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By Martin Foskett | Newswire | Knelstrom Media The headlines screamed it before the ink was even dry: "Moldova votes for Europe!" Trumpets blaring, bureaucrats beaming, the whole spectacle sold as a historic embrace of democracy. But scratch the gloss, peer at the numbers, and you find something far stranger, a country of 3.6 million people, half of whom didn't even turn up, choosing its destiny with a shrug.
By Martin Foskett / Newswire / Knelstrom Media Angela Rayner's resignation wasn't just another ministerial scalp tossed onto the Westminster bonfire. It was an earthquake dressed as a clerical error, a demolition job disguised as paperwork. A slip over stamp duty, they said, but the tremors still shake the Cabinet Office and rattle Starmer's teacups. And in her absence, two ghosts rush into the gap: Jeremy Corbyn, rattling his chains with a new party stitched from old banners, and Nigel Farage, circling with a pint in hand, ready to gut Labour's northern heartlands.
By Martin Foskett / Newswire / Knelstrom Media The White House tomorrow will play host to the most absurd diplomatic jamboree since the Yalta Conference, only this time it's not cigars, cognac and Roosevelt's grim smile, it's a gang of over-dressed European leaders in dark suits, marching into Trump's lair like second-hand furniture salesmen, dragging poor Zelensky behind them as a mascot of endless war. Sir Keir Starmer, freshly polished and painfully earnest, is among them, desperate to prove Britain is still relevant and avoid another Oval Office debacle like Zelensky's humiliating trip in February.
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