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Neil Sedaka, US singer and songwriter, dies age 86
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Paramount acquires Warner Bros. in $110 bn mega-merger
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Rosenior eyes extended stay to stabilise Chelsea
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Spurs struggling physically admits Tudor
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Lens held by Strasbourg in blow to Ligue 1 title chances
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NFL salary cap passes $300 mn for first time
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Wolves secure rare win to dent Villa's bid for Champions League place
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Oil prices jump on Iran attack fears while US stocks fall
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Two dead, dozens injured as tram derails in Milan
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Trump tells US govt to 'immediately' stop using Anthropic AI tech
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Court orders Greenpeace to pay $345 mn to US oil pipeline company
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IAEA stresses 'urgency' to verify Iran's nuclear material
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UN urges action to prevent full civil war in South Sudan
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Hackers steal medical details of 15 million in France
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Susan Sarandon praises Spain’s stance on Gaza
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Murray adamant size isn't everything despite losing Wales place
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Messi knocked down by fan in Puerto Rico pitch invasion
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Two killed, dozens injured as tram derails in Milan
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O'Neill taken aback by Rangers boss Rohl's comments on Celtic
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Ukrainian, Slovak leaders hold call amid energy spat
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French hard-left firebrand sparks row with 'antisemitic' Epstein jibe
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Ahmed, Jacks blast England to thrilling win over New Zealand
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UK police arrest man after Churchill statue sprayed with graffiti
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Bill Clinton denies wrongdoing at grilling on Epstein ties
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Red Cross urges Afghanistan-Pakistan 'de-escalation'
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Coup role revelations revive calls for return of Spain's ex king
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Oil prices jump on Iran attack fears, Wall Street slips on AI
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TikTok disinformation: the other weapon in Mexico violence
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Carmaker BMW to trial humanoid robots at German factory
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NASA announces overhaul of Artemis lunar program amid technical delays
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Golfer Pavan undergoes surgery after freak lift fall
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Bill Clinton faces grilling on extensive ties to Epstein
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For Roberto Cavalli designer, dreams come in all black
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Macron to set out how France's nuclear arms could protect Europe
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Spin-heavy England restrict New Zealand to 159-7 in Super Eights
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Starmer vows to fight 'extremes' after UK Labour election drubbing
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New Pokemon titles on horizon as 30th anniversary approaches
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Arteta backs Gyokeres to impact Arsenal's trophy charge
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55 Ghanaians killed after being lured into Ukraine war: govt
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OpenAI raises $110 bn in record funding round
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Medvedev swats Auger-Aliassime aside to reach Dubai final
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Stocks slide, oil jumps tracking AI and Iran
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France warns of 'provocation' if Russian drone buzzed aircraft carrier
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At Milan Fashion Week, industry's darker side goes unmentioned
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'Impressive' Maguire has Man Utd future says Carrick
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'Games you live for': Rosenior relishes Chelsea's PSG tie
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'Sacrificed futures': German chemical workers protest looming job cuts
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Scientists discover giant bird-like dinosaur in Niger desert
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Pakistan promise final flourish as they await T20 World Cup fate
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Kurdish Iranian groups in Iraq eye opportunity for change at home
Boris Johnson: Brexit hero under 'partygate' pressure
Boris Johnson has long had a socially distanced relationship with the truth, but the UK prime minister's devil-may-care insouciance was pivotal to his Conservative party's staggering election win in 2019.
For his many critics, the truth is finally catching up with a politician once described by former prime minister David Cameron as a "greased piglet" for his ability to escape political scrapes.
Johnson had weathered previous claims of mendacity, but is having a harder time shrugging off allegations that his Downing Street staff were busy partying while the rest of the country endured Covid lockdowns.
Britain's death rate from the coronavirus is second only to Russia's in Europe, and Johnson himself nearly died in the pandemic.
He has relied on a mass vaccination campaign to inoculate his political fortunes, but the drip-feed of "partygate" revelations has seen the Tories slump in the polls and calls mount for him to step down.
- Adversity -
Johnson, 57, became Conservative leader and prime minister in July 2019, consolidating power six months later with a landslide election victory on a pledge to "Get Brexit Done" -- and reap the benefits.
But despite agreeing to a trade deal with Brussels, leaving the bloc -- and ending free movement of people and workers -- has been less than orderly, and exacerbated by the pandemic.
Meanwhile, with energy prices and inflation rocketing, Johnson faces a backlash after breaking an election promise by announcing tax rises to fill budget gaps in health and social care.
But the prime minister, who admires strong Conservative predecessors such as Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher, remains adamant he is "levelling up" economic opportunity across Britain.
With some in his party nervous about UK-wide local elections coming up in May, Johnson is betting that his innate positivity and vows of future "sunlit uplands" still resonate with most voters.
But for a growing number, Johnson's negatives make him unfit for office, and he has a long trail of contentious remarks in print attacking women, gays, black people and Muslims.
- 'World king' -
Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson was born in New York in 1964. His sister said that as a child he wanted to become "world king".
He spent part of his childhood in the EU capital Brussels, where his father Stanley worked for the European Commission. He then attended the elite Eton school in England before studying Greek and Latin at Oxford University.
In his biography "Boris Johnson: The Gambler", journalist Tom Bower recounts the serial womanising that put paid to Johnson's two previous marriages and his relaxed relationship with the truth.
Johnson is believed to have seven children, including two with his third wife Carrie, 33, who gave birth to a daughter last month.
He first worked as a journalist for The Times, where he was sacked for making up a quote, and moved on to become Brussels correspondent for the Daily Telegraph newspaper.
There he made his name by writing "Euro-myths" -- exaggerated claims about the EU such as purported plans to standardise the sizes of condoms and bananas.
Johnson then entered politics but, in 2004, he was sacked from the Conservatives' shadow cabinet for lying about an extra-marital affair.
He rallied to become mayor of Labour-voting, staunchly pro-European London in 2008, an achievement commentators put down to his brazen refusal to respect convention.
- Brexit 'lies' -
Johnson felt torn about which way to leap in Britain's 2016 Brexit referendum, famously drawing up a list of pros and cons for EU membership before throwing his political charisma behind the "leave" campaign.
His popularity, and propensity for exaggeration, helped swing the campaign, and he intervened in 2019 to end the subsequent political paralysis by seizing control of the Tories from Theresa May.
Within six months, Johnson had renegotiated May's much-criticised Brexit deal, won the election and taken Britain out of the EU.
"Those who did not take him seriously were wrong," French President Emmanuel Macron said at the time. But he accused Brexiteers of indulging in "lies and false promises".
Johnson's former chief aide Dominic Cummings has now been leaking against him, including over a costly revamp of his Downing Street flat.
Cummings says he is willing to swear on oath that Johnson "lied to parliament about parties", which if true could prove terminal even for a politician with his talent for escapology.
Johnson has denied the claim.
A.F.Rosado--PC