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  • The Week Evening Review
    Remigration, US football love-ins, and GTA 6 legal woes

     
    THE EXPLAINER

    Remigration: a growing far-right movement

    A “dark money lobbying network” bankrolled by Reform UK donor Richard Smith has been associated with “open advocates of far-right remigration”, said Byline Times. Once a fringe concept, remigration is gaining traction not only in Britain but across the world.

    What is remigration?
    In general terms, it describes the process of an immigrant voluntarily returning to their country of origin, said Al Jazeera. However, in a far-right context, remigration has been appropriated as a “method of ethnic cleansing”, where “all non-white people are forcibly removed from traditionally white countries”.

    It is “less a set of policies and more a catch-all term for a vision of Europe with its ethnic and cultural identity rid of what they call ‘Afro-Arab replacement migration’”, said The Economist. Proponents hope to capitalise on some people’s feelings of unease “at the rapid scale of demographic change they witness around them”.

    Is it becoming mainstream?
    During 2025, there were 952,000 mentions of the term “remigration” by 303,000 unique authors on social media – more than double the year before, according to the US Center for the Study of Organised Hate think tank.

    Many European parties have outlined their support for remigration in their election manifesto, said the think tank. These include the Austrian Freedom Party, Germany’s AfD, and Dutch parties Forum for Democracy and Conservative Liberals. It's also found favour in the Trump administration: in November, the official X account for the Department of Homeland Security posted a message calling for “remigration now”.

    Does it have support in the UK?
    Restore Britain’s manifesto promises to deport any legal immigrant who is “unable to speak English, lives in social housing, claims benefits, refuses to work, fails to integrate, commits crime or actively hates our way of life”.

    A YouGov poll in August last year found that 45% of Britons approved of “an immigration scenario whereby no more new migrants were admitted, and large numbers of recent migrants were required to leave”. However, once questioned on the specifics, only 26% supported the removal of skilled migrant workers, and even fewer supported expelling healthcare workers or foreign nationals with British citizenship.

     
     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Is the World Cup reviving America’s reputation?

    Under President Donald Trump, the US has often seemed less welcoming to outsiders than it used to. But the men’s football World Cup is showcasing the country’s grassroots hospitality to visitors from abroad.

    What did the commentators say?
    Many international football fans were worried about “visa access, high costs” and “gun violence” ahead of this year’s World Cup, said Reuters. But instead they have “flooded” social media with posts about their “warm welcome from Americans” and the “distinctive culture”, awash in “free soda refills” and “chicken wings dipped in ranch dressing”.

    In host cities across the US there is an “unlikely romance between everyday Americans and squads from around the world”, said The New York Times. While polls show the US global reputation “has dipped in recent years”, visitors are discovering American communities have “all kinds of estimable traits”.

    My fellow citizens are “reminding the rest of the world that this country still has a lot of attractive values”, said foreign-policy expert Daniel Drezner on his Substack. That may not matter to world politics in the short term, but it offers a “hopeful reminder that in just a few years America can be great again”.

    What next?
    US residents are welcoming the world “even when their government has failed to do so”, said former Homeland Security official Juliette Kayyem on her Substack. Events like the World Cup “represent a kind of soft power that America has been increasingly unwilling to exert” and had seemingly been lost. It will take more than a summer to repair the world’s “dismal view of America”, but there are signs of hope. “Americans are proving better diplomats than their administration.” 

     
     

    Poll watch

    Half of Brits (50%) think men dress badly in the summer, with only 34% approving of their fashion choices, according to a YouGov poll of 4,924 adults. Women fare better, with 56% of respondents saying they dress “very” or “fairly” well as temperatures rise.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    500,000: The number of military personnel South Korea plans to train as “drone warriors”. Every member of the forces “should be able to use drones like a second personal firearm”, said defence minister Ahn Gyu-back, observing that, in Ukraine and the Middle East, drones are a “game-changer on the battlefield”.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    The trials and tribulations of Grand Theft Auto 6

    It’s been a long 13 years but “GTA 6”, the follow-up to “Grand Theft Auto 5”, is now open for pre-orders and set to launch on 19 November. It is expected to be one of the biggest releases in entertainment history and is projected to generate revenues of £5.67 billion in its first two months.

    But the journey has been far from smooth, said IGN. Fans have now “waited two console generations for a new ‘GTA’”, while developer Rockstar has “pushed back” its launch – “again, and again”.

    Quest for perfection
    The most recent delay – from May – was because “more time was required to polish” and “make sure that it was spectacular”, according to Strauss Zelnick, CEO of Rockstar’s parent company Take-Two Interactive.

    Avid fans greeted the May delay with “resignation, frustration, déjà vu”, said the BBC. Rockstar is a “notoriously perfectionist” developer: “Red Dead Redemption 2”, its most recent major release, “is still widely considered a benchmark for open-world video games” due to its “obsessive attention to detail”.

    Broader industry-wide shifts have also made game development “more expensive, more complex”, and Rockstar has to contend with its own hype: each success “raising ever-higher expectations” for future games.

    Union-busting
    The repeated delays may also be connected with Rockstar’s decision to fire more than 30 staff who were trying to unionise, sparking a legal action against the developer.

    The employees were dismissed in October 2025 for what the company called “gross misconduct”. It claimed staff had discussed confidential game features from upcoming titles in a public forum. The sacked workers dispute this, saying their secure Discord channel was solely used for union-focused discussion. They also claim they have been subject to blacklisting, a “practice in which information about workers engaged in union activity is compiled to facilitate discrimination”, said The Register.

    This month, Rockstar lost a legal battle “which means fired unionised workers can continue to bring blacklisting claims against” it, said Novara Media. The final employment tribunal is set to conclude just a month before “GTA 6” is released.

     
     

    Good day🎤

    … for Graham Norton, who has secured a world-exclusive interview with Madonna, airing tonight at 10.40pm on BBC One. The chatshow host, and superfan, will join the Queen of Pop at the venue where she played her first UK gig in 1983 to reflect on her four-decade career and new album.

     
     

    Bad day 🫛

    … for legumes, as farmers scramble to salvage this year’s pea harvest in scorching temperatures. “Extreme pressure” – first from heavy rainfall, then from intense sunshine – has meant pea pods are “maturing rapidly”, leaving little time for picking them before they spoil, said The Telegraph.

     
     
    picture of the day

    Fan the flames

    People pose for photos during a “destruction ceremony” in Yangon, Myanmar, to mark the UN’s International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking. Burmese police burned more than 50 tons of confiscated heroin, meth, ketamine and marijuana – a haul worth over £450 million.

    Sai Aung Main / 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 with illustrious connections

    Essex: Otten Hall, Belchamp Otten
    An important Grade II country house in an idyllic setting. The estate traces its history back to the Saxon era and, during the reign of Henry II, it came into the possession of the Otto family, from whom the village derives its suffix. 5 beds, 3 baths, kitchen, 4 receps, garden, outbuildings, garage. £1.5 million; David Burr 

    Suffolk: Smokey House, Sudbourne
    A striking example of gothic revival by the architect Frederick Barnes, commissioned by Sir Richard Wallace, who donated his father’s extraordinary collection of art and artefacts to the Wallace Collection in London. 5 beds, 4 baths, kitchen, 2 receps, 1-bed self-contained annexe, garden, parking. £1.45 million; Knight Frank 

    Dorset: Plush Manor, Plush
    An elegant Georgian manor house that was once the home of the celebrated pianist Alfred Brendel, and which hosted the acclaimed Plush Music Festival for 22 years. 9 beds, 5 baths, kitchen/breakfast room, 5 receps, self-contained 1-bed flat, indoor swimming pool, garden, parking. £2.95 million; Savills

    Isle of Wight: Winterbourne House, Bonchurch
    A handsome Victorian villa, close to the beach, in which Charles Dickens wrote part of “David Copperfield”. 6 beds, 7 baths, kitchen, 8 receps, garden, parking. £1.6 million; Spence Willard

    See more

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “If Watergate happened tomorrow, it would be a 12-hour news story.”

    J.D. Vance reassesses the 37th US president’s legacy during a talk at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library in California. “The idea that it would have taken down a presidency is crazy,” he said of the biggest political scandal in America in the 20th century.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    Huw Edwards’s arrogance was his downfall. So of course he’s launched a comeback
    Victoria Richards in The i Paper
    The “same Huw Edwards” who was “slapped with a suspended prison sentence” after pleading guilty to receiving and making indecent images of children “now wants us to read his” Substack posts, writes Victoria Richards. Yes, “it’s natural to be curious” about what he’ll write but “all I see is a man who misses being in the spotlight” and has the “galling arrogance to keep demanding space”. “We’ve all heard quite enough from Huw Edwards; enough to last us several uneasy lifetimes.”

    Cathedrals are civic jewels: let councils help to run them
    Simon Jenkins in The Times
    “I am a non-believer” but “a gothic cathedral has a poetry that can move me to tears”, writes former National Trust chair Simon Jenkins. And I’m clearly not alone: while England’s 42 cathedrals “serve just 40,000 worshippers a year, they get ten million visitors”. Yet 80% of them are “in financial peril” and the Church of England is not equipped to “handle” the “looming crisis”. Our county or borough authorities should share responsibility for these “most magnificent buildings”.

    Forget Burnham, his ‘Blind Date’ wife is about to become No 10’s real star
    Rowan Pelling in The Telegraph
    “No sane person wants to be the Prime Minister’s spouse,” writes Rowan Pelling. But Andy Burnham’s wife, Marie-France van Heel, is “better equipped than most”. She’s  “weathered 25 years as a political wife” and, as her 1992 “Blind Date” appearance showed, has the “self-belief” and “wit” to “take a bit of criticism and turn it around to her advantage”. I wouldn’t be surprised if she comes “to be seen by many of us as the better half of the duo”.

     
     
    word of the day

    Sunbrella

    The “new heatwave accessory”, according to The Guardian. Models and front-row guests sought shade under summer umbrellas at al fresco fashion shows in Paris and Milan this week. And designers are making “anti-UV” brollies to cash in on their shift “from a winter to a summer must-have”.

     
     

     Evening Review was written and edited by Irene Forshaw, Rebecca Messina, Chas Newkey-Burden, Will Barker, Joel Mathis, Elliott Goat, Adrienne Wyper, David Edwards and Helen Brown, with illustrations by Stephen P. Kelly.

    Image credits, from top:  Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images; Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images / Shutterstock; Rockstar Games; Sai Aung Main / AFP / Getty Images; Spencer Platt / Getty Images; David Burr; Knight Frank; Savills; Spence Willard 
    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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