UK Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner Resigns

Angela Rayner has resigned as deputy leader of the Labour Party, housing secretary and deputy prime minister. It comes two days after she admitted that she should have paid more tax when she bought a flat in Hove, a seaside resort in East Sussex, earlier this year. An ethics report released on Friday said Ms Rayner’s actions were in breach the ministerial code – a set of rules which tells people with positions in the government the behaviour expected of them. In a letter Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said that he’s “very sad” that her time in government has ended but she will remain “a major figure” in the Labour Party. Opposition parties have criticised Ms Rayner and the prime minister’s handling of the situation. Ms Rayner was born in 1980 in Stockport. After leaving school she didn’t go to university but got a job in her local council in social work. She later became a representative for the trade union, Unison, which works to support workers in public services, like local government, education and health. In 2014 she was selected as the Labour Party’s candidate for Ashton-under-Lyne, and despite her party losing the 2015 general election, she won her seat and became an MP. She briefly became a member of the housing, communities and local government select committee, before going on to more senior roles. Angela Rayner bought a flat in Hove in May 2025. When someone buys a property they often have to pay a type of tax called stamp duty. Ms Rayner admitted that she made an “error” and didn’t pay the right amount of tax when she bought the flat. Government ministers are expected to follow all the rules on paying tax, and there are supposed to be serious consequences if they don’t. A report looking into what had happened found that she did not “did not heed the caution” in legal advice she received and had breached the ministerial code. She says she is sorry for not getting the right advice on how much to pay. Ms Rayner will now need to pay money to the tax authorities, which she says she will do. Ms Rayner has said that she “deeply regret[s]” her decision not to seek additional specialist tax advice given her position in the government and her “complex” personal situation. “I take full responsibility for this error,” she added, saying: “I would like to take this opportunity to repeat that it was never my intention to do anything other than pay the right amount.” Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer seen leaving Downing Street carrying folders. In a handwritten letter from Prime Minister Keir Starmer to his former deputy, Angela Rayner, he wrote about feeling “very sad that your time as deputy prime minister, secretary of state and deputy leader of the Labour Party has ended in this way”. The PM added that Ms Rayner was “right” to refer herself to the independent adviser on ministerial standards and “right to act on his conclusion”. In a video posted to X, Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch has said: “It’s only because of Keir Starmer’s weakness that she wasn’t sacked three days ago”, adding: “Britain deserves better.” She said Starmer showed “no principle, no backbone” and claims “questions remain” about what the PM knew, and when. Lib Dem leader Ed Davey said it had become “clear” that her position became “untenable”, and said he hopes the government can “move on and deal with the huge problems millions of people in our country face”. Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said in a speech, “you can’t be housing secretary and avoid £40,000 of stamp duty”. He went on to accuse Labour’s cabinet ministers of being “wholly unqualified people to run our country”.

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Ancelotti: My Real Madrid Future Could End Tomorrow

Tax Fraud: Ancelotti Handed One Year Prison Sentence

Brazil manager Carlo Ancelotti has been sentenced to one year in prison for tax fraud. The 66-year-old was accused of failing to pay tax on his image rights revenues and was found guilty of tax fraud dating back to 2014, when he was in charge of Los Blancos. Ancelotti was also accused of misleading the Spanish tax office to avoid paying over £833,000 in income tax. The former Chelsea and Real Madrid manager vehemently denied any wrongdoing, insisting that he had not broken the law due to not spending the 183 days in Spain that demands tax. He has admitted he did not pay enough tax in 2014 and blamed doing so on errors from his accountants. Despite his sentence, Ancelotti could avoid spending any time behind bars as under Spanish laws, any sentence under two years for a non-violent crime rarely requires the defendant without previous convictions to serve jail time. Ancelotti spent three years in his first spell as Madrid boss before leaving in 2016 to take charge of Bayern Munich for a season. Following spells with Napoli, and a shock return to the Premier League with Everton, he returned to the Santiago Bernabeu in 2021. He is now the manager of Brazil after taking over this year and looks set to lead them into the 2026 World Cup.

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