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  • The Week Evening Review
    Populist gambles, Duterte on trial, and Nasa’s Swift rescue mission

     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Will Le Pen and Farage win populist gamble?

    “Let the people decide.” That was the message from two of the world’s most famous populists on Tuesday, when Nigel Farage and Marine Le Pen “put the same pitch” to voters, said Melissa Bell on CNN.

    Le Pen, parliamentary leader of France’s far-right National Rally party, was convicted of embezzlement this week but said she will run for her country’s presidency in 2027. And Reform UK leader Farage resigned as MP for Clacton to force a by-election, arguing that his constituents should be the “ultimate judge” of questions over his finances.

    What did the commentators say?
    The “parallels” are “impossible to ignore”, said University of Edinburgh history professor Emile Chabal on The Conversation. Le Pen and Farage are “both reading” from the “well-thumbed playbook” of “the people vs the courts” that is so “familiar to observers of populist politics in the United States, Hungary or Turkey”.

    The “politics of unfounded grievance is in full swing and taking precedence over parties and policy”, said Lionel Laurent on Bloomberg. But next year’s French election will be the fourth time that Le Pen has run for president, after a “series of failures and policy flip-flops”. And for Farage, there are “indications of voter fatigue” even in “Reform-friendly” Clacton.

    “Mr Brexit” and “Madame Frexit” have “much in common”, said Henry Samuel and James Crisp in The Telegraph. But Le Pen “allowed the process to reach a verdict first”; Farage “should have done the same” before triggering the by-election. The “risk for Farage”, said Annabel Denham in The Telegraph, “is that the more he is seen to be playing politics, the more likely” voters are to “conclude he is part of the problem, rather than the solution”.

    What next?
    Reform has suggested holding the by-election on 6 August, although it is more likely to be a week later. “They call it a stunt,” Farage told the BBC. “It’s not a stunt, because real voters will have a vote for an MP.”

    Meanwhile, Le Pen said she would “pursue all legal avenues” to defend her innocence and appeal to France’s top civil court, the Court of Cassation. That verdict would probably come early next year.

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    Sara Duterte: why the Philippines’ VP is on trial

    The vice president of the Philippines has appeared in court to face impeachment proceedings in a trial that has brought long-standing political tensions to a head. Sara Duterte (pictured above) denies charges including corruption, bribery and threats against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, in what she claims is a “clear case of political harassment”. The trial, which began on Monday, is the culmination of a fallout between the country’s most powerful political dynasties.

    Who are the Duterte and Marcos families?
    The vice president is the daughter of Rodrigo Duterte, who ruled the Philippines with an iron fist from 2016 to 2022. In the 2022 election, she became the running mate of presidential candidate Marcos Jr, son of the dictator who ruled for 20 years before being deposed in 1986. The two younger scions seemed “unstoppable” and won a landslide, said the BBC. In the end, however, “there was not enough power to share between them”.

    What happened?
    Cracks appeared when Marcos’ allies in the Senate began investigating Duterte for alleged misuse of government funds. The pair also disagreed on their approach to Beijing. Marcos ordered the navy to “stand up to China” in the South China Sea, said Al Jazeera, in “sharp contrast” to pro-China Duterte.

    In October 2024, Duterte told reporters that their relationship had become so “toxic” that she had the urge to “chop off his head”. In November, Duterte said during a livestream that she had told someone, “If I get killed, go kill BBM” (Marcos, commonly referred to as Bongbong). His supporters filed an impeachment complaint based on the livestream, and the alleged misuse of funds. This trial shifts the “power struggle” to “a new battleground”, said the BBC, and it will “play out on livestreams for the entire nation”.

    What is the significance of the trial?
    Prosecutors view the case as “a test of accountability ‌and public trust”, said Reuters, while the defence denounces it as a “politically driven bid” to unseat an elected official. The outcome could “shape the 2028 presidential race”, in which Duterte says she intends to run. Should Duterte be convicted and barred from standing, there are “fears of widespread protests” and political turmoil that would “impact the Philippines’ economic growth”.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “I recorded an incredible song today. The trouble is, it’s so long, I don’t think anybody will ever play it.”

    Bonnie Tyler’s initial verdict on her 1983 hit “Total Eclipse of the Heart”, in a letter to a friend after recording composer Jim Steinman’s original seven-minute version. The Welsh singer’s family today announced her death at the age of 75, after two months in intensive care.

     
     

    Poll watch

    Fewer than a third (32%) of American Jews have a positive view of Benjamin Netanyahu. An Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey of 1,022 Jewish adults found that 59% had a negative opinion of the Israeli prime minister. Four in ten said the US was “too supportive” of Israel.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    Nasa’s mission to save a sinking space telescope

    Nasa has launched a spacecraft to catch a falling telescope, in an unprecedented rescue attempt. Launched in 2004, the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory telescope detects some of the most powerful explosions in the universe, and the mission has been repeatedly extended. But it’s now sinking faster than expected due to recent solar storms and is at risk of crashing back to Earth in the coming months unless something is done to change its orbit.

    ‘Especially tricky’ task
    Nasa has enlisted the help of Arizona-based Katalyst Space Technologies, which has engineered a “custom capture mechanism” that will use three guided robotic arms “to latch onto” the Swift telescope, which contains no engines and was not built with docking hardware, said Astronomy. 

    Katalyst’s Link spacecraft successfully launched last week and is now undergoing a series of checks. The car-sized telescope will then be surveyed to determine the best point of contact, before being captured and lifted back into its correct altitude. The capture will be “especially tricky because Swift was never meant to be touched again once it reached orbit”. 

    ‘A spacecraft worth saving’
    At a cost of $30 million, the mission to save “a nearly 22-year-old space telescope” that is “well past its prime” might seem, “on paper” at least, to be poor value for money, said Space. But Swift “is still worth it, according to Nasa”.

    “We didn’t want to set the precedent that anything that comes out of orbit has to be boosted, because it is part of our space ecosystem to have things deorbit frequently,” Nasa’s astrophysics division director Shawn Domagal-Goldman said in June. But Swift is “not just any spacecraft” and has a unique ability to “quickly pivot across the night sky to find things that go boom in the night”.

    “In short,” said BBC science correspondent Pallab Ghosh, “there is nothing like Swift, and Nasa deemed that it was a spacecraft worth saving.”

     
     

    Good day 👶

    … for Olivias, whose name has remained the top choice for girls born in England and Wales, for the tenth year in a row, according to data from the Office for National Statistics. The next most popular baby names were Lily and Amelia. Muhammad was No.1 on the boys’ list for 2025, followed by Noah and Leo.

     
     

    Bad day 💵

    … for Donald Trump, who has been ordered to pay $5 million plus $800,000 in interest to former journalist E. Jean Carroll, three years after a jury awarded her the settlement after finding him liable for sexual abuse and defamation. Judge Lewis A. Kaplan dismissed a last-ditch appeal by the president’s legal team, saying Trump had been “stalling this case for years”.

     
     
    PICTURE OF THE DAY

    Mass mourning

    A crowd flocks around the coffin of Iran’s former supreme leader Ali Khamenei in the Iraqi city of Karbala. Following a six-day funeral procession through holy Shia sites in Iran and Iraq, the slain ayatollah is being buried today in his hometown of Mashhad

    Stringer / Anadolu / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Chain Word

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

    Play here

     
     
    THE WEEK RECOMMENDS

    The best family-friendly water parks in the UK

    “A weekend spent at a water park might be the perfect family trip,” said Sophie Dickinson in The Telegraph. And “mercifully”, given the heat, the UK boasts plenty of options. Here are some favourites.

    Alton Towers Waterpark, Staffordshire
    Attractions including the Master Blaster coaster, Rush ’N’ Rampage waterslides, and the interactive Wacky Waterworks draw visitors from across the UK to this waterpark. Entry is not included with a standard ticket to the Alton Towers theme park, but “if you enjoy hurtling down flumes it’s well worth the additional cost”, said Adam England on Time Out.

    Alpamare, Scarborough, North Yorkshire
    Alpamare’s four major slides – “twisting Snow Storm, frightening Black Run, double-tube Olympic Run and thrilling Cresta Run” – will keep the whole family “entertained for hours”, said Dickinson in The Telegraph. And there’s a “breathtaking” infinity pool overlooking the bay if visitors need a break from the chaos.

    Coral Reef Waterworld, Bracknell, Berkshire
    Coral Reef Waterworld is within “splashing distance” of the English capital and boasts a “whopping” five slides of varying speed and scariness, said Katie Forge on Secret London. To top it all, there is a “humungous” pirate ship in the middle of the pool.

    Let’s Go Hydro, Belfast, Co Down
    If indoor slides and wave pools aren’t your thing, give this outdoor water park a try, said The i Paper. Located at the Knockbracken Reservoir in Carryduff, Let’s Go Hydro features “seven-foot-high slides, climbing walls and floating trampolines” among other attractions, as well as a “Puddle Park” for the smallest visitors.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    30,707: How many times motorists received penalty points for drug-driving last year, outnumbering drink-driving offences for the first time, according to a new analysis of DVLA data. Road safety charity IAM RoadSmart found that while drink-driving offences have fallen by 17% over the last three years, drug-driving rose by 28%.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    I was gaslighted by Virgin Media for years – this is how they ‘trapped’ customers like me
    James Moore in The Independent
    “About damn time,” writes James Moore. Virgin Media has been “hit with a £28 million Ofcom fine” after the watchdog found that the company used a “corporate dirty tricks” manual to “frustrate, infuriate” and “lock in customers”. The “tin hat brigade was right”: a commission scheme “effectively encouraged and financially rewarded call-centre agents” for such tactics. This “record” fine doesn’t go “far enough” to punish the “everyday slapdash-ery much of corporate Britain thinks is an acceptable substitute for customer service”.

    Ruth Ellis was a murderer. She doesn’t deserve a pardon
    Theodore Dalrymple in The Telegraph
    “In no murder could premeditation have been clearer” than in the case of the last woman executed in Britain, writes Theodore Dalrymple in The Telegraph. Ruth Ellis undoubtedly suffered abuse and exploitation, but there was no “question of self-defence or active coercion” when she shot her lover. The idea that her being “under some kind of Svengali-type influence of the man she killed” is “a grounds of excusing murder” is “dangerous” and “demeaning to women”.

    The Ankara summit exposes ugly truths about Nato
    Morning Star editorial board
    The sight of Nato leaders “abasing themselves before Donald Trump in Ankara” undermines “claims that the military spending splurge makes us more independent of Washington”, says the Morning Star. To “appease” Trump, heads of state flaunted multibillion-dollar arms deals, most of which “primarily benefit US arms companies” and “embed us still more deeply in a US-controlled war machine”. It’s “time to campaign for withdrawal from Nato, and the expulsion of US troops from our country”.

     
     
    word of the day

    Sinecure

    From the Latin for “without care”, a paid position requiring nominal work. MPs are constitutionally barred from formally resigning their seats and also from holding certain Crown sinecures, so accepting one is a way for an MP to quit. Nigel Farage has done so by becoming the Crown Steward and Bailiff of the Manor of Northstead – no longer a paid role but classed as an “office of profit”. 

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Rebecca Messina, Jamie Timson, Harriet Marsden, Chas Newkey-Burden, Elliott Goat, Will Barker, Irenie Forshaw, Adrienne Wyper, David Edwards and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations from Stephen P. Kelly.

    Image credits, from top: illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images; Noel Celis / Pool / AFP / Getty Images; Nasa; Stringer / Anadolu / Getty Images; Milky Way / Getty Images

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

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