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The Daily Brief

Today's Briefing Live Updates
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✎ Curated Briefing · Edited at 08:00 & 18:00
☽

Evening Briefing

Tuesday 31 March 2026 — 18:15 BST

What It Means For You

  • Jet fuel supply at risk — the UK’s last known shipment of aviation fuel from the Middle East arrives Thursday. Airlines could face disruption by late April. If you have flights booked, check with your airline and consider travel insurance.
  • Diesel breaks £100 per tank — at 182.7p per litre, filling a 55-litre family car now costs over £100 for the first time since December 2022. Use the new GOV.UK Fuel Finder to compare prices nearby.
  • Energy bills fell today — but don’t celebrate yet. The April price cap saves £117 per year, but Cornwall Insight forecasts a £322 surge in July. If you can lock in a fixed deal now, it may be worth it.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Tells Starmer and Allies “Go Get Your Own Oil”

↻ This morning: Trump threatens to seize Kharg Island → This evening: tells European allies to secure their own oil from Hormuz

President Trump told European allies to “build up some delayed courage, go to the Strait, and just TAKE IT,” urging nations that refused to join the war to secure their own oil supplies from the Hormuz strait. He singled out Britain, saying: “You’ll have to start learning how to fight for yourself.” US gasoline prices passed $4 per gallon for the first time since 2022. Iran struck an oil tanker off Dubai, tightening its grip on Gulf shipping.

Dive deeper
Trump’s “go get your own oil” message represents a fundamental rupture in the transatlantic energy security compact that has underpinned Western alliances since 1945. The deliberate humiliation of Starmer — named directly in a public post — leaves Downing Street with no diplomatic cover. The tanker strike off Dubai demonstrates Iran retains offensive capability despite a month of bombardment, and raises the spectre of direct attacks on commercial shipping outside the Strait itself. For the UK, which imports approximately half its jet fuel from the Middle East, the message is existential rather than rhetorical.

Pakistan and China Launch Five-Point Peace Plan for Middle East

China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Pakistan’s Deputy PM Ishaq Dar issued a joint five-point peace initiative calling for an immediate ceasefire, humanitarian access, civilian protection, maritime security in the Strait of Hormuz, and a UN-based framework for resolution. The plan calls on all parties to halt attacks on civilian infrastructure including energy, desalination and nuclear facilities.

Dive deeper
The Pakistan-China peace plan represents the first formal alternative to Washington’s 15-point demands. Beijing’s direct involvement — after weeks of back-channel support — marks China’s most overt diplomatic intervention in a Middle Eastern conflict. The five points are deliberately broader than Trump’s framework, avoiding demands for nuclear dismantlement while emphasising humanitarian law and UN primacy. For Pakistan, the plan cements its role as the conflict’s indispensable mediator, now with Chinese backing. The question is whether Washington will treat the plan as complementary or competitive.

Iran Strikes Oil Tanker off Dubai — Gulf Shipping Under Direct Attack

An Iranian missile struck a commercial oil tanker in waters off Dubai, the first confirmed attack on merchant shipping outside the Strait of Hormuz since the war began. The vessel, carrying crude for an Asian buyer, sustained significant damage but remained afloat. Lloyd’s of London raised the Gulf war risk zone to include UAE coastal waters. Shipping insurance premiums for the entire Gulf surged to record levels.

Dive deeper
The tanker strike outside Hormuz signals a strategic expansion of Iran’s maritime campaign. Until now, Tehran restricted its naval operations to the Strait itself. Striking a vessel off Dubai — within sight of the world’s busiest port — demonstrates both capability and willingness to escalate. The insurance implications are immediate: if Lloyd’s extends the war risk zone further, premiums could make all Gulf shipping commercially unviable regardless of Hormuz status. The UAE, which had maintained cautious neutrality, now faces direct economic threat to its maritime commerce.

UK’s Last Jet Fuel Shipment from Middle East Arrives Thursday

The Libyan-flagged tanker Maetiga, carrying jet fuel from Saudi Arabia, is expected to dock in the UK on Thursday — the last known shipment of aviation fuel from the Middle East. No other vessels bound for Britain have managed to transit the Strait of Hormuz. London has imported at least half its jet fuel from the Middle East in recent months. Industry warns airlines could face disruption by late April.

Dive deeper
The Maetiga’s arrival marks a critical threshold for British aviation. Heathrow alone consumes approximately 20 million litres of jet fuel per day. While UK refineries produce some jet fuel domestically, the country has been increasingly dependent on Middle Eastern imports since the closure of the Stanlow and Grangemouth refinery capacity. The industry’s warning of disruption “by late April” gives the Government roughly three weeks to secure alternative supply chains. Emergency measures could include prioritising military and emergency aviation, restricting charter flights, or drawing on NATO strategic reserves.

US Gasoline Passes $4 as Global Oil Crisis Deepens

Average US gasoline prices broke $4 per gallon for the first time since 2022, driven by the Hormuz closure’s removal of approximately 20 million barrels per day from global supply — the largest disruption in history according to the IEA. Brent crude climbed above $118. Goldman Sachs warned prices could reach $130 if the conflict escalates further. Trump blamed “Biden’s incompetence” for the energy infrastructure he inherited.

Dive deeper
The $4 gasoline threshold is politically toxic for Trump — it was the price point at which Biden’s approval collapsed in 2022. Goldman’s $130 scenario assumes the 6 April deadline passes without Hormuz reopening and Houthi attacks continue disrupting Red Sea shipping. The IEA’s characterisation of the Hormuz closure as “the biggest oil shock in history” surpasses the 1973 Arab embargo and 1979 Iranian revolution in volume terms. Combined with Ukraine’s campaign against Russian Baltic oil ports, roughly 25 million barrels per day of global export capacity is currently disrupted or offline.

UK UK Domestic Politics

COBRA Meets as UK Faces Jet Fuel Shortage Within Weeks

↻ This morning: energy cap falls, July surge looms → This evening: COBRA convenes on acute jet fuel shortage

Starmer chaired a second COBRA session with the Chancellor, Foreign Secretary, Energy Secretary and Bank of England Governor. GBN News reported the meeting was called urgently after it emerged Britain’s last known jet fuel shipment arrives Thursday. Emergency rationing plans under the Energy Act 1976 are under active review, including a £30 fuel purchase limit and priority access for NHS, police and emergency services.

Dive deeper
The COBRA meeting’s focus has shifted from general economic concern to acute supply security. The jet fuel crisis is the most immediate threat — without alternative supply, Heathrow, Gatwick and other major airports face operational constraints within weeks. The Energy Act 1976 rationing powers have not been invoked since the 2000 fuel protests. Their activation would require a formal ministerial order and would likely trigger panic buying at scale, making the situation worse before it improves. The Government’s options are narrowing rapidly.

Diesel Breaks £100 Per Tank — Drivers Pay £544m Extra Since War Began

Diesel hit 182.77p per litre, meaning a typical 55-litre family car now costs £100.52 to fill — breaching the £100 mark for the first time since December 2022. Petrol reached 152.83p. British drivers have collectively paid £544 million extra for fuel since the US-Israeli campaign began on 28 February. The RAC warned both fuels could rise a further 10p per litre by mid-April.

Dive deeper
The £100 tank threshold is psychologically powerful — it transforms fuel costs from an abstract percentage increase into a concrete spending milestone that every driver understands. The £544 million aggregate figure understates the true impact, as it measures only direct pump costs, not the downstream inflation in food, deliveries and services. Haulage operators report fuel now consuming 45% of operating budgets, up from 30% pre-conflict. The Government’s Fuel Finder tool addresses transparency but cannot fix the supply constraint. Industry bodies estimate marginal operators will begin suspending services if diesel reaches 200p.

Energy Price Cap Falls Today — April Reprieve Amid Gathering Storm

↻ This morning: cap falls tomorrow → This evening: cap now in effect, but wholesale gas up 70% in March

Ofgem’s energy price cap dropped to £1,641 from 1 April, cutting typical household bills by £117 per year. Gas fell to 5.7p/kWh and electricity to 24.7p/kWh. However, wholesale gas prices have surged 70% in March. Cornwall Insight forecasts the July cap at £1,963, adding £322. Starmer pledged “appropriate support” after the cap expires but provided no detail on the mechanism or cost.

Dive deeper
The April price cut is a ghost from a pre-war economy — calculated using wholesale prices from before the Hormuz closure. It arrives as a footnote to the gathering energy storm. If oil remains above $115, the July adjustment will not only erase the saving but add a net £205 increase over six months. The Treasury is understood to be developing a contingency support package modelled on the 2022 Energy Price Guarantee, but the estimated £3–5 billion cost arrives with fiscal headroom already eroded by rising gilt yields. The political trap is obvious: the Government cannot claim credit for a price cut that will reverse within three months.

Fuel Finder Launched — Government Urges Drivers to Shop Around

The Government launched a new Fuel Finder tool on GOV.UK to help drivers compare petrol and diesel prices at nearby stations. The tool, which aggregates live data from UK forecourts, aims to increase price transparency and reduce profiteering. Asda, Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons all publish live prices. However, critics argued the tool addresses symptoms rather than the supply-side crisis driving prices up.

Dive deeper
Fuel Finder is a demand-side intervention in a supply-side crisis — useful for individual savings but structurally irrelevant to the underlying problem. The tool’s launch was timed to coincide with COBRA and the energy cap reduction, creating a narrative of government action. In practice, the price differential between the cheapest and most expensive stations in any given area is typically 5–8p per litre — meaningful for frequent drivers but marginal against a 27% wholesale price surge. The real question is whether the CMA’s anti-profiteering powers, granted during the March roundtable, will be deployed against retailers widening margins.

Labour’s Poll Position Worsens as Local Elections Approach

A fresh YouGov poll puts Reform UK on 24%, Conservatives on 20%, and Labour on 16% — a new record low. Labour’s net approval rating fell to minus 42, the worst for a governing party this early in a parliament since records began. Internal party projections suggest Labour could lose control of all councils it gained in 2022. The 1 May local elections are five weeks away.

Dive deeper
The polling trajectory is catastrophic by any historical standard. No governing party has fallen to 16% within two years of a landslide majority. The cost-of-living crisis — driven by forces largely beyond Starmer’s control — is destroying Labour’s core electoral argument. With the Conservatives recovering to 20% under Badenoch and Reform consolidating at 24%, Labour faces a three-way squeeze with no obvious escape. The local elections will serve as the first electoral verdict on the Government’s handling of the Iran crisis, and current projections suggest a wipeout in traditional Labour heartlands.
One To Read

Iran War Live Updates: Trump Tells Allies to ‘Get Your Own Oil’

NBC News · Comprehensive live coverage of the day’s escalation — Trump’s extraordinary rebuke of allies, the tanker strike off Dubai, and the global fuel crisis intensifying as the 6 April deadline approaches.
☼

Morning Briefing

Tuesday 31 March 2026 — 08:58 BST

What It Means For You

  • Energy bills fall tomorrow — Ofgem’s new cap of £1,641 takes effect on 1 April, saving roughly £10 per month. Green levies are being removed from bills, potentially saving a further £150 per year. But Cornwall Insight forecasts the July cap at £1,963 — consider fixing your tariff before summer.
  • Petrol easing slightly — Brent crude dropped to $108 overnight on diplomatic optimism, but the RAC still expects pump prices above 155p per litre this week. Diesel remains at 169p, adding cost to every delivery and grocery bill.
  • Mortgage pressure continues — two-year fixed rates have climbed from 4.84% to 5.21% in March alone, adding roughly £115 per month on a £250,000 mortgage. If your fix expires before autumn, locking in a rate now could save hundreds.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Threatens to Seize Kharg Island as Iran Rejects Peace Terms

President Trump told the Financial Times the US could “take the oil in Iran” and seize Kharg Island, warning he would “completely” obliterate Iran’s power plants, oil wells and export terminals if the Strait of Hormuz is not immediately reopened. Iran dismissed the 15-point US demands as “unrealistic, illogical and excessive.” Pakistan confirmed it will host direct US–Iran talks “in coming days.”

Dive deeper
Trump’s threat to seize Kharg Island — which handles 90% of Iran’s crude exports — would require an amphibious operation of a scale not seen since the Falklands. Iran’s Vice-President Aref warned that troops sent to Kharg “will not return, because no one returns home from hell.” The arrival of USS Tripoli with 3,500 marines suggests planning is advanced. The simultaneous pursuit of Pakistan-mediated diplomacy and escalatory threats creates profound uncertainty in oil markets, where Brent has swung $30 per barrel in a single week.

Netanyahu Orders Expanded Invasion of Southern Lebanon

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu instructed his military to widen the security buffer zone in southern Lebanon, with forces advancing toward the Litani River. At least 1,238 people have been killed since Lebanon entered the war on 2 March, including 124 children; over 1.2 million have been displaced. Satellite imagery reveals mounting destruction across the south.

Dive deeper
Netanyahu’s expansion order transforms what Israel initially described as a limited defensive operation into an open-ended occupation. Fears of a “Gaza model” replication are well-founded: satellite imagery captures systematic destruction of entire villages south of the Litani. UNIFIL peacekeepers report being confined to their bases. The humanitarian toll has drawn sharp criticism from the UN Secretary-General. Hezbollah’s capacity to strike northern Israel persists despite the ground advance, suggesting territorial control alone cannot eliminate the rocket threat.

Iranian Strike Wounds US Personnel at Saudi Air Base

An Iranian missile strike wounded over a dozen US military personnel and damaged fighter jets at a coalition air base in Saudi Arabia. The attack marks a significant escalation in Iran’s direct targeting of American forces in the Gulf. CENTCOM confirmed it has now struck over 11,000 targets in Iran since operations began on 28 February.

Dive deeper
Iran’s willingness to strike US personnel directly — rather than relying on proxy forces — represents a qualitative shift in the conflict. Previous Iranian attacks concentrated on Israeli targets and Gulf infrastructure; hitting a US base in Saudi Arabia risks drawing Riyadh formally into the war. The damage to fighter jets is operationally significant, potentially reducing coalition sortie rates. The 11,000-target figure from CENTCOM underscores the extraordinary intensity of a bombing campaign now exceeding the first month of the 2003 Iraq war.

Russia Fires 289 Drones at Ukraine as Bulgaria Signs Defence Pact

Russia launched 289 drones at Ukraine overnight; air defences intercepted 267. Ukrainian forces reported 970 Russian casualties in 24 hours, bringing total losses to approximately 1.3 million since February 2022. A drone struck an apartment building in Odesa. Ukraine and Bulgaria signed a 10-year security pact committing Sofia to fund air defences and co-produce arms.

Dive deeper
Moscow’s spring offensive maintains extraordinary tempo, with daily drone launches routinely exceeding 200. The Ukraine-Bulgaria pact is strategically significant: Sofia’s commitment to co-produce weapons expands Ukraine’s industrial base beyond its traditional Western European partners. Meanwhile, a private-sector air defence unit shot down Russian drones in Kharkiv Oblast — the “first result” of an experimental Defence Ministry programme that could transform Ukraine’s defensive posture. Russia’s cumulative 1.3 million casualties dwarf any post-1945 conflict.

Pope Leo XIV Condemns War in Palm Sunday Address

Pope Leo XIV rejected claims that God justifies war during Palm Sunday Mass before tens of thousands in St Peter’s Square, praying specifically for Christians in the Middle East. The pontiff’s message was widely interpreted as a rebuke of both American and Israeli military action. Vatican diplomatic channels with Tehran remain among the few active Western contacts with Iran.

Dive deeper
The Pope’s intervention carries particular weight as the first major geopolitical statement of his pontificate. His rejection of theological justifications for conflict addresses evangelical Christian support for the Iran war, a significant factor in US domestic politics. The prayer for Middle Eastern Christians reflects concern about the conflict’s impact on ancient communities in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, many facing displacement for the second time in a decade. The Vatican’s open diplomatic channel with Tehran could prove valuable if negotiations require a neutral intermediary.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Consumer Confidence Collapses to Lowest Under Starmer

The British Retail Consortium’s economic expectations index plunged to minus 53 in March from minus 30 — the lowest recorded under Starmer’s premiership and worse than during the 2022 mini-budget crisis. Households face a triple squeeze from rising energy costs, food prices and mortgage rates. The BRC warned the decline was driven by “acute anxiety over the international situation.”

Dive deeper
The single-month plunge from minus 30 to minus 53 is the sharpest deterioration the BRC has ever recorded. The index now sits below the trough of the Truss mini-budget crisis — a politically devastating comparison for Labour, which promised economic stability. The compound effect of the Iran war on household finances — energy, fuel, food and mortgage costs all moving adversely — mirrors the late-2022 squeeze but with no clear resolution in sight. Labour faces May’s local elections with consumer confidence at rock bottom.

Energy Cap Falls Tomorrow but July Surge of £322 Looms

Ofgem’s reduced price cap of £1,641 takes effect on 1 April, saving households approximately £10 per month. The government is also removing green levies from bills, potentially saving a further £150 per year. However, Cornwall Insight forecasts the July cap at £1,963 — a £322 increase — as the Hormuz crisis drives wholesale gas prices 67% higher.

Dive deeper
The April cap was calculated before the full impact of the Strait of Hormuz closure on wholesale gas markets became clear. The government’s decision to move green levies to general taxation is the most significant structural change to energy billing in a decade, but its £150 saving is dwarfed by the prospective July increase. If oil remains above $100, the July adjustment will erase the entire April saving and add approximately £205 in net annual costs. The Chancellor is understood to be developing contingency plans for targeted support if the cap exceeds £2,000.

Welfare Cuts Hit 3.2 Million as OBR Halves Growth Forecast

Spring Statement welfare reforms are set to affect 3.2 million people, costing an average £1,720 per year. Universal credit health benefits have been cut by 50 per cent and frozen for new claimants until 2030; some 800,000 will lose disability payments entirely. The OBR halved its growth forecast, forcing Reeves to find £4.1 billion in savings to meet her fiscal rules.

Dive deeper
The scale of welfare reductions — 800,000 people losing disability benefits entirely — represents the largest single retrenchment of the social safety net since 2010. Labour campaigned against benefit cuts; implementing them within months undermines the party’s core electoral proposition. The OBR’s halved growth forecast is partly attributable to the Iran war’s energy shock, meaning Reeves is cutting support for the most vulnerable to address a fiscal hole created by an external crisis. Disability campaigners and Labour backbenchers are already organising opposition.

Defence Spending to Reach 2.5% of GDP by 2027

The government confirmed defence spending will reach 2.5 per cent of GDP by 2027 — three years ahead of the Conservative timeline — with a target of 3 per cent in the next parliament. Overseas development aid will be cut from 0.5 per cent to 0.3 per cent of GNI to fund the increase. The MoD receives an immediate £2.2 billion supplement.

Dive deeper
The Iran crisis has compressed what was expected to be a gradual defence spending increase into an accelerated programme. Cutting overseas aid to 0.3 per cent of GNI takes Britain below every other G7 nation and contradicts Labour’s manifesto commitment to restore the 0.7 per cent target. The expanded definition of “defence spending” — now including security and intelligence agencies — is contested by NATO allies who argue it inflates the headline figure. At 2.6 per cent under the new definition, Britain would still trail the United States, Poland and Greece in actual military expenditure as a share of GDP.

Reform Projected to Gain 2,260 Council Seats in May

Electoral projections indicate Reform UK could gain 2,260 council seats on 7 May if current polling holds. Three traditionally Conservative counties — Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk — are projected to flip to Reform. YouGov puts Labour at a record low of 16 per cent, behind Reform on 23 per cent and the Greens on 21 per cent.

Dive deeper
The projections would make Reform the third-largest party in English local government in a single election — a feat that took the Liberal Democrats decades. Farage’s £5 million direct mail campaign targets the eastern counties where Conservative support has collapsed. Labour’s third-place position presents an existential challenge: the party has never governed from 16 per cent. The Greens’ surge to 21 per cent — driven by opposition to UK involvement in the Iran conflict — splits the anti-Conservative vote and could paradoxically hand more seats to Reform through vote-splitting on the left.
One To Read

The Iran War Is Exacting a Heavy Toll on Gulf Energy Exporters

Chatham House · Expert analysis of how the conflict is reshaping Gulf energy markets — from damaged infrastructure to shifting trade routes — and why the economic fallout will outlast the war itself.
§

Weekly Roundup

The stories that defined this week View roundup
Week of 23–29 March 2026

The Week In Numbers

  • Iran’s death toll passed 1,900 including 230 children as the war entered its second month — Houthis opened a new front from Yemen, firing ballistic missiles at Israel for the first time, while the US military presence in the Gulf reached its highest level since the 2003 Iraq invasion
  • Petrol broke £1.50 per litre for the first time since the 2022 energy crisis, up 17.3p in four weeks — the OECD delivered the steepest growth downgrade of any G20 nation, slashing UK forecasts from 1.2% to 0.7% and nearly doubling its inflation projection to 4.0%
  • Consumer confidence collapsed to record lows as the BRC index plunged to minus 53 — Labour fell to 16% in polls, behind Reform at 23% and the Conservatives at 19%, while an estimated 500,000 marched through London against the far right and war

What Moved Forward

Two-Child Benefit Cap Abolished — 450,000 Children Lifted From Poverty

Domestic

The Universal Credit (Removal of Two Child Limit) Act takes effect on 6 April, ending the nine-year restriction that capped benefit payments at a household’s first two children. An estimated 570,000 households will gain an average of £450 per month, with the child element — worth approximately £3,650 per year per additional child — applied automatically. The government estimates 450,000 children will be lifted out of relative poverty, making it the most significant anti-poverty measure since the introduction of tax credits.

Royal Navy Authorised to Board Russian Shadow Fleet

Geopolitical

Starmer announced at the Helsinki JEF summit that UK armed forces may now interdict sanctioned Russian shadow fleet vessels in British waters, including the English Channel. The fleet of over 500 ships carries an estimated 75 per cent of Russia’s crude exports using false flags and disabled transponders. HMS Cutlass supported the French interception of MV Deyna in the Mediterranean, while patrol ships shadowed the Russian warship Boikiy and oil tanker MT General Skobelev in the Channel — the first active enforcement of the UK’s new maritime authority.

First Female Archbishop of Canterbury Installed

Domestic

The Right Reverend Sarah Mullally was enthroned as the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury on Wednesday at Canterbury Cathedral, becoming the first woman to hold the role in the Church of England’s 490-year history. Over 2,000 guests attended, including representatives from 85 Anglican provinces. The appointment marks a generational shift in the church’s leadership and follows years of debate over gender equality within the Anglican Communion.

What Stalled

Bank of England Freezes Rate Cuts as Inflation Forecast Surges

Markets

The Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to hold the base rate at 3.75%, abandoning what had been widely expected cuts. Governor Bailey warned the Middle East conflict constitutes a “major shock to energy supply,” with CPI inflation now forecast between 3% and 3.5%. Mortgage rates have climbed sharply, with two-year fixes rising from 4.84% to 5.28% in eleven days. The Bank effectively signalled that rate cuts are off the table until the Hormuz crisis resolves — a timeline nobody can predict.

Iran Rejects US Ceasefire Plan and Islamabad Summit

Geopolitical

Tehran dismissed Washington’s 15-point ceasefire proposal as “maximalist and unreasonable” and boycotted the four-nation Islamabad summit — the first multilateral diplomatic effort since the war began. Iran issued five counterdemands including war reparations, sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, and a halt to all attacks on allied forces. Foreign Minister Araghchi warned that US troops setting foot on Iranian soil would arrive “on fire.” The gulf between positions remains vast.

UK Growth Slashed to 0.7% — Steepest Cut of Any G20 Nation

Domestic

The OECD cut the UK’s 2026 growth forecast by 0.5 percentage points to just 0.7% and nearly doubled its inflation projection to 4.0%, calling Britain the most exposed G20 economy to the Iran war’s energy price shock. Consumer confidence collapsed to record lows, with the BRC index plunging 23 points in a single month to minus 53. Retailers recorded their worst month since the first lockdown, while manufacturers face their largest cost surge since 1992.

What To Watch Next Week

Trump’s Extended Deadline — 6 April for Iran to Reopen Hormuz

Geopolitical

Trump extended the deadline for strikes on Iran’s energy infrastructure to 6 April after Tehran permitted 10 oil tankers through Hormuz as a “present.” Diplomatic insiders suggest direct US–Iran talks could occur as early as Tuesday, routed through Pakistani channels. But Iran’s “toll booth” system remains in place, charging vessels an estimated £1.6 million per transit and permitting only five nations through. The deadline gives diplomacy eight days — and markets a week of uncertainty.

Energy Cap Falls Tuesday — But July Surge of £322 Looms

Domestic

Ofgem’s price cap drops to £1,641 from 1 April, saving typical households £117 per year. But Cornwall Insight now forecasts the July cap could surge £322 to £1,963 as the Iran war drives oil above $100 per barrel — erasing the saving and adding a net £205 over six months. With petrol already past £1.50, diesel at 177.7p, and wholesale gas up 70% in March alone, the April reprieve may prove short-lived.

Easter Recess — No Parliamentary Scrutiny During War’s Most Volatile Phase

Domestic

Parliament rose for a fortnight’s Easter recess on Thursday, returning 13 April. The two-week absence means no parliamentary scrutiny during the war’s most volatile phase — with the Houthi front opening, Trump’s 6 April deadline approaching, and the Islamabad diplomatic track stalling. With 52% of Britons now saying Starmer should resign and Labour in third place, the recess gives the government breathing room but denies the opposition its most powerful platform.

One To Read This Weekend

Global Markets and the Strait of Hormuz: The Economic Shockwaves of the Iran War

Stimson Center · A rigorous analysis of how the Hormuz closure is transmitting shockwaves through shipping insurance, energy markets and emerging economies — and why the economic fallout could outlast the conflict itself by years.
☽

Evening Briefing

Monday 30 March 2026 — 18:03 BST

What It Means For You

  • Energy bills drop tomorrow — Ofgem’s cap falls to £1,641, saving roughly £10 per month. But wholesale gas is up 75% since February; Cornwall Insight forecasts the July cap at £1,963. Consider fixing your tariff before summer.
  • Petrol still climbing — Brent crude crossed $116 today and Houthis are threatening to close a second maritime chokepoint. The RAC expects forecourt prices above 155p per litre this week.
  • Late payment reform for small businesses — new laws force large firms to pay within 60 days with mandatory 8% interest penalties. If you supply larger companies, overdue invoices totalling £23.4bn nationally should clear faster.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Threatens to Obliterate Iran’s Oil Wells if Hormuz Deal Fails

↻ This morning: Trump claims Iran accepts ‘most’ demands → This evening: threatens to destroy oil infrastructure

President Trump told the Financial Times he could “take the oil in Iran” and seize Kharg Island, warning he would “completely” obliterate Iran’s power plants, oil wells and export terminals if a deal is not reached to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Pakistan’s Deputy PM Ishaq Dar confirmed Islamabad will host direct US–Iran talks “in coming days.” Iran described the US demands as “unrealistic, illogical and excessive.”

Dive deeper
Trump’s explicit threat to seize and destroy Iran’s energy infrastructure marks the most direct escalation in rhetoric since the war began on 28 February. Kharg Island handles 90% of Iran’s oil exports; its capture or destruction would eliminate Tehran’s remaining economic leverage. The gap between Trump’s maximalist threats and Pakistan’s careful facilitation creates a contradictory diplomatic picture. Markets reacted with a further oil surge — Goldman Sachs has not ruled out $130 per barrel if the conflict escalates further.

Houthis Threaten Bab al-Mandeb Blockade as Second Chokepoint Looms

Yemen’s Houthi deputy information minister confirmed that closing the Bab al-Mandeb strait is “among our options” in the next phase, should Israel target Hodeidah or civilian infrastructure. The strait handles 4.8 million barrels of oil and 12% of global trade daily. Bloomberg warned oil markets face acute risk from dual chokepoint closure. Major shipping lines have suspended Suez Canal transits.

Dive deeper
A simultaneous closure of Hormuz and Bab al-Mandeb would be without precedent — together they control roughly 35% of seaborne oil and most Europe–Asia container traffic. Rerouting around the Cape of Good Hope adds 10–14 days and approximately $1 million per voyage in fuel costs. The Houthis’ phased approach — attacking Israel first, threatening shipping second — mirrors their 2024 Red Sea campaign but with far higher stakes. Insurance premiums for Gulf and Red Sea transit have already risen 400% since late February.

European Consumer Confidence Collapses at Fastest Rate Since 2022

Eurozone consumer confidence plunged to minus 16.3 — its lowest since October 2023 — with the sharpest monthly decline since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in March 2022. Economic sentiment fell 1.6 points to 96.6 across the euro area. Consumers’ inflation expectations surged from 26.2 to 43.4. The ECB warned energy-dependent economies including Germany and Italy face technical recession.

Dive deeper
The speed of the confidence collapse underscores how rapidly the Iran war is transmitting through European economies. Unlike the 2022 energy shock, Europe this time faces simultaneous oil and gas disruption — the Ras Laffan LNG terminal strike removed 17% of Qatar’s export capacity, with repairs taking up to five years. The ECB’s decision to pause rate cuts on 19 March signals monetary policy will tighten rather than ease, compounding the demand shock. Summer gas storage refills are now the critical vulnerability.

US Marines Arrive in Gulf as Pentagon Plans Limited Ground Operations

Some 3,500 additional US troops arrived in the Middle East aboard the USS Tripoli, bringing the regional total to its highest since the 2003 Iraq invasion. Pentagon officials confirmed planning for “weeks” of ground operations “falling short of a full-scale invasion,” including special forces raids and conventional infantry deployments. CENTCOM said it has struck over 11,000 targets in Iran since 28 February.

Dive deeper
The distinction between “limited ground operations” and “invasion” is one Pentagon planners are striving to maintain but which may prove impossible once troops engage Iranian forces on their soil. The 11,000-target figure suggests the air campaign has been far more extensive than publicly acknowledged. Historical parallels to Iraq 2003 are uncomfortable — that invasion began with “limited” objectives that expanded rapidly. The USS Tripoli’s amphibious capability suggests coastal targets, most likely Kharg Island.

Russia Launches Largest Drone Barrage as Spring Offensive Intensifies

Russia fired 948 drones at Ukraine in 24 hours — one of the largest aerial attacks since the full-scale invasion — alongside 147 combat clashes on the front line. Ukrainian forces reported 870 Russian troops killed or wounded daily. Explosions hit Taganrog overnight from Ukrainian drone strikes. A chemical plant in Samara Oblast was struck, with smoke visible from Tolyatti.

Dive deeper
Moscow’s spring offensive is operating at extraordinary tempo — nearly a thousand drones in a single day indicates either a massive stockpile or Iranian-supplied production surge. Ukraine’s counter-strikes on Russian oil infrastructure in Taganrog and Samara are strategically significant, targeting the energy revenues that fund the war. Russian cumulative casualties since February 2022 have reached approximately 1.3 million, dwarfing any post-1945 conflict. Whether Russia can sustain this attrition rate through summer remains the central question.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Starmer Pledges Open-Ended Energy Support as Bills Set to Surge

↻ This morning: Starmer convenes Hormuz crisis roundtable → This evening: pledges ‘whatever happens’ bill support

Following this morning’s roundtable with energy, shipping and insurance executives, the Prime Minister pledged “appropriate” support for household energy bills after the current price cap expires at the end of June. Cornwall Insight now forecasts the July cap at £1,963 — a net increase of £322 over April levels. Treasury contingency planning is understood to be “well advanced.”

Dive deeper
Starmer’s open-ended commitment signals the government recognises the April price cut is politically worthless if summer bills soar. The £1,963 July forecast implies typical households face annual costs exceeding £2,000 for the first time since winter 2023 — erasing two years of post-crisis relief. Extending support will cost the Treasury an estimated £3–5 billion depending on oil prices. The political calculus is blunt: Labour cannot face the May elections with households paying more for energy than under the Conservatives.

Government Unveils Strongest Late Payment Laws in G7 History

Labour introduced the toughest late payment protections in the G7, forcing large firms to pay small suppliers within 60 days. All commercial contracts will carry mandatory interest at 8% above the Bank of England base rate — a £10,000 invoice paid 60 days late automatically triggers £293 in interest and compensation. Small businesses are owed an estimated £23.4 billion in overdue payments nationally.

Dive deeper
Late payments kill more small businesses than any other single cause — the Federation of Small Businesses estimates 50,000 firms close annually because of cash-flow problems caused by delayed invoices. The automatic interest mechanism removes the burden of enforcement from suppliers, who previously had to pursue claims individually. The 60-day cap, with a target of 45 days within five years, brings the UK into line with France’s existing regime. Implementation is expected later this year.

Royal Navy Authorised to Seize Russian Shadow Fleet Tankers

Starmer announced at the Joint Expeditionary Force summit in Helsinki that UK armed forces will board and seize sanctioned Russian shadow fleet tankers transiting British waters. Officials estimate 75% of Russian crude exports move through this ageing, uninsured network of vessels operating under flags of convenience. Over 500 ships have been sanctioned; enforcement powers rest on the 2018 Sanctions Act.

Dive deeper
The shadow fleet is Moscow’s financial lifeline — circumventing the $60-per-barrel price cap to sell crude at near-market rates, generating an estimated $15 billion annually. The UK’s geographic position astride key North Sea and Channel shipping lanes makes it uniquely placed to interdict these vessels. Previous policy relied on sanctions lists alone; the shift to physical interception marks a significant escalation. Several shadow fleet tankers are over 20 years old and lack proper insurance, posing acute environmental risk to British waters.

NHS Satisfaction Rises for First Time Since Pandemic

The King’s Fund and Nuffield Trust survey showed public dissatisfaction with the NHS fell 8 percentage points — the largest drop in nearly three decades. Waiting lists are at a three-year low, A&E four-hour performance is the best in four years, and ambulance response times the fastest in five. However, only 12% of respondents said they were satisfied with waiting times overall.

Dive deeper
The improvement is real but fragile — driven largely by operational gains at the margins rather than structural reform. The 8-point drop in dissatisfaction is the first positive movement since 2020, giving Labour its strongest NHS narrative in months. But the headline masks deep frustration: GP access satisfaction stands at just 23%, and nearly half of respondents named GP appointments as their top priority. The Iran war’s inflationary pressure on NHS procurement costs threatens to reverse these gains within quarters.

Reform Projected to Gain 2,260 Council Seats at May Elections

Electoral projections indicate Reform UK could gain 2,260 council seats on 7 May if current polling translates into votes. Three eastern counties — Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk — are projected to flip to Reform, representing a historic realignment of traditionally Conservative strongholds. Combined, the Conservatives and Labour face a net loss of 74% of the seats they are defending.

Dive deeper
The projections rest on a critical assumption — that Reform’s national polling advantage translates uniformly into council wards, where local factors and candidate quality traditionally dominate. Nigel Farage’s £5 million direct mail campaign since January is designed to overcome exactly this challenge. If Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk flip, Reform would control more council seats than the Liberal Democrats for the first time. The implications for the next general election are significant — these are the marginal constituencies Labour needs to retain its majority.
One To Read

Pessimism Sets In for Europe as Iran War Hits Confidence

CNBC · How the Middle East conflict is transmitting through European economies — collapsing consumer confidence, surging inflation expectations and the growing risk of stagflation across the euro area.
☼

Morning Briefing

Monday 30 March 2026 — 08:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • Energy bills fall tomorrow — Ofgem’s price cap drops 7% from 1 April, saving roughly £10 per month. But wholesale gas has surged 70% in March; the July cap could reverse the saving entirely. Consider fixing a deal before the next review.
  • Petrol still climbing — Brent crude rose above $113 overnight as Houthi attacks threaten Red Sea shipping alongside the Hormuz closure. The RAC expects forecourt prices to reach 155p per litre by mid-week.
  • Easter recess means no Commons scrutiny — Parliament returns 13 April. With the IRGC’s university deadline passing today and Trump’s 6 April Hormuz deadline approaching, the government faces two weeks of executive-only decision-making.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Claims Iran Agreed to “Most of” 15-Point Demands — Tehran Denies

President Trump claimed Iran has agreed to “most of” the 15-point list of demands conveyed via Pakistan to end the war. Pakistan confirmed it will host direct US–Iran talks “in coming days,” with Foreign Minister Dar saying Pakistan “will be honoured to host and facilitate meaningful talks.” Iran continues to deny any direct negotiations are taking place, accusing Washington of “talking to itself.” CNN analysis described the war as “at a fateful fork in the road.”

Dive deeper
The gap between Trump’s claims and Tehran’s denials has become the defining diplomatic dynamic of this conflict. Pakistan’s centrality as broker reflects both Washington’s lack of direct channels and Islamabad’s unique position maintaining relations with both sides. The 15-point demands — including nuclear dismantlement, full IAEA access and Hormuz reopening — are maximalist by design. The real question is whether Iran’s formal response, delivered Saturday, contains enough ambiguity for face-saving on both sides. Markets have largely priced in a prolonged conflict; a genuine breakthrough would trigger a sharp oil sell-off.

Foiled Paris Bomb Plot Linked to Iran War — Two More Suspects Arrested

French anti-terrorism authorities arrested two more suspects in connection with the foiled bomb attack outside Bank of America’s Paris headquarters on the Rue de la Boétie, near the Champs-Élysées. A 22-year-old man was arrested Saturday at 03:30 as he placed a device containing five litres of fuel and an ignition system. He told police he was recruited via Snapchat for €600. Prosecutors linked the plot to the “concretisation of the Iranian threat towards American and Israeli interests in Europe.”

Dive deeper
The Paris plot represents the war’s first confirmed spillover onto European soil — a significant escalation beyond the Middle Eastern theatre. The recruitment via social media for just €600 suggests a low-cost, high-volume approach to mobilising lone actors. French security services have raised the national threat level to its highest since the 2015 attacks. The targeting of a US financial institution rather than a military or diplomatic site broadens the threat surface considerably. European capitals are now reassessing security around American and Israeli commercial interests.

Israel Kills Three Journalists in Marked Press Car in Lebanon

An Israeli airstrike hit a clearly marked press car on the Jezzine highway in southern Lebanon on Saturday, killing journalist Ali Shoaib of Al-Manar TV, journalist Fatima Ftouni of Al-Mayadeen TV, and her brother, freelance photojournalist Mohamad Ftouni. The IDF claimed Shoaib was embedded within a Hezbollah intelligence unit but offered no evidence and did not mention the other two victims. Lebanese President Aoun called it a violation of “the most basic rules of international law.”

Dive deeper
The strike drew immediate condemnation from the Committee to Protect Journalists, which said “journalists are not legitimate targets, regardless of the outlet they work for.” The total death toll in Lebanon has now surpassed 1,142 since 2 March, including 124 children. The targeted killing of media workers covering the conflict raises questions about press freedom in the theatre. Al-Mayadeen is a Beirut-based pan-Arab outlet; Al-Manar is Hezbollah’s broadcaster. Israel’s claim of intelligence links is unverified and follows a pattern of post-hoc justifications for strikes on civilian infrastructure.

Zelenskyy Signs 10-Year Defence Deals with Gulf States

President Zelenskyy completed a diplomatic tour of the Gulf, signing 10-year security agreements with Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE. The deals establish joint defence industry projects, co-production facilities and technological partnerships focused on countering missiles and drones. Ukraine has deployed anti-drone experts to all three countries. In return, Kyiv is seeking high-end air defence missiles that Gulf nations possess and that Ukraine needs to counter Russian attacks.

Dive deeper
Zelenskyy’s Gulf pivot is a masterstroke of wartime diplomacy — leveraging Ukraine’s hard-won expertise in drone interception to unlock the interceptor stockpiles Kyiv desperately needs. The Gulf states, under daily Iranian drone and missile attack, have urgent demand for exactly the capabilities Ukraine has refined over two years of Russian bombardment. The arrangement creates mutual dependence that could outlast the current conflict. For Moscow, the deals are unwelcome — they deepen Ukraine’s international partnerships and diversify its arms supply away from sole dependence on NATO stocks.

CPAC Exposes Republican Rifts Over Iran as Trump Skips Event

President Trump skipped CPAC for the first time in a decade as divisions over the Iran war dominated the conservative conference in Texas. Former Congressman Matt Gaetz warned from the stage that “a ground invasion of Iran will make our country poorer and less safe.” Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly have become vocal critics. Trump’s approval has crashed to 36% — the lowest of his second term. Attendees expressed anxiety about surging gas prices and the risk of escalation.

Dive deeper
CPAC has historically served as Trump’s coronation ground — his absence signals either strategic distance from the base’s discomfort or acknowledgement that the war is politically toxic. The conference’s internal polling showed 67% of attendees support the campaign but just 23% approve of ground operations — a gap that widens as costs mount. Gas prices are the critical political variable; Goldman Sachs estimates every $10 rise in oil reduces the president’s net approval by 2–3 points. The Republican establishment is fracturing between hawks who see Iran as an existential threat and populists who campaigned on ending foreign wars.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Starmer Convenes Energy and Shipping Chiefs for Hormuz War Briefing

The Prime Minister convened senior government and military officials alongside energy, shipping, finance and insurance sector leaders for a roundtable in Downing Street to examine the impact of Iran’s effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The session focused on fuel supply security, shipping insurance costs and the financial sector’s exposure to prolonged disruption. It follows four COBRA meetings in March as the economic fallout from the conflict intensifies.

Dive deeper
The roundtable’s composition — energy executives alongside Lloyd’s of London insurers and shipping CEOs — reflects the government’s growing concern that market mechanisms, not just geopolitics, could trigger a domestic crisis. Shipping insurance premiums for Gulf transit have risen 400% since late February, effectively adding a war surcharge to every import. The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee is monitoring exposure at major UK insurers. Starmer’s decision to bring the private sector into COBRA-adjacent discussions mirrors the approach taken during the 2022 energy crisis, but the scale of disruption is significantly larger.

Energy Price Cap Drops Tomorrow — But Wholesale Surge Threatens July

Ofgem’s energy price cap falls to £1,641 from 1 April, cutting gas to 5.7p/kWh and electricity to 24.7p/kWh — saving a typical household £117 per year. However, wholesale gas prices have surged 70% in March, and Cornwall Insight now forecasts the July cap at £1,963. The Prime Minister pledged “appropriate support” to ease household bills after the cap expires at the end of June.

Dive deeper
The April reduction was set before the Iran conflict escalated and reflects pre-war wholesale prices. The disconnect between falling regulated prices and surging wholesale costs creates a false sense of relief. If oil remains above $100, the July adjustment will not only erase the April saving but add approximately £205 in net annual costs. Energy UK warned that some suppliers may struggle with the margin squeeze between the lower cap and their own rising procurement costs. The government’s commitment to extend support “whatever happens” suggests Treasury contingency planning is well advanced.

Labour Launches Local Election Campaign Amid Record-Low Polling

Starmer launched Labour’s local election campaign with a focus on cost-of-living measures — the energy bill discount, the two-child benefit cap abolition, the living wage increase and pension triple lock. He argued that voting Reform risks “undermining the progress we’ve made.” Internal predictions point to significant setbacks in Wales, Scotland and English councils. YouGov puts Labour at 17%, Reform at 23%, Conservatives at 19%.

Dive deeper
Labour’s local election strategy is defensive — defending incumbency in councils won during the 2022 anti-Tory wave rather than making gains. The party’s 17% polling is historically catastrophic for a governing party less than two years into its term. In Wales, where Labour has governed in the Senedd for 27 years, the party faces its worst projected results in a generation. The cost-of-living message is undermined by precisely the inflation Starmer cannot control. The 1 May elections will serve as the first major electoral verdict on the government’s handling of the Iran crisis.

Together Alliance March — Organisers Claim 500,000, Police Say 50,000

The Metropolitan Police estimated 50,000 attended Saturday’s Together Alliance march through central London — significantly below the 500,000 claimed by organisers. Over 300 organisations including the TUC, Unison and Amnesty International supported the march from Park Lane to Whitehall. A separate Palestine solidarity contingent converged from Exhibition Road. Police reported no major incidents.

Dive deeper
The order-of-magnitude gap between police and organiser estimates is typical of large UK demonstrations, but the true figure matters politically. Even the lower police estimate would make it the largest anti-far-right demonstration in years. The coalition’s breadth — trade unions, faith groups, anti-racism campaigners and civil liberties organisations — suggests the centre-left is beginning to coalesce in response to Reform’s polling surge. Whether this translates into local election turnout on 1 May is the critical test. Single-day marches rarely sustain organisational momentum without concrete electoral follow-through.

IRGC University Deadline Passes Today — UK Universities on Alert

The IRGC’s deadline for Washington to condemn strikes on Iranian universities expires today (30 March), with threats to expand attacks on educational institutions if no condemnation is issued. UK universities with Iranian research partnerships have been advised to review cybersecurity protocols. The Russell Group confirmed it has received guidance from the National Cyber Security Centre. Three Iranian universities have been damaged in strikes since 28 February.

Dive deeper
The IRGC deadline creates an unusual escalatory trigger — tying military action to a demand for diplomatic rhetoric rather than operational concessions. UK universities maintain extensive research collaborations with Iranian institutions, particularly in engineering, medicine and nuclear physics. The NCSC advisory focuses on the risk of retaliatory cyber operations rather than physical threats. Tehran’s framing of university strikes as an attack on civilian infrastructure has gained traction at UNESCO, which passed a resolution condemning attacks on educational facilities by 142 votes to 3.
One To Read

Trump’s Iran War Is at a Fateful Fork in the Road

CNN Politics · Stephen Collinson examines the war’s critical juncture — Pakistan’s diplomatic gambit, Houthi escalation, and the fundamental question of whether Trump has an exit strategy or is sleepwalking into a quagmire.
☼

Morning Briefing

Sunday 29 March 2026 — 10:03 BST

What It Means For You

  • Energy bills drop from Tuesday — Ofgem’s price cap falls 7%, saving a typical household £10 per month. But wholesale prices have surged since; consider fixing before July’s expected £322 increase.
  • Petrol prices heading higher — with Brent at $112 and Houthi attacks threatening Red Sea shipping, the RAC expects forecourt prices to reach 155p per litre by mid-week. Fill up this weekend.
  • Universal Credit changes take effect next week — the two-child cap ends 6 April, adding roughly £450 per month per additional child. But the health element halves for new claimants; submit before 6 April to secure the higher £97 weekly rate.

GEO Geopolitical

Islamabad Peace Summit Opens — Four Nations Table Ceasefire Framework

Foreign ministers from Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt convene in Islamabad for the first multilateral diplomatic effort since the war began on 28 February. PM Sharif held a 90-minute call with Iranian President Pezeshkian. Diplomatic insiders suggest direct US–Iran talks via Rubio and Araghchi could occur as early as Tuesday. Iran has conveyed its formal response to Washington’s 15-point peace proposal.

Dive deeper
The summit’s abrupt relocation from Ankara to Islamabad underscores Pakistan’s growing centrality as diplomatic broker. Each participating nation brings distinct leverage: Pakistan as primary back-channel, Turkey maintaining relations with Tehran, Saudi Arabia as Washington’s key Gulf ally, and Egypt providing Arab League credibility. The fundamental gap remains vast — Washington demands nuclear dismantlement and Hormuz reopened, while Tehran demands reparations and a halt to all strikes. Beijing has conveyed support for Pakistan’s de-escalatory role, signalling a parallel Chinese diplomatic track.

Houthis Open New Front as Iran War Enters Second Month

Yemen’s Houthi rebels launched two missile and drone attacks on Israel on Saturday, marking their formal entry into the conflict on Day 29. Both ballistic missiles were intercepted; falling debris injured 11 in Eshtaol. The Houthis vowed to continue strikes until attacks on Iran cease. Major container lines suspended all Suez transits within hours of the attacks.

Dive deeper
The Houthi entry transforms the bilateral campaign into a multi-front regional war spanning Iran, Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen. Their missile inventory includes Iranian-supplied Toufan cruise missiles with ranges exceeding 2,000km. The group’s involvement raises the spectre of renewed Red Sea shipping disruption — they launched over 100 attacks on commercial shipping in 2024. Combined with the Hormuz restriction, roughly 35% of global seaborne oil and 12% of containerised trade is now rerouted around the Cape of Good Hope.

Iran Death Toll Nears 2,000 — IRGC Issues University Strike Deadline

The Iranian Health Ministry reports 1,937 killed since 28 February, including 230 children. The IRGC has demanded Washington condemn strikes on Iranian universities by 30 March or face expanded attacks on educational institutions. In Lebanon, 1,189 have been killed since 2 March, including 124 children. Israel killed three journalists in a targeted strike in southern Lebanon.

Dive deeper
The mounting toll is approaching the threshold at which international pressure for ceasefire typically intensifies. The IRGC’s 30 March deadline on university strikes introduces a new escalatory trigger — threatening to expand attacks on civilian infrastructure unless Washington issues a public condemnation. The targeting of universities, which Iran says housed no military installations, drew condemnation from the International Committee of the Red Cross. Independent casualty estimates range from 3,100 to 5,300, suggesting the official toll is significantly underreported.

Trump Considers 10,000 More Troops as Gulf Force Hits Post-2003 High

The USS Tripoli amphibious assault ship carrying 3,500 Marines has arrived in the CENTCOM area, bringing the US military presence to its highest since the 2003 Iraq invasion. More than 300 service members have been wounded and 13 killed. Trump is reportedly considering deploying up to 10,000 additional troops. Several senators have demanded a War Powers Act authorisation vote.

Dive deeper
The Tripoli carries Marine Expeditionary Unit assets capable of forcible-entry operations, raising questions about whether ground forces could be deployed to secure the Strait of Hormuz. Capital Alpha Partners analyst Byron Callan estimates a 25% probability the war concludes by May, 45% by autumn 2026, and 35% it extends into 2027. Goldman Sachs warns the conflict is already costing the US economy 10,000 jobs per month. Congressional scrutiny is intensifying, with calls for formal war authorisation the first serious legislative challenge to the campaign.

Ukraine Hits Russian Oil Terminals Again; Odesa Struck Overnight

Ukrainian drones struck Ust-Luga and Primorsk oil terminals for the third time in five days, keeping oil loading suspended. Ukraine’s air defence shot down 252 of 273 Russian drones overnight; 21 penetrated. One person was killed and 12 wounded, including a nine-year-old boy, in a strike on Odesa. Russia lost 1,360 personnel in the latest daily count.

Dive deeper
Kyiv’s strategy of targeting Russia’s Baltic oil export infrastructure is shifting from temporary disruption to permanent destruction — the pace of strikes prevents Russia from completing repairs. The Kirishi refinery, processing 350,000 barrels per day, was also hit. Combined with the Hormuz disruption, this creates the tightest global oil supply picture since the 1973 crisis. Stray Ukrainian drones entered all three Baltic states’ airspace last week, triggering calls for EU air-defence support rather than condemnation of Kyiv.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Energy Cap Drops Tuesday — But July Surge of £322 Looms

Ofgem’s price cap falls to £1,641 per year from 1 April, saving typical households £117 annually. However, Cornwall Insight warns the cap could surge £322 to £1,963 in July as the Iran war drives oil above $100 per barrel. The Government has deployed a £6.9 billion energy bill discount scheme removing green levy costs from bills for three years.

Dive deeper
The April reduction was supposed to be Labour’s strongest consumer narrative — tangible proof of falling bills. Instead, it arrives as a footnote to war-driven energy inflation. If oil remains above $100, the July cap will erase the April saving and add a net £205 increase over six months. The Chancellor’s anti-profiteering framework empowers the CMA to clamp down on energy price gouging, but enforcement is untested. The 1.5 million homes on heating oil face the sharpest pain, with kerosene prices up 40% since late February.

Consumer Confidence Collapses to Record Low Under Starmer

The BRC reported consumer expectations plunged to minus 53 — the lowest ever recorded — down 23 points in a single month. The GfK index fell to minus 21. Household savings rates surged six points as families brace for higher energy bills, petrol at 150.7p per litre, and inflation forecast at 4% by the OECD.

Dive deeper
A 23-point single-month collapse has no precedent outside pandemic lockdowns. The cost-of-living crisis Starmer promised to resolve is deepening under his watch, driven by geopolitical forces largely beyond his control. Polls show Labour at 17% nationally, behind Reform at 23% and the Conservatives at 19%. With local elections on 1 May, the consumer confidence data suggests severe electoral punishment is likely. The OECD’s 4% inflation forecast would represent the highest rate since late 2023.

Hundreds of Thousands March Against Far Right and War

The Together Alliance march brought an estimated 50,000 to 500,000 through central London on Saturday. Over 300 organisations including the TUC, Unison and Amnesty International supported the march from Park Lane to Whitehall. A separate Palestine solidarity march converged from Exhibition Road. Police reported no major incidents.

Dive deeper
The march’s significance lies in its breadth — over 300 organisations uniting under a single banner, suggesting the British centre-left is coalescing in response to Reform UK’s polling surge. The Palestine contingent’s integration reflects how the Iran war has re-energised the pro-Palestinian movement. With local elections five weeks away, this is the centre-left’s opening salvo. Whether the Together Alliance maintains organisational coherence beyond a single-day event and translates turnout into local election results remains the critical question.

Parliament Rises for Easter Amid Acute Geopolitical Crisis

The Commons rose on Thursday and the Lords on Friday for a fortnight’s Easter recess; both return on 13 April. The Pension Schemes Bill and Crime and Policing Bill completed Lords stages. The Representation of the People Bill, lowering the voting age to 16, entered committee stage. The two-week absence means no parliamentary scrutiny during the war’s most volatile phase.

Dive deeper
The timing is acutely uncomfortable — Parliament will be absent precisely as the IRGC’s 30 March university deadline passes, the Islamabad summit unfolds, and the conflict’s second month begins. The Pension Schemes Bill saw a significant Lords rebellion, with peers voting 191–118 to strip the Government’s power to mandate pension asset allocations — a defeat likely to trigger ping-pong after Easter. The votes-at-16 bill remains deeply contentious; committee stage will test backbench discipline.

Reform Fractures as Restore Britain Targets Local Elections

Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain will field candidates in the 1 May local elections, threatening to split the right-wing vote. Farage launched Reform’s campaign days after the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards ruled he breached disclosure rules 17 times, totalling £384,000 in undisclosed interests. YouGov puts Reform at 23%, Conservatives at 19%, Labour at 17%.

Dive deeper
If Restore takes just 3% of the vote, it could devastate Reform by splitting the right-wing electorate — mirroring the damage Reform once inflicted on the Conservatives. The populist right is fragmenting faster than consolidating. Farage’s 17 standards breaches provide ammunition for both Labour and Restore, undermining his anti-establishment credentials. The key metric on 1 May is whether combined Reform–Restore votes exceed what Reform would have won alone, or whether the split hands seats to Labour and the Conservatives by default.
One To Read

The Iran War Could Drag Into 2027, Analyst Warns

Fortune · Why Capital Alpha Partners warns the conflict has a 35% chance of extending into 2027 — and why Goldman Sachs says 10,000 American jobs are already being lost every month.
☽

Evening Briefing

Sunday 29 March 2026 — 19:55 BST

What It Means For You

  • Fill up this weekend — the RAC expects petrol to hit 155p per litre by mid-week as Houthi attacks add Red Sea disruption to the Hormuz closure. A full tank today saves roughly £5–8.
  • Energy bills fall Tuesday — Ofgem’s cap drops to £1,641, saving £10 per month. But Cornwall Insight now forecasts a July surge to £1,963; fixing your tariff before summer may lock in savings.
  • Food prices under pressure — the Hormuz closure has disrupted 20% of global oil shipping and rerouted cargo around the Cape of Good Hope, adding 10–14 days to deliveries and pushing up import costs.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Rejects Islamabad Talks; Warns US Troops Will Arrive ‘on Fire’

↻ This morning: Four nations convene for ceasefire → This evening: Iran dismisses talks outright

Iran’s Foreign Ministry dismissed the four-nation Islamabad summit as “futile,” warning that American troops setting foot on Iranian soil would be “on fire as soon as they arrive.” The Pentagon is preparing weeks of limited ground operations, including raids on Kharg Island. Pakistan secured passage for 20 ships through the Strait under Iranian escort.

Dive deeper
Tehran’s rejection signals fundamental mistrust of any framework negotiated without its direct participation, especially while strikes continue. The Pentagon’s Kharg Island planning is significant — the island handles 90% of Iran’s oil exports and seizing it would end Tehran’s remaining leverage over global energy markets. Pakistan’s bilateral ship deal may become a template for selective Hormuz access, bypassing the multilateral impasse entirely.

IDF Completes ‘Widespread’ Tehran Strikes; Nuclear Scientist Killed

The Israel Defence Forces launched “widespread” strikes on government infrastructure “in the heart of Tehran” on Saturday, targeting ballistic missile production sites and command centres. Nuclear scientist Mohammed Reza Kia and his wife were killed in Kiashahr. The IDF says it will finish targeting nearly all key military industry sites within days. Bushehr nuclear plant was struck on Friday.

Dive deeper
The IDF’s assessment that it is days from exhausting its top-priority target list suggests the air campaign is approaching a natural ceiling. Targeting nuclear scientists in open airstrikes — previously a covert Mossad speciality — marks a significant escalation in doctrine. The Bushehr strike crossed a threshold the US had previously vetoed, raising the spectre of radiological contamination. The question now shifts to what follows: withdrawal, ground operations, or an indefinite air campaign.

Houthis Fire Second Missile Barrage at Israel Within 24 Hours

↻ This morning: Houthis launch first attack → This evening: Second barrage in under 24 hours

Yemen’s Houthi rebels fired a second salvo of ballistic missiles at Israel, targeting what they described as “sensitive military sites” in southern Israel. Both attacks were intercepted; falling debris injured 11 in Eshtaol. Analysts warn the group could impose a blockade of the Bab al-Mandeb strait, threatening 12% of global containerised trade. Major shipping lines suspended all Suez transits.

Dive deeper
The rapid escalation from one strike to two barrages in 24 hours suggests a pre-planned campaign. The Houthis’ Iranian-supplied Toufan cruise missiles have ranges exceeding 2,000 km, capable of reaching any Israeli city. A Bab al-Mandeb blockade, combined with the existing Hormuz closure, would simultaneously shut two of the world’s three critical maritime chokepoints — an unprecedented disruption. Combined, roughly 35% of seaborne oil and 12% of container traffic is now rerouted around the Cape.

Pope Leo XIV Condemns War in Palm Sunday Address

Pope Leo XIV rejected claims that God justifies war during a Palm Sunday Mass in St Peter’s Square, declaring “He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war.” Cardinal Pizzaballa, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, was blocked by Israeli police from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Leo prayed for Christians in the Middle East, Myanmar and the Congo.

Dive deeper
Leo’s rebuke — delivered as US, Israeli, Iranian and Russian leaders have each invoked divine sanction for military action — carries particular weight as his first Palm Sunday homily. The blocking of Cardinal Pizzaballa adds institutional confrontation between Israel and the Vatican to the diplomatic picture. Leo’s consistent anti-war stance positions the papacy as a moral counterweight, though its practical influence on the conflict remains limited to diplomatic pressure and public opinion.

Russia Loses 8,700 Troops in One Week; Ukraine Hits Baltic Oil Terminals

Russia lost 1,360 troops in the latest daily count, bringing weekly losses above 8,700 — the highest sustained rate of the war. Ukrainian drones struck Baltic oil terminals at Ust-Luga and Primorsk for the third time in five days. Partisans sabotaged electronic warfare equipment in Novgorod Oblast, enabling strikes on an aircraft repair plant in Staraya Russa.

Dive deeper
Moscow’s spring offensive is extracting an extraordinary price at over 8,700 casualties per week. Kyiv’s strategy of targeting Baltic oil infrastructure has shifted from tactical disruption to strategic denial — the pace of strikes prevents Russia completing repairs between attacks. Combined with the Hormuz closure, these strikes contribute to the tightest global oil supply picture since 1973. The partisan sabotage deep in Novgorod Oblast suggests Ukraine’s unconventional warfare capabilities are expanding well behind Russian lines.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Energy Cap Falls Tuesday but July Surge Could Add £322

↻ This morning: Ofgem cap drops 7% → This evening: Cornwall Insight warns July cap could hit £1,963

Ofgem’s price cap drops to £1,641 from Tuesday, saving typical households £117 per year. But Cornwall Insight now forecasts the July cap could surge to £1,963 — erasing the saving and adding a net £205 over six months. Wholesale gas prices are up 75% since late February. The 1.5 million homes on kerosene heating oil face the sharpest pain, with prices up 40%.

Dive deeper
The April reduction was Labour’s strongest consumer narrative — tangible proof of falling costs. Instead it arrives as a footnote to war-driven energy inflation. If oil stays above $100, the Government faces a devastating summer of rising bills ahead of the May elections. The Chancellor’s anti-profiteering framework empowers the CMA to investigate price gouging, but enforcement mechanisms remain untested and household budgets are being squeezed now.

Organisers Claim 500,000 at Largest Anti-Far-Right March in UK History

The Together Alliance confirmed its estimate of 500,000 marchers at Saturday’s demonstration through central London — which, if accurate, would be the largest anti-far-right rally in British history. Over 300 organisations including the TUC and Amnesty International backed the march. Police estimated 50,000. A Palestine solidarity march converged at Whitehall.

Dive deeper
The tenfold gap between police and organiser estimates is itself a political story. Even the lower figure of 50,000 would rank this among the year’s largest protests. The coalition’s breadth — spanning trade unions, faith groups and anti-war campaigners — suggests the centre-left is consolidating against Reform UK’s polling surge. Whether this translates into votes on 1 May or dissipates as single-day activism remains the critical question for Labour strategists.

Ipsos: 52% Say Starmer Should Resign as Labour Falls to Third

An Ipsos poll found 52% of Britons believe Starmer should stand down, up four percentage points from November. YouGov puts Labour at 17% — behind Reform at 23% and the Conservatives at 19%. Despite the numbers, Labour MPs increasingly expect Starmer to survive through 2027. Parliament’s prorogation from late April removes the infrastructure for organised leadership challenges.

Dive deeper
The paradox of Starmer’s position is stark: a majority want him gone, yet no challenger has emerged. Prorogation from late April until 13 May denies rebels the mechanism for a challenge precisely when electoral losses could trigger one. The comparison with Gordon Brown is imperfect but instructive — Brown survived despite worse ratings because no credible alternative commanded a majority. Starmer’s survival may depend not on popularity but on the absence of a viable successor.

Pension Schemes Bill Faces Ping-Pong After Lords Strip Asset Mandate

The Lords voted 191–118 to strip the Government’s power to mandate pension fund asset allocations before the bill completed its passage on Thursday. The defeat means the Pension Schemes Bill faces ping-pong after Easter. Ministers had argued the measure was essential for channelling pension capital into UK infrastructure; peers called it an “unprecedented” overreach.

Dive deeper
The Lords rebellion reflects deep unease about allowing ministers to direct pension investments — a power no previous government has sought. The 191–118 margin suggests the defeat will not easily be overturned. The Government’s argument echoes Canada’s model of using pension capital for domestic infrastructure, but without the governance frameworks that make the Canadian approach functional. With ping-pong extending into May, this becomes another front of parliamentary resistance for Starmer.

Armed Forces Commissioner Endorsed as Defence Spending Debate Sharpens

The Defence Committee endorsed the interim appointment of Polly Miller-Perkins as Armed Forces Commissioner, the first holder of a new role designed to advocate for service personnel. The appointment comes as the Iran conflict sharpens debate over defence spending, currently at 2.3% of GDP. Senior military figures are pressing for a commitment to 2.5% by 2028.

Dive deeper
The Commissioner’s role arrives at a moment when the UK military is stretched by the dual demands of supporting the US-led Middle East campaign and maintaining NATO commitments in Eastern Europe. The 2.3% spending figure, which appeared adequate in January, now looks insufficient given simultaneous pressures from the Hormuz crisis and NATO’s eastern flank. Whether Labour commits to 2.5% before the May elections could test Starmer’s seriousness on defence.
One To Read

Iran Has a New Demand to End the War — and It Could Bring in Billions

CNN · How Tehran is turning the Strait of Hormuz from a military chokepoint into an economic weapon — and why its demand for sovereignty over the waterway could reshape global shipping.
☾

Evening Briefing

Saturday 28 March 2026 — 19:01 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Fill up this weekend — Brent at $112.57 means pump prices above 150p per litre will keep climbing. Analysts expect 155p by midweek as wholesale costs feed through to forecourts.
  • Mortgage rates have hit 5.51% for two-year fixes, up from 4.84% three weeks ago. If your deal expires within six months, locking in now with a free switching window is prudent — the BoE is unlikely to cut before 2027.
  • Universal Credit claimants: the health element halves for new claims from April. Submitting before 6 April secures the higher £97 weekly rate; existing claimants are frozen, not cut.

GEO Geopolitical

Houthis Fire Second Missile at Israel Hours After First Strike

↻ This morning: first Houthi missile intercepted → This evening: second barrage fired; Houthis declare formal entry into war

Yemen’s Houthi rebels fired a second ballistic missile at Israel on Saturday evening, hours after their first strike marked the group’s entry into the Iran war. The IDF intercepted both missiles, though falling debris from the first launch injured 11 people in Eshtaol. The Houthis declared they are acting in solidarity with Iran.

Dive deeper
The timing — Day 29, as the conflict enters its second month — signals Tehran’s proxy network is now fully activated. The group’s missile inventory includes Iranian-supplied Toufan cruise missiles with ranges exceeding 2,000km. Their participation creates a fourth active front alongside Iran, Lebanon and Iraq, raising the spectre of renewed Red Sea shipping disruption. Israel’s Defence Minister Katz threatened “all 10 plagues” in response. The Pentagon is reportedly weighing whether to extend naval operations to target Houthi launch sites in Yemen.

Rubio Claims War Will End “in Weeks” — Tehran Rejects Timeline

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Washington expects to complete its Iran war objectives “in the next couple of weeks,” declaring Iran will be left “weaker than in recent history.” Tehran dismissed the claim, with Foreign Minister Araghchi accusing the US of refusing genuine diplomacy. The Pentagon privately acknowledged the conflict may extend past its original timeline.

Dive deeper
Rubio’s optimism sits in stark tension with the Pentagon’s private assessment and Starmer’s warning that the war “could go on for some time.” The gap between public rhetoric and operational reality reflects a familiar pattern in American military campaigns. The 300-plus US wounded and 13 killed represent the highest American combat casualties since Afghanistan. Rubio’s emphasis on leaving Iran “weaker” rather than achieving regime change suggests war aims may be quietly narrowing.

Iran Death Toll Passes 1,900 as War Enters Second Month

The Iranian Red Crescent reported at least 1,900 killed since 28 February as the conflict passed the one-month mark. Israeli strikes damaged buildings at a Tehran university overnight. In Lebanon, 1,189 have been killed since 2 March, including 124 children. Israel killed three journalists in a targeted strike in southern Lebanon.

Dive deeper
The mounting toll is approaching the threshold at which international pressure for a ceasefire typically intensifies. The targeting of a Tehran university — which Iran says housed no military installations — drew condemnation from the International Committee of the Red Cross. The killing of three Lebanese journalists will face scrutiny under international humanitarian law. The 1,189 Lebanon fatalities confirm the conflict has effectively restarted full-scale war there, despite last autumn’s Gaza ceasefire.

Islamabad Summit Tomorrow — Four Nations to Table Ceasefire Plan

↻ This morning: summit confirmed for 30 March → This evening: ceasefire framework to be tabled; Witkoff confirms US back-channel

Pakistan confirmed foreign ministers from Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan will meet in Islamabad on Sunday in the first multilateral diplomatic effort since the war began. US special envoy Steve Witkoff confirmed Washington has been negotiating through Pakistani channels. Turkey’s foreign minister said a monitored ceasefire framework will be proposed.

Dive deeper
The quadrilateral format brings together nations with genuine leverage: Pakistan as primary back-channel; Turkey maintaining relations with Tehran; Saudi Arabia as Washington’s key Gulf ally; Egypt providing Arab League credibility. The fundamental gap remains vast — Washington demands nuclear dismantlement and Hormuz reopened unconditionally, while Tehran demands reparations. Oil executives warn Hormuz must reopen by mid-April or supply disruptions will escalate sharply.

USS Tripoli Deploys 3,500 Marines — US Gulf Force at Highest Since Iraq

The USS Tripoli amphibious assault ship arrived in the CENTCOM area on Friday carrying 3,500 Marines and sailors. The deployment brings the American military presence to its highest level since the 2003 Iraq invasion. More than 300 US service members have been wounded and 13 killed since operations began on 28 February.

Dive deeper
The Tripoli carries Marine Expeditionary Unit assets capable of forcible-entry operations, raising questions about whether ground forces could be deployed to secure the Strait of Hormuz. CENTCOM’s posture now includes three carrier strike groups plus amphibious and land-based assets across Qatar, Bahrain and Diego Garcia. The casualty figures have triggered growing Congressional scrutiny, with several senators calling for a formal war authorisation vote under the War Powers Act.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Starmer Warned Britain “Not on War Footing” at Defence Grilling

MPs accused the Prime Minister of “enormous complacency” on defence during a combative Liaison Committee session. Bernard Jenkin pressed Starmer on the delayed defence investment plan, demanding to know when spending would reach 3% of GDP. Starmer snapped back that Britain suffered “years of underinvestment by the last Government” and warned the Iran war “could go on for some time.”

Dive deeper
The Government has committed to 2.5% of GDP on defence by 2027, with an ambition of 3.5% by 2035, but the gap between those milestones remains unfilled. Starmer’s admission the war “could go on for some time” directly contradicts Rubio’s “couple of weeks” optimism, revealing a significant UK–US divergence. His insistence that “this is not our war” sits uneasily alongside the Royal Navy’s newly authorised shadow fleet interdiction operations.

NHS Records Biggest Fall in Dissatisfaction in Nearly Three Decades

The British Social Attitudes survey found NHS satisfaction rose six percentage points to 26% in 2025, the first increase since the pandemic. Dissatisfaction fell eight points — the largest single-year drop since the late 1990s. Waiting lists are at their lowest in three years and ambulance response times the fastest in five.

Dive deeper
The data offers Labour its strongest domestic narrative in months. The King’s Fund noted satisfaction remains historically low — 60% were satisfied in 2019 — but the direction of travel is significant. The improvement tracks operational gains: 7.5 million patients now wait for elective treatment, down from a peak of 7.8 million. Health Secretary Streeting’s productivity reforms appear to be delivering, though war-driven inflation threatens NHS budgets ahead.

UKRI Suspends Research Grants — Physics Faces 60% Budget Cuts

UK Research and Innovation suspended grant-review processes across medicine, biosciences, engineering and physical sciences. The STFC asked the particle physics and astronomy community to model cuts of up to 60%, requiring £162 million in savings by 2030. Britain has told CERN it will withdraw from a Large Hadron Collider detector upgrade.

Dive deeper
The Government’s rationale — reprioritising toward quantum computing, AI and semiconductors — reflects a growth-oriented industrial strategy, but execution has been chaotic. Three research councils suspended funding simultaneously, stranding thousands of researchers. Dame Chi Onwurah, chair of the Science Committee, called the cuts “wholly unacceptable.” The Institute of Physics labelled it a “devastating blow.” The CERN withdrawal signals Britain’s retreat from the international collaborations that once defined its scientific standing.

Universal Credit Health Element Halved for New Claimants From April

From April 2026, the health-related element of Universal Credit for new claimants falls from £97 to £50 per week. Under-22s will no longer be eligible. For 2.25 million existing recipients the payment is frozen until 2029/30. Some 730,000 new recipients face an average annual loss of £3,000; the measures save £1.9 billion by 2030/31.

Dive deeper
These represent the most significant welfare cuts since 2015, arriving with little political noise as the Iran conflict consumes Westminster’s bandwidth. Disability Rights UK labelled the package “devastating,” warning it will push vulnerable claimants toward destitution. Face-to-face PIP assessments are increasing from 6% to 30% of claims — a move critics say targets the approval rate. The political cover of the simultaneous two-child benefit cap removal is not coincidental.

Parliament Rises for Easter After Busy Legislative Week

The Commons rose on Thursday and the Lords on Friday for a fortnight’s Easter recess; both return on 13 April. The Pension Schemes Bill and Crime and Policing Bill completed Lords stages. Commons considered amendments to the Tobacco and Vapes Bill. The Representation of the People Bill, lowering the voting age to 16, entered committee stage.

Dive deeper
The Pension Schemes Bill saw a significant Lords rebellion, with peers voting 191–118 to strip the Government’s power to mandate pension asset allocations — a defeat likely to trigger ping-pong after Easter. The votes-at-16 bill remains deeply contentious; the Conservatives and Reform UK oppose it, and committee stage will test backbench discipline. The fortnight’s absence means no parliamentary scrutiny during a period of acute geopolitical uncertainty.
One To Read

Iran War-Hit Oil Prices Will Soon Rise If Hormuz Stays Shut

CNBC · Why oil executives warn the strait must reopen by mid-April or the economic fallout will escalate sharply — with Brent already up 55% since 28 February.
☾

Evening Briefing

Saturday 28 March 2026 — 18:00 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Fill up before Monday — Brent’s 4% surge has not yet reached forecourts. The RAC expects another 3–5p per litre increase by mid-week. Diesel drivers face the sharpest hit — 180p is realistic by Easter.
  • Two-child cap ends 6 April — if you have three or more children on Universal Credit, the additional £3,650 per child per year should appear automatically. Check your UC journal after 6 April to confirm.
  • Review savings and mortgage deals — the OECD now forecasts UK inflation at 4.0%. If you’re approaching a fixed-rate renewal, expect lenders to reprice upwards. Cash ISA rates may rise but will lag inflation.

GEO Geopolitical

Houthis Enter the War — Two Barrages at Israel as Red Sea Shipping Suspended

↻ This morning: first missiles intercepted → This evening: two confirmed barrages; Maersk, MSC, Hapag-Lloyd suspended Suez transits; 35% of global seaborne oil now rerouted around Cape

Yemen’s Houthi rebels launched two barrages of ballistic missiles at Israel on Saturday, marking their formal entry on day 29. Major container lines suspended all Suez transits within hours. Combined with the Hormuz restriction, roughly 35% of global seaborne oil and 12% of containerised trade is now rerouted around the Cape of Good Hope, adding 10–14 days to Asia–Europe voyages.

Dive deeper
The Houthi entry transforms this from a bilateral campaign into a multi-front regional war, forcing the US Navy to split attention between the Strait of Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb. Container lines had tentatively returned to the Red Sea in mid-February; those plans are now shelved indefinitely. Lloyd’s List reports box shipping has exited the Hormuz corridor entirely. Global freight rates, already up 40% since February, face further spikes. Watch for: whether the Houthis resume attacks on commercial shipping or confine themselves to Israeli military targets — the distinction determines whether freight rates spike further or stabilise.

Iran Strikes Saudi Airbase — 15 US Troops Wounded, Two Aircraft Damaged

Iran fired six ballistic missiles and 29 drones at Prince Sultan Air Base outside Riyadh overnight, wounding at least 15 US service members — five seriously — and damaging two USAF KC-135 refuelling aircraft. Total US casualties since 28 February: 303 wounded, 13 killed. 2,500 Marines from the USS Tripoli have arrived, boosting the US presence to over 50,000 troops.

Dive deeper
The Prince Sultan strike is Iran’s most significant direct attack on US forces. Previous retaliatory fire targeted Israeli territory and Gulf air defences — this escalation deliberately hits American personnel on Saudi sovereign territory, testing both Washington’s and Riyadh’s tolerance simultaneously. The base hosts F-15E Strike Eagles; damaging the KC-135 tankers directly degrades aerial refuelling capacity. Patriot batteries failed to intercept all inbound missiles. Watch for: whether the 6 April deadline passes without a deal, triggering strikes on Iran’s power grid, or whether the Islamabad quadrilateral summit produces a diplomatic opening.

IDF Nears 90% of Iran’s Military Targets — Missile Capacity Down 92%

↻ This morning: strikes on Arak + Yazd confirmed → This evening: IDF claims 70% destroyed, approaching 90%; Iran’s missile launch rate collapsed 92%; one killed in Tel Aviv cluster strike

The IDF says it has targeted roughly 70% of Iran’s military-industrial sites, expecting 90% “in the coming days.” Iran’s missile launch rates have fallen 92% since the war’s start. Overnight, an Iranian cluster missile hit eight sites across Tel Aviv, killing a 52-year-old security guard. Iran’s Red Crescent reports 1,900+ deaths; independent estimates range from 3,100 to 5,300.

Dive deeper
The Ardakan yellowcake plant is “the only one of its kind in Iran” — destroying it severs the supply chain for future enrichment, though Iran’s existing stockpile of 5,700 kg at 60% purity remains intact. Secretary Rubio’s framing — leaving Iran “weaker than it has been in recent history” — suggests the US views this as a once-in-a-generation opportunity to dismantle Iran’s deterrent entirely. Watch for: Iran’s five conditions for ending the war remain maximalist. The Islamabad summit tomorrow is the first real test of whether Tehran will negotiate.

Ukraine’s Baltic Drone Campaign Spills Into NATO Territory

↻ This morning: third Baltic strike confirmed → This evening: stray drones entered all three Baltic states; one hit Estonia’s Auvere power station; Baltic states demand EU air-defence support

Ukrainian drones struck Ust-Luga and Primorsk for the third time in five days. Stray drones entered Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian airspace — one striking Estonia’s Auvere power station chimney, likely redirected by Russian electronic warfare. Oil loading at Ust-Luga remains suspended. The Kirishi refinery, processing 350,000 barrels per day, was also hit.

Dive deeper
Euromaidan Press reports Kyiv’s intent is permanent destruction, not temporary disruption — the pace of return strikes prevents Russia from completing repairs. The Baltic drone spillover is diplomatically awkward but all three states called for EU air-defence reinforcement rather than condemning Kyiv, signalling understanding of the strategic calculus. Combined with the Hormuz disruption, this is the tightest global oil supply picture since the 1973 crisis, with Brent at $112.57. Watch for: whether NATO formally addresses the Baltic airspace incidents at next week’s defence ministers’ meeting.

G7 Fractures — No Communiqué for First Time on a Major Conflict

The G7 ended without a joint communiqué for the first time in the bloc’s history on a major conflict. Rubio told counterparts the war would last “two to four more weeks” with no ground troops. European ministers pressed for a ceasefire timeline. The Islamabad quadrilateral summit — Pakistan, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Egypt — begins tomorrow.

Dive deeper
Washington views the campaign as time-limited; European capitals see an open-ended war with catastrophic economic spillover. Germany’s foreign minister warned of a “world economic catastrophe.” China and India are exploiting Western disunity to position themselves as mediators. The Islamabad format represents a non-Western diplomatic track that may prove more consequential than G7 handwringing. Watch for: whether the Islamabad format yields any Iranian concessions before 6 April.

UK UK Domestic

Hundreds of Thousands March in London Against the Far Right

The Together Alliance march brought tens of thousands to central London — organisers claim 500,000, police estimate 50,000. Over 300 organisations including the TUC, Unison, and Amnesty International supported the march from Park Lane to Whitehall. A parallel Palestine solidarity march fed in from Exhibition Road. Police reported no major incidents.

Dive deeper
The march’s significance lies in its breadth — over 300 organisations united under a single banner, suggesting the British centre-left is coalescing in response to Reform UK’s polling surge. The Palestine contingent’s integration reflects how the Iran war has re-energised the pro-Palestinian movement. With local elections on 1 May, this is the centre-left’s opening salvo against Farage’s campaign launch in Sunderland. Watch for: whether the Together Alliance maintains organisational coherence beyond a single-day march, and whether turnout translates into local election results.

Consumer Confidence Collapses to Record Low Under Starmer

↻ This morning: OECD slashed growth to 0.7% → This evening: BRC consumer expectations hit record minus 53; GfK at minus 21; households entering defensive crouch

The BRC reported consumer expectations plunged to minus 53 — the lowest ever recorded, down 23 points in a single month. The GfK index fell to minus 21. The savings rate surged 6 points as households brace for higher energy bills, petrol at 150.7p, and inflation forecast at 4% by the OECD.

Dive deeper
A 23-point single-month collapse has no precedent outside pandemic lockdowns. The £117 reduction in typical energy bills from April will be wiped out if oil stays above $100. The political damage to Starmer is compounding: the cost-of-living crisis he promised to resolve is deepening under his watch, driven by geopolitical forces largely beyond his control. Watch for: whether the Bank of England holds rates at its May meeting despite surging inflation, and whether the Treasury announces emergency fuel-duty relief.

Two-Child Benefit Cap Ends 6 April — 500,000 Families to Gain

The abolition takes effect on 6 April, extending Universal Credit’s child element (£3,650 per year) to all children. An estimated 500,000 families gain an average of £450 per month. Existing UC claims update automatically. The separate benefit cap remains, meaning around 70,000 workless families may not see the full increase.

Dive deeper
This is the single largest anti-poverty measure since the introduction of Universal Credit. The fiscal cost is £2.5 billion annually by 2030–31. The policy arrives alongside other April changes: a 4% National Living Wage increase, a rail fare freeze, and the Ofgem price cap reduction. The timing is politically convenient for Labour ahead of 1 May. Watch for: whether the DWP systems process the change smoothly from day one.

Reform Fractures Deepen as Restore Britain Targets 1 May Elections

↻ This morning: Restore registered → This evening: will field candidates on 1 May; Farage hit by 17 standards breaches; right-wing vote split could hand seats to Labour

Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain will field candidates in the 1 May local elections. Farage launched Reform’s campaign days after the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards ruled he breached disclosure rules 17 times totalling £384,000 in undisclosed interests. YouGov puts Reform at 23%, Conservatives at 19%, Labour at 17%.

Dive deeper
If Restore takes just 3% of the vote, it could devastate Reform by splitting the right-wing vote — mirroring the damage Reform once inflicted on the Conservatives. Reform’s donor base remains formidable at £10 million in Q3 2025, but the populist right is fragmenting faster than consolidating. The standards investigation provides ammunition for both Labour and Restore. Watch for: seat-by-seat results on 1 May — if Reform and Restore split the right-wing vote, it reshapes the general election calculus.

Mandelson Phone Theft Fuels “Cover-Up” Accusations

A phone belonging to Morgan McSweeney, Starmer’s former Chief of Staff, was stolen last October — one month after Lord Mandelson was removed as US ambassador. The phone contained texts relevant to the Mandelson-Epstein investigation. The Met declined to investigate. The next batch of appointment files is expected after Easter.

Dive deeper
Parliament forced disclosure of thousands of documents after the US Epstein files revealed Mandelson’s relationship with the late sex offender. The first tranche showed officials had been warned. The Met’s refusal to investigate the theft has handed opposition parties a devastating line of attack. For Starmer, the danger is guilt by proximity — his operation’s handling looks incompetent at best and evasive at worst. Watch for: the post-Easter document release, and whether any messages are recoverable from cloud backups.
One To Read

The War Against Iran and Global Risks: Tell Me How This Ends

Georgetown Journal of International Affairs · How the 2026 campaign has disrupted Iran’s power dynamics and raised unanswerable questions about what “victory” looks like when your adversary controls the world’s most critical oil chokepoint.
☼

Morning Briefing

Saturday 28 March 2026 — 08:00 GMT

What It Means For You This Weekend

  • Fill up today if you can — Brent’s 4.2% Friday surge has not yet reached forecourts. Petrol at 150.7p will climb further next week as wholesale prices feed through. Topping up today saves money versus midweek.
  • Check your Universal Credit — if you have three or more children, the two-child limit ends on 6 April. Existing claims should update automatically, adding roughly £450 per month per additional child. If you don’t see the change by May, contact the UC helpline.
  • Review your energy tariff before 1 April — the Ofgem price cap drops 7% from Tuesday, saving a typical household £117 per year. But this is based on pre-war wholesale prices. Consider whether fixing now protects you against autumn increases.

GEO Geopolitical

Israel Strikes Two Iranian Nuclear Sites — Tehran Vows Disproportionate Response

↻ Yesterday: Israel bombed Arak reactor → This morning: IDF confirmed strikes on Arak + Yazd yellowcake plant plus two IRGC steel factories; Iran vows response “will no longer be an eye for an eye”

The IDF confirmed it bombed Iran’s Arak heavy water reactor and the Ardakan yellowcake plant in Yazd — the first direct assault on nuclear infrastructure since the war began on 28 February. Tehran says no casualties or radiation release occurred but warned retaliation would be disproportionate, with the IRGC ordering employees at sites with American or Israeli shareholders to “leave their workplaces immediately.”

Dive deeper
This marks the second Israeli strike on Arak — the first came during the June 2025 “12-Day War,” which breached the IR-40 reactor’s containment dome. The Ardakan yellowcake plant processes uranium ore into the feedstock for enrichment — hitting it disrupts the very front end of Iran’s fuel cycle. Iran’s Foreign Minister Araghchi called the strikes a contradiction of Trump’s 10-day extension for diplomacy, accusing Israel of sabotaging negotiations. Satellite imagery from June showed the containment dome breached and the heavy water production plant rendered inoperable. The IAEA has confirmed no radiation increase above background levels. Watch for: whether Iran’s promised “disproportionate” response targets Israeli civilian infrastructure or energy assets in the Gulf.

Trump’s Peace Plan Hits Wall — Quadrilateral Summit Set for 30 March in Islamabad

↻ Yesterday: impasse between US 15 points and Iran’s 5 conditions → This morning: US privately acknowledges war may extend past initial timeline; Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to meet Monday

The US 15-point peace proposal demands nuclear dismantlement, full IAEA access and Hormuz reopening. Iran’s five counter-demands include war reparations and sovereignty over the strait. Washington has privately acknowledged the war may run past its initial 4–6 week timeline. A quadrilateral meeting in Islamabad on 30 March will be the first multilateral diplomatic effort since hostilities began.

Dive deeper
Pakistan’s foreign minister confirmed the points are “being deliberated upon,” but Iranian officials describe a climate of deep mistrust. The structural gap is vast: Washington demands Iran disarm Hezbollah and reopen the strait unconditionally, while Tehran demands reparations for the 1,937 confirmed dead and permanent sovereignty over the world’s most critical oil chokepoint. The quadrilateral format — Turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan — brings together nations with genuine influence over both sides. Turkey maintains diplomatic channels with Tehran; Saudi Arabia is Washington’s key Gulf ally; Egypt provides Arab League credibility; Pakistan has served as the primary communication channel throughout. Watch for: whether the Islamabad meeting produces a framework both sides can engage with, or whether 6 April becomes the next escalation trigger.

Houthis Enter the War — First Ballistic Missile Fired at Israel From Yemen

Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthis launched their first ballistic missile at Israel since the war began, triggering air raid sirens across Beersheba and the Negev. The IDF says the missile was intercepted with no injuries. A second and third missile followed within 24 hours, with the third falling short of Israeli territory.

Dive deeper
The Houthis had telegraphed their entry, warning they would intervene if “other countries joined the United States and Israel.” Their participation opens a fourth active front alongside Iran, Lebanon and Iraq. The group demonstrated sustained strike capability during the 2024 Red Sea crisis, launching over 100 attacks on commercial shipping. Their missile inventory includes Iranian-supplied Toufan and Quds-series cruise missiles with ranges exceeding 2,000km. Israel’s Defence Minister Katz threatened “all 10 plagues” in response. The Houthis control most of Yemen’s population centres and have proven resilient against years of Saudi-led airstrikes. Watch for: whether Houthi attacks extend to Red Sea shipping lanes, which would compound the Hormuz disruption and create a two-strait chokepoint crisis.

Ukraine Hammers Russia’s Baltic Oil Ports for Third Time in Five Days

↻ Yesterday: Ust-Luga struck, one berth destroyed → This morning: third strike in five days hit both Ust-Luga and Primorsk; pace suggests Kyiv is attempting to destroy Baltic export capacity beyond repair

Ukrainian drones struck Ust-Luga and Primorsk oil terminals overnight for the third consecutive attack in five days, destroying at least one loading berth completely and damaging five storage tanks. The campaign has severed an estimated 2 million barrels per day of Russian oil exports — roughly 40% of total export revenue.

Dive deeper
Ust-Luga handles roughly 700,000 barrels per day; Primorsk adds another 1.3 million. Together they represent the backbone of Russia’s Baltic crude exports. Satellite imagery shows one berth completely destroyed by fire. The operational tempo — three strikes in five days — suggests Kyiv is pursuing a strategic campaign to render these facilities irreparable. Russia has simultaneously launched its spring offensive with a 948-drone barrage. The twin disruption of Russian Baltic exports and Iranian Hormuz restrictions is creating the tightest global oil supply picture since the 1973 crisis, with Brent settling at $112.57. Watch for: Russian attempts to reroute exports via Pacific terminals at Kozmino, which would add 30+ days to delivery times.

G7 Fails to Produce Joint Communiqué as Western Divisions on Iran Deepen

↻ Yesterday: G7 summit concluding, statement expected → This morning: no comprehensive communiqué issued; divisions too deep; only partial agreements on maritime coordination

G7 foreign ministers abandoned attempts to issue a comprehensive final statement at the Paris summit, exposing deep fissures between European allies pushing for de-escalation and the US keeping “multiple options on the table.” The group did agree on coordination for eventual freedom-of-navigation operations in the Strait of Hormuz.

Dive deeper
The failure to produce a joint statement is extraordinary — G7 summits have issued communiqués at every meeting since the format’s inception. France and Germany pushed hardest for de-escalation language; the UK occupied a middle position. The maritime coordination agreement is notable — G7 nations will explore escorting commercial vessels through the strait when security conditions allow. Germany’s foreign minister warned of a global economic “catastrophe” if the conflict continues. Watch for: whether the maritime escort concept develops into a formal coalition, and whether Japan takes a more assertive role given its Gulf oil dependency.

UK UK Domestic

OECD Confirms UK Took Largest Growth Cut of Any G20 Economy — Inflation Forecast Nearly Doubled

↻ Yesterday: OECD published headline figures → This morning: full analysis confirms UK took steepest downgrade; inflation forecast raised from 2.5% to 4.0%

The OECD cut its 2026 UK growth forecast from 1.2% to 0.7% and raised its inflation projection to 4.0%, calling Britain the most exposed G20 economy to the Iran war’s energy price shock. CPI is expected to hit 3.5% as early as this month. The BoE warned of “increased risk of domestic inflationary pressures through second-round effects.”

Dive deeper
The 0.5 percentage point growth cut is the steepest in the G20, reflecting Britain’s acute vulnerability to energy price swings. The UK imports roughly 40% of its natural gas and remains heavily exposed to global wholesale prices. The BoE held rates at 3.75% on 18 March, but the OECD’s 4% inflation forecast makes further cuts unlikely and raises the spectre of hikes. With the Ofgem price cap falling 7% from 1 April thanks to pre-war wholesale contracts, households face a contradictory picture: lower bills in Q2 but rising costs in Q3 as war-inflated wholesale prices feed through. Watch for: whether the BoE signals a rate hold through summer or pivots to a hiking cycle at its May meeting.

Petrol Climbs Past 150p as Brent Surges to $112 — Drivers Pay £11 More Per Tank

↻ Yesterday: petrol crossed 150p threshold → This morning: Brent settled at $112.57, up 4.2% on Friday alone; pump prices expected to continue rising through April

Average UK petrol hit 150.7p per litre, breaching the £1.50 mark for the first time since the 2022 energy crisis. Diesel stands at 178.2p. Over three weeks, petrol rose 10p per litre and diesel 20p, adding roughly £11 to the cost of filling a 55-litre family car. Brent crude settled at $112.57 on Friday — the highest since 2022.

Dive deeper
The RAC and AA have both warned that the current 150.7p average likely understates the true cost at many forecourts, with supermarket prices typically lagging wholesale movements by 7–10 days. A weaker pound (GBP/USD at $1.331) compounds the pain, as oil is dollar-denominated. Fuel duty and VAT together account for more than half the pump price, and calls for a temporary cut are growing. Diesel’s sharper rise reflects the Hormuz disruption’s disproportionate impact on middle-distillate supplies. Hauliers are warning of pass-through price increases on food and consumer goods within weeks. Watch for: whether the government announces a fuel duty freeze or cut; and whether supermarkets begin rationing fuel purchases.

Royal Navy Shadow Fleet Interdiction Formally Authorised at Helsinki JEF Summit

↻ Yesterday: operations reported as going active → This morning: formal authorisation confirmed by PM at Helsinki; Finnish, Swedish and Estonian allies have closed critical Baltic routes

Prime Minister Starmer announced at the Joint Expeditionary Force summit in Helsinki that UK Armed Forces will now interdict sanctioned Russian shadow fleet vessels in British waters. The Royal Navy has already been tracking ships to enable interdiction. Finland, Sweden and Estonia have closed critical Baltic routes, creating a Nordic-Baltic maritime cordon.

Dive deeper
Around 75% of Russia’s crude exports move on its shadow fleet — ageing, poorly insured tankers designed to evade Western sanctions. The UK has sanctioned 544 such vessels. The new authorisation allows the Royal Navy to physically stop, board and detain flagged vessels in UK territorial waters and the English Channel. The timing is strategic: Ukraine’s strikes on Ust-Luga and Primorsk have disrupted Baltic loading, and Royal Navy interdiction closes the escape route. Combined with the Hormuz disruption, Russia now faces simultaneous pressure on its two primary export corridors. Watch for: the first actual boarding incident and Moscow’s response — Russia has previously warned that interfering with its shipping could be treated as an act of war.

Two-Child Benefit Cap Ends 6 April — 570,000 Households to Gain £450 a Month

↻ Yesterday: approaching implementation → This morning: MoneyHelper confirms existing UC claims will update automatically; families who don’t see changes by May should contact UC helpline

The Universal Credit (Removal of Two Child Limit) Act takes effect on 6 April, extending the child element (£3,650 per year per child) to all children in a household. An estimated 570,000 households gain an average of £450 per month, with the government projecting 450,000 children lifted out of poverty this parliament.

Dive deeper
The two-child limit affected an estimated 1.5 million children and was widely criticised by campaigners and cross-party MPs. CPAG estimates the policy will cost £3.4 billion annually but argues long-term savings in health, education and social services vastly exceed that figure. A critical caveat: the separate benefit cap remains in force, meaning around 70,000 out-of-work families may not see the full increase. The policy arrives alongside other April changes: a 4% National Living Wage increase, a regulated rail fare freeze, and the Ofgem energy price cap reduction. Watch for: whether the government addresses the benefit cap interaction in the Spring Statement.

Reform UK Fractures as Restore Britain Registers — Musk Endorsement Shifts Dynamics

↻ Yesterday: Reform defections reported → This morning: Restore Britain formally registered with Electoral Commission; Lowe sits as Restore MP; Elon Musk endorsement confirmed

Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain formally registered with the Electoral Commission on 20 March, with Lowe defecting from Reform to sit as a Restore MP. Eight councillors — including seven from Kent — followed. Elon Musk endorsed the new party. YouGov puts Reform at 23%, Conservatives at 19%, Labour at 17%.

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Modelling suggests that if Restore Britain stood candidates in every constituency and took just 3% of the vote, it could devastate Reform’s electoral prospects by splitting the right-wing vote. The Musk endorsement is significant: his reach dwarfs conventional party media operations. Reform’s candidate for the 2028 London mayoral election described Restore as “neo-Nazi” — prompting legal threats from Lowe. The fracture reflects a deeper tension: Reform’s parliamentary professionalisation under Farage sits uneasily with harder-line populism. British politics in 2026 resembles a “multi-party scramble” unseen since the 1920s. Watch for: whether Restore fields candidates in May’s local elections and splits the populist right vote.
One To Read

The War Against Iran and Global Risks: Tell Me How This Ends

Georgetown Journal of International Affairs · How the US–Israel campaign has disrupted Iran’s internal power dynamics and raised existential questions about regional stability, global energy security and transnational terrorism.
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Evening Briefing

Friday 27 March 2026 — 18:00 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Petrol at £1.50 and rising — fill up this weekend if you can. RAC data shows prices rising daily. A full 50-litre tank now costs £8.65 more than four weeks ago; budget an extra £35 per month for fuel.
  • Mortgage holders: rate cuts are off the table — the BoE is stuck at 3.75% with inflation forecast to hit 4%. If you’re on a tracker or coming off a fix, prepare for rates to hold through summer at minimum.
  • Two-child benefit cap ends 6 April — if you claim Universal Credit and have three or more children, you do not need to take any action. The additional £3,650 per child per year will be applied automatically.

GEO Geopolitical

Israel Bombs Iran’s Arak Nuclear Reactor as War Enters Day 28

↻ This morning: Trump extended Iran deadline to 6 April → This evening: Israel escalated independently, bombing the Arak heavy water reactor; Iran hit Herzliya hotel with ballistic missile fragments

The Israeli Air Force confirmed striking Iran’s Arak heavy water reactor on Friday afternoon, calling it “key infrastructure for producing plutonium for nuclear weapons.” The IAEA confirmed the reactor was not operational and contained no nuclear material, meaning no radiological risk — but the symbolism is seismic. Hours earlier, fragments from an Iranian ballistic missile damaged the Dan Accadia Resort in Herzliya, central Israel.

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The Arak strike echoes Israel’s 1981 Operation Opera against Iraq’s Osirak reactor — a pre-emptive nuclear denial doctrine now applied to the fourth week of sustained conflict. Under the 2015 JCPOA, Arak’s core was removed and filled with concrete; Iran had since worked to restore the facility. The strike on a non-operational reactor suggests Israel’s campaign has shifted from degrading active military capacity to permanently eliminating future nuclear breakout potential. The IAEA’s Rafael Grossi reiterated that “nuclear facilities must never be attacked under any circumstances,” placing Israel in direct tension with the international atomic watchdog. With 1,937 confirmed dead in Iran and 19 in Israel across 28 days, the human toll continues to mount. The Herzliya hotel strike — though causing no injuries — demonstrates Iran can still penetrate Israeli air defences in populated civilian areas. Watch for: whether the Arak strike derails the fragile indirect talks running through Pakistan, and whether Russia or China issue formal condemnation at the UNSC.

Trump’s 15-Point Peace Plan Meets Iran’s Five Conditions — Gulf Between Positions Remains Vast

↻ This morning: Trump claimed talks “going very well” → This evening: Iran’s formal counter-proposal expected via Pakistan; five conditions include war reparations and Hormuz sovereignty

Iran is expected to deliver its formal response to Washington’s 15-point peace plan on Friday, routed through Pakistani Army Commander Asim Munir. Tehran has signalled five conditions: an end to all aggression and assassinations, concrete guarantees against future attack, war reparations, a comprehensive ceasefire across all fronts, and Iran’s “exercise of sovereignty” over the Strait of Hormuz.

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The structural gap is enormous. Washington demands nuclear dismantlement, full IAEA access, missile limits, and Hormuz reopening. Tehran demands reparations and permanent sovereignty over the strait — terms that would reward the very blockade triggering the global energy crisis. A senior diplomatic source told CNN: “The maximum Iran might give does not meet the minimum the US is demanding.” Vance reportedly clashed with Netanyahu this week, accusing the Israeli PM of “overselling” the prospects of Iranian regime change. The Pentagon is preparing to deploy up to 10,000 additional troops to the Middle East — a coercive diplomacy play that analysts warn may backfire if Tehran interprets it as preparation for ground operations. Watch for: whether Iran’s formal response arrives today and opens any negotiating space, or whether the April 6 deadline becomes the next inflection point.

Iran’s Hormuz “Toll Booth” Tightens Grip — Only Five Nations Granted Passage

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard has formalised a “toll booth” system in the Strait of Hormuz, rerouting approved vessels along the Iranian coastline for IRGC inspection. Some ships have been charged an estimated £1.6m per transit. Only vessels from China, Russia, India, Iraq, and Pakistan are granted passage. Approximately 20,000 sailors remain trapped on their vessels, with at least seven killed in IRGC attacks on commercial shipping.

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The Hormuz crisis is reshaping global trade architecture in real time. Oman has emerged as the default pivot point, with Salalah, Sohar, and Duqm serving as discharge points for Gulf-bound cargo. But this workaround handles only a fraction of the 20% of global oil and 25% of LNG that normally transits the strait. Brent crude held at $108 on Friday. The selective transit system is strategically elegant from Tehran’s perspective: it maintains oil flows to allies (particularly China, which receives 1.5m barrels per day from the Gulf) while weaponising access against Western-aligned shipping. Insurance premiums for Gulf transits have reportedly tripled since late February. Watch for: whether the US Navy attempts to escort commercial vessels through the strait, potentially triggering a direct US-Iran naval confrontation.

G7 Concludes Paris Summit — Deep Divisions on Iran, Unity on Ukraine

↻ This morning: G7 ministers meeting → This evening: joint statement demands end to civilian attacks; deep divisions remain on Iran strategy

G7 foreign ministers concluded their two-day summit outside Paris, issuing a joint statement demanding an immediate halt to attacks on civilians. Secretary of State Rubio sought allied support for Washington’s Iran strategy but met scepticism from European counterparts. On Ukraine, ministers expressed “firm support for Kyiv and US mediation efforts.”

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The Paris communiqué papers over a fundamental transatlantic rupture. France, Germany, and the UK have consistently refused to participate in strikes on Iran, viewing the conflict as a US-Israeli operation they were not consulted on. The civilian casualty language is pointedly directed at both sides but carries particular weight given the 1,937 confirmed dead in Iran. UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper attended alongside counterparts, threading the needle between the special relationship and deep domestic unease. On Ukraine, the backdrop of 40% of Russian oil export capacity being knocked offline by Ukrainian drone strikes gave Kyiv’s FM strong leverage. Watch for: whether the G7 statement influences Iran’s response to the US peace plan, and whether European nations begin independent mediation efforts.

Ukraine Cripples 40% of Russian Oil Exports with Baltic Drone Campaign

↻ This morning: Russia launched 400-drone barrage → This evening: Ukraine struck back — Ust-Luga oil terminal ablaze, ~2m barrels/day of export capacity offline

Ukraine’s drone campaign against Russian energy infrastructure reached a critical threshold this week, with strikes on the Ust-Luga oil terminal sparking large-scale fires. Reuters calculates approximately 40% of Russia’s crude oil export capacity — around 2 million barrels per day — has been shut down. Eight people were injured in Kharkiv overnight when Russian drones struck a residential high-rise.

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By targeting Ust-Luga and Primorsk — Russia’s two primary Baltic Sea export terminals — Kyiv has struck at the revenue lifeline funding Moscow’s war machine. With global oil markets already strained by the Hormuz crisis, Russia cannot easily reroute these exports. The campaign has created an extraordinary irony — Western sanctions failed to achieve what Ukrainian drones accomplished in three days. Russia’s retaliatory 948-drone barrage earlier this week killed at least 40 people and injured many more. President Zelensky’s appearance at the G7 in Paris, armed with export disruption data, gave him significant leverage in pushing for continued military aid. Watch for: whether Russia retaliates by escalating attacks on Ukrainian civilian infrastructure, and whether the export disruption pushes Moscow towards accepting a ceasefire.

UK UK Domestic

OECD Delivers Steepest Growth Downgrade of Any G20 Nation — UK Forecast Slashed to 0.7%

The OECD cut the UK’s 2026 growth forecast by 0.5 percentage points to just 0.7% — the steepest downgrade of any G20 economy — driven by surging energy prices, financial market volatility, and supply chain disruptions from the Iran war. CPI inflation is now projected at 4%, up sharply from the December forecast of 2.5%.

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This is a devastating blow to Chancellor Reeves’s fiscal arithmetic. The October 2025 Budget was built on OBR projections of 1.2% growth; at 0.7%, the headroom for spending commitments evaporates. The UK is uniquely exposed to the Iran crisis because of its energy import dependency, services-heavy economy, and financial sector exposure to volatile commodity markets. GfK consumer confidence fell to −21 in March. With the Bank of England frozen at 3.75% and unable to cut amid resurgent inflation, the UK faces a proto-stagflationary environment: weak growth, rising prices, and no monetary policy room. Watch for: whether the OBR issues an interim forecast revision, and whether Reeves signals fiscal loosening or tightening in response.

Petrol Breaks £1.50 Barrier as Fuel Costs Surge 13% in Four Weeks

Petrol hit 150.11p per litre on Friday, up 17.3p in less than four weeks since the outbreak of the Iran war. Diesel has climbed to 177.68p. On 28 February, unleaded stood at just 132.83p. The RAC said further increases are expected next week as Brent crude remains above $108 per barrel.

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The £1.50 threshold is psychologically significant — the last time petrol was this expensive was during the 2022 energy crisis. The 13% rise in under a month represents one of the fastest peacetime fuel price accelerations in UK history. For a typical family car with a 50-litre tank, a full fill now costs £75.05, up £8.65 from pre-war prices. The RAC estimates this adds approximately £307 million to the nation’s collective weekly fuel bill. Diesel’s steeper price reflects its closer link to crude oil costs and the strain on freight. Haulage firms report margins being squeezed to breaking point. Supermarkets are warning of 3–5% price increases on fresh produce within weeks. Watch for: whether the Treasury considers a temporary fuel duty cut or extends the existing 5p cut due to expire in April.

Royal Navy Shadow Fleet Operations Enter Active Phase

↻ This morning: PM authorised Royal Navy to intercept → This evening: operations now active; patrol ships shadowed Russian warship Boikiy and tanker in the Channel

The Royal Navy’s authorisation to board suspected Russian shadow fleet vessels is now operational. Patrol ships shadowed the Russian warship Boikiy and oil tanker MT General Skobelev in the Channel, while HMS Cutlass supported the French interception of MV Deyna in the Mediterranean. Russia’s shadow fleet comprises over 1,000 ageing tankers using false flags and disabled transponders.

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Starmer’s authorisation represents the most aggressive British maritime enforcement action since the Falklands. The shadow fleet has become Russia’s financial lifeline — even as Ukrainian drones take out 40% of export capacity at Baltic terminals, Moscow has relied on these clandestine tankers to maintain revenue. By deploying Special Forces boarding capabilities, the UK is signalling a willingness to physically interdict Russian oil revenue in a way that paper sanctions never achieved. The environmental dimension is significant too — these ageing, uninsured tankers pose a catastrophic oil spill risk. Watch for: whether Russia retaliates diplomatically or militarily against British naval assets, and whether other NATO nations follow suit.

Two-Child Benefit Cap Officially Abolished — 450,000 Children to Exit Poverty

↻ This morning: bill became law on 18 March → This evening: implementation confirmed for 6 April; existing UC claimants updated automatically

The Universal Credit (Removal of Two Child Limit) Act takes effect on 6 April 2026. Families already claiming Universal Credit will see the child element — worth approximately £3,650 per year per additional child — applied automatically with no action needed. The government projects 450,000 fewer children in relative poverty by 2030/31.

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This is the single largest anti-poverty measure since tax credits in 2003. The two-child limit affected 1.5 million children across 540,000 households at its peak. The £3.4 billion annual cost is significant but targeted — the £450 monthly average gain represents a meaningful income floor for the poorest families, disproportionately concentrated in the North East, West Midlands, and Wales. The timing creates tension with the OECD’s inflation warning: extra household spending into a supply-constrained economy could add modest upward pressure on CPI. Watch for: whether the DWP’s systems deliver the automatic uplift smoothly on 6 April.

Reform UK Fractures as Councillors Defect in Both Directions

↻ This morning: Reform defections reported → This evening: picture more complex — two Conservatives defected TO Reform, but seven Kent councillors defected FROM Reform to Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain

Reform UK’s local base is simultaneously growing and splintering. Two Wealden Conservative councillors defected to Reform at Farage’s local election launch. But seven councillors in Kent switched to Rupert Lowe’s breakaway Restore Britain movement, with further defections in Warwickshire and Leicestershire. A former Labour council leader also crossed to Reform.

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The populist right in Britain is undergoing rapid fragmentation. Restore Britain, launched by expelled Reform MP Rupert Lowe in February 2026, claims 60,000 members. The split reflects an ideological fault line: Lowe’s faction accuses Farage of insufficient radicalism. A leaked voice note from former Reform figure Ben Habib accused Restore of having “gone full tilt racist,” triggering a public row. For the Conservatives, continued defections to Reform erode their local government base ahead of May. The net effect is a fractured opposition landscape that may paradoxically benefit Labour in first-past-the-post contests. Watch for: whether Restore Britain fields candidates in May’s local elections and splits the populist right vote.
One To Read

US-Iran Mediation: What Are Each Side’s Demands — and Is a Deal Possible?

Al Jazeera · A clear-eyed comparison of the US 15-point plan and Iran’s five counter-conditions, with expert analysis on which demands are negotiable and which are non-starters.
☼

Morning Briefing

Friday 27 March 2026 — 08:00 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Mortgage holders stuck — the Bank of England’s rate freeze at 3.75% means the 1.6 million households refinancing in 2026 face higher-for-longer fixed rates. If you’re remortgaging, lock in now before autumn.
  • Fuel and energy bills climbing — petrol past 150p per litre, wholesale gas up 75% since February. The July energy cap is forecast to rise £322. Budget accordingly and check if you’re on the best tariff.
  • Pay transparency coming — if you work for a firm with 250+ staff, your employer will soon publish ethnicity and disability pay gaps. Check your company’s existing gender pay gap report for context.

GEO Geopolitical

Royal Navy Given Green Light to Intercept Russian Shadow Fleet in British Waters

Prime Minister Starmer has authorised UK armed forces to board, intercept and seize Russian “shadow fleet” vessels transiting British waters, including the English Channel. The fleet — more than 500 sanctioned ships carrying an estimated 75% of Russia’s crude exports — uses false flags and disabled transponders to evade Western sanctions. Nine European NATO members will coordinate enforcement through the Joint Expeditionary Force.

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This is the most aggressive enforcement action any Western nation has taken against Moscow’s sanctions-evasion infrastructure since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The shadow fleet carried roughly $15 billion worth of Russian crude in 2025, bankrolling the Kremlin’s war machine whilst posing environmental hazards in Europe’s busiest shipping lanes. Britain’s geographic position makes this uniquely consequential: the English Channel is a chokepoint that shadow fleet tankers must navigate to reach refineries in India and Turkey. Forcing them onto the longer route north of Scotland adds days and significant cost to every voyage. Moscow’s immediate response — condemning the move as “piracy” — signals the pressure this applies. Each proposed interception undergoes review by legal, military, and energy market specialists before ministerial sign-off, pre-empting accusations of overreach. Watch for: whether JEF allies — particularly Denmark and Norway, who control other key northern chokepoints — follow suit with reciprocal enforcement in their own territorial waters.

Trump Extends Iran Deadline to 6 April After Tehran Permits 10 Oil Tankers Through Hormuz

President Trump revealed that Iran allowed 10 oil tankers to pass through the Strait of Hormuz as a “present” to the United States, extending his deadline for Iran to fully reopen the strait to 6 April and pausing strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure. However, Tehran has rejected Washington’s 15-point ceasefire framework and submitted its own conditions — including sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz — leaving a deal far from certain.

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The conflict, which began on 28 February when Israel and the US launched strikes against Iran, has already reshaped global energy markets. The IEA estimates roughly 20 million barrels per day have been affected by the near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz — a waterway through which approximately 20% of the world’s oil supply normally flows. Brent crude surged from around $70 pre-conflict to peaks above $100, though prices fell 13–15% after Trump’s initial pause announcement. Iran’s counteroffer demanding sovereignty over the strait is a non-starter for Washington and its Gulf allies — no previous agreement has ever ceded control of an international waterway to a single nation. The 10-tanker gesture is tactically shrewd: it costs Tehran almost nothing whilst buying diplomatic time and easing price pressure that was turning Asian importers against Iran. Watch for: whether oil markets rally or sell off around the 6 April deadline — any extension without substantive progress will test the credibility of the entire negotiating framework.

Russia Launches 400-Drone Barrage at Ukraine as Spring Offensive Begins

Russia unleashed one of its most ferocious aerial bombardments in weeks, firing nearly 400 long-range drones — many Iranian-designed Shaheds — and 34 missiles, including ballistic weapons, across at least seven Ukrainian cities. Poland placed its air defences on the “highest state of readiness” and scrambled fighter jets alongside Romania as strikes neared NATO airspace.

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The scale of this attack marks a qualitative shift. Previous mass bombardments typically involved 100–150 drones; nearly 400 in a single wave suggests Russia has significantly expanded its drone production capacity, likely through deepened cooperation with Iran and North Korea. The inclusion of 34 ballistic missiles — far harder to intercept than cruise missiles — indicates Moscow is willing to burn through expensive munitions to overwhelm Ukrainian air defences. Poland’s decision to place air defences on highest readiness, and Romania’s scrambling of F-16s, reflects growing anxiety about spillover. A Russian drone crossed into Romanian airspace during a previous incident in late 2024, and the risk of an Article 5–triggering accident grows with each massive barrage. Intensified incursions along the eastern and southern front lines suggest this aerial campaign is designed to degrade Ukrainian logistics ahead of territorial pushes. Watch for: whether Ukraine’s Western allies accelerate deliveries of Patriot and SAMP/T air defence systems — the current stockpile cannot sustain interception rates against attacks of this magnitude indefinitely.

G7 Ministers Convene Outside Paris as Iran Rejects Trump’s 15-Point Ceasefire Plan

Foreign ministers from G7 nations gathered at Vaux-de-Cernay Abbey outside Paris for a two-day summit dominated by the Iran conflict, with France also inviting counterparts from Saudi Arabia, Brazil, India and South Korea. Tehran rejected Washington’s ceasefire proposal outright, with Foreign Minister Araghchi declaring Iran “has not engaged in talks to end the war,” while publishing a counterproposal demanding war reparations and sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz.

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The summit exposes a fracture at the heart of the Western alliance that has been widening since US–Israeli strikes began on 28 February. France and Germany want an immediate ceasefire and have publicly criticised the scope of the strikes — particularly Israel’s attack on Iran’s South Pars gasfield, which triggered the Hormuz closure and sent European energy prices spiralling. Washington views the military campaign as leverage for a broader deal encompassing Iran’s nuclear programme, regional proxies and missile capabilities — hence the expansive 15-point plan Tehran has now rejected. Iran’s counterproposal demanding sovereignty over the strait and war reparations is widely seen as a non-starter designed to buy time while its remaining military assets regroup. The inclusion of Saudi Arabia and India at the table signals Paris’s recognition that any durable settlement will require buy-in from Gulf energy producers and major importers alike. Watch for: the communiqué language on Friday — any softening of the G7’s previous “lasting peace and stability” formula would indicate European patience with Washington’s approach is running thin.

EU Gas Storage Falls to Critical Lows as Hormuz Crisis Triggers 70% Price Surge

The benchmark Dutch TTF natural gas price has surged from €38 to €54 per megawatt-hour in March alone — a 70% monthly increase, the steepest since September 2021 — as the Strait of Hormuz disruption chokes global LNG supplies. EU underground gas storage stood at just 28.4% as of 24 March, five percentage points below the same date last year, with the Netherlands at a critical 6.0% and Germany at 22.3%.

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Europe’s energy vulnerability has been laid bare for the second time in four years. While the EU reduced its dependence on Russian pipeline gas after 2022, it pivoted heavily toward LNG — roughly 40% of which transits the Strait of Hormuz via Qatari exports. When Israel struck Iran’s South Pars field and Iran retaliated by hitting Qatar’s Ras Laffan terminal, the two largest gas facilities feeding Europe’s LNG supply were simultaneously compromised. The Netherlands, ordinarily a swing producer via the now-closed Groningen field, is most exposed at just 6% storage. The Commission’s 90% storage target for 1 November looks increasingly unreachable without attracting LNG cargoes away from Asian buyers, who are bidding aggressively for the same diminished supply. Goldman Sachs raised its Q2 2026 TTF forecast to €72/MWh and warned an extended Hormuz disruption could push summer prices above €89/MWh — back toward 2022 peaks. Watch for: whether Brussels accelerates renewable deployment timelines and reopens the conversation about nuclear’s role in baseload security.

UK UK Domestic

Bank of England Freezes Rate Cuts as Middle East Conflict Pushes Inflation Forecast to 3.5%

The Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to hold the base rate at 3.75%, abandoning what had been an expected cut to 3.50%. Governor Bailey warned that the Middle East conflict constitutes a “major shock to energy supply,” with CPI inflation now forecast between 3% and 3.5% over the coming quarters. Wholesale gas prices have risen roughly 75% since late February, and household energy bills are forecast to climb 10% from July.

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This represents a significant pivot for the BoE, which had been on a cautious easing path — cutting from 5.25% in August 2024 down to 3.75% by early 2026. The unanimous 9–0 vote underscores how dramatically the Middle East conflict has shifted the calculus. Before the escalation, markets had priced in a cut with near-certainty; now, futures suggest rates could remain at 3.75% well into autumn. The transmission is clear: Brent above $90 feeds directly into petrol prices (already up 8p per litre) and wholesale gas costs, which flow through to the Ofgem price cap with a lag. For mortgage holders, the freeze means roughly 1.6 million households due to refinance in 2026 face higher-for-longer fixed rates. The broader risk is stagflation — the OBR had forecast 1.4% GDP growth for 2026, but higher energy costs and tighter monetary policy could shave that below 1%. Watch for: the April inflation print (due mid-May) — if CPI breaches 3.5%, expectations for any 2026 rate cut will evaporate entirely.

Firms With 250+ Staff Must Now Publish Ethnicity and Disability Pay Gaps

The government has confirmed that large employers will be required to publish six key pay gap metrics covering ethnicity and disability, alongside workforce composition data. The move — backed by 87% of consultation respondents — extends the existing gender pay gap reporting framework to cover race and disability for the first time. At minimum, firms must compare disabled and non-disabled workers, and white employees against all other ethnicities combined.

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This is the most significant expansion of workplace transparency obligations since gender pay gap reporting was introduced nearly a decade ago. The 2017 gender regime produced measurable results — the overall gender pay gap narrowed from 18.4% to 14.3% between 2017 and 2024 — providing the government with a strong evidence base for extending the framework. Business groups have expressed cautious support, though concerns remain about data collection — disability disclosure rates in UK workplaces sit at roughly 50%, meaning early reports will likely undercount the true gap. The TUC has called it “long overdue,” noting the ethnicity pay gap has remained stubbornly around 5–6% nationally, with far wider disparities in financial services and the legal profession. Watch for: the detail of the Equality (Race and Disability) Bill, expected in the King’s Speech, which will provide the legislative underpinning — and whether enforcement carries penalties comparable to gender pay gap non-compliance.

Meta and YouTube Found Negligent in Landmark Social Media Addiction Verdict

A Los Angeles jury found Meta and YouTube negligent in the design of their platforms, concluding both companies deliberately built addictive features and failed to protect young users. Meta was assigned 70% responsibility. The jury awarded $6 million in damages. Both companies plan to appeal, but the bellwether verdict could influence more than 2,000 pending lawsuits.

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This verdict, whilst modest in financial terms for companies with a combined market capitalisation exceeding $2 trillion, is seismic in its legal implications. It is the first time a jury has found major social media platforms liable for addiction-related harms — establishing the principle that platform design choices constitute a form of product liability, akin to defective manufacturing. The 70/30 split reflects the jury’s view that Instagram’s algorithmic recommendation engine and infinite scroll were more directly harmful than YouTube’s autoplay features. Meta’s internal research — leaked by whistleblower Frances Haugen in 2021 — showed the company knew Instagram was harmful to teenage mental health, and proved devastating at trial. The UK’s Online Safety Act, which came into full force in 2025, already imposes similar duties of care. Watch for: whether Congress accelerates the stalled Kids Online Safety Act, and whether Meta and YouTube settle the remaining 2,000 cases en masse rather than risk larger verdicts.

Two-Child Benefit Cap Abolished as Historic Anti-Poverty Law Takes Effect in April

The Universal Credit (Removal of Two Child Limit) Act takes effect on 6 April, abolishing the nine-year-old restriction that capped benefit payments at a household’s first two children. The government estimates 450,000 children will be lifted out of relative poverty — the largest single reduction since comparable records began in the 1990s — while 570,000 households will gain an average of £450 per month by 2030–31.

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The two-child limit was introduced by George Osborne in April 2017 as part of a broader squeeze on working-age welfare, and became one of the most contested policies in British social security — not least because of the accompanying “rape clause” exception requiring women to prove a third child was conceived through non-consensual sex. At its peak, an estimated 1.5 million children in 490,000 families were affected. Labour pledged abolition before the 2024 general election but delayed action until the 2025 Autumn Budget, drawing fierce criticism from its own backbenches. The £3.4 billion annual cost is significant but targeted — the £450 monthly average gain represents a meaningful income floor for the poorest families with three or more children, disproportionately concentrated in the North East, West Midlands and Wales. The caveat is the surviving benefit cap: households where no adult works more than 16 hours per week will see the additional child element clawed back, limiting the real-world gain for roughly 85,000 families. Watch for: the first official child poverty statistics post-implementation, due in early 2027.

One in Ten Reform Councillors Quit as Party’s First Year Brings Tax Rises and Cuts

A year after Reform UK won control of 14 local authorities and 677 council seats, an audit reveals 63 councillors — almost one in ten — have already resigned, while Reform-controlled councils have pushed through council tax increases of up to 9% despite campaigning to cut bills. The findings land six weeks before the 7 May local elections, where Reform is projected to win the most seats nationally — polls showing it at 27%, ahead of Labour on 20%.

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Reform’s rapid transition from protest movement to governing party has exposed the gap between populist campaigning and the brutal constraints of English local government finance. The 9% council tax rise in Worcestershire is instructive: councils face a structural funding shortfall driven by adult social care costs, which consume roughly 40% of upper-tier budgets and are rising at 8–10% annually due to demographic pressures. No party — regardless of ideology — can cut council tax while maintaining statutory services, and Reform’s manifesto costings never addressed this arithmetic. The defection rate of nearly 10% in twelve months is historically high; by comparison, UKIP lost around 15% of its councillors over two years following the 2013–14 cycle. Farage has signalled a £5 million campaign spend for the May elections, betting that voters will blame Labour and the Conservatives for the funding crisis rather than Reform’s own record. Projections show them potentially taking control of county councils in Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk for the first time. Watch for: whether the council tax and defection numbers gain traction in the campaign — or whether anti-establishment sentiment overrides Reform’s governing record.
One To Read

Shadow Fleet Set to Be Interdicted in UK Waters in Latest Blow to Russia

GOV.UK · The full government announcement on Royal Navy authority to board and seize Russian sanctions-evading tankers in the English Channel.
☾

Evening Briefing

Thursday 26 March 2026 — 17:45 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Fuel bills climbing fast — petrol has risen to 149.9p per litre and diesel to 176.6p. Budget an extra £10–15 per tank. The April energy cap drops to £1,641, but a £322 rise is forecast for July.
  • Savings rates on hold — the Bank of England at 3.75% means mortgage rates stay elevated but savings accounts remain attractive. Lock in a fixed-rate ISA before 5 April.
  • Pension check-up time — the Pension Schemes Bill could reshape your workplace pension. Check performance against benchmarks.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Extends Iran Energy Strike Deadline to 6 April as Back-Channel Talks Intensify

↻ This morning: fresh salvos hit central Israel → This evening: Trump extends energy strike deadline, back-channel talks via Pakistan intensify

The US president announced a further ten-day pause on strikes against Iran’s energy infrastructure, pushing the deadline to 6 April. Trump claimed “talks are going very well” while envoy Witkoff confirmed a 15-point framework had been transmitted to Tehran via Pakistan. Iran publicly denied any negotiations.

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The extension marks Trump’s second postponement — revealing tension between rhetoric and reality on Day 27. The US has struck over 9,000 targets since 28 February. The Hormuz closure has proven more potent than Tehran’s arsenal. Brent closed at $106.18. Watch for whether Iran responds before 6 April.

Pentagon Weighs Diverting Ukraine Weapons to the Middle East

The Pentagon is considering redirecting military aid earmarked for Ukraine as the Iran campaign depletes Patriot and THAAD interceptors. Zelensky claimed US-aligned nations fired over 800 Patriots in three days, exceeding Ukraine’s total four-year stockpile.

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The PURL programme supplied 75% of Ukraine’s Patriot missiles. The Pentagon reportedly plans to redirect $750 million. NATO’s Rutte offered assurances that equipment “continues to flow.” Watch for European reaction and whether NATO members fill the gap.

Russia Launches Nearly 1,000 Drones at Ukraine in One of the War’s Largest Attacks

Russia fired approximately 948 drones including a rare daytime assault of 550. NATO scrambled jets from Poland and Romania. Ukraine hit Ust-Luga, sparking fires at one of Russia’s most important oil export hubs.

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March 2026 is the first month Ukraine’s long-range drones roughly match Russia’s. Ukrainian strikes have halted about 40% of Russia’s oil export capacity. Watch for Russian retaliation against Ukrainian energy infrastructure.

Meta and YouTube Found Liable in Landmark Youth Addiction Verdicts

A jury found Meta and YouTube liable for addictive platform design, awarding $6 million. Meta was 70% responsible. A separate New Mexico trial hit Meta with $375 million for failing to protect children. Over 2,000 similar lawsuits are pending.

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This establishes a precedent that platform design choices can constitute negligence. In the UK, the Online Safety Act’s enforcement could be accelerated. Watch for the New Mexico trial’s second phase on 4 May.

Denmark’s Inconclusive Election Triggers Coalition Talks

Frederiksen was named formateur after her Social Democrats won 38 seats but fell short of a majority. Rasmussen’s centrist Moderates (14 seats) are kingmaker. The 21.9% vote share was the Social Democrats’ worst since 1903.

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Frederiksen called the snap election over Greenland but voters focused on domestic issues. Denmark’s fragmentation mirrors a broader European trend. Watch for whether she forms a government before Easter.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Consumer Confidence Collapses to Record Low as Iran Conflict Fuels Fears

↻ This morning: BRC expectations plunged to minus 53 → This evening: personal finance expectations also hit record low of minus 17

The BRC’s economic expectations hit minus 53 — the worst since records began. Personal finance expectations fell to minus 17. CNBC described a coming “brutal” inflation surge with ING forecasting CPI could peak at 4% in autumn.

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A 23-point single-month collapse exceeds the 2022 mini-budget crisis. Retailers face a triple squeeze. Watch for the April energy cap change and the projected July increase.

Government Bans Crypto Donations to Political Parties

Starmer announced an immediate moratorium following the Rycroft Review. Reform UK MPs walked out. The ban will be embedded in the Representation of the People Bill.

Dive deeper
The ban targets Reform UK, which openly accepts cryptocurrency. Reform leads polls at 23% with May elections looming. Watch for legal challenges from Reform.

North Sea Drilling Row Splits Cabinet

Starmer deferred to Miliband as Reeves pushed for new licences. Petrol prices have surged past 149p amid Hormuz disruption. Industry groups estimate 75,000 jobs from expedited licensing.

Dive deeper
Miliband’s green credentials make a U-turn treacherous. But with Brent above $106, every barrel of domestic production is strategically valuable. Watch for a decision before Easter recess.

Kent Meningitis Passes Peak — 20 Cases, Two Deaths

No new infections reported on 26 March. Over 10,500 antibiotic doses administered. The WHO issued a situation report. The strain is not fully covered by the current Bexsero vaccine.

Dive deeper
The Canterbury outbreak is the largest MenB cluster since Bexsero was introduced in 2015. Watch for UKHSA’s formal containment declaration before Easter.

Pension Schemes Bill Heads to Final Stage as Lords Rebel

Lords voted 191–118 to remove the government’s power to mandate pension asset allocations. The Bill awaits Third Reading on Friday before Easter recess.

Dive deeper
The amendment preserves flexibility for well-performing smaller schemes. The broader reform agenda remains intact. Watch for whether the government triggers ping-pong after Easter.
One To Read

Don’t Be Fooled by the UK’s Pre-War Inflation Print

CNBC · Why February’s 3.0% CPI figure masks the true inflationary impact of the Iran conflict, and what households should expect in the months ahead.
☼

Morning Briefing

Thursday 26 March 2026 — 08:05 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Petrol prices may ease — Brent crude fell below $97 overnight as Iran’s partial Hormuz reopening continues. If oil stays below $100, expect 3–5p per litre off pump prices by mid-April, though the two-week lag means no immediate relief at the forecourt.
  • Mortgage rates stuck through summer — the Bank of England’s hold at 3.75% and rising inflation expectations mean two-year fixes remain above 5.2%. If you are remortgaging, lock in before the war-driven energy shock feeds through to CPI.
  • Consumer confidence at record low — the BRC index plunged to minus 53, the worst since records began. Retailers are warning of further price rises from April as employer National Insurance increases and energy costs cascade through supply chains.

GEO Geopolitical

Day 27: Iran Fires Fresh Missile Salvos at Central Israel

Iran resumed missile attacks on central Israel after a 14-hour lull, injuring two people in Kfar Qasim with cluster bomb impacts. Sirens sounded across the Dan metropolitan area. The strikes confirm Tehran retains significant offensive capability despite nearly four weeks of sustained US-Israeli bombardment.

Dive deeper
The resumption of fire after a brief pause suggests Iran is calibrating attacks to maintain psychological pressure whilst conserving missile stocks for a protracted campaign. The cluster munitions used at Kfar Qasim force multiple Iron Dome interceptions per incoming round, burning through interceptor stocks at an accelerated rate. The Day 27 cumulative toll stands at over 3,100 dead in Iran, 14 Israelis, 13 US service personnel and more than 1,070 in Lebanon. The targeting of residential areas rather than military installations signals continued emphasis on economic disruption.

Tehran Rejects US Ceasefire Plan as “Maximalist”

Iran dismissed Washington’s 15-point peace proposal, delivered via Pakistan, as “maximalist and unreasonable.” Foreign Minister Araghchi said message exchanges “do not mean negotiations.” Tehran issued five counterdemands including war reparations, Hormuz sovereignty and a halt to all strikes on allied forces in Lebanon and Iraq.

Dive deeper
The rejection was emphatic but the door remains ajar — Iran’s willingness to issue counterdemands, rather than refuse engagement entirely, suggests a negotiating posture rather than outright intransigence. Pakistan’s PM Sharif has offered to host direct talks, with Islamabad emerging as the most credible broker. The US plan reportedly addresses sanctions relief, nuclear rollback and maritime routes. Trump’s five-day strike pause on energy infrastructure expires this weekend; failure to show diplomatic progress could trigger a major escalation.

Russia Unleashes Record 9,414-Drone Barrage on Ukraine

Russian forces fired 9,414 drones and conducted 158 combat engagements in 24 hours — the heaviest aerial assault of the entire war. Ukraine destroyed 2,038 unmanned vehicles. Russia lost 1,210 soldiers, bringing total casualties since February 2022 to approximately 1,292,170. An early-morning strike hit infrastructure in Kryvyi Rih.

Dive deeper
Moscow is exploiting the global preoccupation with the Iran conflict to intensify operations on multiple axes. The drone volume dwarfs even last week’s 948-unit barrage. Ukraine’s interception capacity is under severe strain as Western attention and air defence stockpiles are diverted to the Middle East. Zelensky has warned of an imminent deficit of interceptor missiles. The spring offensive appears aimed at grinding down Ukrainian defences through sheer attritional volume rather than achieving dramatic territorial breakthroughs.

Saudi Arabia Intercepts 28 Drones and Ballistic Missile

Saudi Arabia shot down 28 drones and a ballistic missile targeting its Eastern Region, home to the Abqaiq and Ras Tanura oil processing facilities. Gulf air defences are at their highest alert since the conflict began. The attack followed IRGC threats to strike energy infrastructure across Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE.

Dive deeper
The escalation of Iranian strikes against Gulf states marks a dangerous widening of the conflict. Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province processes roughly 5 million barrels per day; a successful strike on Abqaiq alone could remove 5 per cent of global supply overnight. The IRGC views Gulf cooperation with the US-Israeli campaign as co-belligerency warranting direct retaliation. Insurance premiums for Gulf-based energy assets have reached record levels, adding inflationary pressure even if no major facility is hit.

Starmer Warns of “War on Two Fronts” at Helsinki Summit

The Prime Minister told JEF leaders in Helsinki that Western nations confront simultaneous threats from the Iran conflict and Russian aggression. President Zelenskyy and Canadian PM Carney joined remotely. The summit of ten northern European defence partners focused on coordinating Ukraine support and countering Russian maritime threats in the Baltic.

Dive deeper
Starmer’s “two fronts” framing is a deliberate attempt to link the Iran and Ukraine conflicts in Western strategic thinking — arguing that Russia benefits directly through elevated oil revenues and reduced Western bandwidth. The JEF summit carries particular weight given that several member states border Russia or depend on Baltic shipping lanes vulnerable to shadow fleet disruption. Starmer used the occasion to announce that British forces would begin boarding sanctioned Russian vessels in UK waters, a significant operational escalation against Moscow’s sanctions-evasion infrastructure.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Consumer Confidence Collapses to Lowest Under Starmer

The BRC’s measure of economic expectations plunged to minus 53 in March from minus 30 in February — the worst reading since the tracker began in 2024. Personal finance expectations hit a record low of minus 17. The collapse is driven by fears of surging inflation as the Iran conflict pushes energy costs sharply higher.

Dive deeper
The BRC survey, conducted by Opinium between 10 and 13 March, captures sentiment before Iran’s partial Hormuz reopening, meaning the true picture may be marginally less bleak. Nevertheless, a 23-point single-month collapse exceeds the deterioration during the September 2022 mini-budget crisis. Retailers face a triple squeeze of falling demand, rising input costs and the April employer National Insurance increase. The risk of a consumer-led recession is now firmly on the horizon.

Government Blocks £1.5bn Chinese Wind Factory Over Security

Ministers blocked Ming Yang’s plans for a wind turbine factory at Ardersier Port in the Scottish Highlands, citing national security. The facility would have created 1,500 jobs. Concerns centred on Chinese technology in critical energy infrastructure, intensified by the alleged spy scandal involving Scottish Labour MP Joani Reid’s husband.

Dive deeper
The decision reflects a hardening Government stance on Chinese investment in strategic sectors, mirroring similar moves by Australia and Germany. Ming Yang’s exclusion from UK waters — London has also banned its turbines from British offshore wind farms — significantly narrows the supply chain for clean energy targets. The Business and Trade Committee chair warned the decision “must be accompanied by a credible domestic industrial strategy.” Scotland’s First Minister criticised the ruling as prioritising “Whitehall paranoia” over Highland jobs.

British Forces Authorised to Board Russian Shadow Fleet

Starmer announced that British military personnel may interdict sanctioned Russian shadow fleet vessels transiting UK waters. The legal framework, identified in January, permits boarding and inspection. Around 75 per cent of Russia’s crude oil is transported by the shadow fleet; the UK has sanctioned 544 such vessels alongside allies.

Dive deeper
Britain’s territorial waters cover key shipping lanes between the North Sea and Atlantic through which shadow fleet tankers regularly transit en route to European and Asian buyers. Each target will be individually assessed by military, law enforcement and energy specialists before ministers authorise an operation. The first boarding is expected imminently. This positions Britain as the first NATO ally to take direct physical action against Russia’s sanctions-evasion infrastructure, raising the prospect of retaliatory measures.

Parliament Rises for Easter as Defence Plan Row Intensifies

The House of Commons rises today for Easter recess, returning on 13 April. The break follows a bruising Liaison Committee session where Bernard Jenkin accused Starmer of “enormous complacency” on defence. The Prime Minister snapped back at 14 years of Conservative underinvestment. The defence investment plan remains unpublished.

Dive deeper
The three-week recess comes at an extraordinarily sensitive moment: the Iran conflict shows no sign of de-escalation and the spring offensive in Ukraine is intensifying. Starmer told the Liaison Committee that “this is not our war” regarding Iran but acknowledged it “could go on for some time.” The still-unpublished defence investment plan has become an albatross. When Parliament returns, Starmer will face intensified pressure to demonstrate both fiscal credibility and military readiness simultaneously.

New Visa Rules Bar Afghan and Sudanese Nationals From Today

Immigration restrictions taking effect today bar nationals from Afghanistan and Sudan from applying for student and skilled worker visas. The measures form part of the Government’s earned settlement reforms, delayed to autumn after a 100-MP Labour revolt. The Home Affairs Committee warned the ban risks “unintended consequences” for NHS staffing.

Dive deeper
The restrictions arrive at a particularly controversial moment — Afghanistan remains under Taliban rule with no British diplomatic presence, and Sudan is engulfed in civil war. Humanitarian organisations argue that blocking visa routes for conflict-affected nationals contradicts protection obligations. The NHS recruited over 37,000 international staff last year, with significant numbers from affected countries. The Home Affairs Committee warned that cutting skilled worker routes for healthcare workers could exacerbate staffing shortages in social care.
One To Read

What to Know About Trump’s 15-Point Peace Plan After Iran’s Rejection

Time · A comprehensive breakdown of what the US proposal demands, why Tehran rejected it, and what the five Iranian counterdemands reveal about the prospects for a ceasefire.
☾

Evening Briefing

Wednesday 25 March 2026 — 17:55 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Petrol prices may ease — Brent crude fell below $100 for the first time since mid-March as Iran partially reopened the Strait of Hormuz. Forecourt prices typically lag by 7–10 days; if oil stays below $100, expect 3–5p per litre off pump prices by early April.
  • Mortgage rates remain elevated — the Bank of England’s rate hold at 3.75% means two-year fixes remain above 5.2%. If you are remortgaging before summer, locking in now avoids further rises should inflation spike as expected.
  • Kent meningitis alert — if you have a child at the University of Kent or in Canterbury, contact the university health service about the targeted vaccination programme. Over 9,300 jabs have been administered; two students have died.
Prime Minister’s Questions Wednesday 25 March 2026

Badenoch Opens on North Sea Energy

Kemi Badenoch chose energy security as her line of attack, demanding Starmer explain why the government refuses to grant new drilling licences for the Jackdaw and Rosebank North Sea fields. “While families are paying record prices at the pump, the Prime Minister is blocking British energy,” she said to loud cheers from the Conservative benches. Starmer accused her of “opportunism,” noting the Court of Session had ruled the original licences unlawful. Badenoch shot back: “He’s hiding behind Ed Miliband and the courts.”

Starmer Pivots to Iran: “I Stuck to My Principles”

In the second half, Starmer seized the initiative on foreign policy, declaring “I stuck to my principles not to join this war” and attacking what he called “Badenoch’s Iran amnesia.” He accused the Conservatives of having supported US military action without conditions during the early days of the conflict. Badenoch appeared wrong-footed, offering no direct rebuttal on Iran. The New Statesman gave this exchange decisively to the Prime Minister.

Davey Backs Starmer on Drilling Licences

In a rare moment of cross-party agreement, Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey stood to support Starmer: “As a former energy secretary who himself granted oil and gas licences, the Prime Minister is actually right and the leader of the opposition is wrong. The law is clear and I believe in the rule of law.” The intervention drew a mix of cheers and groans. Badenoch dismissed it as “a coalition of the unwilling.”

Farage Attacks on Small Boats: “Smash the Gangs Has Failed”

Nigel Farage rose to challenge Starmer on Channel crossings, delivering a sustained attack: “Smash the gangs, that is what the Prime Minister promised us. Trust me, I will stop the boats from coming. But 70,000 later and 1,000 in the last week, and too many young men that pose a threat to national security — is it not time to admit smash the gangs has been a total abject failure?” He accused Starmer of presiding over “a collapse in border security” as Labour backbenchers jeered.

Starmer Brands Farage “Absolute Disgrace”; All Eight Reform MPs Walk Out

Starmer responded with the session’s most explosive moment: “This is from the man and the party that voted against giving law enforcement counter-terrorism style powers to tackle it. He wants the grievance — he doesn’t want it sorted.” He called Farage an “absolute disgrace,” attacked his “screeching U-turn” on Iran and noted a Reform-run council raised council tax by 9 per cent. All eight Reform MPs stood and walked out. Labour’s Emily Darlington called “bye” as they left, drawing laughter. Starmer quipped they were “absolutely snookered.”

Cross-Party Reaction: Walkout Branded “Absolutely Pathetic”

Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty called the walkout “absolutely pathetic” and “obviously pre-rehearsed,” describing it as reflective of Reform’s “thin-skinned demeanour.” Reform Deputy Leader Richard Tice told GB News afterwards: “We’re furious! It’s ridiculous! This is becoming a farce.” The walkout dominated post-PMQs coverage, overshadowing the substantive energy and Iran exchanges that preceded it.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Rejects US Ceasefire Plan, Issues Five-Point Counterproposal

↻ This morning: US 15-point plan delivered via Pakistan → This evening: Iran rejects outright, issues own demands

Iran dismissed the US 15-point ceasefire proposal delivered via Pakistan, with an official telling Press TV: “Iran will end the war when it decides to do so.” Tehran issued a five-point counterproposal demanding a halt to all US and Israeli attacks, war reparations, and international recognition of Iran’s authority over the Strait of Hormuz.

Dive deeper
The rejection was emphatic and unconditional. Iran’s five demands — cessation of hostilities, guarantees against resumption, reparations, protection of allied militias in Lebanon and Iraq, and Hormuz sovereignty — are maximalist by design, intended to establish a negotiating floor rather than a final position. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Sharif offered to host talks, but any dialogue depends on both sides accepting preconditions the other finds unacceptable. The US plan reportedly included sanctions relief, nuclear cooperation, and IAEA monitoring — concessions Tehran views as insufficient while bombs continue to fall.

Oil Crashes Below $100 as Iran Opens Hormuz to “Non-Hostile” Ships

↻ This morning: Hormuz effectively closed → This evening: Partial reopening, Brent at $101.47

Iran’s UN mission announced that “non-hostile” vessels may transit the Strait of Hormuz, the first easing of the blockade since 28 February. Brent crude crashed 6% in morning trading to $99.16 before recovering to $101.47. Only five vessels transited on Monday, compared with 120 per day before the conflict.

Dive deeper
The partial reopening is a calculated de-escalation, allowing Iran to claim it is not indiscriminately blocking global trade while maintaining leverage over Western-allied shipping. Over 1,000 vessels remain stranded near the strait. An FT investigation found $580 million in bets on falling oil prices were placed just 15 minutes before Trump announced the postponement of energy strikes — raising questions about market manipulation or insider knowledge. Despite the partial recovery, Brent remains down sharply from its $126 peak earlier this month.

Iranian Drones Strike Kuwait Airport; 82nd Airborne Deploys

Iranian drones struck a fuel tank at Kuwait International Airport, sparking a major fire. The Kuwait National Guard intercepted six drones. Separately, the Pentagon confirmed 2,000–3,000 troops from the 82nd Airborne Division, under Maj. Gen. Tegtmeier, are deploying to the region — supplementing approximately 50,000 US forces already in theatre.

Dive deeper
The Kuwait airport strike represents a significant escalation of Iran’s campaign against Gulf states hosting US forces. The IRGC simultaneously launched missiles and drones at military bases in Kuwait, Jordan and Bahrain. The 82nd Airborne deployment raises the total US presence to its highest level since the 2003 Iraq invasion. One likely objective is Kharg Island, handling 90 per cent of Iranian crude exports. Day 26 cumulative toll: 3,114 deaths in Iran (1,354 civilian), 13 US service members, 14 Israelis and over 880 in Lebanon.

Russia Launches 948 Drones in Largest Assault; Spring Offensive Begins

Russia fired 948 drones in a 24-hour barrage — the largest single aerial assault since the full-scale invasion — alongside ground movements signalling the start of its spring offensive. Seven people were killed and 55 injured. Part of the UNESCO-listed area around Lviv’s St Andrew’s Church was damaged.

Dive deeper
Moscow is exploiting the global distraction of the Iran conflict to intensify operations. Nearly 500,000 people in Russia’s Belgorod region lost power after Ukrainian retaliatory attacks, while 150,000 consumers in Chernihiv were cut off. A Ukrainian drone strike hit Ust-Luga, a major Russian oil export hub on the Baltic. Zelensky warned that Ukraine faces an imminent deficit of air defence missiles as Western attention and stockpiles are diverted to the Middle East. Russian cumulative losses since February 2022 now exceed 1.29 million personnel.

Danish PM Frederiksen Resigns After Worst Result Since 1903

Mette Frederiksen submitted her government’s resignation after her Social Democrats won just 38 seats in the 179-seat parliament — the party’s worst showing since 1903. The left-leaning “red bloc” secured 84 seats, six short of a majority. Coalition talks with the Moderates could still return Frederiksen for a third term.

Dive deeper
The election was fought primarily on immigration, welfare and the cost of living, with Trump’s Greenland ambitions proving less decisive than expected. Frederiksen’s party lost 12 seats compared with 2022. The Moderates, led by Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen, are now kingmakers and could demand a broad centrist coalition. Denmark’s political instability matters beyond its borders: Copenhagen has been a key NATO voice on Arctic security and the Greenland question, and any coalition talks will be closely watched in Washington.

UK UK Domestic Politics

All Eight Reform MPs Walk Out of PMQs After Farage Clash

Nigel Farage and all eight Reform UK MPs staged a dramatic walkout from the Commons after Starmer branded Farage an “absolute disgrace” over his U-turn on the Iran war. Conservative MP Ben Obese-Jecty called the stunt “absolutely pathetic” and “pre-rehearsed.” The session had earlier seen Badenoch dominate on North Sea drilling licences.

Dive deeper
The walkout was the most dramatic Commons moment of the session, eclipsing substantive exchanges on energy and Iran. Starmer’s triple attack — on Farage’s voting record against counter-terrorism powers, his Iran U-turn, and Reform’s 9 per cent council tax rise — left Farage visibly angered. The pre-planned nature of the exit, with all eight MPs rising simultaneously, suggests Reform calculated the television moment was worth more than parliamentary engagement. Richard Tice’s furious post-session interview on GB News confirmed the party sees the episode as a rallying point rather than an embarrassment.

UK Inflation Holds at 3.0% — Last Clean Print Before War Impact

CPI rose 3.0% in the 12 months to February, unchanged from January. Core inflation edged up to 3.2%; services inflation slowed to 4.3%, the lowest since March 2022. This is the final reading before the Iran war energy shock feeds through — analysts expect sharp rises from April onwards.

Dive deeper
The breakdown reveals a mixed picture beneath the headline. Food inflation eased to 3.3% from 3.6%, and transport fell to 2.4% as petrol dropped 1.6p per litre in February — a trend now decisively reversed. Housing and utilities crept up to 4.6%. Clothing posted its first increase in four months. The Bank of England faces an impossible trade-off: the February data alone would have supported a rate cut, but the March energy shock changes the calculus entirely. Markets now price no further cuts until at least the fourth quarter of 2026.

Kent Meningitis Outbreak Kills Two; 23 Cases Confirmed

An outbreak of meningitis B centred on the University of Kent in Canterbury has killed two young people, including 18-year-old Juliette Kenny, with 23 confirmed cases. Health Secretary Wes Streeting described it as “unprecedented” and announced a targeted vaccination programme for 5,000 students. Over 9,300 vaccines have been administered.

Dive deeper
The outbreak is believed to have originated at Club Chemistry nightclub on 5–7 March and represents the most significant meningococcal cluster in Britain in decades. The UKHSA has deployed a specialist team to Canterbury. Parents of university students across the country are seeking reassurance, and several universities have begun reviewing their public health protocols. The ECDC has assessed the risk to the EU and EEA as very low, but the speed of transmission has alarmed epidemiologists.

Court of Appeal Upholds VAT on Private School Fees

The Court of Appeal dismissed a human rights challenge against the government’s 20 per cent VAT on private school fees, brought by Charedi Jewish parents and evangelical Christian schools. The court found “no general prohibition on taxing education.” The claimants plan to seek permission to appeal to the Supreme Court.

Dive deeper
The ruling is a significant victory for Labour’s flagship education funding policy, which the party argues will generate revenue to invest in state schools. The claimants argued the policy would force faith-based schools to close, but the three-judge panel found no breach of Article 2 of Protocol 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Critics warn some smaller faith schools and specialist institutions may become financially unviable. If the Supreme Court declines to hear the case, the policy will be settled law.

Retail Records Worst Month Since April 2020; Costs Surge

British retailers recorded their worst month since the first lockdown, with sharp sales declines and no recovery signals. Manufacturers face their largest monthly cost surge since 1992, driven by Middle East energy prices. Enterprise Foods entered administration with £5 million in debts, affecting 250 suppliers.

Dive deeper
The combination of the April employer National Insurance rise and energy cost increases is creating acute pressure for labour-intensive businesses. Hospitality and manufacturing are worst affected, with some firms reporting energy bills up 40–60 per cent since February. Output growth hit a six-month low while firms raised prices at near-year-high rates. The British Chambers of Commerce has called for an emergency support package, but the Chancellor’s fiscal headroom — already thin at the Spring Forecast — leaves scant room for new spending commitments.
One To Read

Finding an Off-Ramp in the Middle East War

International Crisis Group · The definitive analysis of why neither side can win decisively, what a realistic ceasefire framework looks like, and why Turkey may be the only credible broker.
☼

Morning Briefing

Wednesday 25 March 2026 — 08:06 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Fuel costs keep climbing — petrol has reached 149.5p per litre, up 14p in a month. Diesel at 175.6p. Filling a 55-litre family car now costs roughly £82, about £7.70 more than four weeks ago. Fill up sooner rather than later.
  • Mortgage rates are rising sharply — two-year fixes jumped from 4.84% to 5.28% in just eleven days, adding roughly £55 per month on a £200,000 mortgage. If you are remortgaging this year, lock in rates now before further increases.
  • Energy bills will fall to £1,641 from April, but Ofgem’s cap is forecast to surge 20% to £1,973 in July — a £332 jump. Consider fixing your tariff before wholesale rises feed through to retail offers.

GEO Geopolitical

Day 26: Pentagon Orders 82nd Airborne to Middle East

The Pentagon has ordered Maj. Gen. Brandon Tegtmeier and his headquarters staff to deploy to the Middle East, with up to 3,000 paratroopers on standby. Kharg Island, handling 90 per cent of Iran’s crude exports, is identified as the likeliest target for an airborne assault. No final order has been issued.

Dive deeper
The deployment of the 82nd Airborne’s command element is the clearest signal yet that Washington is preparing ground force options. Kharg Island sits 25 kilometres off Iran’s coast in the Persian Gulf and processes virtually all of Iran’s seaborne oil exports. Seizing it would cripple Tehran’s revenue but risk a catastrophic escalation, drawing in Iranian ground forces and potentially triggering retaliation against US bases across the region. The Pentagon describes this as “prudent planning,” but the simultaneous diplomatic messaging — Trump claiming talks are under way — creates deliberate ambiguity about Washington’s true intent.

Trump Claims Iran Talks Under Way; Tehran Flatly Denies

President Trump said Vice-President Vance, Secretary Rubio and envoys Witkoff and Kushner were engaged in discussions with Tehran. Iran rejected the claims outright, accusing Washington of “buying time.” Trump ordered a five-day postponement of planned strikes on Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure.

Dive deeper
The diplomatic confusion underscores a fundamental disconnect between Washington’s public messaging and battlefield reality. While Trump frames the strike pause as a goodwill gesture, the simultaneous deployment of 82nd Airborne assets suggests preparation for escalation rather than de-escalation. Iran’s refusal to acknowledge talks may reflect genuine absence of negotiations or a domestic political calculation — any appearance of dealing with Washington under bombardment would undermine the regime’s standing. The next 72 hours are critical: if the five-day pause expires without progress, the Kharg Island option moves considerably closer.

Russia Launches Spring Offensive With 400-Drone Barrage

Russia fired nearly 400 long-range drones at seven Ukrainian cities on 24 March, signalling the start of its spring-summer offensive. Ground assaults intensified around Lyman in Donetsk, where 500 Russian troops mounted a seven-pronged attack using 30 armoured vehicles. Ukrainian forces report all attacks were repelled.

Dive deeper
Moscow is exploiting the global distraction of the Iran conflict to press its advantage. President Zelensky has warned of a “very bad feeling” about the war’s consequences for Ukraine, citing postponed diplomatic meetings as Western attention shifts to the Middle East. The Institute for the Study of War assesses Russia is unlikely to breach the Fortress Belt defensive line in 2026, but the offensive’s true purpose may be attritional — grinding down Ukrainian reserves and Western resolve simultaneously. Russia’s cumulative losses since February 2022 now exceed 1.29 million troops.

Strait of Hormuz Crisis Chokes Global Energy Supplies

The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed to Western-allied shipping on Day 26. Around 200 tankers are stranded, and global oil supply has been cut by an estimated 10 million barrels per day — the largest disruption in history. Iran is selectively permitting transit for Chinese, Indian and Japanese vessels.

Dive deeper
Iran’s selective transit policy is a masterclass in asymmetric leverage, rewarding neutrality while punishing Western allies. The IEA has called this the “greatest global energy and food security challenge in history.” Gulf Cooperation Council states, which depend on the Strait for over 80 per cent of food imports, face a concurrent grocery supply emergency. The ECB has postponed planned rate cuts and revised its inflation forecasts upward. Brent crude remains above $100 despite retreating from its $126 peak. Every week this continues, the economic damage compounds exponentially.

NATO Agrees Unprecedented 5% Defence Spending Target

NATO member states agreed at The Hague summit to a new defence investment target of 5 per cent of GDP, with an interim commitment of 3.5 per cent by 2035. Germany has committed to reaching 3.2 per cent by 2029, budgeting €117.2 billion for defence in 2026. Poland leads allies at 4.48 per cent.

Dive deeper
The Iran war and Russia’s grinding offensive have crystallised European defence urgency in a way that years of American cajoling could not. The shift from 2 per cent to 5 per cent represents a generational reorientation of European fiscal priorities, requiring an additional €254 billion annually across EU NATO members. France has allocated €68.5 billion despite wider deficit pressures. The question is whether European industrial capacity can absorb this spending effectively, or whether it simply inflates procurement costs without proportionate capability gains.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Crime and Policing Bill Clears Lords Third Reading

The Crime and Policing Bill completed its third reading in the House of Lords, clearing upper chamber scrutiny of the government’s flagship criminal justice legislation. The bill tackles anti-social behaviour, knife crime, violence against women, retail theft and child sexual abuse. It returns to the Commons for consideration of Lords amendments.

Dive deeper
This represents a significant legislative milestone for the Home Office, which has steered the bill through months of parliamentary scrutiny since its second reading in October 2025. The Lords’ report stage, running from late February to 18 March, saw extensive debate on police powers and misconduct investigation provisions. The bill’s passage before the Easter recess — Parliament rises on 27 March — gives the government a tangible domestic achievement amid a period dominated by the Iran crisis. No major obstacles are anticipated in the Commons.

Starmer Chairs COBR as Iran Conflict Drives Energy Surge

The Prime Minister chaired a COBR meeting on the domestic economic impact of the Iran conflict, attended by Chancellor Reeves and Bank of England Governor Bailey. Wholesale gas prices have risen approximately 75 per cent since late February; petrol climbed 14p per litre and diesel surged 29p per litre in under a month.

Dive deeper
The government faces a cost-of-living crisis it did not create but must manage. The OBR has warned that the energy spike could add a full percentage point to UK inflation in 2026, potentially pushing CPI above 5 per cent and undermining the Bank of England’s cautious rate-cutting trajectory. Starmer has insisted “this is not our war” whilst permitting US forces to use British bases — a position that invites comparisons with the 2003 Iraq debate. The Chancellor’s fiscal headroom, already thin after the Spring Forecast, is under further pressure.

English Devolution Bill Enters Lords Report Stage

The English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill began its report stage in the House of Lords this week, with debate continuing on 25 March. The legislation transfers powers from Westminster to combined authorities and local councils across England, covering planning, transport, skills and economic development.

Dive deeper
The devolution bill is central to the government’s levelling-up agenda, but its passage has been complicated by tensions between Whitehall departments reluctant to cede control and local leaders demanding genuine autonomy. The report stage amendments signal the government’s effort to address Lords concerns about insufficient safeguards for affected communities. With Parliament breaking for Easter on 27 March, the bill will not complete report stage until mid-April, and its progress will be closely watched by the metro mayors who stand to gain the most from its provisions.

Votes at 16 Bill Advances Through Commons Committee

The Representation of the People Bill continued its committee stage scrutiny. The bill’s core measures include lowering the voting age to 16 for all UK elections, extending voter registration to 14-year-olds and clamping down on foreign interference. Approximately 1.7 million young people would become newly eligible to vote.

Dive deeper
This is the government’s most significant constitutional initiative of the session, fulfilling a Labour manifesto commitment. The Conservatives and Reform UK oppose votes at 16, arguing that the franchise should align with the age of majority. Supporters point to the existing precedent in Scotland and Wales, where 16-year-olds already vote in devolved elections. The foreign interference provisions have attracted cross-party support. The bill’s passage before the end of the parliamentary session would require consistent government prioritisation of Commons floor time — a challenge given competing demands of the Iran crisis.

Bank of England Holds Rate at 3.75% as War Clouds Outlook

The Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to maintain the base rate at 3.75 per cent, pausing rate cuts widely anticipated before the Middle East conflict escalated. Mortgage rates have risen sharply, with two-year fixes climbing from 4.84 per cent to 5.28 per cent in just eleven days.

Dive deeper
The MPC’s unanimous decision underscores the inflationary threat posed by the Iran conflict. Before hostilities escalated in late February, markets had priced in at least two further rate cuts in 2026. That expectation has been overtaken by events. The jump in mortgage rates — roughly 44 basis points on two-year fixes in under a fortnight — will hit the estimated 1.6 million homeowners due to remortgage this year. The Bank faces a painful trade-off: cutting rates to support a slowing economy would risk embedding higher inflation, whilst holding rates prolongs the squeeze on mortgage holders and business investment.
One To Read

Iran War: Taking Kharg Island Is a Big Risk for Little Reward

Bloomberg Opinion · A rigorous assessment of why seizing Iran’s oil export hub could trigger catastrophic escalation with minimal strategic gain — essential context as the 82nd Airborne deploys.
☾

Evening Briefing

Tuesday 24 March 2026 — 18:15 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Oil is climbing back — Brent surged above $102 today, reversing Monday’s relief rally. Petrol prices are unlikely to fall this week; diesel may push past 170p per litre. Don’t count on the Trump “pause” holding — fill up sooner rather than later.
  • Today’s PMI data signals the services sector is weakening fast. If you work in hospitality, retail or any discretionary-spending sector, prepare for a tougher spring — employers are already cutting hours and pausing recruitment.
  • The £53 million heating oil fund targets rural households not covered by the energy price cap. If you heat with oil (not mains gas), check eligibility at gov.uk — Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales and rural England qualify.

GEO Geopolitical

Day 25: Trump Claims Iran Offered a “Significant Prize” — Tehran Denies Any Contact

President Trump claimed Iran had offered “a very significant prize” related to the Strait of Hormuz, but refused to specify what it was. Tehran categorically denied any contact, accusing Washington of “trying to buy time.” Israel carried out a large wave of airstrikes on central Tehran, while Iran fired multiple missile barrages at Tel Aviv, damaging a multi-storey apartment building. Over 1,000 additional troops from the 82nd Airborne have been deployed to the region.

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The fog of war now extends squarely to diplomacy. Trump’s “prize offer” rhetoric arrived hours after he approved the deployment of over 1,000 troops from the 82nd Airborne Division, suggesting preparation for escalation rather than de-escalation. An Israeli official told NPR that planning was underway for talks in Pakistan later this week, while Pakistan’s PM confirmed his country would host negotiations — but both statements were undercut by an Israeli diplomat separately telling CNN that a deal “does not appear to be tangible right now.” The humanitarian toll continues to mount: nearly 350 children have been killed across the conflict zone. Saudi Arabia intercepted approximately 20 drones targeting its Eastern Province on Monday — a critical region housing the majority of the kingdom’s oil infrastructure. The IEA has described the Strait of Hormuz disruption as the worst energy supply shock since the 1970s. Watch for whether the reported Pakistan-hosted talks materialise this week.

Trump’s Approval Crashes to 36% as Americans Turn Against Iran War

A Reuters/Ipsos poll shows President Trump’s approval rating has plunged to 36% — the lowest of his second term — driven by surging fuel prices and growing public opposition to the war. Just 25% approved of his handling of the cost of living. The four-point drop in a single week is one of the sharpest declines for any modern US president.

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The collapse strikes at the core of Trump’s political brand — economic competence and cost-of-living relief. His 2024 campaign was built almost entirely on reducing prices for ordinary Americans, and the Iran war has delivered precisely the opposite. Gasoline prices have surged above $4.50 per gallon, the highest since 2022. The 36% figure places Trump in historically dangerous territory: no post-war president who dipped below 38% approval recovered to win re-election. A separate Quinnipiac poll showed 74% of voters oppose sending ground troops. Goldman Sachs projects elevated oil prices could persist through 2027. Congressional Republicans are increasingly nervous, with midterm elections just 19 months away. Watch for whether Republican members of Congress begin publicly breaking with Trump on Iran — any significant defections would signal a shift in the war’s political sustainability.

German President Calls Iran War a “Disastrous Mistake” in Sharpest European Rebuke

President Steinmeier delivered an extraordinary public rebuke, calling the war “politically disastrous” and a breach of international law. He said Trump’s second term had caused a rupture in transatlantic relations “as profound as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” adding that there would be “no going back.” He called on Germany to reduce its “excessive dependencies” on the United States.

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Steinmeier’s intervention is remarkable for both content and source. The German presidency is largely ceremonial, but it carries moral authority, and Steinmeier — a former foreign minister and lifelong transatlanticist — chose his words with precision. His explicit comparison to the February 2022 rupture with Russia is the most severe framing any senior European leader has used to describe US-European relations. The speech goes significantly further than Chancellor Merz, who has avoided commenting on the war’s legality, mindful of Germany’s deep economic ties and the 35,000 American troops stationed on German soil. NATO has already withdrawn troops from Iraq and is relocating forces to Europe. Watch for Merz’s response — if he aligns with Steinmeier, it would signal a fundamental and potentially irreversible shift in German foreign policy away from its post-war Atlanticist orientation.

Israel Strikes Lebanese Christian Town in Significant Expansion of Conflict

Israeli forces struck Sahel Alma, a predominantly Maronite Christian town north of Beirut, for the first time — a significant geographic expansion of the parallel Israel-Hezbollah conflict. Separately, Israel killed three people in strikes on Beirut itself. The war in Lebanon has now killed over 100 children, according to Lebanon’s health ministry.

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Until now, Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon had been concentrated in the south, the Bekaa Valley and Hezbollah-dominated suburbs of south Beirut. Sahel Alma is in the Keserwan district, an area historically distant from Hezbollah operations. The strike suggests either an expansion of Israeli targeting criteria or intelligence indicating Hezbollah has dispersed assets into previously untouched areas. Either interpretation is alarming for Lebanon’s fragile sectarian balance. The 2006 war largely spared Christian areas; targeting them now risks drawing other communities into what has been framed as an Israeli-Hezbollah confrontation. Lebanon’s economy, already in freefall since the 2019 financial crisis and the 2020 Beirut port explosion, faces further devastation. Watch for reactions from Lebanese Christian political leaders — any shift from neutrality would significantly complicate the conflict.

Colombian Military Plane Crash Kills at Least 66 Soldiers

A Colombian Air Force C-130H Hercules carrying 128 people crashed shortly after takeoff from Puerto Leguizámo in southwestern Colombia, near the Ecuador and Peru borders. At least 66 were killed and 58 survived. The military has ruled out hostile action, citing a mechanical failure. It is the second-deadliest crash in Colombian Air Force history.

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The crash raises immediate questions about the maintenance of Colombia’s ageing military fleet. The C-130H variant has been in production since the 1970s, and many aircraft still in service across Latin America were acquired decades ago under US military assistance programmes. Colombia’s armed forces have been operating at high tempo, conducting counter-narcotics operations and combating FARC dissident groups in precisely the kind of remote jungle territory where this crash occurred. Puerto Leguizámo sits in Putumayo department, a strategically critical region bordering both Ecuador and Peru. President Petro ordered an immediate investigation. The crash is a significant blow to military capability and morale at a time when Petro’s “Total Peace” policy remains deeply contested within the armed forces. Watch for whether the investigation reveals broader fleet maintenance issues that could ground similar aircraft.

UK UK Domestic

Counter-Terror Police Probe Iran-Linked Group After Golders Green Arson

Four ambulances belonging to Hatzola, a Jewish volunteer medical service, were set ablaze outside Machzike Hadath Synagogue in Golders Green. Counter-terrorism officers are leading the investigation after an Islamist group with alleged Iranian links, Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia, claimed responsibility. A public fundraising appeal surpassed £1 million within 24 hours. The Community Security Trust recorded a 500% increase in antisemitic incidents since the war began.

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The attack marks a disturbing escalation. Golders Green, home to one of London’s largest Orthodox Jewish communities, has historically been a target, but the deliberate destruction of emergency medical vehicles represents a new threshold. The group claiming responsibility — Ashab al-Yamin — has been linked to attacks on Jewish sites across Europe, including a synagogue explosion in Liège and incidents in Amsterdam and Rotterdam, with suspected connections to Iranian-backed Shia Islamist factions in Iraq. Health Secretary Streeting confirmed the government would replace the ambulances. Prime Minister Starmer’s condemnation was swift, but opposition figures have called for a full review of security provision for Jewish community institutions. Watch for whether the investigation establishes a verified Iranian state connection, which would have significant diplomatic and security implications.

UK Economy Stalls as Flash PMI Slumps to Six-Month Low

The S&P Global UK Composite PMI fell sharply from 53.7 to 51.0, with services particularly hard-hit at 51.2 versus 53.0 expected. Input price inflation surged to its highest in over three years, with manufacturing cost pressures accelerating at the fastest pace since 1992. Companies directly blamed lost business on the Middle East conflict.

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The PMI data paints a stark picture of an economy caught in a stagflationary vice. Before the Iran conflict erupted on 28 February, the UK had been on a tentative recovery path — the OBR projected 2.3% average inflation for 2026. Those projections are now obsolete. Oil above $100 and gas prices up roughly 50% are transmitting rapidly through supply chains. The RAC reports diesel up 19.7p per litre and petrol up 9.5p in three weeks. The Ofgem energy price cap could jump 20% from July, adding £332 to average household bills. The OBR estimates the energy spike alone could add a full percentage point to UK inflation by year-end. Watch for the Bank of England’s next rate decision — a cut cycle that seemed certain in February is now in serious doubt, with markets pricing in a potential hold or even a hike.

Matt Brittin Named as Next BBC Director-General

The BBC Board has approved the appointment of Matt Brittin, 57, the former president of Google for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, as the next director-general. He succeeds Tim Davie and becomes the first technology executive ever to lead the 103-year-old public broadcaster. Rhodri Talfan Davies will act as interim DG during the transition.

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Brittin’s appointment is a calculated gamble at a moment when the BBC faces existential questions about its funding model. The licence fee, currently £169.50, is under sustained political pressure, and the BBC’s share of total UK viewing fell below 30% for the first time last year. Brittin brings deep expertise in digital advertising, platform economics and AI-driven content distribution from two decades at Google, but critics note his complete lack of broadcasting or editorial experience. His time at Google was not without controversy — he faced scrutiny at a 2016 parliamentary hearing over UK tax arrangements. The appointment arrives amid a charged environment, with the government’s mid-term review of the BBC Charter due later this year. Watch for his first public statements on the licence fee, AI strategy and the BBC’s relationship with Ofcom — these will signal whether radical reform is coming.

Davey Declares “Two-Horse Race” as Lib Dems Launch Local Election Bid

Sir Ed Davey launched the Lib Dem local election campaign in Surrey, declaring a “two-horse race” with the Conservatives and targeting traditional Tory seats in southern England. He dismissed the Greens as “dangerous” and appealed to centrist voters, positioning his party as the pragmatic opposition focused on “potholes, police officers and GP appointments.” Local elections are on 7 May.

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Davey’s combative launch masks genuine strategic anxiety. The Lib Dems have flatlined at 12–14% nationally since 2024, while Reform has surged past 20% and the Greens to 8–10%, squeezing the centrist ground the Lib Dems once dominated. Framing the contest as a binary Lib Dem versus Conservative fight echoes the “decapitation strategy” that won 72 seats in 2024. Kemi Badenoch launched her own Conservative campaign five days earlier, signalling the Tories view these elections as critical. The Lib Dems’ strident opposition to the Iran war is intended to energise their suburban, pro-European base, but whether foreign policy cuts through at local level is doubtful. Watch for council results in Surrey, Oxfordshire and Cambridgeshire on 7 May — these will test whether the Lib Dems can consolidate 2024 gains or Reform is eating their anti-Tory vote.

Government Announces £53m Heating Oil Fund and Toughest Late Payment Crackdown in 25 Years

Starmer announced £53 million in emergency support for vulnerable households struggling with soaring heating oil costs, targeting the 1.5 million rural homes not covered by the energy price cap. Separately, ministers unveiled a mandatory 60-day payment window for large firms paying smaller suppliers, backed by statutory interest at 8% above base rate and multimillion-pound fines.

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These announcements represent the government’s twin-track response — immediate crisis mitigation and structural reform. While gas and electricity are regulated through Ofgem’s price cap, the 1.5 million UK households reliant on heating oil have no such protection. Rural communities in Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales and parts of England have seen costs roughly double since the Strait of Hormuz closure. On late payments, the Federation of Small Businesses has long argued that Britain’s late payment culture costs small firms £22 billion annually. The new 60-day cap, reducing to 45 days after five years, brings the UK closer to EU standards. The Small Business Commissioner gains sweeping investigatory and fining powers. Construction retentions — a notorious source of small firm insolvency — will also be banned. Watch for whether £53 million proves sufficient as oil remains above $100, and whether large corporates lobby to water down the payment reforms before their 2027 implementation.
One To Read

Germany’s President Slams Trump’s Iran War as “Disastrous Mistake”

Modern Diplomacy · The full text and analysis of Steinmeier’s landmark speech — what it means for NATO, European defence sovereignty, and whether the transatlantic alliance can survive a second Trump term.
☼

Morning Briefing

Tuesday 24 March 2026 — 08:08 GMT

What It Means For You

  • Petrol prices remain elevated at roughly 155p per litre; diesel at 168p. Trump’s five-day postponement eased oil below $100, but Brent could spike again if talks collapse — fill up while prices are marginally lower.
  • Mortgage rates continue to climb as gilt yields hold near 5%. The average two-year fix is now 5.25%, adding approximately £120 per month on a £250,000 mortgage compared with January rates. Remortgage offers are being withdrawn daily.
  • Reeves’s new anti-profiteering framework gives the CMA powers to investigate fuel and food retailers exploiting the crisis — report suspected price gouging via the CMA consumer hotline.

GEO Geopolitical

Day 25: “Unprecedented” Israeli Strikes Devastate Eastern Tehran

Israel launched two waves of strikes on Tehran overnight, targeting IRGC headquarters and weapons manufacturing sites in what correspondents called “unprecedented” attacks. Over 80,000 civilian buildings have been damaged across Iran since the war began; at least 1,047 civilians, including 214 children, have been killed.

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The eastern Tehran strikes represent the deepest penetration of Iranian airspace by Israeli jets since the war began on 28 February. The IDF stated the targets included Iranian security organisation headquarters and “key weapons manufacturing sites,” though Iranian state media reported residential damage in surrounding districts. The Iranian Red Crescent confirmed strikes also hit homes in Tabriz and Khorramabad, killing at least seven people including a child. The IAEA has warned that continued military operations near Isfahan risk damaging nuclear monitoring equipment, which could impair the agency’s ability to verify Iran’s enrichment activities.

Iran Denies Trump’s “Productive Talks” Claim as Five-Day Pause Begins

President Trump postponed strikes on Iranian power plants for five days, citing “good and productive conversations.” Tehran categorically denies any dialogue, with state media accusing Trump of “retreating out of fear.” The Pentagon has paused targeting of energy infrastructure but conventional strikes continue unabated.

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The five-day window expires on Friday 28 March. Trump’s claim of ongoing talks appears to have no Iranian counterpart — Foreign Minister Araghchi stated “there have been no discussions, direct or indirect, since the aggression began.” Oman and Qatar are believed to be attempting back-channel mediation. Markets rallied sharply on Monday on the postponement, with Brent crude falling 14 per cent, but the underlying crisis remains unresolved. If the pause lapses without agreement, strikes on Iran’s power grid would affect 85 million civilians and constitute the largest deliberate infrastructure attack since the Second World War.

Iran Attacks All Six GCC States in Historic First

For the first time, Iran struck targets across all six Gulf Cooperation Council states — Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE — in overnight missile and drone salvoes. The attacks represent a dramatic widening of the conflict beyond Israel and US forces. Damage assessments are continuing.

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The simultaneous attacks on all GCC members are without precedent in Middle Eastern warfare. Iran appears to be retaliating for the 22-nation Hormuz coalition’s demand to reopen the Strait, which several Gulf states signed. Saudi Arabia had already expelled Iran’s military attaché last week. Qatar’s gas processing infrastructure is particularly vulnerable — the country supplies 25 per cent of global LNG, and any sustained damage would have severe implications for European energy markets. The attacks may accelerate Gulf states’ decision on whether to join active military operations alongside the United States.

Asian Markets Rally on Trump Pause; Oil Falls Below $100

Asian equities surged overnight — the Nikkei gained 0.9 per cent, the Hang Seng 1.4 per cent, and South Korea’s Kospi 1.1 per cent. Brent crude fell below $100 for the first time in two weeks. S&P 500 futures edged down 0.6 per cent as the initial euphoria faded on Iran’s denial of talks.

Dive deeper
Monday’s market rally was the sharpest single-session recovery since the conflict began, driven almost entirely by the prospect of de-escalation. The S&P 500 closed up over 1 per cent at 6,581, while the FTSE 100 recovered to 9,894. However, the divergence between Trump’s claims and Tehran’s denial creates acute headline risk — a single statement from either side could reverse the rally within minutes. Oil markets remain pricing a significant risk premium; Brent at $99 is still 40 per cent above pre-war levels. The VIX remains elevated at 26, well above its long-term average of 20.

Russia Strikes Ukrainian Energy Grid Across Nine Regions

Russian forces hit energy infrastructure in Odessa with Geranium drones and struck targets across nine Ukrainian regions overnight, causing power outages in the south. Moldova’s power link to Ukraine was severed. Ukraine destroyed 86 drones in response; total Russian casualties have reached an estimated 1.29 million.

Dive deeper
The sustained campaign against Ukrainian power infrastructure continues even as global attention focuses on the Iran conflict. The disconnection of the Isaccea–Vulcanesti transmission line between Romania and Moldova demonstrates the cross-border consequences of these attacks. Ukraine’s peace talks with the United States, relocated from Abu Dhabi to Florida owing to the Iran crisis, have stalled as Washington’s diplomatic bandwidth narrows. Russia gained just five square miles last week, while Ukraine’s domestic drone production exceeds 100,000 units per month, sustaining its ability to strike Russian energy targets deep behind the front line.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Starmer Chairs COBRA on Economic Fallout; Plans for “Some Time”

The Prime Minister chaired an emergency COBRA meeting yesterday with the Governor of the Bank of England, the Chancellor and the Energy Secretary to address the war’s economic impact. Starmer warned the Government must plan for the conflict to continue “for some time” and pledged to use “every lever available.”

Dive deeper
The COBRA meeting signals Downing Street’s recognition that the Iran crisis has become primarily an economic emergency for Britain. UK gilt yields have breached 5 per cent — their highest since 2008 — erasing approximately £3 billion of fiscal headroom. Britain’s dependence on imported natural gas makes it particularly vulnerable; wholesale gas prices have risen 67 per cent since the conflict began. The meeting discussed emergency support for energy-intensive industries, potential fuel duty intervention, and the new anti-profiteering framework. Starmer faces a difficult balance between reassuring markets and preparing the public for sustained economic pain.

Reeves Unveils Anti-Profiteering Framework to Combat Price Gouging

The Chancellor announced a new anti-profiteering framework giving the CMA “time-limited, targeted powers” to investigate companies exploiting the crisis. Lord Richard Walker, the Government’s cost-of-living tsar, recommended a temporary profit cap on energy and petrol retailers to prevent windfall gains.

Dive deeper
The framework represents the most significant government intervention in retail pricing since the Competition Act 1998. The CMA will gain powers to launch rapid investigations into sectors where prices have risen disproportionately to input costs — fuel, food and building materials are expected to be early targets. Diesel has reached a three-year high ahead of Easter travel. The move echoes the wartime profiteering measures of the 1940s, though Treasury officials insist it is temporary and targeted. Business groups have warned that overly aggressive enforcement could deter investment, but public anger over fuel prices may leave Reeves with little political choice.

Gilt Yields Hold Near 5% as Fiscal Headroom Evaporates

The UK 10-year gilt yield remains near 4.94 per cent, its highest level since July 2008, after briefly breaching 5 per cent on Monday. Government borrowing costs have risen 68 basis points in three weeks, erasing Rachel Reeves’s £9.9 billion fiscal headroom and raising the spectre of emergency spending cuts.

Dive deeper
Britain’s bonds have fallen more steeply than those of any comparable economy, reflecting the UK’s acute vulnerability to energy shocks. Debt interest payments are running at an annualised £110 billion, the largest item of government expenditure after health and pensions. The OBR’s fiscal forecast, which assumed Brent at $75, is now obsolete; sustained oil above $100 adds approximately £8 billion to annual spending on energy support. Markets are pricing two Bank of England rate rises to 4.25 per cent by year-end, a complete reversal from the cuts anticipated in January. A further gilt sell-off could force an emergency fiscal statement.

Labour Falls to Record Low of 16% as Greens Surge

A YouGov poll puts Reform UK on 23 per cent, the Greens on 21 per cent, and Labour on just 16 per cent — its lowest ever recorded. The Green Party gained 15,000 members in a single week following its Gorton and Denton by-election victory, with opposition to UK involvement in the Iran conflict driving support.

Dive deeper
The polling collapse represents an existential crisis for Labour ahead of May’s local elections. The Green surge is concentrated among younger voters and in urban seats where Labour’s majority was already thinning. Starmer’s approval rating after 20 months is the lowest of any prime minister in 50 years. Reform UK’s lead, while narrowing from 15 points in November to seven, remains formidable in the Red Wall seats Labour needs to hold. With six weeks until polling day, these figures suggest Labour could lose hundreds of council seats, further destabilising Starmer’s leadership.

Commons Enters Final Week Before Easter Recess

Parliament sits for its last week before the Easter break, with Lords amendments to the Tobacco and Vapes Bill, the National Insurance Bill and the Victims and Courts Bill all on the agenda. Both Houses rise by Friday 27 March and return on 13 April. A debate on Northern Ireland is scheduled for Monday.

Dive deeper
The National Insurance Contributions Bill, which empowers the Treasury to charge NICs on salary-sacrificed pension contributions above £2,000 from April 2029, returns after Lords scrutiny focused on its impact on small businesses. The recess is politically charged — MPs returning to constituencies will face voters alarmed by rising fuel and energy costs, with local election campaigns already under way. A petition with 201,000 signatures calling for free access to court transcripts will be debated. The timing is awkward for Starmer; a two-week absence from the Commons comes just as the Iran crisis demands visible parliamentary accountability.
One To Read

How Will the Iran War Affect the Global Economy?

Chatham House · A rigorous assessment of the war’s cascading economic consequences — from the Hormuz closure’s impact on 20 per cent of global oil supplies to the uneven toll on European, Asian and emerging-market economies.
● Live Updates · Auto-aggregated from 16 sources

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