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  • The Week Evening Review
    The Dragon-Bear alliance, a housebuyer’s market, and Count Binface

     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Is the Russia-China relationship a threat to Nato?

    Documents have emerged from “clandestine” meetings in 2023 between Russian and Chinese leaders about neutralising the threat of Elon Musk’s Starlink in Ukraine, while revealing the growing military cooperation between the two nations.

    The joint investigation by The Insider, Der Spiegel and Le Monde exposes China’s “professed neutrality” in Ukraine “as a fiction”, and poses questions about the nature and targets of the Dragon-Bear alliance.

    What did the commentators say?
    The China-Russia “no limits” alliance is “one of the world’s most consequential relationships”, said Brookings. The partnership is “stronger than it ever has been in decades, certainly since the post-Cold War period”, said policy expert Patricia Kim.

    Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin have described each other as “best friends”, and they “share vital interests” but, economically, the alliance is highly uneven, said Ankur Shah, editor of the BBC’s Global China Unit. China is “Russia’s largest trading partner, while Russia makes up just 4% of China’s international trade”. 

    China is by far the dominant party, said The Economist. When Xi received visits, just days apart, from Donald Trump and Putin, both seeking economic stability, China appeared the singular “fulcrum of global geopolitics, dealing with America as an equal” while relegating Russia to a “junior partner”.

    But Trump’s war in Iran has given a “powerful impetus to strengthening Russo-Chinese ties”, said Leonid Ragozin on Al Jazeera. China has become “reliant” on Russian oil, and in turn has funded the Russian war effort in Ukraine.

    But there are “important imbalances and points of friction”, said Christopher Walker in a Center for European Policy Analysis report. The two nations lack the “dense institutional connective tissue” that could match Nato; they act in “parallel play” rather than with lasting cohesion.

    What next?
    After the summit in Ankara, Nato unveiled defence initiatives in response to “security challenges posed by Russia and China”, said the South China Morning Post. These included a motion on raw materials and investment of $40 billion in the next five years into expanding modern warfare.

    China and Russia working together, along with North Korea, “should concern us all”, said Mark Rutte, Nato’s Secretary General. They “do not have our best interests in mind”. That’s we need a “transatlantic defence industrial revolution”.

     
     
    The Explainer

    Why your home may not be selling

    The time it takes for a property to sell has hit a record high. A mix of “buyer financial uncertainty and a shortage of conveyancing firms”, means it now takes “longer than at any time in at least a decade” to sell a property, said The Times. Figures from property data firm TwentyCi show that it takes an average of 211 days – or 6.9 months – between a property being listed for sale and new owners moving in.

    Meanwhile, almost half of homes listed on property portals over the past three years have failed to sell, according to Zoopla. Here are five of the most common reasons:

    Unrealistic pricing
    The “biggest sticking point” is pricing, said Zoopla. “Overambitious and unrealistic” values are the “biggest reason homes remain unsold”.
    In many of these cases, the appropriate course of action is to lower the asking price, as this is often “the only way to attract a buyer”.

    Reduced demand
    Sellers are also suffering from a lack of demand, amid concerns about geopolitical tensions, while “political uncertainty is emerging as another headwind for the market”, said the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors. High mortgage rates are also having an impact on buyer budgets, and leading to hesitation.

    Competition
    Data from property website Rightmove shows the number of homes for sale is at its highest level since 2015. This makes it a “buyers’ market”, said MoneyWeek, so sellers need to be “more flexible on pricing to attract interest amid high levels of competition”.

    Poor first impressions
    Lower levels of demand and high supply make it more important that your home is accurately priced and attractive to sellers. Think about “first impressions”, said the HomeOwners Alliance, such as the state of your garden and whether your wheelie bins are on show. Buyers may struggle to look beyond the wear and tear inside your house, so you may need “enhancements or staging to help it sell”.

    Wrong time
    Many sellers don’t realise how much “seasonality matters”, said Lynch Brother Homes. January, February and March offer the “quickest average time to sell”, while late November to Christmas is typically the “deadest period”.

     
     

    Poll watch

    Nearly three-quarters (73%) of Brits think Nigel Farage is “sleazy” – including four in 10 Reform UK voters. A YouGov survey of 2,083 adults found that 69% think his party is sleazy (up 18 points since 2024), more than either the current Labour government or the Conservatives since the last election (with sleaze ratings of 57% and 61% respectively).

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    27%: The fall in knife murders across the UK in two years. Knife crime dropped overall by 10% in the 2025 to 2026 period, in what the Home Office is calling the “best year on record” for its “county lines” initiative, launched to tackle the flow of drugs from cities into small towns. 

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    Count Binface: Nigel Farage’s biggest nemesis since Brexit

    Count Binface had been “looking forward to a relaxing journey back to his home planet of Sigma IX”, said The Guardian. Then Nigel Farage “dropped the “political bombshell” of his resignation as MP for Clacton-on-Sea.

    Britain’s “hottest new political property” said he was “left with no choice but to perform a swift intergalactic handbrake turn”, and enter the by-election race. With the main parties all vowing to boycott the contest, the 5,900-year-old leader of the Recyclons could well be Farage’s only challenger.

    ‘Unity candidate’
    Count Binface is the alter ego of Jon Harvey, a 46-year-old comedy writer whose credits include “The Thick of It” and “Have I Got News for You”. He first entered politics in 2017 as Lord Buckethead but, following a copyright claim over the character, re-emerged in 2019 as Count Binface.

    Since then, he’s taken on prominent politicians at the ballot box, running against Boris Johnson, Rishi Sunak, Sadiq Khan and Andy Burnham. But the “satirical figure” is best known for his “rubbish-can-shaped helmet” and “absurd campaign promises”, said Al Jazeera.

    His manifestos have included pledges to cut the cost of the 99 ice cream with a Flake to 99p, and to rename London Bridge “Phoebe Waller-Bridge”. He has also promised to “nationalise Adele” and “conscript anyone who plays loud music without headphones on public transport”. For the Clacton election, Binface has pledged to “build at least one affordable house”. But he said his main appeal is that he’s “not Nigel Farage”.

    ‘Electoral shock’
    Harvey has been “inundated” with emails and messages from Binface activists “offering to knock on doors and deliver leaflets on his behalf”, said The Guardian. His campaign “could yet emerge as an electoral shock” comparable to when Hartlepool United’s mascot, H’Angus the Monkey, was elected mayor of the northern town.

    Betting odds platform Oddschecker said odds on the parody candidate winning had been slashed from 5/1 to 7/2. “It’s earliest days yet and there is a long old road to go,” said the Count. “But if in the unlikely event that the humans of Clacton prefer me to old Nige, then I will do my very best to represent them.”

     
     

    Good day🎤

    … for Britain’s live music, after blockbuster concerts by the likes of Oasis and Coldplay helped attract record crowds. An estimated 24.7 million “music tourists” attended UK concerts and festivals last year, according to industry body UK Music, up 4.8% on 2024, representing a whopping £11.2 billion of spending across the economy.

     
     

    Bad day🛬

    … for France’s skies, after air traffic controllers were slammed by a scathing inquiry. The 4,000 aiguilleurs du ciel (signalmen of the sky) have long battled claims of being “strike-happy, pampered, overpaid and work-shy”, said The Times. Now, the Senate and state spending watchdog say their strike action helped cause Europe’s worst flight delays.

     
     
    picture of the day

    Fanning flames

    A replica of a mosque on top of pallets, which was due to be lit for an “Eleventh Night” bonfire in Moygashel, Co Tyrone, tomorrow as part of the Protestant Orange Order’s 12 July loyalist celebrations. The widely condemned display was burned last night as police prepared to remove it.

    Charles McQuillan / Getty Images

     
     
    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: fine Welsh country houses

    Ceredigion: Rhydlewis, Llandysul
    A delightful rustic house within easy reach of the sandy beaches of Cardigan Bay. Set in mature gardens of approx. 1.5 acres, the property boasts a lake and a beautifully restored lakeside cabin as well as two Dutch barns. 3 beds, 2 baths, kitchen, recep, garden, parking. £585,000; Savills.

    Powys: Penybont Hall, Llandrindod Wells
    This grand Grade II manor house dates back to 1755 and is set in more than 21 acres. 8 beds, 2 baths, kitchen, 3 receps, 2-bed annexe, garden, outbuilding, parking. £950,000; Strutt & Parker.

    Powys: Plas Trefaldwyn, Montgomery
    Fine Georgian house set in approx. 3.6 acres of mature gardens. 8 beds, 6 baths, kitchen, 5 receps, coach house, garden, parking. £850,000; Tulloch & Carter.

    Flintshire: Coed Y Cra Ucha Farm, Northop
    A delightful Grade II* farmhouse with far-reaching views of the surrounding countryside. 3 suites, kitchen/breakfast room, 2 self-contained flats (with a total of 3 beds), recep, study, garden, outbuildings, parking. £975,000; Strutt & Parker.

    See more

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “They started shooting and we decided it’s time to slap them back hard.”

    An unnamed senior US official warns that the US is preparing for more confrontation with Iran, after Donald Trump launched extensive strikes on Wednesday and declared the ceasefire “over”. Regional mediators are reportedly scrambling to de-escalate tensions.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    This think tank exposed fat cats and obscenely high pay. Guess what has happened to it?
    Polly Toynbee in The Guardian
    The announcement of the “imminent closure” of the High Pay Centre “feels like the death of an idea”, writes Polly Toynbee. The think tank was behind the annual “fat cat day” – “this year it calculated that it took the median FTSE 100 CEO less than two-and-a-half days” to earn what a median full-time employee makes in a year. UK incomes are the “second most unequal among rich countries” and now “an organisation devoted to examining these very causes and distortions of obscenely high pay is gone”.

    Are you disabled and patronised? Welcome to my world
    Julie Burchill in The i Paper
    When I read that the NHS is to “reward people” who walk 26 miles a month, “I made a very disrespectful noise”, writes Julie Burchill. This “nanny-knows-best babyfication of the adult population” is “inappropriate” when recent headlines have exposed basic shortcomings in the health service. And “what about my lame brethren, who simply cannot walk for half an hour a day?” At least this “pets-win-prizes plan” is showing the able-bodied “how it feels to be patronised the way we cripples are”.

    When did travelling on buses become so intolerable?
    Patrick West on The Spectator
    Nowhere is the breakdown of the social contract “more evident than in the normalisation of incivility on public transport”, writes Patrick West. “Selfish and inconsiderate behaviour” from passengers, as well as the “customary rudeness” of drivers – which “perhaps reflects how fed up they are” – are driving many of us away from public transport. Like the “broken windows” theory of New York City in the 1990s, this “intolerable experience” is a “deceptively simple indication that something is seriously amiss”.

     
     
    word of the day

    Housefishing

    The practice of using AI to enhance or edit pictures of a property in a listing, to the point where it becomes misleading. Prospective buyers say AI-generated or edited listings are rapidly on the rise, with almost all agents and photographers now admitting to using AI in some capacity.

     
     

     Evening Review was written and edited by Harriet Marsden, Rebecca Messina, Jamie Timson, Irenie Forshaw, Chas Newkey-Burden, Will Barker, Marc Shoffman, Adrienne Wyper and Steph Jones, with illustrations by Stephen P. Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images, Benjamin Cremel / AFP / Getty Images; Charles McQuillan / Getty Images; Savills; Strutt & Parker; Tulloch & Carter; Strutt & Parker
    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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