practical and sensible ways of delivering homes and our record on this is fantastic. as i said, 2.2 million homes since 2010 and we are not stopping there. not stopping there. speaking of locally elected not stopping there. speaking of locally elected representatives, not stopping there. speaking of- locally elected representatives, one of your colleagues, anthony brown, says he will do everything he can to stop nonsense plans for a mass house building in cambridge. will you face down those in your party who oppose your plans? ila you face down those in your party who oppose your plans? you face down those in your party who oppose your plans? no one is doinu who oppose your plans? no one is doing mass who oppose your plans? no one is doing mass house-building - who oppose your plans? no one is doing mass house-building in - doing mass house building in cambridge. this is about adding a new urban quarter in cambridge, which is what local communities have spoken about and that will
directing a terrorist organisation. the housing secretary michael gove setting out how the government intends to meet its housing targets. they are committed to build 1 million new homes by 2024, missed ago says development will focus on cities and will not mean concreting over the countryside. cinemas say they have had their busiest weekend since before the pandemic thanks to the opening of barbie and oppenheimer. worldwide barbie has taken £293 million at the box office. those are your news headlines, john bennett has the sport. good morning. australia legend glenn mcgrath says he wants to see a different mindset from the team during the final test match at the oval on thursday. england dominated the fourth test before rain forced the match to end as a draw. england captain ben stokes says they were pretty much perfect throughout the whole game. rory mcilroy says he has got plenty left to play for this year after missing out on his last chance to win a major in 2023. he finished joi
North Sydney Council's ballooning legal bill comes as a new report from the NSW Productivity Commission finds the city's most affluent suburbs must become higher and denser to arrest the housing crisis.