Evening Briefing
What It Means For You
- Petrol & Energy: Oil eased back below $85 a barrel today after Trump dropped his 20% Hormuz toll, taking some of the immediate heat out of pump prices. But with the war and a blockade of Iranian ships continuing, the risk of fresh spikes has not gone away.
- A New Prime Minister Next Week: Andy Burnham addressed his MPs today as prime minister-in-waiting, with speculation swirling over his cabinet — Ed Miliband is tipped as chancellor and Rachel Reeves’s future is in doubt. Those choices, from 20 July, will shape the economy.
- Heat, Fire & Water: The heatwave — now linked to an estimated 2,700 excess deaths this summer — holds into Wednesday, with major wildfire incidents and hosepipe bans spreading. Keep away from open water, ditch disposable barbecues, and save water.
GEO Geopolitical
Trump Drops the Hormuz Toll but Keeps a Blockade on Iran
President Trump reversed course on Tuesday, scrapping the 20% toll on Strait of Hormuz shipping he had announced only a day earlier, after it drew near-universal rejection — from the UN’s maritime body, which said there was no legal basis for it, to China and Brazil’s president, Lula, who called it “piracy”. He said he would “replace” the fee with “trade and investment deals” from the Gulf states. But he is pressing ahead with a US naval blockade — now aimed only at ships to and from Iranian ports — due to begin tonight.
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Oil Eases Off Its One-Month High as the Toll Is Scrapped
Oil pulled back from a one-month high after Trump dropped the Hormuz toll, with Brent crude easing to around $84 a barrel having touched almost $86 earlier in the day. The market had jumped nearly 10% on Monday on the blockade and toll threat; softer US inflation figures and the climbdown on the fee took some heat out of it. Shipping through the strait remains sharply reduced, however, with transits down more than half on the week, keeping a war premium in the price.
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Britain Joins Ukraine and Europe in a Missile-Defence Coalition
Ukraine and nine European countries, including Britain, France and Germany, have announced a coalition to build a shared, integrated missile-defence capability against the ballistic weapons Russia fires in ever greater numbers. The pact, unveiled in Paris, would pool technology, research and industry, and help fund and accelerate Ukraine’s home-grown “Freya” interceptor, which Kyiv hopes can one day rival the American Patriot. Hours after the announcement, Russia struck Kyiv again with ballistic missiles.
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Wildfires Spread Across Europe as Fontainebleau Is Evacuated
A wildfire tore through the historic Fontainebleau forest south of Paris, forcing evacuations and disrupting road and rail as it spread across more than 1,300 hectares, in France’s third heatwave in three months. In Spain, ten people were still missing after a southern wildfire that killed thirteen, with extreme heat, drought and wind driving fires across the country and beyond. It is the same heat dome that is baking Britain, now settled over much of the continent.
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EU Rallies $1bn for Gaza’s Recovery
The European Union has launched a fund of around a billion dollars to help rebuild Gaza after more than two years of war, rallying donors including Britain, France, Germany, Japan and the World Bank behind a “Team Gaza” initiative. The money is to go on clearing debris and restoring water, sanitation, health and energy systems. It is a substantial gesture, but a fraction of the more than $70bn the EU and UN estimate the territory will need over the next decade.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Burnham Addresses His MPs as Cabinet Jockeying Begins
Andy Burnham addressed the parliamentary Labour party today for the first time as prime minister-in-waiting, telling MPs his cabinet would reflect “a broad church of ideas”. With his path to Downing Street secured, the jockeying for jobs has begun in earnest: Ed Miliband is being tipped as a possible chancellor and the future of Rachel Reeves is openly in doubt, while Wes Streeting and the deputy leader, Lucy Powell, are among those linked to senior roles. He is expected to be confirmed leader this week and to take office on 20 July.
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Heatwave Linked to 2,700 Excess Deaths as Fires Spread
This summer’s heatwaves are estimated to have caused more than 2,700 excess deaths in England and Wales across May and June, according to a study by scientists at Imperial College, the Met Office and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, which attributes around 1,100 of them to human-caused climate change. It lands as the heat holds into midweek: a moorland fire at Tintwistle in the Peak District has been declared a major incident, one of several large wildfires burning across England and Wales, with the peak forecast for Thursday and Friday.
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Fourteen Labour MPs Defy the Whip on the Immigration Bill
The 14 Labour MPs who voted against the government’s immigration Bill at its second reading last night have been named, among them the veteran left-wingers John McDonnell and Rebecca Long Bailey. Diane Abbott, who still sits without the Labour whip, spoke against the Bill in the debate. McDonnell said he was “appalled” at the inclusion of trafficking provisions and at “the narrative developed by those on the Labour front bench”. The Bill still passed comfortably, by 264 votes to 90, with Andy Burnham voting in favour.
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South West Water Imposes a New Hosepipe Ban
South West Water became the latest company to restrict supply, imposing a hosepipe ban across parts of Devon from midday today as the drought deepens, after demand ran millions of litres a day above normal through two heatwaves in three weeks. It joins bans already in force across the East of England, Cambridge, Kent, Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, with further restrictions from other suppliers due later this week, taking the number of people affected towards eleven million.
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Petrol Pressure Eases as Trump Drops the Hormuz Toll
The immediate threat of another jump at the pumps eased today after Trump abandoned his 20% Hormuz toll and oil slipped back below $85 a barrel. This morning’s warning that a fresh spike was coming has, for now, softened. But British drivers are not off the hook: pump prices remain near 151p a litre, among the highest in over two years, and with a US blockade of Iranian ships still going ahead, the war premium in oil has not disappeared.
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Morning Briefing
What It Means For You
- Petrol & Energy: Oil has climbed above $85 a barrel, a one-month high, as Trump’s reinstated blockade and 20% Hormuz toll and Iran’s closure of the strait bite. Expect pump and energy prices to keep rising; the recent falls are firmly over.
- A New Prime Minister Next Week: The government’s immigration Bill passed last night with Andy Burnham’s backing, 14 Labour MPs rebelling. He is confirmed leader on Friday and Prime Minister on 20 July, and his hard line on migration is now set.
- Heat, Fire & Water: The heat holds into Wednesday under an amber alert, with a major wildfire incident in North Wales and hosepipe bans widening across England. Keep away from open water, ditch disposable barbecues, and save water.
GEO Geopolitical
Trump’s Hormuz Toll Draws Global Pushback as Oil Tops $85
President Trump’s plan to blockade Iran and charge a 20% toll on all shipping through the Strait of Hormuz has run into a wall of opposition, even as it sends oil to a one-month high. The UN’s maritime body said there is “no legal basis” for mandatory tolls to transit a strait; China called the blockade “dangerous and irresponsible”. Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, called the fee “too much”, insisting Iran controls the waterway. Brent crude rose above $85 a barrel; analysts reckon the toll alone would add around $16 to the price.
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US Strikes Iran for a Third Night as Iran Hits Gulf Bases
American forces struck Iran again overnight in an operation US Central Command said lasted more than five hours, hitting missile and drone sites and the ports of Bandar Abbas and Bushehr — a third consecutive night of bombing. Iran answered with fresh waves at the Gulf states that host US forces: sirens sounded three times over Bahrain, home to the US Fifth Fleet, and Iran claimed strikes on bases there and in Kuwait, while Jordan said it intercepted four missiles. Mediation by Qatar, Oman and Pakistan continues, but Tehran has called diplomacy “futile”.
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Two Tankers Set Ablaze in Hormuz, Indian Sailor Killed
Iran fired cruise missiles at two oil tankers, the Mombasa and the Al Bahiyah, in Omani waters at the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz, setting both ablaze, according to the United Arab Emirates. One Indian crewman was killed and around six to eight others, mostly Indian, were injured; the fires have since been put out. Traffic through the strait has all but collapsed, with maritime trackers counting a handful of crossings against dozens a week earlier, as owners refuse to risk the passage.
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Typhoon Bavi Kills 18 in the Philippines as Millions Flee in China
Typhoon Bavi has killed at least 18 people in the southern Philippines, where monsoon-amplified rains triggered landslides and floods, before making landfall in eastern China. Chinese authorities evacuated well over a million people — by some counts nearly three million — across Zhejiang province ahead of the storm, opening thousands of shelters, and the mass pre-emptive evacuation appears to have prevented deaths on the mainland. The storm, among the strongest to hit the region in July for decades, has since weakened.
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Europe’s Wildfires Burn On as the Heat Grips the Continent
The wildfires driven by southern Europe’s heatwave are still burning across Spain, France, Greece, Portugal and beyond. A blaze in Almería, in southern Spain, has killed at least twelve, with more than twenty missing, and tens of thousands have been placed under evacuation or shelter orders around fires on the Costa Brava and in the French Pyrenees. Temperatures have reached 43C in Spain, and firefighters from across the continent have been deployed under the EU’s civil-protection mechanism.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Immigration Bill Passes as 14 Labour MPs Rebel and Burnham Backs It
The government’s immigration Bill cleared its Commons second reading late last night by 264 votes to 90, a majority of 174, with 14 Labour backbenchers rebelling. Andy Burnham, the prime minister-in-waiting, voted in favour, as expected — his first significant vote since returning to Parliament and a clear signal of continuity on migration before he takes office. Among the rebels, Nadia Whittome voted against; Stella Creasy and Tony Vaughan abstained. There were no frontbench resignations.
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Heatwave Holds Into Wednesday as North Wales Fights a Major Fire
The heat holds into the middle of the week, with amber heat-health alerts across much of England until 9pm on Wednesday and the wildfire risk rated “exceptional” in places. A mountain fire near Sychnant Pass on Conwy Mountain in North Wales, burning since Sunday, remains a declared major incident, having forced homes in the area to be evacuated, and fire services are tackling wildfires on many fronts in strong winds. This year has now recorded 35C on six separate days, a first.
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Burnham Set for Coronation as Starmer Faces His Final PMQs
Andy Burnham’s path to Downing Street is all but complete: backed by 322 of Labour’s MPs and the only declared candidate, he is set to be confirmed leader when nominations close this week and to become Prime Minister on 20 July. Sir Keir Starmer will face his final Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday before the Commons rises for the summer, drawing a line under a premiership ended by his own MPs’ loss of confidence. Attention now turns to the cabinet Burnham will build.
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UK Petrol Braces to Climb as Oil Tops $85
The escalation in the Gulf has driven oil to a one-month high above $85 a barrel, and British drivers and households will feel it. Pump prices, already near 151p a litre for petrol and among the highest in over two years, are set to rise as the war premium rebuilds, and the wholesale gas price that sets energy bills is exposed to the same shock. The 5p cut in fuel duty, frozen to the end of this year, is the only thing holding pump prices down.
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Hosepipe Bans Widen as Drought Deepens
Water restrictions are spreading with the heat. Bans are now in force across the East of England, Cambridge, parts of Kent, Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, covering millions of households, with Anglian Water’s the first in a decade and Cambridge Water’s the first in around thirty years. Thames Water is urging its 15 million customers to stop using hosepipes, though it has stopped short of a formal ban. Much of southern and eastern England is now under some form of restriction after the driest spring in decades.
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Evening Briefing
What It Means For You
- Petrol & Energy: Oil surged nearly 6% to over $80 a barrel today as President Trump reinstated a blockade of Iran and a shipping toll on the Strait of Hormuz and Iran declared the strait shut. Expect the pressure on pump and energy prices to build through the week.
- A New Prime Minister Next Week: Andy Burnham is set to be confirmed Labour leader on Friday and Prime Minister on 20 July. Tonight he backs the government’s immigration Bill despite nearly 80 of his own MPs urging him to soften it — the first real test of his authority.
- Heat, Fire & Water: The heat holds into Wednesday under an amber alert, with a major wildfire incident in North Wales and hosepipe bans widening across England. Keep away from open water, ditch disposable barbecues, and save water.
GEO Geopolitical
Trump Declares the US “Guardian” of Hormuz and Demands a 20% Toll
President Trump announced that the United States will become “the Guardian of the Hormuz Strait”, reinstating its naval blockade of Iran and charging all commercial shipping a fee “at the rate of 20% on all cargo” to cover the cost of policing the waterway. The declaration blows up the memorandum that ended the war last month, in which lifting the blockade was central. It came as Iran declared passage through the strait “not possible” and struck back at American bases across the Gulf.
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US Strikes Iran a Fourth Time as Iran Hits Bases Across the Gulf
American forces launched a fourth wave of strikes on Iran, using sea-launched attack drones for the first time and hitting dozens more targets — taking the week’s tally past 300, according to US Central Command. Iran retaliated with drones and missiles against US-linked sites in Bahrain, Kuwait and Jordan, and again declared the Strait of Hormuz closed. Thousands have been killed since the war began in February, and the exchange now reaches across the Gulf monarchies that host Western forces.
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Oil Surges Past $80 as Hormuz Shipping Collapses
Brent crude jumped almost 6% to more than $80 a barrel, its highest in weeks, as the blockade threat and the strikes drove a war premium back into oil. Traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has all but stopped: maritime trackers counted only a handful of vessels over the weekend against a peacetime norm of around 130 a day, with crossings down by more than half on the week. Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil normally passes through the strait, so the disruption reaches every economy that imports energy.
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Wildfires and Record Heat Force Mass Evacuations Across Europe
A severe heatwave has driven major wildfires across France, Spain, Greece, Portugal, Italy and Turkey, forcing mass evacuations. Around ten thousand people were moved in the French Pyrenees and tens of thousands were under evacuation or shelter orders around a blaze on Spain’s Costa Brava, with further evacuations near Thessaloniki in Greece. At least fourteen people have died so far, and hundreds of firefighters from more than a dozen countries have been deployed. June was western Europe’s hottest on record.
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Russia’s Barrage Kills Eight in Ukraine as Defences Run Low
A mass Russian attack on Ukraine — ballistic and cruise missiles and more than 120 drones — killed at least eight people and wounded dozens, with glide bombs on Sumy killing five. President Zelensky again pressed allies to speed the air defences promised at last week’s NATO summit, warning that Ukraine is critically short of the Patriot interceptors that are its only reliable defence against Russia’s ballistic missiles. More than sixty people have been killed in the Kyiv region alone this month.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Burnham Backs the Immigration Bill as 80 MPs Press Him to Soften It
The government’s Immigration and Asylum Bill was debated in the Commons this afternoon, with the crucial vote expected late tonight, and it has become the first test of Andy Burnham’s incoming leadership. Nearly eighty Labour MPs signed a letter urging the prime minister-in-waiting to dilute the reforms, but Burnham is expected to back the Bill, which would double the qualifying period for permanent settlement to ten years, require asylum seekers to repay some accommodation costs, and curb the use of human-rights law in deportation cases.
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Government Moves to Deport Rochdale Grooming Ringleader
The home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, set out plans to deport Shabir Ahmed, the freed ringleader of the Rochdale grooming gang, jailed for 22 years in 2012 and recently released on licence. Ahmed was stripped of his British citizenship after his conviction, leaving him only Pakistani nationality, but a 1971 law bars the removal of some long-resident Commonwealth citizens. Mahmood aims to close that loophole through the immigration Bill; Pakistan, however, has shown no willingness to take him back.
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Heatwave Holds Into Wednesday as North Wales Fights a Major Fire
The heatwave will hold into the middle of the week, with amber heat-health alerts across much of England until Wednesday evening and the wildfire risk rated “exceptional”. A mountain fire at Conwy in North Wales, which broke out on Sunday, remains a declared major incident, having forced the evacuation of the village of Capelulo, and fire services are tackling around nineteen wildfires across England and Wales in strong winds. This year has set a record run of days above 34C.
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Burnham’s Coronation Week: 322 Nominations and “Manchesterism”
Andy Burnham has the backing of 322 of Labour’s 403 MPs, leaving him effectively unopposed as nominations close on Wednesday. He is set to be confirmed leader on Friday and to become Prime Minister on 20 July. He has sketched an economic pitch his allies call “Manchesterism” — business-friendly and committed to Labour’s fiscal rules and Starmer’s manifesto, but favouring public control of transport, water and energy and moving some government functions to the north.
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Hosepipe Bans Widen Across England as Drought Deepens
Water restrictions are spreading with the heat. Anglian Water’s ban across the East of England, its first in a decade, is now in force for millions of customers, alongside restrictions from South East Water in Kent and a first ban in around three decades from Cambridge Water. Thames Water is urging its 15 million customers to stop using hosepipes, though it has stopped short of a formal ban. Much of southern and eastern England is now under some form of water restriction after the driest spring in decades.
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Morning Briefing
What It Means For You
- Petrol & Energy: Oil jumped around 4% to about $79 a barrel as markets reopened, reversing the recent easing after Iran and the US traded strikes over the Strait of Hormuz. That renews the upward pressure on pump prices — already about 20p above pre-war levels — and on energy bills.
- A New Prime Minister This Week: Andy Burnham’s coronation week begins — nominations close Tuesday, leader on 17 July, PM around 20 July — and his first test is a revolt by nearly 80 Labour MPs over today’s immigration Bill. The choices ahead will shape household budgets.
- Heat, Fire & Water: The heat holds into midweek (35-36C) with the wildfire risk “exceptional” — a major incident is still active in North Wales — and hosepipe bans are widening. Avoid open water, ditch disposable barbecues, save water, and check on the vulnerable.
GEO Geopolitical
US Strikes Iran Again as the Battle Over Hormuz Rages
American forces struck Iran again early on Monday, the fourth wave in a week, hitting air defences, coastal radars and missile sites in what US Central Command again called an effort to stop Iran threatening shipping. Iran’s Revolutionary Guard said it had hit US bases in Kuwait and Bahrain in reply. At the centre of it all is a factual standoff over the Strait of Hormuz: Iran says it has closed the waterway, while President Trump insists it is “open” to commercial traffic. The truth is being tested tanker by tanker.
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Oil Jumps and Asian Markets Slip as the War Reopens
Oil climbed around 4% when markets reopened on Monday, with Brent crude rising to about $79 a barrel — its highest in three weeks — as traders priced in the weekend’s escalation and the threat to the Strait of Hormuz. Asian equities fell, with Japan’s Nikkei down more than 2%, as a risk-off mood spread. The move reverses the easing of recent weeks, when the war premium had drained out of oil, and puts renewed pressure on petrol and energy prices worldwide.
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Talks Go On in Oman With a Plan to Split the Strait in Two
Even as the strikes continued, the US and Iran kept talking in Oman, where mediators have drafted a tentative plan to divide the Strait of Hormuz into two managed corridors: a southern lane in Omani waters, open to free navigation as before the war, and a northern lane in Iranian waters, where passage would need Tehran’s prior approval. President Trump declared the ceasefire “over” at the weekend but said Iran had asked to keep talking and that Washington had agreed. The plan is not finalised.
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Wildfires and Mass Evacuations Sweep Southern Europe
A severe heatwave has driven major wildfires across southern Europe, forcing mass evacuations from France to the Balkans. Around ten thousand people were moved from the French Pyrenees, and tens of thousands are under evacuation or shelter orders in Spain, where temperatures reached 43C. Fires are also burning in Portugal, Greece, Croatia and Albania, with tens of thousands of hectares scorched; the European Union has deployed a record number of firefighters and aircraft. It is the continent’s third major heatwave since May.
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Ukraine’s Patriot Stocks Run Dry as Russia Presses On
Ukraine’s stock of Patriot interceptor missiles has “run dry”, President Zelensky said, as he reworked his diplomacy to speed the deliveries allies promised at last week’s NATO summit. Russian attacks over the past day killed at least five people and wounded dozens, while Ukraine struck back at Russia’s oil economy, hitting a major refinery at Syzran, deep inside Russia. The interceptor shortage leaves Ukrainian cities increasingly exposed to the ballistic missiles their remaining defences cannot stop.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Immigration Bill Faces the Commons as 80 Labour MPs Rebel
The government’s Immigration and Asylum Bill reaches its second reading in the Commons this afternoon, and it lands as the first real test of Andy Burnham’s incoming leadership. Almost eighty Labour MPs have written to the prime minister-in-waiting urging him to soften the reforms, which would make most migrants wait twice as long for permanent settlement and require asylum seekers to repay some accommodation costs once working. The signatories warn the “hostile rhetoric” is playing into Reform’s hands; Burnham backed the measures during his campaign.
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Heatwave Holds Into Midweek as Wildfire Risk Stays “Exceptional”
The heat will not break today, with amber health alerts running across most of England until at least Tuesday and temperatures forecast to reach 35-36C mid-week before thunderstorms are expected to bring relief only towards the weekend. The wildfire risk remains “exceptional”: a major incident declared over the weekend on Conwy Mountain in North Wales is still active, with the village of Capelulo evacuated, and fire chiefs say the number of wildfires is expected to rise sharply. The health agency continues to warn of deaths among the vulnerable.
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Burnham’s Coronation Week Begins as Nominations Close
This is the week Andy Burnham is expected to be confirmed as Labour leader and prime minister-in-waiting. Nominations from Labour MPs close on Tuesday, and with Burnham the only declared candidate and backed well beyond the threshold, he is set to be announced as leader on 17 July, with a King’s appointment and swearing-in around 20 July. Sir Keir Starmer will face his final Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday before the Commons rises for its summer recess, drawing a line under his premiership.
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Oil’s Jump Renews the Pressure on Petrol and Energy Bills
The weekend escalation in the Gulf has reversed the recent easing in fuel prices, with oil climbing around 4% to about $79 a barrel as markets reopened on Monday. Petrol had been falling as the war premium drained away — the average pump price sits near 153p a litre, still around 20p above pre-conflict levels — but the renewed jump threatens to halt that decline. Motoring groups had welcomed the fall; a sustained disruption to the Strait of Hormuz would push prices back up, feeding into inflation just as a new government takes office.
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Hosepipe Bans Widen as Drought Stress Deepens
Water restrictions are spreading as the prolonged heat deepens drought stress across England. Temporary use bans are now in force or imminent across several suppliers — South East Water in Kent and Sussex, Southern Water in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, Anglian Water across the East, and Cambridge Water, whose ban this week is its first in around three decades. Thames Water is urging its 15 million customers to stop using hosepipes after a roughly 50% jump in demand, though it has stopped short of a formal ban.
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Evening Briefing
What It Means For You
- Petrol & Energy: Iran has declared the Strait of Hormuz — a fifth of the world’s oil — closed, and prices are set to jump when markets reopen on Monday. Expect renewed pressure on pump prices and energy bills; the recent easing is firmly over.
- A New Prime Minister This Month: Andy Burnham is set to be declared Labour leader on 17 July and Prime Minister around 20 July. The outgoing chancellor has warned he faces “shocks and challenges” from day one — a signal of the hard choices ahead for household budgets.
- Heat, Fire & Water: The heat runs into midweek with the wildfire risk “exceptional” — a major incident was declared in North Wales — and hosepipe bans are widening. Avoid open water, ditch disposable barbecues, save water, and check on the vulnerable.
GEO Geopolitical
US Strikes Iran a Third Time as a Hormuz Standoff Hardens
The interim ceasefire has collapsed entirely. US Central Command said it struck about 140 Iranian targets overnight, a third round in a week and more than 300 in total, after Iran declared the Strait of Hormuz closed and set a container ship ablaze. The two sides now openly contradict each other on the waterway itself: Iran says the strait is shut “until US interference ends”, while President Trump insisted it was “open” and that the American blockade would stay until talks concluded. Iran’s parliament speaker was defiant: “The era of one-sided deals is over.”
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Iran Attacks Five Gulf States and US Bases Across the Region
Iran fired coordinated missile and drone barrages at five Gulf states overnight and into Sunday — Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Kuwait and Oman — along with the American bases they host. Qatar said it intercepted missiles aimed at Al Udeid, the largest US airbase in the region, but that falling shrapnel wounded three people, including a child. Bahrain, home to the US Fifth Fleet, sounded missile alerts for a third time, and drones struck sites in Oman’s Musandam peninsula, which juts into the Strait of Hormuz.
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UN Warns of “Catastrophe” as Allies Refuse to Help Reopen Hormuz
The escalation drew alarm and division across the world’s capitals. The UN secretary-general, António Guterres, warned of “catastrophic consequences” for the global economy and the region, and urged an immediate return to talks. Crucially, China and several European members of NATO have rebuffed President Trump’s calls for help to reopen the Strait of Hormuz by force, wary of being drawn into a widening war. The one surviving thread of diplomacy is the Omani channel, where Iran’s foreign minister met his counterpart on Saturday.
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Russian Barrage Kills Eight in Ukraine as Sumy Is Struck
Russia launched another mass overnight attack on Ukraine — ballistic and cruise missiles and more than 120 drones — killing at least eight people. Glide bombs struck a crowded part of Sumy, killing five, while two died in Odesa and a rescue worker was killed in the Kharkiv region. Ukraine’s air force said it downed most of the drones but not the ballistic missiles, and President Zelensky again pressed allies to deliver the air defences promised at this week’s NATO summit faster.
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Israeli Strikes Kill Five in Gaza, Including a Nine-Year-Old
Israeli strikes killed at least five Palestinians across Gaza on Sunday, including a nine-year-old girl killed by gunfire at a displacement camp and four people in a drone strike on a workshop in Gaza City. The near-daily killings continue nine months into a ceasefire under which more than a thousand Palestinians have died, as talks in Cairo on Hamas’s disarmament and a full Israeli withdrawal remain deadlocked and Israel holds close to 70% of the territory.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Reeves Warns Burnham to Expect “Shocks and Challenges” in No 10
The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has warned Andy Burnham to arrive in Downing Street with a “worked-through plan”, cautioning in what may be her last major interview in the role that “lots of challenges and shocks will come his way”. Speaking on Sunday, she said governing Britain was hard and urged the incoming prime minister to be ready, while insisting he would inherit “an economy that is much stronger than the one I inherited from the Tories”. Burnham is set to be declared leader on 17 July and to take office around 20 July.
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“Exceptional” Wildfire Risk as North Wales Declares a Major Incident
The heatwave’s danger turned acute on Sunday as a large wildfire on Conwy Mountain, near Sychnant Pass in North Wales, prompted emergency services to declare a major incident and evacuate the village of Capelulo. The fire is one of many across a weekend in which much of southern England and the Midlands was rated at “exceptional” wildfire risk, with further blazes near Eastbourne and in the Peak District. Amber heat-health alerts run into midweek, and forecasters say the heat will break only slowly, with thunderstorms possible from Monday.
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UK Braces for Higher Fuel and Energy as Hormuz Closure Bites
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has put Britain on notice for a fresh squeeze on fuel and energy prices, with oil expected to spike when markets reopen on Monday. As a net energy importer, the UK feels a Gulf shock quickly, through petrol and diesel at the pump and the wholesale gas price that sets household bills. Pump prices are already near a two-year high, held down only by a 5p fuel-duty cut the government has extended to the end of 2026; a sustained closure would test that relief and feed back into inflation.
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Clacton By-Election Set for 13 August as Rivals Boycott Farage
The by-election triggered by Nigel Farage in Clacton has been set for Thursday 13 August, and his main rivals are refusing to contest it: Labour, the Conservatives and the Greens have all confirmed they will not stand. The Greens called it a contest “designed not to serve local residents but to serve Nigel Farage’s personal political ambitions”. Fifteen candidates are standing, among them Farage himself and an assortment of independents and minor-party figures.
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Hosepipe Bans Widen as Drought Risk Grows
Restrictions on water use spread further this weekend as the dry, hot summer raised the risk of formal drought declarations in parts of England. Cambridge Water imposed a hosepipe ban on its 350,000 customers for the first time in around three decades, joining Anglian Water’s ban across the wider East of England and South East Water’s restrictions in Kent and Hampshire. Thames Water’s appeal to its 15 million customers remains an advisory. Officials warned the heat is deepening water stress across the East, the South West and beyond.
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Morning Briefing
What It Means For You
- Petrol & Energy: Iran has declared the Strait of Hormuz — which carries a fifth of the world’s oil — closed, and prices are set to jump when markets reopen on Monday. Expect pump and energy costs to rise; the recent easing in fuel prices is firmly over.
- A New Prime Minister Next Week: Andy Burnham is on course to be declared Labour leader on 17 July and Prime Minister around 20 July — and he has now pledged fiscal discipline and welfare cuts to reassure markets, an early signal of the choices ahead for household budgets.
- Heat, Fire & Water: The heatwave is now extended into midweek, not breaking tonight, with an amber alert to 15 July, the highest wildfire risk today across southern England, and hosepipe bans enforced for millions. Avoid open water, ditch disposable barbecues, save water, and check on the vulnerable.
GEO Geopolitical
US and Iran Trade Strikes Across the Gulf as the War Goes Regional
The US-Iran war widened sharply overnight into Sunday. American forces carried out a third round of strikes this week, hitting about 140 Iranian targets — more than 300 in total, US Central Command said — from missile and drone sites to naval assets and coastal radars. Iran struck back at US bases and allied Gulf states, with the United Arab Emirates and Jordan reporting they had intercepted Iranian missiles and drones. “Iran made a poor choice,” the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, said as the strikes were announced.
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Iran Declares the Strait of Hormuz Closed and Fires on a Ship
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard declared the Strait of Hormuz closed “until further notice” after firing on the GFS Galaxy, a Cyprus-flagged container ship it said was using an unauthorised route through the waterway. India said eleven of its nationals were aboard; ten were rescued and one is missing. Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil passes through the strait, and with no weekend trading the closure leaves crude braced to spike when markets reopen: Brent was already near $76 and heading for a weekly gain after a week of strikes.
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Russian Barrage Kills Eight in Ukraine as Sumy Is Hit
Russia launched another mass overnight attack on Ukraine — ballistic and cruise missiles and more than 120 drones — killing at least eight people and wounding dozens. Two glide bombs struck a crowded area of Sumy, killing five and injuring around thirty, while a dozen were wounded in Kyiv and port infrastructure at Odesa was hit again. Ukraine’s air force said it downed most of the drones but not the ballistic missiles, as President Zelensky renewed his plea for the air defences promised at this week’s NATO summit.
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Spain’s Deadliest Wildfire Kills 12 as Europe Bakes
A wildfire in Almería, in southern Spain, has killed at least twelve people with more than twenty missing, in what regional authorities are calling Andalusia’s most devastating fire on record. Several victims were found in burnt-out vehicles after failing to heed evacuation orders. It is the sharpest edge of a continent-wide heat emergency: red alerts stretch across Spain, France, Germany, Switzerland and the UK, a fire in the Pyrenees forced thousands to flee, and Portugal is burning too.
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US Congressman Says He Was Detained by Settlers in the West Bank
The Democratic congressman Ro Khanna says his vehicle was surrounded by armed Israeli settlers near a village in the southern occupied West Bank, and that he was held for more than an hour before police intervened. He said the settlers carried US-made rifles and criticised nearby soldiers for appearing at ease with them. The Israeli military denied detaining any visitors but said it had dispersed civilians unlawfully blocking vehicles. The incident, surfacing over the weekend, has drawn attention to settler violence in the territory.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Heatwave Extended Into Midweek as Wildfire Risk Peaks
The heatwave will not break tonight as forecast but is being extended into the middle of next week: the health agency has issued a fresh amber heat-health alert running until Tuesday evening across most of England, warning of a rise in deaths among the over-65s. The wildfire risk is at its highest today across much of southern England, with London rated “extreme” through Monday; fire crews spent the weekend tackling moorland blazes near Glossop in the Peak District. Temperatures reach the mid-30s, with warm “tropical” nights offering little relief.
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Hosepipe Bans Now Enforced for Millions Across the South and East
Hosepipe bans are now in force for millions of households as the dry summer bites: Anglian Water’s ban across the East of England, its first in a decade, took effect this weekend, alongside restrictions already live for South East Water’s customers in Kent and Hampshire. Thames Water’s appeal to its 15 million customers in London and the Thames Valley remains an advisory for now. Much of southern and eastern England is now under some form of water restriction after the second-driest spring on record.
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Burnham Pledges Fiscal Discipline as Coronation Nears
Andy Burnham has moved to reassure the markets and the centre of his party, pledging fiscal discipline and a commitment to cut the welfare bill as he closes in on Downing Street. Backed by around 322 of Labour’s 403 MPs and facing no rival, the Greater Manchester mayor is set to be declared leader when nominations close on 15 July, confirmed at a special conference on 17 July, and appointed prime minister around 20 July. The promise to hold to the government’s borrowing limits is aimed at dispelling fears that his arrival heralds a spending splurge.
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Farage Faces Standards Inquiry Over Fraudster’s Support
The parliamentary standards commissioner is investigating benefits Nigel Farage received from George Cottrell, a man convicted of wire fraud in the United States, including staffing, security and the use of a London townhouse in the period before Farage became an MP in July 2024. A separate £5m donation to Reform from the businessman Christopher Harborne is also under scrutiny. Farage denies any wrongdoing and is said to be weighing legal action over the reporting. The inquiry adds to a widening set of questions over Reform’s finances.
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Heat’s Toll Mounts With Water Deaths and NHS Under Strain
The human cost of the heat is mounting as it persists, with police and fire services renewing warnings about open water after a series of drownings during the hot spell, and the NHS under sustained pressure. Officials have urged people not to cool off in reservoirs, rivers and lakes, where cold-water shock can incapacitate even strong swimmers, and to reserve 999 for life-threatening emergencies. The highest risk is to the very young, the over-65s and those with existing conditions, the groups the heat-health alerts are designed to protect.
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Evening Briefing
What It Means For You
- A New Prime Minister in Nine Days: Andy Burnham is set to be declared Labour leader on 17 July and become Prime Minister around 20 July — a change of government without an election, with the welfare, tax and NHS choices ahead set to shape household budgets.
- Petrol & Energy: Oil held near $76 with markets shut for the weekend, as Iran’s revenge rhetoric was offset by talks continuing in Oman. The war premium stays embedded, so don’t expect pump prices to fall soon.
- Heat, Fire & Water: Record heat peaks with wildfires and an “extreme” fire risk, an amber alert to Sunday, and Thames Water now urging 15 million people to stop using hosepipes. Avoid open water, ditch disposable barbecues, and save water.
GEO Geopolitical
Iran’s New Supreme Leader Breaks His Silence to Vow Revenge
Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei — unseen since his father was killed in the opening strike of the war in February — has issued his first message since the funeral, vowing that revenge against the United States and Israel is “inevitable”. In a written statement released on Saturday, he said vengeance was “the will of our nation and must inevitably be carried out”, framing it as bigger than any leader: “Whether we are present or not, it will come to pass.”
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Iran’s Foreign Minister Talks in Oman as Diplomacy Clings On
Even as the rhetoric hardened, Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, flew to Muscat on Saturday and met his Omani counterpart to work on a mechanism guaranteeing safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz — evidence that the back-channel has not collapsed despite President Trump declaring last month’s memorandum “over”. The two sides agreed to hold further technical and political talks. Washington’s precondition is unchanged: Iran must publicly declare the strait open and its vessels safe before any wider negotiation resumes.
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Russia Pounds Kyiv and Odesa as Ukraine Hits Russian Tankers
Russia struck Kyiv, Odesa and Kharkiv overnight with ballistic and cruise missiles and more than 120 drones, killing at least two people and wounding around a dozen, as President Zelensky said his defenders had downed most of the barrage but “not the ballistic ones”. Ukraine, in turn, pressed its campaign against Russia’s shadow economy: its drone commander said units had struck 21 fuel tankers and seven other vessels overnight, taking the number of ships hit this week to 76.
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Moldova’s President Names Pro-EU Investor as Prime Minister
Moldova’s president, Maia Sandu, has nominated Vasile Tofan, a 44-year-old investment-fund partner educated at Harvard, as prime minister, after the previous premier resigned this month amid friction with the governing pro-European party. Tofan, whose mandate is EU accession, institutional reform and reviving a struggling economy, must win a parliamentary confidence vote within fifteen days. The choice signals continuity in Moldova’s westward course, on a border where Russia has worked persistently to pull the country back into its orbit.
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France Bakes Under Red Alert as Paris Landmarks Shut
France’s weather service placed Paris and two dozen departments across the north-west under its top red heat alert on Saturday, affecting more than 22 million people, as temperatures climbed towards 39C in the country’s third heatwave since May. The Eiffel Tower closed to visitors from 4pm on Saturday and Sunday, and the Louvre and Musée d’Orsay shut early, as the same anticyclone baking Britain settled over the continent. June had already been France’s hottest month on record.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Heatwave Peaks as Wildfires Rage and Fire Risk Turns “Extreme”
The summer’s third heatwave reached its peak this weekend, and with it came fire: crews from Derbyshire and Greater Manchester fought a significant blaze across Tintwistle Moor, closing the A628 Woodhead Pass in both directions, as fire services warned the wildfire risk had escalated to “extreme” across England and Wales. Temperatures reached the mid-30s, amber heat-health alerts run across most of England until 9pm on Sunday, and the health agency continues to warn of a rise in deaths among the vulnerable.
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Thames Water Urges 15 Million to Stop Using Hosepipes
Thames Water has urged its 15 million customers across London and the Thames Valley to stop using hosepipes, after demand jumped by around half in the heat — an advisory that stops short of a formal ban but signals how close the system is to one. It follows formal hosepipe bans already in force for millions of households in the East of England, Kent and Hampshire, and leaves much of southern England under some form of water restriction after the second-driest spring on record.
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Reform Finance Inquiry Widens as More Transactions Reach Crime Agency
The scrutiny of Reform UK’s finances widened on Saturday, with further transactions worth millions reported to the National Crime Agency through banks’ suspicious-activity reports. The referrals are said to involve the party’s chairman, Richard Tice, and the businessman George Cottrell — including an £80,000 bridging loan to a Tice investment vehicle and the £1m donation to Britain Means Business, part of which reached Reform. The party denies any wrongdoing. It adds to Metropolitan Police inquiries into £500,000 in Cottrell-family donations and a £37,500 gift to Robert Jenrick’s leadership campaign.
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Burnham Set for Coronation as Nomination Window Closes
Andy Burnham moved closer to Downing Street this weekend as the window for Labour MPs to nominate a leader neared its close, with no rival to the Greater Manchester mayor in the field. Backed by around four-fifths of Labour MPs and endorsed by the health secretary, Wes Streeting, he is set to be declared leader unopposed on 17 July and appointed prime minister around 20 July, once Sir Keir Starmer formally resigns and the King invites him to form a government.
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NHS Under Sustained Strain as the Heat Bites
The health service is under sustained pressure as the heatwave peaks, with ambulance services reporting high demand and hospitals warning that extreme temperatures are testing both staff and equipment. The public has been urged to reserve 999 for life-threatening emergencies and use 111 otherwise, with the highest risk to the very young, the over-65s and pregnant women. The strain compounds the year-round pressures on a service the incoming government has promised to reform.
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Morning Briefing
What It Means For You
- A New Prime Minister in Nine Days: Andy Burnham is on course to enter Downing Street on 20 July — a change of government without an election. The welfare, tax and NHS choices he inherits will start shaping household budgets from the autumn.
- Petrol & Energy: Oil held near $76 a barrel as US-Iran talks resumed, but the war premium of recent weeks is now embedded in the price. The recent fall in pump prices has stalled, so budget for higher fuel and energy through the summer.
- Heat & Water: Record heat peaks this weekend under an amber health alert to Sunday, and a new hosepipe ban now covers five million households in the East. Check on elderly relatives, expect rail disruption, and mind the water restrictions.
GEO Geopolitical
Trump Threatens Iran With “1,000 Missiles” Over Assassination Plot
President Trump has warned Iran that “1,000 missiles are locked and loaded” and aimed at the country, with “thousands more to immediately follow”, threatening overwhelming retaliation if Tehran acts on what he says are plots to assassinate him. Writing on his social platform, he said military orders had “already been given”. The threat follows reported Israeli intelligence, relayed to Washington, of a fresh Iranian plan to kill him, and open calls for his death at Ayatollah Khamenei’s funeral. US forces, he said, were “ready, willing and able”.
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US and Iran to Meet in Oman as Tehran Calls Hormuz Attacks a “Mistake”
US and Iranian negotiators are due to meet in Oman today, after Iranian officials privately conceded that firing on ships in the Strait of Hormuz was “a mistake” carried out by hardliners acting without authorisation. Washington’s price for a deal is steep: a public Iranian declaration that the strait is open and safe for shipping, and the handover of enriched-uranium residue — the “nuclear dust” — from sites bombed earlier in the war. “If we don’t get the dust, we do not have a deal,” one US official said. Trump has set a deadline.
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Ukrainian Drones Hit Russian Shipping in the Azov Sea
Ukrainian drones struck four vessels overnight in Taganrog Bay, on the Azov Sea, including a methanol tanker, killing a sailor and further disrupting a Russian grain-export corridor, Moscow said. Russia’s defence ministry said it had downed 178 Ukrainian drones and launched precision strikes in return on military-industrial sites in Kyiv and on port infrastructure at Odesa, Chornomorsk and Izmail. The exchange extends a pattern in which each side targets the other’s economic lifelines — Russia’s ports and refineries, Ukraine’s cities and grain routes.
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Venezuela Earthquake Death Toll Passes 3,500 and Keeps Rising
The death toll from the twin earthquakes that struck northern and central Venezuela in late June has passed 3,500, with more than 16,000 injured, and is still climbing more than two weeks on as rescuers reach cut-off communities. The magnitude-7.2 and 7.5 quakes flattened towns and infrastructure across several states; US Geological Survey modelling warns the eventual toll could run far higher. Aid is struggling to reach the worst-hit areas amid damaged roads and an economy already in collapse.
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Israel Now Controls Nearly 70% of Gaza, Nine Months Into the Truce
Israel’s military now controls close to 70% of the Gaza Strip, up from about half when the ceasefire began in October, according to a new analysis, as its footprint expands along shifting front lines that Prime Minister Netanyahu describes as a step-by-step plan to encircle Hamas. The United Nations says around 200 Palestinians have been killed near these lines since the truce took hold. President Trump’s plan for a full withdrawal, a new governing authority and Hamas’s disarmament remains stalled.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Heatwave Peaks With Records Tumbling Across the Country
The summer’s third heatwave reaches its peak this weekend, with the heat shifting west: highs of 32-34C are forecast for Wales and south-west England, and much of the country stays above 30C. The UK has now recorded eight days above 34C in 2026 — the most on record — and has topped 35C in May, June and July of the same year for the first time. A provisional 34.4C was reached at Wisley, in Surrey, on Thursday. Amber and yellow heat-health alerts run across most of England until 9pm on Sunday, with an extreme wildfire risk.
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Hosepipe Ban Takes Effect for Five Million in the East
A hosepipe ban came into force at one minute past one this morning for more than five million Anglian Water customers across the East of England, the company’s first such ban in a decade. It follows the second-driest spring on record, now compounded by the heatwave driving demand to exceptional levels. Customers may not use hosepipes for gardens, cars, patios or pools — watering cans are still allowed — with breaches risking fines of up to £1,000. It is the third English region under restrictions, after a Kent ban late last month.
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Fire Shuts Stratford Station and Snarls East London Rail
A lineside fire near Stratford, in east London, forced the station to close on Friday evening and cascaded across the capital’s rail network, at the height of the heatwave. The blaze broke out shortly before 7pm, drawing eight fire engines and around 60 firefighters; power to the overhead lines was cut so crews could tackle it safely. Because Stratford links National Rail, the Elizabeth line, the Overground, the Underground and the DLR, the closure suspended Elizabeth line services towards Shenfield and severely disrupted the Overground and Greater Anglia.
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Reform Donations Referred to Crime Agency as Police Probe Widens
The scrutiny of Reform UK’s finances has deepened, with donations linked to the party’s chairman, Richard Tice, referred to the National Crime Agency on suspicion of money laundering. One referral concerns a £1m donation to Britain Means Business, a Reform fundraising vehicle, whose ultimate source bankers and the agency have been unable to identify. It comes as the Metropolitan Police investigates £500,000 given to Reform by Fiona Cottrell, with two people interviewed under caution, and a separate inquiry into a £37,500 donation to Robert Jenrick’s Tory leadership campaign, which he calls “entirely false”.
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Burnham Weighs His Cabinet as the Handover Nears
With his path to Downing Street clear, attention has turned to the cabinet Andy Burnham will build. Having secured the backing of 322 Labour MPs and facing no challenger, the Greater Manchester mayor is set to be declared leader on 17 July and to become Prime Minister on 20 July, with Sir Keir Starmer staying on until the handover. Speculation centres on how far he will reshape the top team, reward allies and signal a break from his predecessor’s operation, against an in-tray dominated by the economy, the Gulf war and welfare.
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Evening Briefing
What It Means For You
- A New Prime Minister on 20 July: Andy Burnham is set to enter Downing Street on 20 July, unopposed — a change of government without an election. The welfare, tax and NHS choices he inherits will start shaping household budgets from the autumn.
- Petrol & Energy: Oil slipped back towards $76 a barrel today even as the US-Iran war grinds on, but the war premium of recent weeks is now baked into pump and energy prices rather than easing. Don’t expect the earlier fall in fuel costs to resume soon.
- A Dangerous Weekend of Heat: An amber alert covers England until Sunday, with temperatures in the mid-30s and a real risk to older and vulnerable people. Check on elderly relatives, stay out of the afternoon sun, and expect rail delays as tracks overheat.
GEO Geopolitical
US and Iran Keep Trading Blows as Talks Grind On in Secret
The war and the negotiation are now running in parallel. Even as American forces strike Iran and Tehran fires back at Gulf bases, US officials say technical talks on Iran’s nuclear programme are quietly continuing, with Washington striking and then pausing to avoid tipping the confrontation over the edge. President Trump, who declared last month’s memorandum “over”, has let negotiations go on while casting doubt on their outcome. Pakistani, Qatari and Gulf mediators are pressing both sides to hold the line.
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Tankers Stay Frozen in Hormuz as Oil Slips Back
The Strait of Hormuz remains all but impassable for large tankers, with owners keeping ships away from a waterway that carries a fifth of the world’s oil — yet the crude price is drifting lower rather than spiking. Brent eased towards $76 a barrel, down on the day and below its late-Thursday level, as traders judged the disruption contained and bet that neither side wants the strait closed for good. Maritime trackers say tracked crossings have effectively stopped since Tuesday.
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Fire Kills 28 at Chinese Shoe Factory
At least 28 people were killed when a fire tore through a shoe factory in Jinjiang, in China’s south-eastern Fujian province, one of the country’s deadliest industrial blazes in years. The fire broke out around midday in a store of flammable materials and spread fast through adhesives and raw stock, with rescuers hampered by goods piled in the stairwells. Of the 239 people inside, 213 were evacuated. Company managers have been detained and the firm’s bank accounts frozen as an investigation begins.
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Germany Strikes Deal to Buy and Base US Tomahawks
Germany will buy American Tomahawk cruise missiles and station them on its own soil, Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced, describing the move as a way to “close an important strategic gap” in the country’s defences. Agreed on the sidelines of this week’s NATO summit in Ankara, the deal makes Berlin the third European operator of the long-range weapon after Britain and the Netherlands. Washington is expected to clear the sale in August; the missiles, able to reach targets 1,550 miles away, will be German-owned and operated, with no US troops to run them.
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Le Pen to Stand for President Despite Embezzlement Ruling
Marine Le Pen has said she will run in France’s 2027 presidential election, days after an appeals court convicted her party of embezzling €2.8m in European Parliament funds and ordered her to wear an electronic monitor for a year. Crucially, the ruling cut an earlier ban on holding office to a length she has largely served, clearing her path to stand. Le Pen said she would appeal to France’s highest court, a step that suspends the tag: “I will therefore campaign without an electronic bracelet,” she told French television.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Burnham Set to Enter No 10 on 20 July, Unopposed
Andy Burnham is on course to become Prime Minister on 20 July, running unopposed for the Labour leadership after his last potential rival stood aside. With nominations open until Wednesday and no challenger in the field, the Greater Manchester mayor — who returned to Parliament only weeks ago through a by-election in Makerfield, after a decade away — is expected to be declared leader at a party event at the end of next week. He has sketched a decentralising blueprint, including a new No 10 unit based in Manchester to hand local government more control over housing and transport.
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Met Investigates £500,000 in Reform Donations
The Metropolitan Police is investigating at least £500,000 given to Reform UK by Fiona Cottrell, the mother of a convicted fraudster who has secretly bankrolled Nigel Farage’s political operation. Detectives are examining two £250,000 payments that reached the party weeks before the 2024 general election, over concerns they may breach rules barring donations from impermissible sources or concealing a donation’s true origin. Two people have been interviewed under caution; no arrests have been made. The inquiry opens a second front of financial scrutiny around Reform as it prepares to fight a by-election.
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Heat Set to Peak This Weekend Under Amber Alert
The summer’s heatwave is forecast to reach its peak this weekend, with temperatures in the mid-30s across southern England and an amber heat-health alert in force until Sunday evening. The health agency, which escalated the alert this week, warns of a likely rise in deaths, particularly among the over-65s, and of sustained pressure on the NHS. Yellow alerts cover the north of England. Forecasters say the length of the spell, rather than any single reading, is what makes it dangerous, with little respite overnight.
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Police Investigate £37,500 Donation to Jenrick’s Tory Bid
The Metropolitan Police is investigating a donation of nearly £40,000 to Robert Jenrick’s 2024 Conservative leadership campaign, after the Electoral Commission referred allegations the money originated with a US businessman, which electoral law bars as a foreign source. Jenrick, who has since defected to Reform UK, called the allegations “entirely false” and said he had had “no contact with the Met police whatsoever”, accusing “an establishment determined to stop Reform”. The inquiry runs alongside a separate probe into £500,000 given to Reform by a donor’s family.
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Doctors Urged to Reject Pay Deal, Raising Strike Risk
The committee representing resident doctors in England has urged its members to reject the government’s latest pay offer — a 5.4% rise plus a £750 lump sum — calling it “pay restoration in name only”. A consultative ballot closes on 22 July; rejection would trigger a formal strike ballot, with fresh walkouts possible from mid-September. The union says junior doctors remain around a fifth worse off in real terms than in 2008. The offer would lift a first-year doctor’s basic pay from £36,616 to £38,593, backdated to April.
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Morning Briefing
What It Means For You
- A New Prime Minister Within Days: Andy Burnham’s 322 nominations put him on course to enter Downing Street around 20 July — a change of government without an election. The welfare, tax and spending choices he inherits will start shaping household budgets from the autumn.
- Petrol & Energy: Oil is holding near $76 a barrel as the US-Iran war grinds on, with the war premium of recent weeks now embedded in the price. The earlier run of falling pump prices has stalled, so budget for higher fuel and energy costs through the summer.
- A Dangerous Weekend of Heat: An amber alert covers England until Sunday, with temperatures in the mid-30s and a real risk to older and vulnerable people. Check on elderly relatives and neighbours, stay out of the afternoon sun, and expect rail delays as tracks overheat.
GEO Geopolitical
Mediators Scramble to Save the US-Iran Truce as Strikes Trade
After two nights in which American forces struck scores of Iranian targets and Iran fired back at US bases across the Gulf, a diplomatic scramble is under way to stop the war from swallowing the region’s fragile truce. Pakistan and Qatar, the original brokers, are working the phones alongside Saudi, Turkish and Omani counterparts to bring both sides back to the table. President Trump, who declared last month’s memorandum “over”, blew hot and cold: Iran, he said, “badly” wants a deal, but he may “no longer be interested in even trying”.
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Shipping Through Hormuz Grinds to a Halt as Oil Holds Steady
Traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has all but stopped. No vessel above 10,000 tonnes has crossed the US-coordinated “southern highway” route with its tracking signal on since Tuesday, maritime intelligence shows, as owners keep tankers away from a waterway that carries a fifth of the world’s oil. Yet crude barely moved: Brent held around $76 a barrel on Friday, little changed on the day. Markets are betting the disruption stays contained, even as analysts call the strait’s paralysis one of the biggest supply shocks on record.
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Germany to Buy and Station US Tomahawk Missiles
Germany has struck a deal to buy American Tomahawk cruise missiles and base them on German soil, Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced, calling it a move to “close an important strategic gap” in the country’s defences. Agreed on the sidelines of this week’s NATO summit in Ankara, the deal will make Berlin the third European operator of the long-range weapon after Britain and the Netherlands. Washington is expected to approve the sale in August; the missiles, which can reach targets 1,550 miles away, will be German-owned and German-operated.
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Le Pen Vows to Run for President Despite Court-Ordered Monitor
Marine Le Pen has said she will stand in France’s 2027 presidential election, days after an appeals court convicted her party of embezzling €2.8m in European Parliament funds and ordered her to wear an electronic monitor for a year. The ruling cut an earlier ban on holding office to a length she has largely served, clearing her path to run. Le Pen said she would appeal to France’s highest court, a step that suspends the monitoring order: “I will therefore campaign without an electronic bracelet,” she told French television.
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Abbas Calls First Palestinian Elections in Twenty Years
President Mahmoud Abbas has issued a decree setting 28 November for Palestinian legislative elections, the first in two decades, to be held across the occupied West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza. The last such vote, in 2006, delivered a shock victory for Hamas and was never repeated. The decree expands the legislative council from 132 seats to 200, lowers the candidacy age from 28 to 23, and requires at least a third of candidates on each list to be women. Abbas, who has ruled by decree for more than fifteen years, faces mounting international pressure to show his government’s legitimacy.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Burnham Secures 322 Nominations and Nears No 10
Andy Burnham has won the backing of 322 Labour MPs on the first day of nominations to succeed Sir Keir Starmer, far beyond the 81 needed to stand and enough to put him on course for Downing Street. With no rival declared and nominations closing on 16 July, the Greater Manchester mayor looks set to be confirmed as Labour leader — and therefore Prime Minister — at a special conference on 17 July, with a handover expected within days. He used the moment to promise a tougher line on Israel, admitting Labour “didn’t get it right” on Gaza.
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Police Investigate £500,000 in Reform Donations
The Metropolitan Police is investigating at least £500,000 given to Reform UK by Fiona Cottrell, the mother of a convicted fraudster who has secretly bankrolled Nigel Farage’s political operation. Detectives are examining two £250,000 payments that reached the party weeks before the 2024 general election, over concerns they may breach rules barring donations from impermissible sources or concealing a donation’s true origin. Two people have been interviewed under caution; no arrests have been made. The inquiry opens a second front of financial scrutiny around Reform as it prepares to fight a by-election.
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Doctors Urged to Reject Pay Offer, Reopening Strike Threat
The committee representing resident doctors in England has urged its members to reject the government’s latest pay offer — a 5.4% rise plus a £750 lump sum — calling it “pay restoration in name only”. A consultative ballot closes on 22 July; rejection would trigger a formal strike ballot, with fresh walkouts possible from mid-September. The union says junior doctors remain around a fifth worse off in real terms than in 2008. The offer would lift a first-year doctor’s basic pay from £36,616 to £38,593, backdated to April.
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Heatwave Peaks This Weekend as Amber Alert Holds
The summer’s heatwave is forecast to reach its peak this weekend, with temperatures in the mid-30s across southern England and an amber heat-health alert in force until Sunday evening. The health agency, which escalated the alert this week, warns of a likely rise in deaths, particularly among the over-65s, and of sustained pressure on the NHS. Yellow alerts cover the north of England. Forecasters say the length of the spell, rather than any single reading, is what makes it dangerous, with little respite overnight.
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Channel Small-Boat Crossings Fall 38% This Year
The number of people crossing the Channel in small boats has fallen sharply, down about 38% in the first five months of 2026 compared with the same period last year, according to parliamentary figures. Around 9,000 people made the journey by the end of May, against roughly 36,000 arrivals in the twelve months to that point, a 13% annual fall. The decline offers a rare piece of good news for a government under sustained pressure on immigration, though summer typically brings a rise in attempts as the weather improves.
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Evening Briefing
What It Means For You
- Energy Bills: The typical household energy bill has risen around £209, or 13%, from this month to roughly £1,850 a year, driven by the war’s effect on oil and gas — and analysts warn bills may stay elevated into the autumn even if the fighting eases. Budget for higher standing costs through the winter.
- The Heat Peaks: Temperatures are forecast to reach 35C today with amber alerts across England, rail speed restrictions cancelling and slowing services, and a hosepipe ban now covering around 850,000 Kent households. Keep checking on older relatives — the health risk runs through the weekend.
- Petrol: A small mercy amid the war — oil actually eased today, with Brent falling towards $76 as markets judged the strikes contained for now. That pauses, though does not reverse, the upward pressure on pump prices.
GEO Geopolitical
US and Iran Trade Strikes for a Second Night
American forces struck Iran for a second consecutive night — more than 170 targets over two days, from Bushehr and Bandar Abbas to the ocean port of Chabahar — and Iran answered with missiles and drones at US bases across four countries: Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and Jordan. Jordan said it intercepted eight incoming missiles; falling debris wounded one person in Kuwait. At least 14 Iranians have been killed. President Trump declared the June peace deal dead: “I think it’s over. I don’t want to deal with them anymore.”
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Oil Falls Despite the Strikes as Iran Keeps Grip on Hormuz
Brent crude fell around 2% towards $76 even as the strikes resumed, unwinding part of this week’s surge as traders judged the disruption contained for now — a striking verdict on a day of open warfare. Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, insisted the Strait of Hormuz “remains under the total oversight and management of Iran” for the next thirty days, signalling Tehran wants a new transit regime for the world’s most important oil chokepoint rather than simply to close it.
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Iran Buries Khamenei as His Successor Is Barred From the Funeral
Iran buried Ayatollah Ali Khamenei at the Imam Reza shrine in Mashhad, closing a week of mass processions that drew enormous crowds chanting “we will kill you” at President Trump beneath placards demanding his death. The most telling detail was an absence made official: his son and successor, Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, was kept away from his own father’s burial, with Iranian officials telling reporters he had been barred over fears he could be tracked and assassinated.
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IMF Cuts Global Growth Forecast as the War Bites
The International Monetary Fund lowered its 2026 global growth forecast to 3.0%, from 3.1%, blaming the Middle East war along with trade fragmentation and the risk of a correction in AI-driven markets. Energy prices are up around 25% since the conflict resumed, and the Fund raised its global inflation forecast to 4.7%. Growth across the Middle East and central Asia was cut sharply. Britain was the one bright spot — the only G7 economy the Fund upgraded, to 1%.
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Trump Confirms Ukraine Can Build Patriots as Summit Closes
As the NATO summit in Ankara formally concluded, President Trump confirmed the United States will let Ukraine manufacture its own Patriot air-defence systems — “we’ll show them how to do it… we’ll bring the company here” — reversing years of American resistance. The alliance pledged around €70bn for Ukraine’s defence. Moscow condemned the licensing decision, which follows a week in which Russian ballistic missiles struck Kyiv largely unopposed.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Burnham on Course for No 10 as Nominations Open
Nominations to succeed Sir Keir Starmer as Labour leader — and therefore as Prime Minister — opened today, with Andy Burnham the only declared candidate and needing the backing of around 81 MPs to be confirmed. His last potential rival, the former defence minister Al Carns, ruled himself out. If no challenger emerges, Burnham is expected to be crowned at a special conference on 17 July and to enter Downing Street days later, after an audience with the King.
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Disability Benefit “Not Working”, Review Finds as Charities Respond
The government’s interim review of Personal Independence Payment, published today, found the benefit “not fit for purpose”, with the disability minister Sir Stephen Timms concluding: “Pip is not working. It is not working for the people that go through the process, nor for a government committed to supporting disabled people.” Drawing on around 40,000 responses — more than nine in ten describing negative experiences — it recommends moving away from the points-based assessment. Disability charities welcomed the findings while warning the benefit remains a lifeline.
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AstraZeneca Sheds £19bn as Heart-Drug Trial Fails
AstraZeneca shares fell as much as 9% in London — wiping around £19bn from the value of Britain’s largest listed company — after a late-stage trial of its heart drug Wainua, developed with the US firm Ionis, failed to reduce deaths and cardiac events in patients with a form of heart failure. Ionis shares dropped around 20%. The setback dragged the FTSE 100 lower on a day already unsettled by the Gulf war.
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Heatwave Peaks Near 35C as Rail and Water Feel the Strain
Temperatures are forecast to reach 35C today as the summer’s third heatwave peaks, with amber health alerts across England, Network Rail speed restrictions slowing and cancelling services, and a hosepipe ban now covering around 850,000 households in Kent. The NHS reports “sustained pressure” on ambulance services, and forecasters warn of wildfire risk. The health agency’s alerts, warning of a rise in deaths among the vulnerable, run until Sunday evening.
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Foreign-Source Claim Detailed in Jenrick Donation Probe
The £37,500 donation to Robert Jenrick’s 2024 Conservative leadership campaign now under Metropolitan Police investigation is alleged to have originated with a US businessman, routed through a US company before reaching a UK donor — the arrangement that prompted the foreign-source referral, since such donations are barred by electoral law. Jenrick, who has since joined Reform UK, called the allegations “entirely false”, said he had had “no contact with the Met police whatsoever”, and accused “an establishment determined to stop Reform”.
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Morning Briefing
What It Means For You
- The Heat Peaks Today: Temperatures are forecast to reach 35C, with amber alerts across England and the NHS warning of “sustained pressure” — this is the most dangerous day of a heatwave that could prove the longest in fifty years. Keep checking on older relatives, watch for signs of heat exhaustion, and expect rail speed restrictions.
- Petrol & Energy: Oil is holding near $78 a barrel as the US-Iran conflict reignites — roughly $6 above where it sat before the fighting resumed. The war premium is now embedded in the price, so the recent run of falling pump prices has firmly reversed.
- Disability Benefits: The minister reviewing Personal Independence Payment says it is “not fit for purpose” and needs fundamental change, with final recommendations due in the autumn. If you or a family member claims Pip, the shape of the benefit — which supports four million people — is now firmly in play.
GEO Geopolitical
US Strikes Iran for a Second Night as Ceasefire Collapses
American forces hit more than 90 Iranian military targets overnight — a second consecutive night of strikes on air defences, naval assets and missile stores — after President Trump declared last month’s ceasefire “over”. Two days of bombing have killed at least 14 Iranians and wounded 78, Tehran’s health ministry said. Aboard Air Force One, Trump was unrepentant: “We just hit them very hard… I say we hit them 20 to 1”, warning that every Iranian attack would be answered twentyfold.
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Iran Strikes US Bases in Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar
Iran launched swarms of kamikaze drones at American facilities across the Gulf overnight — a Patriot interceptor system in Kuwait, an early-warning site in Qatar and fuel tanks in Bahrain — sending air-raid sirens across the region as Kuwait said its defences had confronted the attack. Tehran told the UN Security Council the American strikes were a “blatant violation” of the UN Charter. Iran’s parliament speaker was defiant on the strait at the heart of the crisis: it “will only open with Iranian arrangements, not American threats… if you strike, you’ll get hit”.
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Iran Buries Khamenei in Mashhad as His Successor Stays Hidden
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is to be buried today at the Shrine of Imam Reza in Mashhad, his home city, ending a days-long procession through Tehran, Qom and the Iraqi holy cities that drew vast crowds; the governor of Mashhad said he expected millions. Khamenei, who ruled Iran from 1989, was killed aged 86 in the opening Israeli strike of the war in February. His son and presumed successor, Mojtaba Khamenei, has made no public appearance throughout the rites and is reported to have been wounded in the same attack.
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Trump Grants Ukraine a Licence to Build Patriot Systems
President Trump confirmed at the close of the NATO summit in Ankara that the United States will license Ukraine to manufacture its own Patriot air-defence systems, after meeting President Zelensky, and suggested Ukrainian strikes on Russian refineries could help end the war. The alliance pledged fresh billions for Kyiv’s defence. Moscow condemned the licensing move. The decisions followed a week in which Russian ballistic missiles struck Kyiv without being intercepted.
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Russia Strikes Kyiv for a Second Day Running
Russian drone and missile attacks across Ukraine killed at least four people, including two in Kyiv, the second consecutive day the capital was struck — the barrages landing as NATO leaders gathered in Ankara and Washington moved to arm Ukraine’s air defences. The timing, on the summit’s doorstep, fits a pattern of Russian strikes calibrated to the diplomatic calendar.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Burnham on Course for Coronation as Nominations Open
Nominations to succeed Sir Keir Starmer as Labour leader — and therefore as Prime Minister — open today, with Andy Burnham the only declared candidate and his last potential rival, Al Carns, ruling himself out overnight. Candidates need the backing of 81 MPs to force a contest. Carns said a challenge was “not the best use of Labour’s time” and that the party needed to “get on board” with Burnham, who has promised MPs he will not use party discipline to “stifle debate”.
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Police Investigate £37,500 Donation to Jenrick’s Leadership Bid
The Metropolitan Police has opened an investigation into a donation of nearly £40,000 to Robert Jenrick’s 2024 Conservative leadership campaign, after the Electoral Commission referred allegations the money came from a foreign source — which electoral law prohibits. Jenrick, who has since defected to Reform UK, called the allegations “entirely false”. The inquiry opens a second front of financial scrutiny around Reform, alongside the standards affair that prompted Nigel Farage’s resignation.
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Disability Benefit “Not Fit for Purpose”, Review Warns
The government’s interim review of Personal Independence Payment — the first comprehensive look at the benefit since it was introduced in 2013, co-chaired by the disability minister Sir Stephen Timms — concludes it is “not fit for purpose” and needs bold reform, describing its assessment as dehumanising. Pip supports around four million people in England and Wales with the extra costs of disability, and its cost is forecast to exceed £41bn by 2030; the review drew on nearly 40,000 responses. Timms said “fiscal sustainability… is going to be a concern” but insisted he was “not expecting” the final report to contain “crude proposals”.
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Heatwave Peaks Near 35C as NHS Warns of Sustained Pressure
Temperatures are forecast to reach 35C today as the summer’s third heatwave peaks, with amber heat-health alerts across England and the NHS warning of “sustained pressure” on services. Forecasters say a run of ten consecutive days above 30C could make this the longest heatwave in around fifty years. The health agency warns of a rise in deaths, particularly among the over-65s, with the risk concentrated through today and into the weekend.
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IMF Upgrades UK Growth Forecast as War Fears Ease
The International Monetary Fund raised its forecast for UK growth to 1% this year — up 0.2 points from April, and the only upgrade among the G7 — making Britain the bloc’s third fastest-growing economy behind the United States and Canada, as fears over the economic damage from the Iran war diminished. The upgrade offers a rare piece of good economic news, landing the day after the fiscal watchdog warned that the public finances were on an “unsustainable path” without tax rises or spending cuts.
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Evening Briefing
What It Means For You
- Petrol Set to Rise: Brent crude jumped around 7% to nearly $80 a barrel — its sharpest move in months — after the US and Iran traded strikes across the Gulf. The long run of falling pump prices is over for now, and forecourt prices tend to follow the wholesale market up within a fortnight.
- Mortgages & Borrowing: The 10-year gilt yield rose to 4.97%, up sharply on the day, as the oil shock revives inflation fears — that feeds through to fixed mortgage pricing and the cost of government borrowing just as the fiscal watchdog warns the public finances are on an “unsustainable path”.
- The Heat Peaks Ahead: Amber alerts now cover the whole of England, with the health agency warning of “significant impacts” including a rise in deaths, and up to 35C possible later this week — midweek to the weekend is the dangerous stretch, so keep checking on older relatives.
GEO Geopolitical
US and Iran Trade Strikes as Trump Sours on Ceasefire
The United States and Iran exchanged strikes across the Gulf overnight and into today — American forces hitting more than 80 Iranian targets, Iran firing on US bases in Bahrain and Kuwait — after which President Trump declared dealing with Tehran “just a waste of time”, while adding that he would allow talks to continue. Washington revoked the waiver that had lifted Iranian oil sanctions. Iran’s parliament speaker was defiant: “The era of bullying and extortion is over… We don’t fold.” Oil surged towards $80.
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Trump Lets Ukraine Build Patriots and Strike Deeper Into Russia
President Trump said the United States will license Ukraine to manufacture Patriot air-defence systems itself — “We’ll give them the right to make Patriots… It’s a make-them-yourself” — a marked softening after an hour-long meeting with President Zelensky in Ankara. Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed Washington and Kyiv are discussing letting Ukraine strike deeper inside Russia: “It’s an escalation, but it’s an escalation that could lead to the end of the war.” It follows a week in which Russian ballistic missiles hit Kyiv untouched by its defences.
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NATO Closes Ankara Summit With $80bn Ukraine Pledge
NATO’s leaders closed their Ankara summit pledging $80bn to Ukraine’s defence needs this year and next, and reaffirming the “ironclad” Article 5 commitment to collective defence, in a declaration citing “the long-term threat Russia poses”. Secretary-General Rutte pressed allies for credible plans to reach 5% of GDP on defence by 2035. Sir Keir Starmer, at his final summit as Prime Minister, urged unity and called it a “huge privilege” to represent Britain, insisting the American president had made no issue of UK defence spending with him.
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Trump Orders Trade Halt With Spain and Revives Greenland Claim
President Trump ordered his Treasury Secretary to halt all trade with Spain, branding it “a terrible partner in NATO” over its refusal to meet the 5% spending target — “Don’t even talk to them. They’re hopeless” — and revived his insistence that the United States should control Greenland from Denmark. Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez shrugged it off, saying their conversation was “very cordial” and covered “the World Cup and golf”, not spending. Trump also held the first meeting between a US president and Syria’s new leader at a NATO summit.
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Khamenei’s Cortege Crosses Iraq Before Mashhad Burial
Ayatollah Khamenei’s coffin passed through Iraq’s Shia holy cities of Najaf and Karbala, drawing vast crowds, before its return to Iran for burial in Mashhad tomorrow — the final act of a six-day passage from Tehran. Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has remained entirely out of public view throughout the rites. The funeral has proceeded even as Iran and the United States traded strikes, with the permanent-deal talks formally paused for the mourning.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Farage’s By-Election Gamble Falters as Rivals Refuse to Play
Labour, the Conservatives, the Liberal Democrats, the Greens and Restore Britain have all confirmed they will not contest the Clacton by-election Nigel Farage triggered by resigning — leaving a novelty candidate, Count Binface, as his only declared opponent. The BBC’s political editor judged it “far from certain” the contest will strengthen him. Farage himself conceded the point when asked if it was a stunt: “Oh, it’s a big gamble.”
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Ruth Ellis, Last Woman Hanged in Britain, Pardoned
The King has granted a posthumous conditional pardon to Ruth Ellis, the last woman executed in the United Kingdom, hanged at Holloway Prison in 1955 for shooting her abusive lover David Blakely — a recognition, seventy-one years on, of what her family called a profound injustice. A conditional pardon leaves the conviction standing but acknowledges the sentence as unjust, and is the first of its kind explicitly tied to a reframing of the case around domestic abuse.
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Starmer Seals £37bn Missile Pact at Farewell Summit
Sir Keir Starmer signed off a £37bn ($50bn), twelve-nation European programme to develop next-generation long-range “deep precision strike” missiles over the next decade — a British-led initiative confirmed in a joint statement at his final NATO summit as Prime Minister. The partnership, spanning France, Germany, the Nordic and Baltic states and others, aims to pool Europe’s deep-strike development rather than build a single weapon, drawing directly on the lessons of the war in Ukraine.
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Amber Heat Alerts Now Cover the Whole of England
The UK Health Security Agency’s amber heat-health alert now covers every region of England, running until Sunday evening, with the agency warning of “significant impacts” across health and social care — including a rise in deaths, particularly among the over-65s. Temperatures could reach 35C later this week in what may become one of the longest-lasting heatwaves since 1976, and some rail services were already slowed today as tracks heated.
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Watchdog Warns of “Unsustainable” Finances Awaiting Burnham
The Office for Budget Responsibility warned that Britain’s public finances are on an “unsustainable path”, with debt set to climb steeply without tax rises or spending cuts — a tightening it likened in scale to the entire education budget early next decade. The warning frames the economy Andy Burnham is expected to inherit within weeks, alongside today’s oil shock, a sharp rise in borrowing costs and the Bank of England’s finding that a million more homeowners face higher mortgages.
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Morning Briefing
What It Means For You
- Amber Alerts Are Live: The amber heat-health alerts are now in force across the Midlands, eastern and southern England until Sunday evening, with up to 36C possible this week and the health agency warning of “significant impacts” including “a rise in deaths”, particularly among the over-65s — this could be one of the longest-lasting heatwaves since 1976, so pace the week and check on older relatives daily.
- Petrol & Borrowing: The overnight US-Iran strikes pushed oil to nearly $76 and sent gilt yields jumping — the months of falling pump prices are ending, and the bond move feeds directly into the cost of government borrowing and fixed mortgage pricing.
- Cancelling Contracts: Virgin Media was fined a record £28m for making it needlessly hard to cancel — dropped calls, endless holds, repeated transfers. If you were blocked from leaving between January 2022 and September 2024, complaints and the One Touch Switch process are your tools.
GEO Geopolitical
US and Iran Trade Strikes as Hormuz Ceasefire Buckles
The United States struck more than 80 Iranian targets overnight — air defences, coastal radar, missile sites and some 60 fast boats — in response to the tanker attacks, and Iran answered with missiles and drones against what it called 85 US military facilities in Bahrain and Kuwait. Washington also revoked the waiver permitting Iranian oil sales, reinstating sanctions suspended under last month’s memorandum. Iran’s parliament speaker declared: “The era of bullying and extortion is over… We don’t fold.”
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Le Pen Declares 2027 Run Hours After Court Clears Her
Marine Le Pen confirmed she will contest the 2027 presidential election — her fourth bid — in a prime-time television interview hours after the Paris appeals court restored her eligibility, tag and all. She will appeal to the Court of Cassation, and she settled her party’s internal question in a sentence: Jordan Bardella would be her prime minister. The court said it “took into account the voter’s freedom of choice” in shortening her ban.
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Gulf Strikes Overshadow NATO Summit’s Decisive Day
NATO’s leaders enter the summit’s working day with the Gulf exchange hanging over the agenda, after a first day of billions in announced arms contracts and President Zelensky’s declaration that “Ukraine belongs in NATO”. Zelensky signed drone deals with Denmark, Estonia and the Netherlands; Europe and Canada now fund roughly 90% of Ukraine’s air defences. President Trump meets Zelensky and Syria’s President Sharaa — fresh from the Damascus bombings — later today.
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Russia Strikes Kyiv for Third Time in a Week
Russian ballistic missiles struck Kyiv again overnight — the third attack on the capital in under a week — injuring at least two people, days after a barrage in which Ukraine’s defences intercepted none of the 23 ballistic missiles fired. Ukraine has answered in kind at sea, hitting around a dozen tankers of Russia’s shadow fleet ferrying fuel to Crimea over two days, while Moscow deploys jamming against its Starlink-guided drones.
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Iraq’s Holy Cities Mourn Khamenei Before Mashhad Burial
Vast crowds filled Najaf as Ayatollah Khamenei’s coffin passed through Iraq’s Shia holy cities, with the Karbala leg following today and burial in Mashhad tomorrow — the end of a six-day passage from Tehran through the heartlands of Iran’s regional network. Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has remained entirely out of public view throughout, with officials citing security. The US-Iran permanent-deal talks stay formally paused for the rites — even as the two countries traded strikes overnight.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Every Major Party Boycotts Farage’s Clacton By-Election
Labour, the Conservatives, the Liberal Democrats, the Greens and Restore Britain all refused to contest the by-election Nigel Farage triggered by resigning his seat. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper called it a “political tantrum”: “Nobody is going to get drawn into what is a political stunt… because he wants to duck and dive around the rules that apply to everyone.” Kemi Badenoch dismissed “the fake election”; the standards inquiry into Farage has been paused by his resignation. Farage conceded: “Oh, it’s a big gamble.”
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Bankers Reported Farage’s £5m Gift Over Laundering Fears
Bankers filed a suspicious activity report to the National Crime Agency in May 2024 over the £5m gift to Nigel Farage from Christopher Harborne, unable to trace the ultimate origin of the funds — a disclosure that landed hours after his resignation announcement. Such reports are not proof of wrongdoing. Farage said he has “no reason to doubt the ultimate source of the money” and claimed the information was “illegally obtained”. Reform’s Richard Tice has asked the NCA to investigate the leak of his own flagged transactions.
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Amber Alerts in Force as Heatwave Rivals 1976
Amber heat-health alerts are now live across the Midlands, eastern and southern England until Sunday evening, with the health agency warning of “significant impacts” across health and social care — “including a rise in deaths”, particularly among the over-65s. Up to 36C is possible in southern England this week, and some locations could remain in heatwave conditions for fourteen days, which would make this one of the longest-lasting heatwaves since 1976.
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Starmer Unveils £37bn Twelve-Nation Missile Programme
Twelve countries led by Britain will spend more than £37bn over ten years on the Deep Precision Strike programme — a European missile with a range of around 200 miles, potentially extending to 1,250 — announced as Sir Keir Starmer convenes allies at his final NATO summit. “We must step up to deliver a stronger, more European NATO,” he said. Yvette Cooper, in Ankara: “We are sending a clear message to President Putin; NATO is stronger, more European and ready to defend our citizens.”
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Virgin Media Fined Record £28m for Blocking Cancellations
Ofcom fined Virgin Media £28m — its largest ever consumer-protection penalty — after finding millions of cancellation calls were likely mishandled between January 2022 and September 2024: calls deliberately dropped, customers left on pointless holds, transferred excessively, and more than a million made to repeat their cancellation request to a second agent, under a commission scheme that effectively encouraged obstruction. Virgin Media apologised, saying leaving-related complaints have since fallen 89%.
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Evening Briefing
What It Means For You
- Amber Alerts From 9am: The amber heat-health alerts activate at 9am tomorrow across the Midlands, London, the East, South East and South West, running to Sunday evening with up to 35C by Friday — the riskiest stretch of the summer’s third heatwave starts now, so check on older relatives daily and keep nights as cool as you can.
- Mortgages: The Bank of England now expects just over five million homeowners to face higher repayments by the end of 2028 — a million more than forecast in December, blamed on the war’s rate shock. A typical remortgager faces about £45 a month extra; the 750,000 coming off sub-3% deals this year face nearer £170.
- Petrol & Gas: Three tankers were hit near the Strait of Hormuz — including a Qatari gas carrier — and oil jumped 3% to $74. The months-long run of falling pump prices is now genuinely at risk, and gas prices are exposed if LNG shipping reroutes.
GEO Geopolitical
Le Pen Cleared to Run in 2027 — With an Ankle Tag
The Paris appeals court upheld Marine Le Pen’s embezzlement conviction but cut her ban from office to 45 months, mostly suspended — effectively restoring her eligibility for the 2027 presidential election. The catch: a year of her reduced prison sentence is to be served at home with an electronic tag, which she has said would make campaigning impossible. All eleven co-defendants and the National Rally itself were also convicted, with a €100m fine imposed. Her lawyer called the verdict “a good start”.
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Trump Woos Erdogan and Berates Allies as Summit Opens
President Trump opened NATO’s Ankara summit by promising to lift the sanctions blocking Turkey’s return to the F-35 programme, praising his “chemistry” with President Erdogan — “Türkiye has become very strong under President Erdogan’s leadership” — while saying he had been “very disappointed” by allies during the Iran war. European members unveiled billions in arms contracts to prove last year’s spending pledges are real; Germany’s Chancellor Merz answered Trump’s “ridiculous” jibe: “this is the greatest effort we have ever made to strengthen our defence capabilities.”
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Three Tankers Hit Near Hormuz as US Blames Iran’s Guards
Three tankers were struck near the Strait of Hormuz — a crude carrier set ablaze off Oman, a Saudi-flagged tanker damaged, and the Qatari LNG carrier Al Rekayyat hit and at risk of exploding — in the first attacks on shipping since the strait reopened. A senior US official blamed missiles fired by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard; Tehran has made no formal claim. Qatar called it an “unacceptable attack” on global energy security. President Trump, asked about retaliation: “I’d rather make a deal, because I don’t want to affect 91 million people.”
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Damascus Bombs Wound Eighteen During Macron’s Visit
Two explosive devices — one in a rubbish bin, one in a parked car — detonated in central Damascus near the hotel where President Macron is staying, wounding at least 18 people including four police officers. Macron, the first major Western leader to visit Syria since President Sharaa took power, was inside the presidential palace at the time; the Élysée said his meeting continued as scheduled and his economic delegation’s programme goes ahead. No group has claimed the attack.
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Zelensky Makes Air Defence the Summit’s Test
President Zelensky said decisions on air defence should be “one of the key outcomes” of the Ankara summit, pressing for additional Patriot systems, a licence to manufacture Patriot interceptors in Ukraine, and what he called a domestic anti-ballistic-missile capability — after a week in which Russian strikes on Kyiv killed at least 15 people and Ukraine answered with its deepest strike of the war on a Siberian refinery.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Farage Resigns as MP to Fight His Own By-Election
Nigel Farage resigned the Clacton seat, triggering a by-election he intends to contest himself, after revealing he is now under a second parliamentary standards inquiry — into the undeclared support from convicted fraudster George Cottrell — on top of the inquiry into the undisclosed £5m Harborne gift. “I’ve decided that the people of Clacton should be the judges of my actions,” he said. “This will be a people versus the establishment byelection… It’s a chance to stick two fingers up to the entire establishment.”
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Harry Loses Landmark Privacy Case Against Mail Publisher
The High Court dismissed in their entirety the claims brought by Prince Harry, Elton John, Elizabeth Hurley and others alleging that the Daily Mail’s publisher unlawfully obtained private information between the 1990s and 2011, with the judge finding the claimants “failed to prove the allegations”. Harry could reportedly face a legal bill approaching £50m. The verdict landed on the first day of his visit to Britain, made without his family after the security row.
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Million More Homeowners Face Higher Mortgages, Bank Warns
Just over five million homeowners will see their repayments rise by the end of 2028, the Bank of England’s Financial Stability Report found — a million more than it forecast in December, with the increase attributed to the war’s effect on energy costs and rate expectations. A typical remortgager faces about £45 a month extra, while the 750,000 borrowers leaving sub-3% deals this year face an average rise near £170. The Bank also flagged stretched AI stock valuations and heightened cyber risk.
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Robertson Warns Starmer of Frosty Welcome at NATO
Lord Robertson — the former NATO secretary-general who co-authored the government’s own defence review — told MPs the £15bn Defence Investment Plan fails to chart a route to the alliance’s 3.5% core spending target: “Quite simply we are running out of years… the challenge is now bigger, more serious and earlier than we had anticipated and yet the Defence Investment Plan itself does not come up to it.” Of Starmer’s reception in Ankara: “I think relations may well be frosty.”
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Amber Heat Alerts Activate at 9am as 35C Approaches
Amber heat-health alerts come into force at 9am tomorrow across six English regions — the Midlands, London, the East, South East and South West — running until Sunday evening, with yellow alerts covering the north. The third heatwave of the summer builds towards a possible 35C in the South East by Friday, with forecasters warning of tropical nights and potentially ten consecutive days above 30C.
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Morning Briefing
What It Means For You
- Heatwave Declared: The third heatwave of the summer is now official, building to a possible 35C in the South East by Friday or Saturday with “tropical nights” that stay warm — amber health alerts activate at 9am tomorrow across the Midlands, London, the East, South East and South West, so tonight is the time to prepare: fans out, medication stored cool, plans made to check on older relatives.
- House Prices: Prices rose 0.2% in June — the first monthly increase in four months, taking the typical home to £299,330 — a sign the market is steadying, though lenders caution it remains subdued and the Bank of England’s August decision is the next test for mortgage rates.
- Petrol: The tanker attack in the Strait of Hormuz has pushed oil back up over 1% to nearly $73 — the first upward pressure in weeks, which may pause the run of falling pump prices if it holds.
GEO Geopolitical
Damascus Bombs Rock Macron’s Landmark Syria Visit
Two explosive devices detonated near the Damascus hotel where President Macron had spent the night, wounding at least 18 people, as the French president held talks with Syria’s President Ahmed al-Sharaa — the first visit by a major Western leader since the fall of the Assad regime. The Élysée said Macron was inside the presidential palace at the time, is safe, and is continuing his programme. No group has claimed the blasts.
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Tanker Set Ablaze by Projectile in Strait of Hormuz
A tanker caught fire after being struck by an unknown projectile east of Limah, Oman, while southbound through the Strait of Hormuz, the UK’s maritime agency reported — the first strike on commercial shipping since the strait reopened under the US-Iran ceasefire. No casualties were reported. Oil rose more than 1% towards $73, the first significant upward move in weeks, as the attack punctured the market’s confidence in the reopening.
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NATO Summit Opens in Ankara as Trump Flies In
The alliance’s first Turkish-hosted summit opened today, with President Trump arriving this afternoon for a bilateral with President Erdogan and a leaders’ dinner tonight, before tomorrow’s working session and his meetings with President Zelensky and Syria’s President Sharaa. Washington is pressing allies to reach the 5% of GDP spending target “as soon as possible”. Of Putin, Trump said after their weekend call: “I think he does feel pressure… Putin wants it to end, I will tell you that very strongly.”
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Ukraine Strikes Siberian Refinery in Deepest Attack of War
Ukrainian drones hit the Omsk refinery — Russia’s largest, some 2,500km from Ukraine — in the deepest strike of the war, with President Zelensky saying his country’s “long-range sanctions” now reach Siberia. The attack answered a weekend in which Russia’s barrages killed at least 22 people across Ukraine, including at least 19 in Kyiv, where rescue operations at two destroyed residential blocks concluded today.
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Khamenei’s Cortege Reaches Qom as His Heir Stays Invisible
Ayatollah Khamenei’s funeral procession moved to the shrine city of Qom after Monday’s vast Tehran procession, where crowds marched beneath red banners demanding vengeance — the coffin travels on to Iraq’s shrine cities before Thursday’s burial in Mashhad. Reports from inside Iran describe chaotic planning and political tension around the ceremonies. Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei has not appeared at any point in the funeral week.
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UK UK Domestic Politics
Labour Refers Farage to Elections Watchdog Over Gifts
Labour asked the Electoral Commission to investigate whether Nigel Farage broke electoral law by failing to declare benefits from convicted fraudster George Cottrell — staff, security and use of a London mansion — while the standards commissioner is reported to be preparing to interview Farage over the separate £5m Harborne donation, with findings due within weeks. Health Secretary James Murray said Farage “seems to have a bit of a flexible relationship with transparency”. Farage insists he has “done no wrongdoing”.
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Starmer Attends Final NATO Summit as Caretaker PM
Sir Keir Starmer travelled to Ankara for his final NATO summit, thirteen days before the expected handover to Andy Burnham, facing American pressure over defence spending after the US ambassador to NATO called on allies “lagging behind” to step up immediately. Britain’s defence plan reaches roughly 2.7% of GDP by 2030 against the 5% trajectory Washington demands — and the £4.7bn gap in that plan remains unfunded.
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Third Heatwave Declared With 35C Peak Forecast
The UK formally entered its third heatwave of the summer, with temperatures building towards a possible 35C in the South East on Friday or Saturday, London expected to reach 34C, and forecasters warning of “tropical nights” that stay above 20C. As many as ten consecutive days above 30C are possible. Amber heat-health alerts activate at 9am tomorrow across six regions, with yellow alerts covering the north.
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House Prices Rise for First Time in Four Months
UK house prices rose 0.2% in June — the first monthly increase since February, when the war’s outbreak froze the market — taking the typical property to £299,330, slightly ahead of forecasts. The lender behind the index cautioned that the market remains subdued, with activity still well below where it stood before the conflict’s inflation shock pushed rate cuts off the table.
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GP Tests to Cut Endometriosis Diagnosis to 45 Minutes
Two new tests that can be carried out by GPs have been approved for NHS use, promising to cut the diagnosis of endometriosis from an average of nine years or more to as little as 45 minutes. The condition — in which tissue similar to the womb’s lining grows elsewhere in the body, causing severe pain — affects roughly one in ten women of reproductive age.