The White House has pointed to wholesale egg prices as evidence of improvement.
The royals hosted guests inside Buckingham Palace, while the prime minister threw a tea party on Downing Street. Bank holiday street parties were also held around the country including in Manchester, Middlesbrough and Seaford.Away from the main drag of the Mall and Buckingham Palace, the Tower of London displayed almost 30,000 ceramic poppies for the opening of an exhibition titled The Tower Remembers, created by designer Tom Piper.
They were originally displayed as part of artist Paul Cummins's Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red installation at the Tower in 2014.The commemorative display resembles a 'wound' at the heart of the Tower, which was bombed during the Blitz. The exhibition will run until Armistice Day on 11 November.Stand by for a dazzling European event. Cameras everywhere. Famous faces. Red carpets.
No, not Eurovision in all its noisy glory, but the first European summit of what the prime minister hopes will be a new era, where governments around the continent concentrate not on instant verdicts – douze points or nul points – but on creating long-term relationships that make life easier.The UK is hoping to show that just as you don't have to be European to enjoy Eurovision, you don't have to be in the European Union (EU) to get some of the benefits of the club.
Expectations of Monday's summit are high. One minister joked they hope you'll
– get it? It's a moment to fix what they consider were the mistakes of Boris Johnson's Brexit deal.Bustinduy's ministry is now awaiting further judicial rulings on the other 60,000 or so properties whose listings it deems unlawful.
According to the ministry, the properties it has identified either did not provide a licence number, provided an erroneous number, or did not specify the legal status of the owner to show whether they were renting on a professional basis or as a private individual.He described the court's decision as "a clear victory for those who fight to protect the right to housing".
Bustinduy added that "it can be possible to ensure that no economic interest has priority over housing and that no company, however big or powerful, is above the law".Housing has emerged as Spaniards' biggest concern in recent months, due to spiralling rental costs, particularly in larger towns and cities.