
Polish conservative Nawrocki wins presidential vote, electoral commission says
WARSAW, June 2 (Reuters) - Polish nationalist opposition candidate Karol Nawrocki won Sunday's second round of presidential election with 50.89% of votes, the electoral commission said early on Monday on its website.
His rival, Rafal Trzaskowski, the liberal Warsaw mayor and an ally of the government led by Donald Tusk, got 49.11%.
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The Sun
15 minutes ago
- The Sun
Man Utd miss out on their Coutinho moment as Bruno Fernandes snubs Al-Hilal – so where does he fit into their plans?
OH, to be a fly on the wall of Sir Jim Ratcliffe's office when news broke that Bruno Fernandes had snubbed a mega £100million bid from Saudi Arabia. Manchester United 's part-owner could not have believed his luck when Al-Hilal offered to take captain Fernandes, who turns 31 in September, off their hands and give the Red Devils a much-needed cash injection. 3 3 Ratcliffe, who claimed the 'bloated' club was set to go 'bust at Christmas', has led a ruthless cost-cutting drive at Old Trafford — culling 450 staff including the much-loved receptionists and also withdrew free canteen food for workers at the ground. So to have the potential of receiving a nine-figure sum for a player whose legs are only going to get wearier was almost too good to be true. And it turned out to be . . . but only because Fernandes rejected Al-Hilal's advances. Even the offer of tax-free £700,000-a-week wages was not enough to lure the Portuguese star to the Middle East. Yet Fernandes ' admirable resistance has thrown United's chaotic transfer plans up in the air once again. It is back to the drawing board for Ratcliffe and manager Ruben Amorim, who are under pressure to juggle the books with Profit and Sustainability Rules after their failure to qualify for Europe. Despite Fernandes turning down the Saudi riches, the midfielder could still be a target for European clubs this summer — although the offers are unlikely to be even half the astonishing transfer fee on offer from Al-Hilal. And even if he stays, Red Devils fans will now be debating where Fernandes fits into Amorim's rebuild next season? Join SUN CLUB for the Man Utd Files every Thursday plus in-depth coverage and exclusives from Old Trafford Amorim is wedded to his 3-4-3 formation and his early transfer activity seems to match up. Wolves' Matheus Cunha has signed in a £62.5m deal and Bryan Mbeumo is now a £50m target from Brentford, with the duo expected to play in the attacking positions behind the lone striker. Bruno Fernandes enjoys dinner with Al-Hilal 'secret agent' Joao Cancelo as he faces Man Utd exit decision Amad Diallo and Alejandro Garnacho, linked with Chelsea and Napoli, are other options for the wide forward roles. That quartet is likely to see Fernandes move further back to one of the two central midfield berths which he fulfilled in the Europa League final loss to Tottenham. Amorim has other options in the centre of the park, including Manuel Ugarte, Casemiro, Kobbie Mainoo and Mason Mount. Casemiro is on big wages, Amorim knows Ugarte well from their time together at Sporting Lisbon and the United boss lavished praise on Mount following his return to fitness towards the end of the season. While homegrown talent Mainoo, 20, is an intriguing prospect. So where will Fernandes play on a regular basis? In last season's disastrous campaign, Amorim relied heavily on talismanic Fernandes to dig his woeful 15th-placed Prem side out of the mire, netting 19 times in all competitions. Failed Coutinho moment Fernandes' quality and consistency led to the eye-watering bid from Saudi and the £100m fee will play on Ratcliffe's mind in their 'Mission 21' operation to knock Liverpool "off their perch" once again. The Reds went through a similar scenario over seven years ago when they sold star man Philippe Coutinho to Barcelona for a staggering £142m. The transfer fee gave Jurgen Klopp the chance to rebuild as the German used that money to bring in Virgil van Dijk and Alisson, and his new spine delivered the Champions League and Premier League titles. If Fernandes remains at United then club legend Gary Neville believes Garnacho, Marcus Rashford, Antony and Jadon Sancho must all leave. Garnacho clashed with Amorim after the Bilbao loss to Tottenham, while the other three have all been out on loan this season. Neville said: 'If players are taking on and questioning the manager in public through social media, the manager has to win. Neville's transfer advice 'If the manager doesn't win, the manager has to leave and I don't think that's going to happen this time. That's happened far too many times before. I think Garnacho will leave purely because of that, I think they've had enough. 'Marcus has to leave for him and the club. I think that ship has sailed and he needs to find himself another club. 'It sounds to me like Villa aren't going to keep him. I would say for Marcus' and United's sake that it feels like that path has come to an end. 'I feel a little bit similarly with Jadon as I do with Marcus. I'd be a bit concerned that Chelsea haven't made the noises that they're going to keep him. United have to make sure they part ways with him. 'Antony has gone to Spain and having seen a couple of players that I played with not do it Old Trafford but do it in Spain . . . I think he's suited down to the ground and it's been proven.' Ratcliffe may have canned hundreds of local staff but he will soon discover it's much harder to get rid of superstar players who are tied down to huge contracts. 3


BBC News
23 minutes ago
- BBC News
Netherlands 1-1 Scotland: Who impressed?
Kirsty Maclean was outstanding in the middle of the park as Scotland ended a disappointing Nations League campaign with a promising 1-1 draw in the Netherlands.


Daily Mail
23 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Rolls-Royce value tops record £75bn: Defence stocks soar as governments are pushed to increase military spending
Rolls-Royce's value has topped £75billion for the first time in its 119-year history as pressure on governments to increase military spending sends defence stocks soaring. As it emerged that Nato plans to force Britain to spend 3.5 per cent of GDP on defence by 2032 – far more than the 3 per cent 'ambition' outlined by Sir Keir Starmer this week – shares across the sector rallied once again. Rolls-Royce, which makes engines for Royal Air Force fighter jets and nuclear reactors that power Royal Navy submarines, closed the day up 2.9 per cent, or 25.4p, at a record high of 894.2p. That gave the engineer a value of £75.7billion. The shares have risen almost ten-fold since 'Turbo' Tufan Erginbilgic took over as chief executive at the start of 2023 when the company was worth just £7.9billion. BAE Systems also hit a record high, rising 2 per cent, or 37.5p, to 1957p, giving it a value of £59billion and taking gains this year to 69 per cent. The company supplies the Ministry of Defence, providing everything from munitions to battlefield communications while also building warships, submarines and planes. Babcock – which was seen as a big winner from plans announced this week to build 12 nuclear-powered attack submarines as it plays a key role in servicing the Royal Navy fleet – gained another 0.9 per cent having risen more than 8 per cent on Monday. The three FTSE 100 defence groups have a combined value of £140billion having been worth just £28.5billion at the start of 2022 before Russia invaded Ukraine. Countries across Europe – including Britain – are racing to rearm in the face of Russian aggression after US President Donald Trump said the Continent must take more responsibly for its own security. In his strategic review of UK military spending announced on Monday, Starmer outlined plans to raise defence spending from 2.3 per cent of GDP to 2.5 per cent by 2027. He also outlined an 'ambition' for it to rise to 3 per cent but refused to set a date. However, Nato members are under pressure to sign up to a much higher target of 5 per cent of GDP in total – made up of 3.5 per cent on defence and 1.5 per cent on wider cyber and security.