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  • The Week Evening Review
    Grad debt, dark woke, and Norway’s royal scandal

     
    today’s Big Question

    Are student loans a debt trap?

    It’s not “moral” to keep the student debt repayment threshold where it is, MoneySavingExpert founder Martin Lewis has told Rachel Reeves.

    The chancellor has said she’s freezing the salary level at which graduates start to repay their student loan. This, together with the crippling interest rates charged on the loan, means demoralised young Brits are caught in a “student debt trap” they have “no chance of paying off”, campaigners told Times Higher Education.

    What did the commentators say?
    “If you wanted to design the most regressive and distortive model for funding higher education imaginable,” you’d get the Plan 2 student loan system inflicted on those “unlucky enough to embark upon a university degree between 2012 and 2023”, said Rachel Cunliffe in The New Statesman.

    In 2012, the coalition government trebled tuition fees to more than £9,000, which, even at the time, was “projected to leave the average graduate with close to £50,000 of debt”. And then interest terms on student loans were hiked up to RPI plus 3%, which made “that debt almost impossible to pay off”. The interest rate also varied by salary: “the more graduates earned, the faster their debt would grow”. 

    Now, graduates who have been making payments for almost a decade are discovering to their horror that “their debt has in fact risen”. 

    In last year’s Budget, Reeves “turned the screw even further”, said Rupert Jones in The Guardian. By freezing the repayment threshold, those young people will have to “pay even more towards their student loans as they benefit from pay rises”.

    The student-loans system is working like “an age-based tax”, said The Economist. It is “whipping away 9% of earnings – or 15% for postgrads – above a certain income”. Although it is fair that “students should pay for degrees that benefit them”, these five million or so Avocados – Aggrieved Victims Of Crushing Academic Debt Obligations – are being “squeezed until the stone squeaks”.

    What next?
    The threshold salary for Plan 2 loan repayments will remain at £29,385 until April 2027.

    “It’s not right that people who don’t go to university” should “bear the cost for others to do so”, the chancellor told LBC. If you’re a graduate and earn “a good wage, you’ll pay that money back quicker” and “if you’re never able to repay”, the loan “will eventually be written off”.

     
     
    tHE eXPLAINER

    ‘Dark woke’: can it help US Democrats?

    Democrat politicians in the US are being encouraged to “embrace a new form of combative rhetoric” aimed at “winning back voters” who like “Donald Trump’s no-holds-barred version of politics”, said The New York Times. As the left ramps up for the midterm elections in November, some party members seem willing to try out a more aggressive communication style, known in online circles as “dark woke”.

    What is dark woke?
    It’s an attempt to “step outside the bounds of the political correctness that Republicans have accused Democrats of establishing”. Examples include California Governor Gavin Newsom’s aggressive brand of meme warfare, and Texas congresswoman Jasmine Crockett’s fondness for “alliterative insults” (such as referring to Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene as a “bleach blonde bad built butch body”).

    Dark woke redresses an “extreme imbalance in strategy that allows Republicans to say stuff that really grabs voters’ attention”, while Democrats are stuck in a “respectability prison”, communications consultant Bhavik Lathia told the NYT.

    What is the goal?
    The objective of the dark woke agenda is to “subvert the qualities” that many think “made wokeness cringe”, like “virtue-policing” and “the polite ‘when they go low, we go high’ posturing”, said GQ. The left is now trying to “go Joker mode to make Democrats cool again”.

    Dark woke is “rooted” in the “demand posed by grassroots Democrats to the party establishment: throw some punches, or we’ll primary you into oblivion”, said UnHerd.

    How effective is it?
    Going dark woke “could serve as a cathartic release for the many jaded progressives fed up with the tame grandstanding and insipid inertia of their party’s leaders”, said GQ. But right now, it “mostly feels like an algorithmic fad built on quick thrills”: “a meme, not a movement”.

    The “real trouble with dark woke” is that it is a “plainly false, calibrated attempt at gritty authenticity”, said Ross Barkan at Intelligencer. It is “awkward and alienating” when politicians suddenly decide they must “dispense with decorum to catch up to Trump”. The “young, male, and politically heterodox” voters they are hunting are not interested in “garden-variety Democrats” who curse every once in a while.

     
     

    Poll watch

    Almost two in three British women over 50 struggle with their mental health, affected by menopausal “brain fog”, financial pressures and the death of their parents. The British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy survey of 2,000 women over 50 revealed this as an “epidemic of silence”, with almost 90% of those struggling saying they didn’t seek help.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    71,667: the number of Gazans killed since Israel’s bombardment began after the 7 October 2023 attacks, according to the enclave’s Hamas-run health ministry. This includes 492 since the ceasefire started last October. The Israeli military has accepted the figures, regarded as reliable by the UN, for the first time, sources told Haaretz.

     
     
    In the Spotlight

    Norway’s scandal-hit royals

    The “extraordinary” rape trial of the son of Norway’s crown princess increases the “already considerable woes” of the country’s royal family, said The Sunday Times.

    Marius Borg Høiby (pictured above), stepson of Crown Prince Haakon, faces 38 charges, including rape, domestic abuse and filming women’s genitals without consent. His lawyer says Høiby “denies all charges of sexual abuse, as well as the majority of the charges regarding violence”. The trial begins in Oslo on Tuesday. If convicted, the 29-year-old faces up to 10 years in prison.

    ‘Horrific’ attack
    Mette-Marit, a single mother from a non-aristocratic background, married Haakon in 2001. Her son Høiby, who was then four, was raised as part of the royal family but without any claim to the throne.

    In 2024, police were called to an Oslo flat over a case of suspected domestic violence. They found “a knife embedded in the wall”, said The Sunday Times. Prosecutors say the victim had been hit, pinned to the bed and “repeatedly choked so that she could not breathe”. The alleged perpetrator was Høiby; the victim, his then girlfriend. “The ferocity of the attack, thought to have been the culmination of months of abuse, made it especially horrific.” 

    In a statement, Høiby said he had acted “under the influence of alcohol and cocaine after an argument”, having suffered from “mental troubles”. Shortly afterwards, more of Høiby’s ex-girlfriends accused him of abuse, and he was charged last August.

    This week, prosecutors added six more charges. The “most serious” alleges Høiby “received and transported at least 3.5kg of marijuana”, said Vanity Fair. Høiby, “once seen as a symbol of the openness of the monarchy, has acknowledged those allegations as true”.

    ‘Tarnished’ reputation
    The case is just “one of the challenges” facing the Norwegian royal family. Harald V, king since 1991, is 88 and “in delicate health”. Crown Princess Mette-Marit needs a lung transplant after “years of chronic illness” that has forced her to withdraw from royal duties. And just weeks after Høiby’s arrest, the king’s eldest daughter, Princess Märtha Louise, married “an American conspiracy theorist and self-professed shaman”, said The Sunday Times.

    Membership of the republican association Norge Som Republikk has “more than tripled in the last two years”, its leader told The Guardian. The royals traditionally enjoyed high support but the “ongoing omniscandal” has “really tarnished their reputation”.

     
     

    Good day📱

    … for Apple, as huge demand for its iPhones, AirPods and Apple Watch drove sales far beyond Wall Street estimates. Revenue grew 23% year on year from September to December, said CEO Tom Cook, making it the company’s “biggest quarter in history”.

     
     

    Bad day 🖥️

    ... for Microsoft, after $400 billion was wiped off its stock market value yesterday. The company had reported a 17% rise in quarterly revenue, but its rapid surge in spending on AI infrastructure spooked investors and sparked a sharp sell-off.

     
     
    picture of the day

    Holy Nole!

    Novak Djokovic pulls off an astonishing four-hour win in the Australian Open men’s singles semi-final. The 39-year-old tennis star beat 24-year-old defending champion Jannik Sinner over five stunning sets. He will bid for a record 25th Grand Slam title against Carlos Alcaraz on Sunday.

    Izhar Khan / 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: lovely houses reduced in price

    Dorset: Apple Tree Cottage, Tarrant Monkton
    A fine Grade II cottage in a tranquil setting. 4 beds, 2 baths, kitchen, 2 receps, study, self-contained 3-bed annexe, outbuildings, garden, parking. Was £850,000, now £800,000; Symonds & Sampson.

    Cornwall: The Cottage, Trebetherick
    Moments from Daymer Bay Beach and the Southwest Coast Path, this handsome house offers panoramic sea and estuary views. 4 beds, 3 baths, kitchen, 2 receps, garden, garage. Was £2.25 million, now OIEO £1.85 million; John Bray Estates.

    Kent: Prestbury House, Smarden
    This picturesque, early 19th century Grade II house is set in mature, well-established gardens. 4 beds, 2 baths, kitchen, 4 receps, paddock, Victorian-style greenhouse, workshop, garage. Was £1.25 million, now £1.195 million; Savills.

    East Sussex: Bodle Street Green, Hailsham
    This charming 16th century, Grade II house is set in 2.5 acres. 5 beds, 3 baths, kitchen, 4 receps, workshop, garage. Was £1.95 million, now £1.895 million; Knight Frank.

    Kent: Hall House, Boughton Monchelsea
    A remarkable Grade II house dating back to the 1500s and set in approx. 9 acres, including an orchard, woodland and kitchen garden. 5 beds, 5 baths, kitchen, 4 receps, 2-bed cottage, tennis court, garage. Was £2 million, now £1.75 million; Knight Frank.

    See more

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “This is my idea of heaven. Whenever I go there, I feel like I’ve entered a dream.”

    Madonna sings Margate’s praises on social media after visiting her friend Tracey Emin’s studio in the Kent seaside town. Margate “seems to be inhabited and energised by creativity”, said the pop legend, who praised the “commitment and passion” of the local artistic community.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    At last… Kemi Badenoch has embraced her inner Nigerian!
    Ava Vidal in The Independent
    “You can take the girl out of Nigeria, but you can’t take Nigeria out of the girl,” writes comedian Ava Vidal. “Born in Wimbledon and raised in Lagos”, Kemi Badenoch is “from the Yoruba tribe”, who are known for “combining strength with outspokenness”, and her “blistering speech” about Tory defectors to Reform was certainly a “sick burn”. I actually “felt sorry” for Robert Jenrick, who “clearly had no idea who he had been playing with”.

    Has Harry Styles killed the music tour?
    Alexander Larman in The Spectator
    Harry Styles’ decision to forgo a “proper” world tour in favour of “extended” stints in seven cities “has been met with a disappointed and indignant response”, writes Alexander Larman. Fans are “irritated” about having to “fork out” for hotels and travel on top of “extortionate” tickets. But it’s “a sign of the times”. Many musicians “have wearied of an exhausting country and city-hopping schedule” and prefer “to pitch up” for a “well-paid residency” instead.

    Optimistic Lithuania puts Britain to shame
    Edward Lucas in The Times
    Lithuania “is forging ahead” as “we wallow in stagnation”, writes Edward Lucas of the Center for European Policy Analysis. Its capital, Vilnius, was “a decaying wreck” following Soviet occupation but is now the “richest city in the Baltics, humming with opportunity and excitement”. And, despite the continuing Russian “menace”, a new poll suggests that Lithuanians “are the most optimistic people in Europe”. As a Brit, “I find that blush-making”: we should emulate their “gutsy, resourceful spirit”.

     
     
    word of the day

    Pothole

    The scourge of UK drivers – and a bump in the road for plans to bring the Bayeux Tapestry to Britain. The Anglo-Saxon artwork is due to be displayed at the British Museum next year while Normandy’s Bayeux Museum is renovated, but French conservationists are objecting, worried that the potholed route to London risks “vibrations and shocks” that could rip the 1,000-year-old cloth.

     
     

     Evening Review was written and edited by Harriet Marsden, Chas Newkey-Burden, Theara Coleman, Jamie Timson, Rebecca Messina, Irenie Forshaw, David Edwards, Adrienne Wyper, Helen Brown, and Kari Wilkin.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; Douglas Rissing / Getty Images; Lise Aserud NTB / AFP / Getty Images; Izhar Khan / AFP / Getty Images; Knight Frank; Symonds & Sampson; John Bray Estates; Savills
    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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