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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Weighing up jury trials, a revised Ukraine peace plan, and an AI Olaf at Disneyland

     
    today’s politics story

    Jury trials to be scrapped except for serious crimes

    What happened
    Justice Secretary David Lammy is preparing legislation that would sharply reduce the use of juries in England and Wales, reserving them only for the gravest offences such as murder, rape and manslaughter. Leaked proposals indicate that judges would handle most other cases alone, including crimes carrying prison terms of up to five years. The move comes amid a record backlog approaching 80,000 cases, with officials warning that inaction risks a “wider collapse” of the criminal courts.

    Who said what
    In the leaked memo Lammy told ministers and senior officials that the UK had “no right” to jury trials and that sweeping reforms were required to reduce the crown court backlog. But the move “will be highly controversial”, said Catherine Baksi in The Times. Senior criminal justice figures have already described the plan as “the biggest assault on our system of liberty in 800 years”. Former director of public prosecutions Alison Saunders said scrapping jury trials for practical reasons was “quite worrying”, while Barbara Mills KC argued that judge-only hearings would not “significantly reduce” delays.

    Rather than “dispensing with the core principles of English justice, it would surely be wiser for the government to fund them”, said The Telegraph’s editorial board.

    What next?
    Legislation is expected next year. If enacted, the reforms would shift roughly three-quarters of trials to judge-only hearings and introduce new limits on defendants’ appeal rights. But a Ministry of Justice spokesperson said “no final decision has been taken by the government”.

     
     
    today’s international story

    Ukraine and US align on revised peace plan

    What happened
    Ukraine says it has reached a “common understanding” with the United States on an amended peace proposal intended to halt its war with Russia. The plan, built on a 28-point framework delivered to Kyiv last week, was refined during talks in Geneva over the weekend. Russia, however, has yet to receive the updated version and remains wary of any potential changes.

    Who said what
    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he hoped to meet with US President Donald Trump soon to address “sensitive points” in the plan. Trump confirmed on social media that he aimed to sit down with Zelenskyy and Putin “soon, but ONLY when the deal to end this war is FINAL”. Yet European leaders remain sceptical: Emmanuel Macron said he saw “no Russian will for a ceasefire” and Downing Street cautioned that there was “a long way to go”.

    Some of the issues that Russia and Ukraine are “still deeply at odds over” remain “unaddressed so far”, said Laura Gozzi on the BBC. Still to be resolved are complex matters including “security guarantees for Kyiv and control of several embattled regions in Ukraine’s east”.

    What next?
    As talks inch forward, the fighting continues. Heavy Russian air strikes on Monday and yesterday killed 14 people across Ukraine, while Moscow has reported intercepting hundreds of Ukrainian drones.

     
     
    Today’s justice story

    Court clears comedy writer Linehan of harassment

    What happened
    A judge has ruled that comedy writer Graham Linehan did not harass transgender activist Sophia Brooks, but was guilty of criminal damage for throwing their phone. The “Father Ted” creator was fined £500 and ordered to pay costs of £650 and a statutory surcharge of £200.

    Who said what
    The court heard that Linehan (pictured above) had called Brooks a “sissy porn-watching scumbag”, a “groomer” and a “disgusting incel”, said The Guardian. The complainant had responded “you’re the incel, you’re divorced”.

    District Judge Briony Clarke found that while Linehan’s comments were “deeply unpleasant, insulting and even unnecessary”, they were not “oppressive or unacceptable beyond merely unattractive, annoying or irritating”. She declined to issue a restraining order against Linehan and ruled that Brooks was not “as alarmed and distressed as they portrayed themself to be”. Speaking outside court, Linehan said he was “proud to have stood up to” Brooks and her supporters.

    What next?
    Sarah Vine KC, Linehan’s legal representative, told the court she expected him to mount an appeal against his conviction for criminal damage.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Disney has unveiled an AI-driven Olaf robot that brings the popular “Frozen” character to life. Developed in Zurich using reinforcement learning, the three-foot character can teach itself to interact with guests. Set to debut at Hong Kong Disneyland and Disneyland Paris early next year, the robot even allows visitors to detach Olaf’s nose and arms, echoing his on-screen antics. Disney says the project marks a playful step forward in blending advanced robotics with live storytelling.

     
     
    under the radar

    Mendik Tepe: the ancient site rewriting human history 

    The 12,000-year-old Göbekli Tepe site in Turkey is often called the “zero point of history”, according to The Archaeologist. But recent excavations at the nearby Mendik Tepe site suggest that it dates back even further and could offer “newer insights into humanity’s earliest steps towards settled life”.

    Mendik Tepe (Mendik Hill or Peak) is in a rural area of south-eastern Anatolia, about 130 miles east of the city of Şanlıurfa. It is in this region that the first permanent human settlements are thought to have been established in the early Neolithic period.

    Excavation at Mendik Tepe got underway last year, led by University of Liverpool archaeology professor Douglas Baird. Baird told The Archaeologist the site dates to when humans began to abandon “mobile foraging” for a more “sedentary lifestyle, possibly experimenting with plant cultivation”. The “site seems to capture the very beginnings of that transformation”, dating it to as much as 2,000 years before Göbekli Tepe.

    The excavations have already unearthed several buildings of various sizes, raising questions about their function and significance.

    While structures excavated at Göbekli Tepe have massive T-shaped stone pillars, decorated with carvings of people and animals, the pillars on the buildings at Mendik Tepe are smaller and not T-shaped. This suggests that the two communities “possessed a different ideology” or that Mendik Tepe “was constructed for different purposes”, said science site The Debrief.

    The whole Taş Tepeler region is “particularly exciting” for archaeologists, Baird told Turkey’s Anadolu new agency, because it allows for the study of “a network” of Neolithic settlements and their development “on a larger, regional scale”.

     
     
    on this day

    26 November 2006

    The last international rugby union match was played at Dublin’s Lansdowne Road Stadium before its demolition – a 61-17 victory for Ireland over the Pacific Islanders, a side made up of players from Tonga, Samoa and Fiji. This week Ireland lost 24-13 to South Africa in a Nations Series fixture at their redeveloped home, Aviva Stadium.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Moment of truth’

    The Budget is a “moment of truth” for Rachel Reeves and the “UK economy”, says The i Paper. The Financial Times expects the chancellor to deliver a “tax-raising Budget”. Reeves will announce “new taxes on fun”, says The Sun, including “work, pensions, houses, taxis, milkshakes” and “hotel stays”. She faces a “chorus of condemnation” for “pricing young people out of work”, says the Daily Mail.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Shear pride

    New York City has hosted the first ever fashion show using wool that came exclusively from gay sheep. Designer Michael Schmidt joined forces with LGBT+ dating app Grindr and Rainbow Wool, a German not-for-profit that rescues non-mating rams, to raise money and awareness of male sheep that often face slaughter because they prefer same-sex partners. Schmidt told The New York Times the 37-piece knitwear collection was an attempt to bring both the animal and human rights story to life.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Elliott Goat, Will Barker, Alex Kerr, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden.

    Image credits, from top: Justin Tallis / AFP / Getty Images; Chen Mengtong / China News Service / VCG / Getty Images; Dan Kitwood / Getty Images; Cebrail Caymaz / Anadolu / Getty Images.

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

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