THERESA MAY AND JEREMY CORBYN GO HEAD-TO-HEAD AT FINAL PMQS BEFORE ELECTION

Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn will square off at Prime Minister's Questions for the last time before the General Election and possibly ever.

On Wednesday, the Prime Minister and Labour leader are expected to use the final House of Commons set-piece before the June 8 poll to push their main campaign messages.

Mrs May is likely to stress that only she will provide the "strong and stable leadership" required in Brexit negotiations and call on voters to give her a mandate for those talks, while attacking Mr Corbyn's "chaotic" leadership.

THERESA MAY TO MEET EU CHIEF BREXIT NEGOTIATOR MICHEL BARNIER AT DOWNING STREET

Theresa May will for the first time come face-to-face with the European Union's chief Brexit negotiator amid a General Election campaign she is seeking to define by Britain's exit from the bloc.

The Prime Minister will host Michel Barnier and European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker for a working dinner at Downing Street at 7pm on Wednesday.

It will be the first time Mrs May has met Mr Barnier since taking office and the outcome of the meeting could influence an election campaign in which she is asking voters to give her a mandate for exit talks to begin after the June 8 poll.

MADELEINE HUNT POLICE 'PURSUING SIGNIFICANT LINE OF INQUIRY' 10 YEARS ON

British detectives working on the Madeleine McCann case are still pursuing "critical" leads as the 10th anniversary of her disappearance approaches, a Scotland Yard chief has said.

Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley said there are "significant investigative avenues" that are of "great interest" to both the UK and Portuguese teams.

Madeleine vanished from the family's holiday apartment in Praia da Luz in Portugal on May 3 2007 when she was three years old - with her mother Kate saying the 10th anniversary is a "horrible marker of time, stolen time".

WOMAN TO SUE POLICE OVER GUN LICENCE AFTER STEPFATHER SHOT HER MOTHER AND SISTER

A devastated woman has condemned police who handed back firearms to her stepfather seven months before he shot dead her mother and sister.

Stacy Banner said 66-year-old Christine Lee and Lucy Lee, 40, would still be alive had Surrey Police acted properly against John Lowe.

One of the guns returned to Lowe was used to fatally shoot the pair in a rampage at his puppy farm near Farnham, Surrey, on February 23, 2014.

10% FALL IN PEOPLE BEING TREATED AT A&E FOR VIOLENCE-RELATED INJURIES

Serious violence dipped by a 10th in England and Wales last year, but casualties peaked at weekends amid spikes in alcohol-fuelled incidents, according to research.

Academics found an estimated 188,803 people attended emergency departments for treatment following violence in 2016 - 21,437 fewer than the previous year.

The report said the latest fall continues steady reductions since 2002, with last year's tally 40% down compared with 2010.

TEENAGE FARM WORKER MAY FACE JAIL FOR STAMPING ON NEWBORN CALVES

A farm apprentice could face jail for hitting, throwing and stamping on newborn calves.

Owen Nichol, 19, was filmed attacking the young cows and their mothers at Pyrland Farm in Taunton, Somerset, in December last year.

The abuse was captured on a covert camera placed in a barn by the charity Animal Equality.

CONDUCT OF TV LICENCE COLLECTORS RAISES 'CONCERNS' FOR MPS

Television licence collectors have been attacked for their "poor" performance amid high levels of evasion and plummeting enforcement rates.

The BBC is losing up to £291 million a year through fee-dodging, according to a committee of MPs.

Successful enforcement cases under Capita have dropped by nearly a fifth and it has failed to drive down evasion, with the worst offenders Scottish and Northern Irish viewers, the probe found.

UNITED AIRLINES 'SADDENED' AFTER GIANT RABBIT DIES ON FLIGHT TO US

United Airlines is investigating after reports a giant rabbit died on one of its transatlantic flights.

Three-foot Simon, a continental giant rabbit aged 10 months, was said to have been travelling from Heathrow to O'Hare in Chicago after being bought by a celebrity owner in the United States.

Breeder Annette Edwards, from Worcestershire, told The Sun that Simon was expected to grow to be the world's biggest rabbit after his father Darius grew to 4ft 4in (1.32m).

PEOPLE ARE REVOLTING AGAINST THE ELITE, SAYS FRANCE'S MARINE LE PEN

Far-right presidential contender Marine Le Pen has said that people are revolting against the elite and predicted that could translate into a "very big surprise" when ballots are cast May 7 in France's final round to choose a new leader.

Ms Le Pen and Emmanuel Macron, the independent centrist candidate who is her rival in the upcoming vote, sparred in successive television appearances, tossing insults as each launched a political offensive to win new voters before the balloting in less than two weeks.

Mr Macron placed first in the first-round of the election, followed by Ms Le Pen, and he is viewed as the favourite. Nine other candidates were eliminated.

US-MEXICO WALL DEMANDS EASED AS SPENDING TALKS ADVANCE

Congressional negotiators have inched toward a potential agreement on a catchall spending bill that would deny President Donald Trump's request for immediate funding to construct a wall along the Mexico border.

The emerging measure would increase the defence budget and eliminate the threat of a government shutdown on Mr Trump's 100th day in office this Saturday.

Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer said Republican negotiators were following the lead of Mr Trump, who signalled on Monday evening that he would not insist on one billion dollar-worth (£800 million) of wall funding now as an addition to the one trillion dollar-plus (£800 billion) spending bill.