REFORMS to avoid a repeat of the Monarch collapse will be considered, Chris Grayling has said after confirming around 80,000 of the failed airline’s passengers have returned home.

The Transport Secretary said he wants to see if it is possible for airlines to “wind down in an orderly manner” and look after their customers without the need for the Government to step in.

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THERESA May will face her top team in full for the first time since the calamitous conference speech that further destabilised her leadership when the Cabinet meets at No 10.

The Prime Minister saw off a botched attempt to oust her in the hours after the address to Tory activists which was hit by a series of toe-curling setbacks, but faces continued speculation about her weakened authority.

Brexiteers Boris Johnson and Michael Gove gave a public display of loyalty on Monday by praising Mrs May’s statement to MPs on Brexit, despite the PM indicating European judges will still have a role during the UK’s transition out of the EU.

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A DRUNK who sneaked into a house, went to sleep in a double bed and killed a pensioner after being woken up by her husband has been jailed for 13 years.

Keiran Wathan, 24, wrestled a hammer from homeowner Wayne Morgan and repeatedly hit him over the head before stabbing him and his wife Sheila, 71.

He later boasted to have enjoyed the attack, telling a witness: “I can’t believe I killed someone but I actually enjoyed it.”

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UNIVERSITY tuition fees will not rise next year, the Government has confirmed.

Graduates will also not have to start repaying loans until they are earning at least £25,000 – up from the current £21,000 threshold, Universities Minister Jo Johnson said.

Confirmation that tuition fees will be frozen at £9,250 for next autumn comes the week after the Prime Minister announced the plan on the eve of the Conservative Party conference.

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Tuition fees for English universities trebled to a maximum of £9,000 a year in 2012 and were fixed at that level.