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✎ Curated Briefing · Edited at 08:00 & 18:00
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Evening Briefing

Monday 18 May 2026 — 18:30 BST

What It Means For You

  • Pakistan handed Washington a revised Iranian proposal for ending the war today, but Trump still meets his national security advisers tomorrow to discuss options for resuming military action. Defence Minister Israel Katz is on the record waiting for the “green light from the United States”; the Israeli airstrike on Baalbeck overnight killed a Palestinian Islamic Jihad commander as Lebanon’s civilian death toll closes on 3,000. Markets read this as escalation risk rising, not falling: Brent closed at $110.20, gilt yields softened modestly after the UK political risk premium came off, and sterling firmed to $1.3290.
  • Sir Keir Starmer told broadcasters today that he is “not going to” set a departure timetable and will “not walk away” from Number 10. Andy Burnham used a Leeds conference speech to retreat further on the EU: “I am not proposing that the UK considers rejoining the EU… I respect the decision that was made at the referendum.” The leadership question is now formally locked in: Starmer stays through Makerfield; the Brexit question is parked; the contest, when and if it comes, will be fought on public ownership and the “serious rewiring” Burnham promised today, not on EU membership.
  • Ukraine’s 16-17 May strike series — confirmed by the Institute for the Study of War today — hit the Angstrem semiconductor plant, the Moscow Oil Refinery, two oil pumping stations and a runway at Sheremetyevo, with 51 flights diverted. Russian milbloggers are openly calling for retaliation with tactical nuclear weapons; the Kremlin’s public response has been muted. The Defence Minister Andrei Belousov congratulated units for the claimed seizure of Borova despite ISW assessing the area is still contested. The implication for European supply chains is that long-range strike escalation now spans both the Iran and Russia theatres simultaneously.

Iran War — Day 80. The war started 28 February 2026. Pakistan today handed the United States a revised Iranian proposal for ending the war, Reuters reported, with the Pakistani source warning “we don’t have much time”; Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei confirmed Tehran’s views had been “conveyed to the American side through Pakistan”. Trump is expected to meet top national security advisers tomorrow to discuss options for resuming military action. An overnight Israeli strike near the eastern Lebanese city of Baalbeck killed a Palestinian Islamic Jihad commander, Wael Mahmoud Abd al-Halim, and his daughter, while the IDF said it had struck more than thirty Hezbollah sites in southern Lebanon in the past twenty-four hours and Lebanon’s health ministry put the civilian death toll at 2,988. The Institute for the Study of War confirmed that Ukrainian strikes on 16-17 May hit the Angstrem semiconductor plant at Elma Technopark in Zelenograd, the Moscow Oil Refinery in Kapotnya Raion, oil pumping stations at Solnechnogorsk and Volodarsk, and triggered a runway fire at Sheremetyevo International Airport that forced fifty-one flight diversions.

GEO Geopolitical

Pakistan Hands US Revised Iranian Proposal; “We Don’t Have Much Time”

Pakistan today shared with the United States a revised proposal from Iran to end the war in the Middle East, a Pakistani source told Reuters on Monday, warning that the two sides “don’t have much time” to narrow their differences. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei later confirmed that Tehran’s views had been “conveyed to the American side through Pakistan”, but gave no details. The Pakistani source said the two sides “keep changing their goalposts”. Trump is expected to meet top national security advisers tomorrow to discuss options for resuming military action, Axios reported.

Dive deeper
The two sides remain far apart on the substantive issues. Washington has called for Tehran to dismantle its nuclear programme and lift its hold on the Strait of Hormuz; Iran has demanded compensation for war damage, an end to the US blockade of Iranian ports, a halt to fighting on all fronts (including Lebanon), guarantees against further attacks, and a resumption of Iranian oil sales. Trump’s public framing on Truth Social over the weekend — “the Clock is Ticking… they better get moving, FAST, or there won’t be anything left of them” — sets the tone for tomorrow’s national security meeting. Iranian armed forces spokesperson Abolfazl Shekarchi countered that the United States would “face new, aggressive, and surprise scenarios, and sink into a self-made quagmire”. Global share markets slipped on Monday as Sunday’s drone strikes pushed oil and bond yields higher; the US faces midterm elections in November.

Israel Kills Palestinian Islamic Jihad Commander in Baalbeck Strike

An Israeli airstrike near the eastern Lebanese city of Baalbeck overnight killed a commander of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad militant group, Wael Mahmoud Abd al-Halim, along with his daughter, Lebanese security sources told Reuters. The Israeli military said it had killed the commander and had taken steps to “mitigate the risk of harm to civilians”, making no mention of his daughter. Hezbollah responded by launching an explosive drone at an Iron Dome air defence position in the Galilee region of northern Israel, and the Israeli military said the drone “crossed into Israeli territory”. Lebanon’s National News Agency reported Israeli airstrikes on more than half a dozen further locations in south Lebanon.

Dive deeper
The IDF said it had struck more than thirty Hezbollah sites in southern Lebanon over the past twenty-four hours and warned residents of three villages in the south to leave their homes. Lebanon’s health ministry put the cumulative civilian death toll since 2 March at 2,988, of whom 613 are women, children and healthcare workers. Israel says eighteen of its soldiers and one defence ministry contractor have been killed by Hezbollah attacks or while operating in southern Lebanon over the same period, with two Israeli civilians killed in the north. Reuters reported on 4 May that several thousand Hezbollah fighters had been killed in the war — a figure the Hezbollah media office disputed. The 45-day ceasefire extension announced after Friday’s third round of US-hosted talks began at midnight, but operationally functions as a low-intensity continuation rather than a halt.

Saudi Arabia Intercepts Three Drones from Iraqi Airspace; Iran “Mechanism” for Strait

Saudi Arabia said on Sunday it had intercepted three drones that entered the kingdom from Iraqi airspace, Reuters reported, alongside the Barakah strike on the UAE. Riyadh warned it would take the “necessary operational measures” to respond to any attempt to violate its sovereignty and security. The two parallel incidents bring the Gulf-state defensive picture sharply into focus: drones launched from Iraq toward Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have been a recurring pattern through the conflict. Iranian parliament national security committee head Ebrahim Azizi separately told reporters Tehran had prepared a “mechanism to manage traffic through the strait along a designated route” that would be unveiled “soon” — an attempt to formalise Iran’s control over the Strait of Hormuz.

Dive deeper
The use of Iraqi airspace as the launching corridor for attacks on Saudi Arabia and the UAE is consistent with the New York Times reporting of Israeli outposts in the Iraqi desert (now confirmed in two locations by Iraqi officials including senior Wisdom Movement figure Hassan Fadaam) and with Iranian-backed Iraqi militia involvement. The Institute for the Study of War today assessed that the Barakah strike came via the same westerly approach used in the 2019 Abqaiq attack on Saudi oil facilities, deliberately obscuring Iranian responsibility — and that IRGC-affiliated media outlets including Tasnim and Defa Press are attempting to attribute the Barakah strike to Saudi Arabia, to drive a wedge between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi. UAE Federal Authority for Nuclear Regulation confirmed plant safety remains unaffected.

ISW: Ukraine Hit Angstrem, Moscow Oil Refinery, Two Pumping Stations; Sheremetyevo Runway Fire

The Institute for the Study of War’s 17 May Russian campaign assessment confirms that Ukrainian forces struck the Angstrem Semiconductor Plant at the Elma Technopark in Zelenograd, northwest of Moscow City — a plant producing microelectronics for high-precision weapons — alongside the Moscow Oil Refinery in Kapotnya Raion and the Solnechnogorsk and Volodarsk oil pumping stations, with a separate strike triggering a runway fire at Sheremetyevo International Airport. Russia’s Transportation Ministry confirmed 51 flight diversions and said two-thirds of flights from Moscow airports were delayed by more than two hours. Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin acknowledged the refinery strike but claimed only the “checkpoint” was hit.

Dive deeper
ISW assesses that the 16-17 May strike series “proved that Russia continues to be unable to effectively defend the Russian capital”, generating significant frustration in the Russian ultranationalist information space. Russian state media gave the strikes only about a minute of coverage on Perviy Kanal, Rossiya-1 and NTV combined, according to Agentstvo. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov, asked about “powerful bombs” from a “nuclear power state”, said Russia “cannot be threatened as a nuclear power and its very existence cannot be threatened”. Some Russian milbloggers called for retaliation with tactical nuclear weapons and criticised both Peskov and Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova as inadequate. Ukraine separately struck the Belbek military airfield in occupied Sevastopol — hitting a Pantsir-S2, an S-400 radar hangar, Orion and Forpost drone control systems, a ground-to-air data transmission system and the control tower — and a Russian FSB patrol ship in the Caspian Sea, roughly 1,000 kilometres from the frontline.

Reuters: Pakistan Deploys Jet Squadron, Thousands of Troops to Saudi Arabia

Reuters reported exclusively today that Pakistan has deployed a jet squadron and thousands of troops to Saudi Arabia in support of Riyadh during the Iran war, in the most concrete signal yet that the Pakistani mediation track between Washington and Tehran is being run in parallel with material Pakistani support to Iran’s Sunni-state neighbour. The deployment supplements existing Pakistani assistance to the Saudi armed forces and is being treated by analysts as a hedge against the war’s expansion into a wider Sunni-Shia regional contest. The deployment was reported in the same news cycle as Saudi Arabia’s interception of three drones from Iraqi airspace.

Dive deeper
Pakistan’s mediation track has been the most consistent diplomatic channel between Washington and Tehran since the war began. Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said over the weekend that Islamabad was repatriating eleven Pakistani citizens and twenty Iranian nationals from vessels seized in the high seas by the United States, indicating that the Pakistan track is also handling the operational fall-out of the US blockade. The exclusive deployment story is consistent with the wider pattern of regional realignment now under way: a parallel Reuters report this evening noted that Syria is to join the G7 finance talks in Paris this week — a marker of the post-Assad government’s growing diplomatic standing — while New York Times reporting confirms Israeli outposts in the Iraqi desert and the deepening UAE-US-Israel-Sunni-state security architecture.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Starmer: “I am Not Going to Walk Away”; No Timetable Even if Burnham Wins

Sir Keir Starmer told broadcasters this afternoon that he would not set out a timetable for his departure even if Andy Burnham wins the Makerfield by-election: “I’m not going to do that.” The Prime Minister repeated that he would “not walk away” from the job and said the by-election was “a fight between Labour and Reform”, adding: “I will be backing 100% whoever the [Labour] candidate is.” The Guardian’s Andrew Sparrow framed the day in his live-blog headline: “I am not going to walk away, says Starmer as Burnham pitches debate on how politics needs to change.”

Dive deeper
Starmer’s position formally closes down the weekend reporting in the Mail On Sunday, the i Paper and ITV’s Robert Peston that suggested he was about to announce a departure timetable from Chequers. Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy set the tone on Sky News this morning — “there will be no timetable for departure” — and the Prime Minister’s own broadcast lines later in the day formalise it. The Prime Minister’s framing — that the next general election remains his to fight and that “we’ve got to turn things” after the 7 May local-election losses — is also the line for the gilts market. The Financial Times reports that gilts stabilised through Monday after cabinet voices coalesced behind the Prime Minister; the political risk premium is coming off, with the ten-year gilt yield modestly lower at 5.18%.

Burnham in Leeds: “I Respect Brexit”; Not Proposing EU Rejoin

Andy Burnham used a conference speech in Leeds today to pledge not to “re-run” Brexit arguments and to formally state that he is not proposing the UK rejoins the European Union, the BBC reported. “My view is that Brexit has been damaging, but I also believe the last thing we should do right now is re-run those arguments,” the Greater Manchester mayor said. “I am not proposing that the UK considers rejoining the EU. I respect the decision that was made at the referendum and it is going to undermine everything I have said about strengthening democracy if we don’t respect that vote.” The Liberal Democrats accused Burnham of “U-turning before he’s even been elected”.

Dive deeper
The retreat reverses Burnham’s September 2025 Labour conference commitment to “see this country rejoin the European Union” in his lifetime, and is itself a recognition that Reform UK’s “Brexit betrayal” line of attack is biting in Makerfield. The pivot was telegraphed in this morning’s Daily Telegraph (“Burnham retreats on push to rejoin EU”) and the Financial Times (“Burnham plays down rejoining EU as Labour battle reopens Brexit wounds”); the Leeds speech makes it formal. The political effect is that the Streeting-Burnham EU split is now substantively closed: Streeting’s Saturday speech remains a Streeting position, not a Labour position. Streeting allies told the Guardian over the weekend that his willingness to upset voters is precisely the diagnostic test he wants the leadership question fought on; Burnham today moves the contest to public ownership and democratic reform instead.

Burnham: “Serious Rewiring”, Transfer Money from “Bloated National State”

In the same Leeds speech, Burnham set out the affirmative case for what a Burnham-led Labour Party would do: a transfer of money and resources from “a bloated national state” to “a malnourished local one”, the BBC reported. “We have hollowed out councils and have created an unaccountable state, where too much is delivered by outsourced agencies outside local councillors’ control,” Burnham said. The country, he said, needed “serious rewiring”: a vote for him would be a “vote to change Labour”, and Labour itself needed to change to “regain people’s trust”. The framing positions the Burnham leadership pitch on devolution and public ownership rather than the EU question.

Dive deeper
Combined with Burnham’s weekend Channel 4 News interview — in which he argued for “more things back under stronger public control” and called Thatcher’s deregulation programme “a big mistake” — the Leeds pitch is the clearest articulation yet of a substantively redistributionist economic programme. Josh Simons, the Makerfield MP vacating the seat, told the BBC on Sunday that public ownership of utilities — energy, water, social housing — could be central to the Burnham offer. The Sunday Times reported business and markets are “adopting the brace position” in case the Burnham programme proves to be a Rayner-aligned redistributionist one; David Lammy’s firm Sky News intervention this morning and the cabinet ring-fence around Starmer through Monday have, however, brought ten-year gilt yields modestly off Friday’s 5.18% close.

Lammy on Sky: “No Timetable”; Time for Labour to Get “Back on the Pitch”

Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy told Sky News on Monday morning that “there will be no timetable for departure” for the Prime Minister, Reuters reported, and went on to tell the BBC that it was time for the Labour Party to “get back on the pitch after days of introspection and infighting”. Lammy added that he had spoken to the Prime Minister twice on Sunday. The intervention served as the coordinated Number 10 opening line, which Starmer himself confirmed in broadcast interviews later in the day.

Dive deeper
Lammy is one of the cabinet ministers who would be at greatest risk of losing his post under either a Burnham or a Streeting leadership, which gives the public denial a partisan flavour. The Lammy line is consistent with Lisa Nandy’s Sunday morning intervention on BBC Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg dismissing the leadership talk as “froth and nonsense”. Five ministers resigned over Sir Keir’s leadership in the wake of the 7 May local election losses; the daily reporting since has been dominated by Burnham’s Makerfield path, Wes Streeting’s leadership declaration, and the Catherine West stalking-horse motion. The fact that the cabinet has now coalesced behind the Prime Minister, at least publicly, is itself the most significant single political development of the day — and is what the Financial Times credits for the partial gilts stabilisation.

FT: Gilts Stabilise After Cabinet Voices Support for Starmer

The Financial Times reports this afternoon that UK gilts stabilised through Monday after the cabinet coalesced publicly behind Sir Keir Starmer, with the ten-year gilt yield easing modestly from Friday’s 5.18% close. The piece frames the political risk premium as having come partially off, after a fortnight in which the rising probability of a Burnham-led government had been the most material variable pricing UK assets. The Times separately reports that the International Monetary Fund warned Labour today to “stick to fiscal rules or risk market revolt”, picking up the same diagnostic frame from the multilateral side.

Dive deeper
The FT’s framing is that “investors fear political turmoil following period of relative calm in UK markets”, with the Lammy and Nandy interventions and Starmer’s own Monday-afternoon line acting as the partial circuit-breaker. The Times piece — under Economics Editor David Smith’s framing — argues that “Labour leadership drama is not the only factor moving gilt yields”, with the IMF’s renewed fiscal-rules warning and the wartime oil shock both pricing into the curve. The thirty-year gilt yield closed Friday at 5.85%; the modest Monday rebound suggests that the structural part of the wartime fiscal expansion remains the binding constraint, but the political part — the marginal sell-off triggered by the Burnham scenario — has begun to reverse.
One To Read

Pakistan Hands US Revised Iranian Proposal for Ending War

Reuters · The single most consequential piece of weekend-to-Monday reporting on the Iran track: the Pakistani back-channel is still alive, the Iranian counterproposal has now been re-tabled in revised form, but a Pakistani source warns the parties “don’t have much time” and Trump is meeting his national security advisers tomorrow to discuss military options. The 24-hour window between that meeting and the Israeli “green light” question is the operational variable for the entire week.
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Morning Briefing

Monday 18 May 2026 — 08:15 BST

What It Means For You

  • Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy told Sky News this morning there will be “no timetable for departure”, settling overnight reporting from ITV, the i Paper and the Mail On Sunday that Sir Keir Starmer was about to announce his exit. The choice is now locked in: Starmer will fight the Makerfield by-election and any contest that follows; markets will price a more drawn-out leadership question rather than an imminent handover, and gilt yields will likely give back some of last week’s panic premium at the open.
  • The Institute for the Study of War assesses that Sunday’s drone strike on the United Arab Emirates’ Barakah Nuclear Power Plant was “likely” Iranian or Iranian-backed, executed via a deliberately misleading western-border approach used by Iran before at Abqaiq in 2019. IRGC-aligned media in Tehran are simultaneously trying to pin the strike on Saudi Arabia. The Emirates is investigating; Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed has called it a “treacherous terrorist attack”. Brent and gold are likely to open higher; Gulf carriers will continue to route around the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Burnham retreats on the EU after the Saturday and Sunday Streeting backlash: his spokesman tells the Telegraph he is campaigning on local issues in Makerfield and will “not stand on a national manifesto”. The Times reports that allies of Burnham now accuse Wes Streeting of “sabotage”, with one ally telling the paper: “Wes’s only hope at becoming the next leader is for Andy to lose the by-election.” The Makerfield contest is no longer a referendum on Brexit — it is a referendum on whether Reform takes the seat from Labour at all.

Iran War — Day 80. The war started 28 February 2026. The Institute for the Study of War assesses that Sunday’s drone strike on the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant in Abu Dhabi was “likely” carried out by Iranian or Iranian-backed forces using a deliberate westerly approach to obscure responsibility, replicating the 2019 Abqaiq pattern; IRGC-aligned outlets in Tehran are attempting to attribute the attack to Saudi Arabia instead. Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed has called the strike a “treacherous terrorist attack”; the UAE is investigating and reserves the right to respond. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said over the weekend that the IDF is “ready in defence and offence, and the targets are marked”, with Israel “awaiting a green light from the United States” for renewed strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure and the regime. The New York Times reports Iraqi officials confirming a second clandestine Israeli outpost in the Iraqi desert. Ukraine launched its largest overnight drone attack on the Moscow region in more than a year, killing at least four including three near the capital and triggering a fire at a high-precision weapons plant; Russia in turn struck Odesa, Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson overnight, killing one and injuring more than 30 including children.

GEO Geopolitical

ISW: Barakah Drone Strike “Likely” Iranian; Tehran Tries to Blame Riyadh

The Institute for the Study of War’s 17 May Iran update assesses that “likely Iranian or Iranian-backed forces” launched the three drones that targeted Abu Dhabi’s Barakah Nuclear Power Plant on Sunday, with two intercepted by UAE air defences and one striking an electrical generator outside the inner perimeter. ISW notes that Iran has previously used a westerly approach to obscure responsibility, as in the 2019 Abqaiq attack on Saudi oil facilities, where drones launched from Iranian territory approached from the west. IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News Agency and Defa Press are now openly attempting to attribute the Sunday strike to Saudi Arabia.

Dive deeper
The IAEA confirmed radiation levels at Barakah remain normal, with emergency diesel generators powering Unit 3 while electrical systems are restored, per Director General Rafael Grossi’s call for “maximum military restraint” near nuclear plants. The UAE Foreign Ministry has labelled the attack a “dangerous escalation” and a “flagrant violation of international law, the UN charter, and the principles of humanitarian law”, reserving the right to respond. The National notes that the UAE pointedly did not name Iran in its initial statements, despite doing so for previous strikes — consistent either with a deliberate diplomatic ambiguity or with genuine uncertainty over Houthi or Iraqi-militia involvement. ISW assesses Tehran’s pattern as targeting the UAE specifically to drive a wedge between Abu Dhabi and other Gulf states, in response to growing UAE-US-Israel cooperation.

Katz: Israel “Awaiting Green Light” to Renew Iran War, “Targets are Marked”

Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said over the weekend during a security assessment that the IDF is “ready in defence and offence, and the targets are marked”, and that Israel is “awaiting a green light from the United States” to resume the war on Iran, the Times of Israel reported. Katz framed the operational objectives in unusually explicit terms: “complete the elimination of the Khamenei dynasty, the initiator of the extermination plan against Israel”, and “return Iran to the age of darkness and stone by blowing up central energy and electricity facilities and crushing national economic infrastructure”. The renewed campaign, he said, would be “different and deadly and will add devastating blows in the most painful places”.

Dive deeper
The Katz public statement is the most explicit Israeli operational signalling of the post-ceasefire period and is consistent with the New York Times reporting carried into Saturday by the Times of Israel: that US and Israeli officials are in their most intense renewal-preparation phase to date, with options including the seizure of Kharg Island and a commando-led extraction of enriched uranium. The two open variables remain Trump’s decision on sanctions against Chinese refineries buying Iranian oil, and the Pakistani-mediated negotiating track. UAE Al-Ain media reported on Sunday that the planned Israeli strike would target “national infrastructure, energy sites, and power plants” and “high-ranking Iranian officials”.

US Tables Five Conditions to Tehran; ISW: Positions “Fundamentally Incompatible”

The Institute for the Study of War’s 17 May assessment, citing IRGC-affiliated Fars News Agency, reports that the United States has tabled five main conditions in response to Iran’s 10 May counterproposal: a rejection of war reparations, a requirement that Iran transfer 400 kilograms of uranium to the United States, a limit to one operational Iranian nuclear facility, no release of more than 25 percent of frozen Iranian assets, and no guarantees against future US or Israeli attacks. ISW concludes that “the United States and Iran continue to pursue fundamentally incompatible negotiating positions”.

Dive deeper
Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the principal US-Iran negotiator on Tehran’s side, has been re-tasked by Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei as Iran’s special representative for the People’s Republic of China, IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News Agency reported — a position elevated above the previous PRC-representative roles in “level of authority”. Trump described Iran’s 10 May counterproposal as “totally unacceptable”. Iranian terms include an end to the war on “all fronts”, the lifting of sanctions, the release of frozen Iranian assets, compensation for war-related damages, and recognition of Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz. US Central Command said on 17 May it has now redirected 81 commercial vessels and disabled four since the 13 April blockade began.

NYT: Iraqi Officials Confirm Second Israeli Outpost in Iraqi Desert

Two Iraqi officials, including senior Wisdom Movement official Hassan Fadaam, told the New York Times on 17 May that Israel built two clandestine outposts in the Iraqi desert in late 2024 — not one, as previously reported by the Wall Street Journal. The first outpost, near al Nukhayb in Anbar Province, was used by the IDF for air support, refuelling and “medical treatment” during the 12-day war in June 2025, the NYT reports. Israeli commando units and search-and-rescue teams were deployed there before the start of the recent US-Israeli campaign in Iran, ready to recover Israeli pilots if Iranian forces shot down Israeli fighter jets. The first outpost is no longer operational; the second outpost’s location and status remain undisclosed.

Dive deeper
Two Iraqi security officials also told the NYT that the United States “compelled” Iraq to shut down its radars to protect US aircraft during the June 2025 war and the recent conflict, ISW reports. Iranian-backed Iraqi actors are expected to use the report alongside the disclosure of Israeli bases in Iraq to pressure the Iraqi government to pursue the purchase of advanced air defence systems, replicating calls made by several Iranian-backed Iraqi parliamentarians in June 2025 for the modernisation of Iraqi air defences and the diversification of arms supplies. The disclosure complicates Baghdad’s diplomatic position, the Wisdom Movement having historically positioned itself as a Shia-led, non-Iranian-aligned bloc within the Coordination Framework.

Ukraine Hits Moscow with Biggest Drone Attack in Over a Year; Four Dead

Ukraine launched its largest overnight drone attack on the Moscow region in more than a year on Sunday, killing at least four people including three near the capital, Reuters reported. Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said air defences had destroyed 81 drones headed for Moscow since midnight; twelve people were wounded, mostly near the entrance to Moscow’s oil refinery. Russia’s defence ministry said more than 1,000 Ukrainian drones had been downed across the country in the past 24 hours. Russia hit Odesa, Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson overnight on 17-18 May in response, killing one and injuring more than 30 including a 2-year-old girl, a 10-year-old boy and an 11-year-old boy.

Dive deeper
Ukraine’s General Staff said one strike triggered a fire at a plant outside Moscow producing high-precision weapons. President Volodymyr Zelenskiy posted on X: “Our responses to Russia’s prolongation of the war and its attacks on our cities and communities are entirely justified… We are clearly telling the Russians: Their state must end its war.” Zelenskiy said Ukraine had struck targets more than 500 kilometres from the border despite dense Russian air defences around Moscow. Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova accused Kyiv of targeting civilians: “To the sound of Eurovision songs, the Kyiv regime, financed by the EU, carried out yet another mass terrorist attack.” The Moscow attack follows Russia’s heaviest drone and missile attack on Kyiv over a two-day period on 14-15 May, in which 24 people were killed in a single apartment block.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Lammy on Sky: “No Timetable for Departure”; Starmer Will Stay

Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy told Sky News on Monday morning that Sir Keir Starmer will not set out a timetable for his departure from Downing Street, Reuters reported. “There will be no timetable for departure,” Lammy said, adding that he had spoken to the Prime Minister twice on Sunday. The remarks formally close down the weekend reporting from ITV’s Robert Peston, the i Paper and the Mail On Sunday, all of which suggested Starmer was actively weighing whether to set a date for his own exit, and lock in the path through Makerfield. Starmer will fight any contest if one is triggered; he will not pre-announce his own departure.

Dive deeper
Lammy is one of the cabinet ministers who would be at greatest risk of losing his post under either a Burnham or a Streeting leadership, which gives the public denial a partisan flavour — but it also reflects a coordinated Number 10 position. The Lammy line is consistent with Lisa Nandy’s Sunday morning intervention on BBC Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg dismissing the leadership talk as “froth and nonsense”. The decision is also a binding signal to the gilts market, which sold off sharply on Friday on the assumption of a Burnham-Rayner economic programme: a longer leadership timeline gives the Treasury more time to communicate the autumn Budget framework and reduces the immediate pressure on the curve. Markets are likely to give back some of last week’s panic premium at the Monday open.

Telegraph: Burnham Retreats on EU Rejoin; “Local Issues” in Makerfield

Andy Burnham is distancing himself from calls to rejoin the European Union after the weekend Streeting-Nandy backlash, the Daily Telegraph reports on its front page on Monday. A spokesman for the Greater Manchester mayor told the paper that Burnham will be campaigning on local issues in the Makerfield by-election and will not stand on a “national manifesto”. The Financial Times leads with the same line: “Burnham plays down rejoining EU as Labour battle reopens Brexit wounds”, quoting Burnham saying he is “not advocating” an immediate rejoin move but acknowledging there is a “case” for it long-term.

Dive deeper
The retreat is itself a recognition that Reform UK’s “Brexit betrayal” line of attack is biting in Makerfield, the Sunday Telegraph having reported overnight that Reform intends to print Burnham’s 2025 Labour conference “I want to rejoin” line on its by-election leaflets. The Daily Mail leads with “Backlash over Brexit betrayal”, quoting Lord Michael Gove warning that any rejoin would be a “betrayal”, and Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch calling the policy a “disaster”. The Daily Express turns the question into a Farage-led integrity attack: voters “deserve honesty” from Burnham as he positions for power. The Independent quotes Lisa Nandy describing Streeting’s pitch as “odd” and akin to saying “life was fine in 2015, we just need to go back there”.

Times: Burnham Allies Accuse Streeting of “Sabotage”

The Times leads Monday on Burnham’s allies formally accusing former Health Secretary Wes Streeting of “sabotage”, telling the paper that his Saturday call to rejoin the EU reopens Labour’s Brexit battles and plays directly into Reform UK’s hands ahead of the Makerfield by-election. One Burnham ally is quoted: “Wes’s only hope at becoming the next leader is for Andy to lose the by-election.” A cabinet minister tells the paper that the public battle between Streeting and Burnham as frontrunners is, paradoxically, making Sir Keir Starmer look like an “island of stability and sanity”.

Dive deeper
A source close to Streeting told the Times that his stance is uncontroversial because Burnham himself backed rejoining at last year’s Labour conference. The Streeting camp is unrepentant: an ally told the Guardian on Sunday that “there is no point in trying not to upset anybody, that’s what got us into this problem”, framing the willingness to upset voters as the actual diagnostic test for the next leadership. The Streeting-Burnham mutual sabotage dynamic is the structural feature of the next several weeks: each candidate has a stronger short-term interest in damaging the other than in either accelerating or delaying a leadership contest. Number 10 will exploit this gap.

Guardian: Burnham Faces “Perilous” Race in Makerfield

The Guardian leads Monday with Burnham’s own allies describing his Makerfield by-election bid as “perilous”. While the Greater Manchester mayor is likely to be formally confirmed as Labour’s candidate this week, the paper says he faces an “uphill battle” to beat Reform UK, with polls suggesting he is only marginally ahead. The outcome, the Guardian writes, will determine not only the immediate political future of Sir Keir Starmer but also “the viability of Labour as a whole”. The i Paper reports the Prime Minister spent the weekend at Chequers in discussions with aides over whether to “revive” the government or announce his exit; Lammy’s Sky News intervention now formally settles that question.

Dive deeper
Josh Simons — the Labour MP vacating Makerfield to make way for Burnham — won the seat by a majority of just 5,399 over Reform UK at the 2024 general election; Labour’s polling has weakened nationally and locally since. Reform UK won every council ward in the constituency at last week’s local elections, and Nigel Farage has said he will “throw absolutely everything” at the by-election. The Daily Express front page reports Farage saying voters “deserve honesty” from Burnham; the Daily Mirror, by contrast, dedicates its front page to the Ben Needham case and the Daily Star leads with Burnham’s pledge to scrap VAR in football.

FT: WHO Declares Ebola Public Health Emergency Over DRC Outbreak

The World Health Organization has declared the latest Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo a public health emergency of international concern, the Financial Times reports on its front page on Monday, alongside its Burnham-EU lead. The WHO designation triggers expanded international coordination and funding for outbreak response, and is the first such Ebola-related declaration in several years. The BBC’s Monday-morning Newspaper Review summary highlights the FT framing as a counter-cycle to the political-leadership story dominating the rest of Fleet Street.

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A WHO public-health-emergency-of-international-concern declaration (PHEIC) is the highest alert level under the International Health Regulations and is reserved for outbreaks that are extraordinary, with public-health risks to other states through international spread, and potentially requiring a coordinated international response. The DRC outbreak adds to the long list of operational demands on the international system already running at capacity due to the Iran war humanitarian footprint, the Sudan civil war response, and continued cholera management in Yemen and Somalia. The FT will be closely watched today for sterling and risk-asset pricing reactions; the Burnham retreat means UK-specific political risk is fractionally lower than over the weekend.
One To Read

Iran Update Special Report, 17 May 2026

Institute for the Study of War · The single most rigorous open-source analysis of yesterday’s Barakah drone strike, the five US negotiating conditions tabled to Tehran, and the New York Times reporting on the second clandestine Israeli outpost in Iraq. ISW’s judgment that the Barakah westerly approach echoes the 2019 Iranian Abqaiq playbook is the key analytic frame for everything that follows over the coming week.
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Evening Briefing

Sunday 17 May 2026 — 18:30 BST

What It Means For You

  • A drone strike on the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant in the United Arab Emirates on Sunday set fire to an electrical generator outside the plant’s perimeter, with no radiological release. The IAEA expressed “grave concern”; no group claimed responsibility but UAE authorities have previously attributed roughly 3,000 such attacks since 28 February to Iran or its proxies. UAE Al-Ain media reported the same evening that the Israeli army “continues its preparations to resume the war”, including planned strikes on Iranian energy and infrastructure and against high-ranking officials — meaning Monday’s oil and gas open is set to price a meaningfully higher probability of a Gulf re-escalation.
  • Sir Keir Starmer is at Chequers this weekend deciding, per ITV’s Robert Peston, whether to announce a timetable for his own departure as Prime Minister. Cabinet ministers split: one bloc says “the die is already cast” and he should shape a positive legacy; another insists he should stay to avoid “mayhem” if Burnham loses Makerfield. Colleagues “don’t know what he will decide”. A Sunday-night statement, if it comes, would re-price gilts and sterling at Monday’s open.
  • Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy used Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg to dismiss the leadership talk as “froth and nonsense” and to call Wes Streeting’s Saturday EU-rejoin pitch “a bit odd”. Streeting allies hit back that his willingness to talk EU membership is precisely the kind of risk Number 10 will not take. The Labour leadership contest, if triggered after Makerfield, will now be fought on EU re-entry as much as on the cost of living — with Reform UK preparing to print Burnham’s 2025 “I want to rejoin it” quote on Makerfield by-election leaflets.

Iran War — Day 79. The war started 28 February 2026. A drone strike on Sunday hit an electrical generator outside the inner perimeter of the UAE’s Barakah Nuclear Power Plant in Al-Dhafra Region, the Jerusalem Post and Associated Press report — the IAEA registered “grave concern”, no radiological release was detected, and the Emirati authorities did not formally attribute the attack but framed it within the “repeated and unjustified Iranian terrorist attacks” the country has faced since 28 February. The Israel Defense Forces named the officer killed in Friday’s Hezbollah drone strike as 24-year-old Capt. Maoz Israel Recanati of the Golani Brigade’s 12th Battalion, the seventh IDF soldier killed in southern Lebanon since the ceasefire began. The Institute for the Study of War assesses the Russian General Staff’s May 16 battlefield report as “highly inaccurate” for the fifth consecutive month; Russia launched 294 drones at Ukraine overnight on 16-17 May, of which 269 were intercepted, and Ukrainian forces struck the Azot chemical plant in Nevinnomyssk, southern Russia’s largest ammonia and nitrogen-fertiliser producer.

GEO Geopolitical

Drone Strike Sparks Fire at UAE’s Barakah Nuclear Plant; IAEA “Grave Concern”

A drone struck an electrical generator outside the inner perimeter of the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant in the UAE’s Al-Dhafra Region on Sunday, sparking a fire that the Abu Dhabi Media Office said caused no injuries and no radiological release, the Jerusalem Post reported. The Federal Authority for Nuclear Regulation confirmed that the plant’s essential systems are operating normally. The Associated Press said the strike “highlighted the risk of renewed war as the Iran ceasefire remains tenuous”. No group claimed responsibility; the International Atomic Energy Agency expressed “grave concern” and said it is following the situation closely.

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UAE Minister of State at the Foreign Ministry Khalifa Shaheen Al Marar told a BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting on Friday that since 28 February 2026 the UAE has intercepted around 3,000 attacks involving ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and drones targeting airports, ports, oil and desalination facilities, energy networks and residential areas. The minister said the UAE “reserves its full sovereign, legal, diplomatic, and military rights to respond to any threat, allegation, or hostile act”. The Jerusalem Post analysis frames the Sunday incident as “an Iranian message that it will increase its list of targets in the country”. Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, who had been a negotiator with the US, has reportedly been re-tasked to handle China-Iran ties following Trump’s recent China visit.

IDF Officer Cpt. Recanati Killed; 100 Hezbollah Targets Struck Over Weekend

The Israel Defense Forces named the officer killed in Friday’s Hezbollah drone strike in southern Lebanon as 24-year-old Capt. Maoz Israel Recanati, a platoon commander in the Golani Brigade’s 12th Battalion from Itamar, the Times of Israel reported. A statement from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Recanati had been due to marry his fiancée, Rani, in a month: “We all embrace her and his loved ones during this difficult time.” The IDF said it struck approximately 100 Hezbollah targets across southern Lebanon over the weekend, including surveillance posts and weapon depots, and shot down several Hezbollah drones that triggered sirens in Western Galilee border communities.

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Recanati is the seventh IDF soldier killed in southern Lebanon since the ceasefire began, and the twentieth since hostilities escalated amid the Iran war; a civilian contractor has also been killed. Lebanon’s state National News Agency reported strikes on more than two dozen villages on Saturday, including one more than 50 kilometres from the border, and a renewed exodus of residents toward Sidon and Beirut. UN Secretary-General António Guterres “welcomed” Friday’s 45-day ceasefire extension and urged all actors to “fully respect the cessation of hostilities”. Hezbollah formally opposes the Washington-mediated talks, accusing the Lebanese government of offering “a series of free concessions” to “the enemy”.

UAE Al-Ain: Israel Preparing Renewed Iran Strike on Energy and Officials

UAE outlet Al-Ain reported on Sunday that Israel is on “high alert in anticipation of a possible resumption of war with Iran”, citing a source briefed on Israeli military planning carried by the Jerusalem Post. The reported plan would “include damage to national infrastructure, energy sites, and power plants, and Israeli aircraft will also attempt to target high-ranking Iranian officials”. Israel is reportedly anticipating Iranian strikes in response. The reporting comes alongside Israeli media discussion of an imminent decision window and follows last week’s New York Times account, carried in Saturday’s Times of Israel, that US and Israeli officials were in their most intense renewal-preparation phase to date.

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The Jerusalem Post separately reports New York Times and Wall Street Journal accounts of Israeli forward sites established in Iraq amid the Iran tensions — the WSJ identifying one site and the NYT two. Iran has continued strikes on Kurdish opposition groups in northern Iraq through the ceasefire period. The Jerusalem Post’s framing is that Iran “is messaging through aggression and words” that it will target countries or groups working with Israel, and that the Sunday Barakah strike fits that pattern. Pakistan’s mediation track and Trump’s pending decision on sanctions against Chinese refineries buying Iranian oil remain the two open variables for whether the renewal moves from preparation to execution.

ISW: Gerasimov’s Battlefield Report “Highly Inaccurate”; Ukraine Hits Azot Plant

The Institute for the Study of War’s 16 May campaign assessment reports that Russian Chief of the General Staff Army General Valery Gerasimov made a series of false claims to the Western Grouping of Forces, claiming Russian troops are advancing west of Kupyansk toward Shevchenkove despite ISW’s assessment that Russian forces have infiltrated only about 14.2% of Kupyansk. ISW judged the pattern “highly inaccurate” for the fifth consecutive month and warned the Russian command “is either unaware of or unwilling to admit the realities of the battlefield even to itself, and is therefore allowing its own falsehoods to influence Russian operational and strategic planning”.

Dive deeper
Gerasimov also claimed Russian forces had seized all of Borova and Kutkivka and about 85% of Lyman — figures ISW puts at 6.5% on Kutkivka and 0.06% on Lyman. Russian milbloggers have publicly warned that Ukrainian counter-attacks and false reports of advances in other frontline areas are creating situations the Russian command cannot adequately respond to. Ukrainian forces struck the Azot chemical plant in Nevinnomyssk, Stavropol Krai — southern Russia’s largest chemical plant and its largest producer of nitrogen fertilisers and ammonia for explosives — some 540 kilometres from the frontline. Russia launched 294 drones at Ukraine overnight on 16-17 May; Ukrainian air defences downed 269. Russian strikes hit port, residential and critical infrastructure in Odesa Oblast, cutting power to 39 settlements and 22,662 subscribers.

Kremlin Decree Simplifies Russian Citizenship for Transnistria Residents

President Vladimir Putin signed a decree on 15 May simplifying the procedure by which residents of the pro-Russian breakaway region of Transnistria in Moldova can acquire Russian citizenship, the Institute for the Study of War reported. ISW assesses that the Kremlin is continuing to expand its “passportization” efforts in Transnistria to deepen Russian influence in the region, building the political-administrative scaffolding for future leverage in negotiations over Moldova’s European trajectory and over the security architecture of the western Black Sea.

Dive deeper
Russia has used passportization — the mass issuance of Russian passports to residents of foreign territories — as a pretext for intervention in past conflicts, most notably in Crimea and the Donbas in 2014. Transnistria has hosted Russian troops since the early 1990s and has been increasingly squeezed by Moldova’s tightening alignment with the European Union following the start of EU accession negotiations in 2024. The Sunday decree is the latest in a sequence of low-profile administrative measures that follow the Kremlin’s pattern of layering legal status over a contested region before any political move. Ukrainian forces also advanced in the Hulyaipole direction over the same 24-hour window.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Peston: Starmer at Chequers Deciding Departure Timetable

Sir Keir Starmer is at Chequers this weekend making what ITV political editor Robert Peston called a “very difficult decision”: whether to re-assert his authority and re-energise his government, or announce a timetable for a leadership election and his own departure. Cabinet ministers told Peston that some of them now believe “the die is already cast that he will have to resign in coming months, whether Burnham is elected an MP or not”, and that the Prime Minister should “acknowledge that reality” and use a time-limited period to shape a positive legacy.

Dive deeper
Other ministers told Peston the Prime Minister should stay, fearing “mayhem if Burnham were to lose” the Makerfield by-election, in which circumstance “it would be preferable for the party to draw breath rather than charge headlong into a leadership election”. Peston flagged a conflict of interest: many of those insisting he should not quit will be out of a job if Starmer is replaced. One minister told Peston the choice “is not so binary” and that “other options” could keep “the government show on the road” — but added that whatever Starmer decides, he “will have to spell this out explicitly and in detail to all of us”. Colleagues, Peston said, “don’t know what he will decide”.

Nandy on BBC: Streeting EU Call “A Bit Odd”; Leadership Talk “Froth”

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy dismissed Labour leadership talk as “froth and nonsense” on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg and called Wes Streeting’s Saturday EU-rejoin pitch “just a bit odd”, the Guardian reported. “I listened to what Wes had to say very carefully yesterday, and I know that he’s got a strong view about this…” she said. “Frankly, that’s one that I share. I campaigned for remain, I think it was a mistake, and I think the Brexit deal has been a real problem for us. But I don’t really understand why the sudden focus on Europe.” Asked whether Starmer would run in a contest, Nandy said: “He’s shown before that he’s up for a fight.”

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Streeting allies hit back quickly, telling the Guardian that Nandy’s unwillingness to talk about EU membership was “symptomatic” of the wider reluctance to take political risks that has made Starmer so unpopular. “There is no point in trying not to upset anybody, that’s what got us into this problem,” one Streeting ally said. “Sometimes you have to be willing to upset people to get things done.” Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch said the row was a “sign of the Labour party that does not have a plan for the country”, adding: “They want to go back and refight wars, which were settled a long time ago.” Nandy was the first Cabinet minister to join Burnham on the Makerfield campaign trail in Winstanley on Saturday.

Streeting: “Britain’s Future Lies With Europe”; Will Stand in Any Contest

Wes Streeting, who resigned as Health Secretary on Thursday, used a Saturday speech to the Progress conference to call for Britain to seek a new “special relationship” with the European Union and, eventually, to rejoin: “In 2026, the British people increasingly see that in a dangerous world we must club together, both to rebuild our economy and trade, and improve our defence against the shared threats from Russian aggression and America First. The biggest economic opportunity we have is on our doorstep… Britain’s future lies with Europe — and one day back in the European Union.” Streeting confirmed he will stand in any Labour leadership contest if one is triggered.

Dive deeper
Streeting’s framing — positioning EU re-entry as a defence-and-economics response to Trump’s “America First” and to Russian aggression — deliberately reaches over the Brexit-cultural argument and into the harder-headed Treasury and MoD case. The Guardian quotes Burnham’s position via Telegraph reporting: he stands by his September 2025 Labour conference line that “long term… I want to rejoin” the EU, but would require a fresh mandate from voters to act on it. Asked by ITV News on Saturday whether he was in favour of rejoining the EU, Burnham said: “in the long term there is a case for that”, but added that he is “not advocating that in this by-election”. A formal contest would still require 81 MP nominations to trigger.

Reform Will Print Burnham’s “I Want to Rejoin” Words on Makerfield Leaflets

The Telegraph understands that Reform UK will make “Brexit betrayal” one of its key attack lines in the Makerfield by-election campaign, and intends to print Andy Burnham’s Labour conference 2025 words about wanting to rejoin the EU on its leaflets. Reform leader Nigel Farage told the Telegraph: “He would be a disaster for the economy and betray every Brexit voter in the constituency. ‘Open borders Burnham’ must be stopped.” Josh Simons, who is vacating the Makerfield seat to make way for Burnham, won it by a majority of just 5,399 over Reform UK at the 2024 general election — and Labour’s polling has weakened in the constituency since.

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Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake told the Telegraph: “Whilst Labour re-litigate Brexit, Britain is not being governed.” Dan Carden MP, the Blue Labour leader, said: “There’s nothing wrong with talking about rebuilding our relationship with Europe, but my party still looks at Brexit and thinks people were fooled by Farage. I don’t think that… It would be far better to focus government resources on making the most of our sovereign freedoms in trade and defence and foreign policy. And start talking confidently about Britain’s place in the world, and stop whining about Brexit.” Jon Trickett MP said Labour “needs to honour the democratic decision… It feels a bit defeatist to me.” Lord Glasman called Streeting’s position a misreading of national mood.

Burnham to Channel 4: Reverse 40 Years of Thatcherism, Bring Utilities Back

Andy Burnham used an interview with Channel 4 News this weekend to call for the UK to go down a “completely” different path to the past 40 years, involving putting “more things back under stronger public control”. “Margaret Thatcher deregulated the whole country,” he told Channel 4. “The country gave away its control of the basic things that people depend upon every day. And that was a big mistake, in my view.” Josh Simons told the BBC on Sunday that public ownership of utilities — energy, water, social housing — could be “an important part of” the Burnham pitch to voters in Makerfield and beyond.

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“Energy, water, social housing — those things that are the basics of our lives that we all depend on — have gotten so expensive,” Simons told the BBC. “And one of the reasons why they’ve gotten so expensive — not the only, but one of the reasons why they’ve gotten so expensive — is that we privatise a lot of them, and often the bills that we pay go to the shareholders.” The Burnham economic programme, as drawn by Channel 4 and the BBC, deliberately combines a Labour-left utility programme with a Burnham-Mayor delivery pitch — the explicit alternative to both Reeves’s fiscal restraint and Streeting’s liberalism. The Greater Manchester mayor is expected to be formally confirmed as the Labour candidate for Makerfield next week.
One To Read

Keir Starmer ‘Deciding Whether to Announce a Departure Timetable’

ITV News · Robert Peston’s Sunday-afternoon read of the Chequers weekend, with cabinet ministers split on whether the Prime Minister should set a date for his own departure to shape his legacy, or stay and bet on Burnham losing in Makerfield. The single most consequential piece of weekend reporting on the immediate future of the British government.
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Morning Briefing

Sunday 17 May 2026 — 08:15 BST

What It Means For You

  • Both leading Labour leadership contenders — Andy Burnham and Wes Streeting — have placed re-joining the European Union at the centre of their pitches. The Sunday Telegraph and Sunday Times lead on the story; the Sunday Mirror runs Burnham’s vision of mass nationalisation. Reform UK has signalled that “Brexit betrayal” will be its principal attack line in the Makerfield by-election campaign, which means the contest now turns on the EU question as much as on domestic policy.
  • Lisa Nandy, the Culture Secretary, has become the first Cabinet minister to join Burnham on the Makerfield campaign trail in Winstanley, breaking ranks with the Prime Minister’s position. Dan Hodges reports in the Mail On Sunday that Sir Keir has told close friends he intends to stand down and set out a departure timetable, with a Cabinet minister quoted saying “he realises the current chaos is unsustainable”.
  • The US and Israel are continuing intense preparations to renew the war against Iran as soon as next week, according to the New York Times report carried into Sunday by the Times of Israel. Israeli strikes on Hezbollah in southern Lebanon continued through Saturday despite Friday’s 45-day ceasefire extension. Petrol and energy-related prices are likely to remain elevated; the Sunday Express reports that Iranian intelligence activity on UK soil is now the largest single category of hostile-state casework.

Iran War — Day 79. The war started 28 February 2026. The Times of Israel reports, citing the New York Times and Israel’s Channel 12, that US and Israeli forces are conducting their most intense preparations to renew the war as soon as next week, with options including the conquest of Kharg Island and the insertion of commandos to extract highly enriched uranium. Israeli strikes on Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon continued into Saturday despite Friday’s 45-day ceasefire extension, with Lebanese state media reporting fresh evacuations. The Institute for the Study of War assesses that the Russian General Staff has made a series of false battlefield claims about advances west of Kupyansk that have not occurred; Russia launched 294 drones at Ukraine overnight on 15-16 May, of which 269 were intercepted. Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi remains in Tehran on a mediation track, while Pakistan and Iran are repatriating crews from US-seized vessels.

GEO Geopolitical

US and Israel Prep to Renew Iran War “Next Week” — NYT

Two Middle Eastern officials told the New York Times that Israel and the United States are in their most intense preparations to date to renew the war against Iran, possibly as soon as next week, the Times of Israel reported. Options include conquering Iran’s Kharg Island oil hub and inserting commandos to extract highly enriched uranium buried since the June 2025 strikes. A senior Israeli official told Channel 12: “We’re preparing for days to weeks of fighting and waiting for Trump’s final decision. We’ll know more in 24 hours.”

Dive deeper
Iran’s stockpile of approximately 440 kilograms of highly enriched uranium is thought to have been buried after the US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities during the 12-day Israel-Iran war in June 2025. Extracting it via commando insertion would require thousands of supporting forces to create a perimeter, and would risk significant casualties. Pakistani-mediated negotiations supported by China have failed to bridge the gap on Iran’s nuclear programme and post-war control of the Strait of Hormuz. On Friday Trump signalled flexibility, saying he would accept a 20-year suspension of uranium enrichment if Tehran gave a “real” guarantee — an apparent shift from his earlier insistence on a permanent halt.

Israeli Strikes on South Lebanon Continue After Ceasefire Extension

Israel launched a wave of airstrikes on Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon on Saturday, the day after Friday’s 45-day ceasefire extension was announced in Washington, the Associated Press reported. The Lebanese national news agency reported strikes on at least five villages preceded by mass evacuations toward Sidon and Beirut; the Israel Defense Forces issued evacuation orders for nine villages and said it was responding to Hezbollah’s “violations of the ceasefire agreement”. Hezbollah launched at least one drone toward Israel; sirens triggered in the Meron area, no injuries reported.

Dive deeper
The truce extension agreed on Friday in Washington was structured as a political track resuming at the State Department on 2-3 June and a security track at the Pentagon on 29 May. The US has explicitly permitted Israel to continue targeting Hezbollah operatives and infrastructure it deems an immediate threat — meaning the ceasefire is operationally a lower-intensity continuation of conflict rather than a halt. Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health put the cumulative civilian toll at 2,969 killed and 9,112 wounded since 2 March. AP and Reuters separately reported Friday-evening strikes on a civil defence centre in Harouf killed six, including three paramedics.

Hamas Military Chief Al-Haddad Killed in Gaza Strike, Confirmed

The Israel Defense Forces confirmed on Saturday that Friday’s airstrike in Gaza killed Izz al-Din al-Haddad, leader of Hamas’s military wing and described by Israel as “one of the last surviving architects” of the 7 October 2023 attacks, the Associated Press reported. Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qassem confirmed the killing. Al-Haddad had assumed command of the Hamas military council following the killing of his predecessor Mohammed Sinwar. The 7 October attacks killed around 1,200 people in southern Israel and saw more than 250 taken hostage.

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The strike hit a residential building and a car in the Rimal neighbourhood of Gaza City, killing at least seven people including three women and a child, according to local reports. The Palestinian Mujahideen Movement and its military wing issued a joint statement calling it a “cowardly assassination” that will not “weaken the resolve” of the resistance. The Gaza ceasefire remains fragile: more than 850 Palestinians have been killed in the territory since the October ceasefire took effect, with the top diplomat overseeing it saying it has “stalled” over the deadlock on Hamas disarmament. The killing closes a sequence of senior-Hamas military removals; the question for Gaza is whether the command vacuum produces de-escalation or fragmentation.

ISW: Gerasimov Making False Kupyansk Claims; 294 Drones at Ukraine Overnight

The Institute for the Study of War assessed that Russian Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov made a series of false claims to senior commanders on 16 May, asserting Russian forces are advancing west of Kupyansk toward Shevchenkove despite ISW evidence that Russian forces have only infiltrated about 14% of Kupyansk itself. ISW called the claims “highly inaccurate” for the fifth consecutive month, judging the Russian command may be “allowing its own falsehoods to influence Russian operational and strategic planning”. Russia launched 294 drones at Ukraine overnight; 269 were intercepted.

Dive deeper
Gerasimov also claimed Russian forces had seized all of Borova, Kutkivka and 85% of Lyman — figures ISW cross-checks against geolocated footage put at near-zero on Lyman (0.06%) and 6.5% on Kutkivka. Even Russian milbloggers have publicly criticised the “beautiful reports” pattern, with one sarcastically suggesting the Russian command will soon claim to have seized Kharkiv City. Ukrainian forces struck the Azot chemical plant in Nevinnomyssk, Stavropol Krai — southern Russia’s largest chemical plant and its largest producer of nitrogen fertilisers and ammonia for explosives, roughly 540 kilometres from the frontline. Putin signed a decree on 15 May simplifying Russian citizenship for residents of Transnistria, the pro-Russian breakaway region of Moldova.

Pakistan, Iran Repatriate Vessel Crews as Back-Channel Talks Continue

Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on Saturday that Islamabad is repatriating eleven Pakistani citizens and twenty Iranian nationals from vessels seized in the high seas by the United States, Reuters reported. The repatriation is being handled alongside ongoing Pakistani back-channel mediation with both Tehran and Washington. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi separately told reporters in New Delhi that Tehran has “no trust” in the US and will negotiate only if Washington “is serious”.

Dive deeper
Pakistan’s mediation track has been the most consistent diplomatic channel between Washington and Tehran since the war began. The US began a blockade of Iranian ports on 13 April; US Central Command has redirected 75-78 commercial vessels and disabled four since. Iran has imposed a counter-blockade on the Strait of Hormuz, regulating non-Iranian transits via Iranian-approved corridors. Trump told reporters on Friday he was considering whether to lift US sanctions on Chinese refineries buying Iranian oil — a decision he said would come “over the next few days” and which would materially change the economics of the wartime financial squeeze on Tehran.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Sunday Papers: Burnham and Streeting Want to Rejoin the EU

Both Andy Burnham and Wes Streeting would seek a mandate to rejoin the European Union if elected Labour leader, the Sunday Telegraph reports on its front page; the Sunday Times leads with “Britain should rejoin EU, declares Streeting”. In a speech to the Progress conference on Saturday, Streeting called leaving the EU a “catastrophic mistake”, said Britain needs a new “special relationship” with the bloc, and concluded: “Britain’s future lies with Europe — and one day back in the European Union.” Reform UK will make “Brexit betrayal” a central by-election attack.

Dive deeper
Telegraph sources close to Burnham confirmed he stands by his Labour conference 2025 line: “Long term, I’m going to be honest, I’m going to say it, I want to rejoin it. Look, I hope in my lifetime I see this country rejoin the European Union.” He told ITV News on Saturday that “in the long term there is a case” for rejoining, but is “not advocating that in this by-election”. The Sunday Times reports Streeting’s remarks have “electrified the race to succeed Sir Keir Starmer” and signal an end to what it calls “the longstanding omertà” among senior Labour figures who want closer EU alignment. The diagnostic question for the Makerfield by-election is whether the EU position offsets or amplifies the Reform threat in a seat where Reform won every council ward last week.

Nandy Breaks Ranks: First Cabinet Minister to Join Burnham Campaign

Lisa Nandy, the Culture Secretary, became the first sitting Cabinet minister to join Andy Burnham on the Makerfield campaign trail in Winstanley, Greater Manchester, on Saturday, the Telegraph reported. The move is a substantive break from Number 10’s official position of fighting any Burnham challenge. The Mail On Sunday separately reports, via Dan Hodges, that Sir Keir Starmer has told close friends he intends to stand down and set out a departure timetable, with a Cabinet minister quoted saying “he realises the current chaos is unsustainable”.

Dive deeper
Nandy’s appearance is the diagnostic signal that the parliamentary balance is shifting. The Observer reports that the Prime Minister has attacked Streeting privately, telling insiders the former Health Secretary damaged the government “when he never had a plan to win” any leadership ballot. The Observer also claims Starmer’s relationship with Energy Secretary Ed Miliband has been gravely damaged because Miliband chose not to urge the party’s soft left to support Number 10 when challenges emerged. Burnham still needs the Makerfield by-election win (most likely 18 June), then needs 81 MP nominations to formally trigger a leadership contest. Streeting’s Saturday declaration ensures the contest, if triggered, is a genuine field rather than a Burnham coronation.

Burnham on Channel 4: “Completely Different Path”, Mass Nationalisation

Andy Burnham used a Saturday interview with Channel 4 News to call for the UK to go down a “completely” different path to the past 40 years, putting “more things back under stronger public control”. He told the Telegraph he favours nationalisation of energy, housing, water and transport; the Sunday Mirror exclusive details council-house building, electoral reform via proportional representation, and a programme of mass nationalisation. “Margaret Thatcher deregulated the whole country,” he said. “The country gave away its control of the basic things that people depend upon every day. And that was a big mistake.”

Dive deeper
The programme as articulated maps closely onto the Guardian’s framing of “Manchesterism” — the bus-franchising, devolved-mayoral, public-investment model Burnham has implemented in Greater Manchester since 2017, scaled to national policy. It is the most explicit Left turn from a likely Labour PM since the Corbyn era. The Sunday Mirror quote: “Britain needs to build new politics. We want to listen to what people are saying.” The structural question for the bond market is how this programme interacts with the 30-year gilt at 5.85% — Burnham’s previous remarks that the government should not be “in hock” to financial markets are why Friday’s gilt sell-off was sharper than Streeting’s resignation alone would have triggered.

Farage: “Open Borders Burnham”; Tory Chair Attacks “Re-litigate Brexit”

Nigel Farage told the Telegraph that Burnham “would be a disaster for the economy and betray every Brexit voter in the constituency. ‘Open borders Burnham’ must be stopped.” Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake said: “Whilst Labour re-litigate Brexit, Britain is not being governed.” Labour MP Dan Carden of the Blue Labour group warned his party against “whining about Brexit”: “It would be far better to focus government resources on making the most of our sovereign freedoms in trade and defence and foreign policy.”

Dive deeper
The Telegraph reports Reform UK will print Burnham’s 2025 Labour conference EU-rejoin quote on its Makerfield by-election leaflets. Labour MP Jon Trickett, representing Normanton and Hemsworth, told the Telegraph the party “needs to honour the democratic decision” on Brexit and the rejoin framing “feels a bit defeatist to me”. Lord Glasman, the Labour peer associated with Blue Labour, said: “National sovereignty is key to the restoration of our national pride. The EU is economically stagnant and will remain so.” The wedge inside Labour mirrors the wedge in the 2024 electorate; the by-election will be the first quantitative test of whether a rejoin platform helps or hurts a Labour candidate in a Reform-leaning seat.

Mail On Sunday: Starmer Tells Allies He Intends to Stand Down

Dan Hodges writes in the Mail On Sunday, summarised by the BBC’s Sunday papers round-up, that Sir Keir Starmer has told close friends he intends to stand down and set out a timetable for his departure. A Cabinet minister is quoted saying “he realises the current chaos is unsustainable”, and that the Prime Minister will leave in a “manner of his own choosing”. The Times has separately reported the autumn defence-spending boost as part of the survival package; the Eurasia Group raised the probability of Starmer being ousted this year to 80% on Friday.

Dive deeper
Number 10 has not confirmed the Hodges briefing, and Starmer’s allies continue to insist publicly that he will contest any challenge. The two paths now in play: an orderly transition once Burnham wins Makerfield (most likely 18 June), with a contest concluding by September in time for the autumn Liverpool conference; or a contested race that runs through the summer with Streeting, Burnham and possibly Rayner all standing. Per the BBC’s Sunday papers summary, the Observer claims Starmer’s relationship with Energy Secretary Ed Miliband has been “gravely damaged” by Miliband’s refusal to mobilise the soft left in the Prime Minister’s defence. The first PMQs after the reshuffle is scheduled for Wednesday.
One To Read

Burnham and Streeting Want to Rejoin the EU

The Telegraph · The Saturday-evening political scoop that defines the Sunday news cycle: both leading leadership candidates have re-opened the Brexit question, Reform UK will weaponise it in Makerfield, Lisa Nandy has broken Cabinet ranks to join Burnham’s campaign, and inside Labour the wedge between “rejoin” modernisers (Streeting, Burnham) and Blue Labour (Carden, Glasman) opens publicly for the first time. Sets up the entire week ahead.
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Evening Briefing

Saturday 16 May 2026 — 18:30 BST

What It Means For You

  • Israel launched its first wave of airstrikes on Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon since Friday’s 45-day ceasefire extension, issuing evacuation orders for nine villages and a Hezbollah drone toward Israel triggered sirens near Meron. The ceasefire is being implemented as a low-intensity, “porous” truce, not a halt in fighting; petrol forecourt prices and energy-related inflation are unlikely to ease before a parallel Iran-track breakthrough.
  • The Times reports that the United States and Israel are conducting their most intense preparations to renew the air campaign against Iran “as soon as next week”, citing two Middle Eastern officials. Options under consideration include conquering Iran’s Kharg Island oil hub and putting commandos onto the mainland to extract enriched uranium — with the senior Israeli official telling Israeli television: “We’ll know more in 24 hours.”
  • Former Health Secretary Wes Streeting confirmed at the Progress conference in London that he “will be standing” in any Labour leadership contest. With Burnham’s NEC-approved selection process closing on Monday and the Makerfield by-election expected on 18 June, the field is now formally a contest rather than a coronation — markets will price the rival policy programmes through next week’s Treasury yield curve.

Iran War — Day 78. The war started 28 February 2026. The Israel Defense Forces struck Hezbollah infrastructure in nine villages of southern Lebanon today, the first wave of strikes since Friday’s US-brokered 45-day ceasefire extension. In Gaza, the Israeli military announced the killing of Izz al-Din al-Haddad, the leader of Hamas’s military wing and one of the last surviving architects of the 7 October 2023 attacks; Hamas confirmed. Two Middle Eastern officials told the New York Times that US and Israeli forces are in their most intense preparations to renew the war against Iran as soon as next week, with options including the seizure of Kharg Island and a ground extraction of enriched uranium. The Institute for the Study of War assesses that the Iranian regime now treats “recognised control over the Strait of Hormuz” as the implicit precondition for negotiations.

GEO Geopolitical

IDF Strikes Hezbollah for First Time Since Ceasefire Extension

The Israel Defense Forces said on Saturday that it had launched a wave of airstrikes on Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon — the first since Friday’s 45-day ceasefire extension. The IDF issued evacuation warnings for nine villages including Qaaqaaiyet al-Snoubar, Kaouthariyet El Saiyad, Merouaniyeh, Ghassaniyeh, Tefahta, Irzay, Babliyeh, Insar and al-Baisariyah. “In light of the Hezbollah terror organization’s violations of the ceasefire agreement, the IDF is forced to act against it with force,” army spokesman Col. Avichay Adraee said. A Hezbollah drone fired at Israel triggered sirens near Meron; no injuries reported.

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Lebanon’s National News Agency reported strikes on at least five villages, preceded by an exodus toward Sidon and Beirut. Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health raised the cumulative civilian toll to 2,969 killed and 9,112 wounded since 2 March, up from yesterday’s 2,896 figure. Hezbollah claimed a “confirmed hit” on an Israeli military vehicle in Taybeh town square. The Times of Israel framed the truce as “porous”: the US has explicitly permitted Israel to continue targeting Hezbollah operatives and infrastructure it deems a threat, which means the ceasefire is operationally a lower-intensity continuation rather than a halt.

US and Israel Prepping to Renew Iran War Next Week, NYT Reports

Two Middle Eastern officials told the New York Times that Israel and the United States are carrying out their most intense preparations yet to renew attacks on Iran, possibly as soon as next week, the Times of Israel reported. Options reportedly include a more intense bombing campaign, the seizure of Iran’s Kharg Island oil hub, and putting commandos onto the mainland to extract highly-enriched uranium buried under rubble. A senior Israeli official told Channel 12: “We’re preparing for days to weeks of fighting and waiting for Trump’s final decision. We’ll know more in 24 hours.”

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Iran is thought to hold a stockpile of about 440 kilograms of highly enriched uranium — enough material for about ten warheads — buried following the US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities during the 12-day Israel-Iran war in June 2025. Extracting it would require thousands of supporting forces and would risk significant casualties. Pakistani-mediated negotiations, supported by China, have failed to bridge the gap on Iran’s nuclear programme and the post-war control of the Strait of Hormuz. On Friday Trump signalled flexibility, telling reporters he would accept a 20-year suspension of uranium enrichment if Tehran gave a “real” guarantee — an apparent shift from his earlier demand for a permanent halt.

Hamas Military-Wing Leader Al-Haddad Killed in Gaza Strike

An Israeli airstrike in Gaza on Friday killed Izz al-Din al-Haddad, the leader of Hamas’s military wing and “one of the last surviving architects” of the 7 October 2023 attacks, the Israeli military said on Saturday; Hamas spokesperson Hazem Qassem confirmed the killing on social media, the Associated Press reported. Israel said al-Haddad had assumed command of the Hamas military council after the killing of his predecessor Mohammed Sinwar. The 7 October attacks killed around 1,200 people in southern Israel and saw more than 250 taken hostage.

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The Palestinian Mujahideen Movement said in a joint statement with its military wing that the “cowardly assassination” will not “weaken the resolve” of the resistance group. Al-Haddad was 55 and headed the five-member military council that commands the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades. The strike on a residential building and a car in the Rimal neighbourhood of Gaza City killed at least seven people, including three women and a child, with dozens injured. The Gaza ceasefire remains fragile: more than 850 people have been killed in the territory since the October ceasefire took effect, with the top diplomat overseeing it saying it has “stalled” over the deadlock on Hamas disarmament.

ISW: Iran Demands Guarantees Against Future Strikes; CENTCOM Redirects 75 Ships

The Institute for the Study of War’s Iran Update for 15 May assesses that senior Iranian officials “continue to demand guarantees against future US-Israeli attacks as a precondition for negotiations, and the Iranian regime likely views recognised control over the Strait of Hormuz as one such guarantee”. US Central Command announced that US forces have redirected 75 commercial vessels and disabled four since the blockade began on 13 April; Al Jazeera’s Saturday live coverage cited an updated CENTCOM figure of 78 ships redirected.

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IRGC Baghiyatollah Sociocultural Headquarters Commander Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari said on 14 May that the United States must satisfy Iranian “confidence-building” measures before Iran will negotiate — ISW assesses his statements reflect the negotiating position of IRGC Commander Ahmad Vahidi. ISW also flags that Iran appears to have deprioritised toll collection at Hormuz to encourage states such as China to cooperate with Iranian transit procedures and implicitly recognise its control. The People’s Republic of China “does not appear to have made a clear commitment to support US efforts to secure freedom of navigation”, despite Trump’s public claims. President Putin held diplomacy-track talks today with UAE President Mohammed bin Zayed.

Lebanon Civilian Toll Rises to 2,969 Killed, 9,112 Wounded Since March

Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health updated the cumulative casualty toll on Saturday to 2,969 killed and 9,112 wounded since 2 March, when Hezbollah’s missile fire at Israel three days into the US-Israeli war on Iran triggered the renewed conflict, Al Jazeera’s live coverage reported. The Friday strike on a civil-defence centre in Harouf, which killed six people including three paramedics, was the proximate trigger for the updated count and was reported in detail by Reuters and the BBC overnight.

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The Tyre district saw at least 37 wounded in Friday’s separate Israeli strikes, including six hospital personnel, nine women and four children, the Lebanese health ministry said. United Nations humanitarian coordinator for Lebanon Imran Riza called the toll “unacceptable”. The Israeli military has said it has killed more than 2,000 Hezbollah operatives since hostilities escalated, including hundreds of members of the Radwan Force, and struck over 5,000 Hezbollah targets. Nineteen IDF soldiers and one Defence Ministry civilian contractor have been killed in southern Lebanon over the same period.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Streeting: “I Will Be Standing” in Any Labour Leadership Contest

Former Health Secretary Wes Streeting confirmed on Saturday that he will challenge Sir Keir Starmer in any Labour leadership contest, Reuters reported. “We need a proper contest with the best candidates on the field, and I will be standing,” Streeting told the Progress group’s annual conference in London. The declaration ends a week of speculation about whether the parliamentary right would back Andy Burnham unopposed. Streeting resigned from the Cabinet on Thursday and publicly backed Burnham’s Makerfield by-election bid on Friday.

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A leadership contest is not yet formally triggered: under Labour’s rules a challenger needs the support of 81 MPs — 20% of the parliamentary party — to force the vote, and around 80 Labour MPs have publicly demanded the Prime Minister’s departure but the signatures have not been submitted in coordinated form. The Guardian quoted a Starmer ally on Streeting’s position: “This was Wes’s moment and he messed it up. Everyone has been expecting him to go for it more or less since we got into office, and this was his chance. And he got 40 MPs. It’s embarrassing.” Streeting’s Saturday move re-opens the question by promising a contest if one is triggered.

Sunday Times: Business Fears “Raynernomics” Under Burnham

Business and the markets are “adopting the brace position” in case Angela Rayner’s economic programme — redistributionist, with higher taxes on the better-off and on businesses — becomes a reality under a Labour leader of the soft left, the Sunday Times reports. Economics Editor David Smith argues that, “in the absence of any detail from Andy Burnham, who, should he win the Makerfield by-election, will be a leadership candidate, possibly the favourite, it is reasonable to assume that his economics would be similar to Rayner’s”.

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Rayner’s recent speech at the CWU conference in Bournemouth was aggressively redistributionist: she described “an economy that does not work for the majority, with wealth concentrated in too few hands” and attacked “decisions like cutting winter fuel allowance” from Chancellor Rachel Reeves. Unlike Reeves, Rayner has not ruled out a wealth tax; a leaked memo last year advocated higher taxes on dividends and banks and bringing more higher-paid people into the additional-rate 45% band. Markets read a Burnham-Rayner alignment as the worst-case combination for gilts — reflecting Friday’s sell-off in the bond and currency markets.

Guardian Analysis: Starmer Now Looks Like an “Interim Leader”

Steve Reed, the housing secretary and one of the Prime Minister’s closest cabinet allies, told the BBC: “There is no contest. ‘Moves’ mean nothing. People need 81 nominations to stand against the prime minister.” The Guardian’s weekend analysis argues that, although technically correct, the past week has shed so much of Starmer’s authority that many MPs “view him as, in effect, an interim leader, still in office only until the necessary arrangements can be made for a replacement”. A loyalist Labour official is quoted: “At several points this week I’ve felt like I was going mad. Why are we even doing this?”

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The Guardian reports that Starmer’s allies continue to insist he will contest any challenge and call on Labour members — who make the final decision — to stick with stability. Even some cabinet allies accept that “at some point he may have to face that the game is up”: one quoted aide said the test will be whether closer to the next election he can win it himself. The risks for Burnham are equally explicit: losing the by-election would shatter his “only I can stop Farage” positioning, and his departure as mayor could deliver Greater Manchester to Reform UK.

CNBC/Eurasia: 80% Probability Starmer Ousted This Year

Eurasia Group analysts have raised the probability of Sir Keir Starmer being ousted this year to 80%, up from 65% previously, with a 35% probability that MPs force a leadership election by September, a 25% probability of an orderly transition and a 20% probability of an immediate election, CNBC reported. Jordan Rochester, head of EMEA fixed-income strategy at Mizuho, told CNBC: “For many, the writing is on the wall at this stage, it’s just a matter of how quickly the exit happens.”

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Deutsche Bank strategists told CNBC that the rise in UK 10- and 30-year borrowing costs — to 5% and 5.67% respectively on the day of their analysis — reflected market concerns that a new Labour leader “may face pressure to ease the fiscal rules and raise gilt issuance”. Friday’s subsequent sell-off pushed those yields higher still, to 5.18% and 5.85% per The Times. The Eurasia Group framing is the most institutional articulation that markets are now pricing the Labour-leadership question as a binding policy variable, not an internal party dispute, with knock-on consequences for the autumn Budget.

Reuters in Makerfield: Voters Split Between Burnham and Reform

Reuters dispatched a correspondent to Ashton-in-Makerfield where voters are split between Andy Burnham and Reform UK. Former miner Anthony McCormack told Reuters he would back Burnham because he is “the right man for the job” and would “100%” make a better prime minister than Sir Keir Starmer, describing the current Prime Minister as “not a politician, he’s middle management”. Aesthetics nurse Rachael Hulse told Reuters her family had always voted Labour but “now, that’s completely changed”, and that she hoped Reform UK would win the seat.

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Labour has held Makerfield in parliament since 1906, but Reform won all the council seats contested in the constituency in last week’s local elections. Reform leader Nigel Farage told GB News he would “throw absolutely everything” at the by-election. Pensioner Ann Garner told Reuters: “I think Keir Starmer should be given a chance. We really need to get the country sorted.” Burnham’s pitch quoted in the article: people in Makerfield “have long supported our party but lost faith in recent times. We will change Labour for the better and make it a party you can believe in again”. ITV News estimates the by-election is most likely on Thursday 18 June or 25 June.
One To Read

‘Why Are We Even Doing This?’ The Week That Left Britain’s PM Looking Like an Interim Leader

The Guardian · The single best weekend reading of how Starmer arrived at this point: the Catherine West Saturday letter, the junior-minister Monday resignations, Streeting’s Thursday cabinet exit, the Friday NEC waiver for Burnham — and the Labour loyalist quote that captures the disorientation: “You can’t go around saying ‘the PM has to leave, and we don’t know who will replace him’. It’s wildly irresponsible.”
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Morning Briefing

Saturday 16 May 2026 — 08:15 BST

What It Means For You

  • The fragile Israel-Lebanon ceasefire was extended by 45 days at the conclusion of two days of US-mediated talks in Washington, with new political and security tracks scheduled for early June and 29 May. Petrol forecourt prices are unlikely to ease meaningfully until the Iran track produces a parallel breakthrough; oil rose roughly 2% to around $108 a barrel on Friday.
  • UK borrowing costs closed Friday at levels not seen since the 2008 financial crisis: ten-year gilts at 5.18%, thirty-year at 5.85% (the highest this century); sterling fell to a five-week low of $1.33, its biggest weekly drop against the dollar since November 2024. Mortgage and fixed-rate household borrowing costs are likely to follow if the political risk premium proves persistent.
  • Andy Burnham’s pathway to challenging the Prime Minister cleared its first hurdle when Labour’s National Executive Committee approved his entry into the Makerfield selection process; the by-election is expected on 18 June. A Survation poll modelled by The Guardian puts Burnham on 45% to Reform’s 43% in Makerfield, against 27% for any other Labour candidate.

Iran War — Day 78. The war started 28 February 2026. The most material overnight development is the United States’ announcement that Israel and Lebanon have agreed to a 45-day extension of the ceasefire that was due to expire on Sunday, with a political track convened by the State Department on 2-3 June and a security track at the Pentagon on 29 May. The announcement was overshadowed by an Israeli strike on a civil defence centre in Harouf, southern Lebanon, that the Lebanese state news agency reported killed six people, including three paramedics, and wounded 22 others. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told reporters in New Delhi that “a lack of trust” remains the biggest obstacle in talks to end the wider war with Washington.

GEO Geopolitical

Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire Extended 45 Days at Washington Talks

Israel and Lebanon agreed to a 45-day extension of the ceasefire that was due to expire on Sunday, the US State Department announced on Friday at the conclusion of two days of talks in Washington. State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott said: “The April 16 cessation of hostilities will be extended by 45 days to enable further progress.” A new security track will be launched at the Pentagon on 29 May; the political track reconvenes at the State Department on 2-3 June.

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The third round of talks included military officials from both sides for the first time, including Israel’s acting defence attaché to the US Brigadier-General Arik Ben Dov and the head of the IDF’s Strategic Division Brigadier-General Amichai Levin. Israeli ambassador to the US Yechiel Leiter called the talks “frank and constructive”, adding: “There will be ups and downs, but the potential for success is great.” The Lebanese delegation said the extension “provides critical breathing space for our citizens, reinforces state institutions, and advances a political pathway toward lasting stability.” Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said Beirut had had enough “reckless” wars fought for foreign interests.

Six Killed, Three Paramedics, in Israeli Strike on Harouf

At least six people were killed and 22 wounded in an Israeli strike on a civil defence centre in the town of Harouf in southern Lebanon late on Friday, the Lebanese state news agency reported early on Saturday. The dead included three paramedics, with a fourth sustaining critical injuries, according to Lebanon’s health ministry. Separately, Lebanon’s health ministry said Israeli strikes on the Tyre district wounded at least 37 people, including six hospital personnel, nine women and four children. The BBC has contacted the Israeli military for comment.

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United Nations humanitarian coordinator for Lebanon Imran Riza called the toll “unacceptable”, saying that “diplomatic efforts now offer a critical opportunity to stop the violence.” The strikes came as the US announced the 45-day ceasefire extension — the most explicit illustration of why the truce is described as “porous” in Israeli and Lebanese reporting. Lebanon’s health ministry says Israeli attacks have killed 2,896 people in Lebanon since 2 March, including 589 women, children and medics. The IDF says it has killed more than 2,000 Hezbollah operatives, including hundreds of members of the Radwan Force, and struck more than 5,000 targets.

Araghchi: “Lack of Trust” Biggest Obstacle; Trump Weighs Chinese Refinery Sanctions

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told reporters in New Delhi that “a lack of trust” remains the biggest obstacle in negotiations to end the war with the United States, the Associated Press reported. President Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that he was considering whether to lift U.S. sanctions on Chinese refineries buying Iranian oil, telling reporters: “We talked about that and I’m going to make a decision over the next few days.” China is the biggest buyer of Iranian crude; the decision would materially change the economics of the wartime blockade.

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Araghchi also said Tehran had received messages from Washington indicating willingness to continue talks but that Iran “does not trust” the United States, which has curtailed previous rounds by launching air strikes. Iran is “prepared for a resumption of fighting as well as for diplomatic solutions”, he added. President Trump warned from Beijing that he was “not going to be much more patient” with Tehran. Oil rose around 2% to about $108 a barrel; U.S. Treasury yields hit their highest in around a year as traders priced in the risk of renewed strikes. China’s foreign ministry restricted itself to saying the conflict “should never have happened, has no reason to continue”.

ISW: Putin Spinning Strained Economic Data as Strikes on Ukraine Continue

The Institute for the Study of War’s Friday assessment opens with the judgment that “Russian President Vladimir Putin is positively portraying data about Russia’s economic performance that actually shows a strained economy.” The assessment follows two days during which Russian forces launched more than 1,600 long-range drones and missiles, collapsing a nine-storey residential block in Kyiv and killing at least twelve. Russian milblogger reporting and Ukrainian Air Force figures show President Volodymyr Zelensky’s 94% drone-intercept rate held under the saturation effort.

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ISW’s framing is the analytically significant move: the strain narrative is consistent with prior ISW findings that Russia is falling behind on Iskander-M ballistic-missile production despite an order book of 643 for 2025, and that the Kremlin has continued replacing border-oblast governors as a scapegoating mechanism for the inability to defend Russian rear infrastructure. The next material observation point for the war is the Russian central bank’s next rate decision and any further evidence on weapons-production bottlenecks. Western counter-strike capacity is unchanged.

China’s Iran Statement: “Should Never Have Happened, Has No Reason To Continue”

China’s foreign ministry issued an unusually direct statement of frustration with the Iran war at the close of President Xi Jinping’s summit with President Trump in Beijing: “This conflict, which should never have happened, has no reason to continue.” The ministry stopped short of indicating that Beijing would use its commercial leverage with Tehran to push for a settlement. Xi separately pledged not to send Iran military equipment, a low-cost concession Trump described on Fox News as “a big statement”.

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The diagnostic gap from the summit is between Beijing’s explicit rhetorical alignment (no nuclear weapon, strait open, no military equipment) and the absence of any Chinese commitment to actively pressure Tehran beyond statements. Trump told reporters: “I’m not asking for any favors because, when you ask for favors, you have to do favors in return.” The pending decision on lifting U.S. sanctions on Chinese oil refineries buying Iranian crude is the next material lever; if granted, it removes a key piece of the wartime financial squeeze on Tehran in exchange for what is essentially Chinese verbal alignment.

UK UK Domestic Politics

NEC Approves Burnham for Makerfield Selection; Endorsement 21 May

Labour’s National Executive Committee on Friday approved Andy Burnham’s entry into the candidate selection process for the Makerfield by-election. NEC officers agreed by email to grant a waiver and did not wait for Burnham’s formal application. The selection window opened immediately and closes at noon on Monday; longlisting and due diligence conclude on Monday, shortlisting interviews and hustings on Tuesday, with NEC endorsement marked for 21 May.

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A Labour party spokesperson said: “Labour’s ruling body, the national executive committee has today given permission to Andy Burnham to stand in the candidate selection process in the forthcoming by-election for the Makerfield constituency.” The reversal is striking: in February the same officers’ group, including the Prime Minister, blocked Burnham from standing in the Gorton and Denton by-election. An NEC member told The Guardian: “Regardless of where people stand on the recent events in the party, we have got this by-election and he is our best shot of winning it, so we need to get behind him.” The earliest by-election date is Thursday 18 June.

Gilts Highest This Century; Sterling at 5-Week Low Against Dollar

UK ten-year gilt yields rose 18 basis points to 5.18% on Friday, the highest since the 2008 financial crisis, and thirty-year yields rose 19 basis points to 5.85%, the highest this century, according to The Times. Sterling fell another 0.6% to $1.33, a five-week low, and is down almost 2% on the week against the dollar — its biggest weekly drop since November 2024. The FTSE 100 shed 1.7% and the FTSE 250 fell 1%.

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Bonds across European markets sold off but gilts were the worst-performing major asset class. James Smith, an economist at ING, told The Times: “Investors are focused on the impact a leadership contest might have on Britain’s fiscal trajectory, gilt issuance over the next couple of years, and its interplay with inflation.” Jefferies economist Mohit Kumar said the base case is “a managed exit for Starmer and Burnham likely becoming the next PM”. RBC BlueBay CIO Mark Dowding said the fund had increased its bets against the pound. Burnham last year said governments should not be “in hock” to financial markets.

Burnham Team Targets PM by Autumn Conference; Survation Poll Favours Him

Andy Burnham’s supporters say he will push to become Prime Minister in time to address Labour’s autumn conference in Liverpool, The Guardian reported. Analysis by Survation shared with the newspaper suggests that with Burnham as the candidate Labour would narrowly beat Reform UK by 45% to 43% in Makerfield, compared with a non-Burnham Labour candidate attracting 27% versus 53% for Reform. Burnham is expected to set out his “Manchesterism” vision next week.

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Labour’s deputy leader Lucy Powell, who will lead the party’s by-election campaign, told The Guardian: “Should he be our candidate, Andy’s story, Andy’s narrative, Andy’s connection to the place will absolutely be at the forefront of it all. He is very much what keeps a seat like that in play for us.” A close Burnham adviser, Neal Lawson, said: “He appeals to both Green voters and Reform voters, and no one else does it.” The Survation modelling extrapolated from local-election results and Gorton and Denton by-election survey data; the contest itself is expected on Thursday 18 June.

Streeting Backs Burnham: “Best Players on the Pitch”

Former Health Secretary Wes Streeting publicly backed Andy Burnham’s by-election bid on Friday, telling reporters that Labour needs “our best players on the pitch. There is no doubt that Andy Burnham is one of them.” The endorsement is the most consequential intra-party signal of the week because Streeting, on the parliamentary right of Labour, had himself been seen as a potential challenger to Sir Keir Starmer from a more market-friendly position. The endorsement materially simplifies the candidate field if a full leadership contest opens.

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Streeting’s public backing follows his Thursday resignation as Health Secretary and signals that the parliamentary right will not split the anti-Starmer vote by running a parallel candidacy. Steve Reed, one of the Prime Minister’s closest cabinet allies, conceded on Friday that Sir Keir was unpopular but warned Labour should not repeat the leadership-churn pattern that damaged the Conservatives. Under Labour’s rules a leadership challenger needs the support of 81 MPs — 20% of the parliamentary party — to formally trigger a contest. Around 80 Labour MPs have publicly demanded the Prime Minister’s departure but the signatures have not been submitted in coordinated form.

Starmer Expected to Approve £18bn Defence Boost Next Week

The Prime Minister is expected to approve an £18 billion increase in defence spending as early as next week, according to The Times reporting cited by The Guardian. The move is described as part of Sir Keir Starmer’s political-survival strategy as Andy Burnham’s pathway to a leadership challenge crystallises. Burnham has previously argued that defence spending should be excluded from the fiscal rules — a position that bond markets have read as adding to fiscal-loosening risk.

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The defence announcement, if confirmed next week, would be the largest single fiscal-policy signal from Number 10 since the local-election defeat triggered the leadership crisis. Markets are already pricing in a Burnham succession premium — gilts at 5.85% at the long end — and an £18 billion increase outside the fiscal rules would compound the issuance concern. Whether the measure is funded through reallocation or new borrowing is the diagnostic detail. The Times also reported earlier in the week that the autumn Budget on 26 November is the binding moment for Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s ability to keep the Government’s fiscal stance credible.
One To Read

Left-Leaning Andy Burnham’s Leadership Tilt Spooks Bond Market

The Times · The clearest single account of Friday’s market reset: ten-year gilts to 5.18% (highest since 2008), thirty-year back to 5.85% (highest this century), sterling weakening to $1.33, FTSE -1.7%. Includes the Lombard Odier framing on the Liz Truss-2022 memory acting as a constraint on any new prime minister, and ING’s “fiscal trajectory” framing. Essential context for understanding why a Burnham succession premium is now priced.
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Evening Briefing

Friday 15 May 2026 — 18:15 BST

What It Means For You

  • UK borrowing costs and sterling reset on the Burnham leadership signal: the ten-year gilt yield closed near 5.14% (highest since 2008), the thirty-year near 5.82% (highest since 1998) and the pound at $1.3325 against the dollar, a five-week low against the dollar. Mortgage and overdraft costs are likely to follow if the political risk premium proves persistent.
  • President Trump warned from Air Force One that his patience with Iran is “running out” and is weighing whether to lift U.S. sanctions on Chinese refineries buying Iranian crude. Oil prices rose roughly 2% to around $108 a barrel; petrol forecourt prices will track the move with a one-to-two-week lag.
  • The Lebanon ceasefire formally expires on Sunday. The third round of US-mediated Israel-Lebanon talks continues today in Washington; the United States described Thursday’s session as “productive and positive”. If no extension is announced before Sunday, Israeli ground operations in southern Lebanon become procedurally easier and regional escalation risk rises.

Iran War — Day 77. The war started 28 February 2026. The most material development on the war today was President Trump’s “not going to be much more patient” warning to Tehran from Air Force One on the flight back from Beijing, alongside news that he is weighing whether to lift U.S. sanctions on Chinese oil refineries buying Iranian crude. China’s foreign ministry said the conflict “should never have happened, has no reason to continue”, but gave no indication Beijing would actively pressure Tehran. The United Arab Emirates moved to fast-track the West-East pipeline to bypass the Strait of Hormuz by 2027 after the IRGC redefined the strait as a 300-mile “vast operational area”. The first non-Iranian very large crude carriers since the war began are reaching destinations: Idemitsu Maru, carrying Saudi crude, docks at Nagoya on 25 May.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump: “Not Going To Be Much More Patient” With Iran; Oil to $108

President Trump warned from Air Force One on the flight back from Beijing that his patience with Iran is running out and that Chinese President Xi Jinping had agreed Tehran must reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Trump said he was considering whether to lift U.S. sanctions on Chinese oil refineries buying Iranian oil, telling reporters “I’m going to make a decision over the next few days”. Oil prices rose around 2% to around $108 a barrel on the lack of progress; U.S. Treasury yields hit their highest in around a year.

Dive deeper
Trump’s “I’m not asking for any favors” framing on the flight home is the diagnostic gap: Xi gave a public pledge not to send Iran military equipment but Beijing offered no firm commitment to pressure Tehran on Hormuz. China’s foreign ministry restricted itself to saying the conflict “should never have happened, has no reason to continue”, which is rhetorical alignment rather than enforcement. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said in New Delhi Tehran had received messages from Washington indicating willingness to continue talks, while adding Iran “does not trust” the United States. The U.S. Treasury yield move is the cleaner financial signal: traders read the “cleanup work” line as raising the probability of renewed strikes.

UAE Fast-Tracks Pipeline to Double Hormuz-Bypass Export Capacity

Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed directed the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company to fast-track the West-East Pipeline to the Gulf of Oman port of Fujairah, the government’s Abu Dhabi Media Office said on Friday. The pipeline will double UAE export capacity that bypasses the Strait of Hormuz and is expected to start operating next year. The acceleration follows the IRGC’s 12 May announcement redefining the strait as a 300-mile “vast operational area” encompassing much of the UAE’s Gulf of Oman coastline.

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The existing Habshan-Fujairah pipeline (ADCOP) carries 1.8 million barrels per day; doubling that capacity would put roughly half the UAE’s pre-war 3.4 million bpd output outside Iran’s reach. The UAE exited OPEC two weeks ago, freeing it of output quotas and signalling that the producer-cartel framework cannot accommodate wartime pressures. The IRGC’s 4 May map and 12 May 300-mile redefinition were paired with a drone strike on an ADNOC tanker and a barrage on Fujairah’s oil zone — the UAE foreign ministry called the attacks “unacceptable transgression” and “economic blackmail”. Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline already moves about 60% of pre-war exports.

Israeli Soldier Killed in Lebanon; IDF Strikes 65 Hezbollah Sites

Staff Sergeant Negev Dagan, 20, of the Golani Brigade’s 12th Battalion, was killed by Hezbollah mortar fire in southern Lebanon late on Thursday, the IDF announced on Friday morning. He is the nineteenth Israeli soldier killed since 2 March and the sixth since the 16 April truce. The IDF said it struck 65 Hezbollah infrastructure sites and killed more than 20 Hezbollah operatives in the past 24 hours, and issued an “urgent” evacuation warning for villages near Tyre ahead of further strikes.

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The third round of US-mediated Israel-Lebanon direct talks continues today in Washington; a State Department official cast Thursday’s eight-hour session as “productive and positive”. Both sides have broadened their delegations beyond their Washington ambassadors: Lebanese Presidential Special Envoy Simon Karam and Israel’s Deputy National Security Adviser Yossi Draznin lead the new round. The fragile ceasefire expires on Sunday — without an extension, the architecture lapses and Israeli ground operations in southern Lebanon become procedurally easier. The IDF has procured 158,000 square metres of mesh netting to counter Hezbollah’s FPV drones.

Russia Launches 1,600+ Drones, Missiles at Ukraine Over Two Days

Russian forces launched more than 1,600 long-range drones and missiles against Ukraine over the 48 hours to Wednesday evening, the Institute for the Study of War reported. Strikes heavily targeted Kyiv City; a ballistic missile collapsed a nine-storey residential block in the capital, killing at least twelve including a twelve-year-old child and injuring fifty-seven. President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukrainian forces had downed about 94% of the drones and 73% of the missiles despite the saturation effort.

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The Kyiv strike followed a Ukrainian-respected 9-11 May Victory Day ceasefire during which Ukraine did not strike Moscow’s Red Square as agreed. ISW assesses the resumption of large-scale strikes “demonstrates that Russia is a bad faith negotiator”. Russia is also reportedly falling behind on ballistic-missile production: Ukrainian source Militarnyi reports procurement documents show the Kolomna design bureau received an order for 643 Iskander-M missiles in 2025, while monthly intelligence assessments suggest Russia’s stockpile has stayed flat at 200-250. Putin has replaced Belgorod and Bryansk governors in apparent scapegoating of regional officials for border-security failures.

First Major Non-Iranian Tankers Begin Reaching Destinations

The Japanese-managed Eneos Endeavor, carrying 1.2 million barrels of Kuwait crude and 700,000 barrels of Emirati Das Blend, exited the Strait of Hormuz on 14 May and is due to arrive in Japan on 3 June, according to LSEG and Kpler data. The Idemitsu Maru, the first very large crude carrier to exit since the war began, will arrive at Nagoya on 25 May with 2 million barrels of Saudi crude. The Chinese-flagged Yuan Hua Hu, with 2 million barrels of Iraqi crude, is expected at Zhoushan on 1 June.

Dive deeper
The transit pattern matters because shipping deliveries, not diplomatic statements, are the cleanest evidence that the wartime blockade is structurally easing. Pre-war the strait handled roughly a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas. The list of recent transits spans Japan, the UAE, India, China, Thailand, Malaysia and South Korea, suggesting that Iranian transit clearance has become bilateral and case-by-case rather than blanket. The U.S. Navy redirected the Vietnam-bound Agios Fanourios I as part of its continuing blockade of Iranian ports, which means the easing is one-directional — outbound non-Iranian crude is moving, inbound Iranian exports remain blocked.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Burnham Confirms Makerfield By-Election Bid; NEC to Decide

Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham confirmed on Friday that he will seek the Labour nomination in Makerfield after sitting MP Josh Simons announced he would stand down. Burnham said he would ask Labour’s National Executive Committee to allow him to stand, and the Prime Minister has indicated Number 10 will not block him this time, unlike at the Gorton and Denton by-election in February. The earliest the by-election could be held is Thursday 18 June — the same week as the G7 summit in France.

Dive deeper
Burnham framed his pitch in a statement on Friday: “This is why I now seek people’s support to return to parliament: to bring the change we have brought to Greater Manchester to the whole of the UK and make politics work properly for people.” The constituency is a notional safe Labour seat — Simons won by 5,399 votes in 2024 — but Reform UK swept all nine Wigan council seats contested in the constituency last week. Polling expert Sir John Curtice told Politico Labour would have “less than 5% chance” in Makerfield “if it were anyone other than Andy Burnham”. Burnham does not have to resign as mayor unless he wins.

Gilts Hit 1998 High; Sterling at $1.33 as Burnham Bid Drives Risk

The ten-year UK gilt yield reached 5.14% on Friday morning — the highest since 2008 — and the thirty-year yield was back at 5.82%, last seen in 1998, after Burnham’s leadership move clarified, according to Morningstar. Sterling weakened to $1.3325 against the dollar, a five-week low, after starting the week at $1.36. Matthew Ryan, head of market strategy at Ebury, told Morningstar: “GBP and gilts are unlikely to react favourably given Burnham’s recent remarks that the government should not be beholden to the bond market.”

Dive deeper
Neil Mehta, macro portfolio manager at RBC BlueBay, told Morningstar that the Prime Minister’s “days are numbered”, adding: “The next Labour leader will come from the left side of the Party and against a backdrop of uncertainty, UK financial assets and Sterling seem likely to be subjected to an elevated political risk premium for an extended period.” The 10-year gilt began the week at 4.87%; Friday’s level represents a 27-basis-point widening across five sessions. The structural concern is that the next Chancellor inherits a debt-service burden built on the assumption of falling yields. The Bank of England’s pension-fund stress facility remains dormant in pre-activation contingency.

YouGov: Burnham Only Senior Politician With Positive Favourability

Andy Burnham is the only senior politician without a negative net favourability score in YouGov’s May tracker, with a net rating of +4 across the British public, according to fieldwork conducted on 12-13 May. Among 2024 Labour voters, Burnham’s net favourability is +41, far ahead of Angela Rayner (+13), Yvette Cooper (+12) and Ed Miliband (+7). Sir Keir Starmer’s net favourability remains at -46, with Chancellor Rachel Reeves on -51, the lowest of any frontbench figure polled.

Dive deeper
Burnham holds positive net favourability among 2024 Liberal Democrat (+24) and Green (+18) voters too — the only senior Labour figure with cross-party reach. Kemi Badenoch’s -17 score is her highest to date and the highest for any Conservative leader since June 2021, a reminder that the Opposition leader is in modest recovery even as Labour deteriorates. Wes Streeting’s net rating fell eight points to -28 in the month before he resigned. YouGov’s 10-11 May voting intention reads Reform UK 28%, Conservatives 17%, Greens 16%, Labour 16%, Liberal Democrats 13% — consistent with a four-way fragmented opposition rather than a clean Reform path.

Greens to Contest Makerfield, Complicating Burnham’s Path

The Green Party announced on Friday it has begun selecting a candidate for the Makerfield by-election, ending speculation it would stand aside to avoid splitting the anti-Reform vote. Former Green leader Caroline Lucas publicly dissented on X: “There are times when it’s more important to put country before party. This is one of them.” Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice told the BBC the party would “make Burnham history” and was “throwing everything possible” at the contest, which sits 29th on Reform’s target list.

Dive deeper
The Greens overturned a 13,000 Labour majority in Gorton and Denton in February under Zack Polanski’s leadership, so the prospect of a serious Green campaign in Makerfield is materially different from the 2024 baseline, when the Greens came fifth. Reform needs a swing of just over 6.7% to take the seat; in last week’s local elections, Reform pulled in roughly 50% of the local vote share to Labour’s 27%, with the Greens at 10%. The Greens are highly decentralised, meaning the local Makerfield party will make the final candidate-selection decision regardless of the national leadership’s view. A serious three-way split between Labour, Reform and the Greens makes Burnham’s personal vote the decisive variable.

Labour Mechanics: 81-MP Threshold; Streeting Backs Burnham

Under Labour’s rules, a leadership challenger needs the formal support of 81 MPs — one fifth of the parliamentary Labour Party — to trigger a contest, the Associated Press reported. Around 80 Labour MPs have publicly demanded the Prime Minister’s departure but the signatures have not been submitted in coordinated form. Former Health Secretary Wes Streeting, who resigned on Thursday, publicly backed Burnham, saying Labour needs “our best players on the pitch”. Outgoing Makerfield MP Josh Simons told BBC Radio Manchester the party had been “imploding”.

Dive deeper
Simons told the BBC his decision to stand aside was the “most difficult of my life” and was framed in family terms with his three-week-old son. “We were heading for a leadership election with the Labour Party split into different factions, and there was no hope, no energy that anything would change,” he said, adding Makerfield was “where Andy Burnham has lived for 25 years”. The Streeting-Burnham realignment is the consequential development: Streeting backing the candidate of the soft left, rather than positioning as a rival from the right, materially simplifies the candidate field if a contest opens. Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy is the most likely interim leader if the Prime Minister resigns ahead of a contest.
One To Read

Sterling and Bonds Slide on Prospect of Andy Burnham Leadership Bid

Morningstar · The clearest single account of Friday’s market reset: ten-year gilt to 5.14% (highest since 2008), thirty-year back to 1998’s 5.82%, sterling weakening to $1.33 from $1.36 at week-start. Includes the “days are numbered” framing from RBC BlueBay and Ebury’s warning that “the wheels could come off fast” if cabinet resignations widen.
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Morning Briefing

Friday 15 May 2026 — 08:29 BST

What It Means For You

  • The Trump-Xi summit closed in Beijing this morning. The two leaders agreed on a “constructive China-U.S. relationship of strategic stability” framework; President Xi pledged not to send military equipment to Iran and agreed the Strait of Hormuz should reopen “as soon as possible”. China was reported to have agreed to buy US oil, although Beijing stopped short of confirming the energy purchase. Substantive bilateral deals on Taiwan, tariffs and rare earths remain unannounced.
  • Sir Keir Starmer’s overnight reshuffle named James Murray, the former Chief Secretary to the Treasury, as the new Health Secretary in place of Wes Streeting; Lucy Rigby takes Murray’s Treasury post. The 81-MP threshold needed to trigger a formal Labour leadership contest remains unmet, and no consensus on a single challenger has emerged among the parliamentary right.
  • Iran allowed more than thirty commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz overnight — the first material easing of the wartime blockade. Vice-President JD Vance said the “fundamental question is, do we make enough progress that we satisfy the president’s red line?” President Trump warned Tehran from Beijing: “I’m not going to be much more patient.” Petrol forecourt prices may begin to ease over the next ten days if the shipping signal holds.

Iran War — Day 77. The war started 28 February 2026. The most material overnight development is the closing day of the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing, at which the two leaders agreed Tehran cannot have a nuclear weapon, China pledged no military equipment for Iran and Beijing called for shipping lanes to reopen “as soon as possible”. Iran allowed more than thirty commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz overnight. Vice-President JD Vance told reporters that “progress is being made” in negotiations. The BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting in New Delhi has so far failed to produce a joint statement after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi accused the UAE of being “directly involved in the aggression” against Iran.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump-Xi Summit Closes: Strategic-Stability Framework, Iran Alignment

The two-day Trump-Xi summit closed in Beijing this morning at a tea session and working lunch in the Chinese leadership’s private compound. The two leaders agreed to develop what Beijing is calling a “constructive China-U.S. relationship of strategic stability”, framed as the guiding principle for the next three years. On Iran the leaders agreed Tehran cannot have a nuclear weapon, and Beijing called for a “comprehensive and lasting ceasefire” with the Strait of Hormuz reopened. Substantive deals on Taiwan, tariffs and rare earths remain unannounced.

Dive deeper
The closing format — intimate tea session in the leadership compound rather than a public communiqué ceremony — signals that both sides wanted the summit to register as a relationship reset rather than a transactional negotiation. The strategic-stability framing is the most consequential single phrase of the trip, because it commits Beijing to a published guiding principle for the medium term. The absence of substantive Taiwan, tariff or rare-earth announcements is the diagnostic gap: the things both sides care most about have been deferred. Chatham House analysts have framed the summit as “managing US-China rivalry, not resolving it”, which is the corridor in which the actual outcome sits.

Xi Pledges No Military Equipment to Iran; China Will Help Open Hormuz

President Xi Jinping pledged during the summit that China will not send military equipment to Iran and offered Chinese assistance in opening the Strait of Hormuz. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi had separately told his Iranian counterpart that the strait should be opened “as soon as possible”. The commitments are the most explicit Chinese material distancing from Tehran since the war began. China is the top importer of Iranian crude and the only major power whose pressure on Tehran would meaningfully change the calculus.

Dive deeper
A public pledge not to send military equipment is a calibrated, low-cost concession to Washington that nonetheless registers as substantive: the constraint binds Beijing publicly even though it is unlikely Beijing was preparing to send such equipment in the first place. The Wang Yi “as soon as possible” framing on Hormuz is consistent with Chinese strategic-stability priorities — Beijing has been disproportionately affected by the closure given its volume of Iranian crude imports. The question for next week is whether Tehran reads the Chinese position as binding diplomatic pressure or as a tactical signal.

Iran Allows 30+ Ships Through Hormuz Overnight; Vance: “Progress Made”

Iran allowed more than thirty commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz overnight — the first material easing of the wartime blockade since the conflict began on 28 February. Vice-President JD Vance told reporters at the White House that the “fundamental question is, do we make enough progress that we satisfy the president’s red line?” President Trump warned from Beijing that Tehran “should make a deal”, adding: “Any sane person would make a deal.”

Dive deeper
A thirty-vessel transit overnight is the kind of operational signal that markets and diplomats read more carefully than public statements: it indicates that the IRGC has been instructed to ease the blockade ahead of any formal agreement. The asymmetry between Vance’s “progress” framing and Trump’s patience-warning is consistent with the usual US choreography of soft-cop / hard-cop in late-stage negotiations. The next material catalyst is whether the Pakistani-mediated text now produces a revised Iranian response, or whether the Chinese diplomatic backing accelerates a parallel track.

BRICS Struggles for Joint Statement; Araghchi Accuses UAE

The BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting in New Delhi appears unlikely to produce a joint statement after Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi accused the United Arab Emirates of being “directly involved in the aggression against my country”. Araghchi called Iran a “victim of illegal expansionism and warmongering” and urged BRICS to “explicitly condemn violations of international law by the United States and Israel”. India’s External Affairs Ministry separately condemned the attack on an Indian-flagged vessel off Oman as “unacceptable”.

Dive deeper
Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi told reporters “one member country” had pushed for language condemning Iran, preventing a consensus communiqué. The Iran-UAE rupture being publicly aired at a multilateral forum of which both are members is the most consequential regional development of the day, because it confirms that Gulf-Arab solidarity with Iran is no longer assumed even at venues where Iran is the host’s guest. India sources around 50% of its crude through the Strait of Hormuz, which explains the calibrated “safe maritime flows” positioning rather than overt alignment with either side.

Israel-Lebanon: 2,896 Killed Since March; Washington Talks Continue

Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health says at least 2,896 people have been killed in Israeli attacks since the conflict resumed in early March. Israeli warplanes struck a residential project in Srifa, southern Lebanon, on Thursday, killing two. Four Israeli civilians were wounded, one critically, in a Hezbollah drone attack on the Rosh Hanikra area. The third round of US-mediated talks between Israel and Lebanon, opened in Washington Thursday, continues today; the ceasefire formally expires on Sunday.

Dive deeper
A 2,896 death toll over ten weeks of an officially-extant ceasefire is the structural feature that makes the Washington talks editorially complicated: they are presented as ceasefire-extension negotiations while the ceasefire itself is operationally close to collapse. Sunday’s formal expiry is the binding constraint — either an extension is announced before then or the architecture lapses, in which case Israeli ground operations in southern Lebanon become procedurally easier. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has previously refused to meet Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu directly until strikes stop, which remains the central structural objection.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Murray Appointed Health Secretary; Rigby Moves to Treasury

Sir Keir Starmer named James Murray, the former Chief Secretary to the Treasury, as the new Health Secretary late on Thursday night following Wes Streeting’s resignation. Lucy Rigby has taken Murray’s Treasury post, becoming the second-most senior figure in Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s ministry. The overnight reshuffle is the minimum-disruption response Number 10 had signalled it would pursue; no further Cabinet-rank vacancies have been announced.

Dive deeper
A within-Treasury move for Rigby keeps the Chancellor’s machine intact at the moment gilt yields are sitting at multi-decade highs, which was the principal calculation for Number 10. Murray’s Health appointment is the more politically loaded one: a Treasury-trained minister opening a brief defined by NHS productivity will face immediate questions about whether the department’s spending settlement is now under renegotiation. The first PMQs after the reshuffle, scheduled for next Wednesday, is the next political weather-test.

81-MP Threshold Still Unmet; No Single Challenger Has Emerged

More than 80 Labour MPs publicly demanded Sir Keir Starmer’s departure during the week, but the 81 signatures required to formally trigger a leadership contest under Labour rules have not been submitted to the General Secretary in coordinated form. Wes Streeting, Angela Rayner and Andy Burnham remain the three named potential challengers; no consensus among the parliamentary right has emerged on which of them to back. Burnham still lacks a parliamentary seat.

Dive deeper
The published public count above 80 has accumulated in letters and statements rather than as a single formal submission — which means Number 10 can argue, accurately, that no formal challenge has been triggered. The decisive sequencing question for next week is whether Streeting’s resignation now consolidates parliamentary right behind a single candidacy, or whether the three rivals split signatures and let Starmer survive the immediate test. The Burnham track requires a parliamentary by-election; Labour’s NEC blocked his standing in January.

NIESR: Reeves’s £22 Billion Headroom “Tiny”; Debt-to-GDP Heading to 100%

The National Institute of Economic and Social Research’s latest UK Economic Outlook framed Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s £22 billion fiscal headroom against her stability rule as structurally inadequate, with the Institute for Fiscal Studies similarly noting that Reeves had “chosen to operate her fiscal rules with such teeny tiny headroom”. NIESR projects UK GDP growth of 1.4% in 2026 and warns the debt-to-GDP ratio is approaching 100% by decade-end, limiting future scope for discretionary support.

Dive deeper
The combination of a tight headroom, rising interest costs and an active leadership crisis is the structural reason gilt yields have been sitting at multi-decade highs through the week. NIESR’s 1.4% growth forecast is just above the trend rate of 1.25% and assumes residual fiscal expansion plus steady consumption growth — both of which could erode under fresh political instability. The IFS framing that “run-of-the-mill forecast changes could easily blow her off course” is now the operational concern for the autumn Budget.

Markets: Gilts Pared Slide on Thursday; Sterling Below $1.30

UK gilts pared back earlier-week losses through Thursday: the ten-year yield closed near 5.03% and the thirty-year near 5.70% in midday London trading, per CNBC. The pan-European Stoxx 600 closed about 0.7% higher. Sterling held below $1.30 against the dollar. The Bank of England’s pension-fund stress facility, dormant since the November 2022 LDI crisis, remained in its pre-activation contingency status; the Financial Policy Committee’s March 2023 minimum-resilience framework continues to govern LDI desks.

Dive deeper
A modest gilt rally on the day a Cabinet minister resigned is the cleanest evidence that real-money positioning had over-shorted into Tuesday’s 1998-yield close and required some technical unwinding regardless of the political news. Political risk has not yet been displaced as the dominant pricing variable, but sterling weakness alongside firmer gilts means the currency is now the cleanest market vehicle for expressing UK political risk. Friday’s scheduled fiscal-headroom statement from the Chancellor will be the next material catalyst.

Reform UK and Greens Capitalise; Local-Election Aftermath Continues

Reform UK and the Greens are continuing to capitalise on the local-election cycle that triggered the Labour leadership crisis. Labour lost more than 1,400 council seats in last week’s English local elections, with Reform UK gaining 1,454 seats and taking control of multiple county councils. Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch is reportedly preparing to test whether parts of the centre-right vote can be reconsolidated; the Tories’ own electoral performance was historically weak.

Dive deeper
The local-election arithmetic is the binding constraint behind the Labour leadership question: 1,400 Labour seats lost in a single cycle is the largest single-day defeat in postwar history, and it cannot be reframed as a midterm protest vote because the swing went to Reform rather than to the Conservatives. The Conservative inability to absorb dissatisfied Labour voters means the right-wing realignment is now structural rather than tactical. Badenoch’s next strategic move is the second major political weather-test alongside the Labour leadership question.
One To Read

Iran War Day 77: Trump, Xi Discuss Hormuz as Tehran Rallies BRICS

Al Jazeera · The clearest single account of Day 77: Xi’s pledge of no military equipment to Iran, the “as soon as possible” Hormuz framing, Trump’s “not going to be much more patient” warning, the 30-vessel overnight transit signal, and the Iran-UAE rupture at BRICS. Essential before the weekend’s expected revised Iranian text and Sunday’s Israel-Lebanon ceasefire expiry.
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Evening Briefing

Thursday 14 May 2026 — 18:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • Health Secretary Wes Streeting resigned from the Cabinet this afternoon, telling Sir Keir Starmer in his letter, “It is now clear that you will not lead the Labour Party into the next general election.” He is the first Cabinet-rank minister to resign. He did NOT formally declare a leadership challenge and did not confirm whether he has secured the 81 MPs required to trigger a contest under Labour rules. Number 10 said the Prime Minister “is purely focused on governing”.
  • The Trump-Xi summit in Beijing produced an explicit White House agreement that Iran “can never have a nuclear weapon” and that the Strait of Hormuz must be fully opened. President Xi offered to mediate the US-Iran conflict (“If I can be of any help at all, I would like to be of help”), but US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said publicly, “We are not asking for China’s help. We don’t need their help.”
  • UK gilts rallied through the session despite Streeting’s departure: the ten-year yield fell about four basis points to 5.028% and the thirty-year fell about six basis points to 5.695%, per CNBC. The FTSE 100 opened around 0.3% higher. Sterling traded under pressure on continued political uncertainty. Mortgage holders on long-fix products do not yet see relief, but the immediate fiscal-credibility shock that prevailed earlier this week has eased.

Iran War — Day 75. The war started 28 February 2026. The most material development of the day is the Beijing communiqué from the Trump-Xi summit: a White House statement confirmed that the two leaders agreed Iran “can never have a nuclear weapon” and that the Strait of Hormuz should be fully opened. President Xi offered to mediate; Secretary of State Marco Rubio publicly declined the offer. In New Delhi, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi addressed the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting and called on the bloc to condemn US and Israeli “unlawful aggression”; India’s Subrahmanyam Jaishankar called for “safe, unimpeded maritime flows”. No fresh public statements from Tehran on the summit outcome had been issued at the time of going to press.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Streeting Resigns; Tells Starmer He Cannot Lead Labour Into Next Election

Health Secretary Wes Streeting resigned from the Cabinet this afternoon, posting on X that he no longer had “confidence” in Sir Keir Starmer’s leadership. In his resignation letter, Streeting told the Prime Minister, “It is now clear that you will not lead the Labour Party into the next general election.” He is the first Cabinet-rank minister to resign in the current crisis. Four junior ministers had already resigned earlier in the week.

Dive deeper
The first Cabinet resignation is the threshold event of a confidence crisis: it transforms a parliamentary-party question into a governmental question and forces a reshuffle decision in the middle of the week of a King’s Speech. Streeting’s letter is calibrated rather than incendiary, claiming a political conclusion (Starmer cannot lead Labour to the next election) rather than a personal grievance. The political weather over the next 48 hours will be set by whether any second Cabinet minister moves in parallel; a single resignation Number 10 can absorb, a second probably not.

Streeting Did Not Formally Trigger Contest; 81-MP Threshold Still Outstanding

Streeting’s resignation did not formally declare a leadership challenge under Labour rules. A contest requires the public support of one fifth of Labour MPs — currently 81 lawmakers — and Streeting did not confirm in his letter that he had secured that count. More than 80 MPs have publicly called on Starmer to quit or set a departure timetable, but those statements have been delivered as letters and individual declarations rather than as a single formal submission to the General Secretary.

Dive deeper
A resignation without a formal challenge gives Streeting the procedural cover of a clean break while keeping the parliamentary mechanism deliberately ambiguous. The structural calculation is that Cabinet pressure builds faster than letter-counting and that one or two further senior resignations are more decisive than an early formal vote. The 81-MP threshold remains the binding constraint; whether the parliamentary right can convert the diffuse public count of 80-plus into a coordinated written submission is the test of the coming week.

Starmer: “Purely Focused on Governing”; Reeves Warns on Economic Risk

Number 10 said in response to Streeting’s resignation that the Prime Minister “is purely focused on governing” and is “getting on with the job”. Chancellor Rachel Reeves urged Labour colleagues not to risk the economy through a leadership contest. The Government had no immediate replacement to announce; departmental responsibilities at the Department of Health will be handled at junior-ministerial level pending a wider reshuffle.

Dive deeper
A “purely focused on governing” framing leaves Number 10 nothing to retract if Starmer survives and gives him a credible posture of indifference to challenger movements. Reeves’s economic-risk argument is the structurally most durable defence available to the incumbent: gilt yields are sitting at multi-decade highs, and Reeves’s framing makes Streeting (or any challenger) responsible for any further widening. The absence of a named replacement Health Secretary signals that Number 10 wants to keep the reshuffle deferred until the leadership question resolves.

Gilts Rally Despite Resignation: 10Y to 5.028%, 30Y to 5.695%

UK gilts rallied through the morning session despite the Streeting resignation. The ten-year yield fell about four basis points to 5.028% and the thirty-year fell about six basis points to 5.695%, per CNBC data as of midday London time. The FTSE 100 was seen opening 0.3% higher. Sterling remained under pressure as analysts foresaw “risks skewed towards higher gilt yields and a weaker GBP” on continued political uncertainty. Specific FTSE close levels were not yet confirmed in approved-source articles at the time of going to press.

Dive deeper
A morning gilt rally on the day of a Cabinet resignation is the cleanest evidence that real-money positioning had over-shorted into Tuesday’s close and required some unwinding regardless of the political news. The 30-year sitting six basis points below Tuesday’s 1998 closing high is the most important number of the day: it removes the immediate trigger for the Bank of England to activate the dormant pension-fund stress facility. Sterling weakness alongside firmer gilts indicates the currency is now the cleanest market vehicle for expressing UK political risk.

Four Junior Resignations Earlier This Week Set the Sequence

Four junior ministers had resigned earlier in the week, ahead of Streeting’s Cabinet-rank departure: Miatta Fahnbulleh (Devolution, Faith and Communities), Jess Phillips (Safeguarding), Alex Davies-Jones (Victims and Violence Against Women) and Zubir Ahmed (Health). The clustered junior departures set the political weather that allowed today’s Cabinet resignation to land without an immediate stabilising counter-move by Number 10.

Dive deeper
Four junior resignations clustered over three days established the coordinated-pressure framing the parliamentary right has been seeking. None of the four individually forced a reshuffle, but each contributed a public statement that broadcast media will rehearse for the rest of the week. The sequencing question now is whether Number 10 fills any of the four vacant junior posts before or after the leadership question resolves; an early replacement signals confidence, a deferred replacement signals managed retreat.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump-Xi Summit: Iran Must Not Have Nuclear Weapon; Hormuz Must Be Opened

The Trump-Xi summit in Beijing produced an explicit White House statement that the two leaders agreed that Iran “can never have a nuclear weapon” and that the Strait of Hormuz must be fully opened to support the free flow of energy. The agreement is the most explicit US-China alignment on the Iran war so far. The summit is the first US presidential visit to Beijing in nearly a decade and is set to continue with a second day of talks on Friday.

Dive deeper
An explicit US-China statement that Iran “can never have a nuclear weapon” is the most consequential diplomatic alignment on Iran since the war began; it removes the previous Chinese hedging that had complicated the US position. The Hormuz reopening commitment is the operational lever, because Chinese cooperation is the only mechanism that materially tightens the supply of Iranian crude into Chinese ports. The second-day communiqué tomorrow will indicate whether the agreement has substantive enforcement architecture or remains a rhetorical alignment.

Xi Offers Iran Mediation; Rubio: “We Don’t Need Their Help”

President Trump told reporters that Chinese President Xi Jinping offered to help resolve the US-Iran conflict at their summit, saying “If I can be of any help at all, I would like to be of help”. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said publicly that Trump raised Iran with Xi but “he didn’t ask them for anything”, adding, “We are not asking for China’s help. We don’t need their help.” The split signal — Trump accepting the offer, Rubio rejecting it — is the diagnostic feature of the day.

Dive deeper
The Trump-Rubio split on Chinese mediation is the most operationally important rhetorical feature of the summit: Trump’s instinct to accept any offered help meets Rubio’s State Department doctrine that accepting Chinese mediation cedes structural leverage to Beijing. The most plausible resolution is that the formal channel for any mediation runs through Pakistan and Saudi Arabia as before, with China’s role kept rhetorical rather than procedural. Tehran will read Rubio’s remarks more carefully than Trump’s, because Rubio’s frame is the State Department’s operational posture going into the BRICS talks tomorrow.

Xi Warns Trump on Taiwan: “Great Jeopardy”

President Xi Jinping told President Trump that mishandling Taiwan would put the US-China relationship in “great jeopardy”. The framing was the most explicit Chinese public warning on Taiwan delivered to a US president since the 2022 Pelosi visit. At the state banquet following the formal talks, Trump referred to Xi as a “friend” and Xi described the US-China relationship as “partners, not rivals”. The Taiwan question is widely expected to dominate the second day of summit talks tomorrow.

Dive deeper
A public Chinese warning of “great jeopardy” on Taiwan delivered face-to-face to a US president is a calibrated escalation in language but a familiar repetition in substance. The “partners, not rivals” banquet framing is the standard Chinese de-escalating counter-line and signals Beijing wants the trip to register as a reset rather than a confrontation. The substantive test is whether the second-day talks address the pending US$14 billion Taiwan weapons package; an announcement of suspension would be the diplomatic price of the day’s Iran agreement.

BRICS in New Delhi: Araghchi Calls for Condemnation; UAE Tensions Aired

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi addressed the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting in New Delhi, calling on the bloc to condemn US and Israeli “unlawful aggression” against Iran. India’s Subrahmanyam Jaishankar called for “safe, unimpeded maritime flows”. India is attempting to bridge an open Iran-UAE rift inside BRICS; the Emirati delegation’s role at the meeting remained unclear. Bloc unanimity on a strong Iran-supporting communiqué is unlikely; observers expect a general sovereignty-condemnation framing instead.

Dive deeper
The Iran-UAE rift being publicly aired inside BRICS is the most diagnostic regional development of the day, because it confirms that Gulf-Arab solidarity with Iran is no longer assumed even at multilateral forums where Iran is the host’s guest. India’s “safe, unimpeded maritime flows” phrasing is calibrated to align with the Trump-Xi communiqué on Hormuz without joining the US side overtly. The second-day plenary will indicate whether Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Brazil close ranks around the Indian position or carve out separate language.

Iran-Lebanon Talks Open in Washington; Hormuz Remains Blockaded

The third round of US-mediated Israel-Lebanon talks opened in Washington today at ambassador level, with sessions scheduled across 14 and 15 May. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has refused to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu directly until a security agreement is reached and Israeli strikes inside Lebanon cease. Separately, the Strait of Hormuz remains blockaded; the chokepoint carries about a fifth of global oil and gas, and the Trump-Xi communiqué calling for it to be opened is the most material indirect catalyst for the next phase of the diplomatic track.

Dive deeper
An ambassador-level Washington track running in parallel with the Beijing summit is the architectural template of the new diplomatic phase: separate bilateral channels, with multilateral pressure points (BRICS, the eventual Beijing communiqué) layered above them. Aoun’s structural objection on Israeli strikes cannot be lifted while Israel continues to consider an expanded Lebanon ground operation. Delegation-level negotiations on the Israel-Lebanon track are scheduled to begin on 17 May.
One To Read

Britain’s Health Secretary Wes Streeting Resigns from Government

Al Jazeera · The clearest account of the day’s Cabinet resignation: Streeting’s exact letter framing, what the resignation does and does not do under Labour rules, the 81-MP threshold question, and the Number 10 and Chancellor responses. Essential before tomorrow’s Beijing summit communiqué and the second day of BRICS talks.
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Morning Briefing

Thursday 14 May 2026 — 11:15 BST

What It Means For You

  • President Trump has arrived in Beijing for a two-day summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping — the first US presidential trip to Beijing in nearly a decade. Xi told the welcoming ceremony that the two countries’ shared interests “outweigh” their differences and called for a “diplomatic reset”; Trump praised Xi as a “great leader”. The summit agenda includes Iran, the Strait of Hormuz, Taiwan, AI and trade. Analysts expect China to demand Taiwan concessions in return for any meaningful pressure on Tehran.
  • Health Secretary Wes Streeting is expected to resign today and launch a formal leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer. The Times reported on Wednesday evening that an ally said, “He is going for it. He’s going tomorrow.” More than 80 Labour MPs have publicly demanded the Prime Minister’s departure. A new Labour leadership contest would mean a fluid policy environment until it concludes.
  • The BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting opens in New Delhi today with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi sitting at the same table as the Saudi and Egyptian top diplomats. China’s Wang Yi is in Beijing with Trump; Beijing is represented at BRICS by its Ambassador to India, Xu Feihong. The US-mediated third round of Israel-Lebanon talks also opens in Washington today at ambassador level.

Iran War — Day 75. The war started 28 February 2026. The Trump-Xi summit in Beijing is the single most consequential diplomatic event of the war so far: China is the top importer of Iranian oil and the only major power whose pressure on Tehran would meaningfully change the calculus. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has publicly urged China to “join us in supporting this international operation” to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. In parallel, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi opens the BRICS meeting in New Delhi this morning, calling on the bloc to condemn US and Israeli “unlawful aggression”. Brent crude settled $105.63 a barrel on Wednesday, down about 2% as markets priced in the China summit; WTI settled near $101.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Arrives in Beijing for Two-Day Summit with Xi

President Donald Trump arrived in Beijing this morning for a two-day summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, the first US presidential trip to Beijing in nearly a decade. Xi told the welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People that the two countries’ shared interests “outweigh” their differences and called for a “diplomatic reset”. Trump praised Xi as a “great leader”. The summit agenda includes Iran, the Strait of Hormuz, Taiwan, AI and trade. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has urged Beijing to “join us in supporting this international operation” to reopen the Strait.

Dive deeper
A first US presidential visit to Beijing in nearly a decade is itself the operational story; the agenda items are secondary to the fact of the trip. The Strait of Hormuz framing is the most diagnostic Iran lever, because Chinese cooperation is the only mechanism that would materially tighten the supply of Iranian crude into Chinese ports. Analysts expect Beijing to demand opposition to Taiwanese independence and the suspension of a US$14 billion Taiwan weapons package as the price of any meaningful pressure on Tehran. The two-day format implies a serious negotiating window rather than a photo-opportunity visit; the second-day communiqué is the document to read for substance.

BRICS Foreign Ministers Open in Delhi as Iran War Dominates Agenda

The BRICS foreign ministers’ two-day meeting opens in New Delhi this morning, with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi sitting at the same table as the Saudi and Egyptian foreign ministers. Russia is represented by Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, South Africa by Ronald Lamola, Brazil by Mauro Vieira, Indonesia by Sugiono and India by Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar. China is represented by its Ambassador to India, Xu Feihong, with Wang Yi in Beijing for the Trump summit.

Dive deeper
The simultaneous presence of Riyadh, Cairo and Tehran at a foreign-minister-level meeting is an unusual diplomatic configuration; bloc unanimity on Iran is unlikely given persistent Iran-UAE tensions. The default outcome is a heavily-watered chair’s summary rather than a unanimous communiqué. China’s representation by an ambassador rather than the foreign minister is itself a diagnostic signal: Beijing’s diplomatic weight is in the Trump summit room, not the New Delhi plenary. Araghchi’s plenary tone is the next-most-important variable.

Iran’s Araghchi Calls on BRICS to Condemn US-Israel “Unlawful Aggression”

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi opened his BRICS contributions this morning by calling on fellow member states to condemn the United States and Israel for what he characterised as “unlawful aggression” against Iran. The framing is the strongest public language Tehran has used at a multilateral forum since the war began on 28 February. India’s Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar separately called for “safe, unimpeded maritime flows through international waters”, an oblique reference to the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of global oil and gas passes.

Dive deeper
A multilateral framing allows Tehran to walk back its private “legitimate and final” position over time without an overt unilateral concession — the BRICS plenary transfers the political cost of compromise to the institution rather than Tehran. Jaishankar’s “safe, unimpeded maritime flows” phrasing is calibrated to register a position without taking sides; India holds significant Iranian-crude imports and has not joined the US blockade. Saudi and Egyptian responses on the second day are the operational test of whether the Gulf-Arab line will harden, soften or split.

Brent Settled $105.63 on Wednesday Ahead of Trump-Xi Summit

International benchmark Brent crude futures settled $105.63 a barrel on Wednesday, down about 2% on the session, as markets priced in the prospective Trump-Xi summit and the corresponding outside chance of progress on the Strait of Hormuz blockade. US West Texas Intermediate settled near $101. Both benchmarks remain materially above pre-war levels. No fresh statements on Iran have been issued by President Trump overnight; the Monday “garbage” framing remains the public US position pending the summit outcomes.

Dive deeper
A 2% retracement ahead of the China summit indicates options markets are pricing a non-zero probability of a diplomatic breakthrough on shipping rather than expecting an immediate one. Producer hedging above $100 remains notably weak through the conflict, suggesting both OPEC+ producers and US shale firms continue to view the elevated regime as politically rather than physically driven. The second-day Beijing communiqué is the next material catalyst; an absence of progress on Hormuz would likely retrace half of yesterday’s move.

US-Mediated Israel-Lebanon Talks Open in Washington Today

The third round of US-mediated talks between Israel and Lebanon opens in Washington today at ambassador level, with sessions scheduled across 14 and 15 May. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has refused to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu directly until a security agreement is reached and Israeli strikes inside Lebanon cease. Aoun has said “we must first reach a security agreement and stop the Israeli attacks on us before we raise the issue of a meeting”. Delegation-level negotiations are scheduled to begin on 17 May.

Dive deeper
Ambassador-level format is the diplomatic equivalent of a live but unresolved track; a principals meeting would imply a substantive bridge has been built. Aoun’s public conditionality on a halt to Israeli strikes is the canonical structural objection that almost certainly cannot be lifted while the Israeli cabinet is reviewing an expanded Lebanon ground operation. The parallel timing of the Washington talks and the Beijing summit gives Tel Aviv a procedural reason to defer rather than approve any expanded operation in the next 72 hours.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Streeting Expected to Resign and Launch Leadership Bid Today

Health Secretary Wes Streeting is expected to resign from the Cabinet today and launch a formal leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer, according to The Times. An ally told the paper on Wednesday evening, “He is going for it. He’s going tomorrow.” Streeting met Starmer for less than twenty minutes at Downing Street on Wednesday morning ahead of the State Opening and left without responding to journalists. More than 80 Labour MPs — nearly a quarter of the 403-strong parliamentary party — have publicly demanded the Prime Minister’s departure.

Dive deeper
A Cabinet resignation triggers a formal leadership process under Labour rules only when 81 MPs publicly submit signatures to the General Secretary; the published public count above 80 has accumulated in letters and statements rather than through that formal mechanism. Streeting’s tactical sequencing — resign before the threshold is formally crossed — forces the parliamentary right to coordinate around his candidacy rather than have other contenders emerge. The diagnostic test today is whether any second Cabinet minister moves in parallel; a single Cabinet resignation Number 10 can absorb, a second probably not.

King’s Speech Yesterday: 35+ Bills, Security-Heavy, Limited Defence Industry

King Charles III delivered the King’s Speech from the House of Lords on Wednesday morning wearing the Imperial State Crown and a crimson robe, setting out more than 35 bills for the new parliamentary session. The headline ministerial commitment was that “my ministers will take decisions that protect the energy, defence and economic security” of the United Kingdom. The agenda focused on the Ukraine and Iran conflicts but contained only limited defence-industry provisions despite reported pressure from President Trump.

Dive deeper
A King’s Speech delivered amid an open leadership crisis is constitutionally unusual; the ceremonial sequencing of the State Opening was the principal reason no Cabinet challenger moved publicly on Wednesday. The pivot to a “security” framing rather than the “growth” framing of last year’s speech is itself an electoral repositioning. The limited defence-industry content is the most diagnostic gap: scaling up procurement is what Washington has been asking for, and the omission suggests the bill drafters have not cleared that signal through the Treasury under fiscal-headroom pressure.

Starmer: “Pivotal Moment”; Warns Against “Chaos and Instability”

In his formal response to the King’s Speech in the Commons on Wednesday afternoon, Sir Keir Starmer told MPs that “Britain stands at a pivotal moment: to press ahead with a plan to build a stronger, fairer country, or turn back to the chaos and instability of the past”. The framing is the second time in three days Starmer has explicitly invoked the “chaos” of constantly changing leadership as the alternative to his premiership. The framing is calibrated to constrain any challenger’s opening statement; a Streeting resignation today will have to be delivered against that public record.

Dive deeper
The repetition of the “chaos” framing indicates Number 10 has very few new rhetorical tools available and is now playing for time rather than position. Streeting’s resignation timing — the day after the State Opening — respects the constitutional sequencing while removing Number 10’s last procedural protection. The structural test is whether Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper or Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood move in parallel; either would push the count of Cabinet-rank resignations beyond what Number 10 can absorb in a single news cycle.

Junior Ministerial Resignations: Four Since Monday

Four junior ministers have resigned since Monday in protest at Sir Keir Starmer’s continued leadership: Miatta Fahnbulleh (Devolution, Faith and Communities), who said “the public does not believe that you can lead this change”; Jess Phillips (Safeguarding), who cited “opportunities for progress stalled and delayed”; Alex Davies-Jones (Victims and Violence Against Women), who described the local-election results as “catastrophic”; and Zubir Ahmed (Health). No Cabinet-rank resignation has yet been formally registered, though Streeting is expected to move today.

Dive deeper
Four junior resignations clustered across a single week is more than coincidence and signals the parliamentary right is now reaching coordinated coverage of news cycles. None of the four is senior enough to force a reshuffle in response, but each statement constitutes a separate public claim on the future of the Labour Party that broadcast media will rehearse for the rest of the week. The diagnostic question is whether any of the four positions get filled by named replacements before Streeting’s expected resignation, or whether Number 10 allows them to run vacant while it focuses on the Cabinet-level threat.

Markets: Gilts Pared Tuesday’s Slide on Wednesday; Sterling Below $1.30

UK gilts pared back Tuesday’s sharp slide through Wednesday afternoon after Sir Keir Starmer defied calls to quit; the pan-European Stoxx 600 closed about 0.7% higher on the session. Sterling held below $1.30 against the dollar. The 30-year gilt yield closed Tuesday at its highest level since 1998. The Debt Management Office’s scheduled 30-year auction took place on Wednesday morning; specific cover-ratio and tail figures had not been confirmed in approved-source articles available at the time of going to press.

Dive deeper
A modest gilt rally on Wednesday despite the continued leadership crisis indicates real-money positioning had over-shorted into Tuesday’s close and required some unwinding regardless of the political news; political risk has not yet been displaced as a pricing variable. Sterling below $1.30 keeps the imported-inflation pass-through on track to complete within four to six weeks, which lifts the autumn Budget’s revenue arithmetic but tightens the consumer real-income outlook. A successful 30-year auction would have removed the immediate trigger for the Bank of England to activate the dormant pension-fund stress facility.
One To Read

Trump-Xi Summit: China’s Help in Iran May Require US Concessions

Al Jazeera · The clearest framing of the leverage geometry going into today’s Beijing summit: why China is the only major power whose pressure on Tehran would meaningfully change the calculus, what concessions Beijing will demand in exchange (Taiwan, the US$14 billion weapons package), and why the analyst consensus is that Iran is “not really the central issue for either party”. Essential before tomorrow’s summit communiqué and the BRICS plenary tone.
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Evening Briefing

Wednesday 13 May 2026 — 18:06 BST

What It Means For You

  • Labour’s leadership crisis crossed a structural threshold this afternoon: more than 90 MPs are now publicly demanding Sir Keir Starmer’s resignation, comfortably above the 81 signatures required to trigger a formal contest. Health Secretary Wes Streeting is reported to be preparing to resign tomorrow; a new Labour leader could be in post within weeks, with material implications for the autumn Budget, fuel-duty plans and the NHS funding review.
  • The 30-year gilt yield held near Tuesday’s 1998 closing high of 5.75% through the State Opening session; the FTSE 100 closed down 0.94% at 8,254 and sterling at $1.2907. Defined-benefit pension holders and those with mortgage products linked to long-dated yields should expect the elevated funding cost to persist into next week; imported-inflation pass-through from a sub-$1.30 pound is four to six weeks from completing.
  • Brent crude settled at $107.77 a barrel and WTI at $102.18 (per CNBC), holding more than 45% above pre-war 28 February levels. UK forecourt pump prices have not yet reflected the full pass-through; further increases at petrol and diesel pumps are likely over the next ten days. Tomorrow’s BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting in Delhi is the most consequential multilateral diplomatic window since the war began.

Iran War — Day 74. The war started 28 February 2026. There were no fresh Trump statements on Iran during the UK political day; the Monday “garbage” and “life support” framing remains the public Washington position. Brent and WTI settled at $107.77 and $102.18 a barrel respectively, both around 45% above pre-war levels. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi arrives in New Delhi late tonight for the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting; the Saudi and Egyptian foreign ministers will both attend, marking the first multilateral configuration in which the UAE — publicly engaged in retaliatory strikes on Iranian targets — and Iran share the same room since the war began. The Pakistani mediation track via Riyadh has produced no new public statements today.

GEO Geopolitical

BRICS Foreign Ministers Open in Delhi Tomorrow as Iran War Looms

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi will arrive in New Delhi late tonight to attend the BRICS foreign ministers’ two-day meeting beginning Thursday, with the Saudi and Egyptian foreign ministers also confirmed in attendance. The Indian chair has agreed an agenda that includes a session on the Iran war. Tehran has urged the bloc to condemn US and Israeli action; bloc unanimity is unlikely given UAE-Iran divisions. The forum is the most consequential multilateral diplomatic window since Pakistan-mediated contacts opened on 6 May.

Dive deeper
A BRICS-hosted multilateral window is consequential because it allows Tehran to walk back the “legitimate and final” position without overt unilateral concession; the multilateral framing transfers the political cost of compromise away from Iran. Saudi and Egyptian presence in the same room as Araghchi is the first such triangulation since the war began on 28 February; Cairo’s involvement signals Gulf-Arab coordination that has not previously been visible. Indian officials have signalled they intend to use the chair’s prerogative to shape a consensus on de-escalation rather than condemnation. The diagnostic test on Friday will be the tone of Araghchi’s plenary remarks.

Brent Settles at $107.77 a Barrel as US Crude Tracks Sideways

International benchmark Brent crude futures for July settled at $107.77 a barrel on Wednesday, holding Tuesday’s elevated close, while US West Texas Intermediate for June settled at $102.18 (per CNBC). Both contracts remain more than 45% above pre-war 28 February levels. The Trump administration issued no fresh public Iran statements during the UK political day; the Monday “garbage” framing remains Washington’s stated position. Producer hedging above $100 has been notably weak throughout the conflict.

Dive deeper
Holding rather than retracing after a forty-five-percent rally since late February is consistent with markets pricing a persistent rather than tactical war premium. Both OPEC+ producers and US shale operators have been slow to hedge above $100, suggesting they continue to view the elevated regime as politically rather than physically driven. The absence of new Trump statements during a day dominated by UK domestic developments is itself the operational story; Washington has chosen not to escalate further while Tehran is preparing to engage at BRICS. Watch the 06:00 BST API inventories on Thursday for the demand-side signal.

State Department Confirms Third Israel-Lebanon Round for 14-15 May

The US State Department on Tuesday confirmed it will host a third round of talks between representatives of Israel and Lebanon in Washington on 14 and 15 May, at ambassador rather than principal level. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has rejected US pressure to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu directly until a security agreement is reached and Israeli strikes inside Lebanon cease. The talks parallel the BRICS diplomatic window and the wider Iran-mediation track.

Dive deeper
An ambassador-level format is the diplomatic equivalent of a track that remains alive but unresolved; principals-level negotiation would imply a substantive bridge has been built. Aoun’s public conditionality on a halt to strikes is the canonical structural objection and almost certainly cannot be lifted while the Israeli cabinet is reviewing an expanded ground operation. The fact that the third round was confirmed before Thursday’s expected Israeli cabinet decision on Lebanon indicates that a diplomatic track is being held open in parallel with the military-escalation track. A breakdown here would close the most accessible regional de-escalation lane.

Pakistani Mediation Track Continues Without Fresh Breakthrough

The Pakistani-mediated channel between Washington and Tehran produced no new public statements during the day; Iranian working-level negotiators remain in Riyadh. Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar repeated overnight that a revised Iranian response “remains in preparation”, the same framing used on Tuesday. The Saudi backchannel via Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman remains the secondary track; Qatar and Turkey continue to participate in coordinated supplementary diplomacy.

Dive deeper
A 48-hour repeat of the “in preparation” framing without further detail is consistent with the working group having identified a workable bridge text but not yet completed it. The continued physical presence of Iranian negotiators in Riyadh remains the most important counter-signal to public hardening — a complete breakdown would require Tehran to recall its delegation, which has not happened. Thursday’s BRICS window in India will test whether Tehran is prepared to soften publicly through a multilateral framework before the bilateral text is finalised.

UAE and Iran to Share BRICS Table Despite Frontline Antagonism

The United Arab Emirates and Iran will sit across the same BRICS table for the first time since the 28 February outbreak of war, with the UAE’s recent role in striking back at Iranian missile launches an open factional fissure. Reports of Saudi and UAE retaliatory operations on Iranian targets after Iran’s attacks on the Fujairah energy complex deepen the difficulty of producing a joint communiqué. The Indian chair has not yet circulated a draft text.

Dive deeper
The simultaneous presence of Riyadh, Abu Dhabi and Tehran at a foreign-minister-level meeting is the most extraordinary diplomatic configuration of the war so far. The default outcome is a heavily watered-down chair’s summary rather than a unanimous statement; the operational question is whether India will allow Beijing to push a sharper line that the Gulf states cannot sign. Watch for any bilateral pull-aside between the Iranian and Emirati delegations during the working dinner on Thursday evening; such a meeting, even held without readouts, would itself be the headline.

UK UK Domestic Politics

King’s Speech Sets Out 37 Bills With Heavy Security Focus

King Charles III delivered the King’s Speech from the House of Lords this morning wearing the Imperial State Crown, setting out a programme of 37 bills and draft bills. The headline commitment was that “my ministers will take decisions that protect the energy, defence and economic security” of the United Kingdom. The agenda is focused on the Ukraine and Iran conflicts and includes the nationalisation of British Steel, but contains only limited defence-industry expansion measures despite reported Trump-administration pressure.

Dive deeper
A King’s Speech delivered amid an open leadership crisis is constitutionally unusual; the ceremonial sequencing of the State Opening has been the principal reason no Cabinet challenger has moved publicly during the day. The pivot to “security” framing — rather than the “growth” framing of last year’s speech — is an electoral repositioning intended to give the parliamentary right less room to organise around. The limited defence-industry content is the most diagnostic gap: scaling procurement is what Washington has been asking for, and its omission suggests Treasury fiscal-headroom constraints have blocked it through Cabinet.

Streeting Spends 16 Minutes With Starmer Ahead of State Opening

Sir Keir Starmer and Health Secretary Wes Streeting met at Downing Street for sixteen minutes on Wednesday morning before joining the State Opening procession. Streeting left the building without responding to journalists’ questions. The Times reported during the day that Streeting plans to resign as early as Thursday in order to launch a formal leadership bid; an unnamed ally was quoted as saying, “He is going for it. He’s going tomorrow.”

Dive deeper
A meeting of sixteen minutes is the cleanest signal that no accommodation has been reached: a successful arm-twisting session would have lasted significantly longer. Streeting’s continued public silence on departure is the calibrated tactic of a challenger who wants the formal mechanism to begin with a resignation rather than a public statement of intent — the Thursday timing places the trigger after the State Opening ceremonial has concluded and before the Friday market open. The “He’s going tomorrow” ally-to-The-Times framing is the canonical Westminster mechanic for committing a Cabinet minister publicly without their own attribution.

Labour MPs Calling for Starmer to Quit Now Exceed 90

The number of Labour MPs publicly demanding Sir Keir Starmer’s departure has risen above 90 by Wednesday evening, up from approximately 80 at lunchtime and 70 on Tuesday. Bloomberg, citing party sources, reported a figure of 93. The 81-signature threshold needed to trigger a formal leadership contest under Labour rules has therefore now been comfortably surpassed in the public count. Six junior ministers have resigned since Monday.

Dive deeper
Crossing the 81-signature threshold in public letters and resignation statements is qualitatively different from privately submitting them to the General Secretary; the former produces irreversible momentum but does not itself trigger a contest. The accumulation pattern — gradual rather than cascading — has allowed Number 10 to argue that “a hundred MPs have not signed”, while masking the fact that more than a quarter of the parliamentary party has now moved. The diagnostic question is whether the figure climbs above 110, the level at which Cabinet support becomes unsustainable.

Starmer Tells Commons Britain at “Pivotal Moment”

In his formal response to the King’s Speech in the Commons, Sir Keir Starmer told MPs that “Britain stands at a pivotal moment: to press ahead with a plan to build a stronger, fairer country, or turn back to the chaos and instability of the past.” The framing is consistent with Monday’s reset speech and is the second time in three days Starmer has invoked “chaos” as the alternative to his premiership.

Dive deeper
The repetition of the “chaos” framing is calibrated to constrain any challenger’s opening statement: Streeting’s resignation tomorrow will be delivered against a public record in which the incumbent has explicitly named that very act as the threat to the country. The decision to recycle rather than refine the line indicates Number 10 has few new rhetorical tools available and is now playing for time rather than position. The structural test is whether the Prime Minister survives Thursday morning if Streeting’s resignation triggers a coordinated parliamentary letter pushing the published signature count further above 90.

FTSE Closes Down 0.94%; 30-Year Gilt Near 1998 Highs

The FTSE 100 closed down 0.94% at 8,254 on Wednesday and sterling held at $1.2907, with the 30-year gilt yield near Tuesday’s 1998 closing high of 5.75%. The ten-year benchmark settled at 5.13%. Bond markets were described in pre-market commentary by CNBC as “on edge” before the King’s Speech; the scheduled 30-year auction at 10:30 BST proceeded, but the Debt Management Office had not published the cover ratio by the close.

Dive deeper
Yields holding rather than retracing during the State Opening is itself the signal: a successful reassurance from Number 10 would have produced a small rally, particularly given the structural over-positioning short of gilts coming into the session. Sterling holding below $1.30 puts the imported-inflation pass-through on track to complete within four to six weeks, which lifts the autumn Budget’s revenue arithmetic but tightens the consumer real-income outlook. The 30-year auction outcome is the more material data point and will be reported overnight.
One To Read

‘Bond Markets on Edge’ as King Charles Sets Out Fragile UK Government’s Agenda

CNBC · CNBC’s clearest account of the day’s gilt-market signals: the 30-year benchmark holding near its 1998 closing high through the State Opening, structural short-positioning into the speech, and the broader pricing of UK political instability into sterling and the long end of the curve. Essential before Thursday’s 30-year auction cover-ratio data, Streeting’s expected resignation, and the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting in Delhi.
☽

Evening Briefing

Wednesday 13 May 2026 — 18:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • King Charles III delivered the King’s Speech from the House of Lords this morning wearing the Imperial State Crown and crimson robe, setting out a security-heavy legislative programme of more than 35 bills. The speech told the chamber that “my ministers will take decisions that protect the energy, defence and economic security” of the United Kingdom, with focus on the Ukraine and Iran conflicts — though it offered only limited defence-industry measures despite reported requests from President Trump.
  • Sir Keir Starmer met Health Secretary Wes Streeting at Downing Street for under twenty minutes shortly before the State Opening. Streeting left without responding to journalists. The Times reports he plans to resign as early as Thursday in order to launch a leadership bid; an ally told the paper, “He is going for it. He’s going tomorrow.” More than 80 Labour MPs — nearly a quarter of the parliamentary party — have now publicly demanded Starmer’s departure.
  • Starmer’s response to the King’s Speech told the Commons that “Britain stands at a pivotal moment: to press ahead with a plan to build a stronger, fairer country, or turn back to the chaos and instability of the past”. Markets are extending Tuesday’s gilt slide; oil remained near Tuesday’s elevated close (Brent $107.77, WTI $102.18 per CNBC) ahead of the Thursday BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting in India, where Iran’s Abbas Araghchi will attend alongside the Saudi and Egyptian top diplomats.

Iran War — Day 74. The war started 28 February 2026. There were no new Trump statements on Iran during the UK political day; the Monday “garbage” / “life support” framing remains the public US position. Brent and WTI held near Tuesday’s elevated closes of $107.77 and $102.18 respectively (CNBC), both around 45% above their pre-war 28 February levels. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi travels to India tomorrow for the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting; the Saudi and Egyptian foreign ministers will both attend, the most consequential multilateral diplomatic window since the formal Pakistani-mediated channel opened on 6 May. The Pakistani mediation track via Riyadh has produced no fresh public statements today.

UK UK Domestic Politics

King’s Speech: 35+ Bills, Security-Heavy Agenda, Limited Defence Industry Measures

King Charles III delivered the King’s Speech from the House of Lords this morning wearing the Imperial State Crown and a crimson robe, setting out a programme of more than 35 bills and draft bills for the new parliamentary session. The headline ministerial commitment was that “my ministers will take decisions that protect the energy, defence and economic security” of the United Kingdom. The agenda is reported to focus on the Ukraine and Iran conflicts but contains only limited defence-industry provisions, despite reported pressure from President Trump for the UK to scale up production.

Dive deeper
A King’s Speech delivered amid an open leadership crisis is constitutionally unusual; the ceremonial sequencing of the State Opening is the principal reason no Cabinet challenger has moved publicly during the day. The pivot to “security” framing — rather than the “growth” framing of last year’s speech — is itself an electoral repositioning intended to give the parliamentary right less ground to organise around. The limited defence-industry content is the most diagnostic gap: scaling up procurement is what Washington has been asking for, and the omission suggests the bill drafters have not been able to clear that signal through the Treasury under fiscal-headroom pressure.

Starmer-Streeting Meeting at Downing Street: Under Twenty Minutes

Sir Keir Starmer met Health Secretary Wes Streeting at Downing Street for less than twenty minutes shortly before the State Opening procession. Streeting left without responding to questions from journalists. The two men subsequently appeared at Westminster without comment as part of the procession. The Times newspaper reported during the day that Streeting plans to resign as early as Thursday in order to launch a formal leadership bid; an unnamed ally told the paper, “He is going for it. He’s going tomorrow.”

Dive deeper
A meeting of under twenty minutes is the cleanest signal that no accommodation has been reached: a successful arm-twisting session would have lasted longer. Streeting’s silence on departure is the calibrated tactic of a challenger who wants the formal mechanism to begin with a resignation rather than a public statement of intent — the Thursday timing places the trigger after the State Opening ceremonial has concluded and before the Friday market session. The “He’s going tomorrow” ally-to-The-Times framing is the canonical Westminster mechanic for committing a Cabinet minister publicly without their own attribution.

Over 80 Labour MPs Now Publicly Demand Starmer’s Departure

More than 80 Labour MPs — nearly a quarter of the 403-strong parliamentary party — have now publicly demanded Sir Keir Starmer’s departure, per Al Jazeera’s tally on Wednesday. The figure is up from approximately 70 on Tuesday and 42 on Sunday evening, indicating a steady accumulation rather than a sudden cascade. The 81-signature threshold to trigger a formal leadership contest remains the operational variable. Four junior ministers — Miatta Fahnbulleh, Jess Phillips, Alex Davies-Jones and Zubir Ahmed — have already resigned since Monday.

Dive deeper
The accumulation pattern is what distinguishes this crisis from a no-confidence vote: a confidence threshold can fail by one signature and the Prime Minister survives; this style of slow accumulation produces a moment when the figure quietly tips above 81 without a single dramatic publication. Fahnbulleh’s framing — “the public does not believe that you can lead this change” — and Phillips’s — “opportunities for progress stalled and delayed” — are the canonical resignation letters for a transition rather than a fight. Davies-Jones’s description of the results as “catastrophic” is the strongest characterisation by any minister yet.

Starmer Reply to King’s Speech: “Pivotal Moment”, Warns Against “Chaos and Instability”

In his formal response to the King’s Speech in the Commons, Sir Keir Starmer told MPs that “Britain stands at a pivotal moment: to press ahead with a plan to build a stronger, fairer country, or turn back to the chaos and instability of the past”. The framing is consistent with Monday’s reset speech and represents the second time in three days Starmer has explicitly invoked the “chaos” of constantly changing leadership as the alternative to his premiership.

Dive deeper
The repetition of the “chaos” framing is calibrated to constrain any challenger’s opening statement: Streeting’s resignation tomorrow will have to be delivered against a public record in which the incumbent has explicitly named that very act as the threat to the country. The decision to recycle rather than refine the line indicates Number 10 has very few new rhetorical tools available and is now playing for time rather than position. The structural test is whether Starmer survives Thursday morning if Streeting’s resignation triggers a coordinated parliamentary letter that quietly pushes the published signature count above 81.

Markets Extend Tuesday’s Gilt Slide; 30Y Yield Holds Near 1998 Highs

UK markets extended Tuesday’s gilt slide through the State Opening session. The thirty-year yield held near the 1998 high recorded on Tuesday, when it closed at 5.75% after the FTSE 100 fell 0.94% to 8,254 and sterling traded at $1.2907 (per Tuesday levels cited by Bloomberg). Bond markets were described in pre-market commentary as “on edge” before the King’s Speech. The scheduled 30-year gilt auction at 10:30 BST took place as planned; the Debt Management Office had not published the cover ratio at the time of going to press.

Dive deeper
Yields holding rather than retracing during the State Opening is itself the signal: a successful reassurance from Number 10 would have produced a small rally, particularly given the structural over-positioning short of gilts coming into the session. Sterling holding below $1.30 puts the imported-inflation pass-through on track to complete within four to six weeks, which lifts the autumn Budget’s revenue arithmetic but tightens the consumer real-income outlook. The 30-year auction outcome is the more material data point and will be reported overnight.

GEO Geopolitical

BRICS Foreign Ministers Meeting Begins Thursday: Araghchi to Attend Alongside Saudi, Egyptian FMs

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi travels to India tomorrow for the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting, alongside the Saudi and Egyptian foreign ministers. The meeting agenda is reported to include a bilateral US-Iran section requested by Tehran. The Indian Ministry of External Affairs has confirmed the agenda will proceed unchanged. The presence of three regional principals simultaneously is the most consequential multilateral window since the Pakistani-mediated channel opened on 6 May.

Dive deeper
A BRICS-hosted multilateral diplomatic window is the most consequential vector now in play because it allows Araghchi to walk back “legitimate and final” without overt domestic concession — the BRICS framing transfers the political cost of compromise to the multilateral institution rather than to Tehran. The simultaneous presence of the Saudi and Egyptian foreign ministers is unusual; Cairo’s involvement signals a Gulf-Arab coordination that has not previously been publicly visible. The question for Friday is whether Araghchi delivers a softer line in his Thursday public remarks.

Oil Holds Near Tuesday’s Elevated Close: Brent $107.77, WTI $102.18

International benchmark Brent crude futures for July closed Tuesday at $107.77 a barrel after gaining 3.4% on the session, while US West Texas Intermediate for June settled at $102.18 (up 4.2%), per CNBC. Both contracts are now up more than 45% since the war began on 28 February. No fresh statements from President Trump on Iran were issued during the UK political day; the Monday “garbage” and “life support” framing remains the public US position. Pakistani mediation via Riyadh continues without a published timeline.

Dive deeper
Holding rather than retracing after a 45%-since-28-February rally is consistent with markets pricing a persistent rather than tactical war premium. Producer hedging behaviour above $100 has been weak throughout the conflict, suggesting both OPEC+ producers and US shale firms continue to view the elevated regime as politically rather than physically driven. The absence of new Trump statements during a UK political day weighted toward domestic developments is itself the operational story — Washington has not chosen this moment to escalate further.

US to Host Third Round of Israel-Lebanon Talks Thursday-Friday

The US State Department confirmed it will host a third round of talks between representatives from Israel and Lebanon on 14 and 15 May. The previous two meetings in Washington were at ambassador level. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has rejected US pressure to meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu directly, saying high-level engagement would not be appropriate before the sides reach a security agreement and before Israel halts its strikes in Lebanon. The talks parallel the BRICS diplomatic window and the wider Iran-mediation track.

Dive deeper
An ambassador-level format is the diplomatic equivalent of the Israeli-Lebanese track remaining alive but unresolved — principals-level negotiation would imply a substantive bridge has been built. Aoun’s public conditionality on a halt to strikes is the canonical structural objection; a deal cannot be reached while the Israeli cabinet is simultaneously reviewing an expanded ground campaign. The fact that the third round was confirmed before Thursday’s expected Israeli cabinet decision on Lebanon is the relevant sequencing: a diplomatic track is being held open in parallel with a military escalation track.

Pakistani Mediation Continues Without Fresh Public Statements Today

The Pakistani mediation track between Washington and Tehran produced no fresh public statements during the day. Iranian negotiators remained in Riyadh for working-level talks. Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar told the overnight press conference that a revised Iranian response “remains in preparation”, the same framing used on Tuesday. The Saudi backchannel via Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman remains the secondary track; Qatar and Turkey are participating in coordinated supplementary diplomacy.

Dive deeper
A 48-hour repeat of the “in preparation” framing without further detail is consistent with the working group having identified a workable bridge text but not yet completed it. The continued physical presence of Iranian negotiators in Riyadh remains the most important counter-signal to public hardening — a complete breakdown would require Tehran to recall its delegation, which has not happened. Thursday’s BRICS window in India will be the test of whether Tehran is prepared to soften publicly through a multilateral framework.
One To Read

UK’s Starmer Faces Challenge as Resignation Calls Overshadow King’s Speech

Al Jazeera · The clearest account of today’s State Opening day: the Starmer-Streeting under-twenty-minute meeting, the King’s “energy, defence and economic security” framing, the 80+ MP tally, the four junior resignations, and the structural question of whether Streeting’s Thursday resignation pushes the published signature count above 81. Essential before tomorrow’s BRICS window and the third round of Israel-Lebanon talks in Washington.
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Morning Briefing

Wednesday 13 May 2026 — 07:54 BST

What It Means For You

  • King Charles III delivers the King’s Speech at 11:30 BST today, setting out 28 bills for the new parliamentary session. The Immigration Enforcement Bill — with offshore-processing provisions and visa-revocation powers — is the substantive headline measure. Six Cabinet ministers are now privately understood to have urged Sir Keir Starmer to oversee a transition: Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood, Defence Secretary John Healey, Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy and Health Secretary Wes Streeting. Starmer must stand alongside the King this morning before any of them can move publicly.
  • The DMO holds a scheduled 30-year gilt auction at 10:30 BST. The 30-year yield opened at 5.78%, the highest since 1998. A soft auction would force the Bank of England to consider activating the pension-fund stress facility for the first time since the November 2022 LDI crisis. Sterling is at $1.2885; ten-year gilts at 5.18%. Bank-stock weakness has continued into the open.
  • Brent crude opened at $107.77 per barrel after Trump called Iran’s response “garbage” on Monday. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi heads to the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting in India on Thursday alongside the Saudi and Egyptian top diplomats — the most material diplomatic vector now in play. Petrol pump prices will firm above 172p in the coming days as the wholesale roll-through completes.

Iran War — Day 74. The war started 28 February 2026. President Trump’s “garbage” framing of Iran’s memo response, repeated on Monday, has held overnight without further public statement. Brent opened $107.77; WTI $102.18 — both up more than 45% since 28 February. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi will travel to India tomorrow for the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting alongside the Saudi and Egyptian foreign ministers, the most consequential multilateral diplomatic window since the formal Pakistani-mediated channel opened on 6 May. Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said overnight that a revised Iranian text remained “in preparation”.

UK UK Domestic Politics

King’s Speech at 11:30 BST: 28 Bills, Immigration Enforcement the Substantive Test

King Charles III delivers the King’s Speech in the House of Lords at 11:30 BST today, setting out 28 bills for the new parliamentary session. The Immigration Enforcement Bill — with offshore-processing provisions and expanded visa-revocation powers — is the headline measure. Other named bills include a Renters’ Rights (Amendment) Bill, a National Insurance (Reform) Bill, an AI Safety Bill and an Employment Rights (Enhancement) Bill. The State Opening Procession leaves Buckingham Palace at 10:50; the Prime Minister walks alongside the Leader of the Opposition through Central Lobby.

Dive deeper
The State Opening ceremonial sequence is the principal reason Cabinet rivals have not moved publicly: it is constitutionally impossible to move against a Prime Minister who is processing alongside the monarch. Once the King has spoken and Starmer has finished his response, the procedural protection ends. Offshore-processing provisions are the substantive new element relative to the 2024 framework and will face a near-certain ECHR challenge. The AI Safety Bill is the previously-unsignalled measure and indicates Number 10 has chosen to retain bipartisan policy ground that Streeting has been quietly contesting in private briefings.

Six Cabinet Ministers Privately Urged Transition; McDonnell Accuses Streeting of “Coup”

Six Cabinet ministers are now privately understood to have urged Sir Keir Starmer to oversee a transition: Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood, Defence Secretary John Healey, Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy and Health Secretary Wes Streeting. Mahmood is understood to have told the Prime Minister directly that he should manage the handover himself. Former Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell publicly accused Streeting overnight of launching “a coup, for fear of a democratic process whilst candidates are blocked”.

Dive deeper
Six Cabinet ministers privately urging transition is the operational red line: it is structurally larger than the 1990 Howe-led move against Thatcher, and the absence of a single named Cabinet defender beyond McFadden and Kendall is the more telling signal. McDonnell’s “coup” framing is the left-wing rear-guard intervention designed to give Starmer rhetorical cover, but he holds no parliamentary leverage. Mahmood’s direct intervention as Home Secretary is the most consequential: she owns the headline bill in today’s King’s Speech and her departure now would force a fresh reshuffle in the middle of a fiscal crisis.

30-Year Gilt Auction at 10:30; Yield Opens 5.78%, Highest Since 1998

The Debt Management Office holds a scheduled 30-year gilt auction at 10:30 BST. The 30-year yield opened 5.78% — the highest level since 1998 — up from 5.75% at last night’s close. Ten-year gilts opened at 5.18%; sterling at $1.2885. A soft auction would force the Bank of England to consider activating the pension-fund stress facility, dormant since November 2022. Bank-stock weakness has continued into the open: Natwest -1.8%, Lloyds -1.4%, Barclays -1.3%.

Dive deeper
A 30-year auction held at a 1998-high yield level is the cleanest stress test of UK fiscal credibility since the September 2022 mini-budget. The cover ratio and tail are the two metrics to watch: a cover below 2.0x or a tail wider than 1.5 basis points would force the BoE to publicly acknowledge the dormant stress facility. The Bank’s contingency framework has been “refreshed” three times in a fortnight without activation, indicating that the trigger is now a function of LDI hedging volumes rather than a fixed yield level. Reeves is expected to make a statement on fiscal headroom on Friday.

Two More Junior Resignations Overnight; Total Now Six

Two further junior ministerial resignations were reported overnight, bringing the total to six in 36 hours. Justice Minister Heidi Alexander resigned in a letter that said the government had “lost its purpose”; Cabinet Office Minister Pat McFadden’s parliamentary private secretary Catherine Atkinson also resigned. No further Cabinet-rank resignations had been registered as of the 09:00 broadcast round. Streeting and Cooper both declined media interviews. The 81-signature parliamentary threshold has not been publicly confirmed met but is understood to be within two or three signatures.

Dive deeper
Heidi Alexander’s departure is the most consequential of the six because the Justice portfolio sits adjacent to the Home Office and her resignation letter cited the Immigration Enforcement Bill specifically. Atkinson’s departure as PPS to McFadden is the structurally novel one: it indicates the parliamentary right is now reaching into the offices of Cabinet ministers who have publicly defended Starmer. The 81-signature threshold being “within two or three” is the canonical phrase used by parliamentary correspondents in the final hours before a confidence threshold is crossed; the figure rarely retraces.

FTSE Opens 0.48% Lower; Bank Stocks Continue to Slide

The FTSE 100 opened down 0.48% at 8,214; sterling at $1.2885 (-0.17% from Tuesday’s close); ten-year gilts at 5.18%. UK banking stocks led the decline at the open: Natwest -1.8%, Lloyds -1.4%, Barclays -1.3%, HSBC -0.9%. Insurer Aviva fell 2.1% on LDI exposure concerns. The VIX is at 32.20. Pension-fund LDI hedging activity was reportedly heavy through the Asian session. Bank of England sources told the FT contingency frameworks remained pre-activation.

Dive deeper
A third consecutive session of bank-led FTSE weakness is the cleanest measure of how the credit cycle is repricing under the dual political-and-rates risk. Aviva’s outsized fall is the most diagnostic individual move: it indicates LDI counterparty risk is now being discounted, not just policy risk. The pre-activation status of the BoE’s pension-fund stress facility is becoming the question rather than the answer — if today’s 30-year auction goes badly, the facility will be activated. Reeves’s Friday statement is therefore the next material catalyst alongside the auction itself.

GEO Geopolitical

Brent Opens $107.77; WTI $102.18 — Both Up 45%+ Since War Began

Brent crude futures for July opened $107.77 per barrel, broadly unchanged from Tuesday’s 3.4% rally close. WTI for June opened $102.18. Both contracts are now up more than 45% since the US-Israel-led war on Iran began on 28 February. Citi has raised its three-month Brent forecast to $115; Goldman Sachs to $112. Pakistani sources told NPR overnight that a revised Iranian text remained “in preparation”. Gold opened $4,882; the dollar steady against the euro.

Dive deeper
Both forecast upgrades flag the same observation: producer hedging behaviour above $100 remains unusually weak, indicating markets view the war premium as politically driven rather than physically durable. The implied options-market probability of a memo-signing within ten days fell to 32% at Tuesday’s close; the absence of fresh Trump statements overnight has held it broadly unchanged. The Pakistani “in preparation” framing is consistent with a slipped, not collapsed, mediation process — the Iranian negotiating team remains physically present in Riyadh. The next material catalyst is whether Araghchi delivers a softer line at BRICS Thursday.

BRICS Foreign Ministers Meeting Thursday: Araghchi, Saudi FM, Egyptian FM All Attending

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi will travel to India tomorrow for the BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting alongside the Saudi and Egyptian foreign ministers, both of whom have been involved in backchannel mediation. The meeting agenda includes a bilateral US-Iran section requested by Tehran on 11 May. The Indian Ministry of External Affairs confirmed overnight the agenda would proceed unchanged. China’s Wang Yi is also expected to attend; Russia’s Lavrov is sending a deputy.

Dive deeper
A BRICS-hosted multilateral diplomatic window is the most consequential vector now in play because it allows Araghchi to walk back “legitimate and final” without overt domestic concession — the BRICS framing transfers the political cost of compromise to the multilateral institution rather than to Tehran. The simultaneous presence of the Saudi and Egyptian foreign ministers is unusual; Cairo’s involvement signals a Gulf-Arab coordination that has not previously been publicly visible. Wang Yi’s attendance is the secondary signal — Beijing’s mediation channel has been offered but not previously activated.

Pakistan: Revised Text Still “In Preparation”; Iranian Aircraft Question Closed

Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar told the overnight press conference in Islamabad that the revised Iranian response “remains in preparation” with no timeline. The Pakistani Foreign Ministry separately rejected reports that Iranian military aircraft were sheltering in Pakistan, saying the aircraft “arrived during the ceasefire period and bear no linkage to any military contingency”. Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and now reportedly Turkey are participating in coordinated backchannel diplomacy.

Dive deeper
The Pakistani public denial of the Iranian-aircraft claim is the most operationally important diplomatic statement of the night because it closes a potential CENTCOM pretext for a strike on Pakistani facilities. Dar’s “in preparation” framing has now held for 48 hours without slipping further, indicating the Riyadh-based working group has identified a workable bridge text but not yet completed it. The expansion of the coordinating group to four (Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey) is the most consequential regional architectural development; the Saudi defence pact reportedly being widened to include Turkey signals long-tail strategic restructuring beyond the immediate war.

Israeli Cabinet Reconvenes Thursday on Lebanon; France-Israel Tension Holds

The Israeli cabinet is set to reconvene on Thursday to consider an expanded ground campaign in Lebanon. Defence Minister Yoav Gallant’s options paper, presented Monday, remains under review. France’s summoning of the Israeli ambassador in Paris on Tuesday holds without further escalation; the Quai d’Orsay has scheduled an emergency call with the German and Italian foreign ministers this afternoon. The UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert is in Washington for talks at State.

Dive deeper
The French, German and Italian foreign ministers coordinating ahead of the Israeli cabinet’s Thursday session is the first three-state European coordination since the war began and signals Europe’s willingness to use political leverage on Israel that it has previously withheld. The UN Special Coordinator’s presence at State is the parallel diplomatic vector: Washington must reconcile Israeli operational ambitions with the wider Pakistani-mediated diplomatic track. A Litani-line operation would almost certainly require US logistical support and is therefore the most contestable inside Washington.

Saudi-Turkey-Pakistan Defence Pact Reportedly Widening

Pakistan’s defence minister Khawaja Asif confirmed in a Pakistani television interview Monday night that Turkey and Qatar may join the existing Saudi-Pakistan mutual defence cooperation pact. The arrangement is being finalised; the formal scope has not been published. Pakistani sources told Bloomberg the expansion was driven by the US-Iran war and represents the most material regional security realignment of the conflict so far. Iranian state media has not yet commented; the Israeli MOD declined to respond.

Dive deeper
A four-state defence pact across Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Turkey and Qatar would be the most significant Sunni-Muslim multilateral security arrangement since the abandoned Arab NATO concept of 2017 and would constitute a structural answer to the Israel-US strategic position rather than a tactical response to the war itself. Pakistani nuclear capability is the implied underpinning. The non-Iranian reaction is the more diagnostic signal: Tehran has not yet condemned the arrangement, suggesting the IRGC and the foreign ministry view it as a political fact to be accommodated rather than contested. Israeli silence is structurally consistent.
One To Read

Pakistan Scrambles to Salvage US-Iran Diplomacy as Ceasefire Faces Collapse

Al Jazeera · The most complete account of where the Pakistani mediation now sits: Islamabad’s position between Tehran and Riyadh, the aircraft-sheltering question, the Qatari and Turkish supplementary channels, and what tomorrow’s BRICS foreign ministers’ meeting in India might unlock. Essential before the King’s Speech at 11:30 and the 30-year gilt auction at 10:30.
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Evening Briefing

Tuesday 12 May 2026 — 18:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • Sir Keir Starmer told this morning’s Cabinet he intended to “get on with governing” and asked ministers to raise leadership concerns “individually” rather than around the table. Four junior ministers resigned during the day — Jess Phillips (Safeguarding), Miatta Fahnbulleh (Devolution and Faith), Zubir Ahmed (Health) and Alex Davies-Jones (Victims and VAWG). Roughly 80 of Labour’s 403 MPs are now publicly calling for an exit timetable. The 81-signature threshold remains, narrowly, unmet.
  • Health Secretary Wes Streeting is being briefed by British media as having quietly secured close to the 20% of MPs needed to mount a formal challenge. Allies have cited Labour’s hold on Redbridge council in last week’s elections as an electoral marker. President Trump separately escalated the Iran rhetoric this morning, calling Tehran’s response “garbage” and warning the ceasefire architecture was “on life support”.
  • UK markets closed sharply weaker for the second consecutive session: the FTSE 100 ended down 0.94% at 8,254, sterling at $1.2907 (-0.50%), ten-year gilts up another 7 basis points to 5.13% and thirty-year gilts at 5.75%. UK banking stocks led losses — Natwest -4.6%, Lloyds -4.1%, Barclays -4.0%. Brent surged 3.58% to $107.65 on Trump’s “life support” framing; petrol pump prices will firm above 172p in coming days as the wholesale roll-through completes.

Iran War — Day 73. The war started 28 February 2026. President Trump told reporters this morning Iran’s memo response was “garbage” and that the ceasefire was “on life support”, sharpening the rhetoric beyond yesterday’s “totally unacceptable” framing. Brent settled $107.65 (+3.58%) at the European close, the highest level since 2 May; WTI settled $101.51. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei reiterated Tehran’s terms were “legitimate”. Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar confirmed Islamabad was working on a revised text but offered no timeline. The Saudi backchannel via Riyadh remains active.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Starmer Tells Cabinet: “Get On With Governing”; Raises Leadership Concerns “Individually”

Sir Keir Starmer told this morning’s Downing Street Cabinet that “the country expects us to get on with governing” and asked ministers with leadership concerns to raise them with him “individually” rather than around the table. Pat McFadden told reporters after the meeting that “no one challenged” the Prime Minister and that “many messages of support” had been offered. Liz Kendall and Anna Turley publicly gave Starmer their “full support”. Peter Kyle said no formal leadership process had been triggered.

Dive deeper
Asking ministers to raise concerns “individually” rather than collectively is the central mechanical play of Starmer’s survival strategy: it strips any potential challenger of the cover that a public Cabinet split would provide. The decision to channel disagreement through bilateral conversations also gives Number 10 visibility on exactly who is moving and on what timeline, which previous private-letter mechanics had not done. McFadden’s public read-out is unusually detailed for a Cabinet meeting, signalling that Number 10 chose to make the “no one challenged” framing the operational story of the day. Whether that framing survives Wednesday’s King’s Speech is the next test.

Four Junior Ministers Resign in Single Day

Four ministers resigned during the day: Safeguarding Minister Jess Phillips; Minister for Devolution, Faith and Communities Miatta Fahnbulleh, who said Starmer had “lost the trust and confidence of the public”; Health Parliamentary Under-Secretary Zubir Ahmed, who cited a “lack of values-driven leadership”; and Victims and Violence Against Women Minister Alex Davies-Jones, who called for the Prime Minister’s departure after “catastrophic” electoral defeats. All four resigned voluntarily during the Cabinet meeting window.

Dive deeper
Four resignations clustered in a single morning is more than a coincidence and signals the coordination that the parliamentary right had not delivered yesterday. None of the four is senior enough to force Starmer to reshuffle in response, but each statement constitutes a separate public claim on the future of the Labour Party that the broadcast media will rehearse for the rest of the week. Phillips is the most politically valuable departure — her safeguarding portfolio has cross-bench credibility and her exit was reported in advance of the others. The pattern is consistent with a coordinated escalation that Streeting’s camp would benefit from without authoring.

Streeting Reportedly Close to 20% MP Threshold; Cooper Camp Silent

British media reported during the morning that Health Secretary Wes Streeting may have quietly secured close to the 20% of Labour MPs (81 signatures) needed to mount a formal leadership challenge. Streeting allies have cited Labour’s hold on Redbridge council — his home authority — as an electoral marker. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper made no public statements during the day; Cabinet sources told Bloomberg her preference was now reportedly for an “orderly summer transition”. Streeting himself declined to be interviewed.

Dive deeper
A Health Secretary acquiring 81 signatures without making a public move is the precise mechanic that destabilises Number 10 most: it gives Starmer no clear target for a counter-move while removing the moral pressure of an early resignation from Cabinet. The Cooper “summer transition” signalling is the more durable threat — she retains the parliamentary architecture to coordinate the parliamentary right, and her Immigration Enforcement Bill is the only piece of legislation in tomorrow’s King’s Speech that the parliamentary party fully owns. Whether she signs off the bill substantively or trims it in committee is the next bet to track.

UK Markets Close Sharply Weaker for Second Day: FTSE -0.94%, 30Y Gilt 5.75%

UK markets closed sharply weaker for the second consecutive session. The FTSE 100 ended down 0.94% at 8,254; sterling at $1.2907 (-0.50%); ten-year gilts up 7 basis points to 5.13%; thirty-year gilts at 5.75%. UK banking stocks led losses: Natwest -4.6%, Lloyds -4.1%, Barclays -4.0%. The VIX closed 31.85 (+4.25%). Bank of England sources told the FT contingency frameworks were being “refreshed” for a third time in a fortnight but remained pre-activation. The DMO confirmed Wednesday’s scheduled 30-year gilt auction would proceed.

Dive deeper
A banking-stock-led FTSE sell-off is a different market signature from yesterday’s broad gilt-driven move and reflects discounting of an adverse loan-loss-provision cycle if a leadership change triggers an autumn fiscal event. The 30-year gilt now sits 7 basis points higher than yesterday’s 2022-crisis peak. Wednesday’s 30-year auction is the operational stress point: a soft auction would force the BoE to consider activating the pension-fund stress facility, which has remained dormant since November 2022. Sterling below $1.29 is now consistent with the imported-inflation pass-through completing within four to six weeks, lifting the autumn Budget revenue arithmetic but tightening the consumer real-income outlook.

King’s Speech Wednesday: Bill Count Set at 28, Immigration Enforcement Headlines

Number 10 confirmed late this afternoon that Wednesday’s King’s Speech will set out 28 bills for the new parliamentary session, with the Immigration Enforcement Bill the headline measure. The bill will include offshore-processing provisions and expanded visa-revocation powers. Other named bills include a Renters’ Rights (Amendment) Bill, a National Insurance (Reform) Bill, an AI Safety Bill and an Employment Rights (Enhancement) Bill. The speech will be delivered at 11:30 BST.

Dive deeper
28 bills is a high count for a King’s Speech delivered amid a leadership crisis and signals that Number 10 has chosen volume over focus — the implicit calculation is that legislative business in the chamber will deter parliamentary attention from leadership mechanics. Offshore-processing provisions are the substantive new element relative to the 2024 framework and will face a near-certain ECHR challenge. The AI Safety Bill is the previously-unannounced measure; its inclusion implies the government will attempt to retain bipartisan policy ground that Streeting has been quietly contesting. Tomorrow’s bond auction timing puts the speech precisely between two market events.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump: Iran Response Is “Garbage”; Ceasefire “On Life Support”

President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House this morning that Iran’s formal response to the one-page memo was “garbage” and that the ceasefire architecture was “on life support”. The remarks, delivered in an Oval Office availability with the Polish President, sharpened yesterday’s Truth Social rejection. Trump declined to set a deadline but said he would “decide” on the resumption of strikes “very, very soon”. National Security Advisor Mike Waltz was reportedly present.

Dive deeper
“Garbage” is the strongest rhetorical escalation since the original memo was issued and signals Trump has either committed publicly to a position he must now defend, or is constructing the rhetorical predicate for a renewed strike package. The “very, very soon” deadline framing is consistent with Trump’s usual oscillation and does not constitute an operational commitment; CENTCOM force-flow remains the cleanest indicator. Waltz’s presence is the substantive signal — the National Security Advisor has previously chaired the inter-agency reviews that precede operational decisions. The next 48 hours are now structurally tighter than the diplomatic track had implied.

Brent Surges $107.65 (+3.58%); Oil Up 40% Since War Began

Brent crude futures settled $107.65 per barrel at the European close, up 3.58% on the day after Trump’s “life support” framing and a downstream re-rating by Citi and Goldman. WTI settled $101.51. Both contracts are now up more than 40% since the war began on 28 February. Citi raised its three-month Brent forecast to $115; Goldman Sachs lifted its base case to $112. Gold lifted to $4,865 (+0.68%). Options markets imply a 32% probability of a memo-signing within ten days, down from 38% on Monday.

Dive deeper
A 32% memo-signing probability is the lowest level since the formal Pakistani-mediated channel opened on 6 May and reflects both Trump’s public hardening and the absence of any softening signal from Tehran. Both bank forecast upgrades flag the same observation: producer hedging behaviour above $100 remains unusually weak, indicating the market views the war premium as politically rather than physically driven. The next material catalyst is whether Pakistan transmits a revised Iranian text before Friday, when CENTCOM’s 96-hour force-flow window begins to close. A close above $110 by Friday would shift the structural pricing regime.

Iran: Baghaei Reiterates “Legitimate” Terms; Iranian Negotiators Still in Riyadh

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei reiterated at his weekly press conference that Tehran’s memo response remained “legitimate and final”, declining to confirm whether a revised text was being drafted via Pakistan. Iranian negotiators are still physically present in Riyadh for working-level talks; Saudi sources told the Financial Times the discussions were focused on “sequencing language” for the nuclear file. No new statements from Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei have been issued today.

Dive deeper
Baghaei’s “legitimate and final” framing locks Tehran into the public position more tightly than yesterday’s “legitimate and generous” line; the additional “final” word reduces backchannel flexibility. The continued physical presence of Iranian negotiators in Riyadh remains the most important counter-signal to the public hardening, but the absence of a Khamenei statement is now the more meaningful silence — previous diplomatic windows have been opened or closed by Khamenei interventions. The Saudi “sequencing language” focus is consistent with the bridge-text work being directed at the nuclear-file deferral that Washington has now publicly red-lined.

Pakistan: Revised Text Being Worked On; No Timeline

Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar told reporters in Islamabad this afternoon that a revised Iranian response was being “worked on” but declined to offer a timeline. Dar said both Washington and Tehran had reaffirmed Pakistan’s role as a mediator overnight. Pakistani sources told NPR the revised text would address the nuclear-file sequencing question that Washington publicly flagged on Monday. The Saudi backchannel via Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman remains the secondary track.

Dive deeper
Dar declining to offer a timeline is a softer signal than yesterday’s implied 48-hour framing and is consistent with a process that has slipped, not collapsed. The acknowledgement that the revised text will specifically address the nuclear-file sequencing is the most useful piece of mediator-side information of the day — it confirms Pakistan understands the new US red line and is working to bridge it. The Saudi backchannel will be tested separately tonight if MBS phones Trump as briefed yesterday. Tehran’s leverage is the absence of an alternative mediator: China’s offered channel has not been activated.

Israeli Press: Lebanon Cabinet Reconvening Thursday; No Ground-Op Decision Yet

The Israeli press confirmed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s cabinet will reconvene on Thursday to consider an expanded ground campaign in Lebanon. No decision has been taken; Defence Minister Yoav Gallant’s options paper remains under review. The French Foreign Ministry summoned the Israeli ambassador in Paris this afternoon over reported troop concentrations near the northern border. Reservist call-ups have not been issued. The UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon is reportedly seeking emergency consultations.

Dive deeper
The French summoning of the Israeli ambassador is the most consequential European intervention of the war to date and signals that UNIFIL personnel protection is now an active diplomatic question rather than a procedural concern. The continued absence of reservist call-ups is the cleanest indicator that the Thursday cabinet has not pre-decided the operation, but Gallant’s options paper crossing the cabinet on the same day as a possible CENTCOM force-flow announcement is the operational risk. The UN Special Coordinator activation is the canonical procedural step before any Security Council emergency session.
One To Read

Starmer Defiant at Cabinet Meeting Amid Growing Pressure to Resign

Al Jazeera · The clearest account of today’s Cabinet mechanics: McFadden’s “no one challenged” read-out, the four junior resignations, the named Cabinet ministers reportedly urging departure, and the Streeting 20% question. Essential before tomorrow’s King’s Speech at 11:30 and the 30-year gilt auction.
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Evening Briefing

Monday 11 May 2026 — 18:00 BST

What It Means For You

  • Sir Keir Starmer delivered his “fresh direction” reset speech this afternoon, taking responsibility for the local-election result and warning Labour would “never be forgiven” for inflicting “the chaos of constantly changing leaders” on the country. Catherine West backed down from her stalking-horse challenge after the speech, calling it “too little, too late” but withdrawing her own candidacy. The 81-signature threshold has not been reached — over 30 Labour MPs are still publicly calling for an exit timetable, short of the level needed to force a vote.
  • Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei called Tehran’s memo response “legitimate” and “generous”, accusing Washington of “unreasonable” demands. President Trump posted “I don’t like it — TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!” on Truth Social. Brent settled $103.93 at the European close, up a further 2.62% on the day. Both sides are now publicly anchored to maximalist positions.
  • UK markets closed sharply weaker: the FTSE 100 ended down 1.05% at 8,332, sterling at $1.2972, ten-year gilts up 8 basis points to 5.06% and thirty-year gilts almost 10 basis points higher at 5.68%, the highest since the 2022 LDI crisis. The VIX closed above 30. Pump prices, already heading higher, will remain firmly above 170p with Brent re-anchored around $104. The Bank of England is reportedly monitoring pension-fund LDI hedging activity.

Iran War — Day 72. The war started 28 February 2026. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said Tehran’s response was “legitimate” and made no “concessions”, demanding an end to the war, the lifting of the US naval blockade, the release of frozen Iranian assets and safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz. Trump posted “TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE” on Truth Social this morning. Brent settled $103.93 at European close (+2.62%); Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has reportedly raised an expanded Lebanon ground campaign at cabinet. Pakistan’s Ishaq Dar said mediation continues; Iranian negotiators remain in Riyadh.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Starmer Delivers Reset Speech: “Fundamentals Are Sound”, Warns Against “Chaos of Constantly Changing Leaders”

Sir Keir Starmer delivered his “fresh direction” reset speech this afternoon, taking responsibility for the “very tough” election result and pledging to “face up to the big challenges” facing the country. He cited growth, national defence, the UK’s relationship with the EU and energy needs as the four priorities. Starmer said Labour was “not just facing dangerous times, but dangerous opponents”, framing the contest as Labour versus “Reform and the Greens”. He warned Labour would “never be forgiven for inflicting” “the chaos of constantly changing leaders” on the country, signalling he intends to fight.

Dive deeper
The “fundamentals are sound” framing is the most strategically important line of the speech: it puts Starmer on the side of incumbency and against the “change” energy that the local elections expressed. The decision to attack the Greens alongside Reform is the first explicit public acknowledgment that the soft-left of Labour’s vote is the more dangerous defection at the next election. The closer-to-the-EU pledge is the only material policy turn in the speech and signals Number 10 has concluded the soft-Brexit reset is now electorally net-positive after seven years of Conservative reframing. The “mainstream party of power, not protest” line is calibrated to give Cabinet rivals nothing to organise around.

Catherine West Withdraws Leadership Bid After Starmer Speech

Catherine West, the Hornsey and Friern Barnet MP who had threatened to email Labour colleagues at close of business today seeking 81 signatures for a leadership challenge, has withdrawn her candidacy after Starmer’s speech. She told reporters the speech was “too little, too late” but said an “orderly transition” was now the right path and that she would no longer stand. West acknowledged her own candidacy lacked sufficient parliamentary support; her stalking-horse threat appears to have been designed to force a Cabinet move that did not materialise.

Dive deeper
West’s withdrawal is the operational story of the day. The stalking-horse mechanic only works if a Cabinet alternative steps forward in response: none did before the 18:00 PLP meeting. The 42 MPs who had publicly called for resignation by 8pm Sunday did not coalesce into a single signatures effort, and the parliamentary right of Labour appears to have decided the costs of an immediate move outweigh the benefits with Wednesday’s King’s Speech imminent. The risk now shifts from May to the autumn: if the Immigration Enforcement Bill stalls, or if local by-election losses continue, the same arithmetic returns under more disciplined coordination.

Rayner: “What We Are Doing Isn’t Working”; Streeting Holds Silence

Former Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said publicly that “what we are doing isn’t working, and it needs to change” in remarks reported by Bloomberg this afternoon. Health Secretary Wes Streeting has declined media interviews since the local-election result and was not present in the chamber during Starmer’s remarks. Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham, who still lacks a parliamentary seat, repeated that he was “not seeking the leadership” but allies told the FT he had identified two potential by-election routes.

Dive deeper
Rayner’s public statement is calibrated to put pressure on Starmer without endorsing a specific challenger; her positioning is consistent with allies’ private signalling that she would back Burnham if a parliamentary route opened. Streeting’s silence is the more telling signal — a Health Secretary refusing to publicly back the Prime Minister at a moment of acute parliamentary pressure is a calibrated escalation that costs him nothing inside the parliamentary party. The Burnham by-election question matters because Labour’s NEC blocked his standing in January; whether the NEC reverses that decision over the summer is now the proxy measurement of whether the parliamentary right believes a Starmer departure is plausible inside twelve months.

UK Markets Close Sharply Weaker: FTSE -1.05%, 30-Year Gilt at 5.68%

UK markets closed sharply weaker on the twin political and Iran risk. The FTSE 100 ended down 1.05% at 8,332, sterling at $1.2972 (-0.56%), ten-year gilts up 8 basis points to 5.06% and thirty-year gilts up almost 10 basis points to 5.68% — the highest level since the 2022 LDI crisis. Pension-fund LDI hedging activity was reportedly heavy through the afternoon session. The VIX closed at 30.55, up 12% on the day. Bank of England sources told the FT contingency planning was being “refreshed” rather than activated.

Dive deeper
The 30-year gilt at 5.68% is the highest yield since the September 2022 LDI crisis and is the cleanest market signal that fiscal credibility is being repriced. The intervention threshold is not a fixed yield level but a function of the speed of move and the LDI hedging volumes — both are now elevated. The 10-year at 5.06% has crossed the symbolically important 5% level for the first time this year. Sterling below $1.30 puts further imported-inflation pressure on the Reeves fiscal arithmetic. The autumn Budget headroom, already minimal at March’s Spring Statement, is now structurally negative; either tax rises or fresh fiscal-rule re-engineering will be required before October.

King’s Speech Wednesday: Immigration Enforcement Bill Is the Substantive Test

Number 10 confirmed late this afternoon that Wednesday’s King’s Speech will include a new Immigration Enforcement Bill targeting small-boat crossings and asylum-claim processing times. Cabinet sources told the FT the bill includes new offshore-processing provisions and visa-revocation powers. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper is understood to have signed it off in its current form. Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said the bill was “eight years late” and would not change his electoral arithmetic. The full legislative programme will be set out at 11:30 BST Wednesday.

Dive deeper
Offshore-processing provisions and visa-revocation powers are the two clauses that turn the bill from cosmetic to substantive. The 2024 framework did not include either; their inclusion implies a deliberate political decision to invite a legal challenge under the European Convention. Whether Cooper retains the brief through to second reading is now a parameter: her potential leadership candidacy means a departmental move is plausible if Streeting accelerates his own positioning. The Wednesday timing is also the next market catalyst — gilts will trade the substantive content of the bill, not the speech itself.

GEO Geopolitical

Iran: US Demands “Unreasonable”; Baghaei Defends Memo Response

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei said this morning Tehran’s formal response was “legitimate” and “generous”, accusing the United States of “unreasonable” demands. “We did not demand any concessions. Our demand is legitimate: demanding an end to the war, lifting the [US] blockade [on Iranian ports] and piracy, and releasing Iranian assets,” Baghaei told reporters in Tehran. The statement is Iran’s most explicit public defence of the memo response since Trump rejected it on Sunday night.

Dive deeper
Baghaei’s “legitimate and generous” framing locks Tehran into the public position that the response is final, complicating any private redrafting via Pakistani mediation. The decision to characterise US demands as “unreasonable” is a calibrated rhetorical escalation that closes the rhetorical space between Tehran’s public and backchannel positions. Iranian sources told Al Jazeera the memo response had been signed off by the Supreme National Security Council, meaning that any softening would require fresh institutional sign-off — days, not hours. The diplomatic clock has slipped from 48 hours to 96 hours minimum.

Trump Truth Social: “I Don’t Like It — TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!”

President Trump posted a second Truth Social message at 13:30 BST today repeating his rejection of the Iranian memo response. “I don’t like it — TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!” the post read. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters at the afternoon briefing that “all options remain on the table” and that the United States would not accept any agreement that deferred the nuclear file. CENTCOM said US Navy assets remained at their current Gulf posture and that no new force-flow had been ordered.

Dive deeper
A repeat “totally unacceptable” framing is consistent with Trump’s usual oscillation but adds rhetorical commitment without changing the operational posture — CENTCOM force flow is the variable to watch, not Truth Social. Leavitt’s “nuclear file” line is the most important new constraint of the day: Iran’s memo response explicitly deferred the nuclear file, and Washington has now drawn an explicit red line against that sequencing. Reconciling the two positions requires either Iran to concede the sequencing or the United States to accept it — the bridging language being developed in Riyadh has not closed that gap.

Brent Settles $103.93 at European Close (+2.62%)

Brent crude futures settled $103.93 per barrel at the European close, up 2.62% on the day after Trump’s repeat rejection and Iran’s public defence of its memo response. WTI settled $99.20. Citi analysts said in a note this afternoon that “upside skew remains structural” with no near-term mediation breakthrough priced in. Gold lifted to $4,832 (+0.77%) on safe-haven flows. Options markets now imply a 38% probability of a memo-signing within ten days, down from 45% at the morning open and 60% at Friday’s close.

Dive deeper
The 38% memo-signing probability is the operational measure of how the day repriced. A 7-point drop in implied probability over a single session reflects both Iran’s public hardening and Washington’s nuclear-file red line. Citi’s “structural upside skew” framing is consistent with producer behaviour: there has been no observable hedging pressure from US shale or OPEC+ producers above $100, suggesting both groups view the war premium as transitory rather than durable. The next material catalyst is Wednesday: either a revised Iranian text via Pakistan, or a CENTCOM force-flow announcement.

Pakistan: Mediation Continues; Iranian Negotiators Remain in Riyadh

Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar reiterated this afternoon that Islamabad will continue mediation between the United States and Iran. “Both sides remain engaged through us,” he told reporters in Islamabad, declining to confirm whether a revised Iranian text was being drafted. Iranian negotiators are still in Riyadh for working-level talks; Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is expected to brief Trump by phone overnight. Qatar, Turkey and China have all offered supplementary mediation channels.

Dive deeper
The maintenance of Iranian physical presence in Riyadh is the single most important diplomatic signal of the day, even more than the public statements. A complete breakdown would require Tehran to recall its delegation, which has not happened. The MBS phone call to Trump is the operational backchannel and the most plausible vector for a face-saving rephrasing of the memo’s sequencing. The supplementary Qatari, Turkish and Chinese offers indicate the broader regional architecture is mobilising; Beijing’s involvement is the most consequential because of its oil-purchase relationship with Tehran.

Netanyahu Cabinet: Lebanon Ground Campaign Said Under Active Review

Israeli press reports cited by Al Jazeera indicate Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu raised the question of an expanded ground campaign in Lebanon at this morning’s cabinet session. Defence Minister Yoav Gallant is understood to have presented options ranging from a limited buffer-zone operation to a multi-division push to the Litani River. No decision has been taken; the Israeli press said the cabinet would reconvene Thursday. France’s Quai d’Orsay said it had “raised concerns” with Washington.

Dive deeper
A Litani-line ground campaign would constitute the largest Israeli ground operation since the 2024 buffer-zone advance and would almost certainly require US logistical backing. The Thursday cabinet reconvening date is the parallel diplomatic deadline alongside the Pakistani mediation track — the two are now operationally linked. The French intervention is the first European push-back of the war and signals UNIFIL personnel-protection concerns are now active. The cleanest indicator of whether the operation proceeds is whether IDF reservist call-ups are issued during this week; none had been notified as of the European close.
One To Read

Iran Says US Making “Unreasonable” Demands in Negotiations to End War

Al Jazeera · The most complete account of where the diplomatic track sits at the European close: Baghaei’s “legitimate and generous” framing, the Supreme National Security Council sign-off, and how Tehran’s public hardening relates to the Pakistani backchannel. Essential before Wednesday’s King’s Speech and Thursday’s Israeli cabinet reconvening.
☼

Morning Briefing

Monday 11 May 2026 — 10:05 BST

What It Means For You

  • President Trump rejected Iran’s formal response to the one-page memo as “totally unacceptable” on Sunday night, posting on Truth Social that Tehran had spent “47 years — DELAY, DELAY, DELAY”. Brent crude jumped 3.16% to $104.49 overnight; Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu warned the conflict was “not over”. The diplomatic track has reversed in 18 hours.
  • Catherine West will email Labour MPs at the close of business today seeking the 81 signatures needed to trigger a leadership challenge, if no Cabinet alternative emerges from Sir Keir Starmer’s afternoon speech. Streeting, Rayner and Burnham are the named alternatives. Bridget Phillipson defended Starmer on Sky News this morning. The PLP meeting is at 6pm.
  • UK markets opened sharply weaker: the FTSE is down 0.74% at 8,358, sterling at $1.2985, and ten-year gilts up to 4.98% as both the Iran reversal and the leadership crisis price in simultaneously. The VIX is up 8% to 29.5. Pump prices, which were heading lower this week, will now hold above 170p as Brent re-prices the war risk.

Iran War — Day 72. The war started 28 February 2026. Trump called Iran’s formal response to the one-page memo “totally unacceptable” on Sunday night, accusing Tehran of “47 years” of delay. Iran’s reply via Pakistani mediators demanded sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, compensation for war damages, the release of frozen assets and sanctions relief; the nuclear file was deferred. Brent settled $104.49 overnight (+3.16%); Israeli PM Netanyahu said the conflict is “not over”. Pakistan has confirmed it will continue mediation. The Saudi backchannel remains active; Iranian negotiators are still in Riyadh.

UK UK Domestic Politics

Catherine West: Will Email MPs Today if No Cabinet Alternative Emerges

Labour MP Catherine West confirmed this morning she will email her colleagues at the close of business today seeking the 81 signatures needed to formally trigger a leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer, if no Cabinet minister puts themselves forward first. West has been clear her candidacy is a “stalking horse” designed to force a Cabinet move rather than to win the leadership herself. The Parliamentary Labour Party meets at 18:00 BST.

Dive deeper
A close-of-business email is a procedural escalation rather than a vote: it forces Labour MPs to declare themselves in writing, which previous private confidence-letter mechanics had not done. The 81-signature threshold is the operational variable; cabinet sources suggested overnight that the number of MPs prepared to sign publicly is “close to but below” that figure. The PLP meeting at 18:00 is when the political weather settles — either Starmer survives the day with conditions, or a Cabinet-coordinated transition begins.

Starmer to Deliver “Fresh Direction” Reset Speech This Afternoon

Sir Keir Starmer is expected to set out a “fresh direction” in a major speech this afternoon, the first pillar of his attempted reset alongside Wednesday’s King’s Speech. Number 10 sources told the Sunday papers the speech will focus on cost of living, immigration enforcement and a “deliverology” tightening of departmental targets. Starmer told the Observer he plans a “ten-year project of renewal” and will lead Labour into the next election.

Dive deeper
A reset speech delivered 72 hours after a historic local-election 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. The Observer interview was carefully timed to make the cost of defying Number 10 explicit to the parliamentary party. The speech will be measured by whether it includes substantive policy — new immigration enforcement legislation in particular — or only narrative.

Phillipson Defends Starmer; Cabinet Rivals Position Quietly

Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson defended Sir Keir Starmer on Sky News this morning, saying she did not believe “a leadership contest and all the problems that would bring is the answer”. Bloomberg reports Labour rivals are positioning ahead of Starmer’s speech: Health Secretary Wes Streeting, former Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner and Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham are the three names most frequently briefed against No 10. Burnham allies are exploring Manchester by-election seats.

Dive deeper
Phillipson’s public defence is the strongest Cabinet-level signal yet that an immediate move against Starmer would split the parliamentary party. Her positioning — soft-left, junior to the principal challengers — is calibrated to give Streeting and Rayner cover to delay. The Burnham track requires a parliamentary by-election; Streeting holds the parliamentary numbers; Rayner holds the membership. A coordinated tripartite move is mechanically possible but politically unstable.

UK Markets Open Sharply Weaker on Twin Political and Iran Risk

UK markets opened sharply weaker as both the Iran de-escalation reversal and the Labour leadership crisis priced simultaneously. The FTSE 100 is down 0.74% at 8,358; sterling has weakened to $1.2985; ten-year gilts have backed up to 4.98% from 4.92% on Friday. The VIX has jumped 8% to 29.5. Pension-fund LDI hedging activity is reportedly heavy through the morning session. Bank of England sources told the FT a 5% gilt close would force fresh contingency planning.

Dive deeper
A 6 basis-point gilt sell-off on the morning open is the cleanest market signal of dual political-and-geopolitical risk pricing simultaneously. The 5% gilt threshold is the documented intervention trigger for the BoE’s pension-fund stress protocols, last tested during the 2022 LDI crisis. Sterling weakness below $1.30 puts additional imported-inflation pressure on the Reeves fiscal arithmetic, which had relied on the post-Iran-memo Brent settling near $90. The combined effect is to compress the autumn Budget headroom further than Friday’s position implied.

King’s Speech Wednesday: Immigration Enforcement Bill Is the Substantive Test

Wednesday’s King’s Speech opens the new parliamentary session and is the second pillar of Starmer’s reset alongside today’s speech. Number 10 has confirmed the legislative programme will include a new Immigration Enforcement Bill targeting small-boat crossings and asylum-claim processing times. Cabinet sources said the bill has been drafted under Home Secretary Yvette Cooper’s direction and is “ready to lay”. Reform UK has called it “far too late”.

Dive deeper
The Immigration Enforcement Bill is the substantive lever Starmer has to neutralise the strongest Reform talking point. The legislative content matters more than the framing: a bill that includes new offshore-processing provisions or visa-revocation powers would be materially different from the existing 2024 framework. Without those clauses, the parliamentary right will read it as cosmetic. Whether the bill survives Cabinet sign-off in its current form, particularly with Cooper a potential leadership contender herself, is the test before Wednesday.

GEO Geopolitical

Trump Rejects Iran Response as “Totally Unacceptable”

President Trump rejected Iran’s formal response to the one-page memo as “totally unacceptable” on Sunday night, posting on Truth Social that Tehran had spent “47 years — DELAY, DELAY, DELAY”. The response had been delivered via Pakistani mediators at 14:15 BST Sunday and proposed ending hostilities first, with the nuclear file deferred. Trump warned earlier in the week that he would resume bombing “at a much higher level” if Iran refused.

Dive deeper
A “totally unacceptable” framing leaves Trump structurally locked into either a credible new threat of escalation or a substantive concession on sequencing. The Truth Social post is the public position; Pakistani diplomatic sources told the FT overnight that backchannel work is continuing despite the public rejection. The pattern matches Trump’s familiar oscillation between threat and inducement, but the “47 years” framing is a longer historical ledger than previous statements and signals limited near-term appetite for compromise.

Brent Jumps 3.16% to $104.49 on Trump Rejection + Israeli Warning

Brent crude futures rose 3.16% overnight to $104.49 per barrel after Trump’s rejection of the Iranian memo response and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s warning that the conflict with Iran is “not over”. WTI rose to $98.20. Citi analysts said prices could rise further if no deal is reached, with risks “tilted to the upside”. Gold lifted to $4,815 on safe-haven flows.

Dive deeper
A 3.16% one-day move retraces less than half of last Wednesday’s 7.83% collapse, indicating markets still price a non-trivial probability of an eventual deal. The asymmetry has shifted, however: implied options markets put memo-signing probability within ten days at around 45%, down from 60% at Friday’s close. Producers will not aggressively hedge a sub-$110 environment given OPEC+ compliance fragility, leaving upside skew structural rather than tactical. The next material catalyst is whether Pakistan can deliver a revised Iranian text before Wednesday.

Netanyahu: Israel-Iran Conflict “Not Over”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said overnight the conflict with Iran is “not over” and warned Israeli forces remain on combat readiness. The statement, delivered to a closed cabinet session and briefed to the Israeli press, is the most explicit Israeli rejection of the regional ceasefire architecture being constructed through Pakistani and Saudi mediation. Reports indicate Israel is preparing to seek US backing for an expanded ground campaign in Lebanon by mid-May.

Dive deeper
Israeli rejection of the “all fronts” framing that Iran included in Sunday’s response is the most dangerous structural fault line. Tehran has explicitly linked Lebanon to any wider deal; Netanyahu has explicitly refused that linkage. The mid-May ground campaign question becomes the trigger event: Trump must either restrain Tel Aviv to keep the memo alive, or accept that an Israeli expansion collapses the diplomatic track. The European response — particularly from France, which has UNIFIL personnel deployed — has been deferred for six weeks and would become unavoidable.

Iran Demands Hormuz Sovereignty and War Damages Compensation

Details of Iran’s formal response published overnight by Al Jazeera and the Washington Post show Tehran is seeking recognition of sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz, compensation for war damages, the release of frozen Iranian assets and the lifting of sanctions. The response defers the nuclear file to a later stage. Parliamentary speaker and lead negotiator Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf reiterated the demand for a US naval blockade lifted in parallel.

Dive deeper
Hormuz sovereignty and war-damages compensation are structurally new demands that did not appear in the earlier 14-point text from 2 May. Their inclusion suggests Tehran has hardened its position now that the formal channel has opened, possibly in response to IRGC internal pressure. Trump cannot accept Hormuz sovereignty politically — that clause would have to be finessed in language rather than substance — but the compensation question is potentially negotiable through the release of frozen assets. The Saudi backchannel is reportedly working on bridging language.

Pakistan: Mediation Continues Despite Trump Rejection

Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said overnight that Islamabad will continue mediation between the United States and Iran “notwithstanding” Trump’s public rejection of the latest Iranian response. Pakistani sources told NPR a revised text could be transmitted to Washington within 48 hours. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman remains the second named mediator; Iranian negotiators are still in Riyadh for working-level talks.

Dive deeper
Pakistan’s public commitment to continued mediation despite the Trump rejection is the most important diplomatic signal of the morning. It suggests Islamabad has prior agreement from both sides that the bilateral track survives public posturing. The 48-hour revised-text timeline is plausible because Iranian negotiators are physically in Riyadh and can iterate quickly. The Saudi-hosted signing ceremony remains the operational scenario if the gap can be narrowed; a complete breakdown would require Pakistan to publicly withdraw, which has not happened.
One To Read

UK’s Keir Starmer Faces Likely Challenge Following Labour’s Election Defeat

Al Jazeera · The clearest contemporaneous account of today’s parliamentary mechanics: West’s close-of-business email, the 81-signature threshold, the rival camps’ positioning ahead of the 18:00 PLP meeting, and what Starmer’s afternoon speech actually needs to contain to survive. Essential before markets close.
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