Are you dealing with bleeding gums that won’t heal no matter what you do or try? According to recent studies the way you brush your teeth can make or break your gums and teeth...literally! Specialists warn that you should never ever use your toothbrush like this And anyone who does eventually risk sore, bleeding gums that will lead to tooth loss. Watchthis short video and find out how you should never brush your teeth. |
November 2014, the Department for Communities and Local Government announced that it would appoint commissioners to take over some of the council's functions, following an inspection report[34] by PricewaterhouseCoopers that raised several concerns over the allocation of grants.[35] The action was supported by the Department's shadow secretary, Hilary Benn.[36] On 23 April 2015, the courts removed Mayor Rahman from office for electoral fraud and ordered a new election to be held.[37] Six days later, the Electoral Commission officially withdrew Rahman's Tower Hamlets First from the electoral register, after deciding that the party did not operate a responsible financial scheme, nor ran in accordance with its initial documentation provided at registration.[38] The decision did not in itself disband the Tower Hamlets First political group in the council, but the members splintered into the Tower Hamlets Independent Group, the People's Alliance of Tower Hamlets, and a number of Independent councillors. On 11 June 2015, an election was held to replace Rahman, and the Labour candidate John Biggs was elected as mayor, while a Labour win at a by-election enabled the party to regain overall control of the council.[39] As of March 2017, the composition of the council was: 22 Labour, nine Independent Group, five People's Alliance of Tower Hamlets (PATH), five Conservatives, three ungrouped Independents, and one Liberal Democrat.[40] By May 2018, ten councillors had joined a political group called Aspire. At the 2018 Tower Hamlets London Borough Council election, Labour held the position of mayor and also gained twenty council seats overall, giving it control of the council. It now had 42 councillors, taking all but one of the seats won by Tower Hamlets First in 2014, and also taking seats from the Conservatives. Rabina Khan, formerly of Tower Hamlets First, but by then leader of the rival PATH, came second in the Mayoral election and was the only former Tower Hamlets First councillor to hold a se
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