Two Just Stop Oil protesters have sprayed Rolex’s London store with orange paint from a fire extinguisher.
The two activists defaced the front of the luxury jewellers in Knightsbridge at around 8.30am, the group said.
It comes after three weeks of daily protests, which have included climbing 200ft above the Dartford Crossing and people gluing themselves to several roads.
Adrian Johnson, 56, a former deputy headteacher from Perthshire in Scotland said: “The science is clear. The breakdown of the climate is here and it is due to the extraction and use of fossil fuels. Any new fossil fuel projects will cause irreparable damage to the climate. This may have already happened.
“And yet, this is the path our government is following by granting over 100 new oil and gas licences. It makes no sense and it’s reckless beyond belief.”
Jennifer Kowalski, 26, an environmental scientist from Glasgow, said: “People around the world are starving, suffering and dying so an elite can spend vast fortunes on vanity items.”
Just Stop Oil wants the government to suspend all new fossil fuel licences.
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The Met Police said they were “quickly on the scene” by 8.43am and arrested two protesters on suspicion of criminal damage.
“They have been taken into custody at a central London police station,” a spokesperson said.
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JSO activsits spray luxury car dealerships with orange paint
Speaking to Sky News, Professor Lorenzo Fioramonti, director of the University of Surrey’s Institute for Sustainability, said the group’s “strategies are backfiring”.
They also risk “dividing the ecological front” and “tainting the cause” of groups who are engaged in constructive dialogue with governments, fossil foil producers and big business, he added.
The defence secretary has insisted Donald Trump is committed to NATO and is right to push other European nations to put more funding into the security alliance.
John Healey dismissed suggestions the US president-elect will pull out of NATO, the military alliance consisting of 30 European countries and the US and Canada, after previous reports Mr Trump has discussed doing so.
Mr Healey told Sky News: “I don’t expect the US to turn away from NATO.
“They recognise the importance of the alliance, they recognise the importance of avoiding further conflict in Europe.
“But, I do say, and I’ve argued for some time, that the European nations in NATO need to do more of the heavy lifting.”
He added that Mr Trump “rightly pushed European nations to do more to fund NATO better”.
The defence secretary said the US commitment to NATO remained through the previous Trump administration and he has no reason to think that support will discontinue during his second term.
Mr Trump has repeatedly criticised NATO and complained about the US contributing too much of its budget to the alliance while accusing European countries of spending too little on defence.
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During the election campaign, he said the US would only help defend NATO members from a future attack by Russia if they met their spending obligations.
Members pledged to spend at least 2% of GDP on defence by 2024, with 23 of the 32 countries expected to do so by the end of the year.
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NATO chief on Trump and world security
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Poland, which shares a border with Ukraine and the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad, is the biggest spender at 4.1% of GDP, Estonia is second with 3.4% and the US is third with 3.4%.
The UK comes ninth on the list, reaching 2.3% of GDP under the previous Conservative government.
Mr Healey said his government has committed to spending 2.5% of GDP on defence but did not give a timeline for that goal to be reached.
He said Labour was starting to make good on their promise by increasing defence spending by £3bn next year.
“That’s a sign of a government that recognises the first duty of any government is to defend the country and keep our citizens safe,” he added.
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Mr Trump spoke to Russian President Vladimir Putin after the American’s win, and told him not to escalate the war in Ukraine, according to The Washington Post and Reuters, although the Kremlin denied the phone call took place on Monday.
Several sources familiar with the call told them the president-elect reminded Mr Putin of the US’s sizeable military presence in Europe and discussed the goal of peace on the continent.
Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes on the Humber estuary is a constituency that stitches together a town that once laid claim to being the biggest fishing port in the world at the height of the industrial revolution and the more Conservative-leaning seaside resort and rural villages around Cleethorpes.
This new constituency was a bellwether seat in the 2024 general election, sitting at the heart of the “red wall” in Brexit-backing Lincolnshire. A key seat in the Labour-Conservative battleground, this is a place Sir Keir Starmer had to take back on his path to power. And he did.
It was a big symbolic win for Labour as the party took back Great Grimsby, which had been Labour since the Second World War but flipped to Boris Johnson’s Conservatives in 2019 and took the more rural and affluent Cleethorpes too.
But the bigger story on the night was that the Labour vote was as shallow as it was wide, and what I mean by that is Sir Keir’s massive working majority of 165 seats was won on the lowest vote share of any government since the Second World War.
As landslides go, this one was built on particularly shaky ground. The victory was as much the story of a rejection of the Conservatives and the rise of other parties as a tale of a country embracing Labour.
Millions of votes went to Reform and the Liberal Democrats, as the Conservatives suffered their worst-ever election defeat. Nigel Farage’s Reform party won around 14% of all votes cast, returned a record five MPs to parliament and came second in more than 100 others, 89 of which were Labour seats, including Great Grimsby.
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Ask those in Number 10 and they are all too aware that the realignment towards the populist, nationalist right – as seen in other Western democracies – is a very real prospect here, with those leaders – not least Nigel Farage – emboldened by Trump’s emphatic victory in the US.
With Germany and France both facing a real threat from the far right in national elections in 2025 and 2027 respectively, Sir Keir could soon find himself as the last major centre-left leader standing in the continent.
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Sir Keir also is under no illusion that he will face the wrath of voters should he fail to deliver on the promises he made in the July general election, and the budget was the downpayment if you like on those pledges as we finally saw the true contours of this Labour government. This was a budget as historic and hefty in its tax and spend plan for Britain as the Labour’s manifesto was fiscally vague. At its heart, a huge investment in public services, and in particular the NHS, and front-loaded to the first two years of this parliament.
That’s the plan, but how is it landing? During the general election campaign, Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes were Sky News’ target towns. We wanted to see the election through the eyes of those voters both sides desperately needed to win and the centrepiece of that effort was our leaders’ event at Grimsby Town Hall, in which an audience of undecided voters put their questions to Sir Keir and Rishi Sunak. On the night, a snap poll by YouGov gave Sir Keir the win by a margin of two to one.
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From June: Grimsby audience members react to leaders’ event
After the budget, we returned to Grimsby to see how it, and the new government, had been received with three of those voters – Amy, Sharon and Caiman – who asked questions at the Sky News Battle for Number 10 election event.
It has, after all, been a difficult start for the Labour government, and the budget wasn’t exactly as advertised in the run-up to the election. I wanted to find out how this trio thought Sir Keir was doing.
‘It’s felt chaotic’
Two of the big themes of the show were around trust and tax. Sharon, a lifelong Labour supporter who works in the care sector and lives in Grimsby, had really wanted to know how Sir Keir intended to “improve outcomes” for disadvantaged residents and if the now prime minister really wouldn’t put up taxes in order to invest.
Sharon, watching her question back, agreed that it had been the right question to ask and told me that, far from being protected as a “working person” in the budget, she thinks she’ll be indirectly taxed as employers pass on the £25bn of national insurance tax hikes either to employees through lower pay or consumers through higher prices at the shops.
“I’m hoping it comes off, because it feels like a gamble, because he said it’s all dependent on growth,” she said. “I did vote Labour, I’ve always voted Labour, but the Labour I’m seeing so far – there’s been so much – it’s felt chaotic.”
Amy, a former chair of her local Conservative party, couldn’t bring herself to vote for Mr Sunak and ended up voting Liberal Democrat in an election where she said trust was her main concern.
During the leaders’ debate, she told Mr Sunak that actions taken by his government around “partygate” and his decision to leave the D-Day celebrations early had made her feel ashamed and left the Conservative party’s reputation shattered.
She told me that trust was still her big issue four months on from the general election: “[Trust] is a huge issue here. I don’t think this government has covered themselves in glory.” And when it comes to Sir Keir and the budget, Amy said the prime minister talked about bringing growth to the country “which is absolutely what is needed”.
She added: “How has he done that? By, you know, putting the burden on businesses to grow. That’s just not there.”
For Caiman, his was the question that foreshadowed concerns plaguing the early days of Sir Keir’s premiership – that this was a prime minister lacking a human touch and struggling to give voters a vision to justify the tough choices he was making.
Caiman said that while he’d once liked his genuineness, the Labour leader had “formed into more of a politician than the person that I would have voted for to run the country”, telling the prime minister: “You seem more like a political robot.”
Four months in Caiman was still of that view: “Anyone that’s human who has a heart wouldn’t have taken the winter fuel allowance pensioners. I feel like he’s still a robot.”
Of the budget, he said: “It almost feels like a bit of a punishment rather than what we all know, that we need to chip in for our public services. But it’s back to the point about the messaging. Nobody’s laid that out for the ordinary person.”
I was left in no doubt from this trio that the jury’s out on the new government. When I asked them to mark the first fourth months out of 10, Amy gave Sir Keir five, Caiman gave him a four and Sharon, once the loyal Labour supporter, told me: “I’d rather not say at the moment.”
Even the local MP, Melanie Onn, who lost her seat in 2019 but won it back for Labour in 2024, admits she was surprised by the scale of the Labour budget. “I was [surprised], which I was told to stop keep saying that.”
But this was a “bold budget” that she welcomed. “We need to be bold and we need to do everything that we can to try to turn things around as quickly as possible and that means investment, so for me, I was really pleased to see that there was an acceptance that you can’t growth the economy without investing and getting things like our public services back on track.”
‘It’s been a bit of a rocky start’
It matters all the more for Ms Onn, who is well aware that her victory was partial. Yes, she won the seat back, but Reform ran well in not just her seat but dozens of other red wall places that had been traditionally Labour but where voters are now looking for a new political home.
“I think that there was a sense of people who had voted for the Conservatives in 2019 looking for a new home,” she explained. “A lot of those people, they’d given Boris Johnson and the Conservatives a go and that hadn’t really worked. And so they were going to go for Reform, who, of course, making lots of lots of promises that they knew really that they didn’t have to stand up.
“For anybody who perhaps wasn’t convinced by Labour this election, because it’s fair to say that not everybody was, we asked them what their big issues were and they said the NHS and immigration and Reform had a response on those two issues.”
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For Ms Onn, the budget now sets the direction for a government that has put cutting waiting lists at the heart of its early years with a £25bn investment in the health service in the next two years.
“You’d be blind not to say it’s been a bit of a rocky start to the Labour government. I think that really we we’re waiting for the budget. I think it sets a very clear direction and we’re going to work really hard to turn the country around and deliver the change that people want to see.”
Her piece of the red wall has been won back, but never before has a political landslide stood on such shaky ground. Sir Kier and his chancellor are gambling that his big budget will, in time, pay off and see off the populist threat by persuading voters about his promise of change.
A motorist says he is “lucky” to be alive after he was injured in a collision with a stolen lorry – as the worst areas for uninsured drivers are revealed.
Ian Lee was travelling home when a stolen truck with cloned number plates struck his car in an “almighty crash” in Wakefield, West Yorkshire – before the driver fled on foot.
The 60-year-old’s car was badly damaged in the collision, with “shards of glass all over the passenger seat and dashboard”.
He told of his ordeal as new data from the Motor Insurers’ Bureau (MIB) shows the worst offending areas for uninsured driving in the UK.
Locations in the West Midlands account for eight of the top 15 hotspots, which also include areas in Northumbria, London, Thames Valley, South Yorkshire and Greater Manchester.
Describing how the stolen lorry crash happened, Mr Lee said: “I’d just set off from the traffic lights and, all of a sudden, there was an almighty crash.
“I was shunted over to the other side of the road and it was all a bit of a blur. I got out to have a look and saw this lorry on my car.”
Mr Lee injured his shoulder in the crash in November 2021, needing injections over the coming months – and he still feels pain from the injury to this day.
“When I look back, actually I was really, really lucky to get out of that one,” he said.
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On average, every 20 minutes someone in the UK is hit by an uninsured or hit-and-run driver – and each day at least one person suffers injuries so severe they need life-long care, according to the MIB.
It has launched itsOperation Drive Insured campaign this week in collaboration with UK police forces to get uninsured drivers off the road.
The top 15 postal hotspots for uninsured driving, based on two years of MIB claim data, are all in England:
The MIB said 30 claims against uninsured drivers from Croydon were submitted – the highest number in one postal district in the UK. However, due to the dense population of the area, it only ranked 176th on the hotspot list.
This week, road policing units will be carrying out additional checks on motorists in problem areas in a bid to tackle uninsured drivers.
So far this year, almost 115,000 uninsured drivers have had their vehicle seized, the MIB said.
It estimates injuries caused by uninsured and hit-and-run drivers potentially cost the economy nearly £2.4bn a year in emergency services, medical care, loss of productivity and human costs.
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Uninsured drivers receive a £300 fixed penalty notice and six points on their licence. If stopped by police, uninsured vehicles may be seized – with a third going on to be crushed.
Those who end up in court could also receive an unlimited fine and a driving ban.