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Fern Britton reveals why she quit This Morning – but it’s not what people expect

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Highly regarded television presenter Fern Britton has opened up on her decision to leave This Morning in 2009 after spending an impressive 16 years working on the ITV show

Fern spoke of the true reason she left This Morning(Image: Getty Images)

Fern Britton has discussed her decision to leave the popular ITV show This Morning in 2009, after years as a presenter on the programme.

The 67-year-old began her broadcasting career as a newsreader on local radio stations, gradually working her way up to become the BBC’s youngest national news presenter on Breakfast Time. She later took on various roles before joining GMTV as a presenter in 1993.

That same year, she started guest presenting on ITV’s This Morning, and by 1999, she had landed a permanent role on the show, co-presenting the Friday slot alongside John Leslie.

Her role on the show became even more regular in 2002, when she began presenting alongside Phillip Schofield.

LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 30:  Fern Britton attends the 'Costa Book Awards' 2018 at Quaglinoâs on January 30, 2018 in London, Englan  (Photo by Mike Marsland/Mike Marsland/WireImage)
She started her role on This Morning back in 1993(Image: Mike Marsland, Mike Marsland/WireImagevia Getty Images)

However, seven years later, Fern decided to leave the programme, sparking rumours about the reasons behind her departure. There were widespread reports of a fallout with co-host Phillip, which he later commented on in his memoir, stating that their relationship “turned sour”.

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Fern has also previously mentioned to Good Housekeeping that they are no longer friends, saying “we don’t really (speak anymore)”.

In a recent interview on the Spooning with Mark Wogan podcast, Fern sought to provide some clarity on the situation. Revealing the key reason for her decision to step away from the show, she said: “Well, it’s 17 years ago, it’s a long time. And I haven’t really thought about that for a long time. I had a fantastic 10 years and I loved it.”

LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 14: Fern Britton attends the Good Housekeeping Live event celebrating 100 years of the magazine, in partnership with Dyson on October 14, 2022 in London, England. (Photo by Mike Marsland/Getty Images for Good Housekeeping Live)
Fern made it to the Big Brother final last year(Image: Mike Marsland, Mike Marsland/Getty Images for Good Housekeeping Live)

She continued: “But then after a bit, I needed to be back home again, as lots of things were going on. But the boys were about to do their A Levels, going into the two years of that, and the girls as well were leaving little school to go up. I was needed at home, and they needed to come home and know there was chicken in the oven.”

Since her departure from the show in 2009, Fern has been a constant figure on television, participating in some of the nation’s favourite reality TV programmes, including a stint on Strictly Come Dancing in 2012 where she was the fifth star to be voted off.

Last year, Fern took part in ITV’s Celebrity Big Brother, where she reached the final, ultimately losing out to David Potts who took home the crown.

However, fans can look forward to her return to television in the near future with her very own series, Fern Britton: Inside the Vet’s.

Philip Schofield and Fern Britton during 2004 TV Quick Soap Awards - Pressroom at Dorchester Hotel in London, Great Britain. (Photo by Jon Furniss/WireImage)
Phillip Schofield left This Morning in 2023 in controversial circumstances (Image: Jon Furniss, WireImagevia Getty Images)

The six-part series will follow Fern alongside TV vet James Greenwood as they delve into the daily workings of veterinary life, covering everything from vaccinations and sprays to dentistry and surgeries.

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The best last minute booze and food gifts for Father’s Day 2025 from £2

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Not sure what to get him – and fast? We’ve got you covered…

Not sure what to get for your dad for Father’s Day? We’ve got you covered…

Hands up if you’ve still got a gift to buy! Us too… And with Father’s Day now just around the corner, you certainly won’t be alone in wondering what to get your dad this weekend. Well don’t panic, there’s still time to choose the perfect present. And we’re here to help, having hand picked some of this year’s best booze and food gifts. Many available with next day delivery – and some you can even pick up on the high street. Happy shopping!

Best for… WHISKY

Torabhaig Legacy Series Ch.4 : Sound of Sleat, £58.00

An absolutely delicious single malt which takes its name from a narrow, powerful strip of sea dividing Skye and the mainland and offers a rich and fresh combination of orange, apricot, seaweed, bonfire smoke, honey and sea salt.

Torabhaig Legacy Series Ch.4 : Sound of Sleat
Torabhaig Legacy Series Ch.4 : Sound of Sleat(Image: Torabhaig )

Best for… CAKE

M&S You’re My Hero Mini Colin The Caterpillars, £3.90

Who doesn’t love a Colin? It’s impossible. And for Father’s Day these mini Colins have had a cute little makeover, now reading You’re My Hero. The perfect budget gift.

M&S You're My Hero Mini Colin The Caterpillars
M&S You’re My Hero Mini Colin The Caterpillars

Best for… SMALL WINE CASE

Virgin Wines Best Sellers Red Wine Trio in Wooden Gift Box, £39.99

For the red wine loving dad, what could be better than a pick and mix of them? Packaged in a lovely wooden case, this set features three of Virgin Wines top sellers – a French Malbec, a Chilean Cabernet Sauvignon and a Spanish Tempranillo Syrah. Delicious.

Virgin Wines Best Sellers Red Wine Trio in Wooden Gift Box
Virgin Wines Best Sellers Red Wine Trio in Wooden Gift Box

Best for… CHOCOLATE

Cadbury Dairy Milk Biscoff Bar, £2

Milk chocolate – check. Biscoff – check. The ultimate mashup awaits, and it’s a mouthwatering delight. The only issue will be handing it over to your dad on Sunday.

Cadbury Dairy Milk Biscoff Bar
Cadbury Dairy Milk Biscoff Bar

Best for… LARGE WINE CASE

Moonpig x Virgin Wines Epitome of Luxury 12 Bottle Case with Champagne, £179.99

He’ll be spoilt for choice with this 12-bottle gift. It contains whites, reds and a Champagne from Italy, Australia, New Zealand, Spain, France and Chile. Highlights include The Black Pig The Prize Shiraz and Louis Moreau Chablis.

Moonpig x Virgin Wines Epitome of Luxury 12 Bottle Case with Champagne
Moonpig x Virgin Wines Epitome of Luxury 12 Bottle Case with Champagne

Best for… CHAMPAGNE

Aldi Veuve Monsigny Champagne Brut, £14.95

Yes you read that right – a Champagne for less than £15. Run, don’t walk, to snap one up at your local Aldi store. It was recently crowned World’s Best Champagne at the prestigious World Champagne Awards 2025 – outshining luxury rivals.

Aldi Veuve Monsigny Champagne Brut
Aldi Veuve Monsigny Champagne Brut

Best for… CLARKSON’S FARM FANS

Hawkstone Premium Lager (four pack), £7.95

If he’s been following the shenanigans down on Diddly Squat Farm, a four pack of Jezza’s lager is sure to go down a treat. The TV farmer describes his ‘hard to make, easy to drink’ beer as bold, yet balanced, with a smooth body and top notes of light citrus complemented by a subtle, crisp bitterness and malty backbone.

Best for… FUDGE

Fudge Kitchen Best Dad Fudge, £11.99

If it’s fudge that takes your dad’s fancy, this cute selection box of assorted flavours will make the perfect gift. And, the fudge is all handmade in the UK.

Fudge Kitchen Best Dad Fudge
Fudge Kitchen Best Dad Fudge

Best for… CHEESE

Snowdonia Cheese Co Quintessential Cheese Hamper, £45

Featuring some of the brand’s bestselling cheeses, chutneys and crackers, this has all he needs to curate a great cheese board. Inside the pretty hamper, you’ll find Black Bomber Extra Mature Cheddar and Vintage Red Leicester, alongside Balsamic Caramelised Onion Chutney and more.

Snowdonia Cheese Co Quintessential Cheese Hamper
Snowdonia Cheese Co Quintessential Cheese Hamper

Best for… KEEP-FOREVER PACKAGING

Cotswold Distillery Hearts and Crafts Calvados Single Malt Whisky, £100

If like many dads he collects whisky bottles and their boxes (sound familiar) then, well, boxes don’t come more aesthetically pleasing. The whisky inside is delicious too – made in the Cotswolds and with notes of stewed apple and toffee pudding.

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Cotswold Distillery Hearts and Crafts Calvados Single Malt Whisky
Cotswold Distillery Hearts and Crafts Calvados Single Malt Whisky

FIA changes pass amid warnings of ‘dark period’

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Controversial changes to the statutes of Formula 1’s governing body the FIA have been passed by members despite a warning the organisation is in a “dark period of democratic backsliding”.

Austria’s national motoring club, the OAMTC, criticised the statute changes in a letter to the FIA World Council for Automobile Mobility and Tourism (WCAMT) sent on Wednesday before Thursday’s vote at the FIA’s General Assembly in Macau.

It denounced FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem’s leadership and urged members not to vote for changes proposed by Ben Sulayem – and revealed by BBC Sport last month – on the basis that they “risk further contributing to the erosion of the FIA’s reputation for competent and transparent governance”.

However, members voted for the amendments by 83.35% to 16.65%.

The result came despite support from the UK, Belgian, Portuguese and Swiss representatives for Austria’s suggestion of a postponement so the FIA could conduct a “proper review and analysis” before making a decision on whether the changes were appropriate.

An FIA spokesperson described the result as a “resounding majority”.

The OAMTC letter adds that recent actions of Ben Sulayem “are inviting comparisons with the excesses of political leaders intent on deconstructing the checks and balances that come with responsible governance”.

OAMTC chief executive Oliver Schmerold told BBC Sport after the vote: “We brought forward the motion to postpone the vote on the changes to a future assembly as we believe that they inherit some consequences which desire more discussion.

“This was supported by several other members. The president underlined that the statutory process has been followed and asked for the vote.

“We still believe that it is not good governance to change the longstanding rules for elections only four months before the submission deadline for candidates.”

The OAMTC letter hints at the prospect of a legal challenge, on the basis that the changes were “endorsed by (FIA) world council meetings that were not properly constituted, having intentionally excluded elected members from participating and voting”.

David Richards, the MotorsportUK representative on the world council, was among those members barred from a meeting in March in a dispute with Ben Sulayem over refusing to sign a revised confidentially agreement.

Schmerold last year voiced his opposition to previous statute changes passed at the last General Assembly in December, describing them as “not good governance” and “not good in terms of checks and balances”.

The letter says of the proposed changes:

Ben Sulayem’s first term of office ends this December and he is so far the only candidate to have confirmed he is standing for election. Rally legend Carlos Sainz has said he is considering running but has not made a final decision.

The letter accuses Ben Sulayem of reneging on his promises during his election campaign in 2021 to ensure “governance structures are compliant with best practices”.

And it says he has implemented none of the “critical changes” that were recommended by a review and audit of the FIA’s governance structure commissioned from McKinsey in 2022.

It highlights a series of changes that have eroded accountability at the FIA, including:

The FIA spokesperson added: “The FIA has taken steps since 2021 to strengthen its corporate governance policies. These policies guide the FIA’s operations and ensure its rules, practices and processes are robust and transparent.

“The proposed amendments to the FIA statutes are designed to further strengthen processes around governance and confidentiality. They will grant the nominations committee more time to examine the eligibility criteria of candidates, and help to ensure consistency and rigour in the electoral process.

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  • Formula 1

Romeo Beckham shows love for sister Harper in sweet post amid family feud

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Romeo Beckham took to his Instagram page to share a sweet black-and-white photo of himself dancing with younger sister Harper amid the ongoing Beckham family feud

Romeo Beckham shows love for sister Harper in sweet post amid family feud(Image: INSTAGRAM)

Romeo Beckham ignored the family drama by taking to his Instagram page to share his love for his sister Harper. While the Beckham family take over the headlines for their feud with Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz, Romeo took a moment to share his appreciation for the youngest Beckham, Harper.

The 22-year-old recently called time on his relationship with Kim Turnbull, who was reportedly a big reason for the feud. Brooklyn was reportedly ‘uneasy’ about Romeo dating Kim, who was once close friends with the hot sauce enthusiast, and felt his parents were ‘favouring’ his younger brother, who was seen beaming in snaps from David Beckham’s 50th birthday.

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Romeo Beckham and Harper Beckham
Romeo shared a sweet snap of him dancing with Harper(Image: romeobeckham/instagram)

On Thursday, Romeo focused on his family as he shared a black-and-white photo of him and Harper dancing at a lavish event. Romeo smiled at the camera while Harper smiled at her brother with her eyes closed.

Fans were loving the sibling snap and rushed to the comment section to compliment them, with one user writing: “Family is everything, older brother looking after his baby sister!”

“Still the sweet child she’s always been, yet growing into a young lady with quiet grace and effortless style! Harper Seven – luminous!” said another about Harper.

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Romeo (L), Cruz and Brooklyn (R)
It comes amid a family feud(Image: AFP via Getty Images)

One commented: “You’re so incredibly lucky to have each other,” and another user posted: “Harper so blessed to have a brother like you.”

Meanwhile, an insider recently claimed things remain ‘amicable’ between Romeo and Kim Turnbull, and insisted that their split had nothing to do with the bitter Beckham feud.

Brooklyn is said to have felt Kim’s reasons for dating his brother were ‘disingenuous’ amid rumours he used to date the DJ. However, in a now deleted Instagram post Cruz Beckham denied Brooklyn was ever in a relationship with Kim.

Romeo Beckham and Kim Turnbull
Romeo and Kim only recently went their separate ways(Image: Instagram)

Speaking to the Mail about Romeo’s split with the DJ, who the model once referred to his as his “world”, a source said: “Romeo and Kim are both young and they had a lovely time together but at that age things don’t always last forever and they decided to split up.

“They have been friendly since and have even been at the same venues. It’s a huge shame, particularly as David and Victoria really adored her and thought she made Romeo happy but it wasn’t to be.

“David and Victoria would hate for the view to be that they split because of Nicola and Brooklyn because that simply isn’t the case.”

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The Democrats’ resistance to Trump is a hollow performance

From March 31 to April 1, New Jersey Senator Cory Booker delivered a record-breaking 25-hour filibuster on the Senate floor of the United States Capitol. In his marathon speech, Booker repeatedly chastised President Donald Trump for his discriminatory politics and policies and for his attempts to circumvent the US Constitution.

Booker also criticised both the Democratic and Republican parties for failing to do more to oppose Trump. “Do better than me. Do better than we in this body. We are flawed and failed people,” he said unironically, adding, “My voice is inadequate. My efforts today are inadequate to stop what they’re trying to do.” Two days later, he proved himself right. Booker voted against two resolutions that would have limited US arms sales to Israel – just as Israeli forces once again intensified their genocidal campaign in Gaza. In doing so, he aligned himself with one of Trump’s most extreme and violent foreign policy positions – and exposed the hollowness of the Democratic resistance. After all, you cannot claim to be fighting Trumpism at home while helping it advance abroad.

That contradiction sits at the heart of the Democrats’ paralysis. In the five months since Trump began his second term as president, meaningful opposition from the party has been almost nonexistent. The so-called resistance to his authoritarianism has been weaker than the sun over the Arctic in the dead of winter.

The reason is simple: On many of the most consequential issues – Israel, immigration, policing – the Democrats are not resisting Trumpism. They are participating in it. A centre-right party that shares core positions with its far-right opponent cannot mount real opposition. It can only pretend to.

It doesn’t help that the Democratic Party is, in many respects, as beholden to wealthy, right-wing donors as the Republicans. What the party lacks in vision, it also lacks in leadership. As the old saying goes: If you want to understand a politician’s priorities, follow the money. Or, in the words of Upton Sinclair in his 1941 novel Between Two Worlds: “Find out who’s putting up the money for a political party, and then you know what it will do.”

Take Booker’s votes against restricting arms to Israel. Since his first Senate run in 2013, he has received nearly $1m from pro-Israel political action committees (PACs) and individual donors. A 2019 report from The Intercept described how Booker regularly communicated with the leaders of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) “like teenagers”. With such a cosy relationship, his votes for genocide may be immoral, but they are not surprising.

Then there is Hakeem Jeffries, the most powerful Democrat in the House of Representatives. In April, he and Booker held a two-person, all-day sit-in on the Capitol steps to protest proposed deep cuts to Medicaid, Medicare, and food and jobs assistance programmes. “As Democrats, we’re going to continue to stand on the side of the American people, and we will not rest until we bury this reckless Republican budget in the ground,” Jeffries declared.

Three weeks later, Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” passed the House 215–214. Although the Senate may revise it, Jeffries’s grandstanding had already proven hollow.

Jeffries has shown far more resolve against antigenocide protesters. In April 2024 when pro-Palestinian student protests intensified and police raided encampments at Columbia University, he defended the use of New York police to arrest protesters and dismantle the camps. “The antisemitic rhetoric and intimidation deployed by some students and outside protestors on college campuses in New York City and beyond is completely unacceptable and deeply disturbing,” Jeffries said in a news statement.

There was no credible evidence to support his claim. He issued no similar statement in defence of Palestinians nor did he condemn Islamophobia or Zionist attacks on protesters. But he did raise more than $1.15m from AIPAC and other pro-Israel donors during his 2024 re-election campaign.

Like Booker and Jeffries, other leading Democrats have chosen to posture against the marginalised rather than confront unjust policies. On January 30, Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut posted on X: “In the first week, Trump removed 7,300 people. On average, Biden was removing 15,000 a week. Under Biden 72 percent of ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] arrests were criminals. Under Trump it’s dropped to around 50 percent. Trump is removing less people and less criminals.” Whether he intended it or not, Murphy in effect endorsed a mass deportation regime that disproportionately targets migrants from Latin America and the Caribbean.

Murphy is a leader who equivocates. Just two months earlier, he had written that “mass deportation is a (terrible) response to Americans’ real sense they are helpless in the face of global forces.” Yet by May, he was boasting about supporting the “toughest bipartisan border security bill in a generation” as part of “choosing this country over Donald Trump’s campaign”. Murphy may be less beholden to corporate donors than others, but his role in leading the opposition is no less compromised. Even on issues on which Democrats have expressed rhetorical opposition – such as cuts to welfare and education – grandstanding has taken the place of real action.

Despite Jeffries’s occasional calls for a Democratic strategy to organise resistance, many in the party have chosen instead to cooperate with the administration. That explains how the Senate unanimously confirmed Marco Rubio – long an advocate of xenophobic and Islamophobic policies – as secretary of state by a vote of 99–0, including all 45 Democratic senators.

It also explains why 10 Democrats (nine senators, one House member), including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, supported a continuing resolution in March that many agreed would hurt ordinary Americans. “As bad as the CR is, I believe allowing Donald Trump to take even much more power via a government shutdown is a far worse option,” Schumer said.

With the Democratic Party applying the pressure of an ant on a mountain, the so-called resistance it claims to lead against Trump has been more than futile – it has become a grim parody.

Nothing illustrates the party’s rightward drift more clearly than its recent push to court billionaire and former Department of Government Efficiency chief Elon Musk. On June 5 after Musk’s public falling-out with Trump over the “Big Beautiful Bill”, Representative Ro Khanna said, “We should ultimately be trying to convince him that the Democratic Party has more of the values that he agrees with,” including “a commitment to science funding, a commitment to clean technology, a commitment to seeing international students like him”.

By “him”, Khanna seemed to mean rich, white, highly skilled migrants – just as Trump’s immigration plans have prioritised white South African farmers as “refugees” and just as Musk has argued that the US should accept only highly skilled immigrants. Khanna’s comments – and his campaign donations from individuals affiliated with Apple, Google, PayPal and Stanford University – place him squarely within the bipartisan elite consensus that dominates immigration and economic policymaking in the US.

To mount real opposition, a party must have a clear, unified idea of what it would do differently. The Democratic Party has failed to offer such a vision. It continues to stand with Republicans on issue after issue – and when it claims to stand against them, it rarely follows through.

It is long past time to stop hoping the Democratic Party will rescue the US from Trumpism. It won’t. It can’t. The party has become an unreliable and ideologically compromised actor in the struggle for democracy and justice. What is needed now is a mass movement to build a viable, independent, left-of-centre alternative. Because the Democrats have shown, again and again, that they are not it.

Jega Cautions On Rushed Adoption of E-Voting Technology in Nigeria

Former Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Professor Attahiru Jega, has warned against rushing into full adoption of electronic voting in Nigeria, citing serious gaps in infrastructure and technology.

Speaking at The Platform held in Lagos on Thursday to commemorate Nigeria’s Democracy Day, Professor Jega said that while the country must scale up the use of technology in its electoral processes, it must do so cautiously and realistically.

“We have to understand the need to make haste slowly,” Jega said. “We want to scale up the use of technology, but if we do a realistic assessment, we’ll see there are a lot of gaps in technology infrastructure, which will constrain how far we can go.”

He compared Nigeria’s situation to that of Estonia, a small European country known for advancement in electronic voting “Estonia uses the internet for voting, but it’s a very small country with far better infrastructure. In Nigeria, we’re still struggling with internet service even in major cities, not to mention rural areas that are terribly underserved,” he noted.

Jega also stressed that Nigeria’s lack of local equipment manufacturing poses a further setback. “We’re not even equipment manufacturers, and you need a certain level of relative independence. Otherwise, you become hostage to external suppliers.”

According to him, India, even with its stronger technological capacity, still does not use electronic voting, but relies on mechanical voting systems.