UK News
David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth – as it happened | David Attenborough
Well, that was pretty good, but it still didn’t feel like quite enough. So much of Attenborough’s archives are on iPlayer, going all the way back to Zoo Quest, and perhaps the best way to celebrate an occasion like this is to put aside a weekend to immersing yourself in them. He really is the greatest broadcaster we have ever had. That’s all from the liveblog. See you for his 150th birthday, everyone.
The last word goes to Attenborough himself, delivering the lyrics to What a Wonderful World like he’s creeping through the jungle. It’s a clip he recorded 15 years ago, and it’s still absurdly affecting.
And now everyone sings Happy Birthday to David Attenborough, who looks absolutely giddy about it. He gets another standing ovation, one that goes on and on and on. A long, rolling round of applause and surges on and on, and it couldn’t be more deserved.
As the show wraps up, Young announces that Blue Planet III is coming this year. We get a clip of Attenborough narrating some of it with exactly the same care and precision that he always has. This will be good.
Time for the final performance of the night. It’s Sienna Spiro, singing Nature Boy. Because David Attenborough likes nature and was a boy, presumably.
More birthday wishes now, from the Secretary-General of the United Nations and also Cate Blanchett. From the curator of the Natural History Museum to Louis Theroux. And also Camilla Cabello and Alan Titchmarsh and Phoebe Waller Bridge. And Nile Rogers. What a weird mix of people.
It’s a long speech, delivered monotonously like a church service. When it is over, David Attenborough stands up, and he gets a standing ovation just for doing that.
And now here’s the Prince of Wales to deliver a tribute. He gets a standing ovatio too, but it takes a lot longer to happen than Attenborough’s. He begins by promising that he won’t be taking his top off, and then points out that Attenborough was ahead of his time in his environmental warnings.
As they make this wonderful non-Paddington, they tell us what Attenborough means to them, and how he has inspired a love of nature to them. The ‘something beautiful’ turns out to be a number 100 made out of moss and sticks, by the way.
And now, Blue Peter viewers scavenging a beach to make ‘something beautiful’ fir him. They’re not revealing what it is yet, but if it’s Paddington I’m going to flip my television over.
Clips of his extracurricular activities now. He plays the piano! He acts! He advises the royal family! He has inspired several imitators! He flirts with Cameron Diaz something rotten!
And now a bit about Blue Planet II, and how it affected a global crackdown on single-use plastic. This alone would be a tremendous legacy.
When the final marine iguana escapes the snakes, the entire Albert hall erupts in cheers like it’s a World Cup final. Am I suggesting that we replace organised sport with setting animals on each other for entertainment? Apparently I am.
UK News
Plaid Cymru ready to run Wales, leader says, after Labour's historic Senedd election collapse
Plaid Cymru becomes the biggest party in the Welsh Parliament, ending Labour’s century long election winning streak in Wales.
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UK News
Analysis: Many Labour MPs are blaming the boss for elections body blow
Sir Keir Starmer is facing what looks like a coordinated attempt to get him to set a timetable for his departure.
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UK News
Cracks showing for Labour close to backyards of Starmer’s top team | May 2026 elections
Keir Starmer hates to lose. Unsurprisingly, he refused to walk away and end his premiership as Labour’s local election losses began to trickle in on Friday morning. Upon entering Downing Street in July 2024 after leading Labour to a historic general election victory, Starmer promised the public that his government would “fight every day until you believe again”.
Now, Starmer is faced with the uncomfortable truth that the frustrated yet united coalition that brought him into No 10 hoping for change is completely fractured and its discontent cannot be dismissed as early midterm blues.
The cracks are showing very close to the political backyards of Starmer and his top team. Reform UK has pushed through into Labour’s old working-class heartlands across parts of northern England and the Midlands, many of which voted for Brexit. Meanwhile, the Greens undermined Labour’s progressive base with mayoralty wins in Hackney and Lewisham.
Soft left members of the parliamentary Labour party believe Starmer should see the losses, and the fragmentation of politics, as a sign to re-engage progressive voters who feel cast aside. But it is clear the challenge Labour faces is multidirectional, which could prove difficult for strategists around Starmer who have been focused on the threat of Reform.
On Starmer’s local council of Camden, the Labour group leader, Richard Olszewski, failed to win a seat in the Holborn and Covent Garden ward, losing out to the Greens, although the Greens appeared disappointed not to be able to eat into Starmer’s old local ward of Kentish Town.
In Sunderland, the education secretary Bridget Phillipson’s patch, Reform won full control of the city council. In Wigan, the culture secretary Lisa Nandy’s constituency, Reform won 24 of the 25 seats available on the council. Labour lost its majority in Tameside, a Greater Manchester borough it had held for 47 years, to Reform, which may come as worrying news to allies of Angela Rayner, the Ashton-under-Lyne MP. The chief whip Jonathan Reynold’s Stalybridge and Hyde constituency is also nearby.
Luke Tryl, the UK director of the research group More in Common, told the Guardian: “Labour cabinet ministers and a whole raft of senior Labour figures are facing a real challenge from Reform. The right vote is growing, which means Reform can turn people out and there are Labour-to-Reform switchers.”
Meanwhile, the Greens gained 17 seats on Manchester council, making it the second largest party, which could frustrate those close to Andy Burnham, the regional mayor, who is understood to have plans for a “radical rewiring” of the state as part of a Labour leadership bid.
The danger is not just that Labour is losing seats to Reform, the Greens and, in areas such as Blackburn, to independents, but that the losses are geographically uneven. And the picture is darker in the devolved nations.
In Wales, the Labour first minister, Eluned Morgan, lost her seat in the Senedd elections, an indicator of a near wipeout for Labour, leaving the Cabinet Office minister, Nick Thomas-Symonds, in trouble in his Torfaen seat. Douglas Alexander, the Scotland secretary, may feel nervous about his Lothian East seat given Labour’s poor performances in Glasgow and North Lanarkshire in the Holyrood elections.
Tryl said: “The scale of this is beyond midterm blues. I’m struggling to see how Starmer gets another hearing from the electorate, given his impact. He is seen as a big part of this. In focus groups, people regularly say that he hasn’t brought about the change he promised and he represents a continuation of what we’ve had with the Tories. There’s also a perception of weakness, alongside the sheer number of U-turns the government has made so early on.”
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