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Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner has been spotted raving with a top DJ at a superclub in Ibiza.

Video footage shows Ms Rayner dancing enthusiastically in a DJ booth while being cheered on by the crowd at Hi Ibiza, a 5,000-capacity club on the Spanish party island.

Actress and singer Denise van Outen posted the footage on Instagram on Thursday night of the housing minister wearing a red dress that would not be out of place in the House of Commons.

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Pic: vanouten_denise

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Pic: vanouten_denise

Sir Keir Starmer’s number two could be seen singing along to a remix of Gotye’s hit song Somebody That I Used to Know.

The 44-year-old jumped up and down as the beat dropped, while Australian house and techno DJ FISHER placed his headphones around her neck and the pair then hugged.

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Pic: vanouten_denise

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Pic: vanouten_denise

Van Outen, 50, posted the video as part of a series of Instagram images she captioned: “Including a surprise DJ booth rave up with Angela Rayner.”

It is not known how long Ms Rayner is in Ibiza for. She is due back in parliament on Monday when the parliamentary summer recess finishes.

Pic: vanouten_denise
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Pic: vanouten_denise

The minister has previously spoken about her love of raving and drinking strong cocktails, as well as her addiction to vaping.

Speaking to comedian Matt Forde at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival last year, she revealed she had just returned from Spain, although it is not clear if it was Ibiza.

“The girls I was raving with are half my age, and I was like ‘I’m a grandma’. I was proud of that,” she said.

“4pm I started, and I got home at six o’clock in the morning when the sun was shining and I was like, ‘Yes, I can do it’.”

She said she managed to stay up by drinking vodka.

“You’ve got to go with the music, the vibes, you’ve got to be in the moment and it takes you,” she added.

Ms Rayner also revealed she makes a “lethal” cocktail at home called Venom, made using a bottle of vodka, a bottle of Southern Comfort, 10 bottles of Blue WKD and a litre of orange juice.

She said “everyone will have a good time” with it and revealed she invited her two youngest children’s primary school headteacher over and he had to take his wife home after she had the cocktail.

“One of my local councillors, I found her curled up in the dog’s bed with the dog,” she added.

The minister said her children call her “The Vape Dragon” because she is addicted to vaping.

Ms Rayner is not the first minister to be spotted enjoying a dance in a club.

Conservative Michael Gove, Cabinet Office minister at the time, was filmed busting some dance moves at a nightclub in Aberdeen in the early hours of the morning in August 2021.

Dressed in a suit with no tie and appearing to be on his own, the newly-single Tory MP was spotted on the dancefloor at the Bohemia club as it hosted a techno and jungle night.

The manager said Mr Gove told him: “I love to dance.”

The Labour Party has been contacted for a comment.

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Police appeal after man charged with murdering two women and raping third

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Police appeal after man charged with murdering two women and raping third

Police have appealed for information after a man was charged with murdering two women and raping a third.

Simon Levy has been charged with murdering 53-year-old Carmenza Valencia-Trujillo who died on the Aylesbury Estate, south-east London, on 17 March, the Metropolitan Police said.

In September, Levy, of Beaufoy Road, Tottenham, north London, was charged with murdering 39-year-old Sheryl Wilkins who was found unresponsive in High Road, Tottenham, on 24 August.

He is also accused of grievous bodily harm with intent, non-fatal strangulation and two counts of rape against a third woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, in Haringey, north London, on 21 January, police said.

The 40-year-old will appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday charged with Ms Valencia-Trujillo’s murder.

Sheryl Wilkins was found unresponsive in High Road, Tottenham, on 24 August. Pic: Metropolitan Police
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Sheryl Wilkins was found unresponsive in High Road, Tottenham, on 24 August. Pic: Metropolitan Police

He is also due to appear at the Old Bailey on Wednesday for a plea and trial preparation hearing for the murder of Ms Wilkins.

Detectives believe there may be individuals who have information relevant to this investigation – or who are yet to report incidents which have directly impacted them – and are asking for people to come forward.

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Family of woman killed 56 years ago, in a case of mistaken identity, believe her remains are buried in a garden

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Family of woman killed 56 years ago, in a case of mistaken identity, believe her remains are buried in a garden

The family of murder victim Muriel McKay believe her remains are buried in a garden in east London, the High Court has heard.

Ms McKay was officially declared dead by a High Court judge earlier this month, 56 years after being kidnapped.

The 55-year-old was taken from her London home by Nizamodeen and his brother Arthur Hosein in December 1969.

They mistook her for Anna, the wife of media mogul Rupert Murdoch.

Ms McKay’s husband was newspaper executive Alick McKay, the deputy to newspaper mogul Rupert Murdoch.

The kidnappers realised their mistake, but still demanded a £1m ransom for her safe return.

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The two Hosein brothers were convicted and jailed for life in one of the first murder trials without a body. Arthur Hosein died in prison.

On Monday, barristers for two of Ms McKay’s children, Ian McKay and Dianne Levinson, asked a judge to order that the homeowners of two neighbouring properties on Bethnal Green Road allow the family to conduct a “ground-penetrating radar survey” of a shared back garden.

One of the homeowners, Madeleine Higson, opposes the injunction bid, which would also stop her from disturbing the garden.

Mr Justice Richard Smith said he will hand down his judgment at 2pm on Tuesday, stating the case involved “not uncomplicated legal sensitivities”.

Speaking following the hearing, Ms McKay’s grandson Mark Dyer said the bid to discover her remains was “important to the whole family”.

He said: “We do not want to be felt sorry for, we just actually want to get on and … scan the place, check for my grandmother.

“We’ve been told she’s there, most probably there, so we need to pick her up.

“She would like to come home for Christmas this year and what is left of her is purely some remains, some bones.

“They should find a place where the family can go and visit, where whoever’s interested in what happened to her should go and visit, and that’s the right thing to do.”

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UK to launch new ‘national day’ to remember victims and survivors of terrorism

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UK to launch new 'national day' to remember victims and survivors of terrorism

A new “national day” to honour victims and survivors of terrorism will be added to the calendar from next year, it has been revealed.

The annual commemoration will fall on 21 August, and will be marked in a different place each year to recognise the widespread impact of terrorism around the country.

It comes after a 12-week public consultation showed 91% supported the plan for a national day, and 84% strongly supported the proposal.

Flowers left in St Ann's Square, Manchester, to remember the Manchester Arena terror attack. Pic: PA
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Flowers left in St Ann’s Square, Manchester, to remember the Manchester Arena terror attack. Pic: PA

How the day will look, including a final name and symbol, will be worked out collaboratively between survivors and ministers, according to the Home Office.

But it will “honour and remember victims and survivors of terrorism”, encouraging survivors to access specialist support, spotlighting their stories, and educating the public.

A spokesperson for the Home Office confirmed that it would not be a bank holiday.

Jo Berry, whose father Sir Anthony Berry was killed in the IRA Brighton hotel bombing in 1984, said victims of terrorism would no longer be “a footnote of history”.

Jo Berry, whose father was killed in the Brighton bombing in 1984, with convicted bomber Patrick Magee in 2004. File pic: PA
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Jo Berry, whose father was killed in the Brighton bombing in 1984, with convicted bomber Patrick Magee in 2004. File pic: PA

She said: “What we remember as a nation matters. It sends a signal about what we value.

“For too long, survivors of terror attacks, and those who have been killed in them, have been a footnote of history. Survivors have felt ignored and forgotten.

“That’s why Survivors Against Terror launched a campaign for a new national day of memorial three years ago.”

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Travis Frain, who survived the Westminster Bridge attack in 2017, also backed the campaign.

He said: “A national day would provide an opportunity to remember those we have lost, to pay tribute to the bravery and resilience of those who have survived these heinous acts, and for us to look forward to the future to educate the next generation.”

The date was chosen to coincide with the UN International Day of Remembrance and Tribute to the Victims of Terrorism.

Plans have also been announced for a new support hub to help victims in the aftermath of terror attacks.

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