Look, obviously I'd love a bank holiday, but it would be quite galling for the men's team to get the country a bank holiday for winning a tournament the Lionesses already won?
@Daley_thompson You’ve always been my hero. Used to see you training in Crawley. I’ve always said I think you’re the greatest athlete of all time. Not just one discipline but 10 absolutely inspiring x
£8.4 BILLION of government and NHS contracts given to firms controlled by Tory donors
Those donors have given £53.7 MILLION to the Tory party since 2015
I’m aghast
Under the Conservatives, people are waiting longer than ever to see a GP
In 2023, 61 million people had to wait longer than two weeks for an appointment and almost 18 million had to wait more than four weeks
Please RT if you agree the Tories must go
https://t.co/imk5lXxwB9
Anne Frank's father, Otto, visits the attic where they hid from the Germans in World War II. He stands alone as he is the only member of his family to have survived the Holocaust, 1960 .
This picture was taken in 1960 in the Netherlands, where the Frank Family hid from German troops. The Frank family were Jews during a time when Jews were sent away to be killed in concentration camps.
The Franks are one of the most well-known Jewish families during the war due to Anne Frank (Otto's daughter) writing a diary about her experiences in hiding.
Her diary has been republished and has sold more than 30 million copies and has been translated into 70 languages. In her diary, she talks about life in hiding, school, growing up and her fears about the German forces in the area.
At some point, the Franks were found. There are varying accounts as to how they were caught. Some say they were betrayed, and some say there were just found by German troops when they inspected the house they were hiding in.
The door leading to the attic was hidden behind a bookcase, but it is not known for sure how the Germans knew it was a false door that led to the secret hiding spot. They were in hiding for 761 days.
Anne and her sister Margot were sent to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. They died there in March 1945 due to Typhus fever as the camp had a massive outbreak problem of Typhus at the time.
They died two weeks before the camp was liberated. Anne was only 16, and Margot was 19. Their parents, Otto and Edith, were sent to Auschwitz Birkenau, the worst of the concentration camps.
Edith would die of starvation three weeks before the camp was liberated. Otto survived and lived until he died in 1980. Edith would be buried with him 18 years later. Their daughter's bodies were never found. Photographer: Arnold Newman
If everyone who wants The Conversatives out on the 4th of July follows and retweets we'll reach a million by midnight and have a much bigger voice for the next six weeks.