A "street party" protest by anti-cuts campaigners outside Deputy Prime Minister Nick Cleggs home in south-west London ends peacefully.
Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness offers to hold talks with dissident republicans, saying their violence is "a pathetic and futile attempt to turn back the clock".
The Home Office draws up contingency plans to cope with a possible large increase in immigration from Greece if the euro collapses.
A senior Protestant clergyman says talks with Sinn Fein about reconciliation have been "open and frank".
Twelve English High Streets - from Cornwall to Northumberland - will share a £1.2m pot of government cash to rejuvenate shopping areas.
The Northern Ireland Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness says republicans have been talking privately to a "very significant group of Protestants and unionists".
Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt addressed News Corp lobbyist Fred Michel as "daddy" and "mon ami" in text messages released by the Leveson Inquiry.
Iain Duncan Smith demands to see A4e legal advice given to Labour as Chris Grayling casts doubt on whistleblowers integrity.
Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunts main aim was to "reach a fair and unbiased decision" on News Corps bid for broadcaster BSkyB, his departments most senior civil servant tells the Leveson Inquir...
The chief executive of the Student Loans Company, who attracted controversy over his tax arrangements, is to stand down when his contract expires early next year.
Farm labourers could be at greater risk of exploitation under government plans to reduce regulation of gangmasters, unions warn.
A Labour MP says on Twitter an annoying rail passenger should be killed "before he could breed" - comments she later insists were "flippant".
Senior Chinese leader Wu Bangguo has cancelled a trip to the UK in protest at David Camerons meeting with the Dalai Lama.
Former Prime Minister Tony Blair is to appear before the Leveson Inquiry on Monday.
The "yes" campaign for independence wants one million Scots to sign a declaration of support by the time of the referendum in the autumn of 2014.
Fewer decisions about the care of children will be made on the advice of poorly qualified experts under new family court rules to be introduced this year.
London mayor Boris Johnson names a senior BBC journalist as his new director of communications.
The MoD has pressed ahead with cuts to military and civilian workforce without understanding what skills it will need in the future, MPs say.
A new NHS patient rating system - known as the "friends and family test" - is to be introduced to help improve nursing care in England.
Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt sent a note to David Cameron suggesting his support for News Corps bid for BSkyB before he was put in charge of deciding on the deal, the Leveson Inquiry hears.
Fewer than half of the schools in England which applied for money for rebuilding work have been successful.
Nick Clegg says it is wrong to believe Greeces exit from the euro would provide "instant relief" to Europes economic problems and says he is open to suggestions about how to boost growth.
The Alliance Party pulls out of talks at Stormont aimed at promoting better community relations and greater integration in Northern Ireland.
Scotland will become the first place in the UK to introduce minimum drink pricing, after MSPs passed the plan at parliament.
Science minister David Willetts outlines the governments high-tech industrial strategy and announces £250m in funding for research institutes across the UK
A glass roof panel has cracked in the atrium at Portcullis House - the latest in a string of problems to hit the building opened in 2001 to house MPs offices and committee rooms.
Carina Trimingham, partner of former cabinet minister Chris Huhne, has lost her breach of privacy and harassment case against the Daily Mail.
Kent County Council and Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith join forces to tackle youth unemployment in the South East.
Net migration to the UK remains more than double the governments target figure, according to new statistics.
Downing Street denies back-tracking on plans to legislate for gay marriage in England and Wales after it was revealed Tory MPs will get a free vote on the issue.
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