The Week The Week
flag of US
US
flag of UK
UK
https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/flexiimages/jacafc5zvs1692883516.jpg

SUBSCRIBE & SAVE

Less than $3 per week

Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • The Explainer
  • The Week Recommends
  • Newsletters
  • Cartoons
  • From the Magazine
  • The Week Junior
  • Student Offers
  • More
    • Politics
    • World News
    • Business
    • Health
    • Science
    • Food & Drink
    • Travel
    • Culture
    • History
    • Personal Finance
    • Puzzles
    • Photos
    • The Blend
    • All Categories
  • Newsletter sign up Newsletter
  • The Week Evening Review
    Trump’s BBC lawsuit, the UK’s ever-closer ties with the EU, and Animal Farm

     
    THE EXPLAINER

    Trump vs. BBC: what’s at stake

    “Donald Trump loves a fight,” said Chris Blackhurst in The Independent. Despite having received an apology from the BBC over what he claims was a defamatory edit in an episode of the broadcaster’s “Panorama” documentary series, the US president “can smell money”.

    After much speculation, Trump has filed a $10 billion lawsuit in Florida against the BBC. The two counts, the first for defamation and the second for violating the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act, each claim damages of $5 billion.

    What are the key points of contention?
    The BBC apologised after its October 2024 “Panorama” documentary entitled “Trump: a Second Chance?” took two sections of a speech Trump made prior to the insurrection on 6 January 2021 – and spliced them together. This arguably gave the impression of Trump inciting his followers to create the scenes of disorder that followed. A spokesperson for the president claimed that the documentary was “intentionally, maliciously and deceptively” edited in a “brazen attempt to interfere with the 2024 presidential election”.

    The question of jurisdiction is “at the core of the case”, said the Financial Times. Trump has filed the lawsuit in Florida, where defamation claims can be made within two years of the incident, rather than one year in the UK. BBC lawyers say US citizens would not have seen the content as it wasn’t aired in America. But Trump’s lawyers claim that BritBox subscribers, or those with a VPN, could have accessed the material.

    The president’s team needs both to prove that the BBC acted with “actual malice” (meaning it “knew the depiction was false, or acted with reckless disregard for the truth”) and to show “extensive harm”. Trump claims the edit damaged his “brand value” and caused “injury to his future financial prospects”. The BBC is likely to “point out that he won the election” and that he was “acquitted in impeachment proceedings for alleged insurrection”, said Tom Witherow in The Times.

    How might the case play out?
    BBC execs can be “fairly confident” of a win, said The Times’ Jonathan Ames. However, its financial position is “considerably weaker”: the organisation will need to have “difficult pragmatic discussions” regarding legal fees that could rise to between $50 million and $100 million. They might also want to avoid any potentially embarrassing evidence coming out in the discovery stage. And if they reach a settlement instead, that payout could be in the region of $10 million, which is unlikely to sit well with licence payers.

     
     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Is Labour changing course on Brexit?

    The UK’s return to the EU’s Erasmus student-exchange programme has sparked hope among die-hard Remainers that this is a first step towards Britain re-establishing formal economic ties with the EU.

    The new agreement with Brussels, which allows UK students to participate in the EU-wide university scheme from 2027, without any additional fees, has excited those who support a return to the customs union. However, Keir Starmer has repeatedly rejected any such plan. 

    What did the commentators say?
    Starmer has said that Britain does “need to get closer” to the EU bloc and, as talks continue about a “reset” deal on food exports, energy markets and a youth mobility scheme, “the breakthrough on Erasmus” will help him “demonstrate progress”, said The Guardian’s Pippa Crerar.
    Many Labour strategists agree there is “a growing political benefit” in “arguing more openly for a closer relationship with Europe”. 

    The party “is waking up to the damage done by Brexit” and signalling they’re “intent on doing something about it”, said Chris Blackhurst in The Independent. With repeated polls showing that a majority of voters believe leaving the EU was a mistake, there is an element of “political pragmatism” at play.

    There are also “concerns” that, without stronger ties to the EU, “the measures announced in last month’s Budget will fail to secure sufficient economic growth for the UK”, said Amy Gibbons in The Telegraph. 

    Minouche Shafik, the PM’s chief economic adviser, reportedly recommended rejoining the customs union, said Oliver Wright in The Times. Starmer has argued that this would undo recent deals with Donald Trump and other non-EU countries.

    What next?
    Labour could “announce the start of negotiations now on a much bolder deal, for inclusion in the next manifesto, with implementation only if Labour won a fresh mandate”, Starmer’s biographer Tom Baldwin told The Guardian.

    Some within the party are certainly “obsessed” with the idea, said former Labour MP Ian Austin in The Sun. They have “spotted their chance” to make “cuddling up to Brussels the big issue at the next election”. But they should “be careful what they wish for” – the 2016 referendum “would be a tea party compared to another one”.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “She dreamt bigger than all of us.”

    Timothée Chalamet tells the BBC why Susan Boyle is among his top five Britons, alongside Lewis Hamilton, David and Victoria Beckham and rapper Fakemink. The actor was “moved” by her 2009 performance of “I Dreamed a Dream” on “Britain’s Got Talent”.

     
     

    Poll watch

    Only 29% of British adults support the government ban on new petrol and diesel cars from 2030. More than half (58%) are either “somewhat” or “strongly” opposed, according to a YouGov survey of 5,609 people, carried out after Tory leader Kemi Badenoch promised to scrap the ban if she wins the next election.

     
     
    TALKING POINT

    Animal Farm: making a pig’s ear of Orwell?

    It’s been 15 long years in the making but the reaction to the newly released trailer for Andy Serkis’ adaptation of “Animal Farm” suggests it may not have been time well spent. The actor and filmmaker’s animated version of George Orwell’s classic dystopian tale swaps the critique of totalitarian Soviet Russia for a takedown of 21st-century capitalism – with twerking pigs and fart jokes.

    ‘Baffling’ and flatulent
    “Oof magoof”, this trailer “feels so very badly tone deaf”, said Nerdist. It “looks like it’s trying” to turn Orwell’s dark political allegory into something akin to 2006 critter caper “Over the Hedge”. It is “entirely possible” that the full movie “will reflect the tone of the novella” but, if so, why is the trailer “so goddamn goofy”?

    “The decision to inject lowbrow humour into such weighty source material is baffling,” said World of Reel. This “Animal Farm” is all celebrity voices, mile-a-minute CGI energy and family-friendly jokes. But I suppose flatulence is “one way to sell Orwell to a seven-year-old”.

    The film has a “starry” cast, including Seth Rogen, Steve Buscemi, Kathleen Turner and Woody Harrelson, said Variety’s Peter Debruge, who saw a full screening at Annecy International Animation Film Festival. But “the message feels muddled” by “all the pratfalls” and the “noxious ‘Old MacDonald’ rap”. It is just about “recognisable” but is no “substitute for the book” – especially with the addition of new characters like the “ghastly capitalist” Freida Pilkington (Glenn Close), who “drives a Tesla-style Cybertruck” and bribes Napoleon, the pig leader of the animals, with credit cards.

    ‘Emphatic message’
    Nicholas Stoller’s screenplay is still “funny and frighteningly perceptive”, said Pete Hammond on Deadline. It’s “wildly entertaining” and – “uncannily”, given the years it’s taken to get to the screen – may prove to “be a little too close for comfort to America’s drift toward authoritarianism” under the second Trump administration.

    While it may never “satisfy diehard Orwell purists”, said Ben Daly on Screen Daily, this film “still takes a political stance and delivers an emphatic message” about “equality and the power of the collective – albeit one which permits us a little more hope” than Orwell’s novella.

     
     

    Good day☀️

    … for vitamin D, after the UK had its sunniest year on record. The country had clocked up an “exceptional” 1,622 hours of sunshine by 15 December, surpassing the previous high of 1,587 in 2023, the Met Office announced.

     
     

    Bad day 🎅

    … for seasonal Santas, whose pay rates have been frozen this winter. The median rate for a Father Christmas is stuck at £15 an hour, according to Incomes Data Research, which monitors the festive job market. Elves, however, have had a pay bump from £11.60 to £12.48.

     
     
    picture of the day

    Religious role model

    A pilgrim carrying a St Lazarus figurine crawls towards San Lázaro Church in El Rincón, near Havana. Worshippers from across Cuba join the annual procession of St Lazarus, patron saint of the poor and sick, and many crawl as an act of devotion.

    Yamil Lage / 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 Salt Path Scandal: an ‘excellent’ documentary

    Sky’s documentary is filled with “tasty nuggets”, said Carol Midgley in The Times. It follows journalist Chloe Hadjimatheou as she delves into the alleged lies and deceit behind the bestselling memoir by Raynor Winn (pictured above). Those who first read the details of the investigation in The Observer this summer will be familiar with the “fascinatingly tawdry tale”.

    Described by publisher Penguin as “unflinchingly honest”, Winn’s book charts her 630-mile journey along the South West Coast Path with her terminally ill husband, Moth, after losing their home in Wales. But Hadjimatheou’s “original scoop” revealed a series of damaging doubts and allegations, including claims that Winn had defrauded her former employer.

    This is an “excellent documentary for students of journalism”, said Anita Singh in The Telegraph, as we learn that Hadjimatheou’s exposé began with a tip-off and then led to the painstaking process of “finding witnesses, checking sources and consulting experts”.

    There are a “wealth of new details”, said Julia Raeside in The i Paper, including a letter purportedly written by Winn in which she admits to stealing money from her relatives. Winn and her husband, whose real names are Sally and Tim Walker, declined to take part in the documentary and dismissed the allegations. “I did not steal from family, as others can confirm. Nor have I confessed to doing so and I did not write a letter suggesting that I did,” Winn said in a statement. The film, she said, was part of a “false narrative”.

    Winn’s “reputation has taken another hit”, said Midgley in The Times. But when Hadjimatheou’s investigation first broke, “The Salt Path” flew back to the top of the bestseller list, and it’s likely the same will happen following this blistering documentary. “Controversy sells.”

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    45: The percentage of babies born by caesarean section in England last year, overtaking “natural” vaginal deliveries for the first time. Half of the C-sections were planned in advance. According to NHS data, 44% of women had “unassisted” vaginal births, while tools such as forceps or a ventouse were used for 11%.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    Why I’m striking in the middle of a winter flu crisis
    Holly Tarn in The Independent
    “My morale couldn’t be lower” as I join fellow resident doctors in our “next wave of strike action”, says resident doctor Holly Tarn. “Between ‘superflu’, fake news and fatigue”, my hospital is “on its knees”, but Wes Streeting calls us “moaning Minnies”. I “cover six wards – around 120 patients” – and “take home around £2,000 a month, almost half of which goes on childcare”. Doctors “want to serve the public. We just don’t want to drown in the process.”

    Why we should be more like Poland
    Matei Rosca on The Critic
    Western leaders should look to Poland and its “pragmatic patriotism” for “solutions to the polycrisis” facing them, writes Matei Rosca. As a “progressive internationalist mugged by reality”, I’ve “reluctantly come to the conclusion” that a “healthy dose” of “moderate, calm and confident nationalism” may be “the way forward”. We’ve failed “to create a global utopia” but perhaps a “free-thinking” and “open society” that “is strict on those who refuse to contribute” is “an acceptable consolation prize”.

    Kylie, please stop: I have an allergy to Christmas music
    Carol Midgley in The Times
    Festive music “sends me into a spiral of wall-kicking existential despair”, writes Carol Midgley. I order presents online “because the ceaseless Christmas slop” in shops is “aural torture”. And now, “dear sweet Jesus”, Kylie Minogue is clogging the airwaves with an “atrocity” that involves her “singing ‘X-M-A-S’ repeatedly while making the shapes of the letters with her arms”. To say the lyrics “insult the intelligence of a three-year-old” would be flattery. “Do I sound miserable, bitter and no fun whatsoever? Good!”

     
     
    word of the day

    BuzzBagz

    A “garish” line of handbags from cocktail brand Buzzballz that are “topping Gen Z’s Christmas wish list”, said Hannah Evans in The Times. According to the company, each one is worth £4,000, but a limited number will go on sale on its website tomorrow for £3.99. Thousands of fans have joined the waiting list for the “hot new accessory”, designed to look like the ball-shaped bottles containing this year’s “cool kid drink”.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Hollie Clemence, Rebecca Messina, Will Barker, Helen Brown, Irenie Forshaw, Adrienne Wyper, David Edwards and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations from Stephen Kelly.

    Image credits, from top: illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; Richard Baker / In Pictures / Getty Images; Aniventure; Yamil Lage / AFP / Getty Images; Ken McKay / ITV / Shutterstock

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

    Recent editions

    • Evening Review

      A MAGA meltdown

    • Morning Report

      US offers Ukraine a security deal

    • Evening Review

      Seeking durable peace

    VIEW ALL
    TheWeek
    • About Us
    • Contact Future's experts
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie Policy
    • Advertise With Us
    • FAQ
    Add as a preferred source on Google

    The Week is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

    © Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.