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  • The Week Evening Review
    Reform rising, China's arsenal, and the power of BookTok

     
    TODAY'S BIG QUESTION

    Is Reform ready for government?

    Hundreds of businesses, at least two former Tory ministers and one in five of the nation's lobbyists are expected to join an estimated 12,000 supporters at this weekend's Reform UK conference. "This is the moment we build to being the Party of Government," Reform chair David Bull said on X.

    What did the commentators say?
    Reform will use the conference, at Birmingham's NEC, to try to "pivot away from protest" and "towards providing a genuine alternative" to Labour and the Conservatives, said Tony Diver in The Telegraph. Nigel Farage has been "forced to admit" that his party doesn't yet have answers on all political issues, but its staff have been "taking soundings from businesses and think-tank wonks" to "form a more comprehensive policy platform".

    This is Farage's "grandest conference yet", said Politico's London Playbook, and he'll "paint himself as the prime minister-in-waiting in his big speech", telling members they "must be ready to run for government in as little as 18 months". That "may sound outlandish", but Labour is "doing little to dampen his ability to make such claims".

    Reform has been criticised repeatedly for the "unrealistic nature" of its spending plans and "tendency to inflame rather than unite the country", said a leader in The Times. The conference provides a stage to try to "pivot from a party of protest to one of potential government".

    At the heart of the party's success is a "fundamental realignment" of Brexit backers, who have shifted their support from the Conservatives to Reform, said John Curtice on the BBC. But Reform will have to "reach out beyond the ranks of socially conservative Britain" if it is "eventually to succeed in its bid for power".

    What next?
    Although Farage's party has a comfortable overall lead in national polls, research from Merlin Strategies found that 46% of Britons think Reform isn't ready to lead the country yet, compared with 39% who think it is. But as its campaign for respectability gathers force, Reform's "rivals" fear the "glitz and political noise are going to be hard to beat", said The Guardian. "We're the only party conference to have our own pyrotechnics budget," an insider told the newspaper.

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    China's new weapons of war

    Nuclear missiles, underwater vehicles and robot dogs were the stars of a parade in Beijing this week to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War. In a display of military might that offered a "rare look" at China’s new armoury, said The New York Times, a cavalcade of missiles and armoured vehicles "rolled past Tiananmen Square" as jets "screamed across the sky".

    What are these latest weapons?
    China showed off its liquid-fuelled intercontinental strategic nuclear missiles, which have the "entire world under its strike range", according to state media. Beijing also revealed its first air-launched nuclear missile, the JL-1, which was displayed on a military truck. Experts say China's new hypersonic missiles are the "finest set in the world", said The Times. They have a range of 746 miles, a Mach 8 speed and are designed to take out ships at sea.

    Prompted by the destruction of Russia’s tanks by Ukrainian artillery and drones in their ongoing war, China's military has also been equipped with lighter, more agile new tanks to replace the standard PLA Type 99A.  And Beijing paraded two types of extra-large uncrewed underwater vehicles, said The Independent, as well as lasers able to intercept drone attacks and other "low-end threats".

    But it was the robot dogs who "stole the show", said Indian news site Mathrubhumi. The "unsettling wolves" have "enhanced combat features, including mounted cameras for real-time reconnaissance" and "precision strike capability", to be deployed in what Beijing calls "intelligentised warfare".

    What does it mean for the rest of the world?
    The new weaponry is an "open message" that China's restoration as a superpower is "almost complete", said The Times. As to what it might do with that power, new armoured ground vehicles indicate that Beijing may be preparing for "possible rapid deployment" to Taiwan, said The New York Times. The world should also pay attention to the new mobile truck- and ship-mounted laser air defence weapons, which could represent a major barrier to any enemy’s "ability to blunt Chinese military movements", said CNN.

     
     

    Poll watch

    The majority of Poles (52.7%) would not want Ukraine to become a Nato member, research for Polish daily Rzeczpospolita suggests. The survey of 1,069 people found that only a third were in favour of the neighbouring nation joining the alliance, while 13.8% were undecided.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    £1.4 million: The record-breaking transfer fee paid by Women's Super League side London City Lionesses for PSG striker Grace Geyoro. The deadline day signing smashed the women's football record set last month when US side Orlando Pride paid £1.1 million to Tigres UANL for Mexico winger Lizbeth Ovalle.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    BookTok: a boon for publishers – at what cost?

    Amid slowing book sales and a decline in reading for pleasure, the popular TikTok community BookTok has offered a lifeline for the publishing industry. But "the line between influencer and creator is becoming increasingly blurred", said The Bookseller – a trend that threatens to seriously disrupt the industry's status quo.

    'Embrace' the romance
    Racking up hundreds of billions of views with their book reviews and recommendations, BookTok creators have real influence over what bookstores stock and what their customers buy. Novels by authors such as Colleen Hoover and Sarah J. Maas have topped bestseller lists off the back of social media buzz.

    For fans of romance, in particular, BookTok has created space to "loudly and proudly embrace" the genre, which "historically hasn't gotten the respect it deserves", said Carly Tagen-Dye in People magazine. "Romance-specific" bookstores are now opening across the US.

    Classic and literary fiction has been boosted too, said Arabella Grace in The Boar. After book influencers including Jack Edwards shared gushing reviews of Fyodor Dostoevsky's "White Nights", the 1848 novella became one of 2024's bestsellers.

    'Pressure to read an incredible amount'
    BookTok's influence has downsides, however. One "rather glaring problem" is a lack of diversity, said Tyler McCall in The Cut. "Almost every author who has found life-changing success" through BookTok is white, an "extension" of the "racial inequity in the publishing industry overall".
     
    The viral- and algorithm-driven nature of BookTok also often means "the same works are pushed over and over again", said Leila Herrmann in Vogue. And BookTok culture comes with "pressure to read an incredible amount", sometimes removing the joy from reading as creators suggest "ultra-short books to help viewers boost their end-of-year tally". 

    But critics who dismiss BookTok as "shallow" or "consumeristic" really do "miss the point", said Yarimar Bonilla in The New York Times. Ultimately, BookTokkers "are encouraging people to read", and "not for grades or prestige but to find joy and sanctuary in deeply troubling times".

     
     

    Good day 🎶

    … for David Bowie fans, who will soon be able to check out previously unseen notes from his unfinished final project. The handwritten scribbles, going on display at the V&A East Storehouse next week, sketch out plans for a musical set in 18th century London, called "The Spectator".

     
     

    Bad day 🚇

    … for London commuters, who are facing a four-day Tube strike by RMT union members over pay and conditions. Overground services and Elizabeth Line trains will continue to run, but little or no service is expected on other underground lines from Monday.

     
     
    picture of the day

    Line in the sand

    A message to Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu on the beach opposite the US Embassy branch office in Tel Aviv, from activists calling for the release of Israeli hostages seized by Hamas in the 7 October attacks. Today marks their 700th day of captivity.

    Jack Guez / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    PUZZLES AND QUIZZES

    Quiz of The Week

    Have you been paying attention to The Week's news? Try our weekly quiz, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and crosswords 

    Play here

     
     
    THE WEEK RECOMMENDS

    Properties of the week: houses by the Thames

    London: St Mary’s Wandsworth Pier, Battersea SW11
    This striking Belgian Spitz barge, originally constructed to transport grain, offers panoramic river views. 4 suites, family bath, 2 receps, decked garden. £1.549 million; River Homes

    Oxfordshire: Mill House, Abingdon
    An enchanting Grade II listed Georgian country house, built in 1741, in around 17 acres consisting of gardens, grounds, extensive River Thames frontage and three islands. 3 suites, 5 further beds, family bath, kitchen/breakfast room, 2 receps, library, study, summerhouse, gardens, mill pond. £4.5 million; Savills

    London: Lion House, Hampton TW12
    This Grade II house, on historic Thames Street, has the River Thames, Hampton Court Palace and Bushy Park all within easy reach. The attractive property combines beautiful period features and modern design. 5 beds, 2 showers, 2 receps, kitchen/breakfast room, utility, conservatory, garden, parking. £1.3 million; Dexters

    Berkshire: St. Patrick’s Lodge, Charvil
    A fabulous house set in grounds of 1.3 acres with more than 400ft of river frontage. Principal bed with dressing room, 2 further beds, 2 baths, 5 receps, terrace, summerhouse, boat house. £2.8 million; Savills

    See more

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    "Angela is the embodiment of social mobility and an inspiration to those of us from working-class backgrounds."

    Darren Jones, the new chief secretary to Keir Starmer, pays tribute to Angela Rayner following her resignation, after the PM’s ethics adviser found that her failure to pay enough stamp duty on her Hove flat breached the ministerial code.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today's best commentary

    Donald Trump is unpopular. Why is it so hard to stand up to him?
    The Economist's editorial board
    "Most Americans disapprove" of Donald Trump, says The Economist, but "he moves much faster than the lumbering forces that constrain him", and the Republican Party "always lets him have his way". Meanwhile, the independent institutions that "oppose" the president "suffer from a co-ordination problem". Behind all this "lurks the ugly reality" of his "vindictiveness and intimidation". And while the "main task of opposition falls to the Democrats", they seem, "to put it kindly, confused" about how to challenge Trump.

    Lily Allen’s lack of self-awareness shows in her stance as cultural gatekeeper
    Kara Kennedy in The Telegraph
    Lily Allen is the "high priestess" of the "cultural elite" that doesn’t like people displaying the English flag and believes it’s "virtuous to stay quiet, head bowed, eternally apologetic", writes Kara Kennedy. The singer "lectures England on how it ought to behave, but lives far from the realities she so freely diagnoses". For her and her "fellow celeb globetrotters, sneering at patriotism is a way to prove their sophistication", but "for the rest of us, it looks very much like disdain".

    Racism is not 'hate'
    Donald Earl Collins on Al Jazeera
    Racism is "not primarily about hate", writes historian Donald Earl Collins. Whether "structural, institutional, interpersonal" or "internalised", it’s about "maximising power and wealth by ensuring that those who are its victims lack the resources necessary to resist". Those who benefit "muddy the waters with the assumption that everyone is equally racist, rendering systemic racism irrelevant and invisible". Until we recognise racism as a "system of power and profit", it "will continue to structure inequality and violence on a global scale".

     
     
    word of the day

    Defence

    A word being axed from the title of the US government department housed in the Pentagon. Under Donald Trump's planned rebrand, the Department of Defence will revert to its pre-1947 name, the Department of War, while Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, who has repeatedly called for a "warrior ethos" in the military, will become secretary of war.

     
     

    In the morning

    Keep an eye on your inbox for Saturday Wrap, which includes a look at the unanswered questions that still surround Jeffrey Epstein, six years after his death.

    Have a great weekend and thanks for reading,
    Rebecca

     
     

     Evening Review was written and edited by Rebecca Messina, Jamie Timson, Chas Newkey-Burden, Abby Wilson, Helen Brown, Steph Jones and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly.

    Image credits, from top: Oli Scarff / AFP / Getty Images; illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images / AP; Alex Segre / UCG / Universal Images Group / Getty Images; Jack Guez / AFP / Getty Images; Knight Frank / River Homes / Savills / Fine & Country

    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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