Ms Graham said: "On behalf of Unite's 1.2 million plus members, I promised on my election that I would uncover the truth about historic alleged corruption related to the Birmingham hotel project.
after a short illness.The singer-songwriter recorded a number of albums, including The Streets Forget, Here is the River and The Waltz of the Years.
He first took to the BBC airwaves back in the 1980s presenting Friel's Fancy on Radio Foyle, in a broadcast career that spanned over 30 years.The former teacher quickly gained a reputation for his in-depth knowledge of music and was recognised by his industry peers with a Sony award.What happens when the richest person and the most powerful politician have a knock-down, drag-out fight?
The world may be about to find out.A disagreement between Elon Musk and Donald Trump started at a simmer last week, began bubbling on Wednesday and is now in full-on boil. And like everything these two men do, it is all spilling out into public view. These two men have two of the world's biggest megaphones, and they clearly enjoy using them.
In remarks at the Oval Office on Thursday afternoon, Trump sounded a bit like a spurned lover. He expressed surprise at Musk's criticism of his "big, beautiful" tax and spending legislation. He pushed back against the notion that he would have lost last year's presidential election without Musk's hundreds of millions of dollars in support. And he said Musk was only changing his tune now because his car company, Tesla, will be hurt by the Republican push to end electric vehicle tax credits.
Musk took to his social media site, X, with a very Generation X response for his 220 million followers: "Whatever". He said he didn't care about the car subsidies, he wanted to shrink the national debt, which he says is an existential threat to the nation. He called Trump "ungrateful" for his help last year and insisted that Democrats would have prevailed without him.Labour said in recent days that they had identified enough support to beat the SNP and it seems a successful ground operation got those voters to turnout.
But Starmer's popularity in Scotland has plummeted since he swept to power last summer, heavily defeating the SNP.Decisions like cutting winter fuel payments for pensioners seem to have harmed his standing and that policy is to be revised, perhaps as early as next week.
The prime minister made no appearance in the campaign despite announcing the strategic defence review in Glasgow on Monday.Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar has acknowledged public discontent with the UK Labour government.