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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Burnham’s possible return, France boards tanker, and ‘Sinners’ makes Oscars history

     
    today’s politics story

    Starmer allies move to block Burnham comeback

    What happened
    Senior figures aligned with Keir Starmer have reportedly begun efforts to prevent Andy Burnham from returning to the Commons after Andrew Gwynne’s resignation triggered a by-election in Greater Manchester. Members of Labour’s ruling national executive committee said the party’s selection process would be tightly controlled by Starmer supporters keen to head off any future leadership threat. 

    Who said what
    Gwynne said it had been “the honour of my life” to represent his community and acknowledged making mistakes, adding that his health had deteriorated following the fallout from leaked messages. 

    Gwynne’s departure “creates a route for Burnham” to make a Commons comeback “that would allow him to challenge Keir Starmer’s position, following speculation that he could stand in the upcoming by-election”, said Millie Cooke in The Independent. If he returns into parliament “he would be a threat to Starmer”, said Gary Gibbon on Channel 4 News. 

    Burnham has “made no secret of his ambitions”, said Pippa Crerar in The Guardian. However, his allies have “cautioned not to overstate the extent of planning that might be under way, suggesting that he was passionate about his current job and would only return to national politics if he had something to contribute”.

    What next? 
    A by-election is expected to be called, potentially alongside May’s polls, intensifying speculation about Burnham’s future and Labour’s leadership stability.

     
     
    today’s international story

    UK aids French boarding of Russian tanker

    What happened
    French naval forces, with the assistance of allies including Britain, boarded a Russian-linked oil tanker in the Mediterranean as European governments intensified efforts to disrupt Moscow’s covert energy exports. Commandos were lowered by helicopter onto the vessel, the Grinch, while it sailed between Spain and Morocco after taking on crude in Russia’s far north.

    Who said what
    Emmanuel Macron said the interception showed allies would not accept breaches of sanctions. Volodymyr Zelenskyy welcomed the move, writing: “This is exactly the kind of resolve needed”.

    Moscow's “so-called shadow fleet” is a “clandestine network of tankers used to evade Western sanctions on Russian oil exports”, said Jessica Rawnsley on the BBC. The EU has imposed more than a dozen sanctions packages against Russia in response to the country’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, but Moscow “continues to sell millions of barrels of oil to other countries” such as China and India, said Al Jazeera, “typically at discounted prices, despite the economic curbs”.

    What next?
    European governments are examining broader powers to board and detain suspect tankers, potentially on a large scale. London is also weighing whether proceeds from seized oil could be redirected to support Ukraine.

     
     
    Today’s film story

    Vampire thriller ‘Sinners’ makes Oscars history

    What happened
    “Sinners”, Ryan Coogler’s critically acclaimed supernatural horror movie, has become the first film ever to be nominated for 16 Academy Awards.

    The tally “includes a major showing above the line”, said The Hollywood Reporter, with nods in best picture, lead actor (Michael B. Jordan), supporting actor (Delroy Lindo), supporting actress (Wunmi Mosaku), director and original screenplay (both Coogler). This indicates “serious strength opposite presumed front-runner ‘One Battle After Another’” which picked up 13 nods ahead of March’s Oscars.

    Who said what
    It is yet another feather in the cap for Coogler whose “run as a filmmaker has been unimpeachable”, said The Hollywood Reporter, with both critics and audiences “embracing everything from his indie debut ‘Fruitvale Station’ to his subsequent franchise efforts in ‘Creed’ and ‘Black Panther’”.

    What next?
    Sinners’ multiple nods mean it smashes the record of 14 nominations shared by “All About Eve” (1950), “Titanic” (1997) and “La La Land” (2016). But while those films “converted their nominations into a substantial number of wins”, said The Guardian, “the expectation is that Coogler’s drama may end up with a smaller haul come 15 March”.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Researchers from the Johns Hopkins University and Imperial College London have developed a new way to track falling space debris that could make Earth safer and speed up environmental clean-ups. By using existing earthquake sensors to detect sonic booms from objects re-entering the atmosphere, scientists can quickly estimate where hazardous debris may land. The low-cost, scalable approach could help authorities respond faster to contamination risks, recover toxic materials more effectively, and better understand how growing space activity affects the planet.

     
     
    under the radar

    Breaking news: the rise of ‘smash hit’ rage rooms

    Goggles ready, sledgehammer steady, go smash that TV! Booking a “rage room” – in which you can let out your anger by breaking furniture – is the new stress release for anyone feeling “a bit wound up” by “the state of the world”, said Channel 4. 

    Thought to have originated in Japan in the late 2000s, the pay-to-destroy concept is gaining popularity in the UK – although experts are divided about how effective it can be at venting pent-up anger.

    In a rage room,  you can smash as many items as your heart desires. Typical 30-minute sessions cost between £35 and £70, although some slots can rise to £200, depending on the size of the room and the number of items up for smashing.

    Rage rooms are even prescribed by some health professionals. “People are being referred to us from GPs, psychiatrists and charities”, as a safe and controlled way to release complex emotion, rage room owner Amelia Smewing told ITV. 

    However, some experts are sceptical about the benefits. “It feels good, so people assume it’s good for them,” Ryan Martin, a professor of psychology and author of several books on anger, told The Guardian. But the evidence suggests that people who rely on bursts of venting tend to stay angrier for longer, and are more likely to lash out aggressively. Sophie Kjærvik of the Norwegian Center for Violence and Traumatic Stress Studies has found that “meditation and mindfulness and muscle relaxation activities are way more productive ways of dealing with anger”.

     
     
    on this day

    23 January 1978

    Sweden becomes the first nation in the world to ban aerosol sprays, due to their harmful effect on the Earth's ozone layer. Last week a report from Bloomberg claimed Sweden’s green industrial revolution is faltering, leading to a rise in emissions and a drift away from climate targets.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Denied votes’

    The Telegraph reports that some “4.5 million people are to be denied a vote” after more councils were given permission to delay local elections. “Starmer’s allies to bar the return of Burnham”, says The Times, and it’s “Operation Stop Burnham”, says The i Paper. “Does Andy Burnham have the bottle?” wonders then Daily Mail. “Gaza or gaga?”, Metro asks and The Telegraph says a “Starmer aide” is “pushing” for Hamas to “keep their weapons”. 

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Hard evidence?

    The Winter Olympics has been rocked by allegations of a below-the-belt scandal in the ski jumping competition. According to German newspaper Bild, officials are investigating suspicions that some male competitors have injected their genitals with hyaluronic acid to alter key body measurements used to size their competition suits. The suggestion is that competitors are increasing the size of their genitals in order to increase the size of their ski jumping suits, as a slightly bigger ski jumping suit “can generate more lift and improve aerodynamics – which in turn can add critical metres in flight”, said The New York Post.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Jamie Timson, Ross Couzens, and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Marian Femenias-Moratinos.

    Image credits, from top: Christopher Furlong / Getty Images; Ludovic Marin / AFP via Getty Images; Kate Green / Getty Images for Warner Bros.; 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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