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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    Local elections, Israel’s new death penalty law, and the BBC’s sacking of Mills

     
    today’s politics story

    Starmer warns of ‘two-front war’ as local elections loom

    What happened
    Keir Starmer has launched his party’s campaign for the 7 May local elections against a tense global backdrop and renewed economic pressures at home. Speaking in Wolverhampton, he said the UK was facing simultaneous international crises alongside a worsening cost-of-living squeeze.

    Who said what
    The elections across England, along with national contests in Wales and Scotland, are widely viewed as “a major test for Starmer’s premiership”, said Bethan McKernan in The Guardian. The Labour Party is expected to face strong challenges, with polling suggesting potential setbacks in traditional strongholds and a shifting political landscape in devolved nations.

    Starmer described a “war on two fronts”, citing both the conflict in Ukraine and the clash with Iran, adding that people are “worried when they see explosions” and “worried about whether this is going to escalate even further”.

    Labour is “bracing for heavy losses at the polls this spring” as the party “continues to lose voters to both Reform on the right and the Greens to the left”, said Athena Stavrou in The Independent. If the losses in May are particularly heavy, the elections “could spell the end of Sir Keir’s leadership”.

    What next?
    Labour hopes that its policy measures, including energy cost controls and wage increases, will shore up support for the party. Starmer said he was going into the local elections “in good spirits” despite “predictions of a dire night for Labour”, said Genevieve Holl-Allen in The Telegraph.

     
     
    today’s international story

    Israel passes controversial death penalty law

    What happened
    The Israeli parliament has approved legislation enabling courts to impose execution by hanging on Palestinians convicted of lethal militant violence. While capital punishment has technically existed in Israel for decades, it has been used only twice.

    The new measure was spearheaded by far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir (pictured above), who for some time has worn a noose pin on his lapel to signal his support for the bill. The law makes execution the standard penalty in the military courts handling such cases, with limited judicial discretion for exceptions. Legal analysts say the framework, in practice, is unlikely to be used against Jewish extremists convicted of similar crimes.

    Who said what
    Supporters in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition argue that executions could deter future attacks and hostage-taking. “Each time we don’t use the death penalty we are encouraging the next attempt to take hostages,” said Knesset member Moshe Saada.

    The legislation “comes amid a surge in Israeli military and settler attacks against Palestinians in the West Bank”, said Al Jazeera, as well as “thousands of arrests, in the shadow of Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza”. The Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned the move as a “dangerous escalation”.

    What next?
    Petitions challenging the law have already been filed with Israel’s Supreme Court, raising the prospect that it could be struck down.

     
     
    Today’s Media story

    BBC sacks presenter Mills over ‘past relationship’

    What happened
    Scott Mills has been dismissed by the BBC, reportedly over allegations relating to a “historic relationship”. According to The Mirror, which broke the story yesterday, his termination is linked to a previously unknown police investigation from 2016 into “serious sexual offences” committed against a teenage boy. Mill was questioned by police under caution, the Mirror reported, but the investigation was closed due to a lack of evidence.

    The presenter took over Radio 2’s breakfast show from Zoe Ball in January last year; it has since become the UK’s most popular, with 6.5 million listeners. Mills (pictured above) ended last Tuesday’s programme saying “back tomorrow”, but on Wednesday colleague Gary Davie said he was “in for Scott Mills”.

    Who said what
    Mills has been “a presence on BBC radio and TV for more than 25 years and is its 11th highest-paid star”, said the BBC.

    The 53-year-old was initially “taken off air” while the BBC “assessed the information”. This news “will be sudden and unexpected, and therefore must come as a shock”, wrote BBC director of music Lorna Clarke in an email to staff.

    What next?
    The BBC does not “comment on matters relating to individuals”, but “can confirm that Scott Mills is no longer contracted to work with the BBC”, said a spokesperson.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    A Tesco store in Kirkwall mistakenly ordered about 38,000 bananas instead of a much smaller shipment, leaving the island in the Orkneys with an unexpected fruit surplus after ferry disruptions prevented returns. Staff quickly invited schools, clubs and community groups to collect free boxes of bananas, with locals sharing ideas online for using them before they spoiled. The giveaway sparked a wave of baking, freezing and healthy snacking, potentially nudging residents – as well as Brits more widely – towards making bananas a regular and nutritious habit.

     
     
    under the radar

    Surf and dearth: Maine’s lobster industry reckoning

    For centuries, the New England coastal state of Maine has been identified with its lobster industry, which supplies most US supermarkets and restaurants to this day. However, 2025 saw Maine’s lobster haul decline for the fourth straight year to reach a 17-year low, and that is ringing alarm bells for many in the industry.

    Maine fishermen caught a total of 78.8 million pounds of lobsters last year compared to more than 110 million in 2024, according to the Maine Department of Marine Resources. The principal cause is a 10% drop in the number of fishing expeditions from the state as “rising bait, fuel and gear prices made many trips economically unviable”, said the Portland Press Herald. As lobster fishing becomes more difficult, diners across the country may also be turning up their noses at the price of a restaurant lobster, said Bloomberg.

    Not all is lost, though. While the industry in Maine faces specific challenges from “climate change, regulation and increased fishing”, the wider lobster trade is booming “on the back of high prices and Chinese demand”. This is particularly true in Canada, which “now has triple the lobster catch of the US”.

    Despite the challenges, lobster fishing has always been a generational business in Maine, and that isn’t likely to go away. “My youngest son didn’t go to college and now my oldest son wants to come home and go fishing,” Sonny Beal, a member of the Maine Lobstermen’s Association board, told Marketplace. “You can’t raise these guys fishing and being on the ocean and expect them not to do it when they get older.”

     
     
    on this day

    31 March 1966

    The Soviet Union launched Luna 10, which later became the first space probe to orbit the Moon. Nasa sent its first crewed mission into lunar orbit just two years later. This week the US space agency aims to return humans to the Moon’s orbit for the first time in more than 50 years.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Mills crisis’

    “Another scandal hits the Beeb”, says The Sun after the BBC radio presenter Scott Mills was sacked following allegations about his personal conduct. It’s “new BBC shame”, says The Mirror. Radio 2 colleagues are “in shock” over Mills’ departure, the Daily Mail says. Keir Starmer has issued a “48‑hour ultimatum” to trainee doctors, The Telegraph reports. The Financial Times leads on a French AI start‑up’s $830m “debut debt financing” for Nvidia‑powered data centres. The war is bringing in “£20m a day extra in energy taxes", a “windfall” for Rachel Reeves, says The Times.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Home and away

    An England football super fan has put his house on the market to fund his World Cup trip this summer. Retired teacher Andy Milne – who now lives in Thailand – hopes to fetch £350,000 from the sale of the Cheshire home he has been renting out. The 62-year-old has attended eight men’s World Cup tournaments as well as the 2023 women’s cup, and says he has already secured tickets to every Three Lions group match at this year’s tournament.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Rebecca Messina, Harriet Marsden, Justin Klawans, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Christopher Furlong / Getty Images; Kobi Wolf / Bloomberg / Getty Images; Alex Davidson – RFU / The RFU Collection / 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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