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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Ukraine peace plans, Budget leaks, and the air pollution throttling Delhi

     
    today’s international story

    Europe pitches rival Ukraine peace plan

    What happened
    European leaders have tabled an alternative peace blueprint for Ukraine, offering a path for Russia to return to the G8 and proposing limits on Ukraine’s armed forces. The counter-proposal, drafted by Britain, Germany and France, was presented after US President Donald Trump’s 28-point plan drew fierce criticism for leaning heavily towards Moscow’s preferences.

    Who said what
    After an emergency meeting in Geneva, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Washington was “making some changes” to its plan and described the talks as the “best meeting and day” since the administration took office. Trump, meanwhile, complained that Ukraine had shown “zero gratitude” for US efforts and criticised Europe for its insufficient action.

    Europe’s proposal is a “rebuke to Trump”, said Gabriel Gavin and Daniella Cheslow on Politico. European countries including Ukraine “were effectively cut out of the development of the (American) 28-point plan, which critics say rewards Russian aggression and would leave the door open to future invasions”. After the pushback from European leaders, “Washington appears to have softened its stance”, said Yashraj Sharma on Al Jazeera, with Trump saying the plan did not represent a “final offer” for Ukraine. This will “likely create some wriggle room for diplomacy”, according to Sharma.

    What next?
    Overnight, Kyiv mounted a drone strike on a power plant near Moscow, illustrating how volatile the situation remains as diplomats search for a path to a durable ceasefire.

     
     
    today’s politics story

    Minister insists Budget leaks haven’t hurt economy

    What happened
    Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander (pictured above) has dismissed suggestions that extensive Budget speculation has stalled business activity after months of whispers about possible tax rises. Media reports had hinted at increases to income tax rates – a move that would have breached Labour’s campaign pledge – until government sources said last week Chancellor Rachel Reeves had dropped the idea following improved fiscal forecasts.

    Who said what
    Former Bank of England chief economist Andy Haldane told the BBC that the swirl of Budget rumours was a “fiscal fandango” that had “caused paralysis among businesses and consumers”. Alexander countered that “people always speculate in advance of a Budget”.

    Reeves’ “leaked and counter-leaked” Budget on Wednesday will “finally answer a key question for an exhausted public”, said The Times’s editorial board: are she and Keir Starmer “the country’s fiscally responsible parents” or are they “powerless pushovers bending to the will of the mutinous MPs behind them?”

    What next?
    Reeves is still expected to announce a package of smaller tax measures in Wednesday’s Budget, along with policies aimed at easing living costs and reducing NHS waiting lists. Conservatives have demanded an inquiry into the leaks.

     
     
    Today’s health story

    Former PM Cameron reveals prostate cancer diagnosis

    What happened
    David Cameron has announced that he was diagnosed with prostate cancer after a high prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test led to a biopsy confirming the disease. The 59-year-old former prime minister said he also underwent an MRI scan before receiving the news, describing the moment as one every patient fears. His disclosure comes as the UK begins enrolling men in a major health trial known as Transform, which will compare screening methods with current NHS diagnostics. The £42 million project aims to determine whether early detection can be improved without subjecting men to unnecessary biopsies.

    Who said what
    Cameron told The Times he wanted to “add my name to the long list of people calling for a targeted screening programme”, saying men often “put things off” when it comes to their health.

    Prostate cancer is the most common cancer for men in the UK, with about 55,000 new cases diagnosed each year, said Nadeem Badshah in The Guardian, but there is “no screening programme for the disease in the UK because of concerns about the accuracy of PSA tests”. However, in its last assessment the UK’s national screening committee “judged that the costs of prostate testing outweighed the benefits”, said Tom Whipple in The Times.

    What next?
    The National Screening Committee is expected to assess whether the evidence now supports having a national programme. Results from the Transform trial will help inform that decision, shaping future policy on the disease.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Ukrainian refugee Danylo Yavhusishyn has become the first person from his country to win a sumo tournament in Japan, claiming the Kyushu title just three years after fleeing the war with Russia. Competing as Aonishiki Arata, the 21-year-old thanked crowds while speaking fluent Japanese and is now poised for promotion to “ozeki”, the sport’s second-highest rank. Having arrived knowing no Japanese at all, he has risen through the divisions at remarkable speed.

     
     
    under the radar

    ‘Like a gas chamber’: the air pollution throttling Delhi

    Protesters in Delhi wore oxygen masks and carried gas cylinders as they took to the streets last week to highlight the failure of authorities to tackle the city’s ever-worsening air pollution.

    For the past month Delhi’s Air Quality Index, which measures the level of fine particulate matter that can clog lungs, has been “hovering” between 300 and 400, nearly 20 times the acceptable limit, said the BBC.

    There’s a “dystopian” environment in the Indian capital as a particularly “persistent toxic haze” shrouds the city, with low wind and cooling temperatures preventing pollutants from dispersing, according to The Independent.

    The situation is so severe that the Supreme Court of India has asked health authorities to cancel all outdoor sport in schools until the haze lifts. The court said allowing children to take part in such activities when pollution levels were at their peak would be like “putting them in a ‘gas chamber’”, said The Indian Express.

    During the “miasma”, the rich “retreat to their houses, where air purifiers offer some respite”, said the Financial Times, and others “decamp for the cleaner climes of Himalayan hill stations”. But “the poor have to put up with the poison air”.

    According to recent polling, almost four out of five households in the Delhi metropolitan area “have had at least one member fall ill due to toxic air in the past month”, said the Hindustan Times. One doctor at the Delhi teaching hospital said wards “are overflowing with people suffering from wheezing, breathlessness, burning eyes and fast-deteriorating COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease)”.

     
     
    on this day

    24 November 1958

    Mali became an autonomous state within the French Community, a key milestone on the road to full independence, which was granted in 1960. For the past two months the country’s capital Bamako has been blockaded by jihadists linked to al-Qaida, with a litre of petrol now fetching up to six times the official price on the black market.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Help us’

    “Help us, Chancellor,” says The Mirror, reporting on a poll that suggests some want Rachel Reeves to “hit the super-rich in her autumn Budget”. The Telegraph says £15 billion in extra welfare spending will be included in the Budget. Reeves will “target universities”, says The i Paper, with plans to raise international student fees to fund “grants for poorer British students” included in her “smorgasbord” approach. Meanwhile, “Strictly Come Dancing” judge Shirley Ballas “almost died” after choking on a fishbone moments before Saturday’s live show, The Sun reports.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Paws and effect

    A North Carolina motorist was stunned when her windscreen was smashed by a cat dropped from the sky by a bald eagle. The unidentified woman was driving along a highway near Bryson City when the dead feline crash-landed on her vehicle. According to highway patrol officers, “a witness reported that the adult-sized cat was seen ‘fighting’ in the air with a bald eagle” shortly before the incident, said The Charlotte Observer. The female driver was unharmed in the incident, although her car had to be towed.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Rebecca Messina, Will Barker, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Sergey Shestak / AFP / Getty Images; Chris Radburn – WPA Pool / Getty Images; Hoda Davaine / Getty Images for Cornbury House Horse Trials; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images.

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

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