Other demands may include an overt commitment to safeguard public services, a longer-term promise to remove the two-child benefit cap and even regular trade union access to No 10. But with a massive majority, there is no suggestion that Sir Keir will feel he is in the mood to redraft his carefully worked out plans.
Mr Faulkner also said there was no criticism of ambulance clinicians initially treating Ms Sturgess as a patient who had suffered a cardiac arrest linked to opioid use, adding it would have been "incredibly challenging" to diagnose organophosphate - the group of chemicals including nerve agents like Novichok - involvement at that point."I asked 20 colleagues with combined experience of 254 years and none had ever seen an organophosphate case," Mr Faulkner said.
Ms Sturgess fell ill on 30 June 2018, with paramedics returning to the same address later that afternoon to treat Mr Rowley.how paramedics attending to Mr Rowley had recognised his symptoms as possible nerve agent poisoning, but police had disagreed, citing his background as a known drug user.Mr Faulkner praised the paramedics for their approach, telling the inquiry: "I think it would have been all to easy for those paramedics to revert to what the police were telling them, lose confidence in their clinical convictions and go ‘well this is probably just an opioid overdose, the police have got intelligence on this’.
"These are clinicians who I cannot commend highly enough, so despite having counter views put to them, continued with a course of treatment that ultimately was correct.”His comments came after evidence given on Monday by intensive care consultant Dr Stephen Jukes about the care Ms Sturgess received in hospital.
Asked whether, in hindsight, the signs of nerve agent poisoning could have been spotted sooner, Dr Jukes said: "It is a phrase we sometimes say about finding hoof prints on a beach, you should think of horses not zebras.
"And we had already seen what we jokingly called a unicorn in Salisbury, something unbelievable."We believe that the case is of wider significance for the standard of statutory protection that such landscapes enjoy."
CPRE Kent said former secretary of state Michael Gove had agreed with its argument that the scheme did not meet the strict planning policy tests required to justify development in High Weald National Landscape - formerly Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty.Berkeley Homes successfully challenged Gove's decision in court, leading to the quashing of that decision and ultimately the decision by Pennycook.
or WhatsApp us on 08081 002250.The vision was to replace them with an entirely new community. The Lancaster West Estate would have three blocks, each leading to a central 24-storey concrete tower - Grenfell.