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  • The Week Evening Review
    Women-only carriages, the UK’s green mission, and Covid Inquiry bombshells

     
    TALKING POINT

    Women-only train carriages: full steam ahead?

    A petition calling for women-only train carriages in France after a woman recounted being sexually assaulted on a Paris commuter train has “provoked angry debate” in a country that views “sex-segregated spaces as an affront to its – at least theoretical – ideal of equality”, said The Times.

    In the UK, a similar petition calling on Transport for London and Sadiq Khan to make the same change has surpassed the 10,000 signatures needed to trigger a formal government response.

    ‘Failing half the city’
    I have had “negative experiences at the hands of men on public transport and so have a lot of my close girl mates”, said “Love Island” star Georgia Harrison in The Mirror. Women-only carriages “shouldn’t be looked at negatively, like women having to segregate themselves”. 

    With violence against women on public transport rising – more than 900 sexual offences were reported on Transport for London’s services in the first half of this year – it is undeniable that the capital’s transport system is “failing half the city”, said Emma Schubart in The Telegraph. But introducing women-only carriages “tells offenders nothing needs to change” and punishes victims instead of potential perpetrators.

    Entrenching ‘backward norms’
    Results from cities that have already adopted women-only carriages are “hardly reassuring”, said Schubart in The Telegraph. In Rio de Janeiro, for example, a study found harassment declined in the women-only spaces but not on the rest of the network. Worse, the change seemed to “entrench backwards norms”, with women who chose to ride in mixed cars seen as “sexually open or inviting”.

    If Sadiq Khan wants London to mirror what other cities have done, he should “copy the serious bits. That means visible staff, faster responses, better lighting and CCTV” and better reporting. “If the goal is to make women feel safe on the Tube, the way to do it is to make predators feel very unsafe.”

    Ultimately, said HuffPost’s Rachel Moss, if you aren’t addressing the “systems of oppression and inequality that fuel the warped beliefs of perpetrators”, you’re not fixing the issue; “you’re just pushing it further down the track”.

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    Five things we learned from the Covid Inquiry report

    The 760-page report from the UK Covid-19 Inquiry makes for “grim reading for the country’s former prime minister, and much of his top team”, said Andrew McDonald on Politico. “Boris Johnson, look away now.”

    ‘Inexcusable’ delays 
    Inaction and palpable Covid “scepticism” turned February 2020 into “a lost month”, said inquiry chair Heather Hallett. Covid cases were soaring but the Cabinet did not meet during the half-term break, and Johnson did not chair a single meeting of the Cobra emergency committee. Scientific models suggest that a nationwide lockdown on 16 March “would have halved the number of deaths in the first wave” but, by the time a lockdown was considered, a week later, it “was already too late”.

    Downing Street culture was ‘toxic and chaotic’
    Johnson “reinforced” a “toxic and chaotic” environment at the centre of government, in which the views of colleagues, “particularly women, often went ignored, to the detriment of good decision-making”, Hallett said. Dominic Cummings, Johnson’s special adviser at the time, “materially contributed” to a sexist workplace culture.

    Devolved nations ‘overly reliant’ on Westminster
    The devolved governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland “failed to engage with the threat” and were “overly reliant” on Westminster to lead the response, said the report. A “lack of trust” between Johnson and the nations’ First Ministers “coloured the approach to decision-making throughout the pandemic”. None of the national cabinets acted with “sufficient speed”.

    Partygate ‘undermined public confidence’
    Rule-breaking and “Partygate” events resulted in public outcry. Officials and ministers breaking lockdown rules, and that rule-breaking not being swiftly addressed, “undermined public confidence in decision-making and significantly increased the risk of people not complying with the rules designed to protect them,” said Hallett.

    Scientific advice ‘bamboozled’ politicians
    The inquiry heard that “many ministers lacked confidence in their ability to understand technical material”, said Jessica Murray in The Guardian, with Johnson in particular singled out for struggling with scientific concepts. Notes taken by then chief scientific adviser Patrick Vallance recorded Johnson as “bamboozled” and said watching him “get his head around the stats was awful”.

     
     

    Poll watch

    A third of parents in England (32%) did not attend any antenatal classes, according to the Institute for Public Policy Research. Of the 1,523 parents polled, 85% said they “learn as they go” when it comes to child-rearing, using resources such as the internet to get healthcare advice.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    $54.7m The winning bid at a New York auction for a Frida Kahlo self-portrait. “El Sueño” (“The Dream”) depicts the Mexican artist asleep in bed beneath a skeleton wrapped in sticks of dynamite. The painting’s sale broke the auction record for an artwork by a woman.

     
     
    TODAY'S BIG QUESTION

    Can the UK do more on climate change?

    Although the outcome of Cop30 remains unclear, Energy Secretary Ed Miliband has doubled down on Britain’s commitment to tackling global warming. But the actions behind the government’s words paint a more complicated picture.

    What did the commentators say?
    Miliband and Keir Starmer arrived in Brazil “armed with undeniable climate credentials”, said Politico’s Charlie Cooper. His government remains committed to achieving net zero by 2050, with a target of clean power meeting 95% of Britain’s energy demand by 2030, as well as the promise of hundreds of thousands of new green energy jobs. But international aid, which supports the UK’s global climate objectives, has been slashed, and ministers are exploring watering down a pledge to ban new licences for oil and gas exploration in the North Sea.

    These contrasting policy positions “neatly capture the Starmer approach to climate action”, said Cooper. “If it suits the domestic economic and political agenda, great. If not, then there is no guarantee of No. 10 and Treasury support.”

    “The UK is an example of how not to do energy and climate policy,” said Dieter Helm, a professor of economic policy at the University of Oxford, in The Times. While territorial carbon emissions have been coming down, this “reflects more the transformation of the British economy, and not in a good way”. Britain is deindustrialising, and much of its green energy industry relies on imports from China, which burns half the world’s coal.

    What next?
    Reform UK has launched an all-out war on what its deputy leader, Richard Tice, has called “net stupid zero”, pledging to rip up green energy contracts if it wins power. The “challenge” for Miliband and his allies “will be to show that his mission is a net benefit, not a net cost”, said The Spectator’s James Heale.

    Miliband must “stop digging an ever-deeper energy policy hole”, said Helm in The Times. What we need is “honesty” that meaningful decarbonisation “really costs”.

     
     

    Good day ⚽

    … for Birmingham City FC, which has unveiled plans for a 62,000-capacity stadium. Featuring 12 chimney-like towers inspired by Birmingham’s industrial past, the new Powerhouse Stadium will be a “modern-day Colosseum” that puts us “on a trajectory towards greatness”, said club chair Tom Wagner.

     
     

    Bad day 🎄

    … for Christmas shopping, as visitors flock to Buckingham Palace’s Christmas Market – only to discover that it doesn’t exist. AI-generated images showing rows of festive stalls behind the palace gates are circulating on social media, forcing the Royal Collection Trust to clarify that “there will be no Christmas Market” at the royal residence.

     
     
    picture of the day

    Crowning glory

    Miss Mexico celebrates becoming the 74th Miss Universe at a ceremony in Bangkok, following a scandal-filled pageant season. Fatima Bosch claimed the crown weeks after  walking out of a public event after the contest’s director allegedly called her a “dumbhead”. 

    Lillian Suwanrumpha / Getty

     
     
    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: dreamy Italian retreats

    Tuscany: Torrita di Siena
    An enchanting Liberty-style villa. Currently split into two flats, it can easily revert to being a whole house. 4 beds, 3 baths, kitchen, 2 receps, garden, parking. €540,000; Sotheby’s

    Lombardy: Piazza Nazario Sauro, Gargnano
    A generous first-floor flat on Lake Garda that requires complete renovation. The support of a specialist renovation company is available. 2 beds, 2 baths, kitchen, recep, cellar. €410,000; Sotheby’s

    Apulia: Ceglie Messapica
    Picturesque 17th-century trulli complex nestled among ancient olive groves in the Valle d’Itria. 3 beds, 2 baths, kitchen, 2 receps, swimming pool, garden, parking. €600,000; Sotheby’s

    Tuscany: Via di Montalbano
    An impressive villa with far-reaching views, located between Florence and Pisa. 7 beds, 6 baths, kitchen, 2 receps, approx. 8.4 acres of land, parking. €950,000; Savills

    Umbria: Monteleone d’Orvieto
    Charming farmhouse set in mature gardens with an olive grove. 5 beds, 7 baths, kitchen/ breakfast room, open-plan living/dining room, annexe, swimming pool, garden. €1.14 million; Hamptons

    Pisa: Piazza San Martino
    An elegant, frescoed first-floor flat in an 18th-century noble residence, located in the historic heart of the city. 3 beds, 3 baths, kitchen, lift, self-contained 1-bed annexe, courtyard, garage. €845,000; Sotheby’s

    See more

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “I’m sick of people mansplaining how to be chancellor to me.”

    Rachel Reeves reflects on the trials of her job ahead of next week’s Budget. “I’ve got a target on me,” she told The Times, but “I’ve seen off a lot of those boys before and I’ll continue to do so”.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    Boris Johnson is finished – there can be no comeback
    Isabel Hardman in The i Paper
    The Covid-19 Inquiry report should “mark the point at which any ambitions” Boris Johnson “holds of a return to political life are shown up as being delusions”. The “Boris believers” seem “quieter these days” anyway, “muffled perhaps by their worries about the impact of the Boriswave” of immigration. The former PM “will not feel the level of accountability” many think “he should face for his failures”, but these two issues might now “be decoupled from his future prospects as a politician”.

    AI is teaching a university course. We need to stop it
    Ceci Browning in The Times
    “Robots are taking over universities!” That claim “might once have seemed preposterous”, writes Ceci Browning, but University of Staffordshire students are complaining about online lectures featuring “AI-created slides and an AI voiceover”. I was at university during the pandemic and witnessed the “slide away” from teaching in person, but this is “a new low.” If courses aren’t being taught by humans, students might as well watch “three years’ worth of TikTok videos”, or just not go “at all”.

    It’s Time to Trust the Global South
    Sophie Eisentraut on Foreign Policy
    The US is “leaving an empty chair at this weekend’s G-20 summit”, writes the Munich Security Conference’s Sophie Eisentraut. European leaders say they want “more friends” in the Global South but, with “few concrete initiatives”, they still seem sceptical “about the merits of deeper collaboration”. They should “take a more nuanced look” at how “governments in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East” have promoted “peace and security, economic stability, global health, climate protection, and human rights”.

     
     
    word of the day

    Transform

    The name of a major UK prostate cancer screening trial launching today. GPs are sending out the first letters inviting eligible men to join the £42 million study, funded by Prostate Cancer UK. Health Secretary Wes Streeting hailed the Transform project as a “game changer” that could save thousands of lives.

     
     

     Evening Review was written and edited by Irenie Forshaw, Rebecca Messina, Abby Wilson, Will Barker, Elliott Goat, Chas Newkey-Burden, Helen Brown, Adrienne Wyper, Natalie Holmes and Kari Wilkin.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; Xander Heinl / Photothek / Getty Images; Pablo Porciuncula / AFP / Getty Images; Lillian Suwanrumpha / Getty


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

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