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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Starmer mulls exit, US-Iran threats, and Britain braces for record temperatures

     
    today’s politics story

    Starmer poised to outline exit timetable

    What happened
    Keir Starmer is today expected to announce an arrangement that will see him step down as prime minister amid the mounting pressure from senior Labour figures following Andy Burnham’s emphatic victory in the Makerfield by-election.

    Ministers believe that Starmer will signal his intention to leave office in the autumn, allowing time for a managed transition of power. Starmer reportedly spent the weekend at Chequers finalising his plans after receiving warnings from cabinet colleagues that his position had become untenable.

    Who said what
    As Starmer prepares to leave, the “vital lesson” for Burnham is that “first impressions are everything”, said Polly Toynbee in The Guardian. He needs “some immediate and memorable cost of living policies to avoid his predecessor’s fate”. And yet the “trillion-dollar question” for Burnham is “where will he find the money”, said Gordon Rayner in The Telegraph. “With soaring debt, a pensions time bomb, the benefits juggernaut and anaemic growth, finding a way of improving lives is a tough task.”

    For all his success in winning Makerfield, “relatively little is known about his agenda on any significant issue”, said Steven Swinford in The Times, so although Burnham’s succession may now be inevitable, “what comes next is anything but”.

    What next?
    Burnham is due to be at Westminster today as Makerfield’s new MP. He and Starmer are “working towards a handover in September”, said David Maddox in The Independent, but uncertainty remains over whether other rivals such as Wes Streeting might try to force a leadership contest.

     
     
    today’s international story

    Trump and Iran exchange threats as peace talks begin

    What happened
    The US and Iran traded fresh warnings yesterday as their negotiators met in Switzerland for the first direct talks since signing a preliminary agreement aimed at ending their recent conflict.

    Donald Trump told Tehran that it could face renewed military action if it failed to rein in Hezbollah following a surge in violence between the Lebanese group and Israeli forces despite last week’s accord.

    Who said what
    Iran “must immediately stop their highly paid PROXIES in Lebanon from causing trouble”, wrote Trump on Truth Social. Iranian negotiator Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf dismissed the warning, saying: “No matter how much they talk, it is we who take action.”

    Roughly 100 days after the war began, “sceptics are expressing bafflement over what exactly has transformed”, said Neil MacFarquhar in The New York Times. Overall, the memorandum of understanding that the two countries signed is “widely seen as encompassing minimal concrete change”.

    What next?
    Negotiators will continue discussions on a permanent settlement, with Iran’s nuclear programme expected to be a central issue. US Vice-President JD Vance said Trump wanted negotiators to “turn over a new leaf”.

     
     
    Today’s weather story

    UK braces for potential record temperatures

    What happened
    Forecasters have issued amber extreme heat warnings for large parts of England and Wales, with temperatures expected to climb to as high as 38C this week and potentially surpass records for the month of June.

    The Met Office placed central and southern England, the Midlands and parts of Wales under warning from today, before extending alerts into Wednesday and Thursday to include parts of northern England and north Wales.

    Who said what
    The Met Office has said “adverse health effects are likely in the wider population”, including cases of sunburn, dehydration and heat exhaustion. The UK Health Security Agency said the hot weather was expected to increase the number of deaths among vulnerable groups.

    This year “has already been a milestone-setting year”, said Joe Palmer in The i Paper. Meanwhile, “much of Europe is also sweltering”, said Eliana Nunes in The Mirror, with temperatures forecast to hit 37C in Rome and 39C in Madrid today.

    What next?
    Meteorologists say there is increasing confidence that the UK’s current June record of 35.6C, set in Southampton in 1976, could be exceeded. There is also a one-in-four chance that temperatures could reach 40C. Emergency services are preparing for increased demand, while transport disruption, power outages and pressure on health services are all possible.

    Conditions are expected to become more unsettled later in the week, with showers and thunderstorms forecast in some areas from Thursday and Friday.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    British farmers have found a hi-tech ally in the war against crop-devouring slugs. New computer-generated “slug prediction maps”, developed through the aptly named Slimers project, are helping growers pinpoint where the pests are likely to strike. Early trials show that farmers can halve their use of slug pellets, cutting costs and reducing environmental impacts. Researchers are also developing slug-resistant wheat varieties, raising hopes of a future where one of farming’s most persistent pests can finally be outsmarted.

     
     
    under the radar

    Trying to lick Japan’s ‘ice cream cartel’

    Summer is “a boom time for ice cream makers”, said Agence France-Presse. But in Japan some of the country’s biggest firms are feeling the heat.

    Officials from the Japan Fair Trade Commission (JFTC) have raided six companies on suspicion of colluding to hike prices in a cartel. Staff are believed to have “sent emails or met up for years to co-ordinate the timing and size” of the increases, said an anonymous source, violating anti-monopoly laws.

    The anti-trust watchdog searched the head offices of Meiji, Morinaga Milk Industry, Lotte, Ezaki Glico, Morinaga & Co and Akagi Nyugyo, company officials have confirmed. Sources say the six firms are “suspected of raising the suggested retail prices of ice cream” in increments of 10 yen, according to The Japan Times. The aim seems to be “securing profits for each company”.

    The case “threatens to undermine the reputations” of some of Japan’s largest food companies, said The New York Times. The ice cream industry has “boomed in recent years”. Last year it was valued at more than $4 billion, up 3% from 2024.

    But rising prices have “stoked public anger” in the nation, which is battling inflation for “the first time in decades”, fuelled by higher energy costs from the war in the Middle East.

    The JFTC will analyse seized materials and interview individuals to investigate the suspected violation of anti-monopoly laws. But if the commission “concludes that there was a cartel”, said AFP, the anti-trust watchdog will “order the firms to improve their business practices and pay a fine”.

     
     
    on this day

    22 June 1981

    John McEnroe issued his famous “You cannot be serious” rant in his first-round win over Tom Gullikson at Wimbledon. This month McEnroe said he would have hoped to have won “three or four against these top guys, like the Federers, Nadals and Djokovic” out of every 10 matches if he had played them in his prime.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘On the brink’

    “Game over”, says The Mirror, as Keir Starmer weighs up his political future. Andy Burnham “plans to be in No 10 by September”, says The Telegraph. Donald Trump says Starmer “will resign”, says The Independent. “Don and dusted”, says The Sun. “Brace yourself for more ‘reckless tax and spend’”, says the Daily Express. “Now rip up tax pledges, Labour left tell Burnham”, reports the Daily Mail.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Not the Queen’s English

    French tennis player Corentin Moutet lost “almost his entire Queen’s prize money” after swearing seven times in a live court-side BBC interview. The world No.36 was fined £30,325 – having earned £32,800 for reaching the second round of the ATP tournament – but is appealing the decision. Despite the interviewer apologising after the first and fourth expletives, Moutet swore three more times, leading to the exchange being cut short. Writing on Instagram afterwards, Moutet said he was “just joking” and hoped people “didn’t get offended”.

     
     

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

    Image credits, from top: Isabel Infantes – WPA Pool / Getty Images; Nathan Howard-Pool / Getty Images; Richard Baker / In Pictures / Getty Images; 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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