- Evening Standard
What's on in June — top things to do in London this month
From Chaka Khan to Loverboy, here’s a few highlights of what to get up to across town this month
- The Telegraph
British Airways passengers to get Amazon-style booking app
British Airways passengers are to get Amazon-style app booking where flights can be secured in just a few clicks in an overhaul of the company’s decades-old website.
- PA Media: UK News
Remaining Spitfires all have a story to tell, says restoration engineer
Biggin Hill Heritage Hangar is believed to be the largest Spitfire restoration and passenger flight hangar in the world.
- HuffPost UK
Those Star-Studded Knives Out Cast Announcements Aren't Done Yet
The surprises just keep on coming.
- BBC
Mexico elects Claudia Sheinbaum as first woman president
Claudia Sheinbaum has beaten her rival, Xóchitl Gálvez, by a wide margin to become Mexico's next leader.
- Reuters
European shares kick-start week higher, focus on ECB rate verdict
The pan-European STOXX 600 was up 0.5% by 0728 GMT, extending gains for the third straight session. The sentiment was upbeat as China's factory activity grew at the fastest pace in about two years in May, while a softer U.S. inflation print on Friday continued to spur hopes of interest rate cuts this year by the Federal Reserve. All eyes will now remain focused on the ECB's interest rate decision on Thursday, where the central bank is expected to cut borrowing costs by 25 basis points from its
- The Canadian Press
Mexico's first woman president faces pressing gender-related issues
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Claudia Sheinbaum’s name will go down in Mexican history. The governing party candidate won Mexico’s presidential election on Sunday, a turning point in a mostly conservative nation that for more than two centuries has been exclusively ruled by men. Elsewhere in Latin America, women have presided over Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Nicaragua, Honduras, Ecuador, El Salvador, Panama, Haiti and Costa Rica. Mexican women won the right to vote in 1953. No law prevented female c