
How the Goves kept up with the Camerons: the cost of richer friends
I f you're keeping up with the revelations from Sarah Vine's new Westminster wife's kiss'n'tell you will know that the best bit of How Not to Be a Political Wife so far is the Gove's fallout with the Camerons.
Vine, now the former Mrs Michael Gove and free to do her worst, takes us back to the very beginning (before the Tories did well enough at the 2010 election for Dave and Sam to take up residence in Downing Street … Chequers karaoke nights ahoy!) and painstakingly walks us through the gradual unspooling of their friendship.
Was it Brexit that broke these two couples apart — Gove supported Leave, Dave Remain, remember — or was the friendship holed below the waterline by Cameron demoting his friend from minister for education to chief whip two years previously? Hard to say, but the other strong possibility, as Vine admits, is that their relationship was always on a ticking timer with the less powerful Goves scrabbling to keep up with their more affluent and powerful Notting Hill set chums.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
County Durham women first in North East to have heart procedure
A patient who was one of a region's first to have a new heart procedure says it helped her get her life Wells, from Peterlee, and Lindel Carre, from Durham, were the first in north-east England to receive a tricuspid transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER), at Middlesbrough's James Cook University is designed to treat tricuspid regurgitation, a condition where one of the heart's valves becomes leaky, causing fatigue, leg swelling, and breathlessness. Ms Wells said she felt she "didn't have a life" before the procedure but she "didn't think that way now – that's the difference it's made to me". The retired nurse previously had a successful mitral valve replacement using open heart surgery in 2021. However, she began experiencing increasing breathlessness in recent years."Leading up to Christmas, I was wrapping presents with family, and I was thinking 'this is the last time I'm going to be doing this'," she said."I could barely walk three or four steps without having to stop to get my breath back." Tricuspid regurgitation is usually difficult to manage with medication alone and open heart surgery can be too high risk for older is a safer alternative and involves inserting a small clip through a vein in the groin to reduce the leak in the valve. 'Incredibly rewarding' Ms Wells and Ms Carre had the procedure on 6 Carre, 83, said she saw a lot of improvements almost straight retired teacher had been suffering with the heaviness of her legs caused by her worsening valve condition. "I have much more energy, no breathlessness, and I can drive further than I could before – I'm more confident and more independent," she procedures were performed by the hospital's TEER team, led by cardiology consultants Paul Williams, Seth Vijayan and Richard Williams said it was "incredibly rewarding" to see patients experience such an improvement in their quality of life. Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
Post-Brexit pet travel scheme comes into effect
A new scheme aimed at simplifying post-Brexit pet travel between Great Britain and Northern Ireland has come into Brexit, Northern Ireland remained part of the EU's animal health zone while Great Britain was has meant pets being taken from Great Britain to Northern Ireland have required rabies vaccinations and a new travel certificate for each new Pet Travel Document (PTD) will be valid for the pet's lifetime and the requirement for rabies vaccination has been dropped. What does the Pet Travel Document mean? A spokesperson for the UK's Department of Environment said pet owners and assistance dog users who are travelling from Great Britain to Northern Ireland "can now apply for a free pet travel document that's quick and easy to get online, and will last the pet's lifetime"."This is in stark contrast to the old system, which required pet owners to obtain expensive health treatments and cumbersome journey certificates from a vet every time they travelled," they main conditions of the PTD scheme are that the pet must be microchipped and the owner must sign a form saying the animal will not be brought into the Republic of scheme covers dogs, cats and ferrets. There are separate arrangements for other arrangements only apply to pet owners living in Great Ireland residents returning home from Great Britain do not require the travel document but their pet must be PTD is part of the Windsor Framework, Northern Ireland's revised Brexit deal, which amended the original NI Protocol agreement. 'Imposes a pet passport scheme' The scheme has been criticised by the Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV) MP Jim Allister who said its impact has been overstated as the original requirements were not being fully in a House of Commons debate last year, he said: "I take issue with the minister saying that this is an improvement. "The original propositions of the protocol were never implemented."The grace periods remain the current position, which is that no pet passports, no documentation and no requirement to be part of a pet scheme is needed to bring your pet from Great Britain to the other part of the United Kingdom."What these regulations do is impose a pet passport scheme."Guide Dogs NI said it was pleased with the progress and clarity surrounding pet advised those travelling from Great Britain to Northern Ireland with a guide dog should plan in advance, as the process to issue one takes up to five working Search and Rescue Dog Association Ireland North (SARDA IN) expressed strong support for the said the policy simplifies travel for its highly-trained search and rescue UK and EU are working on an agrifood deal that will reduce the impact of the "Irish Sea border', but it is understood that it will not remove the need for the PTD.


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
Sellafield could leak radioactive water until 2050s, MPs warn
The UK's largest nuclear site could continue leaking radioactive water until the 2050s, MPs have warned, while its clean-up operations struggle to progress quickly Public Accounts Committee (PAC) criticised the speed of decommissioning work at Sellafield in Cumbria, citing "cost overruns and continuing safety concerns" in a report published on Wednesday. Although the committee noted there were "signs of improvement", PAC chairman Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown said Sellafield continued to present "intolerable risks".The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA) acknowledged the leak at its Magnox Swarf Storage Silo (MSSS) was its "single biggest environmental issue". The MSSS, which the NDA described as "the most hazardous building in the UK", has been leaking radioactive water into the ground since 2018, releasing enough to fill an Olympic swimming pool every three is likely to continue leaking until the oldest section of the building has been emptied in the 2050s, about a decade later than previously Geoffrey said: "As with the fight against climate change, the sheer scale of the hundred-year timeframe of the decommissioning project makes it hard to grasp the immediacy of safety hazards and cost overruns that delays can have."Every day at Sellafield is a race against time to complete works before buildings reach the end of their life. "Our report contains too many signs that this is a race that Sellafield risks losing." Pointing to the fact that Sellafield Ltd had missed most of its annual targets for retrieving waste from buildings, including the MSSS, the committee warned: "The consequence of this underperformance is that the buildings are likely to remain extremely hazardous for longer."A spokeswoman for the NDA said the "leak in the Magnox Swarf Storage Silo is contained and does not pose a risk to the public". "Regulators accept that the current plan to tackle the leak is the most effective one." 'False dawn' Sir Geoffrey said it was of "vital importance that the government grasp the daily urgency of the work taking place at Sellafield and shed any sense of a far-off date of completion for which no-one currently living is responsible"."Sellafield's risks and challenges are those of the present day."There are some early indications of some improvement in Sellafield's delivery, which our report notes. "The government must do far more to hold all involved immediately accountable to ensure these do not represent a false dawn, and to better safeguard both the public purse and the public itself." Sellafield ceased generating electricity in 2003 and, in addition to work cleaning up the site, now processes and stores nuclear waste from power plants around the government plans to create an underground geological disposal facility (GDF) to store nuclear waste for the thousands of years it will take to become the committee said delays in creating the GDF, which is now not expected to be complete until the late 2050s, meant more costs for chief executive David Peattie said it welcomed the report, adding it took the "findings seriously and the safety of the site and the wellbeing of our people will always be our highest priorities"."We are pleased they recognise improvements in delivering major projects and that we are safely retrieving waste from all four highest hazard facilities." The PAC expressed concern there was a "sub-optimal culture" at Sellafield and called on the NDA to publish information about the prevalence and perception of bullying in its annual NDA spokeswoman said: "We're committed to an open and respectful culture and we've taken decisive action to enable this, including strengthening our whistleblowing policy."The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said it "expected the highest standards of safety and security as former nuclear sites are dismantled, and the regulator is clear that public safety is not compromised at Sellafield"."This is underpinned by monthly performance reviews and increased responsibility for overseeing major project performance, enabling more direct scrutiny and intervention," a spokeswoman for the department said. "We have zero tolerance of bullying, harassment and offensive behaviour in the workplace - we expect Sellafield and the NDA to operate on this basis, investigate allegations and take robust action when needed." Follow BBC Cumbria on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.