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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Iran and US ‘agree truce’, Starmer heads to G7, and Ukraine begins EU accession talks

     
    today’s international story

    ‘Let the oil flow’: Trump announces Iran peace deal

    What happened
    The US and Iran have agreed to a ceasefire after months of fighting that has claimed thousands of lives and disrupted global markets, according to Donald Trump.

    Announcing the breakthrough on social media yesterday, the US president said an agreement had been finalised and indicated that it would include the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. He also said he had ordered an end to the US naval blockade of Iranian ports. While Tehran stopped short of formally confirming the deal, Iranian state media portrayed the outcome as a victory, saying Washington had been compelled to halt the conflict.

    Who said what
    Trump called on “ships of the world” to start their engines and “let the oil flow”.

    Meanwhile, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said an official signing ceremony was expected to take place in Switzerland on Friday.

    “It’s not really a ‘deal’,” said Jonathan Panikoff on think tank the Atlantic Council’s Dispatches news platform. “But Trump’s memorandum with Iran can be the start of something bigger.”

    What next?
    The agreement’s full details have not yet been published, although officials had previously suggested that it would begin with a 60-day cessation of hostilities.

    This month Israel bombed sites in Iran for the first time since a ceasefire began in April. “It is not clear if the Israeli strikes will have any impact” on the deal, said Jaroslav Lukiv on the BBC.

     
     
    today’s defence story

    Starmer arrives at G7 as military funding row deepens

    What happened
    Keir Starmer heads to the G7 summit in France facing growing questions over his leadership after the resignation of defence secretary John Healey and an escalating dispute over military spending.

    The prime minister will meet with fellow leaders as discussions focus on conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East. However, the domestic fallout from the government’s delayed defence investment plan is threatening to overshadow Britain’s role on the international stage.

    The controversy intensified after reports emerged that new Defence Secretary Dan Jarvis would not receive additional funding beyond the £13.5 billion settlement that prompted Healey’s departure.

    Who said what
    A spokesperson for Starmer said the government’s goal at the G7 was to deliver “growth and security at home” while working with allies on international crises.

    Starmer “could face criticism from Emmanuel Macron and Friedrich Merz, the French and German leaders, who have financed defence investment through domestic borrowing”, said Tony Diver in The Telegraph.

    What next?
    Starmer is under mounting pressure to publish the long-delayed defence plan before next month’s Nato summit, where allies are expected to be presented with renewed demands to increase military spending. The PM also confronts the Makerfield by-election on Thursday, which could propel Andy Burnham into Parliament to launch a leadership challenge.

     
     
    Today’s diplomacy story

    Ukraine and Moldova begin formal EU accession talks

    What happened
    Ukraine and Moldova have entered the next stage of their bids to join the European Union, with ministers and senior officials meeting in Luxembourg today to start detailed membership discussions. The move marks the first substantive phase of the accession process for the two former Soviet republics.

    Who said what
    EU leaders Ursula von der Leyen (pictured above right) and António Costa praised the “determination, courage and hard work” shown by both countries in pursuing reforms.

    Ukraine and Moldova were “quickly accepted” as EU candidate countries in 2022, having filed applications days after Russia’s full-scale invasion, said Jennifer Rankin in The Guardian. But “despite a symbolic decision”, substantive negotiations had remained blocked until Hungary’s pro-Russian president Viktor Orbán was voted out this year.

    What next?
    Although Brussels has welcomed the two countries’ reform efforts, officials say both still have substantial work ahead of them. Accession requires the adoption of thousands of EU laws and unanimous approval from every member state, a process that is expected to take years.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    An experimental immune system treatment has sent lupus into remission in early UK trials, raising hopes of a breakthrough for the 50,000 Britons living with the disease. The therapy uses genetically modified immune cells to wipe out malfunctioning cells before allowing healthy ones to regrow, effectively “resetting” the immune system. Five of the first six patients remain in remission, making experts optimistic that lupus can one day be controlled without the need for lifelong treatment.

     
     
    under the radar

    The cafe that stopped charging and made a profit

    Nearly half of its customers paid nothing for their food and drink after a cafe in the US stopped charging them and asked instead for voluntary donations.

    But since switching to this curious business model, the Post Modern Times cafe in Minneapolis is making a profit after mostly posting losses for years.

    In a statement shared on Post Modern Times’ Instagram account in January, the cafe’s owner Dylan Alverson said he had decided to move to a donations-only model in response to a “government occupation” in Minneapolis.

    The restaurant is just four blocks from where Renée Good was killed in January by Ice agents and six blocks from the site of George Floyd’s murder in 2020. “Effective tomorrow we are done making money for the fascists that occupy our city,” he said. “We refuse to generate taxes under the guise of a functioning for-profit capitalist business aligned with government strategy.”

    Running on donations means the cafe doesn’t have to pay tax on sales and the staff are volunteers working for shared tips and community donations.

    After “fighting to make a profit for 15 years”, Alverson had concluded that it was not possible without “taking advantage of people”. But since making the change, he has “succeeded more than I ever did when I was running a conventional business employing 22 people”.

    Some 42% of US restaurant owners said their businesses weren’t profitable last year, according to the National Restaurant Association. So “what started as a workaround to paying sales tax” might “offer a solution to a broken industry”.

     
     
    on this day

    15 June 2017

    Scotland Yard launched a criminal inquiry – and then prime minister Theresa May announced a public inquiry – following the Grenfell Tower fire, in which 72 people died. Police and prosecutors said last month that up to 20 companies and 57 individuals could face criminal charges over the fire.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Australia plus’

    Keir Starmer’s ban on social media for under-16s is “Australia plus”, and expected to be “far tougher” than previously briefed, The Guardian reports. “They think it’s oil over”, says the Daily Star, after a Russian “shadow fleet” oil tanker was boarded by Royal Marines. The UK military is “primed to take further action” against sanctioned Russian vessels, says The Times. Rachel Reeves has been warned to stop treating pensioners as an “easy target”, says the Daily Express. Restore is “the new home for Neo-Nazis”, according to opposition politicians in the Daily Mail.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Barking mad

    A farmer was left “baffled” after his sheepdog was reported to the RSPCA by a member of the public for “worrying sheep”. Eighth-generation farmer Tom Trueman subsequently received animal welfare pamphlets from the charity titled “dog behaviour” and “how to look after your dog”, but the case was swiftly closed following a discussion with an inspector. “The whole thing is laughable, really,” said Trueman. “Usually, if you see sheep, a sheepdog and a farmer, you put two and two together.”

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Will Barker, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden.

    Image credits, from top: Kent Nishimura / AFP / Getty Images; Andy Rain / EPA / Bloomberg / Getty Images; Tetiana Dzhafarova / AFP / Getty Images; Lerexis / Getty Images.

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

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