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A ‘bruising week’ for Sir Keir and ‘Order Andrew to give evidence’
The Sunday Times leads on its interview with the Prime Minister, saying he vowed to fight and win the next general election. The paper describes Sir Keir Starmer as “defiant”, with Labour expecting to suffer heavy losses in elections next month. Separately, the paper notes, allies of the mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, are continuing efforts to secure him a route back to Parliament, potentially paving the way for a leadership challenge.
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London Marathon 2026 – live updates | London Marathon
Key events
Elite men’s wheelchair race: Marcel Hug and Leo Xingchuan have broken away and are leading the pack at around the 10km mark. David Weir is not far behind the pair.
Hug is the most greatest wheelchair marathoner in history and a win today would pull him level with Weir for most marathon wins in London.
Elite men’s race: The men are being introduced. Last year’s winner, Sabastian Sawe of Kenya, spoke to BBC Sport before making his way to the start line.
Not much pressure on me because I run my own race, and it is only the best moment to be here. To be here again and to be a defending champion.
Being unbeaten in races is something special even in my life because it is just me. I am unique.
I see [myself setting a new world record]. It is only a matter of time.
Here they go! And then right behind them … everyone else!
Elite women’s race: We are approaching the 30min mark in this race. The main contenders are still all keeping pace with the pacers. They should be pulling away soon.
World records: 76 people will be attempting 73 different Guinness World Records titles today.
Arnie Delstanche holds the record for fastest marathon in a full-body inflatable costume by a male and returns today in his full-body inflatable T-rex costume to improve his time of 4:07:46.
Mark Goulder will attempt the fastest marathon blindfolded and tethered by a male, with a target time of 3:20:00. His guide is his close friend Alex. Goulder’s attempt is inspired by his younger brother Bobby, who was diagnosed with Stargardt’s disease, a rare condition that causes progressive vision loss.
Simon Fannon will be one of the few who will want to run as slow as possible today as he hopes to knit the longest scarf while running the marathon. The minimum mark to beat is 3.7m and he has six hours to do it. He runs for the Huntington’s Disease Association after his mother’s diagnosis.
Do you know anyone attempting a world record? I want to hear about it so get in touch!
The UK’s leading end of life charity, Marie Curie, is the official charity of the 2026 London Marathon. Marie Curie aims to raise awareness and funds for terminal illness and are hoping to raise £2m.
Elite women’s race: Hellen Obiri is hoping to challenge Tigst Assefa, with the Kenyan making her London debut after consistently racing in New York and Boston, where they do not use pacers.
Elite women’s race: The women’s elite are being introduced on the start line. Tigst Assefa beat the world women’s-only marathon record with her run here in London last year and she returns as defending champion. The Ethiopian has also not been shy in saying that she will attempt her own world record.
Keep your eyes out for Eilish McColgan, who made her marathon debut last year in London and Jess Warner-Judd, who is returning to running after being diagnosed with epilepsy.
And off they go!
Elite women’s wheelchair race: Leading the way is the heavy favourite Catherine Debrunner but Vanessa Cristina de Souza and Manuela Schär are right behind her.
Elite women’s wheelchair race: Still unclear what happened but Rainbow-Cooper has just started the race, about five minutes after her competition. She was aiming for a podium spot today.
Elite women’s wheelchair race: We are just hearing that Great Britain’s Eden Rainbow-Cooper did not actually end up starting the race.
Elite wheelchair race: And they are off! Women on the left side of the course, men on the right.
Elite wheelchair race: It looked like we may have had a delay in the start of the race as Great Britain’s Eden Rainbow-Cooper had a puncture but because it was before the race – and not during – she was allowed help to switch in one of her spares.
Official starters: Great Britain’s four-time Olympic gold medallist Mo Farah returns to the London Marathon for the first time since retiring from athletics in 2024. Seen as the greatest British endurance athlete in history, Farah is also the British record holder for the marathon. He will be joined on the starter’s podium by Red Roses Rugby World Cup-winning star Ellie Kildunne, fresh off the back of England’s Six Nations game against Wales taking place the day before.
The pair will be the official starters for the elite wheelchair, elite women’s and elite men’s races, as well as the mass start, sending more than 59,000 participants on their way from Blackheath to the Mall.
The prodigious growth of running clubs, fuelled by young women, has seen the popularity of the London Marathon sky-rocket.
More than 1.1 million people entered the ballot for this year’s race – 750,000 more than four years ago. Notably, a third of those were in the 18-29 category, with female entrants making up the biggest percentage of those under 30.
The explosion in this new breed of running clubs or “crews” has been key to the boom. Unlike a traditional club, their emphasis isn’t usually on super-fast times but on being inclusive, enjoying a run and a chat, and a coffee afterwards.
And it is gen Z women who are embracing them most of all. According to Jenny Mannion, who founded the female-running group Runners and Stunners in 2023, it is because they are searching for different real-life experiences after the pandemic than millennials like her.
Read more from Sean Ingle below.
Preamble
After some incredible weather for the past seven days, the week in the capital is ending on a high note with the 2026 London Marathon.
The elite field is stacked, as always. On the men’s side, Kenya’s Sabastian Sawe is hoping to defend his title after a victory in 2025 with a time of 2:02:27. He faces tough competition against Uganda’s Jacob Kiplimo, the half marathon world record-holder and Ethiopia’s Deresa Geleta, who became the 20th fastest marathoner in history with a time of 2:03:27 at the 2024 Seville Marathon.
Ethiopia’s Tigst Assefa won the women’s title last year after a women-only world record time 2:15:50. Her consistency in major races across the year makes her a heavy favourite, but last years runner-up, Kenya’s Joyciline Jepkosgei, is aiming to do one better.
Switzerland’s Marcel Hug is the greatest marathon wheelchair racer in history. The three-time Paralympic marathon champion has won more Abbott World Marathon Majors than anyone else in history with 42 and a win today would pull him level with David Weir as the most successful athlete in London Marathon history.
The women’s wheelchair record holder, Switzerland’s Catherine Debrunner, is not just aiming for the title, which she won last year, but the world record, which she missed by just two seconds in 2025. At the 2024 Paris Paralympics she won a five gold medals in the 400m, 800m, 1,500m, 5,000m and marathon distances.
After the start of the elite races, nearly 60,000 will then head off and have at the 26.2 miles (42.195 km) across the capital.
As always, send me your thoughts, predictions, questions and comments. Do you know anyone racing today? Are you gearing up to take the London streets? I want to know so send me an email!
Elite men’s and women’s wheelchair race – 8.50am (all times BST)
Elite women’s race – 9.05am
Elite men’s race and mass start – 9.35am
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Homes evacuated after explosion outside police station
A security incident is underway following the incident in the early hours of Sunday morning on the outskirts of Belfast.
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The tortoise and the hare: will China beat the US in the race back to the moon? | Space
The world watched earlier this month as Nasa sent four astronauts around the moon – but to actually land on the surface the US is once again in a space race, this time with China. And China may well win.
Both countries plan to build inhabited lunar bases – the first settlement on another celestial body – as well as searching for rare resources and using the deep space environment to test technology for future crewed missions to Mars.
The well-funded China National Space Administration (CNSA) is pitted against the US’s National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa).
And while Nasa has an advantage from institutional knowledge of having already landed on the moon as part of its Apollo programme, it is attempting to return with just a fraction of the share of the national budget it had in the 1960s.
The US space agency is also vulnerable to changes in government every four years, making it hard to stick to decade-long plans – something Chinese rocket engineers working in a one-party state are not affected by.
To move ahead at speed, Nasa has outsourced critical mission components to private firms, including billionaire-led ventures aiming to capitalise on the burgeoning space economy. Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin are both rushing to design and build lunar landers in time for test flights next year.
Unlike the race to the moon between the Soviet Union and the US, the 21st-century competition is shaping up to be more like a marathon, with a gargantuan effort to launch multiple missions over many years.
“What this is really illustrating is that it doesn’t matter who gets to the moon next. It matters who gets to the moon the next 10 times,” said Scott Manley, a Scottish astrophysicist and expert on rocket engineering. “The nation that keeps going is going to be the one that actually starts to win; starts to actually claim space. That’s critical.”
With space being an area with opaque legal consensus, the first country to establish a presence on the resource-rich lunar surface will probably have a head start in defining the rules.
Still, the first return crewed mission will no doubt be a major symbolic win, both domestically and as an expression of power overseas. This competitive element is regularly played up by Nasa, which has an interest in creating a sense of urgency to encourage Congress to fund it. The Nasa chief, Jared Isaacman, said this week that there was a global power competition for the “high ground of space”, adding: “When you do have a competition, you do not want to lose.”
It is a tight race: Nasa plans to land in 2028, although it will possibly be delayed, and Beijing plans to land by 2030, but that could arrive sooner. “The difference between winning and losing will be measured in months not years,” said Isaacman.
China’s human spaceflight programme was established in the 1990s but in the past 25 years it has accelerated, and also partners with the military and local business. While China has never sent a taikonaut beyond low Earth orbit, Beijing already has its own space station, and, unlike Nasa, has an impressive record of adhering to its own timeline.
“When they put a flag in the sand, they tend to be pretty good at hitting that date,” said Manley, who is based in the US. Having “eclipsed Russia in almost every single way in terms of their space capabilities”, he said China is now running a “very deliberate, but not necessarily that fast, space programme”.
A decade ago, James Lewis, a former US diplomat, testified to a committee in Congress that the US, having won the race to the moon against the USSR had “largely lost interest in space”, while China was ramping up its programme. “What we don’t want is a tortoise and hare scenario where a slow-moving China passes the United States,” he said.
Over the past 10 years, Nasa has reinvigorated its crewed space programme, which is called Artemis after the Greek goddess of the moon who is the twin sister of Apollo. That culminated this month in the first crewed mission to the vicinity of moon since 1972.
At the same time, China – which calls its lunar exploration missions Chang’e after the Chinese goddess of the moon – has made formidable progress in catching up, and has broken other records. In 2024, China became the first nation to retrieve samples from the lunar far side with the Chang’e-6 probe. Chang’e-7 is scheduled for late 2026 to hunt for water ice at the south pole, a vital component for a sustained human presence.
“Overall, progress appears to be proceeding smoothly,” said Xie Gengxin, a professor at Chongqing University and a prominent Chinese scientist who has led key experiments in Beijing’s space programme, including the groundbreaking test in 2019 in which a green leaf was grown on the moon for the first time. In another of his experiments a butterfly hatched in space.
Beijing is regularly testing its equipment for crewed missions, which will use a Long March-10 rocket to launch the Mengzhou, or “dream boat”, space capsule with three astronauts. A nine-metre lunar lander called Lanyue, meaning “embracing the moon”, will then take two down to the surface, where they will hop around in a new Chinese spacesuit. The Wangyu suit (“gazing into the cosmos”) has been designed for more flexibility, allowing astronauts to bend down to the rugged terrain.
In the US, SpaceX and Blue Origin are racing to finish their landers in time for Nasa to test their docking capabilities next year. Blue Origin plans a test flight for an iteration of its Blue Moon lander later in 2026, while few details have been released on SpaceX’s 52-metre tall lander, which dwarfs other models. Neither lander is complete, raising questions over Nasa’s ambitious moon-landing timeline.
Within the scientific community, the hope is that the moon will encourage cooperation for the benefit of all, perhaps replicating a situation like Antarctica, which operates as a neutral, science-focused territory under the 1959 treaty that prohibits military activity, mineral mining or new territorial claims.
Yet this is a time of fierce rivalry between Washington and Beijing. Nasa was in effect banned under US law in 2011 from collaborating with China’s space agency, and relations have only soured since then.
In China, their space mission is not framed so much as a race with the US, but instead focuses on achieving domestic aims. “We are not setting a goal of comprehensively overtaking the US,” said Xie. “That would neither be realistic nor necessary.” But he added, landing humans on the moon “will undoubtedly inspire a strong sense of national pride and fulfilment”.
While the US has banned cooperation with China, the European Space Agency (Esa) and individual governments have not. Italy, France and Sweden sent payloads aboard China’s latest lunar probe, the Chang’e-6 mission.
Pierre-Yves Meslin, a researcher at France’s Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie, worked as the scientific manager of the Dorn experiment, which analysed the moon’s very thin atmosphere and was carried onboard the Chinese Chang’e 6 lander.
“As Europeans, we don’t have the tools to go to the moon ourselves … So we rely on international partners to deliver our instruments,” he said. “Mostly the US. But now China is definitely another very serious partner.”
Working with China has given him insight into their space programme. “They have a very clear and very logical step-by-step programme to go to the moon,” he said.
The impact of massive domestic investment from China in the space sector is being felt worldwide, he said. Two decades ago, Meslin did not see so many Chinese people at space science conferences but their halls are now filled with young Chinese scientists.
What has been critical from a researcher perspective, said Meslin, is a reliable partner to take experiments into space, something he said China has proved it can be. “When they decide something, it’s decided and it will be done.”
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