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Two people die during failed Channel crossing attempt

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Two people have died attempting to cross the English Channel on Saturday morning, French officials have told AFP news agency.

The incident happened overnight off the coast of northern France, when about 100 people set off by makeshift boat to try to get to the UK, authorities said.

Sixty people from the attempt were rescued and are “are currently being cared for by civil protection,” according to French official Isabelle Fradin-Thirode cited by the AFP news agency.

A couple and their child suffering from moderate hypothermia were rushed to a hospital in Boulogne, she added.

The incident overnight happened south of the beaches of Neufchâtel-Hardelot in the Pas-de-Calais region.

At least 25 people have died so far this year trying to make the dangerous crossing in small boats.

Earlier this month, three people died – likely in a crush on the bottom of a packed boat – off the coast of Calais during another attempted crossing.

Last year, 50 people died while trying to cross the Channel, according to incidents recorded by the French coastguard.

More than 30,000 people have reached the UK in small boats so far in 2025 and more than 50,000 have crossed since Labour came into power in July 2024.

The UK government has come under increased pressure over the number of small boats crossing into the UK and asylum seeker applications.

Recently France and the UK agreed on a “one in, one out” returns deal, which was designed as a deterrent to stop boats from crossing the Channel. It proposes that for each migrant the UK returns to France, another migrant who had not attempted a Channel crossing but with a strong case for asylum in Britain will come the other way.

Sir Keir Starmer has previously called the crossings “totally unacceptable” and Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has said the “vile” people-smugglers behind them are “wreaking havoc on our borders”.

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All Blacks beat Australia to retain Bledisloe Cup for 23rd year in a row

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New Zealand 33 (20)

Tries: Roigard 2, Clarke, Carter Cons: B Barrett, McKenzie Pens: McKenzie 2, B Barrett

Australia 24 (17)

Tries: Pollard, Potter, Tizzano Cons: O’Connor 3 Pen: O’Connor

New Zealand held off a Wallaby fightback to secure a 33-24 victory over Australia and extend their grip on the Bledisloe Cup to a 23rd year.

The All Blacks bounced back from their record defeat against South Africa last weekend as a late Cam Roigard try ensured they retained the trophy and stretched their unbeaten record at Auckland’s Eden Park to 52 matches.

The victory also means they leapfrog their opponents to move top of the Rugby Championship standings before Saturday’s later game between the world champion Springboks and Argentina.

New Zealand started the match strongly, with winger Caleb Clarke crossing the line inside three minutes and Leroy Carter and Roigard adding further tries to establish a 20-3 midway through the first half.

But a try from hooker Billy Pollard reduced the Wallabies’ deficit, and a move finished by winger Harry Potter just before the half-time whistle meant they trailed by only three points at the interval.

Two penalties from Damian McKenzie extended the All Blacks lead in the second half, but a converted try from Wallaby flanker Carlo Tizzano set up an exciting last 10 minutes, putting the visitors within three points of a first victory in Auckland since 1986.

However, scrum-half Roigard calmed home nerves, sealing the win as he crossed under the posts from a Jordie Barrett pass.

New Zealand now lead the Rugby Championship with one match remaining, although South Africa will overtake them with victory over Argentina later on Saturday.

Australia sit in second with two wins and three losses, going into their final match of the tournament against the All Blacks in Perth next weekend.

Australia have not won at Eden Park since 1986 and have now suffered 23 consecutive defeats at the stadium.

The Bledisloe Cup is competed for annually by the two nations. The 2025 edition is over two matches – in the event of a 1-1 draw the cup remains with the holders.

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How the King’s vision is shaping next wave of new towns

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51 minutes ago

Sean CoughlanRoyal correspondent

imagePA Media/Alastair Grant King Charles III, accompanied by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, speak to construction workers at 'Phase 8A', the next building phase of Nansledan, as they walk to the Kew An Lergh development, a home to a diverse range of businesses, in NewquayPA Media/Alastair Grant

The urban planning ideas of King Charles – which once saw him battling with the architectural establishment – are helping to inspire the next generation of new towns in England, imminently expected to be announced by the government.

A housing ministry official told a King’s Foundation event about plans for new towns that share much in common with the King’s traditional town-building philosophy.

The 12 new towns will be walkable and environmentally friendly, with “gentle density” such as “terraced housing and mansion blocks” rather than high-rise.

TV architect George Clarke says the King’s views on buildings have now become part of the mainstream.

imageGetty Images TV architect George ClarkeGetty Images

“He was absolutely slammed down by the architectural establishment,” said Clarke of the King’s attacks on some modern design plans, such as in 1984 calling a proposed extension to the National Gallery a “monstrous carbuncle”.

But Clarke says there has been a sea-change and younger architects are much more empathetic about producing buildings that are sensitive to the local place and the likes and dislikes of the public.

“Let’s be honest, the enormous mass of 1960s brutalism was devastating for parts of Britain,” said the TV presenter.

“Too many modern designs had been ‘ego-driven’ and the architectural arrogance was off the scale,” he said.

Clarke now warns that too many people are having to “mortgage themselves up to the hilt” for homes on new estates that are not always well built and with poor access to local services.

“I would live in one of the King’s houses on one of his estates, which are really well designed, traditional pieces of architecture, sustainably done, high quality windows, with beautiful public spaces, places for kids to play, pedestrianised areas, village greens,” said Clarke.

The TV architect grew up in council housing in a new town, Washington, in the north-east of England, which he said was a “very humane piece of design”.

“It wasn’t streets in the sky. It wasn’t concrete carbuncles, it wasn’t anything ugly like that. There were simple, low density houses, amazing landscaping, brand new highways,” which he said provided a “fantastic place to live”.

imageGetty Images Nansledan in Cornwall on a summer day with tables out in the streetGetty Images
imageHugh Hastings/Getty Images

The King’s support for traditional building styles, and his idea of “harmony” with nature, have helped to shape his own new town schemes, including Poundbury in Dorset and Nansledan in Cornwall.

They emphasise a walkable layout, using local building materials and creating public spaces which help to support a sense of community.

Although the traditional style had been attacked by some critics as inauthentic and backwards looking.

The government said it had received more than a hundred proposed sites for new towns, each expected to have a population of 10,000 or more, as part of its drive to create 1.5 million new homes.

The final selection of locations is expected to be revealed very soon, and the housing ministry set out the challenges and the framework for how they might be designed.

Previous waves of new towns had been “responses to overcrowding and economic imbalance in the post-war period; they offered affordable homes, green spaces and a sense of community”, the ministry said at an event run by the King’s Foundation, a charity which promotes sustainability and protecting traditional craft and building skills.

Post-war new towns “taught us very hard lessons” about being built too much around cars, a lack of maintenance of public spaces, poor transport links, a lack of social life and insufficient jobs, they added.

imageAdrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images A photograph taken on February 7 2023, shows a general view of Poundbury and the surrounding fieldsAdrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images
imageKiran Ridley/Getty Images  A street party in the small town of Poundbury to celebrate the Coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla on May 07, 2023 in Dorchester, DorsetKiran Ridley/Getty Images

The new towns will have a “design code” for buildings to create an identity. They will be walkable, with a goal of “environmental sustainability”, and with a significant proportion of affordable housing, said the ministry official.

This will mean a “compact” design with “higher density, but not necessarily in the form of high-rise buildings, but gentle density models that we are familiar with, such as terraced housing and mansion blocks,” she said.

The purpose was to turn “housing into homes and sites into communities”, she said.

The King’s Foundation event, held at Hatfield House, heard from more planners about how other new developments had been inspired.

imageGetty Images Man on bike going past colourful buildings in town of Seaside, FloridaGetty Images

Robert Davis, founder of Seaside, Florida, which was used to film The Truman Show, highlighted influences that included the Regency designs of Bath, Renaissance Siena and the ideas of King Charles.

The serious social consequence of town planning was emphasised by another US speaker, Jim Brainard, mayor of Carmel, a town in Indiana, which he’d helped to re-design as it expanded.

It had been a town without any centre or public places where people might gather, he said, a problem for this “fractured republic that we have in the United States today, with so much partisanship”.

“It’s so important for people of different backgrounds, different faiths, different races, different religions, to have a place to come together, to get to know people who have different backgrounds.

“Those types of interactions have taken place in town centres forever,” he said.

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Surrealing in the Years: You know who was really blocked from getting on the ballot? Me

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WITH LESS THAN four weeks left to go until the Irish presidential election, we now know that there will be only three candidates on the ballot. 

Last Saturday, Sinn Féin finally ended the suspense and announced that they would be joining Soc Dems, People Before Profit, Labour and the Green Party by betting on Catherine Connolly.

Indeed, as the week wore on, they only became more fulsome in their endorsement of the independent TD from Galway. “We are ready to move Heaven and Earth to elect Catherine Connolly as our next Uachtarán na hÉireann,” Mary Lou McDonald said in one tweet. A sentiment that will undoubtedly encourage Connolly, though the capital letters on heaven and earth feel a little apocalyptic. We will see Catherine Connolly in the Áras, even if it means taking on God Himself.

Speaking of which. 

In the end, Maria Steen could only convince 18 Oireachtas members to back her bid to get on the ballot. Steen, known to many for campaigning against abortion rights and marriage equality, came within touching distance of joining the race before falling agonisingly short ahead of Wednesday’s midday deadline.

Some political correspondents spent Tuesday and Wednesday of this week tweeting breathlessly as Steen inched ever closer to a nomination — securing the endorsements of Independent Ireland and Michael Healy-Rae. It was the kind of thing that’s exciting to watch if you were, at some point in your life, cursed by a witch to pay close attention to electoral politics for the rest of your life. 

The narrative peddled by some is that Maria Steen was ‘blocked’ from getting on the ballot, which is a fascinating way to frame it. For example, if you were running for election and didn’t get enough votes to win, you haven’t been ‘blocked’ from taking a seat in the Dáil — it’s called losing. It happens sometimes. If anything, Steen should be overjoyed that she was able to convince as many as 18 parliamentarians to back her. 

The argument that any given prospective candidate’s name must be on the ballot for the sake of democracy is a weird one. If it’s somehow a subversion of democracy for Maria Steen, or Gareth Sheridan, or Conor McGregor, to not be on the ballot, then why not do away with the ballot altogether? Why not do away with the local authorities and the 20 Oireachtas members? Why not simply let us choose the president from the five million plus people on the island, have a five-million-way tie and realise that yes, as a matter of fact, we do need some kind of threshold for getting on the ballot. 

You know who was literally blocked from getting on the ballot? Me. Blocked by the Constitution itself. But you don’t see me giving out about it.

And no offence to anyone who didn’t make it this time, but if three Dragon’s Den ‘dragons’ could get their name on the ballot in 2018, then I’m afraid we can’t exactly act as though it’s some steep impossibility. 

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There is virtually no evidence whatsoever that the dozen or so hopefuls who were summarily dismissed in the wisdom of our local authorities commanded any kind of public support. It seems plausible that the average Irish person would have little to no idea who Maria Steen even is. They definitely don’t know who Gareth Sheridan is. They know who Conor McGregor is, of course, but for the most part they despise him.

One does wonder, after all, what kind of person it is that wakes up in the morning and thinks: ‘I’m going to try my hand at public service for the first time in my entire life, and I know exactly where to start: by being the President.’ 

Of course, it would be hubristic of us to conclude that our system cannot be improved upon. Waiting seven years and only raising the matter six weeks out from the election itself, however, is not the behaviour of anyone who is serious about improving our electoral processes.   

There is no reason to dismiss out of hand the idea that the role of the Irish presidency could evolve, or that the mechanisms by which the president is elected could be improved. These arguments would, however, be a lot more compelling if they didn’t invariably seem to end with some degree of self-interest. Sort of like: “By the way, once we’ve made all those other changes, the main change we should make is that I should be the president.” I’m sure all those who raised the issue will be rolling out their comprehensive plans for electoral reform any minute now. 

As it stands, we go into the home stretch of this election with just three names on the ballot: Catherine Connolly, Heather Humphreys of Fine Gael, and Jim Gavin representing Fianna Fáil. 

Abroad, it has once again been a week in which Irish people must reckon with the foolishness of the British government. It was announced yesterday that the UK has plans for everyone who lives there to rely on a digital ID card in order to access essential government services. Now that’s a bad start for a whole host of reasons in terms of government overreach and data protection risk, but we haven’t gotten to the real problem yet. The real problem is that they’re apparently planning to call this digital ID… the ‘Brit card’. Has Keir Starmer ever come up with an idea that people actually like?

In addition to the half a million Irish people living in England and Wales (as of 2021, the current number is probably higher), there is very much a cohort of people in Northern Ireland — roughly half of them, quite famously — who, again quite famously, do not identify with the designation ‘Brit’. One can see an almighty backlash against the idea, sounding as it does like the 21st Century version of ‘taking the soup’. Oh, got your Brit card in your wallet, do you? 

But Irish people in the UK shouldn’t worry. Our fearless leaders surely have our backs. Why, just look at Micheál Martin. After Kneecap were banned from Canada last week (amid false claims by one of their MPs, no less), our brave Taoiseach marched right into a meeting with Canadian PM Mark Carney and uh… didn’t bring it up, actually.

Now, you might think that these (obviously) politically motivated steps being taken against some of the most important Irish artists of our day by multiple governments would merit concern from the Taoiseach, but he defended his reticence by saying that he had received no request for representations to be made. You know, the way leaders talk. Nobody asked me to, how was I supposed to know what to do? I’m just the Taoiseach. 

The attack on Kitty O’Brien by German police last month, the travel restrictions faced by perhaps Ireland’s best known living author in Sally Rooney, the censorship of Kneecap… Apparently, the reason why Martin is incapable of speaking meaningfully about these things is that we’re just not asking him hard enough. 

But hey, maybe we’ll get lucky and our next president will stand up for us instead. One can only hope. 

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