Archive November 10, 2025

Georgia Harrison’s mum gushes over new grandaughter in sweet hospital video

Georgia Harrison has shared an insight into motherhood as she posted a selection of sweet snaps on Instagram on Sunday including her mum’s first reaction from her hospital bed

Georgia Harrison has shared an insight into her first week of motherhood as she shared a selection of sweet snaps on Instagram on Sunday.

Georgia announced back in April that she was pregnant with her first baby, just 10 months after meeting boyfriend Jack, 33, on a dating app. “When you know, you know. I know it’s cringey but that’s definitely how we feel,” she told The Mirror at the time.

She wrote on her social media pages: “We’ve been keeping a secret. Me and Jack are having a baby! Due November 2025, we can’t wait to welcome this little one into the world and embrace all the joy and love he or she will bring.

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“I still can’t believe I’ve finally got everything I ever wanted and I couldn’t be more grateful…And just like that 2 are about to become 3.”

The former Love Island star, 30, welcomed her first daughter with her boyfriend Jack Spacey last week. She took to social media earlier this month to officially announce the news, as she revealed her newborn’s name was Sahara Jean Stacey.

And now she has posted a snippet of her first few days of being a parent. Captioning the post she wrote: “My little scrunch. Here’s a few snaps from the best week of our lives @jackpstacey parenthood is the best chapter yet. Hope the full moon didn’t hit you all too hard.”

Georgia shared some moments from the hospital as her newborn was seen wrapped up in a green blanket, and a sweet video of her mum’s reaction to holiday Sahara for the first time.

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Her followers flooded the comments with supportive messages, one wrote: “Congratulations she looks like her daddy,” another wrote: “Your Mum’s reaction was so pure. Huge congratulations. You look great, but more importantly , you look happy.”

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TOWIE and Love Island stars also rushed to congratulate Georgia in the comments, Clelia wrote: ” Just amazing, can’t wait to meet you little angel,” while Faye Winter wrote: “beautiful”.

US Senate reaches deal to end 40-day government shutdown

The United States Senate is holding a vote to advance a Republican stopgap funding package that could pave the way to end the longest government shutdown in the country’s history.

The breakthrough on Sunday came after a group of centrist Democrats negotiated a deal to reopen the government if Republicans promise to hold a vote on expiring healthcare subsidies by December.

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Senator Angus King, who led the talks, told reporters that the Democrats backing the legislation felt the shutdown has gone on long enough.

When asked if he was confident that there would be enough votes to pass the bill, he said: “That’s certainly what it looks like.”

The package would include a stopgap funding bill that would reopen the government through January 31 and fund other elements – including food aid and the legislative branch – until the end of the fiscal year.

The amended package would still have to be passed by the House of Representatives and sent to President Donald Trump for his signature, a process that could take several days.

As news of the breakthrough emerged, Trump told reporters when he arrived at the White House after a weekend in Florida: “It looks like we’re getting very close to the shutdown ending.”

Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut, told reporters that he would vote against the funding measure but also suggested there could be enough Democratic support to pass it. “I am unwilling to accept a vague promise of a vote at some indeterminate time, on some undefined measure that extends the healthcare tax credits,” Blumenthal said.

Fallout deepens

The shutdown, currently in its 40th day, has caused thousands of flight cancellations, furloughed about 750,000 federal employees and put food assistance for millions of Americans at risk.

Air traffic staffing shortages led at least 2,300 flights travelling within the US and to and from the country to be cancelled as of Sunday, according to data from tracking platform FlightAware, along with more than 8,000 delays.

New York City area airports, along with Chicago’s O’Hare and Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson airports, were especially hard-hit.

Meanwhile, some 42 million people – or one in eight Americans – who rely on the food aid programme Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) have seen their benefits threatened.

Although two courts ordered that the Trump administration must pay out SNAP funds during the shutdown, the Supreme Court paused one of the rulings until further legal arguments could be heard.

“Now, the Trump administration has told states they cannot pay more than 60 percent of the funds due this month, and it is threatening to cut all federal funds to any state that does so,” said Al Jazeera’s Mike Hanna, reporting from Washington, DC.

“For Americans, this is really beginning to bite home, and they are trying to ramp up the pressure on senators,” he added.

Health subsidies

The shutdown began on October 1, when the Senate failed to agree on spending priorities. Since then, Democrats have voted 14 times not to reopen the government as they demanded the extension of tax credits that make coverage more affordable for health plans offered under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

The subsidies, which were put in place in 2021, have helped double ACA enrolment to 24 million Americans.

Democrats have pushed for a one-year extension of the subsidies, but Republicans have maintained they are open to addressing the issue only after government funding is restored.

Republicans, who hold a majority in the Senate, only need five votes from Democrats to reopen the government, so a handful of moderate senators could end the shutdown with only the promise of a later vote on healthcare.

In addition to King, Senators Jeanne Shaheen, Maggie Hassan and Tim Kaine have said they would support the agreement.

“This deal guarantees a vote to extend Affordable Care Act premium tax credits, which Republicans weren’t willing to do,” said Kaine, who is from Virginia, which is home to millions of federal workers.

The bill – a so-called continuing resolution (CR) to keep government funded at pre-shutdown levels – “will protect federal workers from baseless firings, reinstate those who have been wrongfully terminated during the shutdown, and ensure federal workers receive back pay” as required by law, he added.

But many Senate Democrats are opposed to the deal, including the chamber’s top Democrat Chuck Schumer, who expressed anger that it offers a vote for extending the health care subsidies instead of extending them directly.

“I cannot in good faith support this CR that fails to address the health care crisis,” Schumer told the chamber, adding: “This fight will and must continue.”

House Democrats also chimed in against it.

Texas Representative Greg Casar, the chairman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said a deal that does not reduce healthcare costs is a “betrayal” of millions of Americans who are counting on Democrats to fight.

“Accepting nothing but a pinky promise from Republicans isn’t a compromise – it’s capitulation,” Casar said in a post on X. “Millions of families would pay the price.”

Trump, meanwhile, pushed again to replace subsidies for the ACA health insurance marketplaces with direct payments to individuals.

In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump blasted the subsidies as a “windfall for Health Insurance Companies, and a DISASTER for the American people”, while demanding the funds be sent directly to individuals to buy coverage on their own.

“I stand ready to work with both Parties to solve this problem once the Government is open,” Trump wrote.

Senator Adam Schiff, a Democrat from California, said he believed Trump’s healthcare proposal was aimed at gutting the ACA and allowing insurance companies to deny coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,355

Here is how things stand on Monday, November 10:

Fighting

  • The Russian Ministry of Defence said its forces captured the Ukrainian settlement of Rybne in the southeastern Zaporizhia region.
  • Fighting also continues in and around the city of Pokrovsk in eastern Ukraine. The rate of Russian advances in the strategic city “remains temporarily decreased” as Moscow’s forces slow ground activity “to extend logistics and bring up reinforcements to southern Pokrovsk”, according to the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington, DC-based think tank.
  • Elsewhere in Ukraine, repair crews were racing to restore power to thousands of people after Russian drone attacks on Saturday targeted energy infrastructure across the country.
  • Ukraine’s central Poltava area, as well as the northeastern regions of Kharkiv and Sumy, were the hardest-hit, with 100,000 customers in Kharkiv alone without electricity, water and heating, Deputy Prime Minister for Restoration of Ukraine Oleksii Kuleba said on Sunday.
  • Russia faced its own power outages after Ukraine struck back with drone and missile attacks, cutting power and heating to thousands of households in the Russian cities of Belgorod and Voronezh.

Politics and diplomacy

  • In an interview with Russian state news agency RIA Novosti, Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov said that ending Moscow’s war on Ukraine is “impossible” without “fully taking into account Russia’s legitimate interests and addressing its root causes”.
  • Lavrov added that discussions with the US were under way, but “not as rapidly as we would prefer”, noting that he was ready to meet face-to-face with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
  • Russian Security Council Secretary Sergei Shoigu travelled to Egypt for meetings with top officials, including President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, Russia’s state TASS news agency reported, with plans to discuss “military and military-technical cooperation”.
  • Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban told reporters that the United States agreed to provide a “financial shield” to Hungary in the event of economic or budgetary pressures, though he did not explain further. The comments came after Hungary announced it had secured a one-year waiver from US sanctions on Russian oil and gas.

Sanctions

  • Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Kyiv and its European partners were preparing a 20th package of sanctions on Russia.
  • Ukraine will propose “including Russian legal entities and individuals that are still profiteering from energy resources”. The package is expected to be signed within a month, the president added.
  • Zelenskyy also signed new Ukrainian sanctions against eight Russian individuals, including an FSB agent accused of “information sabotage” and financier Kirill Dmitriev, who runs Russia’s sovereign wealth fund and is President Vladimir Putin’s special envoy on international economic and investment cooperation.
  • Another set of new sanctions will target five Russian businesses, including publishing houses engaged in “justifying aggression” and “spreading Russian propaganda worldwide”, Zelenskyy’s office said.

Regional security

  • In Belgium, three drones were detected above the Doel nuclear power plant on Sunday evening, according to the Reuters news agency, the latest in a series of drone sightings that have prompted the temporary closure of two major airports over the past week.
  • The United Kingdom said it plans to provide equipment and personnel to Belgium in light of the incidents. Air Chief Marshal Richard Knighton told the BBC broadcaster that while the source of the drones was not yet known, Russia has been involved in a pattern of “hybrid warfare” in recent years.

Caroline Flack’s agonising final weeks laid bare for first time: ‘She could have been saved’

Caroline Flack tragically died in 2020 after she was charged by police for assaulting her boyfriend

Caroline Flack’s heartbroken mother insists police error was to blame for her daughter’s death as she speaks about the tragedy in a new documentary. The Love Island host took her own life aged 40 in February 2020 ahead of a trial after she was charged with assaulting her boyfriend Lewis Burton.

A note Caroline left in her flat read: “Please let this court case be dropped, and myself and Lewis find harmony.” A new investigation led by Christine Flack highlights what she says are key mistakes and decisions which “made no sense” by the Crown Prosecution Service and the Metropolitan Police.

This, she claims, along with negative media and social media coverage, left her daughter feeling there was “no way out”. Christine says: “They will not admit that they were wrong to push for Caroline to be prosecuted. Because of a police error, my daughter’s died.”

Speaking to the Mirror, Christine said she could not understand why a detective inspector overruled the CPS which initially suggested cautioning Caroline on the night of the incident at her London home in December 2019.

She said: “It would have changed everything. Because they pursued the prosecution, she had to stand down from her jobs. She had to leave her house. It just changed her world.”

Christine speaks to senior legal figures in the Disney+ documentary series who agree that the TV star should have only received a caution. Former CPS chief crown prosecutor Nazir Afzal studied police documents gathered by Christine.

He tells her: “Having looked at all your evidence I can’t understand why they rushed the judgement. This was a case where there is no previous history, no coercive behaviour. Mr Burton never wanted this case and was adamant.

“This was a one off occasion where she lost her temper and did what she did, which she accepts. For all of those reasons, the very worst thing that should have happened was a caution.”

He added: “I have prosecuted thousands of these cases, none of this makes sense. Almost immediately in the cold light of day, prosecutors would have formed a view this case is going nowhere and they should have stopped the case. They are required to stop the case where there is insufficient evidence. I can’t think of any reason to proceed, unless they were scared of what the media were going to say about them. It is not about losing face, this is about justice. My take on it is Caroline would still be with us if certain decisions weren’t taken in that month or two.”

Jess McDonald, an ex-Met detective constable who had worked in a safeguarding unit dealing with domestic violence, tells Christine: “So much shouts out to me as mishandling.”

She highlights an email challenging the decision to only caution Caroline, in which the detective inspector insists there is no clear admission of guilt. Jess adds: “Caroline never denied that she hit Lewis with the phone.”

In a statement, she admitted guilt 12 times. Her lawyer Paul Morris said: “This case was prosecuted because it would’ve been more difficult to stop the snowball rolling than let it continue. Saving face, I think adequately describes the stance taken.”

In late December after she was charged, Caroline was not coping well and her agent and legal team got her to see a psychiatrist. Agent Louisa Booth said: “We sent a psychiatric report to the CPS saying she is not fit mentally to go through this. We had professional analysis. It was ignored.”

Christine told the Mirror: “They were going to pursue the case whatever. That’s what Caroline knew in the end. There was no way out.” It is claimed Caroline may have died the night before she was due in court. The documentary reveals that she took pills and drank a minibar dry.

Prosecution lawyer Katie Weiss told the court Lewis had been hit with a lamp and police said the scene was like “a horror movie”.

Christine says Caroline maintained she hit Lewis with a phone, which he confirmed later. On January 1, a story appeared with photos from the scene showing a bed, covered in blood. Christine says the blood was Caroline’s.

At the time she texted best friend Mollie Grosberg to say: “I won’t get a fair trial. I don’t think I can cope with the shame.” When she heard the case would go ahead on February 13 she texted: “My life is over. My head is throbbing.”

She went into a meltdown, trashing her flat. Friends rushed there and rang an ambulance, but she calmed down. She told them to go home the next morning as her sister was visiting. But Jody arrived to a locked door and later learned Caroline had died.

The Met ­apologised for not keeping a record about why it charged her with assault. An Independent Office for Police Conduct review found no misconduct.

The Met said: “We have engaged with a number of independent reviews and an inquest. While there was organisational learning for us on points of process, no misconduct has been identified.”

The CPS said: “All decisions were made on the basis of the medical opinion available. A person’s celebrity status never influences whether a case is taken forward. We are satisfied the prosecution was correctly brought.”

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Caroline Flack: Search For The Truth premieres on Disney+ today. Call Samaritans on 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org. Call Refuge free on 0808 2000 247.