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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Starmer apologises, Peppa breaks ground, and pie and mash shops in comeback bid

     
    today’s politics story

    Starmer says sorry to Epstein victims

    What happened
    Keir Starmer has issued a public apology to people abused by Jeffrey Epstein after admitting that he relied on false assurances from Peter Mandelson before appointing him as the UK ambassador to Washington. The prime minister addressed the controversy at the start of a planned speech on funding to help improve local communities, conceding that although Mandelson’s association with Epstein was already known, the full scale of their connection only emerged later.

    Who said what
    “I am sorry for having believed Mandelson’s lies and appointed him,” said Starmer in a direct statement to victims. Epstein survivor Marina Lacerda welcomed the apology, saying: “I have to commend him for going on national television and admitting he was wrong.” But Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch described the prime minister’s position as “untenable” while the Liberal Democrats demanded a confidence vote.

    Starmer has ended up “lashed to the mast with Lord Mandelson, stricken on the rocks of another man’s disgrace. From which there is no escape”, said Patrick Maguire in The Times. The scandal “has exposed Starmer’s basic political incompetence”, said The Telegraph’s editorial board. “The prime minister’s judgment is the country’s problem.” There is a “look of despair in Starmer’s eyes”, said John Crace in The Guardian, “and a feeling in the room that the endgame has begun”.

    What next?
    Starmer has ruled out resigning, saying he intends to continue delivering the programme endorsed by voters.

     
     
    today’s migration story

    UK secures deportation deals following visa threat

    What happened
    Britain has locked in agreements with Namibia, Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo to accept the return of people with no right to remain in the UK after warning of escalating visa penalties. The Home Office says more than 3,000 individuals from the three countries will now have their removal accelerated. Charter flights to Namibia have already taken place, with departures to Angola expected this month and to the DRC shortly after.

    Who said what
    Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood (pictured above) said the outcome showed that pressure worked, warning: “If foreign governments refuse to accept the return of their citizens, then they will face consequences.” Conservatives dismissed the approach as misleading, arguing that Labour was inflating success by counting voluntary departures.

    Britain had threatened “Trump-style visa sanctions”, said Matt Dathan in The Times. “Namibia and Angola caved in almost straight away, but the DRC has agreed only in the past few days.”

    What next?
    Ministers are preparing to issue similar warnings to other countries seen as uncooperative, including India and Pakistan, although officials have acknowledged the potential diplomatic risks involved.

     
     
    Today’s television story

    Peppa Pig praised for hearing loss storyline

    What happened
    “Peppa Pig” will feature another groundbreaking theme as Peppa’s little brother will be diagnosed with a hearing problem.

    The episode will see George fitted with a hearing aid, while joining the show for the story is “Gladiators” star Jodie Ounsley, AKA Fury, who is profoundly deaf and has a cochlear implant.

    Who said what
    “You may not have noticed it, but Peppa Pig has quietly become the greatest soap opera on television,” said Stuart Heritage in The Times.  Four years ago “the show introduced its first same-sex couple” and “last year there was a shock pregnancy, resulting in the birth of Mummy Pig’s third child”. This latest storyline will have a huge impact because deaf children “will watch this episode and feel represented in a way they have not been before”. But most importantly, “because this is Peppa Pig, it is likely that the issue will be dealt with lightly, with none of the show’s fast-moving silliness lost”.

    What next?
    The upcoming storyline, which has been developed in partnership with the National Deaf Children’s Society, will air on Milkshake from 9 March.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    The King has inspired a beekeeping programme at HMP Bristol, where prisoners are learning teamwork, responsibility and community through caring for hives. Featured in the King’s new documentary “Finding Harmony”, the project uses bees to teach inmates how healthy systems depend on cooperation. Prisoners say working with the hives is both calming and meaningful, while staff believe it helps inmates understand relationships, responsibility and their place within a wider society.

     
     
    under the radar

    Can London’s pie and mash shops make a comeback?

    Pie and mash shops have been “pushed to the brink of extinction” in recent years as gentrification sent Londoners out of the East End – taking the traditional Cockney cuisine with them.

    “Pie and mash is an integral part of Cockney culture,” said Demi Perera in The New York Times. The first dedicated shop opened in the mid-19th century as shipping docks were developed and expanded in east London, and workers needed “quick, cheap, warm meals”. To begin with the pies were stuffed with eels (which were easy to source from the River Thames), but mincemeat fillings soon grew in popularity, relegating jellied eels to a side dish.

    But London’s pie and mash shops have been “dwindling” in recent years, according to The Economist. There are now fewer than 40 in the capital – down from almost 300 in the mid 1800s. Soaring rents and property prices have “pushed” many of the locals who once lived in neighbourhoods like Shoreditch and Hackney out to nearby counties such as Essex and Kent.

    However, there are encouraging signs that pie and mash is “making a surprise comeback”, said Jonathan Thompson in The Washington Post. A younger generation is unearthing the “delights of minced beef pies and mashed potato, served with lashings of a Kermit-green parsley sauce”.

    And the pie and mash scene is also “alive” and thriving in Essex, said Tomé Morrissy-Swan in The Guardian. New shops are cropping up everywhere from Basildon to Chelmsford, and “diners of all ages are tucking into pies”. It seems that “London’s original fast food is finding a new homeland”.

     
     
    on this day

    6 February 1952

    Queen Elizabeth II succeeded King George VI on the British throne and was proclaimed Queen of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth realms including Canada, Australia and New Zealand. This week it was announced that Elizabeth II’s “surprisingly experimental” wardrobe would be showcased in a new book: “Queen Elizabeth II: Fashion and Style”, to be published by the Royal Collection Trust next month.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Gullible and weak’

    Keir Starmer has been labelled “gullible and weak” following his apology regarding the appointment of Peter Mandelson, says The Times. “Keir and present danger”, is The Mirror’s headline, noting that the PM faces a “growing Labour rebellion”. Angela Rayner is “primed to strike”, says the Daily Mail, but her “tilt at No 10” has been “hit by a tax inquiry”, says The Telegraph. Meanwhile, after 36 days of rain, the Met Office has issued warnings of “yet more bad weather”, The Independent says.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    It’s all Greek to Tesco

    Tesco has apologised for putting up Welsh bilingual signs in one of its Cornish stores. The supermarket giant’s shop in Helston, roughly 200 miles from south Wales, directed shoppers towards pysgod, which is Welsh for fish. Local councillor Loveday Jenkin welcomed the idea of bilingual signage in supermarkets in the area, but said it should be in “Cornish, not Welsh”. A Tesco spokesperson said the company was sorry for the “mistake” and that it had rectified the error.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Jamie Timson, Irenie Forshaw, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Peter Nicholls / Pool / AFP / Getty Images; Zeynep Demir / Anadolu / Getty Images; Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda / Orlando Sentinel / Tribune News Service / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images.

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

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