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The Daily Brief

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✎ Curated Briefing · Edited at 08:00 & 18:00
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Weekly Roundup

The stories that defined this week View roundup
Week of 4–10 May 2026

The Week In Numbers

  • Brent crude traced its widest weekly swing of the war — opening Tuesday at $114.20 after Monday’s 5.96 per cent surge, collapsing 7.83 per cent on Wednesday to $102.95 on Pakistani mediation news, and settling at $101.05 on Friday for a $13 top-to-bottom range. WTI closed at $95.10. The VIX fell from a six-week high of 36.5 on Monday to 27.2 by Friday; gold pulled back from a Tuesday record to $4,795. Implied options markets settled at a 55–60 per cent probability of memo signing within ten days.
  • Ten-year gilt yields traded above 5.06 per cent on Wednesday morning before easing 14 basis points to 4.92 per cent at Friday’s close — the lowest level in three weeks. Sterling firmed from $1.2945 on Tuesday to $1.3045 by Friday, near a one-month high. The FTSE 100 rose 1.7 per cent on the week to 8,420 despite Reform’s sweep, with institutions reading the result as confirmatory rather than disruptive. Cumulative additional household fuel cost since 28 February now exceeds £330 per car.
  • Reform UK took 1,244 new councillors and outright control of 114 councils from a starting position of zero. Labour lost 1,022 councillors and 31 authorities, including Wales for the first time since 1999. The Conservatives shed more than 250 seats; the Greens gained 60-plus and won the Hackney and Lewisham mayoralties, with Zoë Garbett taking 46.9 per cent in Hackney. Plaid Cymru topped the Senedd; First Minister Eluned Morgan became the first sitting head of UK government to lose her own seat in post.

What Moved Forward

Iran War Pivots from Hormuz Skirmish to One-Page Memo

Geopolitical

The week opened with Iranian missile strikes on the UAE and a seven-boat US–Iran maritime engagement in the Strait of Hormuz on Day 65 of the war; it closes with Tehran formally reviewing a one-page memo via Pakistani mediators that would freeze enrichment for twelve years, release frozen Iranian assets and reopen Hormuz within thirty days of signing. Trump paused Project Freedom on Tuesday evening and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman emerged publicly as the second mediator. Pakistan’s Tahir Andrabi said on Saturday: “our hope and expectation is for an agreement sooner rather than later.”

Reform UK Seizes 1,244 Councillors and 114 Councils

Domestic

Final counts published Saturday morning put Reform UK on 1,244 new councillors and outright control of 114 councils — from a starting position of zero. Labour lost 1,022 councillors and 31 authorities, including Wales after 27 years; the Conservatives shed more than 250 seats; the Greens gained 60-plus and took the Hackney and Lewisham mayoralties. Plaid Cymru topped the Senedd poll for the first time and Welsh First Minister Eluned Morgan became the first sitting head of UK government to lose her own seat in post. The largest single-night swing in modern English local government.

Brent Collapses 7.83 per cent on Mediation News

Markets

Brent crude fell from $114.44 at Monday’s close to settle at $101.05 on Friday — a 7.83 per cent one-day collapse on Wednesday after Pakistani mediators briefed the White House that Tehran was “moving toward compromise”. The FTSE 100 rallied 2 per cent on the day to 8,374; gilts eased through 5 per cent to 4.92 per cent in the largest single-session rally in three weeks; the VIX dropped to 28.5 from 36.5 on Monday. Implied options markets settled at a 55–60 per cent probability of memo signing within ten days. The first sustained risk-on session of the war.

Saudi–Pakistani Axis Cemented as Primary Mediation Channel

Geopolitical

Riyadh emerged from quiet shuttle diplomacy into a publicly co-signed mediation role on Thursday, when Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif issued an unprecedented joint communiqué describing the signing window as “this week”. Sharif had named MBS as the second mediator on Wednesday; a Saudi-hosted Jeddah signing ceremony is now the operational expectation if the memo lands. The architecture mirrors the 2023 Saudi–Iran reconciliation, scaled to include Washington directly and effectively closing out European mediation. The IAEA verification mechanism remains the chief outstanding negotiation point.

What Stalled

Starmer Refuses to Resign as 35+ MPs Call for His Departure

Domestic

Sir Keir Starmer told the Observer on Saturday he “will not walk away and plunge the country into chaos”, his most explicit refusal to consider resignation since Thursday’s rout. By Saturday evening more than 35 Labour MPs had publicly called for him to step down; former Foreign Office minister Catherine West confirmed she will move as a stalking-horse candidate on Monday morning unless the Cabinet acts first. The Parliamentary Labour Party’s 81-MP nomination threshold looks reachable. The TSSA’s Maryam Eslamdoust became the first union general secretary to call for his departure; Unite and Unison have not yet moved.

Iran Counter-Text Widens the Negotiating Gap

Geopolitical

Tehran returned its formal response shortly after 16:00 BST on Thursday, accepting the framework but proposing a ten-year uranium-enrichment moratorium rather than twelve, requesting clarifications on Hormuz freedom-of-navigation language, and pressing for asset releases on signing rather than compliance milestones. By Sunday morning Iran was reportedly insisting on UN Security Council guarantees, a total ceasefire and sanctions relief before any substantive nuclear-track discussion — a sequencing reversal that pushes the politically harder concession behind the easier one. Tehran’s definitive response remains pending; markets are pricing through the silence at a 60 per cent probability of signing.

Lebanon Death Toll Passes 2,850 as IDF Widens Operations

Geopolitical

Lebanon’s Ministry of Health confirmed by Sunday morning that the cumulative death toll from Israeli operations since 2 March now approaches 2,850 — up from 2,696 on Monday. Israeli aircraft bombed a Beirut suburb on Wednesday targeting a Radwan Force commander, the first capital strike since the April truce. The IDF issued fresh displacement orders covering villages east of its current occupation zone. Hezbollah holds its tactical pause, widely read as following Tehran’s instructions while memo negotiations proceed; reports indicate Israel is preparing to seek US backing for an expanded ground campaign by mid-May.

Russia–Ukraine Three-Day Truce Holds Nominally, Breaches Mount

Geopolitical

The three-day Russia–Ukraine ceasefire announced by President Trump for 9–11 May entered its second day Saturday despite scattered violation reports from both sides. Ukraine launched 347 drones at Russia overnight Friday — its second-biggest attack of the war. Putin’s 81st Victory Day parade on Friday proceeded without tanks, ICBMs or heavy armour for the first time in two decades; he avoided the “Special Military Operation” framing for the first time since 2022. A 1,000-for-1,000 prisoner exchange is the largest under any ceasefire since the war began. Putin told reporters the conflict is “heading to an end”.

What To Watch Next Week

Monday PLP Meeting and Catherine West’s Stalking-Horse Motion

Domestic

Monday morning’s Parliamentary Labour Party meeting is now the operational deadline for the leadership crisis. Catherine West has confirmed she will move as a stalking-horse candidate unless a Cabinet minister triggers a contest first. The 20 per cent nomination threshold — 81 of 403 MPs — is reportedly already approached by private confidence-letter totals lodged with the Chief Whip. Andy Burnham has emerged in the Sunday papers as the preferred replacement despite his Commons absence; Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner are the alternative names. Cabinet-level discontent is the determining variable: a coordinated Downing Street visit forces a managed transition; fragmentation leaves West’s motion the operational mechanism.

Starmer Reset Speech Monday and King’s Speech Wednesday

Domestic

Sir Keir Starmer plans a major reset speech on Monday focused on cost of living, immigration enforcement and a “deliverology” tightening of departmental targets. The King’s Speech follows on Wednesday, setting out the legislative programme for the new session. Both will be measured against whether they include new immigration enforcement legislation; without it, the parliamentary right will read the package as confirmation that the strategy has not changed. The 1992 Major and 2009 Brown precedents both involved similar attempted resets that failed to arrest underlying decline. The substantive drivers — pump prices, the Mandelson scandal, the Iran war — remain outside Downing Street’s control.

Sunday-Night Asian Futures and Monday’s London Open

Markets

Asian futures reopen Sunday night UK time and are expected to take their cue from any weekend signal on the Iranian response. A continued silence from Tehran would likely retrace half a per cent or so on Brent; a positive headline could pull crude towards $96. Monday’s London open is the first market test of the political crisis since the council results — pension-fund LDI desks reportedly carry neutral positioning into the weekend, signalling institutional uncertainty. The Office for Budget Responsibility’s urgent fiscal-sustainability update is scheduled for 12 May; the Bank of England’s next inflation report follows on 14 May.

Iran Response Window, Jeddah Signing and Lebanon Escalation Triggers

Geopolitical

Pakistan’s “this week” framing puts the Iran memo in a finite signing window. The IAEA verification mechanism remains the chief outstanding negotiation point and the most likely cause of any breakdown. If signed in Jeddah, Hormuz reopens to commercial shipping by 9 June; if rejected, Brent retraces above $115 within a session and Hezbollah is the first front to escalate. Reports indicate Israel is preparing to seek US backing for an expanded Lebanon ground campaign by mid-May — a move that would force the European response that has been deferred for six weeks, particularly from France, which has UNIFIL personnel committed in southern Lebanon.

One To Read This Weekend

Starmer Faces Leadership Challenge as Labour MPs Back Burnham for Top Job

Bloomberg · The most complete account of the parliamentary mechanics now in motion: which MPs have already submitted confidence letters, why the Burnham camp believes the by-election obstacle is solvable, and what the “slow-motion takeover” timeline looks like over the coming fortnight. The single best read before tomorrow’s PLP meeting and the operational test of whether a managed transition is still possible or whether West’s stalking-horse motion becomes the mechanism by default.
☼

Morning Briefing

Sunday 10 May 2026 — 10:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • More than 35 Labour MPs are now publicly calling for Sir Keir Starmer to resign. Catherine West has confirmed she will move as a “stalking horse” on Monday morning unless the Cabinet acts first; the PLP’s 81-MP threshold for a formal challenge looks reachable. Andy Burnham has emerged in the Sunday papers as the rival camp’s preferred replacement, despite his current absence from Parliament. Starmer will give a major speech tomorrow and the King’s Speech is on Wednesday.
  • Iran’s formal response to the one-page US memo remains pending. Pakistan said overnight that “our hope and expectation is for an agreement sooner rather than later”. The text would freeze enrichment for 12 years and reopen Hormuz within 30 days of signing. Brent settled Friday at $101.05; markets reopen Sunday night for Asian futures. If Tehran responds positively before Monday open, oil could leg lower towards $90.
  • Markets closed Friday with the FTSE at 8,420, gilts at 4.92% and sterling at $1.3045. Sunday papers carry leadership-challenge speculation as the dominant front-page theme; Bloomberg already prices a Burnham succession path even though Burnham has no Commons seat. Monday’s open will be the first market test of the political crisis — pension-fund LDI desks are reportedly carrying neutral positioning into the weekend.

Iran War — Day 71. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran is still reviewing the one-page US memo via Pakistani mediators; foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said Tehran will convey its views to Islamabad “after summing up its points of view”. Pakistan’s foreign-ministry spokesman Tahir Andrabi said “our hope and expectation is for an agreement sooner rather than later”. The text would freeze enrichment for 12 years, lift sanctions, release frozen Iranian assets and reopen Hormuz within 30 days of signing. Trump warned of “much higher level” bombing if Iran refuses. Brent settled Friday at $101.05; week range $99.80–$103.10.

UK UK Domestic Politics

35+ Labour MPs Now Call for Starmer to Resign as West Plans “Stalking Horse” Move

More than 35 Labour MPs publicly called on Sir Keir Starmer to step down by Saturday evening, ITV News reports. Former minister Catherine West confirmed she will move as a “stalking horse” candidate on Monday morning unless the Cabinet ushers Starmer out first. The PLP’s 20% nomination threshold — 81 of 403 MPs — looks reachable given current Cabinet-level discontent. Starmer has reiterated he will not walk away.

Dive deeper
A “stalking horse” candidate is a procedural device: West is unlikely to be the eventual successor but her formal nomination forces a confidence vote that other contenders have been politically unable to trigger themselves. The 35-MP figure is the public count; the private confidence-letter total is reported to be already approaching the 81 threshold. The Cabinet faction is now the variable that decides this: a coordinated visit to Downing Street on Monday morning would force a managed transition; a fragmented response leaves West’s motion as the operational mechanism. Either way, Starmer’s premiership has entered its terminal phase.

Sunday Papers: Burnham Emerges as Preferred Replacement

Bloomberg and Sunday papers report that Labour rivals are coalescing around Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham as the preferred succession candidate, despite his current absence from Parliament. Allies are reportedly exploring a parliamentary by-election in a safe Manchester seat; the soft-left and trade-union college support Burnham as the only candidate who could plausibly compete with Reform’s appeal in northern heartlands. Streeting and Rayner remain alternative options.

Dive deeper
A Burnham succession would require either an immediate by-election or a constitutional workaround; the parliamentary mechanics are not trivial and previously excluded Burnham from the explicit succession list. The political logic is straightforward: he is the only Labour figure with name recognition in the Wigan and Hartlepool-style seats Reform now controls. The risk is timing — a managed succession process designed around Burnham takes months, while the political crisis is measured in days. Streeting may end up the operational compromise candidate even if Burnham is the strategic preference.

Starmer Plans Monday Reset Speech and Wednesday King’s Speech

Sir Keir Starmer plans to deliver a major speech on Monday designed to reset his premiership, followed by Wednesday’s King’s Speech setting out the legislative programme for the new session. Number 10 sources told the Sunday papers the Monday speech will focus on cost of living, immigration enforcement and a “deliverology” tightening of departmental targets. Cabinet ministers were instructed to use the bank-holiday weekend for visible local engagement; visibility has been mixed.

Dive deeper
A reset speech 72 hours after a historic council defeat is a familiar political device with a poor success record. The 1992 Major and 2009 Brown precedents both involved similar attempted resets that did not arrest underlying decline. Starmer’s difficulty is that the substantive drivers — pump prices, the Mandelson scandal, the Iran war — are not within his immediate control. The King’s Speech on Wednesday will be measured by whether it includes new immigration enforcement legislation; without that, the parliamentary right will read it as confirmation that the strategy has not changed.

Updated Tally: Labour Lost 1,300+ Seats and 35 Councils, Reform 1,350+ Seats

Final counts published overnight put Labour’s losses at more than 1,300 council seats and control of 35 authorities, including Wales for the first time in over a century. Reform UK secured more than 1,350 seats and outright majority on 13 councils, with control of many more in coalition arrangements. The Conservatives lost more than 250 seats; the Greens gained 60-plus. Plaid Cymru came first in Wales; Reform second.

Dive deeper
A net loss of 1,300+ seats is the worst single night for any incumbent UK governing party in modern records. The geographic distribution is the more significant detail: Labour’s losses are concentrated in long-held northern and Welsh authorities, not the marginal English shire seats it expected to give up. Plaid Cymru’s first-place finish in Wales fundamentally changes the constitutional centre of gravity in Cardiff, with the Welsh independence question likely to re-enter active debate within months. Reform’s 13-council outright majority is smaller than the headline gain count suggests because of fragmented vote distribution — but coalition mechanics give it operational influence in many more.

Cost of Living Returns to Front Pages as Pump Prices Hold Above 170p

Sunday papers carry cost-of-living coverage alongside the leadership crisis: average UK petrol prices remained above 170p heading into the bank-holiday weekend, with diesel at 205p, RAC and AA data confirm. Cumulative additional household fuel cost since 28 February now exceeds £330 per car for average-mileage drivers. The Iran war oil shock has been the dominant cost-of-living story of 2026, well ahead of the autumn 2024 energy reset.

Dive deeper
A £330-per-car cumulative cost over ten weeks of war is roughly equivalent to a 2.5% reduction in disposable income for average-mileage households. The pass-through of Wednesday’s 7.83% Brent collapse will start to reach forecourts mid-week, but only at the wholesale margin: pump prices typically lag by 7-10 days and are sticky on the way down. The political problem is that even if the Iran memo lands and oil falls to $90, voters will still be paying 165p+ at the pump for at least a month longer. The cost-of-living narrative is the structural backdrop to the leadership challenge.

GEO Geopolitical

Pakistan: “Our Hope and Expectation Is for an Agreement Sooner Rather Than Later”

Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesman Tahir Andrabi said overnight that “our hope and expectation is for an agreement sooner rather than later” on the one-page memo to end the 71-day war, after Iran said it was reviewing the latest US proposal. Iranian foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said Tehran will convey its views to Islamabad “after summing up its points of view”. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman remains the second named mediator.

Dive deeper
Pakistan’s public “sooner rather than later” framing is more bullish than the Iranian foreign-ministry tone, which suggests Islamabad is briefing market and political audiences ahead of any formal Iranian decision. The mediation architecture is unusual: Pakistan handles operational diplomacy, Saudi Arabia provides political legitimacy and economic capacity. The memo’s 12-year enrichment moratorium is the politically defensible threshold for Tehran — longer than that would have triggered an IRGC veto. Markets are likely to interpret continued silence from Tehran beyond mid-week as signal of breakdown rather than ongoing review.

Memo Terms: 12-Year Enrichment Freeze, 30-Day Hormuz Reopening, Frozen Assets Released

Reuters and Al Jazeera have published the most complete public account of the one-page memo’s terms: Iran would agree not to develop a nuclear weapon and freeze uranium enrichment for at least 12 years; the US would lift sanctions and release billions of dollars in frozen Iranian assets; both sides would reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping within 30 days of signing. The IAEA verification mechanism remains the chief unresolved point.

Dive deeper
The 12-year enrichment freeze is meaningfully shorter than the US opening position of 20 years but politically defensible in Washington because it covers two presidential terms beyond a possible Trump second term. The asset-release figure has not been disclosed publicly but is reportedly larger than the $6 billion South Korean tranche unfrozen in 2023. The 30-day Hormuz reopening clause is the operational test: if signed Sunday, the strait is fully commercial by 9 June; if Iran resists IAEA-access provisions, the timeline slips and oil retraces. The IAEA verification mechanism is the chief outstanding negotiation point and the most likely cause of any breakdown.

Brent Settled $101 on Friday; Asian Futures Reopen Sunday Night

Brent crude settled Friday at $101.05, holding the $100–103 range it has occupied since Wednesday’s 7.83% collapse. WTI closed at $95.10. Asian futures reopen Sunday night UK time and are expected to take their cue from any weekend signal on the Iran response. Implied options markets put the probability of memo signing within ten days at around 60%. Gold settled at $4,795; the VIX at 27.2.

Dive deeper
A flat oil week after Wednesday’s 7.83% collapse confirms market consensus that some form of de-escalation is more likely than not, but is not yet locked in. The Sunday-night Asian open is the first real-time market test of the weekend’s Iran posture: a continued silence from Tehran would likely retrace half a percent or so; a positive headline could pull Brent towards $96. Producers are unhedged for sustained sub-$100 Brent and OPEC+ compliance has weakened through April; any signing risks a price war on top of the diplomatic one.

Russia: Lukashenko-North Korea Bilaterals Continue in Kremlin

Russia’s Foreign Ministry confirmed overnight that bilateral meetings between President Putin, Belarusian President Lukashenko and the senior North Korean delegation continue at the Kremlin through Sunday. Reports from Moscow indicate working-level talks on accelerated North Korean shell production for export to Russia through 2026 and on a new bilateral economic-cooperation framework with Belarus. Most Western and African heads of state had withdrawn or downgraded for Friday’s parade.

Dive deeper
A two-day post-parade bilateral programme is unusual and suggests Putin is using the diplomatic window to formalise the Pyongyang-Moscow military supply axis as a structural rather than transient arrangement. North Korean shell production for Russian export has accelerated through 2026 according to Western intelligence assessments; the Kremlin meetings are likely to formalise pricing and delivery terms. The Belarus track is more symbolic than operational; Lukashenko continues to refuse direct combat-troop deployment despite repeated Russian requests. The combined message is that Russia is consolidating its non-Western alliance structure rather than pivoting to negotiation.

Lebanon: Death Toll Approaches 2,850 as Israeli Operations Continue

Lebanon’s Ministry of Health confirmed overnight that the cumulative death toll from Israeli operations since 2 March now approaches 2,850. The IDF struck additional Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon overnight; Hezbollah has not retaliated, holding the operational pause flagged through last week. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said no peace track can begin until Israel implements the existing ceasefire in full. Reports indicate Israel is preparing to seek US backing for an expanded ground campaign by mid-May.

Dive deeper
Hezbollah’s continued tactical pause is the single strongest indicator that Tehran has formally requested operational restraint while the Iran memo is finalised. If the memo lands, the Lebanon track may be folded into a wider regional de-escalation; if it collapses, Hezbollah is the first front to escalate. The 2,850-death figure has now exceeded any single-month total of the 2024 war and continues to rise. A US-backed expanded Israeli ground campaign would force the European response that has been deferred for six weeks — particularly from France, which has UNIFIL personnel committed in southern Lebanon.
One To Read

Starmer Faces Leadership Challenge as Labour MPs Back Burnham for Top Job

Bloomberg · The most complete account of the parliamentary mechanics now in motion: which MPs have already submitted confidence letters, why the Burnham camp believes the by-election obstacle is solvable, and what the “slow-motion takeover” timeline looks like over the coming fortnight. Best single read before tomorrow’s PLP meeting.
☼

Morning Briefing

Sunday 10 May 2026 — 08:07 BST

What It Means For You

  • More than 35 Labour MPs are now publicly calling for Sir Keir Starmer to step down. Catherine West has confirmed she will move as a stalking-horse candidate on Monday morning unless the Cabinet acts first; the Parliamentary Labour Party’s 81-MP threshold for a formal challenge looks reachable. Andy Burnham has emerged in the Sunday papers as the rival camp’s preferred replacement despite his current absence from Parliament. Starmer will give a reset speech tomorrow; the King’s Speech is on Wednesday.
  • Iran’s formal response to the one-page US memo remains pending. Tehran is reportedly seeking total cessation of war, UN Security Council guarantees and sanctions relief before any substantive nuclear-track discussion. Pakistan said overnight that “our hope and expectation is for an agreement sooner rather than later”. Brent settled Friday at $101.05; Asian futures reopen tonight for the first market test of the weekend’s diplomatic posture.
  • Markets closed Friday with the FTSE 100 at 8,420, gilts at 4.92% and sterling at $1.3045. Sunday papers carry leadership-challenge speculation as the dominant front-page theme. Monday’s open is the first market test of the political crisis — pension-fund LDI desks are reportedly carrying neutral positioning into the weekend, which itself signals institutional uncertainty about the parliamentary mechanics now in motion.

Iran War — Day 71. The war started 28 February 2026. Tehran continues to review the one-page US memo via Pakistani mediators; foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said overnight that Iran will convey its views to Islamabad “after summing up its points of view”. Pakistan’s Tahir Andrabi said yesterday that “our hope and expectation is for an agreement sooner rather than later”. Reports say Tehran is now insisting on UN Security Council guarantees, total ceasefire and sanctions relief before substantive nuclear discussions. The text would freeze enrichment for 12 years, lift sanctions, release frozen Iranian assets and reopen Hormuz within 30 days of signing. Trump warned of “much higher level” bombing if Iran refuses. Brent settled Friday at $101.05.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Catherine West to Trigger Labour Leadership Contest Monday Unless Cabinet Acts

Former Foreign Office minister Catherine West confirmed overnight she will move as a stalking-horse candidate on Monday morning unless a Cabinet minister triggers the contest first. Her intervention follows weekend pressure from backbench MPs after Friday’s local-election rout. The Parliamentary Labour Party requires 81 MPs — 20% of 403 — to force a formal challenge. Sir Keir Starmer told the Observer he “will not walk away from the job I was elected to do”.

Dive deeper
A stalking-horse candidate is a procedural device used to force a confidence vote that a substantive challenger has been politically unable to trigger themselves. The 81-MP nomination threshold is reportedly within reach of private confidence-letter totals already lodged with the Chief Whip. Cabinet members face a binary on Monday morning: a coordinated visit to Downing Street to manage transition, or fragmented inaction that leaves West’s motion the operational mechanism. The longer political question is whether the Parliamentary Labour Party can coalesce around a successor before Wednesday’s King’s Speech.

More Than 35 Labour MPs Publicly Call for Starmer to Resign

More than 35 Labour MPs had publicly called for Sir Keir Starmer’s resignation by Saturday evening, ITV News reported. The list spans the soft-left, the 2024 intake, and four former ministers, with Wales-facing MPs the most vocal cohort. Larger unions Unite and Unison have not yet joined the TSSA in calling for him to step aside. The PLP’s 81-vote threshold for a formal challenge looks reachable given the Cabinet-level discontent reported by the Sunday papers.

Dive deeper
The public count of 35-plus is the visible portion of the iceberg; the private confidence-letter total lodged with the Chief Whip is reported to be already approaching the threshold. Affiliated unions hold a third of the leadership-election college vote, so movement from Unite or Unison would be the more decisive signal. The Welsh cohort’s prominence reflects the magnitude of Friday’s loss: Eluned Morgan became the first sitting head of government in UK history to lose her seat. Monday’s PLP meeting is now the operational deadline.

Sunday Papers Tip Burnham as Preferred Replacement Despite Commons Absence

Bloomberg and the Sunday papers report that Labour rivals are coalescing around Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham as the preferred succession candidate despite his current absence from Parliament. Allies are exploring a parliamentary by-election in a safe Manchester seat. The soft-left and trade-union college reportedly favour Burnham as the candidate best placed to compete with Reform in northern heartlands. Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner remain alternative options.

Dive deeper
Burnham’s parliamentary mechanics are not trivial; previous succession scenarios excluded him for that reason. The political logic, however, is straightforward: he is the only Labour figure with name recognition in the Wigan and Hartlepool-style seats Reform has now seized. The risk is timing — a managed succession built around Burnham takes months, while the political crisis is measured in days. Streeting may end up the operational compromise candidate even if Burnham is the strategic preference.

Starmer Plans Monday Reset Speech Ahead of Wednesday King’s Speech

Sir Keir Starmer plans to deliver a major speech on Monday designed to reset his premiership, followed by Wednesday’s King’s Speech setting out the legislative programme for the new session. Number 10 sources told the Sunday papers the Monday address will focus on cost of living, immigration enforcement and a tightening of departmental delivery targets. Cabinet ministers were instructed to use the bank-holiday weekend for visible local engagement; visibility has been mixed.

Dive deeper
A reset speech 72 hours after a historic council defeat is a familiar political device with a poor success record. The 1992 Major and 2009 Brown precedents both involved similar attempted resets that failed to arrest underlying decline. Starmer’s difficulty is that the substantive drivers — pump prices, the Mandelson scandal, the Iran war — are not within his immediate control. The King’s Speech on Wednesday will be measured by whether it includes new immigration enforcement legislation; without that, the parliamentary right will read it as confirmation that the strategy has not changed.

Plaid Cymru Tops Senedd; Welsh First Minister Loses Her Seat

Plaid Cymru emerged as the largest party in the Senedd for the first time, with Reform UK in second place and Labour reduced to a historic low of nine seats. First Minister Eluned Morgan lost her own seat — the first sitting head of government in UK history to do so while in post. Reform secured outright majorities on 13 English councils and gained more than 1,350 seats nationally.

Dive deeper
A Welsh result of this magnitude alters the constitutional centre of gravity in Cardiff: the Welsh independence question is likely to re-enter active debate within months. Plaid Cymru’s first-place finish is unprecedented; Labour has held Wales continuously for over a century. The Senedd arithmetic now requires either a Plaid–Reform arrangement or a minority Plaid administration, both of which destabilise Westminster’s working assumptions about Welsh devolution. Reform’s outright majorities on 13 councils give it operational control over planning, council tax and regional services in those authorities from this week.

GEO Geopolitical

Tehran Reportedly Demands UN Guarantees Before Reopening Nuclear Track

Tehran’s reported position now sets total cessation of war, UN Security Council guarantees and sanctions relief as preconditions before substantive nuclear-track discussion, per overnight reports cited by Al Jazeera. The Pakistani-mediated channel remains active; no formal Iranian response has been delivered. Foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said Tehran will convey its views to Islamabad “after summing up its points of view”. Pakistan’s Tahir Andrabi said yesterday: “our hope and expectation is for an agreement sooner rather than later”.

Dive deeper
A two-phase Iranian framework — ceasefire and sanctions relief first, nuclear restrictions only afterward — sequences the politically harder concession behind the politically easier one and is the structurally weaker position for Tehran. The IAEA verification mechanism remains the chief outstanding negotiation point and the most likely cause of any breakdown. Pakistan’s public “sooner rather than later” framing is more bullish than the Iranian foreign-ministry tone, suggesting Islamabad is briefing market and political audiences ahead of any formal Iranian decision. Sunday-night Asian futures will be the first market test.

Three-Day Russia–Ukraine Ceasefire Holds Into Second Day Despite Skirmishes

The three-day Russia–Ukraine ceasefire announced by President Trump for 9–11 May entered its second day overnight despite scattered violation reports from both sides. The pause coincides with Russia’s Victory Day weekend and includes a 1,000-for-1,000 prisoner exchange confirmed by President Zelensky. Trump indicated yesterday he hopes to extend the truce into a longer arrangement. Both Kyiv and Moscow have accused the other of breaches since the ceasefire took effect Friday.

Dive deeper
A three-day truce timed to Victory Day is structurally a Russian concession to managed optics rather than a step toward durable settlement; previous announced ceasefires have collapsed within hours of expiry. The 1,000-for-1,000 prisoner exchange is the largest under any ceasefire since 2022 and may set a precedent for future humanitarian protocols. Putin’s openness to meeting Zelensky “in a third country” once “all conditions are settled” remains the diplomatic conditional that has blocked direct talks for two years. Extension beyond 11 May is the operational test of whether Trump’s pressure track is converting battlefield positions into political ones.

Putin Says Ukraine Conflict “Heading to an End” After Parade

President Putin told reporters at Friday’s scaled-down Victory Day parade that the Ukraine conflict is “heading to an end but it’s still a serious matter”. The parade proceeded without tanks, missiles or heavy equipment for the first time in nearly two decades; pre-recorded frontline videos played on Red Square screens instead. Belarusian President Lukashenko and a senior North Korean delegation attended; most Western and African heads of state withdrew or downgraded.

Dive deeper
A reduced-hardware parade is being read in Moscow analytical circles as a deliberate signal that Russian doctrine is shifting from display to delivery. The North Korean delegation’s presence cements the Pyongyang–Moscow military supply axis as a structural rather than transient arrangement. Western intelligence assessments flag accelerated North Korean shell production for export to Russia through 2026. Putin’s “heading to an end” framing is calibrated to support Trump’s ceasefire diplomacy without committing the Kremlin to specific terms; bilaterals at the Kremlin continue through Sunday.

Israeli Strikes on Southern Lebanon Continue Overnight; Death Toll Nears 2,850

Israeli operations against Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon continued overnight, with Lebanese state media reporting fresh strikes near the Litani river. Lebanon’s Ministry of Health put the cumulative death toll since 2 March at almost 2,850. Israeli aircraft bombed a Beirut suburb on Wednesday targeting a Radwan Force commander, the first strike on the capital since the April ceasefire. Hezbollah continues to hold its tactical pause; Lebanese President Aoun reiterated that no peace track can begin until full implementation.

Dive deeper
Hezbollah’s continued tactical pause is the strongest indicator that Tehran has formally requested operational restraint while the Iran memo is being negotiated. The April ceasefire has already broken down on Lebanese terms but holds nominally because neither side has formally withdrawn. Wednesday’s Beirut strike was the first since the agreement was announced and signals that Israeli operational tempo is accelerating rather than tapering. A US-backed expanded Israeli ground campaign would force the European response that has been deferred for six weeks — particularly from France, which has UNIFIL personnel committed in southern Lebanon.

Brent Settles $101.05 Friday; Asian Futures Reopen Sunday Night

Brent crude settled Friday at $101.05, holding the $100–103 range it has occupied since Wednesday’s 7.83% collapse. WTI closed at $95.10. Asian futures reopen Sunday night UK time and are expected to take their cue from any weekend signal on the Iranian response. Implied options markets put the probability of memo signing within ten days at around 60%. Gold settled at $4,795; the VIX at 27.2; sterling at $1.3045.

Dive deeper
A flat oil week after Wednesday’s 7.83% one-day collapse confirms market consensus that some form of de-escalation is more likely than not, but is not yet locked in. Producers are unhedged for sustained sub-$100 Brent and OPEC+ compliance has weakened through April; any signing risks an immediate price war on top of the diplomatic one. The Sunday-night Asian open is the first real-time market test of the weekend’s Iran posture: a continued silence from Tehran would likely retrace half a percent or so; a positive headline could pull Brent towards $96.
One To Read

Starmer Insists He Won’t Quit as Catherine West Seeks to Trigger Contest

Irish Times · A clean, dispassionate account of the parliamentary mechanics now in motion: West’s stalking-horse procedure, the 81-MP nomination threshold, the Cabinet-level discontent reported overnight, and Starmer’s explicit Observer refusal to walk away. The best single read on the formal sequence the next 48 hours will follow.
☽

Evening Briefing

Saturday 9 May 2026 — 18:30 BST

What It Means For You

  • Final council results put Reform UK on 1,244 new councillors and control of 114 councils; Labour lost 1,022 councillors and 31 councils, including Wales after 27 years in power. Starmer told the BBC he “will not walk away and plunge the country into chaos”. The first union calls for his resignation came from TSSA general secretary Maryam Eslamdoust this morning. Pressure builds through the bank-holiday weekend ahead of Monday’s PLP meeting.
  • Iran has not yet delivered its formal response to the one-page memo via Pakistani mediators; the diplomatic track remains open but unresolved. Trump’s pause on Project Freedom in Hormuz holds. Brent settled at $101.05 in Friday’s close, in the $100–103 range that has held since Wednesday’s 7.83% collapse. UK pump prices should plateau through next week; meaningful relief requires the memo to land.
  • Markets closed Friday with the FTSE 100 at 8,420 (+0.1% on the day, +1.7% on the week), gilts at 4.92% and sterling firm at $1.3045. The political risk premium on UK assets has compressed despite the council shock; the leadership-challenge tail risk is the single largest swing factor for Monday’s open. Reeves’ fiscal position remains compromised by year-to-date Brent above $108 average.

Iran War — Day 70. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran is still reviewing the one-page US memo via Pakistani mediators; no formal response delivered. The text would lift competing Hormuz blockades within 30 days of signing, freeze enrichment for 12 years and unfreeze Iranian assets. Trump warned of “much higher level and intensity” bombing if Iran refuses; Project Freedom remains paused. Brent settled Friday at $101.05; week range $99.80–$103.10. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is the named second mediator alongside Pakistan’s Sharif. Russia’s Victory Day parade on Friday proceeded without tanks for the first time in nearly two decades.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Final Tally — Reform 1,244 Councillors, 114 Councils; Labour Loses 31

The final council count published this morning puts Reform UK on 1,244 new councillors and outright control of 114 councils. Labour lost 1,022 councillors and 31 councils, including Wales after 27 years in power. Reform came second in Wales and made significant gains in Scotland. The Conservatives lost more than 250 seats; the Greens gained 60-plus. The realignment is the largest single-night reshape of British local government since 1931.

Dive deeper
A net 1,244-seat sweep takes Reform from zero councils 12 months ago to controlling regional services, council tax, and planning policy across 114 authorities. The Welsh result is the more politically significant: Labour’s 27-year run in Cardiff Bay ends with Plaid Cymru on top in the Senedd and Reform second in vote share. The Scottish gains, while smaller, secure Reform a foothold in a region historically hostile to populist English parties. The Conservative collapse continues, with shire England turnouts confirming a structural shift to the right rather than a Reform-takes-from-Labour story.
↻ Friday morning: Reform 450+ initial gains → Saturday final: Reform 1,244 councillors / 114 councils.

Starmer Doubles Down: “I Will Not Walk Away and Plunge the Country into Chaos”

Sir Keir Starmer told the BBC this morning he “will not walk away and plunge the country into chaos” and called the right path forward to “rebuild and show the path forward”. The interview was Starmer’s most explicit refusal to consider resignation since Friday’s results landed. He acknowledged that voters want “faster delivery” on the cost of living and immigration. Cabinet ministers have been instructed to use the bank-holiday weekend for visible local engagement.

Dive deeper
A 48-hour entrenchment is a high-risk move when the underlying polling has not moved. Starmer’s framing — “chaos” if he resigns — rests on the absence of a unifying successor more than on his own popularity. Monday’s PLP meeting is now the operational deadline: it is the first formal opportunity for confidence-letter mechanics to surface. The BBC interview was politically calibrated to slow the parliamentary clock by setting a fight rather than admitting a constitutional crisis. Whether 80 MPs are prepared to publicly back a challenger after that interview is the question that determines the rest of his premiership.
↻ Friday: “tough — very tough” → Saturday: “will not walk away and plunge the country into chaos”.

First Union Resignation Call: TSSA Says Starmer Must Step Aside

The Transport Salaried Staffs Association became the first Labour-affiliated union to call for Sir Keir Starmer’s resignation today, with general secretary Maryam Eslamdoust saying “unions like the TSSA will not stand by in the wake of this electoral disaster and let Keir Starmer pave the way for a hard right government led by Nigel Farage”. Former minister Catherine West also called for him to “step aside”. Larger unions Unite and Unison have not yet commented publicly.

Dive deeper
Union resignation calls are the tracking variable that matters most: Labour’s parliamentary party will not move until the affiliated unions move first, because rule-book mechanics give the unions a third of the leadership-election college vote. TSSA is small but the framing — “hard right government led by Farage” — is exactly the rhetorical opening Unite and Unison would use to follow. If either large union joins the call by Monday morning, the political weather changes materially. The Catherine West intervention is parliamentary cover: a former minister on the soft-left signalling internal permission for others to speak.

Starmer Names Gordon Brown Special Envoy on Global Finance

Sir Keir Starmer announced this afternoon that former Prime Minister Gordon Brown has accepted a role as Special Envoy on Global Finance and Cooperation. Brown will represent the UK at G7 finance ministers’ meetings, IMF spring meetings, and on G20 reform proposals. The appointment is read in Westminster as a stabilising signal aimed at gilts and the City rather than at restive Labour MPs. Brown was chancellor 1997–2007 and prime minister 2007–2010.

Dive deeper
A Brown appointment days after a historic local-election defeat reads as defensive: the Treasury wants visible institutional continuity to anchor markets ahead of Monday’s open. Brown is also internally credible enough that any leadership-challenge faction would struggle to dismiss the appointment as a Reeves loyalty play. The Special Envoy framing is also useful for managing the IMF Article IV review timetable, which lands later this month. The longer political question is whether bringing in a 2010-era figure will land with the 2024-intake MPs whose seats are now most exposed — the answer is probably not, but the markets are the immediate audience.

Markets Closed Friday Up 0.1%, Up 1.7% on the Week Despite Political Shock

The FTSE 100 closed Friday at 8,420 (+0.1% on the day, +1.7% on the week), broadly unchanged on the political result. Sterling held at $1.3045, near a one-month high. Ten-year gilt yields stayed at 4.92%, the lowest level in three weeks. The week’s range was driven by the Iran de-escalation premium, not the election; the FTSE rallied on Wednesday after Brent collapsed 7.83%. Monday’s open is the next event: leadership-challenge mechanics could re-introduce political risk premium.

Dive deeper
A flat market on a historic political result is the strongest evidence yet that institutional money priced the Reform breakthrough through April and is now reading the count as confirmatory. The deeper risk is what happens if Monday’s PLP meeting produces a confidence-letter cascade: Reeves’ tenure becomes uncertain, and the autumn Budget timetable wobbles. Pension-fund LDI desks are reportedly carrying neutral positioning into the weekend, which is itself a signal — institutions see no clean directional bet ahead of Monday. The cleanest forward read remains the gilt curve, which has not yet priced any plausible successor scenario.
↻ Monday open FTSE: 8,310 → Friday close: 8,420 (+1.3% on the week through political shock).

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Memo Still Under Tehran Review; No Formal Response Yet Delivered

Iran has not yet delivered its formal response to the one-page memo via Pakistani mediators, four days after Trump’s pause on the Project Freedom Hormuz operation. The text would lift the competing blockades within 30 days of signing, freeze Iranian uranium enrichment for 12 years and unfreeze billions in frozen Iranian assets. Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said today the response is “imminent” but provided no timeline. The IAEA verification mechanism remains the chief sticking point.

Dive deeper
A four-day delay between “closing in” and a formal Iranian response is the diplomatic story: Tehran is using the review window to extract IAEA-access concessions, while Washington holds the Hormuz pause as conditional leverage. The Pakistani “imminent” framing is itself useful: it preserves momentum without committing either side to a deadline. The likely path remains a Saudi-hosted signing ceremony if the memo lands; the alternative is a public Iranian rejection that returns Brent above $115 within a session. Markets are pricing the higher-probability outcome but staying neutral on timing.

Brent Holds $100–103 Range; WTI Settles at $95

Brent crude settled Friday at $101.05, holding the $100–103 range it has occupied since Wednesday’s 7.83% collapse. WTI closed at $95.10. Implied options markets put the probability of a memo signing within ten days at around 60% — broadly unchanged through the week. Gold settled at $4,795, off Tuesday’s record high. The VIX closed at 27.2, four points below mid-week peaks. Iran’s formal response is expected to be the next material catalyst.

Dive deeper
A flat oil week in the wake of a 7.83% one-day move confirms market consensus that some form of de-escalation is more likely than not, but is not yet locked in. Producers are unhedged for sustained sub-$100 Brent; OPEC+ compliance has weakened through April and any signing risks an immediate price war on top of the diplomatic one. The asymmetric scenarios are wide: a memo signing pulls Brent towards $90 within a session, while a breakdown returns it above $115 with credible re-escalation. Monday’s open is the first real-time test of the discount window.

Russia Post-Parade: Lukashenko-North Korea Axis Cemented

The day after Friday’s reduced Victory Day parade, Russia’s Foreign Ministry confirmed that Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko and a senior North Korean delegation held bilateral meetings with Putin in the Kremlin. Most Western and African heads of state had withdrawn or downgraded. The reduced hardware turnout (no tanks, no ICBMs) is being read in Moscow analytical circles as a deliberate Putin signal that Russia’s military doctrine is shifting from display to delivery.

Dive deeper
A North Korean delegation at the Kremlin on the day after Victory Day cements the Pyongyang-Moscow military supply axis as a structural feature of the war, not a transient arrangement. Western intelligence services have flagged accelerated North Korean shell production for export to Russia through 2026. The Lukashenko presence is more symbolic than operational; Belarus has not deployed combat troops despite repeated Russian requests. Putin’s broader signal — military strength without parade-ground display — matches a doctrine update that the Russian General Staff has been hinting at since March.

Lebanon Death Toll Passes 2,800 as Hezbollah Holds Tactical Pause

Lebanon’s Ministry of Health confirmed late Saturday that the cumulative death toll from Israeli operations since 2 March now exceeds 2,800. The IDF struck additional Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon overnight; Hezbollah has not retaliated. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun reiterated that no peace track can begin until Israel implements the existing ceasefire in full. Reports indicate that Israel is preparing to seek US backing for an expanded ground campaign by mid-May.

Dive deeper
Hezbollah’s tactical pause is the strongest indicator that Tehran has formally requested operational restraint while the Iran memo is finalised. If the memo lands, the Lebanon track may be folded into a wider regional de-escalation; if it collapses, Hezbollah is the first front to escalate. The 2,800-death figure has now exceeded any single-month total of the 2024 war and continues to rise. Diplomatic pressure on Israel has been muted while the Iran track holds priority — but a US-backed expanded ground campaign would force the European response that has been deferred for six weeks.

Saudi-Pakistani Mediation: Riyadh Working-Level Talks Continue

Iranian negotiators remain in Riyadh for working-level talks under the joint Saudi-Pakistani mediation framework, three days after Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was first publicly named alongside Pakistan’s Sharif as a mediator. A signing ceremony, if the memo is finalised, would be Saudi-hosted. Riyadh has signalled openness to underwriting initial sanctions-relief mechanics. The diplomatic axis mirrors the architecture that produced the 2023 Saudi-Iran reconciliation, scaled up to include the US directly.

Dive deeper
A Saudi-hosted signing would lock in Riyadh’s position as the indispensable Gulf actor and effectively close the door on European mediation. The Pakistani channel handles operational diplomacy; the Saudi channel provides political legitimacy and economic capacity through sanctions-relief funding. The longer-term consequence is a regional security architecture in which Israel becomes increasingly bilaterally entangled rather than multilaterally constrained. Riyadh’s role also explains the Trump pause: it was as much a courtesy to MBS as it was a concession to Tehran.
One To Read

‘Leader of the Pack’: What Next as Reform Makes Huge Election Gains

Al Jazeera · A clear-eyed analysis of what Reform actually owns now — 114 councils, regional services, planning, council tax — and the structural consequences for Westminster as Farage’s party transitions from protest insurgency to a party of government in 114 jurisdictions. Best single weekend read on the realignment.
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Evening Briefing

Friday 8 May 2026 — 18:59 BST

What It Means For You

  • Reform UK has won 583 councillors and outright control of four councils — Newcastle-under-Lyme, Havering, Suffolk and a fourth authority — in the final national count. Labour has lost 394 councillors and 11 councils; Labour is confirmed to have polled below Plaid Cymru in Wales for the first time since 1922. Sir Keir Starmer is refusing to resign; no challenger has yet moved publicly, though whip soundings remain active this evening.
  • US and Iranian forces exchanged fire near the Strait of Hormuz today — Day 70 of the conflict. President Trump says the ceasefire remains “still in effect” and Washington still awaits Tehran’s formal response on the peace proposal. Brent edged to $101.70; pump prices remain near 175p but no further step-change is expected today.
  • UK markets closed broadly flat: the FTSE 100 finished at 8,384 (+0.25%), sterling held at $1.3020 and ten-year gilt yields ticked to 4.94%. The political shock was largely priced in; the genuine risk event this weekend is the Iran memo — a signing would push gilts lower and sterling higher; a breakdown would reverse Thursday’s rally.

Iran War — Day 70. The war started 28 February 2026. US Central Command said its forces intercepted “unprovoked Iranian attacks” near the Strait of Hormuz on Friday and responded with self-defence strikes; explosions were reported on Qeshm Island and near Bandar Abbas. Iran accused Washington of violating the ceasefire. President Trump insisted the truce remained “still in effect” and Secretary Rubio confirmed the US still expects Tehran’s formal response on the peace proposal. Brent edged to $101.70. The Victory Day parade in Moscow proceeded without tanks; North Korean and Belarusian leaders attended. Ukraine launched 347 drones across 20 Russian regions overnight — its second-biggest ever attack.

GEO Geopolitical

US and Iran Exchange Fire Near Hormuz; Trump Says Ceasefire Holds

US Central Command said its forces intercepted “unprovoked Iranian attacks” and responded with self-defence strikes near the Strait of Hormuz on Friday. Explosions were reported on Qeshm Island and near Bandar Abbas; Iran’s internet blackout entered its 70th day. Iran’s foreign ministry accused Washington of violating the April ceasefire. President Trump insisted the truce was “still in effect” and that the US still awaited Tehran’s formal response on the peace proposal.

Dive deeper
The Hormuz exchange is the most dangerous development since the April ceasefire, but both sides are taking care not to characterise it as a full breakdown. CENTCOM’s “self-defence” framing and Iran’s “ceasefire violation” framing are symmetrical: each side denies it started the escalation. The diplomatic consequence depends on whether Tehran treats the exchange as a reason to delay or accelerate its formal response. Brent rose 0.5% on the news but did not breach $103, suggesting markets read the exchange as a contained event rather than a breakdown signal. Pakistan’s mediation channel reportedly remained active through the afternoon.
↻ Morning: Iran reviewing memo, no signing → Evening: US-Iran exchange fire in Hormuz; ceasefire strained but intact.

Ukraine Launches 347 Drones Across 20 Russian Regions Overnight

Ukraine launched its second-biggest drone attack since the Russian invasion, with air defences engaging 347 drones across 20 Russian regions overnight. Flights at Moscow airports were disrupted; a large electrical substation in Crimea caught fire. Russia’s self-declared Victory Day ceasefire collapsed almost immediately; President Zelensky said Russian forces “continued to attack positions overnight”. Both sides accused the other of violating their respective ceasefires.

Dive deeper
Ukraine’s choice of Victory Day as the moment for its second-largest ever drone strike is explicitly political: it signals that Russian territory carries no sanctuary from Ukrainian long-range reach. The 347-drone figure is within 42 of the all-time record of 389 set last March. Russia’s decision to strip tanks from the Red Square parade — implemented weeks earlier — was vindicated by this strike pattern; a combination of heavy armour and mass drone exposure would have been catastrophic. Ukrainian long-range capacity has grown materially since the start of the conflict, limiting what Moscow can safely display at a parade that exists precisely to project military strength.

Putin’s Victory Day Parade Proceeds Without Tanks or ICBMs

Russia’s 81st Victory Day parade on Red Square proceeded on Friday with no tanks, ballistic missiles or heavy armour — the smallest military display in two decades. President Putin did not use the phrase “Special Military Operation” for the first time since 2022. North Korean and Belarusian leaders attended; most Western delegations had withdrawn. The parade proceeded under a tightened drone-exclusion perimeter and heavy electronic-warfare cover.

Dive deeper
Putin’s omission of “Special Military Operation” framing is the most significant departure from Kremlin messaging since the invasion. Analysts read it as possible recalibration ahead of ceasefire language, or as a domestic signal that the framing has exhausted its political utility after four years of costly attritional war. The parade’s minimalist hardware turnout is the most visible public admission to date of Russia’s equipment attrition; the North Korean and Belarusian leaders’ presence cements a supply axis that the Kremlin will struggle to dismantle cleanly once a ceasefire is reached.

Diplomatic Track Survives Hormuz Exchange; Rubio Expects Iranian Response

The White House said Friday afternoon that the diplomatic track with Iran remained open despite the Hormuz exchange. Secretary Rubio confirmed the US “still expects” a formal Iranian response to the peace proposal. Iran’s foreign ministry said Tehran “will not bow to pressure” but did not declare the ceasefire terminated. The Saudi-Pakistani mediation channel remained active, with Riyadh and Islamabad urging both sides to “preserve the political space.”

Dive deeper
Maintaining diplomatic contact hours after an armed exchange in a contested waterway reflects the depth of both sides’ interest in a deal. Neither Tehran nor Washington withdrew its negotiator; Pakistan’s channel remained active through Friday afternoon. The structural incentive for Iran is strong: a signed memo unlocks frozen assets and ends a naval blockade costing Tehran billions monthly. The Hormuz exchange may ultimately accelerate a signing by concentrating minds on the costs of continued stalemate, rather than providing a pretext for withdrawal from the process.

Lebanon Death Toll Passes 2,750 as IDF Widens Displacement Zone

Lebanon’s Ministry of Health confirmed the cumulative death toll from Israeli operations since 2 March now exceeds 2,750. The IDF issued fresh displacement orders covering villages east of its current occupation zone in southern Lebanon. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun repeated his call for restraint; Hezbollah maintained a deliberately reduced operational tempo during the ongoing Iran memo process.

Dive deeper
Hezbollah’s operational restraint is widely read as following Tehran’s instructions to keep the Lebanon front quiet during the memo negotiations. A ceasefire on the main Iran front would free Lebanese political and military bandwidth for a separate diplomatic track; Hezbollah is reportedly positioning for that post-memo environment rather than creating problems during it. The IDF’s expanding displacement orders are the variable to watch: if the zone extends materially beyond the agreed buffer, Hezbollah’s restraint becomes politically untenable in Beirut regardless of Tehran’s preferences.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Reform Wins 583 Councillors and Four Councils in Final Count

The final national count confirms Reform UK has gained 583 councillors and seized outright control of four councils — Newcastle-under-Lyme, Havering in east London, Suffolk County Council and a fourth authority — having held none previously. Labour has lost 394 councillors and control of 11 councils. The Conservatives lost 267 councillors; the Greens gained 66 and won the Hackney and Lewisham mayoralties.

Dive deeper
Reform’s four-council gain marks its transition from protest movement to party of administration. Council control provides access to budgets, procurement, housing policy and local services — the operational infrastructure that converts popular anger into governing capacity. Labour’s 394-seat loss, while below the worst-case 2,000 projected, is the worst single-night result for a sitting government in modern records. The Greens’ Hackney and Lewisham mayor wins confirm a sustained urban-progressive coalition that has moved well beyond the protest vote in inner London.
↻ Afternoon (partial): Reform 320+, Labour −200+ → Final: Reform 583 seats, four councils; Labour −394.

Starmer Digs In; Labour MP Calls Explicitly for “New Leadership”

Sir Keir Starmer reiterated on Friday morning he will not resign, calling the results “very tough.” Labour MP Jonathan Brash, who represents Hartlepool — a seat Reform won overnight — gave the most explicit call from within the parliamentary party: “We need new leadership in order to achieve that.” Potential rivals Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner have so far declined to move publicly against Starmer.

Dive deeper
Brash’s Hartlepool seat carries symbolic weight: Labour won it back at a by-election, then lost it to Reform overnight. His explicit public call removes the fiction that the leadership challenge discussion is confined to anonymous briefings. Streeting and Rayner’s silence is tactical: the party has never removed a sitting prime minister in its 125-year history, and no challenger wants to appear to have forced the moment prematurely. The PLP’s 80-MP nomination threshold remains the formal gating mechanism; informal whip soundings are reportedly still active this evening.

Greens Win Hackney and Lewisham Mayors; Urban Progressive Bloc Hardens

Zoë Garbett won the Hackney mayoral election with 46.9% of the vote, becoming London’s first Green mayor. The Greens also won Lewisham, giving the party two London mayoral wins on the day. The results confirm a sustained Green foothold in inner London alongside gains in Norwich and university cities. Green councillors nationally rose by 66.

Dive deeper
The Hackney and Lewisham results are strategically significant beyond their immediate impact: Green administrative control in inner London provides an organisational base from which to contest the 2028 London Assembly and, ultimately, the mayoralty. A 46.9% vote share in Hackney significantly exceeds national Green polling and demonstrates the party’s capacity to consolidate tactical Labour-to-Green switching in high-density graduate wards. Two consecutive national electoral advances confirm it is no longer operating as a protest party in these constituencies — it is the governing alternative of choice for urban progressives who have abandoned Labour.

Wales: Labour Confirmed Behind Plaid Cymru for First Time Since 1922

Senedd counting confirmed Labour polled below Plaid Cymru in Wales for the first time since 1922, ending over a century of Welsh Labour dominance. Reform UK also performed strongly across north Welsh councils. A Plaid-led Senedd administration would place Welsh independence on the immediate political agenda and require Westminster to manage new constitutional pressures alongside the Scottish question.

Dive deeper
Labour losing the Welsh Senedd popular vote is a constitutional rupture of historic proportions. Welsh First Minister Vaughan Gething now holds a diminished mandate; cross-party talks for a new governing arrangement in Cardiff Bay are expected within days. A Plaid-led coalition would raise independence as a live policy question in a devolved parliament for the first time, forcing the UK government into reactive constitutional negotiations simultaneously with the Scottish situation. The concurrent Reform surge in north Wales and Plaid advance in south Wales maps a country fracturing on class and national lines simultaneously.

FTSE Closes +0.25% at 8,384; Gilt Yields Tick to 4.94%

The FTSE 100 closed 0.25% higher at 8,384 on Friday, absorbing the historic election results with less disruption than feared. Sterling eased marginally to $1.3020; ten-year gilt yields ticked to 4.94% from Thursday’s 4.93%. Brent edged to $101.70 (+0.5%) on the Hormuz exchange; the VIX rose to 28.4, reflecting residual Iran uncertainty.

Dive deeper
A flat-to-positive Friday close after the largest Reform breakthrough in British political history reflects a market judgement that UK institutional architecture is resilient and the election result was already priced in. The single-basis-point gilt move confirms institutions are watching leadership-challenge mechanics rather than acting on them. The genuine risk to UK assets this weekend is the Iran situation: a memo signing on Sunday would push gilts lower and sterling higher, while a breakdown would reverse Thursday’s rally. Labour’s fiscal arithmetic is unchanged regardless of who leads the party.
One To Read

Keir Starmer Leadership Challenge: How UK Labour Party Could Remove Him

Bloomberg · The authoritative breakdown of the precise mechanics by which the Parliamentary Labour Party could remove a sitting Prime Minister for the first time in the party’s 125-year history: the 80-MP nomination threshold, the 14-day ballot window, Streeting vs Rayner arithmetic, and why Burnham’s Manchester base makes him a bystander rather than a candidate. Essential reading as whip soundings continue this evening.
☼

Morning Briefing

Friday 8 May 2026 — 16:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • Reform UK has won more than 450 council seats overnight in a historic political shift; Labour has lost more than 300 seats including in long-held heartlands such as Hartlepool and Wigan. Sir Keir Starmer has refused to resign, calling the results “tough — very tough, no sugarcoating”. Labour is also on course to lose its century-long lead in Wales for the first time. The PLP’s leadership-challenge mechanism is now politically active even if not formally triggered today.
  • The US-Iran one-page memo to end the 69-day war remains under formal review in Tehran and has not yet been signed. Trump’s pause on the Project Freedom Hormuz operation remains in effect; Iran’s response is being channelled via Pakistani mediators with Saudi support. Brent settled at $101.27 on Wednesday after a 7.83% collapse and has held the $100–103 range since; if the memo lands, expect another leg lower towards $90 and pump-price relief over 7–10 days.
  • UK markets are firm despite the political shock: the FTSE 100 trades around 8,412 (+0.5%), sterling holds above $1.30, and ten-year gilt yields remain at 4.92%, the lowest level in three weeks. The Reform-led council reshape and Labour collapse were largely priced in. The genuine market event next week will be Reeves’ first response to a fiscal arithmetic that no longer holds — and any leadership-challenge mechanics that surface from this afternoon onward.

Iran War — Day 69. The war started 28 February 2026. Trump’s pause on Project Freedom remains in effect as Iran finalises its response to the one-page memo via Pakistani mediators; Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is the second named mediator. The text would freeze Iranian uranium enrichment for 12 years (down from 20 in the prior US position), unfreeze billions of dollars in Iranian assets and reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping. Brent settled Wednesday at $101.27 (-7.83%) and has held the $100–103 range; WTI at $95.08. Russia’s Victory Day parade on Red Square today proceeded without tanks for the first time in nearly two decades; Belarusian and North Korean leaders attended.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Reform Wins 450+ Council Seats; Labour Loses 300+ Including Hartlepool, Wigan

Reform UK has won more than 450 council seats overnight in what Nigel Farage called a “truly historic shift in British politics”. Labour has lost more than 300 seats, including all 20 it was defending in Wigan — a former mining town the party has held for over 50 years — and a decisive defeat in Hartlepool. The Conservatives lost more than 200 seats; the Greens gained 40-plus and the Liberal Democrats made smaller gains. Counting in the West Midlands and Wales is still in progress.

Dive deeper
A wipe-out in Wigan has no modern parallel for Labour: the party has dominated the council for half a century, and losing every defended seat in a single night is structural realignment, not a protest spike. Hartlepool similarly was a Brexit-era totem, won and lost twice in five years; Reform’s win there cements its claim on Labour’s northern coalition. The 450-seat tally already moves the central Bloomberg projection of 1,850 net Labour losses into the realistic ceiling rather than the central case. The Conservative collapse is the silent story: 200-plus seat losses on a 21% national share confirms the party has not recovered ground from Reform.

Starmer Refuses to Resign: “Results Are Tough, No Sugarcoating”

Sir Keir Starmer made a pre-noon statement outside Downing Street acknowledging “tough — very tough” results and explicitly refusing to step down. He called the verdict “a clear message about the cost of living and the pace of change”. Cabinet ministers including Wes Streeting, Yvette Cooper and Bridget Phillipson were filmed entering Downing Street separately within an hour of the statement. No formal leadership challenge has been triggered; the PLP’s 20% nomination threshold (around 80 MPs) remains the gating mechanism.

Dive deeper
A refusal to resign on the morning after a historic defeat is the first move in any leadership-challenge sequence rather than the end of one. The political question is now whether 80 Labour MPs are willing to publicly back a challenger this weekend. Streeting controls the parliamentary numbers; Rayner controls the membership. The internal calculus depends on how many 2024-intake marginal-seat MPs see their own positions as untenable under continued Starmer leadership — whip soundings will continue through the bank-holiday weekend ahead. Burnham remains excluded by parliamentary-seat constraints.

Labour on Course to Lose Wales for First Time in Over a Century

Labour is on course to fail to win the most seats in a Wales-wide election for the first time in more than 100 years, with Plaid Cymru on track to top the Senedd poll. Reform UK has won every council it stood candidates in across north Wales. The result completes a structural realignment of Welsh politics that began with the 2024 general election and has accelerated through the cost-of-living period. Counting in several Welsh authorities continues into Friday afternoon.

Dive deeper
Labour’s Welsh dominance dates from 1922 and has survived every modern political shock until now. Plaid topping the Senedd poll changes the constitutional centre of gravity in Cardiff: a Plaid-led administration would push the independence question back onto the political agenda within a year. The Reform sweep of north Wales mirrors the party’s industrial-belt advances in northern England, suggesting the geographic theory of British politics — safe Labour heartlands — is now obsolete in current form. Welsh fiscal devolution arrangements may need formal review under any Plaid administration.

Pound Firms, FTSE Up 0.5% as Result Lands as Priced

UK markets opened firmer despite the historic council results, with the FTSE 100 up 0.46% to around 8,412 and sterling trading at $1.3041, near a one-month high. Ten-year gilt yields hold at 4.92%, the lowest in three weeks. Markets had largely priced the Reform breakthrough through the back half of April; the late-cycle Iran de-escalation premium is the dominant macro driver this morning. UK miners and financials led; consumer staples lagged.

Dive deeper
A historic political defeat producing a market rally reflects the discount window: traders priced the central case weeks ago and are now reading the result as confirmatory rather than disruptive. The deeper question is the leadership-challenge tail risk, which would re-introduce uncertainty over the autumn Budget and fiscal arithmetic. Pension-fund LDI hedging activity is reportedly moderate this morning, suggesting institutions see the political risk as contained — for now. The gilt curve has not yet priced any plausible successor scenario; a Streeting or Rayner victory would reset assumptions on Reeves’ tenure and the autumn Budget timetable.

Conservatives Quiet After 200-Seat Loss; Badenoch Faces Internal Pressure

The Conservative Party has lost more than 200 council seats overnight, eclipsing its 2026 worst-case planning. Kemi Badenoch made a brief televised statement at 09:30 BST acknowledging the result without setting out a strategic response. Sources told Bloomberg the 1922 Committee’s informal soundings on Badenoch’s leadership have begun within hours. Reform has not just taken Labour territory: 200-plus Conservative losses in shire England suggest Badenoch’s base coalition is also fracturing.

Dive deeper
A 200-seat Conservative loss alongside 450-plus Reform gains cleanly disposes of the “Reform mostly takes from Labour” theory of British politics. The 1922 mechanics for Badenoch are different from Labour’s — a 15% threshold of confidence-letters triggers a vote — but the political dynamic is similar: a leader who failed to recover from the Tory collapse last year now also failed to defend shire territory. The longer-term implication is the consolidation of the British right under Reform rather than a Conservative recovery, which has structural consequences for any 2029 general-election arithmetic.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Memo Still Under Tehran Review; No Final Signing Yet

The one-page memo to end the 69-day war remains under formal review in Tehran and has not yet been signed, according to CNN and NPR reporting overnight. Iran’s foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei reiterated that Tehran is finalising its position and will channel its formal response via Islamabad. The 30-day post-signing negotiation window covers nuclear, sanctions and Hormuz access. Trump told reporters the war would be “over quickly”; the IAEA verification mechanism remains the chief sticking point.

Dive deeper
A multi-day delay between “closing in” and “signed” is itself the diplomatic story: Tehran is using the review window to extract IAEA-access concessions, while Washington holds the Hormuz pause as conditional leverage. The 12-year enrichment moratorium is structurally defensible in Tehran because it falls short of the 20-year US opening position; Iran can sell it domestically as a successful negotiation. The memo is unlikely to be signed before the weekend; markets may begin to retrace some of Wednesday’s 7.8% Brent collapse if Saturday opens with no deal.

Russia Victory Day Parade Proceeds Without Tanks for First Time in Decades

Moscow’s 81st Victory Day parade on Red Square proceeded without tanks, ICBMs or most heavy hardware, the smallest hardware turnout in nearly two decades. Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko and North Korean delegations attended; most Western and African heads of state withdrew or downgraded. President Putin used the speech to claim that Russia “does not need parades to demonstrate its strength”. Air-defence units were on visible heightened alert; airspace over central Moscow was closed.

Dive deeper
Stripping armour from the Red Square parade is the most explicit Kremlin acknowledgement to date that Ukrainian deep-strike drone capability is changing what Moscow considers safe to display. Parade-protection truce calculations now reach into mainstream military doctrine, not just propaganda. Putin’s speech avoided the “Special Military Operation” framing for the first time since 2022, possibly signalling a recalibration of language ahead of any substantive ceasefire negotiation. The North Korean delegation’s presence cements the Pyongyang-Moscow military supply axis as a structural feature, not a transient war-time arrangement.

Brent Holds $100–103 Range as Diplomacy Premium Persists

Brent crude trades at $101.20 in early afternoon European hours, broadly in the $100–103 range it has occupied since Wednesday’s 7.83% collapse to $101.27. WTI is at $95.08. The VIX has settled at 27.2, four points below Tuesday’s peak. Implied options markets put the probability of a memo signing within ten days at around 60% — broadly unchanged on the day. Gold pulled back to $4,798 from its mid-week record high; Bitcoin firmed above $80,000.

Dive deeper
A flat week of oil trading around $101 confirms the market consensus that some form of de-escalation is more likely than not, but is not yet a done deal. The asymmetric scenarios are wide: a memo signing on Sunday could pull Brent towards $90 within a session, while a breakdown returns it above $115 with credible re-escalation. Producers are unhedged for sustained sub-$100 Brent; OPEC+ compliance has weakened through April. The longer the diplomatic limbo continues, the higher the probability of a third-party catalyst — UAE, Saudi or Israeli — reshaping the negotiation.

Lebanon Death Toll Continues to Rise; Israeli Displacement Orders Expand

Lebanon’s Ministry of Health confirmed overnight that the cumulative death toll from Israeli operations since 2 March now exceeds 2,750. The IDF has issued fresh displacement orders covering villages east of its current zone of occupation in southern Lebanon. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun reiterated that no peace track can begin until Israel implements the existing ceasefire in full. Hezbollah claimed three rocket strikes on Israeli forward positions overnight without retaliation.

Dive deeper
The Lebanon track has been the slow-burning collapse of the regional ceasefire architecture for three weeks; expanded displacement orders mark a qualitative shift towards permanent Israeli presence beyond the original buffer. Reports indicate that Israel is preparing to seek US backing for an expanded ground campaign by mid-May if no diplomatic resolution emerges. Hezbollah’s restrained tactical pace suggests Tehran has asked for operational pause while the Iran memo is finalised — if the memo collapses, the Lebanon front becomes the first place to escalate.

Saudi-Pakistani Mediation Channel Now Public; Riyadh Hosts Backchannel

Saudi Arabia is now the second publicly named mediator on the Iran memo alongside Pakistan, ending weeks of speculation about Riyadh’s role. Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif confirmed Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s direct push for the Hormuz pause. Iranian negotiators are reportedly in Riyadh for working-level talks; a signing ceremony, if the memo lands, would be Saudi-hosted. The diplomatic axis mirrors the architecture of the 2023 Saudi-Iran reconciliation.

Dive deeper
A Saudi-hosted signing would lock in Riyadh’s position as the indispensable Gulf actor and effectively close the door on European mediation in any future US-Iran framework. The Pakistani channel handles operational diplomacy; the Saudi channel provides political legitimacy and economic capacity (sanctions-relief funding). The structure also explains the Trump pause: it was as much a courtesy to MBS as it was a concession to Tehran. The longer-term consequence is a regional security architecture in which Israel is increasingly bilaterally entangled rather than multilaterally constrained.
One To Read

UK Elections — Early Results and Takeaways: Will Starmer Have to Resign?

Al Jazeera · A clear-eyed early read of the structural realignment underway in British politics: Reform’s 450-seat sweep across northern England, Labour’s loss of Wigan and Hartlepool, the Welsh dimension and Plaid’s likely first place, and the parliamentary mechanics of a leadership challenge. Best single read while the West Midlands and Senedd counts continue.
☼

Morning Briefing

Thursday 7 May 2026 — 08:30 BST

What It Means For You

  • Polling stations are now open. Doors close at 22:00 across England, Wales and Scotland. Photo ID is required at the desk; postal ballots must be hand-delivered by 22:00. Met Office forecasts showers across most of England through the day — an umbrella matters more than usual because turnout dips on wet days hurt the incumbent.
  • President Trump paused ‘Project Freedom’ in the Strait of Hormuz overnight as Iran reviews the one-page memo to end the 68-day war. The proposal would lift competing blockades, freeze uranium enrichment for 12 years and unfreeze billions in Iranian assets. Brent has held around $103 in early Asian trade; if the memo is signed, expect a further leg lower in oil and a knock-on easing in pump prices over 7–10 days.
  • UK markets open with the FTSE 100 indicated +0.2% at 8,388 on light volume after yesterday’s 2% rally. Ten-year gilts traded at 4.90% in Asian hours, the lowest level in three weeks, and sterling is firm at $1.3022. The big risk is the result, not the open: a strong Reform showing tonight could retrace the gilt rally on Friday morning when London desks reprice the political backdrop.

Iran War — Day 68. The war started 28 February 2026. Trump paused Project Freedom on Tuesday evening as Iran reviews the one-page memo; the text would end hostilities, lift the competing Hormuz blockades, freeze enrichment for 12 years (down from 20 in the prior US position) and release frozen Iranian assets. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is reportedly the second mediator alongside Pakistan’s Sharif. Iran’s foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said Tehran will channel its formal response via Islamabad. Brent settled at $102.95 yesterday; FTSE closed at 8,374.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Pauses ‘Project Freedom’ in Hormuz as Memo Nears

President Trump suspended the Strait of Hormuz naval mission overnight, citing “great progress” on the one-page memo with Tehran. CNN reports Washington and Tehran are “closing in” on a 14-point text that would end hostilities, lift competing blockades and trigger a 30-day window to settle nuclear, sanctions and strait-access terms. Trump said the war would be “over quickly”; Iran’s foreign ministry confirmed the proposal is under formal review.

Dive deeper
Pausing the Hormuz operation is the most concrete US de-escalation gesture of the war and signals Washington genuinely expects a memo to be signed within days rather than weeks. The pause also defuses Iran’s strongest casus belli: any US-Iran shoot-out in the strait while the memo is on the table would have collapsed the diplomatic track. The 14-point structure is unusual — it permits both leaders to claim victory simultaneously, which is the diplomatic prerequisite for any deal Trump signs. Tehran’s formal response is expected within 24–48 hours via the Pakistani channel.

Memo Drops Uranium Moratorium to 12 Years; Frozen Assets to Be Released

The text under review would freeze Iranian uranium enrichment for at least 12 years, down from a previous US ask of 20, and lift sanctions in exchange for the unfreezing of billions of dollars in Iranian assets held abroad. Iran would also formally agree not to develop a nuclear weapon. Both sides would simultaneously reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping. Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is now publicly named alongside Pakistan’s Sharif as a mediator who pushed for the pause.

Dive deeper
A 12-year moratorium is meaningfully shorter than 20 but politically defensible in Washington because it covers two presidential terms beyond a possible Trump second term. The asset-release figure has not been disclosed; it is likely larger than the $6 billion South Korean tranche unfrozen in 2023, given accumulated proceeds frozen since the 2024 sanctions regime. The Saudi role is the more important diplomatic development: Riyadh has been quietly aligned with the Pakistani mediation throughout but was not publicly disclosed until Tuesday’s pause. The IAEA verification mechanism remains the open question and the most likely point of breakdown.

Russia Launches 100+ Drones at Ukraine Hours After Declaring Victory Day Truce

Russia attacked eastern and southern Ukraine with more than 100 attack drones overnight, hours after declaring a unilateral 8–9 May ceasefire timed for Friday’s Victory Day parade. Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said the Kremlin “broke its own truce within hours of declaring it”. Ukrainian long-range drones struck Cheboksary on the Volga, killing two; earlier strikes on a Naftogaz facility had killed five. The Kremlin confirmed the Red Square parade will proceed without tanks for the first time in nearly two decades.

Dive deeper
Russia’s declared truce was always conditional on Ukraine reciprocating; the overnight barrage gives the Kremlin a propaganda line while preserving operational tempo into Friday. The Cheboksary strike is Ukraine’s deepest of the year and signals Kyiv has chosen to demonstrate reach rather than restraint ahead of the parade. Stripping tanks from the parade reflects equipment shortages and air-defence concerns combined: drones have repeatedly entered Moscow oblast in recent weeks. Belarusian and North Korean leaders remain confirmed; most Western and African delegations have withdrawn or downgraded.

Saudi Arabia Joins Pakistan as Named Mediator on Iran Memo

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday named Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as the second mediator who pushed Trump to pause the Hormuz mission. The disclosure ends weeks of public speculation about Riyadh’s role. Pakistan said it was “very hopeful that the current momentum will lead to a lasting agreement”. Iran’s foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei confirmed Tehran will channel its formal response via Islamabad rather than direct US contact.

Dive deeper
A Saudi-Pakistani mediation axis is the diplomatic substrate that produced the previous regional truce in 2023 and is the most credible channel available given the absence of European leverage in this conflict. Riyadh’s public emergence aligns with its broader 2024–26 strategy of presenting itself as the indispensable Gulf actor; signing the memo as a co-mediator would lock in that position. Tehran’s preference for indirect channels reflects domestic political constraints — direct US-Iran contact remains a third-rail issue for the IRGC and conservative blocs. Expect a Saudi-hosted signing ceremony if the memo is finalised.

Brent Holds at $103 in Asian Hours; Memo Probability Priced at ~60%

Brent crude traded at $103.45 in Asian hours on Thursday, broadly stable after Wednesday’s 6% collapse. WTI was at $98.30. Asian equities were mixed, with the Nikkei up 0.4% and Hang Seng up 0.3%. Implied options markets put the probability of a memo being signed within ten days at around 60%, derived from the recent decline in oil-market volatility and the price action since Wednesday. Gold pulled back to $4,810 from its mid-week record.

Dive deeper
A flat overnight tape after a 6% one-day move suggests the market has digested Wednesday’s rally rather than positioning for an extension. The 60% memo-probability priced in options is the cleanest read on what professional money expects: signing within ten days is the central case but failure scenarios remain materially priced. The implied risk asymmetry is meaningful: a memo signing pulls Brent towards $90 quickly, while a breakdown returns it above $115 within a session. London opens into a relatively benign tape but UK assets carry an additional political risk premium for tonight.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Polling Stations Open Across England, Wales and Scotland

Polling stations opened at 07:00 BST across the three nations and will close at 22:00. Voters need photo ID at the desk; postal ballots must be hand-delivered to a polling station by 22:00. Roughly 5,000 council seats in England are contested alongside the full Scottish Parliament and Senedd. Almost 25,000 candidates are standing. Sir Keir Starmer voted in north London shortly after 07:30; Sir Ed Davey voted in Kingston; Kemi Badenoch in North West Essex.

Dive deeper
Photo-ID enforcement remains the operational risk — Electoral Commission research from 2024 estimated 4% of would-be voters were turned away on first attempt; the proportion is materially higher among younger and lower-income voters who lean Labour. Postal-ballot logistics are tight today: many councils received bank-holiday-disrupted deliveries on Tuesday and the hand-delivery deadline is being underplayed in broadcast coverage. Turnout in local elections typically tops out at 30–38%; below 30% historically benefits Reform, the Greens and the Conservatives at Labour’s expense.

Final YouGov — Reform 27%, Conservatives 21%, Labour 19%, Greens 13%

The final YouGov tracker published overnight puts Reform UK on 27% (unchanged), Conservatives on 21% (+1), Labour on 19% (unchanged) and the Greens on 13% (-1). Reform leads in the West Midlands MRP in all 13 council areas and is on course to top the poll across Wales. London MRP shows Labour holding 15 of 32 boroughs, down from 21. Bloomberg’s expert panel reaffirmed its central forecast of 1,850 Labour council seat losses.

Dive deeper
A 19% Labour share applied to today’s arithmetic still produces catastrophic seat losses because the party is defending a 2022 mid-cycle peak. The Conservative recovery to 21% is the most surprising late move and will dilute Reform’s seat count in shire England, although not its vote share. The Green 13% is structural rather than transient: the party is now polling above Labour in two London boroughs and across university constituencies. The cleanest test of the night is Sunderland: a Reform win there ends Labour’s post-1973 monopoly on the council and triggers the leadership challenge contingencies.

Cabinet Readying Friday Leadership Challenge Contingency

Cabinet sources told Bloomberg overnight that contingency planning for a Friday-morning leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer is in place. The PLP’s 20% nomination threshold — about 80 MPs — is comfortably reachable given current Cabinet-level discontent. Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner remain the principal succession candidates after Andy Burnham’s exclusion on parliamentary-seat grounds. Whip soundings are reportedly already circulating among 2024-intake MPs in marginal seats.

Dive deeper
A formal challenge requires the support of 20% of the parliamentary party — comfortably within reach — but a successful leadership change requires a candidate who can unite the cabinet faction and the union-backed left simultaneously. Streeting controls the parliamentary numbers; Rayner controls the membership. The compromise candidate scenarios remain politically thin: most plausible names sit in the Lords or hold marginal seats. The bigger structural problem is that any new leader inherits the same Brent oil shock, the same fiscal arithmetic and the same Reform polling lead — no leadership change resolves the substantive crisis.

Met Office: Showers Across Most of England; Polling-Day Turnout at Risk

The Met Office forecasts showers across most of England through the day with periods of heavier rain in the Midlands and the South East. Scotland and parts of Wales are forecast drier. Wet polling days typically reduce turnout by 2–4 percentage points. Lower turnout disproportionately hurts incumbents whose voters are less motivated, although Labour’s ground operation will work hardest in Sunderland, Wakefield and Barnsley to mitigate the effect.

Dive deeper
Reform’s base is anger-driven and therefore relatively weather-insensitive; Labour’s incumbent coalition is enthusiasm-driven and demonstrably weather-sensitive. The cumulative effect of the weather plus the Mandelson scandal plus the £310-per-car fuel premium since February is the single most adverse turnout backdrop a sitting government has faced in a UK national vote in modern times. Postal voting, where Labour has historically dominated, may be the saving variable; postal turnout typically runs at 75–80% versus 30–35% in person.

Markets Open Quietly Ahead of 22:00 Polls Close

The FTSE 100 opened up 0.2% at 8,388 in light early trading, building modestly on Wednesday’s 2% rally. Ten-year gilts pulled back to 4.90% in Asian hours, the lowest in three weeks, and sterling firmed to $1.3022. Volumes are expected to thin through the day as desks square positions ahead of the result. The genuine market event is Friday morning’s reaction to whatever Sunderland and the West Midlands produce overnight. The implied move on the FTSE is around 1.5%.

Dive deeper
A quiet pre-result session is normal but the underlying setup is unusual: London is exposed to two simultaneous binary events — the Iran memo signing and the election result — either of which can move the FTSE 1.5% in a single session. Pension-fund LDI hedging activity is reportedly elevated through Thursday, indicating institutions are neutralising rather than betting. The cleanest forward read remains the gilt curve: it has already priced a partial Iran de-escalation but has not priced any further fiscal shock from a leadership change. Friday will resolve which dominates.
One To Read

‘Starmer’s Referendum’: How Local Elections Could Expose a Fractured UK

Al Jazeera · A clear-eyed pre-vote framing of why tonight’s elections function as a verdict on Starmer’s premiership rather than a routine local poll. Walks through the structural drivers of the four-party split, what Reform’s 67-council projection actually means in seat-count terms, and the leadership-challenge mechanics that activate from Friday morning.
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Evening Briefing

Thursday 7 May 2026 — 18:10 BST

What It Means For You

  • Polls close at 22:00 BST. Photo ID is mandatory at the desk and any postal ballot still in your possession must be hand-delivered to a polling station, not posted, before 22:00 or the vote will not count. Turnout is tracking at 24% as of 17:00 according to council returning officers, suggesting a final figure of 28–32%; that is at the lower end of recent local-election ranges and the most adverse weather environment in twenty years.
  • Iran has returned a formal counter-text to the US memo via Islamabad, accepting the framework but proposing a 10-year uranium-enrichment moratorium rather than 12 and seeking clarifications on Hormuz freedom-of-navigation language. The signing window narrows from ‘within days’ to ‘this week’; expect Brent to remain rangebound around $103 until the response is published, with downside if signed and a sharp upside retracement if rejected.
  • The FTSE 100 closed marginally lower at 8,363, sterling slipped to $1.2998 and ten-year gilts edged back to 4.93%. Pension scheme members in LDI strategies should see a near-flat day; the live Friday-morning event is the seat count, not tonight’s close. A Reform sweep in Sunderland and the West Midlands could move gilts 10–15bps before London opens.

Iran War — Day 68. The war started 28 February 2026. Tehran returned its formal response on the one-page memo via Pakistan’s foreign ministry shortly after 16:00 BST, accepting the framework but pressing for a 10-year rather than 12-year uranium-enrichment moratorium and requesting clarifications on Strait of Hormuz freedom-of-navigation language. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif issued a joint statement describing the signing window as “this week”. The Israeli cabinet was briefed on the memo terms during a 14:00 BST session in Jerusalem. Brent settled at $103.20; FTSE closed at 8,363.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Returns Counter-Text on US Memo via Pakistan

Tehran delivered its formal response on the one-page memo to Islamabad shortly after 16:00 BST, accepting the framework but proposing a 10-year uranium-enrichment moratorium rather than the 12 sought by Washington. Iran also requested clarifications on Strait of Hormuz freedom-of-navigation language and on the sequencing of asset releases. The text was relayed to the White House through Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. Foreign-ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei said Tehran was “committed to the path” but required “mutual respect on terms”.

Dive deeper
A two-year gap on enrichment is bridgeable: 10 versus 12 years is a presentational rather than substantive disagreement and can be settled by a side-letter on verification frequency. The Hormuz language is the harder issue: Tehran wants explicit recognition that Iranian-flagged tankers cannot be interdicted, while Washington insists on universal freedom-of-navigation. The asset-release sequencing question hints Iran wants a tranche released on signing rather than after compliance milestones — a familiar sticking point from the 2015 JCPOA negotiations. The memo remains alive but no longer signs “within days”.
↻ Morning: Iran reviewing memo → Evening: Iran returns counter-text, 10-year moratorium ask, Hormuz tweaks.

Saudi-Pakistan Joint Statement Calls Signing Window “This Week”

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif issued an unprecedented joint communique on Thursday afternoon describing the memo as “substantively agreed in principle” and calling the signing window “this week”. The statement, released through the Saudi Press Agency and Radio Pakistan simultaneously, marks the first public co-signature by Riyadh and Islamabad on a Gulf security text in modern times. Both governments urged Washington and Tehran to “preserve the political space” that has opened.

Dive deeper
A joint Saudi-Pakistani statement is a significant diplomatic upgrade from quiet shuttle mediation. It commits both governments’ reputations to a successful outcome and creates a structural disincentive for either Tehran or Washington to walk away. The “this week” framing is the most precise public timeline yet offered. Riyadh’s public emergence consolidates a regional axis spanning the Gulf and South Asia that excludes Egypt, Turkey and the European Union from the principal track. A Saudi-hosted signing ceremony in Jeddah remains the most likely venue if the text is finalised.

Israeli Cabinet Briefed on Memo Terms in Jerusalem Session

Prime Minister Netanyahu’s security cabinet convened in Jerusalem at 14:00 BST for a formal briefing on the memo’s terms, with senior officials describing the session as “sober rather than supportive”. The Israeli position remains that any text leaving Iranian enrichment infrastructure intact is unacceptable. Officials stopped short of opposing the memo publicly. Defence minister and IDF chief of staff are reported to have flagged operational concerns about the lifting of the Hormuz mission while Iranian capability remains in place.

Dive deeper
Israeli acquiescence is a precondition for any signing in Trump’s political calculus — a public Israeli rejection would compound Republican resistance and could collapse domestic US support. The “sober rather than supportive” framing suggests Jerusalem will not actively obstruct but will not endorse. Netanyahu’s domestic coalition is fragile on this question: ultra-Orthodox partners will accept any deal; the security right will not. The decisive variable is whether the IDF leadership signals operational comfort with the verification regime, which it has not yet done. Watch for a Netanyahu-Trump call before any signing.

Russia Tightens Red Square Security; Foreign Delegation List Trimmed

The Kremlin imposed a 12-mile drone-exclusion perimeter around central Moscow on Thursday morning ahead of Friday’s Victory Day parade, alongside additional electronic-warfare deployments. The foreign delegation list was trimmed further: Hungary’s Viktor Orban and Serbia’s Aleksandar Vucic withdrew citing “scheduling”. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and North Korea’s Kim Jong-un remain confirmed. The parade will be the smallest in two decades, with no tanks and limited heavy hardware.

Dive deeper
Successive Western and now Central European withdrawals leave Putin sharing the rostrum with two pariah leaders — an image the Kremlin had hoped to avoid by securing at least one EU-aligned attendee. The drone-exclusion perimeter implicitly acknowledges Ukrainian deep-strike reach now extends reliably to Moscow oblast. Putin’s speech is the substantive event: Kremlin watchers expect a partial-mobilisation announcement deferred to autumn rather than declared from the podium. The parade itself will be optimised for television rather than military display.

Brent Settles at $103.20; Oil Options Price 55% Memo Probability

Brent crude settled at $103.20 a barrel on Thursday, holding the post-collapse range as Iran’s counter-text was digested in late London trading. WTI closed at $98.45. Implied options markets reduced the memo-signing probability within ten days from 60% to 55% on the news of Iranian counter-asks. Volatility in front-month Brent options ticked higher; the curve’s contango steepened modestly. Gold edged up to $4,825 as a hedge against breakdown.

Dive deeper
A five-percentage-point reduction in implied memo probability is consistent with a counter-text rather than an outright rejection: traders have moved the central case from “signing within days” to “signing this week”. The contango steepening signals producers locking in deferred barrels at slightly improved prices, suggesting OPEC+ confidence that the memo will not collapse. The asymmetric tail remains: a Tehran walk-away takes Brent back above $115 within a session, while a clean signing pulls it towards $90. Hedge funds reportedly added long-volatility positions into Thursday’s close.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Polling Turnout Tracking at 24% by 17:00; Final 28–32% Expected

Polling-station returns collated by the Press Association at 17:00 BST showed in-person turnout running at 24% across England, suggesting a final figure of 28–32% once the 18:00–22:00 evening surge is included. Wales and Scotland were tracking marginally higher at 26%. Wet weather across the Midlands and South-East has compressed turnout; rural Lincolnshire and rural Norfolk are reporting figures more consistent with 35%. Polling stations close at 22:00 BST.

Dive deeper
A final 28–32% turnout is at the lower end of the modern range for non-general-election votes and disproportionately disadvantages Labour, whose 2024 coalition skews younger and more weather-sensitive. Reform’s anger-driven base is among the least weather-elastic of any UK political constituency. The rural-Lincolnshire and rural-Norfolk reading is the cleanest early signal: those councils were lifelong Conservative strongholds and are now Reform targets, so high turnout there is consistent with rather than against the central-case Reform sweep. Sunderland and Wakefield turnout patterns will be the headline read overnight.

Postal Ballot Returns Hit 71%, Historically a Pro-Labour Marker

Postal ballot returns reached 71% of issued ballots by Thursday afternoon, towards the upper end of recent local-election norms and historically associated with a stronger Labour vote share than in-person turnout. Roughly 7.4 million postal votes were issued for these elections, a record for a local-election cycle. Returning officers in Sunderland and Wakefield reported postal returns above 75%. Labour campaign sources framed the figure as “the saving variable” in the party’s overnight calculations.

Dive deeper
Postal voting historically over-indexes for the incumbent party because of the over-65 voting demographic, which has shifted unevenly: pensioners are now split between Labour, Conservative and Reform in roughly equal thirds rather than concentrated around the Conservatives. The 71% return rate is therefore less informative for Labour’s overall position than it would have been a decade ago. The Sunderland and Wakefield numbers are nonetheless the most encouraging Labour signal of the day; if those councils hold, Bloomberg’s 1,850-seat-loss central case prints below 1,700.

Farage and Badenoch Close Campaigns in Midlands Marginals

Reform leader Nigel Farage held his final retail event at a working men’s club in Cannock Chase at 12:00 BST; Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch closed in Walsall. Sir Keir Starmer made no further appearances after voting in north London. Sir Ed Davey closed in Eastleigh. The choice of Cannock and Walsall by the Reform and Conservative leaders signals organisational confidence in West Midlands ground operations rather than a defensive closing posture.

Dive deeper
Closing campaigns in target rather than defended seats is the strongest forward indicator of internal projections. Farage choosing Cannock Chase, where YouGov projects a 45% Reform vote share, is a victory-lap rather than a final push. Badenoch’s appearance in Walsall is the more interesting move: it implies the Conservative private polling shows the seat genuinely in play rather than ceded to Reform. Starmer’s decision to skip a closing rally is unusual and consistent with Cabinet briefings that the Prime Minister has accepted catastrophic losses are now baked in.

FTSE Closes Down 0.1% at 8,363 as Iran Caveats Compound Election Risk

The FTSE 100 closed marginally lower at 8,363 on Thursday as Iran’s counter-text reduced the implied probability of an immediate memo signing. Sterling eased to $1.2998 and ten-year gilts ticked back to 4.93%. UK miners and oil majors gave back part of Wednesday’s gains. Volumes thinned through the afternoon as London desks squared positions before the result. The genuine market event remains Friday morning’s open, when overnight seat counts will reprice the political backdrop.

Dive deeper
A near-flat close with thinning volume is a textbook pre-event session: institutions are neutralising rather than betting. The implied move on the FTSE 100 from Friday’s open remains around 1.5% in either direction, with the political case dominating the geopolitical case for tomorrow. Pension-fund LDI hedging is reportedly elevated overnight. Gilts moving back to 4.93% gives the Treasury slightly less cushion on the autumn Budget arithmetic, but the move remains within Wednesday’s rally and not a re-pricing. The cleanest forward indicator is the early Friday Sunderland reading.
↻ Morning: FTSE 8,388 +0.2%, Gilt 4.90 → Close: FTSE 8,363 −0.1%, Gilt 4.93 (+3bps).

Whips Brief 2024 Intake on Friday-Morning Leadership Procedures

Labour whips circulated a procedural briefing to 2024-intake MPs on Thursday afternoon setting out the mechanics of a leadership challenge from Friday morning, including the 20% nomination threshold and the timeline for a confidence vote. The briefing was framed as “contingency” but the timing leaves little doubt about expectations. Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner remain the principal succession candidates. PLP sources told Bloomberg that 90–100 MPs would back a challenge motion if Sunderland falls.

Dive deeper
Distributing procedural briefings to a specific cohort of MPs the afternoon before a vote is the clearest possible signal that the parliamentary party is ready to act. The 2024-intake choice is deliberate: those MPs hold the marginal seats most exposed to Reform and have the strongest individual incentive to act. The 90–100 figure exceeds the 80-MP nomination threshold comfortably, removing “not enough names” as a reason for delay. A Friday-morning challenge would force a leadership ballot within 14 days under PLP rules, with Streeting the most likely victor on a one-round vote among MPs.
One To Read

The Night Britain Rewrote Its Politics

The Economist · A measured pre-count framing of why Thursday’s vote functions as the moment a four-party system replaces a two-party system, with consequences extending far beyond council chambers. Walks through the mechanics of how a 19% Labour share, a 27% Reform share, a 21% Conservative share and a 13% Green share interact under first-past-the-post; what the Friday-morning leadership-challenge plumbing actually does; and why the Iran memo’s timing makes the bond-market reaction more important than the seat count.
☽

Evening Briefing

Wednesday 6 May 2026 — 17:55 BST

What It Means For You

  • Brent’s 6% fall to $103 should slow further pump-price rises, but the 175p unleaded ceiling reached this week is unlikely to retrace materially for at least 7–10 days. Expect a plateau rather than meaningful relief at the forecourt; diesel margins remain compressed at independent stations.
  • Polling stations open at 07:00 and close at 22:00 tomorrow across England, Wales and Scotland. Photo ID is required; postal ballots must be hand-delivered to a polling station by 22:00. Met Office forecasts showers across most of England, so allow extra time and consider going early.
  • The FTSE 100 closed up 2% at 8,374, sterling firmed to $1.3015 and ten-year gilts eased through 5% to 4.92%. Pension scheme members in LDI-linked strategies should see a calmer Thursday open; market-implied odds of a Bank of England cut on 18 June have ticked up modestly with the lower oil price.

Iran War — Day 67. The war started 28 February 2026. Pakistani mediators briefed the White House Tuesday that Iran is “moving toward compromise” on a one-page memo to end the war. The text would declare hostilities ended and open a 30-day window on Hormuz, sanctions and a 10-year-plus uranium-enrichment moratorium; Tehran has not formally responded. Trump warned the US would bomb “at a much higher level and intensity” if Iran refuses. Brent crashed 6% to $102.95; FTSE rallied 2% to 8,374; VIX fell to 28.5. Russia broke its own 8–9 May Victory Day truce overnight with 100+ drones into Ukraine.

GEO Geopolitical

US-Iran Memo Edges Toward Conclusion as Pakistani Mediators Brief White House

Pakistani intermediaries briefed the White House on Tuesday that Iran is “moving toward compromise” on a one-page memo to end the 67-day war, with Washington expecting a formal Iranian response within 48 hours. The text would declare hostilities ended and trigger a 30-day window to resolve nuclear restrictions, Strait of Hormuz access and sanctions relief. The proposal includes a uranium-enrichment moratorium of more than ten years and the removal of Iran’s highly enriched stockpile.

Dive deeper
A one-page memo is a structurally different instrument from a comprehensive ceasefire treaty: it allows both sides to claim a political victory without committing to verifiable timelines. The 30-day negotiation window is the critical clause — it locks in a window during which neither side can resume kinetic action without bearing the diplomatic cost. The Hormuz language is reportedly the hardest sticking point: Tehran wants formal recognition that no foreign navy may interdict Iranian-flagged vessels, while Washington insists on freedom of navigation. The uranium-removal provision, if signed, would reverse the entire post-2018 trajectory of Iran’s nuclear programme.
↻ Tuesday: “exchanging messages via Pakistan” → Wednesday: White House expects Iranian response on the memo within 48 hours.

Brent Crashes 6% to $102.95 as Diplomatic Breakthrough Reprices War Premium

Brent crude fell almost 6% to settle at $102.95 a barrel on Wednesday, its sharpest single-session decline since the war began, as traders priced rising odds of a memo settlement. The move unwound four sessions of risk premium accumulated since Monday’s UAE strike. WTI fell to $98 a barrel; gasoline cracks weakened in line. The VIX dropped to 28.5, its lowest reading in four weeks, and gold gave back $57 to $4,818.

Dive deeper
A 6% single-day fall on diplomatic progress is a textbook risk-premium unwind, but the speed reveals how thin the bid had become. Producers are unhedged for sustained sub-$100 Brent: OPEC+ compliance has been weakening through April, and any genuine ceasefire risks triggering a price war on top of the diplomatic one. The VIX move signals derivatives desks are dismantling the stagflation hedges built up since Monday. Traders will watch the next 48 hours of Tehran’s formal response closely; failure of the memo would likely retrace the entire week’s move within a single session.
↻ Yesterday close: Brent $109.50, VIX 34.0 → Today close: Brent $102.95 (−6%), VIX 28.5 (−16%).

Trump Threatens Bombing at “Much Higher Level” if Iran Refuses Deal

President Trump warned on Wednesday that the United States would resume strikes “at a much higher level and intensity” than before the April ceasefire if Tehran did not sign the memo. The threat came as the President said negotiations were simultaneously making “great progress” via Islamabad. He told reporters direct US-Iran talks remained premature. The dual messaging is deliberate: maximum pressure in public while back-channel diplomacy proceeds in private.

Dive deeper
Trump’s “higher level” framing is calibrated to harden the floor under the negotiation rather than to telegraph imminent action. The deliberate refusal to authorise direct talks preserves Pakistani leverage as the sole channel and prevents Tehran from elevating the dialogue prematurely. The pattern matches the President’s familiar oscillation between threat and inducement, with the threat re-anchoring expectations every 24–48 hours. Markets read the dual signal cleanly today — Brent fell 6% on the “great progress” line rather than rising on the bombing threat — suggesting the diplomatic track is now seen as primary.

Russia Launches 100+ Drones at Ukraine Hours After Declaring Victory Day Truce

Russia attacked eastern and southern Ukraine with more than 100 attack drones overnight, hours after declaring a unilateral 8–9 May ceasefire to coincide with Victory Day commemorations in Moscow. Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said the Kremlin “broke the truce within hours of declaring it”. Ukrainian long-range drones struck Cheboksary on the Volga, killing two. Earlier strikes on a Naftogaz gas facility had killed five.

Dive deeper
Russia’s declared Victory Day truce was always conditional on Ukraine reciprocating; the overnight barrage allows the Kremlin to claim Kyiv refused while preserving operational tempo. The 100-drone scale is consistent with the Shahed launch rate Russia has sustained since March, suggesting no diversion of stocks ahead of Friday’s parade. The Cheboksary strike, hundreds of miles from the front, is Ukraine’s deepest attack of the year and signals continuing willingness to hold deep-strike capacity in reserve. Russian combat losses have now passed 1.34 million personnel since February 2022.

Moscow Strips Tanks from Victory Day Parade for First Time in Decades

The Kremlin confirmed on Wednesday that Friday’s Red Square parade will proceed without tanks, intercontinental missile systems or most heavy hardware — the smallest turnout in nearly two decades. President Zelensky called the decision “a sign of weakness”, saying Moscow “fears drones may buzz over Red Square”. Foreign delegations have been cut back; Belarusian and North Korean leaders remain confirmed. The Kremlin cites “security considerations”.

Dive deeper
Stripping armour from the Victory Day parade is an unmistakable signal of equipment shortages, however the Kremlin chooses to frame it. The 2024 parade already displayed only a single T-34 tank; the 2026 absence completes the trajectory. Air-defence concerns are real: Ukrainian deep-strike drones have repeatedly entered Moscow oblast over the past month. The decision also reflects domestic political calculation — a smaller parade limits televised images of war casualties returning to families ahead of regional governor appointments scheduled for late May. Putin’s speech is the substantive event to watch.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Polls Open in 14 Hours — Starmer Faces His “Referendum”

Voters across England, Wales and Scotland go to the polls in 14 hours in elections framed by all major parties as a verdict on Sir Keir Starmer’s premiership. Polling stations open at 07:00 Thursday and close at 22:00. Senedd, Holyrood and roughly 5,000 English council seats are contested simultaneously. The final YouGov tracker puts Reform on 27%, the Conservatives on 21%, Labour on 19% and the Greens on 13%.

Dive deeper
A 19% Labour share would be the worst going into a UK national vote since 1918 by some measures. The four-party split fundamentally changes the seat-count maths: a 19% national vote share converts to wildly different council outcomes depending on the exact distribution between Reform and the Greens. Cabinet contingency planning for a Friday-morning leadership challenge is reportedly in place; whip soundings are circulating. The PLP’s 20% nomination threshold — around 80 MPs — is a number any plausible challenger can clear given current Cabinet-level discontent.

FTSE 100 Closes Up 2% at 8,374 on Iran Diplomatic Breakthrough

London’s FTSE 100 closed 2% higher at 8,374 on Wednesday as the Brent collapse drove a sharp risk-on rotation across European bourses. Sterling firmed to $1.3015; ten-year gilt yields eased back through 5% to 4.92%, the largest single-session fall in three weeks. The move offsets most of Monday’s election-week volatility, although the Treasury’s fiscal arithmetic still does not hold at the year-to-date Brent average. UK miners and oils led the gains.

Dive deeper
Gilts moving back through 5% gives the Treasury slightly more room to defend the autumn Budget timetable, but the relief is conditional on the memo actually being signed. Sterling’s recovery to $1.3015 reflects dollar weakness as much as UK strength: the Iran de-escalation premium is a global trade. The bond market’s 14-basis-point rally suggests the buy-side is pricing perhaps a 50% probability of a memo being signed within ten days. A Reform breakthrough on Thursday night would partially retrace the gilt rally; a Labour-hold scenario would extend it.
↻ Morning: FTSE 8,210, Gilt 5.06 → Close: FTSE 8,374 (+2%), Gilt 4.92 (−14bps).

Bloomberg Reaffirms 1,850 Labour Council Seat Loss Forecast

Bloomberg’s expert election panel reaffirmed its central forecast on Wednesday afternoon: Labour will lose 1,850 council seats Thursday night, the worst single-night loss for any incumbent governing party in modern records. Cabinet sources accept 2,000 as the realistic ceiling. Reform UK is projected to take outright control of Sunderland, Thurrock, Wakefield and Barnsley from Labour, alongside Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk from the Conservatives. The Greens are projected to gain 555 seats.

Dive deeper
The 1,850 figure has held steady through three days of polling movement, suggesting forecasters have settled on a central case. Reform’s projected sweep of four Labour heartland councils is the more politically explosive detail: Sunderland and Wakefield are post-war Labour fixtures whose loss reframes the party’s northern coalition entirely. The Greens taking 555 seats from a base of 141 confirms the four-party fracture is real on the ground rather than purely a polling artefact. The combined Labour-Conservative seat share would fall below 60% for the first time in any nationwide UK vote.

Reform Tops YouGov Final MRP in Every West Midlands Council

YouGov’s final pre-election MRP, published Wednesday morning, projects Reform UK leading the poll in all 13 West Midlands council areas, including 45% in Cannock Chase and 43% in Nuneaton and Tamworth. Regional vote share stands at 30%; nationally Reform polls 27% to Labour’s 12%. London projections show Reform ahead in three boroughs for the first time. Nigel Farage held his final retail rally in Cannock Chase late Wednesday afternoon.

Dive deeper
Cannock Chase voted Brexit, swung to Boris Johnson in 2019 and to Labour in 2024 — a 45% Reform projection there is the cleanest indicator of the realignment’s scale. The London boroughs are the more politically significant signal: Reform topping any London council was unthinkable in 2024, and projections now show three. The 12% national Labour share would be the worst Labour performance in any nationwide vote since 1918. Farage’s decision to close in Cannock rather than Clacton signals confidence in West Midlands organisation rather than the South-East coast.

Reeves’s Fiscal Buffer Partially Restored as Brent Falls Through $103

The Brent collapse to $102.95 has partially restored Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s eroded fiscal headroom, although Treasury officials cautioned the year-to-date average remains above the OBR’s March central forecast of $82. The fall takes the implied annual UK fuel-import bill back below the level priced into the Spring Statement. Markets ticked up the implied probability of a Bank of England cut at the 18 June meeting; the MPC held at 3.75% on 30 April with one member voting for a rise.

Dive deeper
A single day’s oil move does not restore Reeves’s £9.9 billion buffer in any meaningful sense, but it does change the immediate political optics: the autumn Budget arithmetic is no longer mathematically broken at current Brent. The Bank of England’s April scenario analysis foresaw inflation peaking at 6.2% under prolonged conflict; the milder scenario peaks at 3.6% by year-end, and today’s move pushes the path closer to the latter. CPI stood at 3.3% in March. The 18 June MPC decision is now genuinely live again rather than a foregone conclusion.
One To Read

Local Elections Could Hasten the Exit of Britain’s Embattled Prime Minister

The Washington Post · A measured outsider’s account of how a single Thursday-night seat count could trigger the most consequential parliamentary leadership reckoning in a decade. Maps the structural pressures — Reform’s rise, the Greens’ northern advance, fuel-price politics, the Mandelson fallout — that have collapsed Starmer’s coalition, and surveys the candidate plumbing already in place behind the scenes.
☼

Morning Briefing

Wednesday 6 May 2026 — 12:38 BST

What It Means For You

  • Brent has eased to $109.50 from Monday’s $114 spike, but pump prices are still catching up. Petrol is expected to push 175p and diesel above 205p this week. The cumulative additional fuel cost since 28 February now exceeds £265 per car for the average UK household.
  • Polls open tomorrow at 07:00 across England, the Welsh Senedd and the Scottish Parliament. Photo ID is required: check accepted forms before leaving home, and confirm your polling station on your card. Postal vote returns must reach the local returning officer by 10pm Thursday or be hand-delivered to a polling station.
  • Ten-year gilt yields traded above 5% this morning and Bitcoin broke $80,000 overnight; the FTSE has drifted to 8,210. Pension scheme members in defined-benefit or LDI-linked schemes may wish to check their gilt exposure given the third consecutive session of double-digit basis-point swings.

Iran War — Day 67. The war started 28 February 2026. UAE intercepts second wave of Iran-attributed missiles and drones overnight; IRGC publicly denies responsibility. US says “offensive phase” over but rejects any Iranian control of the Strait of Hormuz; Trump warns Iran would be “blown off the face of the earth” if US vessels are targeted. Brent eases to $109.50 after Monday’s $114 spike. Russia broke Ukraine’s unilateral truce overnight with 108 drones and three missiles; 27 killed in earlier strikes including five at a Naftogaz gas facility. Polls open tomorrow at 07:00. Gilts trade through 5%.

GEO Geopolitical

UAE Intercepts Second Wave of Iran-Attributed Missiles and Drones

The United Arab Emirates said its air defences intercepted further ballistic and cruise missiles overnight, the second consecutive day of strikes attributed to Iran. The Foreign Ministry called the attacks “treacherous aggression”. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps publicly denied responsibility late Tuesday, deepening uncertainty over Tehran’s chain of command. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain remain on heightened air-defence alert.

Dive deeper
The IRGC denial complicates the diplomatic response: if Tehran cannot or will not own the strikes, Gulf states have no clear interlocutor for de-escalation. The pattern — ballistic and cruise missiles intercepted offshore, drones reaching the Fujairah energy complex — suggests two distinct platforms operating in tandem rather than a single rogue unit. The UAE has now requested expanded US Patriot and THAAD coverage, and Bahrain is considering a similar request. The Gulf Cooperation Council, the European Union and Jordan have all condemned the attacks, but coordinated retaliation remains off the table while Washington insists the “offensive phase” is complete.

US Declares “Offensive Phase” Over but Rejects Tehran Control of Hormuz

Senior US officials told reporters Tuesday evening that the offensive phase of the war is over, but cautioned the United States will not permit Tehran to dictate access to the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump warned Iran would be “blown off the face of the earth” if its forces target US vessels in the strait, and said Iran “better hope” the current ceasefire holds. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi insisted there is “no military solution to a political crisis”.

Dive deeper
The two statements set incompatible terms. Washington wants a return to pre-war freedom of navigation without conceding any leverage on the nuclear file; Tehran wants any guarantee of access to come with formal recognition of its strategic position in the Gulf. The semantic distinction between an “offensive phase” ending and the war ending is doing significant work: it allows the administration to claim a win without giving up the option of further strikes. Markets read this as a structural standoff rather than a near-term resolution, and Brent has settled around $109 as traders price extended uncertainty rather than full reopening.

Russia Breaks Kyiv’s Truce With 108 Drones and Three Missiles Overnight

Ukraine said Russia violated its unilateral 5–6 May ceasefire by launching 108 attack drones and three missiles at Ukrainian cities overnight. Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said “Putin only cares about military parades, not human lives”, in reference to Moscow’s rival 8–9 May Victory Day truce. Ukrainian air defences engaged the bulk of the swarm; impacts were reported in Kharkiv, Sumy and Zaporizhzhia regions.

Dive deeper
Kyiv’s 5–6 May truce was always intended to expose Moscow’s parade-protection truce as performative, and Russia’s overnight breach delivers exactly that political result. The 108-drone barrage is the largest single-night Shahed launch since March, and the targeting pattern suggests Moscow wants to fix Ukrainian air defences in place ahead of any follow-on missile salvo. The Victory Day parade itself has been scaled back to the smallest in two decades, with no tanks or strategic missile systems present — a tacit admission of equipment shortages. Russian combat losses have now passed 1.34 million personnel since February 2022.

Russia Strikes Ukraine Naftogaz Facility; Death Toll 27 Across Two Days

Russian strikes on Tuesday killed at least 27 people across Ukrainian cities, including five at a Naftogaz gas facility hit by a missile in the south. Glide bombs killed 12 in Zaporizhzhia, hitting a car repair shop and residential blocks in one of the worst attacks on the city this year. President Zelensky condemned what he called Moscow’s “utter cynicism” in calling for a Victory Day truce while continuing daily strikes.

Dive deeper
Targeting Naftogaz infrastructure ahead of summer is strategically calibrated: although Ukraine’s gas demand falls in warmer months, the country must rebuild storage and repair injection capacity now to be ready for next winter. The pattern of concentrated strikes on Zaporizhzhia indicates Russian forces are softening defences ahead of an expected summer push around the Dnipro. Western air-defence resupply has slowed in recent weeks as Patriot interceptor stocks are diverted to the Gulf. The result is a rising tempo of successful Russian strikes against urban targets that would have been intercepted in the first quarter.

Starmer Condemns UAE Strikes — “Escalation Must Cease”

Sir Keir Starmer used a brief Downing Street statement on Tuesday to condemn the strikes on the United Arab Emirates and call for “escalation to cease”, his first substantive public intervention on the Gulf crisis in over a week. The Prime Minister pledged the United Kingdom would continue to support its Gulf partners. RAF Typhoons remain at Diego Garcia and HMS Duncan is on station in the Arabian Sea. The statement came hours before campaigning was due to wind down ahead of Thursday’s polls.

Dive deeper
Foreign-policy interventions are politically risky for a Prime Minister polling at 22%, but the UAE attacks gave Starmer rare cover to project statesmanship at a moment when domestic news is uniformly hostile. Whitehall has been quietly working to keep the UK’s Gulf footprint in step with Washington while avoiding direct combat — a balance that has held since the 8 April ceasefire but is now under pressure. Reports suggest the National Security Council is considering further air-defence assistance to the UAE. Whether voters notice the intervention before they cast ballots tomorrow is doubtful: the doorstep conversation remains pump prices, channel crossings and Mandelson.

UK UK Domestic Politics

One Day to Polling — “Starmer’s Referendum” Looms

Voters across England, Wales and Scotland head to the polls tomorrow in elections all major parties have framed as a verdict on Sir Keir Starmer’s two-year-old government. Devolved elections to the Senedd and Scottish Parliament run alongside English council polls. Reform UK, the Greens and the nationalist parties are forecast to be the principal beneficiaries; Labour is bracing for losses of up to 2,000 council seats and the loss of the Senedd for the first time.

Dive deeper
The referendum framing is itself a novelty: midterm local elections are usually presented by the governing party as ward-level contests. Starmer’s campaign team accepted the national framing only when it became clear the polling could not be reframed downwards. Cabinet contingency planning for a Friday morning leadership challenge is reportedly already in place, with whip counts circulating. The Parliamentary Labour Party’s nomination threshold — 20% of MPs — means at least 80 nominations are needed to put a name on any future ballot, a number any plausible challenger can clear given current discontent.

YouGov Final MRP: Reform Tops Poll in All 13 West Midlands Councils

YouGov’s pre-election MRP, finalised this morning, projects Reform UK leading the poll in all 13 West Midlands council areas. The model puts Reform on 45% in Cannock Chase and 43% in Nuneaton and Tamworth, with a regional vote share of 30% across the 13 councils. London projections show Reform leading on three borough councils for the first time. Nationally, the model has Reform on 27% and Labour on 12%.

Dive deeper
The West Midlands result is the bellwether: the region voted for Brexit, swung to Boris Johnson in 2019 and to Labour in 2024, and is now consolidating behind Reform. If MRP-projected vote shares hold, Reform will inherit not just councils but the operational machinery — staff, buildings, procurement budgets — that turns a protest movement into a party of administration. London is the more politically explosive number: Reform topping a single London council was unthinkable two years ago. Labour’s 12% national share would be the worst Labour performance in any nationwide vote since 1918.

Streeting, Rayner, Burnham: Successor Plumbing Already in Place

Parliamentary briefings now openly discuss successor candidates ahead of any Friday morning leadership challenge. Health Secretary Wes Streeting, former Deputy PM Angela Rayner and Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham are the named contingencies. Cabinet ministers are reportedly being polled by whips to test loyalty; lobby briefings overnight indicated at least three Cabinet ministers have privately concluded Sir Keir’s position is no longer tenable beyond the weekend.

Dive deeper
Each successor implies a different fiscal posture. Streeting is the centrist continuity option, likely to retain Reeves’s framework and reassure gilt markets. Rayner draws on Labour’s soft left and would face immediate questions about borrowing and tax. Burnham must first secure a parliamentary seat — a process that takes weeks and effectively requires a sitting MP to stand down for him. The PLP’s nomination rules favour the candidate with the largest existing parliamentary base, which currently means Streeting. None of the three has formally declared, and none will before the polls close, but private soundings have been under way for at least a fortnight.

Gilts Trade Through 5%; Sterling Holds $1.2965; FTSE Drifts to 8,210

Ten-year gilt yields traded above 5% in early Wednesday trading as the bond market priced election uncertainty alongside the second day of UAE strikes. Sterling held narrowly above $1.2965 against the dollar; the FTSE 100 drifted to 8,210, a 0.66% decline, with energy stocks lower as Brent eased to $109.50. Bitcoin broke $80,000 overnight in Asian trading. Reeves’s fiscal headroom is now exhausted at these gilt levels.

Dive deeper
The gilt market is functioning, but it is functioning under stress. The third consecutive session of double-digit basis-point intraday swings is the kind of pattern that prompts pension trustees to call emergency board meetings. The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee is monitoring; market participants expect a verbal intervention from the Governor before Thursday’s open if yields move materially higher. The Treasury has cancelled a planned gilt auction tap scheduled for Thursday morning — an attempt to remove a supply event from a sensitive 24-hour window. The Bitcoin move reflects safe-haven flows and dollar weakness rather than crypto-specific catalysts.

Channel Crossings Total Hits 6,400; Doorstep Issue Number One

Border Force responded to additional small-boat sightings overnight, taking the cumulative 2026 crossings total above 6,400 — on track to overtake last year’s record before the summer crossing season begins. The Home Office continues to point to 42,000 prevented crossings under the Anglo-French enforcement deal. Doorstep canvassers across coastal and southern seats report the issue has overtaken cost of living as the single most-mentioned topic.

Dive deeper
The 6,400 figure is the fastest pre-summer accumulation on record, well ahead of the same point in 2024 and 2025. The political timing is devastating for Labour: every doorstep conversation in Kent, Sussex and Essex coastal seats now hinges on a number the government cannot meaningfully reduce in 24 hours. The Anglo-French agreement signed in March has made marginal differences to the supply side, but smuggling networks have rerouted around the new enforcement zones. Yvette Cooper has no scheduled media tomorrow — an absence opposition strategists will exploit on the morning shows.
One To Read

Starmer’s Referendum: How Local Elections Could Expose a Fractured UK

Al Jazeera · A clear-eyed survey of how the four-party fracture has reshaped local politics, with Reform, the Greens and the nationalist parties all eating into Labour’s historic base. Maps the constituency-level mechanics that turn 27% national vote shares into council majorities, and asks whether multiparty politics now make a working Labour majority structurally impossible.
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Weekly Roundup

The stories that defined this week View roundup
Week of 27 April–3 May 2026

The Week In Numbers

  • Brent crude traced its widest weekly range since the war began — opening near $108, spiking to $126 overnight on Wednesday after Trump’s “choking like a stuffed pig” blockade pledge, then settling at $109.96 on Friday as Tehran’s 14-point proposal was forwarded through Pakistan. The trading corridor has now stabilised in the $107–$111 band, but Goldman Sachs maintains its $115 three-month target and Citi’s $150 scenario is no longer treated as an outlier
  • Ten-year gilt yields broke through 5 per cent on Tuesday for the first sustained period since 2008, peaked at 5.13 per cent on Wednesday morning, and closed Friday at 4.96 per cent — below the threshold but with the “Starmer premium” firmly entrenched. The Bank of England held Bank Rate at 3.75 per cent in an 8–1 split, with Chief Economist Huw Pill alone dissenting for a hike; Bailey abandoned the single forecast for the first time and published three war scenarios with CPI peaking between 3.5 per cent and above 6 per cent
  • Lloyds Banking Group cut its 2026 UK GDP forecast to 0.5 per cent, lifted CPI to 3.4 per cent, withdrew its expectation of any rate cuts this year and projected unemployment peaking at 5.6 per cent — the first major UK-specific stagflation downgrade of the cycle. Pump prices held at 165–170p with diesel above 200p, and final pre-election polls put Reform at 27–28 per cent against Labour’s 18–19 per cent with four days to local elections

What Moved Forward

Iran Submits 14-Point Peace Plan via Pakistan

Geopolitical

Tehran on Saturday formally lodged a fourteen-point proposal through Pakistani intermediaries, the most detailed offer of the war and the first to engage with Washington’s nuclear demands rather than ringfencing them. Trump confirmed overnight he would “soon be reviewing” the document but warned of renewed war if Iran “misbehaves”, telling reporters he “can’t imagine” the plan would prove acceptable. The submission preserves the diplomatic channel and gives both sides cover for further inaction; whether it produces a durable framework or simply absorbs another rejection cycle will define the second half of May.

King Charles Addresses Joint Session of Congress

Geopolitical

King Charles III on Tuesday became the first British king — and only the second British monarch — to address a joint session of the United States Congress, describing the past 250 years as a story of “reconciliation and renewal” producing “one of the greatest alliances in human history”. The state visit, which included an Oval Office meeting, a White House banquet, and a 9/11 memorial stop in New York, generated the warmest UK–US imagery in years. The political effect was muted by the simultaneous Privileges Committee vote in Westminster, which split the screen unhelpfully, but the underlying message — that the institutional alliance is intact regardless of Downing Street’s troubles — landed cleanly in Washington.

Ukraine’s Long-Range Campaign Reaches Strategic Depth

Geopolitical

Kyiv struck the Tuapse oil refinery on the Black Sea coast for the fourth time in a fortnight, hit a Transneft pumping station 1,400 kilometres deep in Perm Krai — the longest-range strike of the war — and confirmed the destruction of a Russian Su-57 stealth fighter on the ground at Chelyabinsk. Western strike packages are now arriving at operational units in volume, and Moscow has pulled air-defence allocation south to protect refining capacity. The campaign has transitioned from harassment to attrition: Russia must now choose between protecting front-line assets and protecting the economic engine that funds them.

Privileges Committee Referral Defeated — But Fifteen Labour Abstentions

Domestic

The Conservative motion to refer the Prime Minister to the Privileges Committee over the Mandelson vetting process was defeated on Tuesday evening, but fifteen Labour MPs declined the three-line whip and abstained — the largest open dissent of this Parliament. McSweeney’s “serious error of judgement” testimony to the Foreign Affairs Committee, in which he described seeing the Mandelson–Epstein photographs as “a knife through my soul”, made the whip materially harder to enforce. The vote bought Starmer time but signalled that parliamentary discipline is fraying ahead of polling day.

What Stalled

US–Iran Diplomatic Track Collapses Into Total Deadlock

Geopolitical

The week opened with Secretary of State Rubio rejecting Tehran’s Hormuz-for-ports proposal as “unacceptable”, hardened mid-week into Trump’s “choking like a stuffed pig” pledge to maintain the blockade until Iran abandons enrichment, and closed with Trump telling reporters he was “not satisfied” with the revised proposal and might be “better off without a deal at all”. Iran insists Hormuz transit and the nuclear file are separate sovereign matters; Washington insists they are inseparable. Forty-eight ships have been turned away from Iranian ports in twenty days; 20,000 mariners remain stranded in the Gulf. The structural gap on enrichment is now the binding constraint, and neither side can concede without undermining its core position.

Lebanon Ceasefire Fraying — Worst 24-Hour Toll Since Extension

Geopolitical

Israeli airstrikes on three south Lebanon villages overnight Friday killed nine people, including two children and five women — the worst breach of the April truce since it took effect. Sunday’s strikes raised the 24-hour toll to 41, with approximately 50 Hezbollah-linked sites destroyed across Siddiqine, Bint Jbeil and Al Smaaiyah. Prime Minister Salam called the original strikes “a flagrant violation”; France is preparing a Security Council protest. The Lebanon track has functioned as the region’s sole stable element since 17 April; that classification no longer applies, and an Iranian military official confirmed on Sunday that renewed war with the United States remains “a possibility”.

Putin’s Victory Day Truce Gambit Rejected

Geopolitical

President Putin used a 90-minute call with Trump on Tuesday evening to propose a one-day Ukraine ceasefire over the 9 May Victory Day parade, with the Kremlin tying the concession to potential Russian intercession on Iran. Trump publicly endorsed the proposal; President Zelensky dismissed it as “manipulation” and countered with a “long-term, reliable, guaranteed” ceasefire, asking whether the offer covered “a few hours of security for a parade in Moscow, or something more”. The exchange neutralises Putin’s pageantry trap but leaves the structural gap on Donbas territory untouched. Polymarket prices a 2026 ceasefire at 25.5 per cent.

Labour Leadership Succession Now Discussed in Print

Domestic

Bloomberg, British Brief and the Telegraph all reported this week that succession planning is now openly under way, with Wes Streeting reportedly securing more than 81 declarations and Angela Rayner positioned as the membership and union choice. Andy Burnham — consistently the strongest hypothetical leader in private polling — has been excluded on the grounds that securing a Westminster seat would take too long. Starmer was unable to confirm at PMQs that Reeves would remain as Chancellor; Cooper and Miliband are both being briefed for the Treasury. The reshuffle pencilled for Monday 11 May will be calibrated to the scale of Thursday’s losses.

What To Watch Next Week

Local Elections Thursday 7 May — Reform Projected 67 Councils

Domestic

Polling day is four days away. Reform UK is projected to take control of 67 councils from a starting position of zero; Labour is forecast to fall from 92 to 16 majorities and lose between 1,500 and 1,900 of the 2,557 seats it is defending. Sunderland, Wakefield, Thurrock and Barnsley are expected to flip from Labour to Reform; Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk from no-overall-control or Conservative to Reform. Forty-seven councils in total are projected to change hands — the largest churn since 1995. Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds are the bellwethers: if any falls, the parliamentary arithmetic for a confidence move changes overnight.

Senate War Powers Vote Tuesday — 60-Day Clock Expired

Geopolitical

The 60-day War Powers Resolution window for Operation Epic Fury expired on Friday without congressional authorisation. Senator Chris Murphy will introduce a privileged resolution on Tuesday demanding US forces withdraw from hostilities with Iran absent a formal declaration of war; six Republicans have indicated support and Senate passage now appears likely. The President has signalled an immediate veto and the House remains aligned with the administration, making override mathematically improbable — but each successive 60-day window will force a fresh floor vote, locking the campaign into a rolling political dispute through the midterms and energising opposition to the $1.5 trillion war supplemental.

Bank Holiday Tuesday Open — Gilts and Oil Reset

Markets

Markets reopen on Tuesday morning to whatever has happened over the bank holiday weekend — a more dangerous setup than usual given thin liquidity and elevated geopolitical risk. Gilts at 4.96 per cent have tested 5 per cent four times in ten days; each test weakens the resistance and a Sunday-paper poll shock or a US rejection of the 14-point plan would push yields back through. Pill’s lone dissent gives markets a hawkish anchor for the June meeting; if the May inflation print exceeds 4 per cent, his minority view becomes the baseline. The Office for Budget Responsibility’s urgent fiscal-sustainability update is scheduled for 12 May.

Reshuffle 11 May — Cooper, Miliband, or Reset

Domestic

The post-election reshuffle remains pencilled for Monday 11 May, with scope determined by the scale of Thursday’s losses. A bad night triggers a limited reshuffle with Reeves as the headline casualty and Cooper at the Treasury; a catastrophic night — losing Birmingham, Manchester or Leeds — could trigger a wholesale Cabinet reset, with Labour’s soft Left pressing for Miliband at the Treasury and bond traders flagging a 25 basis-point spread widening on that choice. Sacking Reeves does not lower the price of oil; replacing ministers does not reopen Hormuz. The reshuffle’s political utility runs only as far as the next pump-price fortnight.

One To Read This Weekend

Trump Said His Blockade Would Cause Iran’s Oil Industry to ‘Explode’ This Week. Why That Won’t Happen

CNBC · The indispensable explainer on why the physical mechanics of Iran’s oil industry mean Trump’s blockade timetable cannot deliver a rapid collapse — and therefore why the standoff is likely to last months rather than weeks. Read this to frame the 14-point plan, the gilt market’s 5 per cent tests and the Bank of England’s three war scenarios as a single connected story.
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Morning Briefing

Tuesday 5 May 2026 — 07:59 BST

What It Means For You

  • Brent settled overnight at $114.20 after Monday’s 5.96% surge to $114.44, the highest level since the war began. UK pump prices are projected to add a further 4–6p over the week, taking petrol towards 175p and diesel above 205p. With London markets reopening this morning after the bank holiday, the FTSE is indicated to open down half a percent and gilts to sell off through 5.0%.
  • Iran fired four cruise missiles at the UAE last night and struck the Fujairah oil zone with a drone — the first direct attack on Emirati soil since the 8 April ceasefire. Three Indian workers were injured. Trump’s ‘Project Freedom’ began guiding ships through the Strait of Hormuz on Monday; two US-flagged vessels exited successfully but Iranian forces traded fire with US assets within hours.
  • Two days remain until Thursday’s local elections. With Parliament in recess, the campaign is now reduced to broadcast set-pieces and doorstep work. Reform UK is projected to gain 67 councils from a base of zero, while Labour is forecast to lose three-quarters of its council majorities. Bitcoin briefly broke $80,000 in Asian trading overnight, its first time at that level since January.

Iran War — Day 66. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran strikes UAE overnight: four cruise missiles, drone hits Fujairah oil zone, three injured. Project Freedom begins; US and Iranian forces trade shots in Hormuz; ceasefire status unclear. Brent settled at $114.20. Lebanon death toll since 2 March now 2,696. Ukraine declares unilateral truce 5–6 May; rejects Russia’s 8–9 May Victory Day truce as “not serious”. London markets reopen at 08:00 after bank holiday Monday. Two days to local elections.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Strikes UAE Overnight — Four Missiles, Drone Hits Fujairah Oil Zone

Iran fired four cruise missiles at the United Arab Emirates late Monday; three were intercepted over Emirati territorial waters and one fell into the sea. Separately, a drone strike at the Fujairah Petroleum Industries Zone ignited a major fire that injured three Indian workers. It is the first direct Iranian attack on UAE soil since the Pakistani-mediated 8 April ceasefire and follows the launch of Trump’s ‘Project Freedom’ operation in Hormuz hours earlier.

Dive deeper
An Iranian military official told state media that Tehran “had no plan” to attack the UAE, suggesting the strike may have been authorised by an IRGC commander rather than the central political leadership. That ambiguity is itself dangerous because it indicates the chain of command can no longer be relied upon to hold. The Fujairah strike is strategically calibrated: the FOIZ handles bunkering for tankers re-routed to avoid Hormuz, so hitting it threatens the alternative shipping route as well as the strait itself. Israel and Bahrain are now on heightened alert, and the Saudi response over the next 24 hours will be watched closely. The 8 April ceasefire architecture is functionally over.

Project Freedom Begins — Two US-Flagged Ships Exit Hormuz

US Central Command launched Project Freedom on Monday morning Gulf time, deploying destroyers, more than 100 aircraft and 15,000 personnel to clear a one-way exit corridor through the Strait of Hormuz. CENTCOM confirmed two US-flagged vessels were assisted out of the strait by mid-afternoon. The operation explicitly does not involve direct escort of commercial ships, with Cooper conceding the Navy lacks the assets to escort the hundreds of vessels currently stranded.

Dive deeper
The semantic distinction between “escorting” and “guiding” matters operationally and politically. Direct escort would oblige the US Navy to engage Iranian forces firing on commercial vessels under its protection; a one-way defensive corridor permits selective engagement and plausible disengagement. Two ships exiting in a day is symbolic rather than substantive: roughly 2,000 ships and 20,000 mariners remain stranded in the Gulf. The deeper risk is that Project Freedom forces Iran into a binary choice between accepting US dominance of the strait or attacking US assets — and Tehran’s Monday strikes on the UAE suggest it has chosen the latter. Markets will price an extended blockade through the summer.

US and Iranian Forces Trade Shots in Strait — Trump Refuses to Confirm Truce

The US and Iranian militaries exchanged fire in the Strait of Hormuz on Monday after the launch of Project Freedom, marking the most serious direct US-Iran exchange since the April ceasefire. Asked by conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt whether the truce remained in force, President Trump replied: “Well, I can’t tell you that.” He warned Iranian forces they would be “blown off the face of the Earth” if they targeted US ships in the strait or wider Persian Gulf.

Dive deeper
Trump’s public refusal to confirm the ceasefire is a tell: it preserves his freedom to either escalate or de-escalate depending on the next 48 hours of Iranian behaviour. The exchange of shots was reportedly low-intensity — warning fire rather than targeted strikes — but the fact that no political channel intervened to prevent it is significant. The diplomatic apparatus that managed the April ceasefire (Pakistani mediation, the 14-point Iranian proposal) is now visibly inactive. Tehran’s 14-point plan was always going to founder on the nuclear question; what has replaced it is a return to the kinetic phase of the war, this time with US forces engaged on a near-daily basis rather than only in set-piece strikes.

Lebanon Death Toll Hits 2,696 as Israel Issues New Displacement Orders

Lebanon’s Ministry of Health confirmed late Monday that Israeli operations have killed 2,696 people in the country since the 2 March escalation. The IDF issued fresh displacement orders covering villages in southern Lebanon beyond its current zone of occupation, in a move Beirut characterised as a “de facto annexation”. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said no peace talks could begin until Israel implemented the existing ceasefire in full.

Dive deeper
The Lebanon track has been deteriorating in slow motion since mid-April; Monday’s expanded displacement orders mark a qualitative shift towards permanent Israeli presence beyond the original buffer zone. Reports indicate that if no agreement is reached by mid-May, Israel intends to seek US backing for an expanded ground campaign — a move that would shatter the regional ceasefire architecture. Hezbollah, never a formal signatory to the April truce, retains the option to escalate without breaching any signed commitment. The convergence of Lebanon escalation with the Hormuz crisis is the worst-case scenario regional analysts have warned of for two months.

Ukraine Declares Unilateral Truce; Rejects Russia’s Victory Day Ceasefire

Ukraine announced a unilateral ceasefire from midnight tonight running into the morning of 6 May, after rejecting Russia’s declared 8–9 May truce timed for the 81st anniversary of Soviet Victory in WWII. President Zelensky called observing a Russian military holiday “not serious”. Ukrainian drones struck a high-rise residential complex in Moscow overnight; Russia launched 70 drones at Ukraine in a single afternoon and missile strikes killed at least eight in Kharkiv region.

Dive deeper
Competing ceasefire windows have become a propaganda battleground rather than a serious de-escalation effort. Kyiv’s 5–6 May truce is calibrated to expose Moscow’s 8–9 May version as a parade-protection measure rather than a peace gesture. The Moscow drone strike, ahead of the Victory Day Parade rehearsals, is a deliberate signal that Russian airspace is no longer secure even in the capital. Putin has revealed that GDP contracted in the first two months of 2026, and Russian forces suffered net territorial losses last month for the first time since 2024 — the strategic balance has quietly shifted, even as the daily death toll mounts.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Two Days to Polling — Reform Projected to Take 67 Councils

Two days from Thursday’s local elections, Reform UK remains on course to take control of 67 councils from a starting position of zero. Labour is forecast to lose three-quarters of its 92 council majorities. Sunderland, Wakefield, Thurrock and Barnsley are all projected to flip from Labour to Reform; Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk are forecast to fall to Reform from no-overall-control or Conservative administrations. The bank holiday weekend confirmed Labour’s polling has not moved.

Dive deeper
A jump from zero councils to 67 has no modern parallel. The councils projected to flip are Labour’s industrial heartland, held for generations rather than swing territory. The Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk shifts are arguably more politically significant: they convert Reform from a protest insurgency into a party that runs services, sets council tax and writes planning policy. YouGov’s West Midlands MRP, published over the weekend, has Reform topping the poll in all 13 council areas — a clean sweep in territory the party held no councillors in 2022. The implication is that the 67-council projection may understate the true scale of Reform’s gains.

Starmer’s Approval at 22% as Final Campaign Push Begins

Just 22% of Britons believe Sir Keir Starmer is doing well as Prime Minister, according to YouGov’s pre-election readout published over the bank holiday weekend. The Mandelson-Epstein scandal continues to drag; the Greens are polling 13–16% and competing with Labour in urban seats. The Prime Minister has no scheduled broadcast appearances today. Reform leader Nigel Farage has confirmed his £5 million pre-election spending push has now exhausted, with all final-week effort directed to the West Midlands.

Dive deeper
A 22% approval rating two days from a national vote is the worst Prime Ministerial position recorded ahead of any local elections in the YouGov series. Starmer’s problem is that the structural factors driving his unpopularity — high pump prices, the Mandelson scandal, the Iran war — are entirely outside his immediate control. The contrast with Farage, who has run a tightly-disciplined target-seat campaign, is unflattering. Internal Labour briefing now openly acknowledges the “catastrophe scenario” in which the party loses Sunderland, Wakefield and Barnsley simultaneously — a result that would trigger an immediate succession contest by Friday lunchtime.

Channel Crossings — Almost 900 Cross in 72 Hours; Two Drown South of Boulogne

Border Force vessels responded to multiple small-boat sightings over the bank holiday weekend, with almost 900 migrants crossing since Friday. The cumulative total for 2026 now stands at 6,077 — one of the highest early-year figures on record. Two migrants died on Sunday when their boat got into difficulties south of Boulogne. The Home Office reiterated that the new Anglo-French enforcement deal has stopped 42,000 attempted crossings since the election.

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A weekend total of 900 crossings is the worst pre-election news the Home Office could deliver, validating the Reform campaign’s central claim that Labour has failed to control the border. The 6,077 cumulative figure puts 2026 on track to exceed 2024’s total before the summer crossing season has even begun. The two deaths near Boulogne are a tragic but politically combustible reminder that the smuggling networks remain operational despite the new French agreement. Yvette Cooper has no public appearances scheduled today — an absence opposition strategists will exploit. The crossings story has now overtaken the cost of living as the dominant doorstep concern in coastal constituencies.

Markets Reopen After Bank Holiday — Gilts Indicated Through 5%

London markets reopen at 08:00 BST after Monday’s early May bank holiday. The FTSE 100 is indicated to open down 0.54% at around 8,265, weighed down by Wall Street’s Monday session and the weekend’s geopolitical escalation. Ten-year gilt yields are indicated to gap through 5.00% on the open as traders price the Brent surge and the renewed Iran-UAE tensions. Sterling is trading at $1.2945, its lowest level since mid-April.

Dive deeper
Tuesday after a UK bank holiday is always a higher-risk session because three calendar days of global news have to be priced in a single open. The combined catalyst list — Brent at $114, Iranian missile strikes on the UAE, US-Iran exchange of fire in Hormuz, Bitcoin breaking $80,000 — is the heaviest opening backdrop since Day 1 of the war. The gilt move is the one to watch: a clean break above 5.00% would trigger pension-fund LDI hedging flows and risk a self-reinforcing sell-off, particularly with Andrew Bailey not scheduled to speak until Wednesday. Reeves is reportedly being briefed hourly by Treasury officials.

Petrol at 168p as Pump Prices Set to Climb to 175p This Week

Average UK petrol prices remain at 165–170p, with diesel above 200p at mainstream forecourts and 220p at motorway services, RAC and AA data confirm. The 5.96% Brent surge on Monday is expected to feed through to the pumps from mid-week, taking petrol towards 175p and diesel above 205p. The cumulative additional fuel cost since 28 February now exceeds £260 per car, equivalent to roughly £5.7 billion across 22 million UK households.

Dive deeper
Pump-price movements typically lag wholesale moves by 7–10 days, meaning Monday’s Brent surge will reach forecourts on or shortly after polling day. The political timing could not be worse for Labour: Reform’s campaign messaging on the cost of living has been drumming the petrol-price figure for three weeks, and the next price tick will arrive while voters are still queuing at polling stations. There is no operational lever the government can pull in 72 hours: a fuel duty cut would require parliamentary approval after recess, and a strategic-reserve release through the IEA remains in “final stages” with no announced date. The petrol price has become the defining variable of the election.
One To Read

Why US Warships Won’t Be Escorting Merchant Ships Through Strait of Hormuz

CNN · A clear-eyed account of the operational gap between Trump’s ‘Project Freedom’ rhetoric and what the US Navy can actually deliver. Explains why direct escort is impossible, how the “guidance corridor” works in practice, and why the operation may force Tehran into a binary escalation choice.
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Evening Briefing

Monday 4 May 2026 — 20:15 BST

What It Means For You

  • Iran fired missiles at the United Arab Emirates this afternoon — the first activation of UAE air defences since the April ceasefire began — as President Trump launched “Project Freedom”, a US Navy escort operation through the Strait of Hormuz. Trump said the US military shot down seven Iranian boats and warned that any attempt to target US vessels would see Iranian forces “blown off the face of the Earth”. Brent surged 6% to $114.44; pump prices on UK forecourts will pass through to consumers on Tuesday.
  • The S&P 500 closed down 0.5% and the Dow fell 564 points after the UAE attack reignited recession fears. The VIX jumped to a six-week high of 36.5 and gold posted a fresh record. Sterling weakened to $1.296 on dollar safe-haven flows; gilts remain closed for the bank holiday but US Treasury yields fell to 4.48%. Tuesday’s London open will be the first full UK price discovery since Friday and is set up for sharp moves.
  • The local elections are now three days away. Bloomberg expert analysis projects Labour will lose 1,850 seats on Thursday; YouGov MRPs show Reform UK leading in 11 of 13 West Midlands councils and Labour set for historic losses across London. The Iran-driven oil shock has wiped out most of Chancellor Reeves’s remaining fiscal headroom; Treasury officials confirm the Spring Statement arithmetic no longer holds at $114 Brent. The bank holiday gave a one-day campaign pause; final pitches resume tomorrow.

Iran War — Day 65. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran fired missiles at the UAE this afternoon — the first UAE air-defence activation since the April ceasefire. Trump launched “Project Freedom” naval escort through the Strait of Hormuz; the US military shot down seven Iranian boats. Brent surged to $114.44 (+5.96%); WTI to $106.42 (+4%). Trump warned Iran would be “blown off the face of the Earth” for any strike on US ships. Tehran says “Project Freedom” violates the ceasefire. The next ceasefire reassessment is scheduled for Friday 8 May.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Strikes UAE as Trump Launches Hormuz Escort Operation

Iran fired missiles at the United Arab Emirates on Monday afternoon, marking the first activation of UAE air-defence systems since the April ceasefire began. The strikes coincided with the launch of “Project Freedom”, a US Navy escort mission to bring stranded commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump said US forces shot down seven Iranian boats after Tehran targeted other vessels attempting to traverse the passage. He warned on Truth Social that Iran would be “blown off the face of the Earth” if it struck US ships.

Dive deeper
An Iranian strike on the UAE crosses the most important regional redline of the war. Abu Dhabi has held diplomatic distance from the conflict since February, hosting back-channel talks and resisting US pressure to join the blockade publicly. A direct attack on Emirati territory shifts the balance: Gulf states that have hedged on the war must now decide whether to coordinate openly with Washington or seek separate security guarantees. Iran’s decision to strike was almost certainly authorised at IRGC senior level, and the targeting suggests an intent to demonstrate that “Project Freedom” carries unacceptable costs. The seven-boat engagement is the largest US-Iran maritime clash of the war.
↻ Yesterday: Trump “reviewing” 14-point plan → Today: Project Freedom launched, UAE struck, seven Iranian boats destroyed.

Brent Surges 6% to $114.44 as Markets Reprice Hormuz Risk

International benchmark Brent crude rose nearly 6% to close at $114.44 per barrel on Monday after news of the UAE attack and the first US-Iran maritime engagement of the new operation. US West Texas Intermediate climbed more than 4% to settle at $106.42. The S&P 500 closed down 0.5%; the Dow fell 564 points or 1.1%. The VIX volatility index jumped to 36.5, its highest level since mid-March. CNBC reported markets are now pricing a non-trivial probability of US recession by year-end.

Dive deeper
A $6 single-day move in Brent on a confirmed direct Iran-Gulf-state attack is contained relative to historical equivalents, suggesting traders had partially priced the escalation. The more telling signal is the VIX move: a jump from 31.8 to 36.5 indicates derivatives desks are now positioning for a sustained volatility regime rather than a one-day shock. Gold’s fresh record close at $4,858 confirms the safe-haven bid is structural rather than tactical. The combination of higher oil, higher volatility and weaker risk assets is the classic stagflation trade; Federal Reserve commentary this week will be watched for any signal of a policy response.
↻ Friday close: Brent $109.96, VIX 31.80 → Monday close: Brent $114.44 (+6%), VIX 36.50 (+15%).

Russian Missiles Kill Five in Kharkiv as Drones Hit Moscow

Russian missile and drone strikes killed at least five people and wounded over 30 in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region overnight into Monday, according to Ukrainian regional officials cited by Al Jazeera. In response, Ukrainian long-range drones struck targets in Moscow, with explosions reported near the city’s outer ring road. President Zelensky travelled to Armenia for a European leaders’ summit, his first visit to the Caucasus since the war began. Peace talks scheduled for this week have been postponed indefinitely, with the United States citing the deteriorating Middle East situation.

Dive deeper
Drone strikes inside Moscow city limits remain rare and are politically significant. The Kremlin has scaled back this year’s Victory Day parade on 9 May, removing cadets and most heavy hardware — an explicit acknowledgement of Ukrainian deep-strike capability. Zelensky’s Armenia visit reflects a broader Ukrainian campaign to court Caucasus and Central Asian states traditionally inside Russia’s diplomatic orbit. The postponement of US-mediated peace talks because of Hormuz signals that Ukraine remains second-tier on Washington’s agenda; Kyiv is privately briefing that Trump’s focus on Iran is buying Russia time to consolidate spring offensive gains.

Tehran: “Project Freedom” Violates Ceasefire

Senior Iranian lawmaker Ebrahim Azizi told Iranian state media on Monday morning that any US interference in the Strait of Hormuz, including Trump’s newly announced escort operation, would constitute a violation of the April ceasefire and licence Iranian forces to respond. The statement preceded the UAE attack by several hours and was treated by US officials as a notification of intent. The Foreign Ministry has not formally responded; the IRGC has placed all Gulf naval and missile units on combat readiness.

Dive deeper
Azizi’s framing — pre-positioning the legal justification before military action — is a classic Iranian escalation pattern observed in 2019 and 2024. It allows Tehran to claim the response was reactive rather than offensive, complicating Washington’s narrative-management. The next 72 hours are the highest-risk window of the war: the ceasefire reassessment is scheduled for Friday, and either side has incentive to establish new facts on the ground before that meeting. Iran in particular is signalling that it will not allow the blockade to be normalised through unilateral US action without a kinetic response.

Friday Ceasefire Review Becomes the Critical Diplomatic Deadline

The current Iran-US ceasefire is scheduled for formal reassessment on Friday 8 May, the deadline set when the agreement was extended in mid-April. With Monday’s UAE attack, the seven-boat engagement and the launch of “Project Freedom”, the agreement is now functionally moribund three days before its review. The IAEA has requested urgent renewed access to Iranian nuclear sites; Tehran has not responded. European officials told Bloomberg they are pressing for a 72-hour de-escalation window before Friday’s meeting.

Dive deeper
A ceasefire agreement that survives a direct attack on a Gulf state and a maritime engagement does so only on paper. The Friday meeting is now less about extending the ceasefire and more about formalising whatever new posture both sides have arrived at by then. The IAEA inspection request is the leading indicator to watch: if Iran refuses access, the diplomatic track is over and the question becomes how the next phase of the war is structured. Markets are pricing roughly a one-in-three chance of a return to active strikes within 30 days; that probability has risen sharply since this morning.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Three Days to Polling — Bloomberg Projects 1,850 Labour Seat Losses

With three days to local elections on Thursday, expert analysis published by Bloomberg projects Labour will lose 1,850 council seats, the largest single-night loss for any incumbent governing party since the introduction of universal suffrage. The forecast draws on YouGov MRP modelling showing Reform UK leading in 11 of 13 West Midlands councils and Labour facing historic losses across London boroughs. Andy Burnham warned the elections would be “challenging”; cabinet sources told the Guardian privately that 2,000 losses are now seen as the realistic ceiling.

Dive deeper
A loss of 1,850 seats would represent roughly 37% of all Labour council seats up for election — an order of magnitude beyond the worst single nights of the post-2010 period. The geographic distribution is the more important detail: losses are concentrated in long-held northern and Welsh authorities rather than the marginal English shire seats Labour expected to lose. Reform’s projected dominance in the West Midlands, including the metro mayoralty, would give the party functional control of regional economic policy in an area that voted heavily Labour at the 2024 general election. The structural realignment is now arriving rather than being projected.
↻ Friday: 1,500-seat loss the central case → Today: 1,850 the central case, 2,000 the realistic ceiling.

Reeves’ Fiscal Buffer Erased as Brent Hits $114

Treasury officials briefed today that the Spring Statement’s £9.9 billion of fiscal headroom no longer holds following Brent’s surge to $114.44. Bloomberg reported on 21 April that the Iran war could erase “most of Reeves’s buffer”; today’s oil move converts that warning into mathematical fact at current price levels. The OBR’s March central forecast assumed Brent at $82 average over 2026; the year-to-date average is now above $108 and rising. An emergency fiscal statement before the autumn Budget is now under active consideration.

Dive deeper
A buffer of £9.9 billion was already historically thin by post-2010 standards. Erasing it before the local elections, in election week, is a political and economic event simultaneously. Reeves now faces three options: tax rises in the autumn Budget, deeper spending cuts, or revising the fiscal rules — each of which carries direct political cost in the immediate aftermath of a likely heavy electoral defeat. The autumn Budget timetable is now the central political question of Starmer’s premiership; an emergency interim statement, perhaps in late June, looks increasingly likely. Markets will reopen Tuesday morning with that calculation priced in.
↻ 21 April: Bloomberg flags buffer at risk → 4 May: Buffer mathematically erased at current Brent levels.

Starmer Approval at 22% — Joint-Lowest Since Taking Office

The latest YouGov tracker shows just 22% of Britons believe Sir Keir Starmer is doing well as Prime Minister; 70% say he is doing badly. The figure is the joint-lowest of his premiership and represents a five-point fall on the April reading. Among 2024 Labour voters, 51% now say Starmer is doing a bad job. The composite of pre-election polling shows Reform leading in the mid-to-high 20s, the Conservatives at 21%, Labour at 19% and the Greens at 13%. The ratings are the worst going into a UK national vote since the Conservative collapse of 1997.

Dive deeper
An approval rating of 22% three days before a national vote is structurally incompatible with retaining electoral coalitions intact. The 51% figure for 2024 Labour voters is the more politically corrosive number: the parliamentary party will read Thursday’s results through the prism of who held their own coalition and who didn’t. The Burnham, Rayner and Streeting camps are all polling internally on counterfactual leadership scenarios; the briefing war from Friday morning will be intense. The 1997 comparison is misleading in one important respect: the Major government had a clear winning successor in Labour. The 2026 collapse has no obvious beneficiary.

Petrol Set to Pass Through to 175p as Forecourt Margins Collapse

The RAC told reporters on Monday that UK pump prices are likely to pass through Brent’s $114 level over the next 7–10 days, lifting average unleaded prices from current 168p towards 175p and diesel above 210p. Forecourt operators are absorbing some of the increase; independent station margins are reportedly negative on diesel sales. Cumulative additional household fuel costs since the war began now exceed £310 per car for average-mileage drivers. The increase comes during election week; Reform UK and the Conservatives are using it in final-week campaign messaging.

Dive deeper
The pass-through timing is the political danger: a 175p headline in the Friday morning newspapers, immediately after Thursday’s polls close, would dominate the post-election narrative regardless of the seat results. The Treasury cannot intervene meaningfully in three days; a fuel-duty cut would require parliamentary approval and would breach the fiscal rules without offsetting measures. The cumulative £310 figure is the campaign’s most powerful retail fact; it lands particularly heavily in the rural and shire constituencies where Reform is making its sharpest gains. Labour’s defensive line that the war is global and exogenous has limited purchase against a number consumers see at the pump every week.

Bank Holiday Monday — Final Quiet Day Before Three-Day Sprint

The early May bank holiday on Monday produced the campaign’s first quiet day in three weeks. Parliament remains in recess; Sir Keir Starmer made no public appearances; Kemi Badenoch held a closed-door strategy meeting with shadow cabinet colleagues. Reform UK leader Nigel Farage was filmed at Clacton for a final retail event. Final-stretch advertising spending across all four main parties is reported to have been front-loaded into the weekend. The Met Office forecasts overcast conditions across most of England for Thursday’s polling day.

Dive deeper
Bank holiday Mondays are typically a campaign trough by design; the parties prefer to keep media attention low when no announcements are scheduled. The contrast between Starmer’s near-total visibility and Farage’s saturation coverage at Clacton matters more than the individual events: the final 72 hours of broadcast will be shaped by whoever generates content. The Met Office forecast of showers across most of England is consequential: turnout typically falls 2–4 percentage points on wet polling days, and lower turnout disproportionately costs incumbent parties whose voters are less motivated. Combined with the fuel-price story, the structural setup for Thursday remains the worst possible for Labour.
One To Read

‘Misplaced Euphoria’: Markets Are Sleepwalking Into a Recession Amid Iran War Oil Shock

CNBC · The clearest framing of the macro consequences of today’s Brent move — how a sustained $110+ regime feeds through to consumer spending, household savings, and corporate margins, and why the equity market may still be underestimating the recession probability heading into the second half.
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Morning Briefing

Sunday 3 May 2026 — 08:11 BST

What It Means For You

  • Trump confirmed overnight that he is reviewing Iran’s 14-point plan but warned of renewed war if Tehran “misbehaves”. He “can’t imagine” the proposal will prove acceptable. Brent is locked at $110, Gulf shipping at a standstill, and the diplomatic window is narrowing rather than opening. Pump prices remain at 165–170p heading into the bank holiday Monday and polling day Thursday.
  • Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon killed 41 people in 24 hours, the highest toll since the April truce was extended. Approximately 50 Hezbollah-linked sites were destroyed; an Iranian military official said a renewed war with the United States remains “a possibility”. The Lebanon track, until recently the region’s only stable element, is now visibly fraying.
  • Today’s Sunday papers carry the final pre-election polls. Reform leads consistently in the mid-to-high 20s; Labour’s national share is stuck at 18–19%. With four days to local elections and Parliament in recess, the campaign has narrowed to doorsteps and broadcast set-pieces. The bank holiday weekend is the last quiet stretch before Thursday’s verdict.

Iran War — Day 64. The war started 28 February 2026. Trump warns of war if Iran “misbehaves”; reviewing 14-point plan but unconvinced. Israeli strikes kill 41 in southern Lebanon overnight. Iranian military official says renewed war with US “a possibility”. Forty-eight ships turned away by US blockade in 20 days. Brent settled at $109.96. Gilts close week at 4.96%. Four days to local elections; Sunday papers carry final polls.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Warns of War if Iran “Misbehaves” While Reviewing 14-Point Plan

Speaking to reporters as he boarded Air Force One in Florida on Saturday evening, President Trump said he would “soon be reviewing the plan Iran has just sent” but explicitly warned of renewed war if Tehran “misbehaves”. He told the press pool he “can’t imagine” the proposal would be acceptable, citing Iran’s failure to pay “a big enough price” for its conduct over four decades. The remarks confirm what officials have indicated for 48 hours: Washington is unmoved by the structure of the offer.

Dive deeper
Trump’s “misbehave” framing is significant because it shifts the threshold for renewed strikes from a specific Iranian provocation to a generalised judgement call held by the President. That ambiguity is itself a form of pressure: Tehran cannot calibrate its conduct against a clear redline. The reference to “47 years” signals that Trump views the negotiation as part of a longer ledger going back to 1979, not just the current war. Iran’s 14-point document was always going to struggle without nuclear concessions; Trump’s overnight remarks confirm there is no diplomatic ladder back from the current impasse, only a wider war if either side takes the wrong step.

Israeli Strikes Kill 41 in Lebanon — Worst 24-Hour Toll Since Truce Extension

Israeli forces struck approximately 50 Hezbollah-linked sites across southern Lebanon overnight, killing 41 people in a 24-hour period according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Health. Strikes hit Siddiqine, Bint Jbeil and Al Smaaiyah in the Tyre district. The intensity marks the most serious breach of the April ceasefire, which was extended into mid-May only a fortnight ago. Hezbollah confirmed it had targeted Israeli soldiers and vehicles in retaliatory operations.

Dive deeper
The Lebanon track has functioned as the region’s sole stable element since 17 April. A 41-death day — with most fatalities reported as civilian — ends that classification. Prime Minister Salam’s decoupling strategy, which treated Lebanon as separate from the wider US-Iran war, is now under direct strain. Expect a French-led protest at the UN Security Council and renewed European pressure on Tel Aviv. The wider concern is that escalation in Lebanon could activate the Iranian retaliation Tehran has so far held in reserve, undoing 11 weeks of strategic patience and reigniting the multi-front war Trump claimed to have ended.

Tehran: Renewed War With US “a Possibility” as Talks Stall

An Iranian military official told state media on Sunday morning that a renewed war with the United States remains “a possibility” as peace talks stall. The statement aligns with Trump’s overnight warning and confirms both capitals are publicly preparing their populations for the diplomatic track to fail. Tehran insists the 14-point plan is its final offer; Washington has not formally responded. The IRGC has reportedly placed naval assets on heightened readiness in the strait.

Dive deeper
Public escalation rhetoric on both sides on the same weekend is the clearest sign yet that the diplomatic track has reached its terminus. Iran’s military framing, rather than a foreign-ministry response, is deliberate: it signals that the IRGC’s view now carries equal weight to Pezeshkian’s civilian government. In any wider escalation, the IRGC controls the strait, the missile forces and the regional proxies; the Foreign Ministry’s diminishing visibility is itself a leading indicator. The bank holiday weekend is genuinely dangerous: any IRGC action against US Navy vessels, intentional or not, would trigger response protocols that politicians may struggle to contain.

Forty-Eight Ships Turned Away in 20 Days as Hormuz Blockade Tightens

The US Navy has now redirected 48 vessels from Iranian ports over the past 20 days, with three forced back in the past 20 hours alone. CENTCOM confirmed no shipping is being permitted into or out of Iranian ports. Approximately 20,000 mariners remain stranded on 2,000 ships in the Gulf as supplies dwindle and rotation collapses. Lloyd’s of London continues to maintain its war-risk classification, keeping insurance premiums prohibitive for commercial traffic.

Dive deeper
A redirection rate of more than two ships a day represents a comprehensive blockade rather than a screening operation. The mariner crisis is becoming a parallel humanitarian story; many crews are from developing countries with limited consular capacity in the Gulf. Even a partial diplomatic resolution would not restore commercial shipping immediately because the war-risk insurance architecture takes weeks to recalibrate. The blockade has become self-reinforcing: as it tightens, Iran’s revenue collapses; as Iran’s revenue collapses, Tehran’s incentive to escalate grows; as escalation risks rise, war-risk premiums climb further.

Day 64 — Brent Locked at $110, Diplomacy at Its Furthest Reach

Brent crude closed Friday at $109.96 after a week of $107–111 trading and is unlikely to find a settling level until Tuesday’s European open. The market has now absorbed Iran’s 14-point submission, Trump’s scepticism, and the overnight Lebanon escalation without breaking range, suggesting traders see no diplomatic catalyst. Goldman Sachs maintains its $115 three-month forecast. The IEA’s strategic reserve coordination remains in “final stages” with no announced release date.

Dive deeper
Sixty-four days of war and the oil market has settled into a structural new normal at $110, with $126 the recent ceiling and $107 the floor. That trading range is itself the diplomatic verdict: markets price not what governments say but what they expect to happen. A genuine breakthrough would have produced a $10–15 drop in the past 48 hours; that drop has not arrived. For UK consumers, the implication is that pump prices of 165–170p are now the baseline rather than a temporary spike. The strategic reserve release, when it comes, can shave perhaps $8–10 off prices for thirty days but cannot replace the volume normally moving through Hormuz.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Sunday Papers Carry Final Polls — Reform Leads, Labour Stuck at 19%

Today’s Sunday papers carry the final pre-election polls. Reform UK leads consistently in the mid-to-high 20s, with Opinium showing the party at 27%, the Conservatives at 21%, Labour at 20% and the Greens at 13%. The composite of late-campaign surveys puts Labour’s national share at 18–19%, the same band it has held for three weeks. The polls confirm a four-cornered contest unlike any in modern British political history.

Dive deeper
A national share of 19% applied to local-election arithmetic still produces catastrophic seat losses for Labour because the party is defending a 2022 mid-cycle peak. The Conservative recovery to 21% in some surveys complicates the narrative: it suggests Reform’s ceiling may be lower than feared, but does nothing to help Labour. The Green Party at 13–16% — depending on pollster — is now a structural feature of the centre-left vote rather than a transient protest. The final polls are the last chance for either Labour or the Conservatives to argue tactical voting; from Monday onwards, the campaign is set.

Four Days to Polling — Reform Projected to Take 67 Councils

With four days to polling, Reform UK is projected to take control of 67 councils from a starting position of zero. Labour is forecast to fall from 92 to 16 council majorities. Sunderland, Wakefield, Thurrock and Barnsley are all expected to flip from Labour to Reform; Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk are forecast to flip from no-overall-control or Conservative to Reform. Forty-seven councils in total are projected to change hands — the largest churn since 1995.

Dive deeper
A jump from zero councils to 67 has no modern parallel; the closest analogue is the SDP-Liberal Alliance breakthrough of the early 1980s, which subsequently collapsed back. The councils projected to flip are Labour’s industrial heartland — Sunderland, Wakefield, Barnsley — held for generations rather than swing territory. Losing them would represent structural realignment rather than a bad night. The Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk shifts are arguably more politically significant: they convert Reform from a protest insurgency into a party that runs services, sets council tax and writes planning policy. That changes the conversation about Reform’s readiness for a Westminster role.

Burnham Excluded From Succession — Rayner-Streeting Race Now Open

Andy Burnham has been effectively excluded from the Labour leadership succession because securing a parliamentary seat would take too long. The race has narrowed to Angela Rayner and Wes Streeting. Streeting has reportedly secured backing from more than 81 Labour MPs — above the rule-book threshold to trigger a contest. Rayner remains the preferred choice of the membership and the unions. The two represent different ideological paths: Streeting the centrist professional, Rayner the union-backed left.

Dive deeper
The exclusion of Burnham — consistently the strongest hypothetical Labour leader in private polling — is the most revealing detail. The party has chosen speed over strength, signalling that the parliamentary party considers the post-election crisis too urgent to wait for a by-election to manufacture a Burnham seat. The Streeting-Rayner choice mirrors the 2010 Miliband contest: Ed (left, union-backed) versus David (centrist, professional). The membership chose left; the parliamentary party regretted it. Whether the parliamentary party has the discipline to deliver a different outcome this time is the central question of the coming weeks.

Gilts Close Week at 4.96% — Bank Holiday Tuesday Risk Looms

Ten-year gilt yields closed Friday at 4.96%, completing a pullback from Tuesday’s 5.09% peak. The retracement reflects the Bank of England hold, the Iranian proposal and reduced bank-holiday volumes rather than any structural improvement in the fiscal outlook. Pill’s dissent for a 25 basis-point hike remains the policy story. Markets reopen on Tuesday morning to whatever has happened over the bank holiday weekend — a more dangerous setup than usual.

Dive deeper
Closing below 5% removes the immediate pension-fund stress trigger but does not resolve the underlying fragility. Gilts have tested 5% four times in ten days and broken through twice; each test weakens the resistance. Tuesday’s open is the genuine risk window: if the Sunday papers produce a poll below Labour’s 18% baseline, or if Trump rejects the 14-point proposal over the weekend, gilts will gap through 5% before London desks have caught up. Pill’s lone dissent matters because it gives markets a hawkish anchor: if the inflation print or oil moves the wrong way, his minority view becomes the baseline expectation overnight.

Bank Holiday Weekend — Petrol at 168p as Voters Approach Polling Day

The early May bank holiday falls on Monday. Parliament is in recess; no political events are scheduled. UK petrol prices remain at 165–170p, with diesel above 200p at mainstream forecourts and 220p at motorway services. The Met Office forecasts overcast conditions with showers across most of England on Thursday. The combination of high pump prices, low turnout weather and an angry electorate is the worst possible setup for an incumbent government.

Dive deeper
Polling-day weather has been the silent variable in every projection. Rain typically suppresses turnout by 2–4 percentage points, and lower turnout disproportionately hurts incumbents whose voters are less motivated. Reform’s base, by contrast, is anger-driven — less weather-sensitive than enthusiasm-driven Labour or Green coalitions. If turnout drops to 30%, the headline projection numbers are likely to understate Reform’s gains rather than overstate them. The cumulative additional fuel cost since the war began now exceeds £260 per car. That figure, multiplied across 22 million households, is the single most powerful campaign fact of the election — and no government policy can change it in four days.
One To Read

Iran Submits a 14-Point Response to a US Proposal to End the War

NPR · A clear summary of the 14-point Iranian text, Trump’s overnight rejection framing, and why both Washington and Tehran are publicly preparing their populations for the diplomatic track to fail. Essential weekend reading before the markets reopen on Tuesday.
☼

Morning Briefing

Saturday 3 May 2026 — 08:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • Iran has submitted a 14-point response to the US proposal to end the war — more detailed than previous offers, but Washington remains unimpressed. Trump is unhappy it does not address the nuclear programme. Brent closed the week at $110, up 4.5% — still 40% above pre-war levels. The bank holiday weekend begins with oil markets open and diplomacy stalled.
  • Ukraine’s General Staff has formally confirmed the destruction of two Su-57 stealth fighters and one Su-34 at Shagol airfield, 1,700km inside Russia. Zelensky said Ukrainian strikes have inflicted $7 billion in losses on Russia’s oil sector since January, reducing processing volumes to their lowest level since 2009 — down 12% from 2025.
  • Four days to local elections. Tomorrow’s Sunday papers carry the final polls. Projections: Labour loses 1,850 seats, Reform gains 1,300+. Sunderland forecast to flip to Reform. The reshuffle is pencilled in for May 11. The leadership succession — Rayner vs Streeting — is already being briefed. The only question is whether Thursday’s result is bad or catastrophic.

Iran War — Day 64. The war started 28 February 2026. Iran submits 14-point response; US unimpressed. Brent closes week at $110, up 4.5%. Su-57 destruction confirmed. Zelensky: $7bn losses inflicted on Russian oil sector. Processing volumes at 2009 lows. Gilts at 4.96%. Four days to local elections. Sunday papers carry final polls. Bank holiday weekend.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran Submits 14-Point Response to US — Washington Remains Unimpressed

↻ Thursday: “updated proposal” forwarded → Friday: full 14-point document revealed

Iran has submitted a formal 14-point response to the American proposal to end the war, transmitted through Pakistani mediators. The document is more detailed than previous offers but retains the core structure Washington has already rejected: reopen the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for lifting the US blockade, with nuclear negotiations deferred until after hostilities end. An unnamed US official told NPR that Trump was “unhappy” with the proposal because it contained no provisions on Iran’s nuclear programme. The US appears cool on the terms.

Dive deeper
A 14-point document sounds like progress — it suggests Iran is engaging seriously with the specifics rather than offering vague frameworks. But detail without movement on the nuclear question is just a more elaborate version of the same impasse. The US position has been consistent since Rubio’s “unacceptable” rejection: no deal without nuclear concessions. Iran’s position has been equally consistent: nuclear sovereignty is non-negotiable. Fourteen points of agreement on everything except the one thing that matters is not a deal. It is a negotiating position that demonstrates engagement while avoiding compromise.

Su-57 Destruction Confirmed — Ukraine’s General Staff Verifies Shagol Strike

Ukraine’s General Staff and Unmanned Systems Forces commander Robert “Magyar” Brovdi formally confirmed the destruction of two Su-57 fifth-generation stealth fighters and one Su-34 fighter-bomber at Shagol airfield in Chelyabinsk — 1,700km from the Ukrainian border. The confirmation came after satellite imagery and open-source analysis corroborated the initial reports. The Su-57 is Russia’s most advanced combat aircraft, with an estimated unit cost of $35–50 million and fewer than 30 in service.

Dive deeper
Confirmation matters because it moves this from claimed success to verified achievement. Two Su-57s represents a significant proportion of Russia’s operational fleet — possibly 7–10% of the total. More importantly, the strike demonstrates that Ukraine can reach targets Russia considered safe. Chelyabinsk is in the Urals — the industrial heartland where Russia’s defence production is concentrated. If airfields 1,700km from the front are vulnerable, so are the factories supplying the war effort. The strategic implications extend well beyond two aircraft.

Zelensky: Ukrainian Strikes Have Cost Russia $7 Billion in Oil Losses Since January

President Zelensky said Friday that Ukraine’s long-range strikes have inflicted at least $7 billion in cumulative losses on Russia’s oil sector since the start of 2026. The campaign has reduced Russian oil processing volumes to their lowest level since 2009 — down 12% from 2025. The Tuapse refinery alone has been struck four times. Zelensky also announced a major military reform to expand the Unmanned Systems Forces, reflecting the growing centrality of drone warfare to Ukraine’s strategy.

Dive deeper
The $7 billion figure is substantial but needs context: Russia’s oil revenue in 2025 was approximately $180 billion. A $7 billion loss over four months represents roughly 15% of quarterly revenue — painful but not crippling, especially with elevated global prices partially compensating. The 12% drop in processing capacity is more strategically significant: it forces Russia to export crude rather than refined products, which carries lower margins. The military reform announcement signals that Zelensky views the drone campaign as a permanent capability, not a temporary escalation. Building an institutional structure around it suggests Ukraine plans to sustain and expand deep strikes indefinitely.

Brent Closes Week at $110 — Up 4.5% Despite Iran’s Proposal

Brent crude finished the week at $109.96, up approximately 4.5% over five sessions despite Iran’s 14-point submission. The weekly gain reflects the market’s assessment that the proposal is unlikely to produce a breakthrough. Oil reached $126 at its peak earlier in the week before Iran’s offer triggered a brief 3% drop — most of which was subsequently recovered. The $107–111 trading range has held through the week, suggesting the market has found an uneasy equilibrium between blockade risk and diplomatic hope.

Dive deeper
The bank holiday weekend is significant for oil markets because European and UK political attention is absent while crude trades 24/7 in Asian and US markets. Any diplomatic development — a US rejection of Iran’s 14 points, a naval incident in the strait, or an unexpected breakthrough — would move prices before London opens on Tuesday. For UK petrol prices, the current $110 level translates to roughly £1.78–1.82 per litre at the pump. That is the price voters will be paying when they walk to polling stations on Thursday. No government policy can change it in four days.

20,000 Mariners Still Stranded — Shipping Industry Demands International Action

Approximately 20,000 seafarers remain stranded on 2,000 ships in the Persian Gulf as the Hormuz crisis enters its third month. Maritime unions have escalated their calls for international intervention, arguing that crew welfare is deteriorating as supplies dwindle and rotation schedules collapse. Lloyd’s of London maintains its war-risk classification for the strait, which keeps insurance premiums prohibitively high for commercial traffic. The restriction of shipments by more than 90% continues to ripple through global supply chains, with agricultural input costs now rising alongside energy.

Dive deeper
The stranded mariner crisis has been overshadowed by the oil price and diplomatic stories, but it is a growing humanitarian problem. Many of these crews are from developing countries with limited consular capacity in the Gulf. Ships carrying perishable cargo have already written off their loads. The insurance dimension is critical: even if Iran and the US agreed to partially reopen the strait tomorrow, the Lloyd’s war-risk classification would keep premiums at crisis levels until a sustained period of safe transit is demonstrated. The infrastructure of normal shipping — insurance, routing, port scheduling — has been disrupted in ways that will take months to restore regardless of the diplomatic outcome.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Four Days to Local Elections — Sunday Papers Carry the Final Polls

The 7 May local elections are four days away. Tomorrow’s Sunday papers will carry the final pre-election polls — the last data points before voters decide. Current projections: Labour loses approximately 1,850 of the 2,557 seats it is defending (50–74%). Reform gains over 1,300 seats from a base of just 3, potentially reaching 2,342 councillors. The Greens gain around 500. The Conservatives also lose roughly 600 seats. Sunderland, Wakefield, Thurrock, and Barnsley are all projected to flip from Labour to Reform control.

Dive deeper
The projected numbers are historic in scale. Reform going from 3 councillors to over 2,300 would be the most dramatic local election surge by any party since Labour’s post-war breakthrough in municipal government. The councils projected to flip — Sunderland, Wakefield, Barnsley — are not swing territory. They are Labour’s industrial heartland, held for generations. Losing them would not just be a bad election night; it would represent a structural realignment of English politics. The Sunday papers know this, which is why the final polls will dominate the bank holiday weekend conversation and set the narrative for the last four days of campaigning.

Gilts Below 5% Heading into the Weekend — 4.96% on Friday Close

↻ Tuesday: 5.09% peak → Friday close: 4.96%

Ten-year gilt yields closed the week at 4.96%, completing a pullback from Tuesday’s 5.09% peak. The BOE hold, Iran’s proposal, and reduced trading volumes have all contributed to the easing. The week saw extraordinary volatility — a 13-basis-point range between the low (4.96%) and the high (5.09%) — but the direction into the weekend is calmer. Whether it lasts depends on two things: the US response to Iran’s 14 points and the Sunday polls. If both go badly, Tuesday’s open could be volatile.

Dive deeper
Closing below 5% is psychologically important — it removes the immediate pension fund stress trigger and gives the Treasury some breathing room heading into the election. But the calm is fragile. Gilts have tested 5% four times in the past ten days and broken through it twice. Each test weakens the resistance level. The bank holiday weekend is the most dangerous period because the gilt market reopens on Tuesday morning to whatever happened while Parliament was closed. If the Sunday polls show Labour below 15% nationally, or if the US formally rejects Iran’s proposal over the weekend, the gilt market will open straight through 5% again.

Reshuffle Confirmed for 11 May — Scope Depends on Thursday Night

The post-election reshuffle remains scheduled for Monday 11 May. Government sources have outlined three scenarios based on the election result: a targeted reshuffle (Reeves replaced, one or two other changes) if losses are “expected bad”; a wholesale Cabinet reset if flagship councils like Manchester or Birmingham fall; or no reshuffle at all if the result somehow exceeds expectations — a scenario no one in Downing Street is currently planning for.

Dive deeper
The fact that Downing Street is briefing three reshuffle scenarios rather than one tells you everything about the government’s confidence level. Planning for “expected bad” as the best case is not a position of strength. The third scenario — no reshuffle if results exceed expectations — is included for completeness rather than plausibility; it exists to avoid the accusation that the PM has already conceded defeat. The real decision is between scenarios one and two, and that decision will be made between 2am and 6am on Friday 8 May as the counts come in. By Saturday morning, everyone will know whether Starmer is reshuffling his Cabinet or fighting for his leadership.

Labour Leadership Succession Now Openly Discussed — Rayner vs Streeting

The Labour leadership succession race is no longer being whispered — it is being published. British Brief reported Rayner and Streeting as the two frontrunners, with Burnham excluded because securing a parliamentary seat would take too long. The New Statesman asked “Will Labour survive 2026?” in a video analysis. Multiple outlets report that senior Labour figures have moved from “if” to “when” in their private conversations about Starmer’s future. The local elections are now less a test of policy and more a trigger mechanism.

Dive deeper
Open succession reporting before an election is unusual and damaging. It signals to voters that the party itself does not expect its leader to survive the result — which becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Why would a wavering Labour voter turn out for a leader whose own party is publicly planning to replace? The Rayner-Streeting choice represents a genuine ideological fork: Rayner appeals to the union base and the traditional left; Streeting appeals to centrist professionals and swing voters concerned about Reform. Burnham’s exclusion is the most significant detail — he consistently polls as Labour’s strongest hypothetical leader, but the party cannot afford to wait for him. Speed over strength. That tells you how urgent they think the situation is.

Bank Holiday Weekend — The Quiet Before Thursday

The early May bank holiday falls on Monday. Parliament is in recess. No political events are scheduled. The weekend is defined by what is absent: no PMQs, no Commons votes, no ministerial statements. What remains is oil markets trading around the clock, the Sunday papers setting the final narrative, and voters spending their last quiet weekend before the country delivers its verdict. Petrol is £1.78 per litre. The weather forecast for Thursday is overcast with showers across most of England.

Dive deeper
The weather matters more than it should. Rain on polling day historically suppresses turnout by 2–4 percentage points, and lower turnout disproportionately hurts Labour, whose voter base is less likely to turn out in difficult conditions. Reform’s voters, by contrast, are motivated by anger — a powerful driver that is less affected by weather. If turnout drops to 30% (typical for low-engagement local elections in poor weather), the results could be even more dramatic than the polls suggest, because the polls assume a higher turnout baseline. The bank holiday weekend is calm. What follows it is not.
One To Read

Iran Submits 14-Point Response to US Proposal to End War

NPR · The most detailed account of Iran’s formal 14-point response — what it contains, what it avoids, and why Washington is not convinced. Essential context for understanding whether the bank holiday weekend produces a breakthrough or another rejection.
● Live Updates · Auto-aggregated from 16 sources

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