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'Big six' face competition inquiry
Regulators will investigate whether the "big six" UK energy suppliers are preventing effective competition in the UK energy market.
Police 'fail domestic abuse victims'
Thousands of people are at risk of serious harm or even murder because of widespread failure by police in England and Wales to deal with domestic abuse, a report says.
Councils 'divert' public health cash
Councils in England are using public health budgets to fund other services, an investigation for the British Medical Journal suggests.
Clegg and Farage clash on migration
Nick Clegg and Nigel Farage have clashed over who is telling the truth about EU immigration in the first of two debates on the UK's place in the European Union.
New access to pension savings begins
The first stage of the overhaul of pensions, announced in the Budget, has come into force with retirees given greater access to their pension pots.
Sport England cuts FA funding by £1.6m
The Football Association is to lose £1.6m of public funding after a fall in the number of players at grassroots level.
PROFILE: The Sun is a daily national "red top" tabloid newspaper and the biggest-selling newspaper in the UK. Famous for its "Page 3" girls and catchy banner headlines, it is published by News Group Newspapers of News International, a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation. While throwing it's considerable mass influence behind Tony Blair's New Labour, politically, the paper's stance was less clear under Prime Minister Gordon Brown with numerous editorials critical of Brown's policies and often more supportive of those of then Conservative leader David Cameron. On election day (6 May 2010), The Sun urged its readers to vote for David Cameron's "modern and positive" Conservatives in order to save Britain from "disaster". Profile extracted from Wikipedia and used under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.