‘Nearly 22,000 reported incidents of racial abuse and discrimination against nursing staff in just three years, with the true figure likely far higher.’

Disgraceful behaviour

They rush to save the lives of strangers without hesitation or judgment. They do not ask your background, your beliefs or where you were born. Yet the racism inflicted upon our nurses – the very people who keep us alive – is a stain on every ward it touches and a disgrace to this country. Nearly 22,000 reported incidents of racial abuse and discrimination against nursing staff in just three years, with the true figure likely far higher.

One incident every 51 minutes. On NHS wards. Directed at the people caring for us in our darkest moments. A nurse told she cannot treat a patient because of the colour of her skin. A colleague mocked for praying during Ramadan. A senior staff member openly declaring hatred towards Indian people. The racists making such comments show Britain at its ugliest. These nurses are the beating heart of the NHS we all cherish. The same hands that dress wounds, comfort grieving families and save lives deserve far more than poisonous bigotry.

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Reform will exploit Labour chaos

Keir Starmer is right not to indulge demands for a departure timetable while Britain faces serious economic and political pressures. A Prime Minister setting an expiry date for himself in the middle of turmoil would only deepen uncertainty and encourage even more briefing, plotting and paralysis. The country needs stability, not Westminster treating politics like a never-ending leadership contest.

That does not mean Labour can ignore the anger voters are expressing. Andy Burnham is right to warn that too many communities feel battered by decades of decline, hollowed-out town centres and local services left struggling. People want politics to improve the places they live, not for politicians to obsess over themselves. But whether it is to be Sir Keir, Mr Burnham or Wes Streeting who leads us into the next election, they would do well to heed the words of David Lammy. A brief period of introspection may be tolerated, but months of Labour tearing itself apart would only clear a path for Nigel Farage and Reform UK to exploit the chaos.

Golf underdog

In Rocky Balboa’s backyard, Aaron Rai delivered a champion’s story even scriptwriters would struggle to write. The Wolverhampton underdog, famous for wearing two gloves, battled through golf’s toughest test to claim the US PGA title. Backed by unwavering dedication and huge family sacrifice, Aaron’s triumph is a reminder of what hard work can achieve.

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