Ten Things You Need to Know Today: Monday 20 May 2013
- 1. 'SWIVEL-EYED LOONS': FELDMAN FACES BOARD
- 2. LABOUR THROWS PM GAY MARRIAGE 'LIFELINE'
- 3. IRAQ CAR BOMBS, SHOOTINGS KILL 57
- 4. BRITON HELD IN LYON OVER 2 DEAD CHILDREN
- 5. ROD STEWART AT NO 1 AFTER 34-YEAR GAP
- 6. ARSENAL QUALIFY FOR EUROPE AFTER 1-0 WIN
- 7. PM TELLS TAX HAVENS: WE NEED YOUR HELP
- 8. STUART BROAD BOWLS OUT NEW ZEALAND
- 9. BUSINESS LEADERS ATTACK EU NAYSAYERS
- 10. HOT TICKET: IBSEN'S PUBLIC ENEMY UPDATED
1. 'SWIVEL-EYED LOONS': FELDMAN FACES BOARD
Lord Feldman, Tory party co-chairman and a personal friend of David Cameron's from Oxford days, will be quizzed by the party's board this evening over the allegation that he described Tory eurosceptics as "mad, swivel-eyed loons" in a private exchange with journalists on Wednesday. Feldman has strongly denied making the remark.
'Swivelgate' engulfs Tory party: who said what and when
2. LABOUR THROWS PM GAY MARRIAGE 'LIFELINE'
The Labour leadership has moved to save the equal marriage bill which was facing defeat in the Commons. The Opposition is expected to withdraw its support from an amendment tabled by Tory opponents of gay marriage and table its own amendment calling for an immediate consultation on extending civil partnerships to heterosexual couples.
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.
Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
Loveless marriage of Cameron and the Tories hits the rocks
3. IRAQ CAR BOMBS, SHOOTINGS KILL 57
A string of car bombs and shootings have torn through Shia and Sunni areas of Iraq, killing at least 57 people and escalating fears of a return to widespread sectarian bloodletting. The attacks, some of which targeted market places and crowded bus stops during rush hour, are the latest in a recent spike in violence.
4. BRITON HELD IN LYON OVER 2 DEAD CHILDREN
A British man living in the French city of Lyon has arrived in court after allegedly confessing to the killing of his two children, aged five and ten. The man had been allowed to look after them unsupervised for the first time since divorcing their French mother. She reportedly found him covered in blood when she returned to her flat.
Brit Julian Stevenson to appear in French court over child murders
5. ROD STEWART AT NO 1 AFTER 34-YEAR GAP
'Time', a new album by Rod Stewart, has gone straight to number one – 34 years after he last topped the album chart with his Greatest Hits Vol 1 in 1979. Stewart says the process of producing his recent autobiography helped cure his 20-year-long writer's block. Daft Punk remain No 1 in the singles chart with 'Get Lucky'.
Why Rod Stewart's first No.1 LP in 34 years is good for Britain
6. ARSENAL QUALIFY FOR EUROPE AFTER 1-0 WIN
Arsenal have qualified for the Champions League for the 16th season running after beating Newcastle 1-0 yesterday to finish fourth in the Premier League. Tottenham finished fifth and there is renewed speculation they will lose 'Welsh wizard' Gareth Bale to a club that can offer him Champions League exposure.
Arsenal win Champions League spot but Tottenham fall short
7. PM TELLS TAX HAVENS: WE NEED YOUR HELP
David Cameron is asking British overseas territories and crown dependencies with a reputation as tax havens to help clamp down on tax avoiders. He wants Jersey, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands and other shelters to reveal who owns and controls companies. The PM will raise tax-dodging in a meeting with Google boss Eric Schmidt.
8. STUART BROAD BOWLS OUT NEW ZEALAND
England romped to victory in the first cricket Test against New Zealand at Lord's on Sunday, dismissing the tourists for just 68 in their second innings to win by 170 runs. Stuart Broad did the damage, taking 7-44 as New Zealand were bowled out in just 22.3 overs. Earlier, England scored 213 in their second innings to set the tourists a target of 239.
Broad blitz sinks New Zealand, but it's not all rosy for England
9. BUSINESS LEADERS ATTACK EU NAYSAYERS
Anyone calling for Britain to leave the EU is "putting politics before economics", senior business leaders argue in a letter to The Independent. Virgin boss Richard Branson and the chairmen of BT, Deloitte and Lloyds are among those saying that EU membership is worth between £31bn and £92bn per year in income gains.
Business leaders set out case to keep Britain in Europe
10. HOT TICKET: IBSEN'S PUBLIC ENEMY UPDATED
A new adaptation of Ibsen's classic 'Public Enemy' (aka 'Enemy of the People') by playwright David Harrower has opened at London's Young Vic. Nick Fletcher stars as a doctor whose career is destroyed after he exposes water pollution at a spa town. "A class act," says The Times. Until 8 June.
Young Vic updates Ibsen's 'gripping' Public Enemy
Sign up for Today's Best Articles in your inbox
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
-
The best new music of 2024 by genre
The Week Recommends Outstanding albums, from pop to electro and classical
By The Week UK Published
-
Nine best TV shows of 2024 to binge this Christmas
The Week Recommends From Baby Reindeer and Slow Horses to Rivals and Shogun, here are the critics' favourites
By The Week UK Published
-
Crossword: December 28, 2024
The Week's daily crossword puzzle
By The Week Staff Published
-
10 things you need to know today: January 24, 2024
Daily Briefing Trump closes in on nomination with New Hampshire win over Haley, 'Oppenheimer' leads the 2024 Oscar nominations, and more
By Harold Maass, The Week US Published
-
10 things you need to know today: January 23, 2024
Daily Briefing Haley makes last stand in New Hampshire as Trump extends polling lead, justices side with US over Texas in border fight, and more
By Harold Maass, The Week US Published
-
10 things you need to know today: January 22, 2024
Daily Briefing DeSantis ends his presidential campaign and endorses Trump, the US and Arab allies push plan to end Gaza war, and more
By Harold Maass, The Week US Published
-
10 things you need to know today: January 21, 2024
Daily Briefing Palestinian death toll reportedly passes 25,000, top Biden adviser to travel to Egypt and Qatar for hostage talks, and more
By Justin Klawans, The Week US Published
-
10 things you need to know today: January 20, 2024
Daily Briefing Grand jury reportedly convened to investigate Uvalde shooting response, families protest outside Netanyahu's house as pressure mounts for hostage deal, and more
By Justin Klawans, The Week US Published
-
10 things you need to know today: January 19, 2024
Daily Briefing Congress averts a government shutdown, DOJ report cites failures in police response to Texas school shooting, and more
By Harold Maass, The Week US Published
-
10 things you need to know today: January 18, 2024
Daily Briefing Judge threatens to remove Trump from his defamation trial, medicine for hostages and Palestinians reach Gaza, and more
By Harold Maass, The Week US Published
-
10 things you need to know today: January 17, 2024
Daily Briefing The US strikes Houthi targets in Yemen a third time, Trump's second sex defamation trial begins, and more
By Harold Maass, The Week US Published