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  • The Week Evening Review
    Budget black holes, a rebel sect, and the new US nuclear age

     
    TALKING POINT

    Can Burnham plug the defence black hole?

    Keir Starmer announced a £15 billion spending increase in his £298 billion Defence Investment Plan – but £4.7 billion of that remains unfunded, with the Treasury saying it have to be allocated in the next Budget. As presumptive prime minister, Andy Burnham will “somehow need to find more money”, said the Financial Times’ editorial board. It “will be a defining test” of Burnham’s premiership.

    ‘Dirty rotten trick’
    Starmer had promised in his resignation speech to work “dutifully” in the interests of the nation and oversee an “orderly transition”: “he didn’t mean a word of it”, said John Rentoul in The Independent. This “dirty rotten trick” shows us in public what he has been feeling in private. He feels “betrayed” by Burnham, Wes Streeting and Shabana Mahmood, and has “no intention of making life easy for them”.

    “Sir Keir Starmer hasn’t actually sewn raw prawns into the hems of the Downing Street curtains, but he might as well have,” said former Scottish Labour MP Tom Harris in The Telegraph. His “two-faced” and “spiteful” actions look “all the more distasteful” considering his upset over inheriting a £22 billion black hole of his own from Rishi Sunak.

    ‘Call to arms’
    If Burnham is “fazed” by this situation, he “isn’t fit to be PM”, said former Downing Street director of strategic communications James Lyons in The i Paper. The deficit he needs to fill is “peanuts” compared with the £1 trillion-plus that the Government spends every year. “Improved forecasts could” sort the shortfall “at a stroke” – although, granted, the forecasts “could also go the other way”.

    The DIP’s financial commitments were listed in “vague, euphemistic terms”, said James Heale in The Spectator – meaning Burnham’s selection of a chancellor is “the most important decision he makes in the next few months”. The MP for Makerfield should see this situation as a “call to arms” on public finances, said The Times’ editorial board. Public spending is “out of control” but, by arguing that his hands were tied by his predecessor, Burnham “take radical action on pensions and welfare” to make up the defence-funding shortfall.

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    The Society of St Pius X has created a Vatican schism

    Pope Leo XIV has excommunicated members of a breakaway group of traditionalist Catholics after they consecrated bishops without Vatican approval.

    The Society of St Pius X proclaimed four new bishops on Wednesday, despite the pope warning that to do so would be a “sin of extreme gravity”. “The Vatican responded aggressively”, announcing that all SSPX’s bishops and priests were excommunicated, said The Associated Press. The Pope also warned the estimated 600,000 Catholics who attend SSPX services that the order is no longer sanctioned to carry out sacraments like confession and marriage.

    What is the Society of St Pius X?
    Founded in 1970 by French archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, it is a traditionalist group that rejects much of the Vatican II reforms of the 1960s, and purports to practise a “pure” form of Catholicism, untainted by modernising or secular influences. The order continues to celebrate Mass in Latin and uses pre-Vatican II liturgy in its services.
    According to its own figures, SSPX has 751 priests and a presence in 77 countries, with the largest in France and the US.

    What is its relationship with the Church?
    In 1988, Archbishop Lefebvre consecrated four bishops without the approval of Pope John Paul II. All five were excommunicated.
    In 2009, Pope Benedict XVI rescinded the excommunications of the surviving bishops as a gesture towards reconciliation. But, despite years of talks aimed at bringing SSPX back into full communion with the Church, the society’s official status has remained unresolved.

    Can things be reconciled?
    Since becoming Pope in May last year, Leo XIV “has reached out” to many conservatives and traditionalists in the Church, who were, in various ways, “alienated during the Pope Francis pontificate”, said AP. However, last month he told reporters that, “while division among Christians is always a painful matter”, SSPX was rejecting “certain fundamental elements of the Church”, and “if that is the choice they make, I am sorry, but we must move forward”.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “We cannot afford to sit by while our NHS is picked apart by a foreign regime.”

    Lib Dem health spokesperson Helen Morgan reacts to analysis, published in the British Medical Journal, suggesting a UK-US drug export deal agreed last year could cost the NHS £45 billion and indirectly lead to more than 200,000 avoidable deaths by 2036.

     
     

    Poll watch

    The majority of Brits (71%) believe the recent heatwave was probably caused by climate change – but that’s had “little to no noticeable impact” on their support for measures to combat it, according to a YouGov poll of 2,207 UK adults. Two-thirds said keeping household bills down was more important than reducing carbon emissions.

     
     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Is the US launching a new age of nuclear power?

    America mostly abandoned building new nuclear power plants back in the 1990s but Donald Trump’s administration is looking to jump-start a new atomic age. It has launched a programme to build 10 new power plants by the mid-2030s, and federal officials say dozens more could come online after that.

    What did the commentators say?
    The US government is providing $17.5 billion (£13.1 billion) to “speed the development” of new reactors in response to growing electricity demand from “massive data centres”, said The Associated Press. Trump has set a goal of “quadrupling domestic production of nuclear power within the next 25 years”, despite warnings that the plants are “too expensive”, and “riskier” than solar, wind and “other low-carbon energy sources”.

    In theory, nuclear power “should generate the cheapest electricity available”, said Alex Trembath on The Dispatch. The reality is that, over the decades, “overregulation, environmentalist opposition and industrial mismanagement” has made the process of building new plants “increasingly expensive”. But the 57 plants that are already online produce 20% of the nation’s power supply. Now is the “time to build”.

    The US “used to be the world’s leader in nuclear power”, said The Washington Examiner’s editorial board – until “regulatory paralysis” set in. The Trump administration now plans to make it easier for companies to “build, operate, and test reactors” under supervision from the Department of Energy. This “restoration of ambition” could bring us “the nuclear renaissance America has needed for half a century”.

    Hopes of a nuclear revival have often been “longer on aspiration than action” but this programme “could move the needle”, said Axios. Developing so many plants at once should “create more efficient, scaled, standardised and cheaper supply chains” that will, in turn, speed up the production of additional plants.

    What next?
    The US oversight body, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, is  preparing to make “huge cuts” to hours devoted to safety and emergency inspections, said CNN. These changes, which “must be approved by five NRC commissioners to be finalised”, are intended to usher in “more self-policing from the industry”.

     
     

    Good day 🗣️

    … for the Māori language, after Google Maps launched a New Zealand-accented voice that pronounces the country’s indigenous place names correctly. The head of the Māori language commission, which has been working with Google for years to identify mispronunciations in the app, said “we can’t underestimate just how important this is”.

     
     

    Bad day 💿

    … for physical media, as Sony announces that it will no longer manufacture Playstation games on discs. From January 2028, games will only be available to purchase as digital downloads. Sony said its digital-only future reflects “how most of our community prefers to access and play games today”.

     
     
    PICTURE OF THE DAY

    Rising tensions

    A local resident argues with a soldier in Caraballeda, Venezuela. More than a week since twin earthquakes killed more than 2,200 people, hopes of rescuing further survivors are fading, and affected communities are running short on food.

    Juan Barreto / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Chain Word

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

    Play here

     
     
    THE WEEK RECOMMENDS

    Summer Holiday: an ‘irresistibly feel-good’ show

    Sheffield Theatres’ adaptation of the hit 1963 Cliff Richard film “radiates enough rays of feel-good energy to leave you with a tan”, said Matt Barton in The Stage.

    Like the film, the story follows a group of friends who take a road trip across Europe in a double-decker bus. They pick up a pop group and a mysterious American singer along the way but, beyond the “globetrotting destinations”, it’s about the journey – and that “provides a vehicle” for those “easy-going hits” Richards made famous, including “Bachelor Boy”, “The Young Ones” and, of course, the title number.

    Amanda Stoodley’s costumes are “fabulously colourful, heightening the feel-good fun factor”, said Jacob Bush on The Reviews Hub. “The 1960s aesthetic is perfectly captured while somehow still feeling fresh.” Though the structure of the bus is “mainly left to the imagination”, it is “impressive to see a full-size Mini and scooter on stage”.

    Directors Elizabeth Newman and Ben Occhipinti ensure the show is “packed with hits” and delivers an “irresistibly feel-good evening”, said Mark Brown in The Telegraph. All the cast are talented but George Jones, as the “fine-voiced, charismatic Don”, is a “standout”.

    It is an “immensely good-humoured and infectious show”, said Ron Simpson on WhatsOnStage. Opposite Jones, Fanta Barrie morphs from “glamorous singer to urchin boy to Don’s ever-graceful bride”. There was, however, one irony that no one “could do nothing about”: singing the title number with the lyrics “We’re going where the sun shines brightly” to an audience “gasping in the current heatwave”.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    9 hours: The peak length of the online “queue” for tickets to see the Bayeux Tapestry at the British Museum. Tickets for the exhibition, which opens in September and runs until the following July, went on sale at 11am yesterday. By mid-afternoon, more than 76,000 people were waiting to book.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    It’s a truly Trumpian tragedy: he’s made billions of dollars but can’t buy love or respect
    Emma Brockes in The Guardian
    Donald Trump “made more than $2.2bn” last year, writes Emma Brockes – “more than three times what he pulled in the year before his inauguration”. He’s finally getting what he “always desperately wanted”: “genuine, unimaginable wealth”, but at the expense of his other craving: “universal admiration and applause”. He’s “rich but mocked”, with approval ratings on the slide, the Supreme Court ruling against him and the war with Iran “rumbling on”. The man “can’t even keep” a reflecting pool “clean”.

    Kirstie Allsopp, don’t be a snob: ‘passing’ is a good word for death
    Jemima Lewis in The Telegraph
    “Kirstie Allsopp took umbrage” at Bafta mourning “the ‘passing’ of Dame Penelope Keith”, writes Jemima Lewis. I too used “to get irritable” about the euphemistic “vocabulary of death” but now I think it’s “perfectly suited” to our “multicultural society, where belief in the afterlife has become a personal choice, rather than a universal certainty”. “Passed” is “vague” but inoffensive; its “only crime is its politeness”. But for snobs, the word “smacks of lower-middle-class gentility, like serviettes” or “toilet”.

    The toxic move that could undermine Burnham immediately
    Kitty Donaldson in The i Paper
    Labour’s female MPs have long blamed the “boys’ club culture” in No. 10 for “misogyny, bullying”, ignoring “reports of sexual harassment” and, “most egregiously”, the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador, writes Kitty Donaldson. Now they’re warning Andy Burnham not to “make the same mistakes”, pushing for “a 50:50 gender split” in his cabinet, and a female deputy prime minister. The message is clear: “appoint women and their allies, or face the same difficulties” Keir Starmer did.

     
     
    word of the day

    Anchoveta

    A Peruvian species of anchovy that’s a core ingredient in the fishmeal used in commercial fish-farming. Unusually warm waters linked to the El Niño weather phenomenon have drastically reduced anchoveta stocks, and industry experts say the increased cost of fishmeal may soon be passed on in higher prices for farmed fish in supermarkets.

     
     

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

    Image credits, from top: illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images / Shutterstock; Fabrice Coffrini / AFP via Getty Images; illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images; Juan Barreto / AFP / Getty Images; Manuel Harlan

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

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