Unity between faiths has been the central theme of the pontiff's Asia trip and a declaration they signed called for 'religious harmony for the sake of humanity'
Keir Starmer's first experience of being on the receiving end of prime minister's questions passed without the typical barrage of hostile questioning on Wednesday, but he faced pressure over his new government's approach to child poverty.
Labour leader Starmer won a resounding majority in Britain's July 4 election, but he suffered his first, if minor, rebellion on Tuesday, when he was forced him to temporarily suspend seven lawmakers for voting against the government's position on keeping limits on welfare payments for some parents.
At the start of PMQs in parliament, Britain's new prime minister was spared the usual pointed questioning from his opposite number, former prime minister and leader of the opposition Conservative Party, Rishi Sunak, who focused on cross-party consensus around support for Ukraine.
It was the later questioning from members of the Scottish National Party, which took Starmer to task over his refusal to abolish the two-child benefit cap, which prevents most parents from claiming welfare payments for more than two children.
The SNP's leader in Westminster Stephen Flynn asked what had changed in Labour's commitment to end child poverty.
"The last Labour government lifted millions of children out of poverty: something we're very, very proud of. And this government will approach the question with the same vigour," Starmer said, pointing to a new child poverty taskforce.
Seven Labour lawmakers were temporarily suspended for backing a SNP amendment to scrap the limit on Tuesday. Opponents of the cap say the policy pushes children into poverty, while the government has said it cannot make unfunded commitments even if it sympathises with objections to the policy.
While Starmer once grilled Sunak each week on his government's record, conviviality prevailed as both sides adjust to a new reality since Labour's crushing election victory.
During a parliamentary exchange on Monday Starmer accidentally addressed Sunak as "the prime minister", to laughs on both sides of the chamber, with Starmer quipping: "Old habits die hard."
Unity between faiths has been the central theme of the pontiff's Asia trip and a declaration they signed called for 'religious harmony for the sake of humanity'
Musk risks possible EU sanctions in the coming months for allegedly breaking new content rules
More than 90 per cent of buildings within a so-called buffer zone appeared to have been destroyed or severely damaged, according to the London-based rights group
Netanyahu says that Israel must retain control over the Philadelphi Corridor along the Egypt-Gaza border to prevent weapons smuggling to Hamas
Convention covers human rights aspects of AI
According to the International Meteor Organisation, the one-meter asteroid will be a bright and slow fireball and cause no damage
Saad was studying at the Edward Said National Conservatory of Music in nearby Gaza City before it was reduced to ruins in the war that has devastated much of the enclave
The lawsuit is the latest legal challenge to the Democratic president's efforts to fulfil a campaign pledge and bring debt relief to millions of Americans who turned to federal student loans to fund their costly higher education