allowed for 68 officers across Wales' four forces to deliver lessons on substance abuse, safety, safeguarding and behaviour. The scheme was retained in Dyfed Powys.
Prime Minister Netanyahu said on Monday that "sustained humanitarian aid must remain available in Gaza" despite Unrwa's ban, and that Israel would work with its international partners to ensure this.But on Monday the US state department said Israel must do "much more" to allow international aid to enter Gaza. The warning came two weeks after it gave Israel 30 days to boost supplies, or risk seeing some military assistance cut.
Oasis fan John and his family planned a major operation to buy Oasis tickets on Saturday - him on his phone and iPad while at work, in Burnley, his wife and son on their phones and laptop at home, in Cumbria, and his daughter on her phone, in Leeds."My wife and son were travelling across on the train over to Leeds, changing trains, and were on their phones constantly, in the queue," he told BBC Radio 5 Live."My wife said she saw loads of other people in the same situation, all staring at their phones, trying to buy tickets."
By mid-afternoon, after six hours in the online queue, John had given up, but his wife was eventually offered tickets - for £355 each."I find that just disgraceful," he said.
Oasis have "built their career on the connection they've got with ordinary folk", John said.
"But when you've queued all day and the price of the ticket has more than doubled, I just think they've broken their contract with the working class.There is likely to be more checking back over what they branded
. They promised to cut £5 out of every £100 in government spending within a hundred days, end shortages of doctors and nurses over the same time and give tax breaks to anyone who wanted to pay to go private in the NHS. They promised a freeze on non-essential immigration, more police, big changes to education, massive changes to the benefit system, and cutting tax while increasing spending on defence.To some voters their plans might sound like an appealing pick and mix, but there are big questions over whether many of the plans are remotely workable.
And it's not just their policies they need people to get behind – it's their personnel, too. In the general election, as we revealed, candidates who wanted to stand for the party had expressed offensive views Reform found hard to defend. As they seek to expand, have they come up with a cast of characters the general public could get behind?Voters attracted to Reform don't come from any one political tribe, but ask pollsters and they share a sentiment – they're pretty peeved with the UK in 2025.