Former President Barack Obama met Thursday with Texas House Democrats to praise them for leaving the state to stop a GOP-backed redistricting effort.
Obama also pointed to the response by California — which launched its own redistricting retaliation on Thursday — as a result of the Texas Democrats’ own protest, which he views as a temporary offset. He told them he prefers congressional maps to be drawn by independent commissions rather than politicians, but recognized the need for a Democratic response.
“He acknowledged what Texas is doing is wrong, and you have to be able to stand up in this moment,” state Rep. Ann Johnson, who attended the meeting, told POLITICO.
“He was very clear: If we are all playing to our higher angels as politicians, we should want the people determining our lines,” she said. “We should be brave enough to let the voters pick our lines and compete on fair ideas. And that's what he wants. That's what all of us want.”
Obama was joined on call by former Attorney General Eric Holder, chair of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee.
The group of Texas Democrats have been in Illinois for nearly two weeks to deny Republicans the ability to pass a new map carving out five more seats at the request of President Donald Trump. The final day of the special session, ordered by Gov. Greg Abbott, is Friday. Democrats indicated on Thursday they are willing to return home if the session ends on Friday, and if California Democrats introduce their own map adding more seats in retaliation. That process is already in motion in California: Gov. Gavin Newsom formally launched his campaign for a new House map on Thursday.
During the 30-minute call, Obama heard directly from Texas Democratic Reps. Barbara Gervin-Hawkins and Rep. Christian Manuel, and he praised the lawmakers for standing up to the attacks they’ve faced since decamping earlier this month, including bomb threats and lawsuits.
As he runs a long-shot third-party bid for re-election, Mayor Eric Adams is proposing an aggressive approach, favored by conservatives, of combating open drug use.
The City Council is likely to override most of Mayor Eric Adams’s recent vetoes. Still, the mayor seems eager for a fight over bills affecting grocery delivery workers and street vendors.
The leader of Democrats in the Texas House said the battle over redistricting, which could determine control of Congress, is likely to continue in the courts.
State Representative Gene Wu, leader of the Democrats in the Texas House, speaking at a news conference in Chicago, where lawmakers from his party have fled.
The talks on Friday in Alaska pull the Russian leader out of diplomatic isolation from the West, and Ukrainian and European leaders fear it gives him an opening to sway the American president.
The Trump administration has taken steps that have hobbled Washington’s efforts to reduce crime, such as gutting its U.S. attorney’s office and enacting budget cuts of more than $1 billion.
The armed and masked agents assembled outside a museum where the governor was speaking in what Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles called “a provocative act.”
More than a dozen Border Patrol agents turned up in downtown Los Angeles on Thursday outside a museum where Gov. Gavin Newsom was holding a news conference.
A cognitive scientist, she used the language of computers to explore the nature of human thought and creativity, offering prescient insights about A.I.
Margaret Boden in 1994. “What’s unique about Maggie is that she’s a philosopher who has informed, inspired and shaped science,” Blay Whitby, a fellow philosopher, said.
Former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s proposal is a dig at Zohran Mamdani, his main opponent in the mayor’s race, but it could upend the housing search for middle-income New Yorkers.
Former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has been attacking Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani, the front-runner in the mayor’s race, as being too rich to need rent-stabilized housing.
Officials and volunteers patrolled areas around schools, part of an effort to warn families about potential raids and reassure them that their children were safe at school.
As more than half a million students headed back to Los Angeles Unified School District campuses this week, the mood was tense amid the Trump administration’s immigration raids.
US President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin are set to meet in Anchorage on Friday
US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin will travel to Friday's summit in the US state of Alaska with contrasting priorities as they prepare for talks on ending Russia's war in Ukraine.
Putin has been consistent on his desire to win Ukrainian territory, while Trump has made no secret of his desire to act as a global peacemaker.
But both men may also sense other opportunities, such as diplomatic rehabilitation on the world stage on the part of Putin. Second-guessing Trump's aims is harder, as he has recently made vacillating statements about his Russian counterpart.
Here's a fuller look at what the two leaders might want from the meeting.
Putin eyes international recognition... and more
By Russia editor Steve Rosenberg
The first thing Putin wants from this summit is something he's already been given.
And that's recognition.
Recognition from the world's most powerful country, America, that Western efforts to isolate the Kremlin leader have failed.
The fact that this high-level meeting is happening is testament to that, as is the joint press conference that the Kremlin has announced. The Kremlin can argue that Russia is back at the top table of global politics.
"So much for being isolated," crowed the tabloid Moskovsky Komsomolets earlier this week.
Not only has Putin secured a US-Russia summit, but a prime location for it. Alaska has much to offer the Kremlin.
First, security. At its closest point, mainland Alaska is just 90km (55 miles) from Russia's Chukotka. Vladimir Putin can get there without flying over "hostile" nations.
Second, it's a long way - a very long way - from Ukraine and Europe. That sits well with the Kremlin's determination to sideline Kyiv and EU leaders, and deal directly with America.
There's historical symbolism, too. The fact that Tsarist Russia sold Alaska to America in the 19th Century is being used by Moscow to justify its attempt to change borders by force in the 21st Century.
"Alaska is a clear example that state borders can change, and that large territories can switch ownership," wrote Moskovsky Komsomolets.
But Putin wants more than just international recognition and symbols.
He wants victory. He's been insisting that Russia keep all the land it has seized and occupied in four Ukrainian regions (Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson) and that Kyiv withdraw from the parts of those regions still under Ukrainian control.
For Ukraine this is unacceptable. "Ukrainians will not give their land to the occupier," says the country's president, Volodymyr Zelensky.
The Kremlin knows that. But if it secures Trump's support for its territorial demands, the calculation may be that rejection by Ukraine would result in Trump cutting all support for Kyiv. Meanwhile, Russia and the US would get on with boosting relations and developing economic cooperation.
But there is another scenario.
Russia's economy is under pressure. The budget deficit is rising, income from oil and gas exports falling.
If economic problems are pushing Putin to end the war, the Kremlin may compromise.
For now, there's no sign of that - with Russian officials continuing to insist that Russia holds the initiative on the battlefield.
Trump famously promised during his 2024 presidential campaign that ending the Ukraine war would be easy and that he could do it in a matter of days.
That promise has hung over the American president's efforts to resolve the conflict, as he has alternated between frustration with the Ukrainians and the Russians since returning to the White House in January.
He harangued Zelensky at a dramatic White House meeting in February, and later temporarily suspended military aid and intelligence sharing with the war-torn nation.
In recent months, he's been more critical of Putin's intransigence and willingness to attack civilian targets, setting a series of deadlines for new sanctions on the Russians and other nations that do business with them. Last Friday was the most recent deadline, and as with all the ones before it, Trump ultimately backed away.
Now he's hosting the Russian president on American soil and talking about "land-swapping", which Ukraine fears may consist of land concessions in exchange for peace.
So, any discussion about what Trump wants during his Friday talks with Putin is muddied by the president's vacillating statements and actions.
Watch: 'We're going to change the battle lines' Trump on the war in Ukraine
This week, Trump has made a concerted effort to lower the expectations for this meeting - perhaps a tacit acknowledgement of the limited possibilities of a breakthrough with only one party in the war present.
On Monday, he said the summit would be a "feel-out" meeting. He suggested that he would know if he could reach a deal with the Russian leader "probably in the first two minutes".
"I may leave and say good luck, and that'll be the end," he added. "I may say this is not going to be settled."
On Tuesday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt reinforced this message, calling the summit a "listening session".
With Trump, it's often best to expect the unexpected. And Zelensky and European leaders spoke to him on Wednesday in an effort to ensure that he doesn't strike a deal with Putin that Ukraine won't - or can't - accept.
One thing has been clear practically all year, however: Trump would welcome the chance to be the man who ends the war.
In his inaugural address, he said he wanted his proudest legacy to be that of a "peacemaker". It is no secret that he longs for the international recognition of a Nobel Peace Prize.
Trump is not one to get bogged down in details. But if there is an opportunity for him to claim that he has made progress toward peace during the talks in Anchorage, he will take it.
Putin, always a savvy negotiator, may seek a way to let Trump do just that – on Russia's terms, of course.
Ukrainians are still training to fight Russia - few expect the war will end soon
They call it "dronocide": new training to deal with what is now the greatest threat to a Ukrainian soldier's life on the battlefield – drones.
These machines saturate the front line and cause the largest number of casualties, according to Ukraine. If Donald Trump can't make Vladimir Putin agree to a ceasefire at their meeting in Alaska on Friday, then this training in eastern Ukraine might be essential to saving lives on the front.
The continuing preparation for battle suggests few in Ukraine are expecting this war to stop any time soon. The training is not especially sophisticated: their defence is a shotgun. The soldiers go through drills to hit fast-moving targets – shooting first from the ground, and then while on the move. Ihor, their experienced instructor, tells the men a shotgun is currently their most effective means to bring down a drone at close range.
Ihor has been fighting on Ukraine's eastern front since 2014, the year Russia illegally annexed Crimea and sent troops into the Donbas region. His call sign is "The Knifer". He also trains troops in hand-to-hand combat.
Ihor's been trying to help stop the Russian advance for the past ten years. He bristles at any suggestion that Ukraine will have to give up territory as part of any "land swap".
"Neither me nor my comrades are ready for this," he tells me. He says they'd rather continue fighting until "we liberate our territories".
Lee Durant/BBC
Ihor and his comrades would rather keep fighting than accept a "land swap"
That doesn't seem likely, with some Ukrainian front line units now well below strength. One soldier told us renewed efforts to mobilise more troops had been a "disaster". They know they're still outgunned and outnumbered.
Ukrainian troops also admit they're tired and losing ground. It's an undeniable fact. But this training shows they're not giving up.
Oleksii, one of the soldiers honing his skill with a shotgun, says he's already lost his father and friends in the war.
He admits "the war must be stopped one way or another". But as for the suggestion that Ukraine hands over more territory to Russia, he says: "It wouldn't be my suggestion, I don't like this idea."
Ukrainian troops point out that Russia is also taking heavy losses, suffering around 1,000 casualties – dead or injured – every day. Russia's resources are slowly being exhausted too.
The views from the front are reflected in Ukraine's towns and cities. Civilians are also suffering the consequences of this war more directly, not least with the recent ramping up of Russian missile and drone attacks across the country. Last month Russia launched more than 6,000 drones at Ukraine. In July 2024 that figure was much lower - just over 400.
In the streets of the capital Kyiv there's no doubt they want to see an end to the war. "If we don't stop, we will lose even more territory and people," Oleksandr says. He uses the analogy of gambling in a casino: "The more you play, the more you lose."
Getty Images
Russian has hugely increased missile and drone strikes on Ukrainian cities
Volodymyr, another passer-by, is downbeat about the prospect of the talks between Presidents Trump and Putin. He believes Ukraine will probably have to give up more territory in return for a ceasefire. "We don't have the resources," he says. "All our boys are in heaven or in hospital."
President Zelensky has already expressed his frustration that Ukraine's voice will not be heard in Alaska. He's also made clear he won't be surrendering Ukrainian territory. "It's not my private property," he said earlier this week. But some recent polls suggest that more Ukrainians are resigned to the fact that they might have to sacrifice land for peace.
The bottom line though is that few believe Russia really wants peace. Oleksandr Merezhko, an MP and Chairman of Ukraine's Foreign Affairs Committee, thinks the Alaska meeting is just a PR stunt for President Putin.
"Putin doesn't have any desire to reach a compromise," Merezhko says. "He thinks he's winning the war. He is not going to back down."
Merezhko also dismisses President Trump's suggestion that Ukraine will have to "sign something".
"Absolutely not," he says. "I don't believe any agreement which leads to our destruction can be imposed on Ukraine." He says it's both morally and legally wrong to sacrifice people's homes for peace.
But many Ukrainians have already lost their homes and lives. According to the UN, more than 13,000 civilians have been killed in the country, while 3.5 million Ukrainians have been forced to leave their homes.
Lee Durant/BBC
"I don't have much hope": Valeria (right) fears nothing will change after the Alaska talks
More than 500 of those displaced people are now living in a temporary village, just outside the capital. Their new homes are metal containers, rather than bricks and mortar. Many are the elderly who fled the fighting in the East. There's a small play area for children who'll probably never see the towns and villages they were born in. Their old homes are now in occupied territory.
The face of 78-year-old Hennadii wells up with tears when he tells me doesn't think he'll ever see the grave of his mother again. He tells me he still misses what he had to leave behind. "I liked fishing there, I had a small plot of land, my grapes and my walnut tree," he says. "And now it doesn't exist."
No one we talk to here expresses much confidence about the talks between Presidents Trump and Putin. "I really hope there will be something good after those talks but I don't have much hope," says Valeria, an 18-year-old student whose family lost their home.
But 78-year-old Valentina is more defiant. Her husband was killed by a Russian missile. "This is our land and our people are dying for it," she says. "How can we give it up? No way."
In Alaska Presidents Trump and Putin will be talking about Ukraine's future - without Ukrainian representation, and over their heads.
Ukraine may gradually be losing this war, but it's not yet been defeated. That makes it harder for anyone else to force through a peace it cannot accept.
Additional reporting by Firle Davies, Anastasiia Levchenko and Mariana Matveichuk
Maths is a significant contributor to high A-level grades overall as 16.7% of all maths entries scored an A* this year, compared to 9.4% of entries for all A-levels
For the past seven years, girls have outperformed boys in securing the highest A-level grades. But this year it's the boys who have taken the lead in getting the top marks.
The percentage of boys' grades that were A* or A was 28.4%, narrowly beating the 28.2% achieved by girls. It marks a reversal of last year's 0.4% lead for female students.
Boys also strengthened their advantage at the very top of the scale - 9.9% of their entries were awarded an A*, compared with 9.1% for girls.
These are slim margins, but not insignificant ones. Factors including a surge in the popularity of STEM subjects - science, technology, engineering, and maths - are likely to have contributed to this swing.
These subjects have been on the rise for a number of years and are significantly more popular with boys than girls.
For the 12th year in a row, maths is the most popular A-level - and the number of entries is up more than a fifth since 2016 and has increased from last year.
There's also a clear gender divide in who studies it - boys account for nearly two-thirds (63%) of entries and the divide is only getting bigger.
Jill Duffy, chairwoman of the JCQ board of directors and chief executive of the OCR exam board, explains that "proportionally there are fewer girls taking the subject than in 2019".
Sam Perret studied economics at A-level and is off to study it at university in September
Boys' performance in maths improved very slightly this year from 42.5% of entries marked A* or A last year to 42.6% this year. In comparison, girls' results dipped from 41.2% last year to 40.2% this year.
Richard Harry, executive director of qualifications and assessment at WJEC exam board, says maths is a "significant contributor" to high A-level grades overall.
Overall, 16.7% of all maths entries scored an A* this year, compared to 9.4% of entries for all A-levels.
'Don't speculate too much'
Executive director of regulation and compliance at the AQA exam board, Claire Thomson, says that while the percentage of girls achieving A* and A grades is lower this year than their male counterparts, nearly 19,000 more females achieved at least an A due to more girls entering for A-levels in general. Girls made up 54% of all entries.
"It is important not to speculate too much about what has led to any differences between males and females as the figures are small, they do bounce around a bit over time and the causes will be multi-faceted and complex," she says.
Zoe Lewis, Principal and Chief Executive of the Middlesbrough College Group, agrees and says it's still too early to tell if this is significant but "is something to keep an eye on in the coming years".
She adds that the swing is likely due to the "continued growth in STEM subjects and bias towards studying maths".
"There's a lot more information about subject choices and that's perhaps attracting more boys to it."
Maths isn't the only subject that continues to rise in popularity. Business studies and economics entries have also increased and Thompson suggests that social media influencers may be fuelling the interest in those subjects.
She explains that both subjects have "a real world relevance" and that students are following influencers in "gaining some entrepreneurial skills so that they can go out and emulate the people that they see all the time on social media".
Figures published by the Joint Council for Qualifications (JCQ) for England, Wales and Northern Ireland show a 5.5% increase in entries for A-level economics compared to 2024, while business studies entries are up 0.6%.
There was a rise in maths-related subjects but a drop in humanities
Ola, a recent engineering graduate, shared a video on social media about why she chose to study A-level business and how it helped her in her degree.
She says that things she studied during A-level business, like accounting, were in her university degree, which made that module "a breeze".
One student at Oaklands College in Hertfordshire shared her business grade on social media, explaining that she chose the subject as it would open up opportunities in the future.
However, humanities like English, history and some modern languages have seen a drop in popularity.
It is the first time since at least 2000 - the earliest available archive data - that no arts or humanities subjects have appeared in the top five most popular subjects.
Meanwhile, the proportion of entries in arts subjects such as drama and music has fallen by 31% since 2010 and is "approaching a one-third collapse", according to an analysis by the charity Campaign for the Arts.
The charity says the arts have been "systematically underfunded and undervalued" in recent years, particularly in English state secondary schools.
Netflix
The creators of Adolescence say they want the show to "causes discussion and make change"
The conversation around boys' academic struggles and fears they are "being left behind" in education has been around for many years, but there was a renewed interest this year with the release of hit Netflix series Adolescence which tells the story of a 13-year-old boy arrested for the murder of a classmate.
Exploring themes of toxic masculinity and the psychological pressures faced by teenage boys, there's been a greater discussion around how boys are supported emotionally and academically.
Asked about whether this renewed focus on helping boys achieve, Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson acknowledged the pressures boys and young men face.
"They face challenges in their lives and external pressures can give rise to some challenges," she said. "I want to celebrate the success of many young men who have gotten the grades they needed."
However, she added that there are fluctuations every year "so there isn't anything to take away at this point".
King Charles recording a VJ Day message in Clarence House
King Charles has honoured those whose "service and sacrifice" helped to bring an end to World War Two in a personal message marking the 80th anniversary of VJ Day.
In an audio message recorded earlier this month, the King will vow that those who fought and died in the Pacific and Far East "shall never be forgotten".
On Friday, the King and Queen, alongside Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, will attend a service of remembrance at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire to commemorate the anniversary.
VJ Day, or Victory over Japan Day, is commemorated on 15 August each year, and marks the date in 1945 when Japan surrendered to the Allied forces, ending the war.
An estimated 71,000 soldiers from Britain and the Commonwealth died fighting in Japan, including upwards of 12,000 prisoners of war held in Japanese captivity.
The King's message is expected to echo, and reflect on, the audio broadcast made by his grandfather, King George VI, 80 years ago, when he announced to the nation and Commonwealth that the war was over.
He will make reference to the experience endured by Prisoners of War, and to the civilians of occupied lands in the region, whose suffering "reminds us that war's true cost extends beyond battlefields, touching every aspect of life".
VJ Day explained in 60 seconds
The King will describe how those who fought in the war "gave us more than freedom; they left us the example of how it can and must be protected", since victory was made possible by close collaboration between nations, "across vast distances, faiths and cultural divides".
This demonstrated that, "in times of war and in times of peace, the greatest weapons of all are not the arms you bear but the arms you link", he will say.
Two-minute silence
At Friday's service, a national two-minute silence will conclude with a flypast from the RAF Red Arrows.
It will be followed by a reception in which the King and Queen will meet veterans who served in the Far East during the Second World War, along with their families.
VJ Day falls more than three months after VE Day, when fighting stopped in Europe following Germany's surrender.
Events to commemorate the 80th anniversary of VJ Day will conclude with a reception for veterans at Windsor Castle later in the Autumn.
A 16-year-old boy was arrested on suspicion of murder and rape, West Yorkshire Police said
A 16-year-old boy has been arrested on suspicion of murder and rape following the death of a 13-year-old girl in Huddersfield.
Police were called by the ambulance service to a flat on Sheepridge Road just after 23:30 BST on Monday to reports the girl was unresponsive. She was taken to hospital where she died in the early hours of Tuesday.
The arrested boy, from Huddersfield, remains in custody, West Yorkshire Police said.
He was also arrested on suspicion of rape relating to a 16-year-old girl from a separate incident elsewhere in Kirklees.
A post-mortem examination carried out on Wednesday found the girl's death was unexplained pending further investigation.
Det Ch Insp Stacey Atkinson of the Homicide and Major Inquiry Team said: "A post mortem was not able to determine how she died, and we continue to treat her death as unexplained at this time, pending more inquiries.
"Those inquiries are complex and are likely to be lengthy as we work to fully understand the circumstances of the girl's death.
"Specially trained officers are supporting her family at this time."
People paying privately for weight-loss drug Mounjaro in the UK face a rise in the cost of the treatment after manufacturer Eli Lilly said it was increasing the list price of the drug by as much as 170%.
It means the suggested price for a month's supply of the highest dose of the drug will rise from £122 to £330, although the rise for lower doses will be smaller.
More generally, retailers who sell the drug may be able to negotiate discounts to the list price, so it is possible the impact on consumers will be limited.
The announcement does not affect the price the NHS pays, as the service has negotiated a heavily-discounted rate for those getting the drug on prescription.
The weekly injection works by making you feel full so you eat less, and can help people lose 20% of their body weight.
Currently there are thought to be around 1.5 million people on weight loss drugs in the UK with more than half of them on Mounjaro. Estimates suggest nine in 10 pay for these drugs privately, buying from online services and high street pharmacies.
Eli Lilly said the drug had been sold in the UK at a price that was "significantly below" that charged in other European countries.
It comes after US President Donald Trump complained about the high cost of drugs in the US.
He has threatened the pharmaceutical industry with a "most favoured nation" drug pricing proposal to peg US prices to those abroad.
Eli Lilly said it agreed with the objective expressed by President Trump that costs should be shared more fairly – although a "most favoured nation" approach was not the right answer.
Research suggests prices in the US can be three times higher than in other rich nations.
Trump threat
In a statement, Eli Lilly said: "The UK was one of the first countries where Lilly launched Mounjaro, and our priority was to bring it to patients as quickly as possible during a time of limited availability.
"At launch, Lilly agreed to a UK list price that is significantly below the European average to prevent delays in NHS availability.
"With changes in the environment and new clinical evidence supporting the value of Mounjaro, we are now aligning the list price more consistently to ensure fair global contributions to the cost of innovation."
Dr Leyla Hannbeck, head of the Independent Pharmacies Association, said she was "shocked and very disappointed" by the price rise.
"This is a real blow to patients at a time when more and more people, worried about their weight, are turning to jabs.
"It is vital that patients who are already taking Mounjaro talk to their local pharmacy before they take any action.
"Those patients considering weight-loss jabs should also not be put off as Mounjaro is not the only option. Local pharmacies are best placed to offer vital advice about the range of treatments available."
She said it was important other weight loss drug manufacturers hold their nerve and their prices. Alongside Mourjaro, Novo Nordisk drug, Wegovy, is widely used in the UK.
"The British market for weight-loss jabs is only set to grow, but it will only achieve that growth if treatment remains affordable to the average patient," Dr Hannbeck added.
Harry, Meghan and Olivia were among thousands of students picking up their results
"This is the culmination of a lot of hard work," admits student Lily-Rose Williamson. "The sacrifices have paid off."
She was one of thousands of teenagers who received their A-level, Btec and T-level results on Thursday, after a nerve-wracking wait for students across England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
A record number of 18-year-olds got into their first choice of university this year - even if they missed their grades - while boys outperformed girls for the top A-level grades for the first time since 2018.
As pupils picked up their results up and down the country, they chatted to BBC reporters about how they'd fared, what they hoped to do next - and how they were planning to celebrate.
With her distinction in tow, she planned to get onto a university midwifery course through clearing - a process run by The Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (Ucas) matching students with university and college courses which still have spaces.
Students in Bangor, Northern Ireland spoke of the nerves and excitement of results day
'I could barely sleep'
Others had mixed feelings about their results - and the prospect of their next steps - including Shaheer Shafqat and Heron Balisane from Manchester.
"I just went to get it over with, just straight onto my emails," said Shaheer.
He said he "wasn't disappointed" but "wasn't too happy" with his results in A-level media and Btecs in applied psychology and computing.
But he still secured his first-choice place, studying cyber security at Manchester Metropolitan University.
"That's all that matters," he said.
Heron likewise said he so nervous he could "barely sleep" on Wednesday night: "I was panicking."
He said he was "expecting a bit more" from his results, but had still secured a place at the University of Greater Manchester to study law.
Both students said they were expecting to work part-time jobs during university.
"The living costs are pretty high aren't they," remarked Shaheer. "It's worrisome."
'A lot of hard work paid off'
For others, the pressure was off - with jobs and apprenticeships secured before the big day - including Harry McClelland.
The pupil from Bangor, Northern Ireland is set to start an electronics apprenticeship with Red Bull's Formula 1 team in September.
"I knew I had the place before the exams so I could relax a bit more," he said, after receiving two As and a C.
"I don't know who will let me loose on an F1 car," he said.
"Time to celebrate - and watch the F1 movie."
Identical twins Adrian and Łukasz received nearly identical grades - but were excited to set you off on different paths
The day was a family affair for many - including identical twins Adrian and Łukasz Koman from south Wales.
The brothers insisted there was no competition in their house and celebrated their near-identical grades in the same science subjects - two A*s and one A for Adrian, and one A* and two As for Lukasz.
They said they were excited to start new chapters, heading from Newport to the universities of Bristol and Bath.
Łukasz said: "We spend a lot of time together since we've shared the same room for all our lives pretty much.
"It's nice to go out there and be a bit more individual."
Megan and her family were beaming after she opened her results at Launceston College
Meanwhile, Megan from Cornwall brought her entire family with her to collect her results.
She said she "burst out crying" when she saw an A* and two As staring back at her - and her mum said she was "so pleased".
But her brother couldn't shy away from some friendly sibling rivalry.
He joked: "Unfortunately, she beat me."
Others said the support of family and friends along the way had been crucial, including Meghan Cotty from Caerphilly.
She had balanced her studies alongside helping to care for her brother, who has learning difficulties, and working part-time - and today received two A*s and a B.
Looking ahead, she was excited to head off to the University of Birmingham to study law.
"It's taken a lot of work and patience but I'm so glad it paid off," she said.
Bezalel Smotrich, the finance minister, said on Thursday that a plan to significantly expand a settlement near occupied East Jerusalem had won approval. But a procedural step remained.