- UK announces 'historic' trade deal with Gulf states in G7 first CNBC
- UK strikes £3.7bn trade deal with six Gulf states The Guardian
- Britain clinches $5 billion Gulf trade deal in shadow of Iran war Reuters
- UK agrees £3.7bn trade deal with six Gulf states BBC
- UK confirms Gulf trade deal in boost for service industries Financial Times
In seemingly ungovernable Britain, prime ministers keep failing and falling – The Washington Post
- In seemingly ungovernable Britain, prime ministers keep failing and falling The Washington Post
- Why running Britain is so hard, no matter who does it politico.eu
- Why the U.K. has had 6 prime ministers in 10 years, and might soon have a 7th CBS News
- Is Britain ungovernable? CNN
- Downing Street has become a revolving door. Let’s pray for political stability Premier Christianity Magazine
Could a football match soften North Korea-South Korea relations?
US Wants Ukraine to Help Ease Restrictions on Belarus Potash – Bloomberg.com
- US Wants Ukraine to Help Ease Restrictions on Belarus Potash Bloomberg.com
- US Urges Ukraine to Support Easing Belarus Potash Sanctions Kyiv Post
- Washington pushes Lithuania to resume Belarusian potash transit – report Позірк
- Fertilizers in exchange for security: Should Ukraine trust Lukashenko and agree to the easing of sanctions? Українські Національні Новини (УНН)
- U.S. wants Kyiv to lobby against Belarus sanctions The New Voice of Ukraine
At least eight killed in Israel’s air attacks on southern Lebanon
Murder or accident? Mystery of Mango tycoon’s hiking death after son’s arrest
Murder or accident? Mystery of Mango tycoon’s hiking death after son’s arrest
Murder or accident? Mystery of Mango tycoon’s hiking death after son’s arrest – BBC
- Murder or accident? Mystery of Mango tycoon's hiking death after son's arrest BBC
- Mango clothing tycoon’s son named suspect in death of billionaire whose brand stretches across US Fox News
- Son of Mango fashion chain founder posts bail after arrest in Spain over father’s fatal cliff fall AP News
- Mango founder’s son arrested in connection to father’s plunging death CNN
- Court names Mango tycoon's son as suspect in probe into father's death Reuters
Oscar-winning director calls Trump, Netanyahu and Putin ‘monsters’
US military jets and drones tracked near Cuba as tensions rise
US military jets and drones tracked near Cuba as tensions rise
The battle of perception: From Israel’s Fauda to Hezbollah’s FPV footage
Barney Frank: One of the first openly gay US congressmen dies aged 86
What is the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline that Russia, China are planning?
Families demand justice for victims killed in Israeli strikes on Beirut
New UAE oil pipeline bypassing Hormuz 50% complete ahead of 2027 start – Reuters
- New UAE oil pipeline bypassing Hormuz 50% complete ahead of 2027 start Reuters
- UAE says new pipeline that will bypass Strait of Hormuz is nearly 50% complete CNBC
- No full Hormuz flows until first half of 2027, UAE's oil giant says Reuters
- The future of energy in a new geopolitical order with Dr. Sultan Al Jaber Atlantic Council
- New UAE pipeline bypassing Hormuz now 50% complete, ADNOC CEO says BOE Report
Ebola vaccine could take nine months as death toll rises further, WHO warns
What we know about the San Diego mosque attack suspects
Streeting says he resigned because Labour ‘in fight of our lives against nationalism’, and is currently losing – UK politics live
Former health secretary standing down after saying he no longer had confidence in Keir Starmer as PM
Labour is in a curious, transitional state at the moment. Officially Keir Starmer is committed to staying as leader and prime minister until the next election. There is no formal leadership contest underway. But, informally, it has already started, with Andy Burnham and Wes Streeting already setting out their offer to the Labour membership. We will hear more from Streeting this afternoon. But much of the parliamentary party is already working on the basis that a Burnham premiership is all-but-inevitable, and so Streeting’s interventions may turn out to be more about shoring up his position in a potential future Burnham administration than a rehearsal for an election that may never happen.
Here are some of the stories out today covering Starmer, Burnham and Streeting.
Ailbhe Rea in the New Statesman says an insider describes the atmosphere in No 10 now as “very, very odd”. She says:
Starmer and his remaining loyal cabinet ministers want to make every day that they are still in office count, and are determined to cut through the noise of the leadership drama. Many cabinet ministers, who may not survive long in their posts if Starmer is replaced as Prime Minister, are desperate to set a legacy and bank achievements in their briefs while they can. “Let’s get out there and make the case for what we’re doing,” has been Starmer’s message to colleagues. There is even a fleeting hope inside Downing Street that the leadership speculation “burns itself out”, that “Wes and Andy tearing chunks out of each other for weeks might just make Keir look better”. But even many loyalists accept that is wishful thinking. “The writing is on the wall, even if we don’t know exactly what form that takes yet,” one concludes.
Patrick Maguire, Geraldine Scott and Larisa Brown in the Times say Starmer could stay in Downing Street until early next year. They report:
Ministers familiar with Starmer’s thinking say he has no plans to step down before the Labour Party conference in September and is unlikely to relinquish office before Christmas.
They told The State of It, the political podcast from The Times and Sunday Times, that there were still significant obstacles ahead for Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester, who on Tuesday refused to rule out breaking Labour’s manifesto pledge against tax rises.
Caroline Wheeler in the i says cabinet ministers are already angling for jobs in a Burnham administration. She says:
Senior ministers are preparing visits to Makerfield amid growing expectations in Westminster that Burnham could ultimately take the Labour leadership – and with it the power to appoint the next Cabinet.
“The equation cabinet ministers are making is that if they go and he wins they will get a plum job,” one senior source said. “If they don’t go and he wins, he will remember. And if they don’t go and he loses, he will remember.”
Many now believe that Burnham is lining up to make Ed Miliband, the Energy Secretary, as his chancellor. It comes as Miliband’s special adviser was seconded to work with Burnham for the by-election campaign …
Burnham is also widely expected to make Lucy Powell, the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, his deputy prime minister. Multiple sources said that other women likely to be given top jobs include Angela Rayner, the former deputy prime minister, Lisa Nandy, the Culture Secretary, and Louise Haigh, the former transport secretary, who is also the co-chair of the influential soft-left Tribune group of MPs.
Sam Blewett at Politico has taken an in-depth look at the team supporting Burnham. He says the key figure is Kevin Lee, director of the Greater Manchester mayor’s office, who has been advising Burnham with little break since 2010.
Continue reading...James Murdoch to acquire half of Vox Media in deal reportedly worth $300m
Deal is the biggest acquisition for Murdoch since family resolved dispute over future control of media holdings
James Murdoch, second son of publishing giant Rupert Murdoch, has agreed to acquire some of Vox Media’s assets, including New York magazine, in a deal believed to be worth around $300m.
The 53-year-old publishing scion is acquiring the assets through his company, Lupa Systems, which has built up holdings in Art Basel, the traveling art fair business, and Tribeca Enterprises, the media and entertainment company co-founded by Robert De Niro, and the Indian streaming service Bodhi Tree Systems.
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