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
    Ukraine windfall, a mass gang trial, and single fatherhood

     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Will €90bn EU loan help break Ukraine impasse?

    The EU has finally signed off a €90 billion (£78 billion) loan to Ukraine after Hungary dropped its veto. The loan – agreed in December but blocked for months by Hungary in a row over an oil pipeline – is “a question of our life, of surviving”, said Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    “Ukraine really needs this,” said EU foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas. “It’s also a sign that Russia cannot outlast Ukraine.”

    What did the commentators say?
    “European officials had found ways” to get some funds to Ukraine during the delay, but this no-interest loan provides “far more substantial financial support” as Moscow’s full-scale invasion extends into a fifth year, said The New York Times. Ukraine will only need to repay the loan if a future peace deal includes Russia paying reparations.

    Having finally secured the loan, Zelenskyy has renewed calls to restart peace talks with Vladimir Putin, said The Independent – although US mediators are currently “preoccupied with the conflict in Iran”.

    A resumption of talks seems unlikely any time soon. Only a few weeks ago, the Russian president gathered key oligarchs behind closed doors and asked them to contribute financially to the war, said independent Russian news outlet The Bell. “We will keep fighting,” its sources reported Putin as saying. “We will push to the borders of Donbas.”

    What next?
    A Kremlin spokesperson has been reported as saying Putin would only meet Zelenskyy “for the purpose of finalising agreements”, said The Guardian. Instead, Russia wants the US to send Trump’s delegates Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner – who “have repeatedly listened to Putin’s maximalist demands” – to Moscow.

    While the EU loan is “sorted”, there is now “another issue altogether”: Ukraine gaining membership of the EU, said Henry Foy in the Financial Times. Zelenskyy has long seen this as key to securing Ukraine’s long-term security and prosperity. “Belligerent public opposition” to the idea from outgoing Hungarian president Viktor Orbán has long “provided a useful shield for many other EU leaders to huddle behind” but, with his departure, “they will be forced to clarify their positions”.

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    MS-13 and mass trials in El Salvador

    Prosecutors in El Salvador have opened a mass trial of 486 alleged members of the infamous MS-13 gang. They collectively face charges of 47,000 crimes, ranging from homicide to extortion and arms trafficking.

    Mass trials are a feature of President Nayib Bukele’s “iron-fist approach” to fighting organised crime, said The Associated Press. But UN experts say they “undermine the exercise of the right to defence and the presumption of innocence of detainees”.

    What is MS-13?
    MS-13 was formed in the 1980s “on the street corners of Los Angeles” by Salvadoran immigrants who had fled civil war, said Sky News. It only spread to Central America as members were deported from the US.

    At one stage, MS-13, and its rival gang, Barrio 18, controlled up to 80% of Salvadoran territory through “extortion, drug dealing, contract killings and arms trafficking”, said The Times. Bukele’s government estimates that, “over three decades”, the gangs have killed around 200,000 people, including many listed as disappeared.

    What has the reaction to the crackdown been?
    Mixed. President Bukele’s stance on criminal gangs has caused murder rates to plummet and “made him the most popular elected head of state in the world”, said The Times, but it has also “drawn sharp criticism from human rights organisations”. Human Rights Watch estimates that nearly 2% of the El Salvador’s entire population are incarcerated – one of “the highest rates” globally. More than 500 people have died in state custody since Bukele’s election, and there have been reports of torture, said Agence France-Presse.

    What will happen next?
    The vast majority of defendants are being held at the Terrorism Confinement Center (“Cecot”) in Tecoluca, and will watch the trial proceedings on a screen. Cecot, a maximum-security prison built by Bukele in 2023, has “become a symbol of his controversial security policies”, said AP. There are 73 defendants who remain at large and will be tried in absentia.

    Given the limited evidence specific to individuals, mass trials risk the conviction of innocent people. Many of the defendants have been held in custody for years, and now face blanket rulings from unknown judges.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “We’re in danger of being stonked on May 7.”

    Sadiq Khan shares his fears over Labour’s prospects in the upcoming council elections in London. The London mayor told the Financial Times he was “frustrated” that the government’s achievements were being overshadowed by the Mandelson “omnishambles”.

     
     

    Poll watch

    Nearly half of secondary school leaders (47%) have cut back on school trips to save money, according to a survey of 1,105 teachers carried out for The Sutton Trust. Seven out of ten had reduced the number of teaching assistants, while a third had removed GCSE or A level options.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    The men choosing to be single fathers

    Before 2000, a man choosing to be a single father was “virtually unheard of”, said The Atlantic. But that’s certainly not the case now.

    English law changed in 2019 to give single parents the same rights over surrogate children as couples. Since then, the number of men applying to become sole parent of a surrogate baby has tripled, according to data cited in The Times. The number is still “a tiny percentage” of the total applications, but it reflects “a growing trend”.

    ‘On the rise’
    About 15% of the UK’s single-parent households are headed by dads, according to the Office for National Statistics – although this includes widowers, and divorced or separated men. This is a “family type that does seem to be on the rise”, Catherine Jones, a family psychology expert at King’s College London, told The Telegraph.

    Commercial surrogacy is illegal in the UK, but single men can find surrogates in countries such as Cyprus or Belarus. This has caused concern among some campaigners. Surrogacy checks “are not remotely comparable to those we see in cases of adoption”, said Helen Gibson of Surrogacy Concern.

    But some single men, both here and in the US, turn to surrogacy after being turned down by adoption agencies, said ABC News. Every agency I contacted told me I would not be considered or would be “at the bottom of the list”, Peter Gordon, now a single dad to twins, told the US news outlet.

    Importance of fatherhood
    For years, singlehood has been increasing “more steeply among men than women”, said The Atlantic. And the fact that some men are “paying extravagantly for egg donation and surrogacy” suggests “just how important fatherhood is”. Many single fathers by choice described the pandemic as a “turning point”: that was when they knew they wanted to “spend those moments with their loved ones before it was too late”.

    In these times when “many of the traditional trappings of manhood” are no longer guaranteed, fatherhood can be “an answer” to questions of identity. For many single men, it dangles “a promise of deeper meaning in life”.

     
     

    Good day ⚽

    … for Italy, whose World Cup dream could flicker back to life, despite the Azzuri failing to qualify for this summer’s tournament. Paolo Zampolli, US special envoy for global partnerships, has asked Donald Trump and Fifa to consider replacing Iran with Italy. Iran says its team still plans to participate.

     
     

    Bad day 🏡

    … for heritage properties, as the National Trust announces plans to close 137 cottages it operates as holiday lets, and repurpose them as full-time rental properties. The charity said the decision was necessary to “securing a sustainable future” for its wider conservation mission.

     
     
    PICTURE OF THE DAY

    Merry England

    Members of the Ewell St Mary’s Morris Men celebrate St George’s Day with traditional English folk dance outside the Lamb Tavern in London’s Leadenhall Market.

    Henry Nicholls / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Guess the number

    Try The Week’s daily number challenge in our puzzles and quizzes section

    Play here

     
     
    THE WEEK RECOMMENDS

    The UK’s must-see tulip gardens this spring

    In many of the UK’s most well-known gardens, tulips are already in full bloom after the particularly wet and mild start to spring. Here are some of the best places to admire them.

    Ham House, Richmond
    This “17th-century kitchen garden”, featured in the latest season of “Bridgerton”, is not to be missed, said Lily-Rose Morris-Zumin in The Times. The grounds are filled with both “formal, historic varieties” of tulip, as well as “thousands of naturalised, wild-style” flowers, a cherry garden and fruit trees.

    RHS Garden Wisley, Surrey
    The garden is “sea of vibrant colour” at this time of year, said Laura Nightingale in the Daily Express. More than 100,000 tulips have been planted, carefully chosen for their “fabulous shapes and staggered flowering times”.

    Tulleys Tulip Festival, West Sussex
    This farm in West Sussex (pictured above) has more than 130 varieties of tulips that are “planted in long, ordered rows”, said Morris-Zumin in The Times. You can “walk directly through” them or explore the place using an “observation wheel” that’s about 100ft high and offers views out across a “lake with floating tulip beds”.

    Farmer Copleys Tulip Festival, West Yorkshire
    Home to “over 100 varieties and a million flowers”, Farmer Copleys offers “many photo opportunities” to its visitors, said Lauren Hughes in Country Living. There is a giant Ferris wheel on site, with “panoramic views” over the “vast tulip fields”. You can also make your own bouquet to take home.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    106 days: Liam Rosenior’s tenure as Chelsea manager, which has come to an end as the club announced he would be leaving after five goalless Premier League defeats in a row. He becomes the 10th top-flight manager to be sacked this season. Assistant manager Calum McFarlane has been named interim head coach.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    The special relationship is now an abusive marriage
    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown in The i Paper
    “It’s time to face up to some hard truths,” writes Yasmin Alibhai-Brown. Britain’s “special relationship” with the US “is a bad marriage” with a “coercive and controlling” partner. Although Donald Trump “is the most aggressive and brutish, none of the presidents before him treated the UK as a respected, equal partner”. Yet we feel obliged to “please” and to “adjust our behaviours like tradwives”. Such “abject self-subjugation”, politically, economically and culturally, has weakened us. Britain “needs to stand up for itself”.

    Britain has become a nation of ugly, soulless town centres where migrants loiter and locals flee to the suburbs. This is who’s to blame…
    Peter Hitchens in the Daily Mail
    The “mould of modernism and ugliness” is spreading through our country, writes Peter Hitchens. “Roadsides are full of litter”, shopfronts have “garish colours”, and young men “of foreign origin” crowd “once-handsome” city centres that look like they’ve been bombed “and rebuilt by oafs”. How to explain the “desecrating and scouring of so much loveliness”? It seems those “in charge of our heritage – councillors, planners, ministers – have come to hate the elegant, well-proportioned and pleasing past”.

    The UK’s messiest election ever?
    Scarlett Maguire in The Critic
    The 2029 general election is likely to be the “most difficult to call” yet, writes pollster Scarlett Maguire. “You would have to be living under a rock” not to “notice the scale of the public’s rebellion against our political system”. Voters want change, but “even the Greens and Reform are struggling” to get widespread support. “With a political map this fractured”, predictions “can be a fool’s errand”; better to analyse “why voters are increasingly turning their backs on politics”.

     
     
    word of the day

    Passwords

    Soon to be a thing of the past, if government security experts have their way. The National Cyber Security Centre says that passwords have become too vulnerable to security breaches, and now advises the public to use passkeys, linked to facial or fingerprint recognition or a phone PIN, instead.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Rebecca Messina, Jamie Timson, Harriet Marsden, Elliott Goat, Will Barker, Chas Newkey-Burden, Irenie Forshaw, Deeya Sonalkar, Helen Brown, David Edwards and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations from Stephen P. Kelly.

    Image credits, from top: illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images; Marvin Recinos / AFP / Getty Images; Rae Russel / Getty Images; Henry Nicholls / AFP / Getty Images; Rasid Necati Aslim / Anadolu / Getty Images
    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

    Recent editions

    • Evening Review

      Americans’ change on Israel

    • Morning Report

      Virginia boosts Democrats’ congressional hopes

    • Evening Review

      Mamdani’s plan to tax the rich

    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 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.