MORNING BULLETIN: Tánaiste and Garda boss called to resign amidst breath-test scandal and Theresa May to officially Trigger Article 50
GET INFORMED ...
Tánaiste Frances Fitzgerald has become embroiled in the Garda breath test “cover-up” as she and Commissioner Nóirín O’Sullivan faced calls to resign their positions in the Dáil.
As the controversy over the recording of breath tests rumbles on, the gardaí, Department of Justice, and the Medical Bureau of Road Safety (MBRS), each outlined the timeline of events.
: The National Bus and Rail Union (NBRU) has accused Bus Éireann of "creative accounting" to exaggerate the Expressway crisis in a "race to the bottom".
: Four out of ten students who participated in a schools programme to address racism said they had previously experienced discrimination.
Here are the key moments expected on the day British Prime Minister Theresa May triggers Article 50.
: Residents of Australia's cyclone-battered tropical north east have emerged from their homes to find roofs lying in their yards, boats flung on to rocks and roads blocked by tangles of fallen trees and power lines.
: Stability and reliability are qualities coveted by business leaders and mobile investment capital. The value of these attributes is even greater amid the unprecedented political turmoil that is currently enveloping key global economies, writes .
: Seamus Coleman is expected to take the first steps on the road to his recovery from a sickening double leg fracture when he leaves hospital today.
... SOME DISTRACTION

: Technology at school isn’t about passively swiping at a screen, it’s about collaborating and sharing ideas, writes .
: Theresa May has signed the Article 50 letter and the memes have already begun.
: Actor and director Ralph Fiennes has admitted he cannot remember why or in what scene he voiced Lord Voldemort’s famous laugh in the last Harry Potter film.




