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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Dorries defects, Armani dies, and how scientists are speeding up evolution

     
    today's politics story

    Dorries defects to Reform

    What happened
    Former cabinet minister Nadine Dorries has announced she is leaving the Conservatives to join Reform UK on the eve of the party's annual conference in Birmingham. Dorries said she had endured "12 agonising months" before concluding her values were now better reflected in Reform. She becomes the latest high-profile Tory figure to switch allegiance, following Jake Berry, David Jones and Andrea Jenkyns. The move comes as Reform's membership and poll ratings surge, with the party now claiming nearly a quarter of a million members and a steady lead in opinion surveys.

    Who said what
    "The Tory Party is dead. Its members now need to think the unthinkable and look to the future," Dorries told the Daily Mail. 

    But her defection "might not be the boon Nigel Farage wants", said Jon Craig on Sky News. By the time she quit as a Conservative MP in 2023 she was "already an absentee MP". She hadn't spoken in the Commons for more than a year and had only voted six times in 12 months. A Liberal Democrat source told the BBC: "We don't know who to feel more sorry for, Kemi Badenoch or Nigel Farage."

    What next? 
    Dorries will appear at Reform's conference where Farage is set to outline strategy for the next election. With donations pouring in from former Tory donors, speculation is mounting that her defection may be a prelude to further Conservative departures.

     
     
    today's international story

    Trump urges Europe to cut Russian oil

    What happened
    Donald Trump told European leaders they must halt Russian oil imports if they want to help end the war in Ukraine. Speaking during a call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the "Coalition of the Willing", Trump stressed Europe's energy payments were funding Moscow's war effort.

    Who said what
    According to a White House official, Trump noted that Europe had sent €1.1 billion to Moscow in fuel payments last year alone. 

    Almost three weeks after his high-stakes Alaskan summit with Vladimir Putin, Trump is "growing increasingly frustrated with the lack of progress on peace", said Alayna Treene and Joseph Ataman on CNN. The US president is now considering how involved he should be personally in brokering a meeting between Kremlin and Ukrainian leaders, administration officials told the broadcaster.

    What next?
    Following the call, Emmanuel Macron revealed that 26 nations had pledged troops for a possible peacekeeping force, while insisting Ukraine required an "American safety net". However, while Trump has vowed "severe consequences" for Russia if talks stall, he remains cautious about committing to direct US involvement. 

     
     
    Today's fashion story

    Designer Giorgio Armani dies at 91

    What happened
    Visionary Italian fashion designer Giorgio Armani, the founder of the world's largest private luxury brand, has died aged 91.

    Armani had been absent from his last three shows in June and July due to illness, but had been expected "to attend the brand's 50th anniversary celebrations later this month", said The Guardian. He died at home yesterday, surrounded by his family.

    Who said what
    "Indefatigable to the end, he worked until his final days, dedicating himself to the company, the collections, and the many ongoing and future projects," his fashion house said in a statement.

    Perhaps more than any other designer, Armani understood that "fashion was not only about clothes but lifestyle", said the Financial Times, "reshaping the fashion industry in the process".

    What next?
    A funeral chamber will be set up in Milan tomorrow and Sunday, which will be followed by a private ceremony at a later date.

     
     

    It's not all bad

    Seoul's Severance Hospital has become the first in South Korea to trial a four-day working week, aiming to improve staff wellbeing and efficiency. Introduced in 2023, the program reduces salaries by 10% but has cut turnover and sick leave, according to a union report. Nurses reported better health, greater focus, and improved patient care. The initiative reflects a broader shift in South Korea, where long working hours remain the norm but flexible arrangements are slowly spreading.

     
     
    under the radar

    Scientists are speeding up evolution

    The process of evolution usually takes thousands, millions or even billions of years. But researchers have found a way to condense it into a matter of minutes using a method called 'directed evolution,' which allows proteins to rapidly advance. It may be used for a variety of treatments and medical advancements in the future.

    Directed evolution is the "process of rapidly evolving proteins, introducing beneficial mutations and selecting advantageous variants," said Popular Mechanics. The "hyper-evolved proteins can be used in a wide variety of potential cancer and neurodegenerative therapies." While this process has been explored for years, scientists from Scripps Research Institute recently created a system called T7-ORACLE that can speed up evolution by an unprecedented 100,000 years and introduce mutations in minutes, according to a study published in the journal Science.

    Since directed evolution "can force these molecules to evolve in the lab within a much-shortened time scale," there are many promising applications for the technology, said The Scientist. It could be an "important tool for developing new medicines," as well as "give scientists a better understanding of how antibiotic resistance builds up over time," said Popular Mechanics. Protein evolution can also be used to switch diseases off, as well as for diagnostic purposes. 

    And the applications are not merely medical; the technology could "lead to enzymes with helpful abilities such as breaking down the plastic in soda bottles that would otherwise persist in the environment," said Caltech Magazine. "What matters is that we can now evolve virtually any protein, like cancer drug targets and therapeutic enzymes, in days instead of months," said Christian Diercks, a co-senior author of the study.

     
     
    on this day

    5 September 1666

    Firebreaks finally brought the Great Fire of London under control, leaving 13,200 houses destroyed and eight dead. A new map released last month showed the modern landmarks that would perish had the fire happened today and included the Walkie-Talkie, Bank Station, and The Ned.

     
     
    Today's newspapers

    'Controversial trip'

    Labour MPs are urging Keir Starmer not to meet the Israeli President Isaac Herzog during his planned trip to London next week, says The Guardian. The visit is "controversially timed", adds the broadsheet. Meanwhile it's "judgement day" for the deputy prime minister, says The i Paper, reporting that Keir Starmer is "prepared to sack" Angela Rayner if his ethics adviser's findings go against her in his investigation, which could report today. The deputy PM is at a "crisis point", says the Daily Mirror. 

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Pour policy

    A Manchester nightclub owner has said he will allow punters to bring in their own alcohol as a novel way of responding to the difficult financial climate in the hospitality sector. XLR in Withington's owner Chris Hindle said he hoped his approach would help "get people back into clubs again" and alleviate the current "hospitality crisis". The club recommends that guests do not bring any more than eight cans or one bottle of spirits, which would need to be decanted from glass into other bottles.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Jamie Timson, Sorcha Bradley, Ross Couzens, and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Serg Myshkovsky.

    Image credits, from top: Leon Neal / Getty Images; Al Drago / Bloomberg via Getty Images; Stephane Cardinale - Corbis / Corbis via Getty Images; Illustration by Serg Myshkovsky / Getty Images.

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

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