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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Nationalist protests, drones over Romania, and fans salute Ricky Hatton

     
    today's politics story

    Starmer says flag ‘will never be surrendered to violence’

    What happened
    Keir Starmer has pledged that Britain will not yield the national flag to extremists after the largest nationalist rally in decades spiralled into violence in London. Police said between 110,000 and 150,000 people joined the “Unite the Kingdom” demonstration on Saturday, organised by far-right activist Tommy Robinson. Police reported that 26 officers had been injured and at least 25 arrests made for offences including violent disorder, assault and criminal damage.

    Who said what
    The prime minister said the Union flag “represents our diverse country” and while the right to protest was “core to our country’s values”, attacks on police and intimidation based on race or background were unacceptable, asserting that the national flag “will never be surrendered to violence”.

    “What I saw at Saturday’s rally was racism, pure and simple,” said Diane Abbott in The Guardian. The overwhelming majority of the crowds waving flags and carrying crosses “weren’t there for a fight, but they do have a cause”, said Trevor Phillips in The Times. Their message was simple: “stop immigration, defend free speech, revive Christianity”, a “compelling trinity for a country that feels angry and unmoored”. Labour’s “tough talk about ‘stopping the boats’ is falling on deaf ears”, said Andrew Grice in The Independent. “The government must do more to dispel the misconceptions about asylum-seekers put about by its less responsible opponents.”

    What next?
    Starmer is under pressure to do more to tackle extremism ahead of US President Donald Trump’s state visit this week, where questions about rising nationalist sentiment are expected to be raised. Police are continuing to track suspects linked to threats made against the prime minister during the protest.

     
     
    today's international story

    Romania condemns Russian drone incursion

    What happened
    Romania has accused Russia of breaching its airspace after tracking a drone during Moscow’s latest strikes on Ukraine. Its defence ministry said two F-16 jets monitoring the border had detected the drone 20km south-west of Chilia Veche on Saturday before it disappeared from the radar. The incident follows Poland’s claim last week that it shot down at least three Russian drones that crossed its frontier.

    Who said what
    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the Romanian breach “an obvious expansion of the war by Russia” and dismissed the idea that it was accidental.

    “The West must impose a no-fly zone on Ukraine now,” said Hamish de Bretton-Gordon in The Telegraph. Such a “demonstration of European military air power” may well be the catalyst to “get Putin around the negotiating table”, which “no amount of sanctions or hot air has hitherto achieved”.

    What next?
    The Czech Republic has dispatched combat helicopters to Poland in response to its recent airspace intrusion. Zelenskyy urged tighter sanctions while US President Donald Trump said he would consider tougher measures only if Nato states stopped buying Russian oil.

     
     
    Today's sport story

    Fans mourn boxing great Ricky Hatton

    What happened
    Football supporters staged an emotional ovation before the Manchester derby at the Etihad Stadium yesterday for former world champion boxer Ricky Hatton, who was found dead at his home at the age of 46. The body of the fighter and long-time Manchester City fan, celebrated for his skill in the ring and humour outside it, was discovered early yesterday morning at his house in Gee Cross in Greater Manchester. Police have not treated the death as suspicious.

    Who said what
    Supporters left flowers and scarves at Hatton’s gate. One message called him a “beautiful soul” and another hailed him as a “proper geezer”.

    Known by fans as “the Hitman”, Hatton’s “down-to-earth, laddish charm belied a life spent battling his demons”, said The Times in its obituary. Victory brought him “adoration, money and the demons of fame”, agreed Donald McRae in The Guardian. “By buying drinks for blurring strangers in heaving pubs as he matched them pint for pint, Hatton could feel himself slipping away.”

    What next?
    The boxing world is preparing further tributes to Hatton. Former female WBO world lightweight champion Rhiannon Dixon said the love and respect Hatton earned “will live on forever”.

     
     

    It's not all bad

    The Royal Mint has launched a commemorative 50p coin celebrating 90 years of Monopoly, the first board game to be honoured on UK currency. Featuring tokens, property cards and Mr Monopoly himself, the coin even reveals the game’s “M” symbol when tilted. Available in gold for £1,730 or cheaper versions from £15, the coin has been hailed by collectors as the “holy grail” for Monopoly fans.

     
     
    under the radar

    How clean-air efforts exacerbated global warming

    Scientists have struggled to explain the rapid acceleration of global warming over the past 15 years, with temperatures now regularly breaking records.

    It is “among the biggest questions in climate science today”, said atmospheric professors Laura Wilcox and Bjørn H. Samset on The Conversation. Causes suggested include a clean-up of sulphur emissions from global shipping as well as changes in cloud cover.

    But “one factor that has not been well quantified” is the “monumental efforts” by east Asian countries, particularly China, to combat air pollution. A recent study by Wilcox and Samset claims that east Asia’s “aerosol clean-up” is a “key reason” for the temperature surge as the polluted air “may have been masking the full effects of global warming”.

    “In the early 2000s, China had extremely poor air quality as a result of rapid industrialisation, leading to a public outcry in the run-up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics,” said New Scientist.

    The government began concerted – and highly effective – efforts to reduce air pollution. But “there is a sting in the tail of this environmental success story”. China’s dirty air had “inadvertently been cooling the planet”.

    Reducing air pollution didn’t actually cause additional warming – but it “removed an artificial cooling” effect, said Wilcox and Samset on The Conversation. Air pollution “shields the Earth from sunlight”. The aerosol particles also reflect sunlight into space or influence cloud formation so that they reflect more sunlight. Reducing air pollution means removing “this artificial sunshade”. Since greenhouse gas emissions (the main driver of global warming) have continued to increase, “the result is that the Earth’s surface is warming faster than ever before”.

     
     
    on this day

    15 September 1928

    Scottish bacteriologist Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin while sorting through petri dishes containing colonies of the bacteria staphylococcus. More than 100 new antibiotics have been discovered since 1928 and it’s estimated that upwards of 500 million lives have been saved because of that.

     
     
    Today's newspapers

    ‘RIP, champ’

    The Sun leads on the death of former world champion boxer Ricky Hatton. “He was a man of the people”, says Barry McGuigan in the Daily Star and the Daily Express says he was a “friend, mentor” and “warrior”. Some of the Labour MPs who rebelled over benefit cuts during the summer are planning to back a leadership bid by the Mayor of Manchester Andy Burnham, reports The Telegraph. Keir Starmer is "bruised" and facing a "growing threat of a leadership challenge”, says The Times. Meanwhile, the government is considering a plan to use prisoners to help build warships, says The i Paper.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Matrimonial mismatch

    Four years on from crashing a wedding in South Ayrshire, a mystery figure has been identified from photos with the help of internet sleuths. A man, dressed in a suit and with a slight look of bewilderment on his face, had inadvertently turned up at the wrong venue while running late for a different wedding, said the BBC. Having been accidentally given the wrong address by his partner – the only person he would know at the original wedding – Andrew Hillhouse has now become friends with the bride whose wedding he crashed. “You can’t walk out of a wedding in progress so I thought I’d better double down,” he told the BBC.

     
     

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

    Image credits, from top: Ben Montgomery / Getty Images; Clement Mahoudeau / AFP / Getty Images; Oli Scarff / AFP / Getty Images; Illustration by Marian Femenias-Moratinos / Getty Images.

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

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