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- PoliticsKameraOne
VideoTrump granted partial immunity from criminal charges by US Supreme Court
The US Supreme Court ruled in favor of Donald Trump on Monday. US presidents can now enjoy immunity for 'official acts', but not for 'unofficial acts'. The ruling overturns the decision of an appeals court from February that Donald Trump did not have immunity for alleged criminal offenses.
- NewsReuters
Labour poll lead dips before UK election, but Conservatives still far behind
The poll by Redfield and Wilton showed the Conservatives up 3 percentage points on 22%, while Labour dipped 1 percentage point to 41%. Labour's lead dropped below 20 percentage points for the first time since March 10, the pollster said.
1-min read - NewsThe Independent
Ukraine-Russia war latest: Trump’s claim he could ‘end war in one day’ dismissed by Putin’s UN ambassador
It comes as Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban says ‘peace is important not only to Ukraine but to the security of the whole of Europe’
38-min read - NewsEvening Standard
Second poll now shows Tories closing gap on Labour as election battles heat up ahead of July 4
Redfield & Wilton Strategies survey shows Tories closing gap on Labour, who still have a commanding lead
4-min read - PoliticsThe Independent
Biden staffers are ‘scared s***less of him’ and ‘worry about setting him off’
This isn’t the first time that Biden has been accused of losing his temper with staff
3-min read - NewsAFP
Athens Acropolis introduces private visits for 5,000 euros
The Acropolis in Athens, one of the world's most visited ancient monuments, has begun offering private visits for 5,000 euros ($5,400), setting off protests from the site's guards.The programme set off controversy when it was first announced last year, and the union that represents guards at archaeology sites said it opposes these private visits that by-pass the usual official guides.
2-min read - NewsThe Guardian
‘New York weirdness’: why did a mysterious bell ring in a subway station for weeks?
An alarm rang loudly and continuously in a midtown Manhattan station – and neither commuters nor workers at businesses in the station could identify it
3-min read