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  • The Week Evening Review
    Fiscal failings, Gaza flotilla warning, and bedlam at Bethpage

     
    Today’s big question

    Are the UK’s fiscal problems too big to fix?

    Rachel Reeves warned today of harder economic choices to come as Britain continues to grapple with high debt, slow growth and low productivity.

    “We will face further tests, with choices to come made all the harder by harsh global headwinds and long-term damage to the economy, which is becoming ever clearer,” the chancellor told the Labour conference. She needed to perform a tough balancing act in her speech, said Bloomberg, and offered a “mix of pro-growth initiatives, back-to-work support and pledges of fiscal restraint”.

    What did the commentators say?
    The UK’s public finances are, in one sense, “eminently fixable”, said The Economist. Although the financial crisis and pandemic have driven up Britain’s net public debt from 25% of GDP in 2005 to 95% today, the “belt-tightening needed to stabilise debts is about 2% of GDP, some of which is already budgeted for”. Yet while “by historical standards, it is not a demanding target”, the “inability of the political system to grapple with a solvable problem is itself a symptom of decline”.

    A series of forecasts released just before this week’s conference have added to the challenges facing the chancellor. The OECD has forecast that the UK will have the highest rate of inflation in the G7 this year, and predicted growth will slow to 1% next year. 

    In another “blow” for Reeves, said The Independent, the Office for Budget Responsibility “will substantially reduce its estimates for productivity in the economy”, so the chancellor “will need to find even more money to balance the books”.

    What next?
    The levers available to Reeves to reset the economy are limited, and with the UK 30-year gilt yields at their highest since 1998, she has “little wriggle-room as she contemplates 2026’s budget”, said Bloomberg. This is “the big issue so many people are fixated with right now”, said Sky News economics editor Ed Conway.

    There are potential parallels with “the market panic that followed” Liz Truss’ budget, said The Economist. “The difference between her cavalier leap and today’s cautious drift is a lot smaller than it looks.” And “if Britain cannot budget responsibly by choice, then markets will force it to do so by necessity – thereby damaging the entire economy”.

     
     
    The Explainer

    Israel and the Gaza flotilla

    Italy and Spain have deployed naval vessels to assist the Global Sumud Flotilla as it sails to take aid to Gaza. The “unprecedented move” by the two governments follows “repeated attacks” on the flotilla, including one by a drone, that have been blamed on Israel, said Al Jazeera, and amid an escalation in “Israeli rhetoric” against the activists.

    What is the flotilla about?
    The boats of the Global Sumud Flotilla set sail after experts from the UN-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification officially confirmed the famine in Gaza City and warned that central and southern Gaza could also face starvation within weeks.

    The stated goal of the activists aboard, who include Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg, is to “break the illegal siege on Gaza by sea, open a humanitarian corridor, and end the ongoing genocide of the Palestinian people”. Similar initiatives have proved controversial, and three other attempts this year to deliver aid to Gaza by sea have been intercepted by Israeli forces.

    How has Israel responded? 
    More than 50 flotilla vessels were targeted in waters near Crete last Wednesday by drones that dropped explosives, damaging some of the boats, as well as grenades containing irritant gas. An Italian MP on board one of the vessels said their radio communications were “jammed” with ABBA music.

    Israel has not responded to questions about the drone attacks, but its descriptions of the flotilla have shifted from “selfie cruise” to “Hamas flotilla”. That’s telling, according to Yanis Varoufakis on Novara Media, because Israel, “before or after it has attacked, maimed or killed anyone it wants to ‘take out’, it calls them Hamas”.

    Israel’s Foreign Ministry warned on Thursday that it “will not allow any vessel to enter the active combat zone”, and “any further refusal” from the flotilla activists “will put the responsibility on the flotilla organisers”. 

    When could the flotilla reach Gaza?
    In an update on social media early today, the flotilla said its lead vessels were “just 366 nautical miles [678km] from Gaza, with an estimated arrival in three to four days”. The activists said they would be in the high-risk zone within two days, adding: “Our determination is absolute, but this is the moment where your global vigilance and solidarity are needed most.”

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “Like other people who’ve never experienced adult life uncushioned by wealth and fame, Emma has so little experience of real life she’s ignorant of how ignorant she is.”

    J.K. Rowling responds on X to recent comments by Emma Watson about their public disagreement over transgender issues. The Harry Potter actor told a podcast interviewer last week that she didn’t “want to say anything that continues to weaponise a really toxic debate and conversation”.

     
     

    Poll watch

    Only a third of 13- to 17-year-olds intend to exercise their right to vote when the time comes, according to research for The New Statesman. The Merlin Strategies poll of 1,000 UK teens found that of those planning to vote, 33% would opt for Reform and 27% for Labour, while the Tories and Greens were each backed by 12%.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    The most abusive Ryder Cup in history

    It was ironic that, on the day when the European team broke their 13-year Ryder Cup away-win “duck”, US fans tried to distract them with “squeaky duck” toys being handed out in a drinks promo, said Sky News. But that was the least of the insults, slurs and raucous interruptions aimed at Team Europe during golf’s premier team competition.

    Golf is “generally a genteel and polite game”, with “many unwritten rules of etiquette”, said CNN, and this weekend’s scenes at Bethpage have left many feeling that its fans have gone way “too far”.

    ‘Cheap shots’
    One of the most historic competitions in sport has been “appropriated by a nauseating coarseness” that gave it the air of a “stag party from hell”, said The Times. As the weekend drew on, the wife of Masters-winner Rory McIlroy (pictured above) was “called a whore” and had drinks “thrown at her”, while the wife of his teammate Shane Lowry received “dog’s abuse”.

    The tone was set early, and not just by fans attending the event. On Saturday, the master of ceremonies at the first tee, comedian and actor Heather McMahan, led repeated chants of “Fuck you, Rory”. She later apologised and stepped down from her role.

    The “ugliness” of US spectators’ behaviour was symptomatic of a darker, tribal thread running through “Trump’s all-caps America”, said The Guardian. The atmosphere at Bethpage had long been trailed as a “snarling, uniquely American cauldron” that would “rattle Europe”. But “the idiots took it literally”, hurling “homophobic slurs” and “boos during backswings”, and aiming “cheap shots dripping with tiresome stereotypes” at McIlroy, in particular.

    ‘Zero tolerance approach’
    You would be hard pressed to find anywhere in the world with “obnoxious golf fans quite like America”, said The Independent.  Combined with a “sincerely troubling security presence”, this year’s Ryder Cup match turned into a “travelling bear pit”.

    Organising body the PGA of America did beef up security for the final day, with police officers trailing the players as messages warning of a “zero tolerance approach to abusive shouting flashed up on huge screens” on the course, said the BBC. But in future competitions, “enforcement has to be swift, visible and consequential or it becomes permission by another name”, said The Guardian. “You can fill a grandstand without emptying your standards.”

     
     

    Good day 🇵🇷

    … for Puerto Rican pride, as the country’s pop superstar Bad Bunny is named as the headline act at February’s Super Bowl half-time show in California. The announcement comes weeks after the Grammy winner said he didn’t include US dates on his world tour due to fears that Donald Trump’s immigration agents might target fans at his shows.

     
     

    Bad day 🌿

    … for the British lawn, with 23% of UK households planning to pave or deck over their garden within the next five years, according to a report by the Horticultural Trades Association. The industry body said that would obliterate 409 sq km of green space – equivalent to about a quarter of the size of London.

     
     
    picture of the day

    Born of water and the Spirit

    A swimmer equipped with goggles and a crucifix prepares to compete in the 36th edition of the Dakar-Gorée Crossing. The annual 5km swim from the Senegalese capital to the former slave island is a tribute to the slavery victims who attempted to swim to freedom, often in chains.

    Guy Peterson / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily crossword

    Test your general knowledge with The Week’s daily crossword, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and codewords

    Play here

     
     
    THE WEEK RECOMMENDS

    The rise of English sparkling wine

    English fizz “chalked up” a milestone victory over its “rivals across the Channel” earlier this month when a bottle of Nyetimber’s Blanc de Blancs became the first sparkling wine from outside Champagne to scoop a prestigious prize at the International Wine Challenge ceremony, said The Telegraph.

    In a historic first, the producer, based across Sussex, Hampshire and Kent, took home the Champion Sparkling Wine Daniel Thibault Trophy for its Blanc de Blancs 2016 magnum. Judges described it as a “time capsule of a wine” bursting with “mouth-watering acidity, citrus zest and camomile”.

    The brand is a “favourite of the royal family”, said London’s The Standard, and its winning entry is the product of a warm growing season in 2016, which, added to its five years on the lees, has created a “complex” wine. Expect “biscuity notes”, with a hint of brioche and “aromas of warm peaches and candied lemon”. 

    This isn’t the first time that UK sparkling wine has commanded attention. British fizz has been bounding from “strength to strength”, attracting a raft of “awards and accolades” in recent years, said The Independent. In many cases, even to the most sophisticated oenophile, certain bottles produced in Essex, Sussex, and even South Wales can be considered superior to “those made in Champagne”.

    The future for the British sparkling industry is bright, said The Times. Our climate is suited to producing “naturally green, lean, high-acid wines”, which is a staple of the “finest fizz”, giving the wine its unique selling point. Higher quality yields in the UK tend to have come from temperate, “frost-free 2014, 2015 and 2020 vintages” boosted by “long, warm, quality-enhancing autumns”.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    $55 billion: The price agreed by a group of private investors to purchase video-game giant Electronic Arts, in the largest buyout of a publicly traded company to date. The maker of “EA Sports FC” and “The Sims” is selling its shares amid sluggish growth for the $178 billion video game industry, following the boom during the pandemic lockdowns.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    Starmer’s fatal flaw? He misunderstands why voters are against him
    Kamal Ahmed in The Telegraph
    “Confidence and its close sibling, trust, spring from a politician’s ability to say something and for voters to believe it will happen,” writes Kamal Ahmed. Keir Starmer has “failed this simple test too often for comfort”, yet I’m not sure he “understands the size of the hole” that he’s dug himself. Many Labour members are concluding he’s “not fit for the intellectual challenge of leading the country and lacks the street-smart skills necessary to win political battles”.

    The ‘tradwife’ fantasy
    Rana Foroohar in the Financial Times
    In a Christian “trad wife” marriage, the woman “follows but is, in turn, protected by the man, physically, spiritually and economically”, writes Rana Foroohar. This resonates with many women because they “like the idea of having someone else work for money while we make jam” and “play with the kids”. But “let’s be clear”: most of us “can’t afford to stay at home”. Many of “those mythologising the lifestyle” may not actually practise it themselves.

    The joy of war films
    Tom Jones in The Critic
    “For a certain type of man,” writes Tom Jones, films like “Battle of Britain” and “A Bridge Too Far” are a “uniquely British phenomenon”. They are the movies you “find repeated on Sunday afternoon and settle down to watch with your father”; they tell the “noble story of heroic self-sacrifice that is the moral crucible in which Britain’s identity is forged”. And so “we watch and rewatch”, because “they are a thread between generations”.

     
     
    word of the day

    Energy-vampires

    Those so-called friends whose company leaves you feeling drained. Psychologist and author Suzy Reading told BBC Radio 4’s “Woman’s Hour” that common traits of energy-vampires include an excessive need for attention and reassurance. But setting clear boundaries with them could help change the relationship, she said, so “be clear on what’s OK and what’s not OK”.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Jamie Timson, Elliott Goat, Will Barker, Chas Newkey-Burden, Irenie Forshaw, Helen Brown, Steph Jones and Kari Wilkin.

    Image credits, from top: Oli Scarff / AFP / Getty Images; Sardar Shafaq / Anadolu Agency / Getty Images; Richard Heathcote / Getty Images; Guy Peterson / AFP / Getty Images; PA Images / Alamy

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

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