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Friday June 14 2024 | thetimes.com | No 74435

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My dream
home on
the beach

The inside story of
Federer’s long goodbye
Times2

INSIDE
TIMES2

Bricks&Mortar

Women left in A&E after using Ozempic to slim for summer
Eleanor Hayward Health Editor

Young women are ending up in A&E
after buying Ozempic online, with the
NHS’s top doctor warning that weightloss injections should not be abused in
an attempt to get “beach body ready”.
Doctors in emergency care units report that “almost every shift” they see
“young, beautiful girls” with potentially

deadly complications who took the
drug despite being a healthy weight.
Weight-loss injections — including
semaglutide, better known by the
brand names Ozempic and Wegovy —
are being prescribed on the NHS for
people with obesity and type 2 diabetes.
Some patients, however, including
those with eating disorders, have lied
about their weight to get them privately

from online pharmacies or beauty clinics, leading to complications such as
inflammation of the pancreas.
The drugs are sold by companies
including Boots, Superdrug and Lloyds
for between £150 and £200 a month.
Doctors are calling for urgent regulation and control to ensure they are prescribed only to obese patients.
Professor Stephen Powis, NHS

England’s medical director, said the
drugs should not be treated as a “quick
fix for people trying to get ‘beach
body ready’ ”.
At the NHS Confederation conference in Manchester, he said: “We know
these new drugs will be a powerful part
of our arsenal dealing with obesity, but
they should not be abused. Buying
medication online without a doctor’s

supervision can lead to complications
and dangerous consequences.
“Drugs including Ozempic and Wegovy should only be used by people prescribed them for obesity or diabetes.
I’m worried about reports that people
are misusing them.”
The new generation of powerful
weight-loss medications, called GLP-1

‘Conspiracy
of silence’
on cuts and
higher taxes
Labour accused over manifesto spending plans
Steven Swinford Political Editor
Chris Smyth Whitehall Editor
Oliver Wright Policy Editor

Sir Keir Starmer has gambled on
growth in Labour’s manifesto as he
rejected warnings from “defeatist”
economists that Britain faces five years
of spending cuts and tax rises if his
party wins the election.
The Labour leader described his
plans for government as a “manifesto of
hope” and a “rejection of cynicism” as
he insisted that he could defy economic
forecasts by overhauling the planning
system and attracting billions of
pounds in private investment.
However, economists said Labour
was part of a “conspiracy of silence”
involving all the main parties over the
state of the public finances and the
trade-offs that would be needed whoever won the general election.
Although Starmer has said he would
not raise the main rates of tax — income tax, national insurance and VAT
— he has repeatedly failed to give the
same assurances over capital gains tax,
fuel duty and tax relief on pensions.
He has also accepted Tory plans to
freeze income tax thresholds until
2027-28, which would drag millions of
people into higher tax bands. Although
he has insisted there would be no return
to austerity, Starmer has also agreed to
plans that would involve significant
cuts to “unprotected departments”.
Starmer admitted there was “no

magic wand” and Britain’s problems
“won’t disappear overnight if Labour
wins” but insisted that his party would
succeed in growing the economy.
He said: “I have absolute confidence
in the plan for growth that we are putting before the country and I will not
accept the defeatism that says all we
can hope for in this country is to flatline. That is the absolute opposite of the
hope we inject through this manifesto.”
He said official forecasts showing
that economic growth would remain
stagnant were based on the absence of
a clear plan under the Tories.
“This manifesto is a total rejection of
that defeatist approach, that the only
levers are tax and spend,” he said. “I
understand the cynicism, I understand
that after 14 years of this, for many
people the hope’s been beaten out of
them. But this is a manifesto for hope, a
plan for growth, a plan for wealth
creation. I will never accept the defeatism that says we can never do better
than this. We can, we will.”
Starmer is promising to get Britain’s
economy growing faster than that of
any other G7 country, saying that
“growth is our core business — the end
and the means of national renewal”.
Labour’s plans rely on a threepronged approach: overhauling planning rules to build more houses and
infrastructure; an industrial strategy to
ensure workers have the right skills;
and investing £4.7 billion a year in green

The eyes have it Rishi Sunak left his troubles behind at the 50th G7 meeting, hosted by Giorgia Meloni in Puglia.

Poll places Reform ahead of Conservatives
Oliver Wright

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party has
overtaken the Conservatives in a poll
for the first time in a symbolic moment
that deals another blow to Rishi Sunak’s
electoral hopes.
The YouGov survey for The Times
found that support for Reform had
risen by two points to 19 per cent,
with the Tories unchanged on
18 per cent.
It is the first time any poll has shown
Reform ahead of the Tories, a so-called
crossover moment. It will particularly
concern Tory strategists as it was
carried out after the party published its
manifesto on Tuesday. After the poll

Voting intention
Labour

37%

Reform UK

19%

Conservative

18%

Lib Dem

14%

Source: YouGov. Sample size 2,211 adults, June 12-13

was released, Farage said: “We are now
the real opposition to Labour.”
However, in somewhat better news
for the Conservatives the poll also
found that 80 per cent of those backing
Reform said that a very large majority
for Labour would be a “bad thing for the

country”. This week the Tories have
Voting intention
adopted
a strategy of warning that
people who vote Reform could hand
June 10-11
June 12-13
Labour a super-majority that would
38%Labour in power for a decade
37%
put
or
Labour
more — yet the poll highlighted the
Reform
UK 19%in
challenge facing Tory
strategists
18%
converting
this sentiment into votes.
18%
17% 22 per cent
Conservative
Only
of Reform voters
Source: YouGov. Sample size 2,211 adults

y(7HB7E2*OTSNPQ( |||+$!&'

Vot

Jun

18%

17%

Sourc


2 Friday June 14 2024 | the times News Today’s highlights 7am Bim Afolami, economic secretary to the Treasury 7.30am Wes Streeting, shadow health secretary 8.35am Keith Brown, deputy leader of the SNP 9.45am David Seaman, right, the former England goalkeeper 10.30am A bonus How to Win an Election with the political masterminds Peter Mandelson and Daniel Finkelstein Tom Parfitt DAB RADIO l ONLINE l SMART SPEAKER l APP T O D AY ’ S E D I T I O N NEWS SPORT TIMES2 GOLDEN FIND A ring owned by an 18th-century PM was found in a field ‘I’M ON FORM’ Aleksandar Mitrovic on his move to Saudi Arabia INNER TURMOIL Pixar hits arrested development with its latest sequel PAGE 13 PAGE 61 PULLOUT, PAGE 7 443 days since Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich was detained in Russia #FreeEvan THUNDERER 24 LETTERS 26 LEADING ARTICLES 27 WORLD 28 BUSINESS 33 REGISTER 51 SPORT 56 CROSSWORD 66 TV & RADIO TIMES2 Can Labour fix our broken economy? The Story As the day of the election draws closer, Britain’s floundering economy has been at the centre of the national debate. So could Labour get the country out of its stagflation doom-loop? Available on the Times Radio app or wherever you get your podcasts OFFER Save up to 30% with a subscription to The Times and The Sunday Times THETIMES.COM/SUBSCRIBE THE WEATHER 16 24 14 17 16 16 17 19 16 20 Rain in northern and western Scotland. Scattered heavy showers elsewhere. Russia accuses jailed journalist Gershkovich of working for CIA Russian prosecutors have claimed that the American reporter Evan Gershkovich was collecting secret information on a tank factory for the CIA when he was arrested during a reporting assignment. The general prosecutor’s office said that it had sent Gershkovich’s case to court and that he would be tried in the city of Yekaterinburg, where he was detained last year. The prosecutors said in a statement: “The investigation has established and confirmed with documentary evidence that Gershkovich, an American journalist for The Wall Street Journal, on the instructions of the CIA, collected secret information in the Sverdlovsk region in March 2023 about the activities of the defence plant NPK Uralvagonzavod JSC on the production and repair of military equipment.” Gershkovich, 32, who was accredited as a journalist with the Russian authorities at the time of his arrest, could face up to 20 years in jail if convicted on espionage charges. It is unclear when the continued from page 1 Reform party ahead of Tories thought Labour would win any kind of majority. The poll also suggested that Sunak’s decision to leave D-Day commemorations early had badly damaged the prime minister’s standing. Fifty-six per cent described it as a “serious error” that reflected badly on Sunak’s character, including 64 per cent of Reform voters and 48 per cent of people who had yet to decide who to vote for. The story has also cut through with the public: 68 per cent of voters said they had heard at least a “fair amount” about it. Overall Labour retained a 19-point continued from page 1 ‘Conspiracy of silence’ on cuts technology to attract investment and create jobs in industries of the future. “All of these things will make a material difference” to growth, Starmer said. The Labour manifesto, which was published yesterday, contained no new policy detail. Starmer dismissed concerns about the absence of a “rabbit” in his manifesto with a jibe at Nigel Farage: “If you want politics as pantomime, I hear Clacton is nice.” Instead Starmer sought to define himself against the political turmoil of recent years, promising “an end to the desperate era of gesture and gimmicks and a return to the serious business of rebuilding our country”. However, Paul Johnson, the head of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said: “This is a manifesto that promises a dizzying number of reviews and strategies to tackle some of the challenges facing the country. That is better than a shopping list of half-baked policy announcements. But delivering genuine change will almost certainly require putting actual resources on the table. And Labour’s manifesto offers no indication that there is a plan for where the money would come from to finance this.” Mike Brewer, chief executive of the Resolution Foundation think tank, said Labour’s “cautious approach to tax and spend … sets the scene for a parliament of tax rises and spending cuts for unprotected departments”. trial will start or how long it may take. The Wall Street Journal denies the Russian claim and said that the reporter was only doing his job and was not involved in any wrongdoing. The White House has labelled his arrest “ridiculous” and President Biden has called on Moscow to “let him go”. While on assignment, Gershkovich was said to have tried to speak to employees of the defence plant, which is in the city of Nizhny Tagil and manufactures T-14 Armata and T-90M Proryv tanks. President Putin claimed in an interview with the former Fox News presenter Tucker Carlson in February that Gershkovich had been caught “red-handed” when he “received classified information on a secret basis”. The Russian prosecutors allege that Gershkovich had “carried out the illegal actions using painstaking conspiratorial methods”. In a statement Almar Latour, chief executive of Dow Jones and publisher of The Wall Street Journal, and Emma Tucker, editor-in-chief of The Wall Street Journal, demanded Gershkov- ich’s immediate release and urged the Biden administration to “redouble efforts to get Evan released”. They said: “Evan Gershkovich is facing a false and baseless charge. Russia’s latest move toward a sham trial is, while expected, deeply disappointing and still no less outrageous. Evan has [been] wrongfully detained in a Russian prison for simply doing his job. Evan is a journalist. The Russian regime’s smearing of Evan is repugnant, disgusting and based on calculated and transparent lies. Journalism is not a crime. Evan’s case is an assault on the free press.” After the death of the Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, 47, in a penal colony in February, his associates revealed that negotiations had been under way to swap Navalny and two American citizens in jail in Russia for Vadim Krasikov, an FSB-hired hitman serving a life sentence in Germany. It is thought that Gershkovich was one of the American citizens who was part of the planned swap. Putin appeared to suggest last week that a swap involving Gershkovich was still possible. lead over the Conservatives, while the Liberal Democrats were down one point at 14 per cent. Anthony Wells, head of European political and social research at YouGov, said the poll was significant as it was the first to reach the “politically important point of showing Reform ahead of the Conservatives”. He added: “Obviously all polls have a margin of error, so we can’t conclude for certain that more voters now back Nigel Farage’s party over the Conservatives. But what it does make clear is that at the very least the Conservatives and Reform are at a very similar level of support to each other. “That in itself is remarkable given how close we are to an election when we might otherwise have expected smaller parties’ votes to be squeezed.” The poll also suggested that the Tory manifesto had had no positive impact on voter sentiment. Asked to consider what they had seen or heard about the Conservatives’ plans, only 13 per cent of voters said they would be good for them and their family. Among voters backing the Tories, 54 per cent said the plans would be good for them, but only 15 per cent of Reform voters said they would be good. Twenty-three per cent of Reform voters said they would be very bad. YouGov questioned more than 2,200 adults in an online poll on Wednesday and yesterday. Promises are easy — but the hard choices lie ahead Paul Johnson Comment G rowth. It was the focus of the Labour manifesto. Stability, planning reform, regulatory reform, an industrial strategy. They should all help. I am an optimist about the capacity for good policy and good governance, to promote economic growth. I am also a realist. Getting the policies right is hard. The effects take a long time to be felt. And there are nearly always trade-offs. Take the welcome commitments to reform our antigrowth planning system. We need to do it. But don’t expect much thanks from those living close to the new houses, roads, pylons and the rest. So, I applaud the commitment to growth and I hope for the courage to drive it through, not just on planning but on tax reform, relations with the EU, education, investment, regulatory reform. But we do need a plan for what to do if extra growth doesn’t materialise quickly because more likely than not it won’t. What is the plan for tax and spending? That is a question to which the manifesto offered no answers. The commitment to the “green prosperity plan” comes in at £5 billion a year, funded in part by borrowing and in part by “a windfall tax on the oil and gas giants”. Beyond that all the big promises were about what Labour would not do. They will not raise taxes on working people. Though what does that mean? We know income tax will rise by some £11 billion a year because three more years of freezes to thresholds and allowances are nailed in. There will not be increases in rates of income tax, national insurance, VAT or corporation tax, which account for three quarters of tax revenues. They will also not have debt rising in the fifth year of the forecast, the same rule as that of Jeremy Hunt. If you are going to follow that rule then there really isn’t, on current forecasts, any room for additional spending on public services, unless funded by new revenue streams. The tone of the manifesto makes cuts look implausible. How they will be avoided, though, I do not know. Labour has continued in what, at the time of the March budget, I referred to as a conspiracy of silence on the hard choices to be faced. Paul Johnson is director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies
3 the times | Friday June 14 2024 News Alas, poor audiences: tickets hit £200 Theatres struggle with rising costs but the best seats are out of reach for many theatregoers, writes David Sanderson Romeo and Juliet “is now the two hours’ traffic of our stage” William Shakespeare informed theatregoers. For which, he may now add, you will pay £2.50 per minute. For the first time the most expensive tickets for plays in the West End has topped £200, according to an annual survey by The Stage website. Three plays, including Romeo and Juliet starring Tom Holland, breached the £200 mark. The musical Cabaret, however, emerged as the most expensive production for the third year running, with top-price tickets costing £304. Overall the average top-price seat for plays was just under £155, which is a 9.3 per cent rise on last year’s figures, while inflation, according to the consumer prices index, was 2.3 per cent over the 12 months to April. The Society of London Theatre trade association defended the price rises. Eleanor Lloyd, its president, said the top-tier ticket prices allowed for cheaper access schemes to attract “new and diverse audiences”. She added that producers and venues had been dealing with rising costs. Average ticket prices, she said, had risen by only half the rate of inflation since the pandemic, which left many operators close to bankruptcy. Several prominent actors warned of the implications for British theatre if ticket prices continued to rise. The Olivier Award-winning actress Patsy Ferran, said it was “problematic” if prices were beyond the reach of most people. The actor Sir Derek Jacobi said that being charged £150 for a seat in the stalls had shocked him. The Stage’s survey captured prices for performances tomorrow evening, with the data gathered last month. Seeing Tom Holland, the actor of Spider-Man fame, in Romeo and Juliet Cabaret, which starred Cara Delevingne this spring, was the most expensive production for a third year. Romeo and Juliet and The Picture of Dorian Gray also breached the £200 mark For tighter budgets ... 6 The Royal Opera House’s prime seats can also cost £300, but its subsidy from Arts Council England does allow for some considerably cheaper options. A number of £4 tickets were available for tomorrow’s ballet triple bill of Les Rendezvous/The Dream/Rhapsody. 6 One may balk at paying even £15 to stay in Basil Fawlty’s Torquay hotel but the same amount for a Saturday performance of Fawlty Towers: The Play seems far more reasonable. Top-price tickets for the commercial production were £125. 6 Heathers at @sohoplace came top of The Stage’s cheap musical tickets, with £15 securing a seat for tomorrow’s performance. Other £15 tickets could — last month at least — be found to see Ben Whishaw in the Royal Court’s Bluets, and Dominic West in A View From the Bridge at Theatre Royal Haymarket. would cost a maximum of £298.95 this weekend — nearly £150 more than last year’s most expensive play, a National Theatre production of The Crucible which transferred to the West End. The play Cock was widely criticised in 2022 when its dynamic pricing model, which reacted to supply and demand, resulted in £400 tickets. This year Plaza Suite with Sarah Jessica Parker had tickets for £395 and The Picture of Dorian Gray with the Succession star Sarah Snook had a top price of £289. Musicals tend to be more expensive to produce, although the average toppriced seat for tomorrow evening, according to the Stage survey, was £168, a 3.9 per cent rise from last year. The survey highlighted significant differences between the commercial and subsidised or not-for-profit sectors. The average top-price ticket in the commercial sector — which includes all the theatres run by the impresarios Sir Cameron Mackintosh and Lord Lloyd-Webber — had increased by 11.5 per cent to £167. The most expensive seats in the subsidised sector — such as the National Theatre — was down 6.5 per cent to £105. The cheapest tickets in both sectors had decreased by similar amounts. The biggest rises in top-tier prices were all for musicals, with Moulin Rouge, Tina and Hamilton each increasing by £50. The two other plays that broke the £200 barrier were Player Kings starring Sir Ian McKellen and Stranger Things: The First Shadow, the adaptation of the Netflix sci-fi series. Producers pointed out that there are financial risks inherent with any West End production, even if a star name is attached to the project. Opening Night, starring Sheridan Smith, closed months earlier than expected due to low attendances, which will have led to seven-figure losses for investors. Lloyd told The Stage that “despite the rising costs of theatre production, theatre works hard to offer affordable tickets to encourage a vibrant theatregoing community”, adding: “This is delivered in the context of producers and venues facing rising costs, with members experiencing a 120 per cent rise in utility bills since 2019.” Net gains from Netflix as Bridgerton boosts economy by £275m Alex Farber Media Correspondent The characters in Netflix’s Regencystyle series Bridgerton spend their time moving from one glamorous ball to the next without troubling themselves with anything as distasteful as work. But off-screen the show, in which Adjoa Andoh plays Lady Agatha Danbury and Nicola Coughlan stars as Penelope Featherington, has played an important role in creating thousands of jobs, according to the US streaming giant. Netflix has estimated that Bridgerton has boosted the UK economy by £275 million and supported 5,000 local businesses, including food, transporta- tion, design and waste management firms, over five years. Bridgerton’s executive producer, Shonda Rhimes, 54, will open trading at London Stock Exchange this morning to celebrate the figures after yesterday’s launch of the final half of the third series. The chief executive of Shondaland, the show’s production company, said the show has had “seismic impact” on the British economy. “The Bridgerton universe occupies a special space in culture, resonating with young and old alike, creating conversation, starting trends and influencing everything from baby names to weddings,” Rhimes said. “It is clear that the business of art and culture can make a huge economic contribution to local communities.” The figure, calculated by Netflix, includes its direct contracts with suppliers as well as the money they go on to spend for the show. Ancillary revenues, such as the sales of Regency-style embroidery sets, lettering sets and cream tea ingredients, which have spiked after the show’s return, are not included. Visit West, which works to maximise the visitor economy of west England, has reported a boost in visits to the area where much of the show is set, contributing over £5 million to the economy in Bath’s Royal Crescent, featured in the show, had thousands of extra visitors Bath, Bristol and surrounding areas. Thousands of extra visitors have descended on Bath’s Guildhall and the Royal Crescent, Visit West said. Anna Mallett, vice-president of EMEA production at Netflix, said the show has had a huge cultural impact “The Bridgerton universe is another example of Shonda Rhimes’s genius as a storyteller and her global influence,” she said. “The UK is our home and this is one part of our huge investment in creating stories our members will love.” Kiddies Kingdom, a baby name website, has seen a surge in names inspired by the show, including rises in searches for Daphne, Eloise and Colin.
4 Friday June 14 2024 | the times News Quintagram® No 1968 Solve all five concise clues using each letter underneath once only 1 Domestic dwelling (5) ----2 Meadow (5) ----3 Reap (7) ------- 4 Of the sense of sight (7) ------- 5 Dated term for a radio (8) -------A A C D E E E E E F H H I I I L L L O O P R R S S S S T T U V W Solutions see MindGames p15 Cryptic clues MindGames p14 Breakfast: 6am to 10am Our free radio station has all the latest headlines, interviews and debates every morning Seed of creativity The Meadowland art installation at the wild botanic gardens in Wakehurst, West Sussex, is inspired by threatened habitats. It is open until September Blow to PM as NHS waiting lists rise for first time in seven months Eleanor Hayward Health Editor NHS waiting lists have risen for the first time since last year in a further blow to Rishi Sunak’s election hopes. Monthly NHS performance data released yesterday show that hospital waiting lists increased to 7.57 million in April, up from 7.54 million in March. They were at 7.21 million in January last year, when the prime minister promised that they would fall under his government. So far during the election campaign Sunak has argued that waiting lists are coming down, because they have fallen slightly from a record high of 7.77 million in September. However, yesterday’s statistics show that they are rising again for the first time in seven months. Labour and the Liberal Democrats seized on the figures to highlight the Tories’ failed promises on the NHS. On Wednesday night Sunak was heckled and booed by an audience at a Sky News event when he blamed industrial action for the long waiting lists. “I think everyone knows the impact the industrial action has had, that’s why we haven’t made as much [progress],” he said. However, the prime minister, will not be able to blame striking junior doctors for this latest increase in waiting lists because there have not been any NHS strikes since February. Wes Streeting, the shadow health secretary, said the figures had “blown a hole in Rishi Sunak’s claim that the NHS has turned a corner”. He added: “He promised to cut waiting lists, but they are 350,000 longer today than when he became prime minister. He can’t blame NHS staff — there were no strikes last month, yet waiting lists still rose. The blame lies solely with the Conservatives. “If Conservatives are given another five years in government, waiting lists will hit ten million and mortgage hold- ers will be £4,800 worse off. Only Labour has a plan to deliver the change the NHS needs. We will deliver an extra 40,000 appointments at evenings and weekends to beat the Tory backlog, paid for by clamping down on tax dodgers.” The overall waiting list covers all hospital care, including routine operations, such as hip replacements and hernia repairs, as well as waits for MRI scans and x-rays. Yesterday’s figures include more than 300,000 people who have been waiting more than a year for this treatment. The monthly data also revealed a dire situation in emergency care, with tens of thousands of people forced to endure potentially life-threatening long waits for ambulances and A&E care. One in four people had to wait beyond the four-hour target to be seen in A&E, and one in ten patients are now having to wait 12 hours. Heart attack and stroke patients are waiting 33 minutes on average for an ambulance. The target is 18 minutes. Performance for cancer patients’ care is also worse, with one in three not treated within a two-month target. Professor Sir Stephen Powis, the medical director of NHS England, said the long waits partly reflected the record demand on A&E last month. He said: “May was a record month for urgent and emergency services, with the highest number of A&E attendances, as well as being the busiest May for the most urgent ambulance callouts. “With junior doctors striking for five days starting from the end of June, the NHS is preparing for further disruption to services in coming weeks.” British Medical Association members will stage a five-day walkout just before the general election on July 4. They will strike from 7am on June 27 until 7am on July 2, causing tens of thousands of NHS appointments to be cancelled. ‘Life-threatening complications’ from weight-loss jabs agonists, work by mimicking a hormone that makes people feel full. They are being introduced on the NHS for severely obese patients with a body mass index over 35. Websites which sell them privately ask patients to fill in details of their weight, but most do not require in-person examination. Dr Vicky Price, a consultant in acute medicine and president-elect of the Society for Acute Medicine, said: “I and many other colleagues in acute medi- cine across the UK are very concerned about the increasing numbers of patients we are seeing with complications from new weight-loss drugs they have purchased online. “Sadly we are seeing serious, lifethreatening complications including inflammation of the pancreas gland and alterations in blood salt levels in these patients, who were not aware of the risk they were taking.” One doctor described the case of a girl who was “not at all” overweight but bought Wegovy through Boots Online Doctor and arrived at A&E “feeling unwell, like she was going to pass out and couldn’t stand up. She was really struggling to eat.” She needed urgent treatment for starvation ketoacidosis, a lifethreatening condition in which harmful substances called ketones build up in the blood due to a lack of food. Speaking to the Chemist and Druggist news website, the doctor said such incidents were becoming more common, meaning that most A&E shifts now involved patients with complications from the drugs. The doctor said: “It isn’t people who need those drugs that are doing this. This is people with probably an element of eating disorder and body dysmorphia and that’s what terrifies me. I just look at these young, beautiful girls. Oh, my word ... it really makes me very sad.” Boots said it had safeguards to ensure such drugs were prescribed appropriately. Patients had to submit an ID document and answer questions on medical history. It said: “Boots Online Doctor also informs each patient’s GP of the prescription.” Listen seven days a week On DAB, app, website and smart speaker Drugs blend offers bowel cancer hope A combination of two immunotherapy drugs could treat the most common bowel cancer, scientists said after trials showed tumours shrank or remained stable in three out of five patients. Researchers from Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge said botensilimab and balstilimab could “offer new hope” for those with a type of cancer that has previously not responded to immunotherapy. Both drugs trigger the immune system to attack cancer cells. The team, which described the treatment as “potentially game changing”, said it hoped officials would “move quickly” in approving its use. The researchers followed 101 patients in the United States who had microsatellite stable metastatic colorectal cancer, the most common type of bowel cancer. After six months, tumours were shown to shrink or remain stable in 61 per cent of patients. The researchers said the most common side effects were diarrhoea and fatigue. Every year almost 43,000 people in the UK are found to have bowel cancer, with about 85 per cent classed as microsatellite stable. The study was published in the Nature Medicine journal. Justin Stebbing, professor of biomedical sciences at the university, said the results were “incredibly” exciting. Dr Andrea Bullock, of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Centre in the US, said the results could offer “new hope” to bowel cancer patients. Lisa Wilde, a director at Bowel Cancer UK, said the trial showed “exciting” promise. She added: “We will continue to follow with interest.”
the times | Friday June 14 2024 5 V2 News Apple’s tech let wife see ‘deleted’ texts to escorts Will Humphries An unfaithful husband who arranged meetings with prostitutes via messages on his iPhone is pursuing legal action against Apple after his wife discovered that his deleted messages were still stored on a linked computer. Richard, not his real name, said he had turned to prostitutes in the last years of his marriage and had arranged the meetings through the iMessages app. After making the arrangements he would delete the messages, believing the trail of his infidelity had been hidden. However, when his wife clicked on the same app on the family iMac, it showed that the last message he had sent to another person’s iPhone was to a prostitute. When she looked further she found several years’ worth of supposedly deleted messages to prostitutes. She filed for divorce within a month. Richard, a middle-aged businessman and father who lives in England but does not want to disclose his home town, is pursuing legal action against Apple in the hope of recovering more than £5 million he lost in the divorce, plus legal costs. He claims the company does not make it clear to customers that iMessages sent to another iPhone user can be seen on other linked Apple devices, Steely-eyed An abstract sculpture made of steel by Brian Fell is one of 100 works featured in the Show Your Metal exhibition at the Millennium Gallery in Sheffield Mother tells Letby retrial: I saw my girl take last breath Tom Ball The mother of one of Lucy Letby’s alleged victims has told a court how she watched her baby girl die in her husband’s arms three days after the convicted killer is said to have tampered with her medical equipment. Known as Baby K, the girl was born more than three months premature on February 17, 2016, weighing only 1lb 8oz. Letby, 34, then a neonatal nurse at the Countess of Chester Hospital, is accused of attempting to murder her by dislodging her breathing tube roughly an hour and a half after she was born. The prosecution alleges that she was then caught “virtually red-handed” when a consultant on the neonatal unit walked into the nursery and saw Letby standing beside the incubator “doing nothing” as the baby’s blood oxygen levels fell to dangerously low levels. Baby K was later transported to Arrowe Park Hospital, which specialises in caring for extremely premature babies. She died there three days later. The prosecution does not allege Letby caused her death. Yesterday a statement from Baby K’s mother was read to Manchester crown court in which she described having to make “the hardest decision of my life” to “let her go”. She said: “Our daughter was in my husband’s arms when she took her last breath and silently passed away.” Baby K’s mother wiped away tears as she and her husband listened to the statement being read to the court. They sat less than ten metres away from LetLucy Letby was convicted last August of killing seven children by, who watched proceedings from behind a glass-panelled dock. The jury of six men and six women has been told that Letby was convicted last August of murdering seven children and attempting to kill six others at the hospital in Cheshire. Letby, who is serving a whole-life prison term, is being retried on one count of attempted murder that the jury at the original trial was unable to reach a verdict on. The trial continues. even if they have been deleted on the phone. He told The Times: “It’s all quite painful and quite raw still. It was a very brutal way of finding out [for my wife]. My thoughts are if I had been able to talk to her rationally and she had not had such a brutal realisation of it, I might still be married. “I think what had been a superb marriage has been thrown away for something which many men do, and some women do, but mainly men.” As well as the financial loss caused by the divorce, Richard said the effect on his health had been dramatic. “I was on really strong beta blockers to try to reduce my panic attacks,” he said. He has engaged the London law firm Rosenblatt to pursue legal action against Apple. It is looking into establishing a class action lawsuit on a no-win, no-fee basis. “Even if there are a couple of hundred people in the UK who have got similar divorce payouts to me, then that is a £1 billion claim and it’s probably a global situation,” Richard said. Simon Walton, from Rosenblatt, said: “Richard told us what had happened and when we looked into it, we saw that Apple had not been clear with users as to what happens to messages they send and receive and, importantly, delete. “In many cases, the iPhone informs the user that messages have been deleted but, as we have seen, that isn’t true and is misleading because they are still found on other linked devices — something Apple doesn’t tell its users. “We have contacted Apple, and the magic circle international firm of solicitors who we have reason to believe represents them, several times, but all contact has been ignored. This strongly suggests either Apple are sufficiently concerned about this issue that they hope ignoring it will make it go away, or they simply do not care about their users’ rights.” Apple did not respond to a request for comment.
6 Friday June 14 2024 | the times News News Politics Labour’s manifesto promises Sir Keir Starmer has set out the details of his plans for power, Oliver Wright, Chris Smyth and Matt Dathan write TAX AND ECONOMY What Labour will do Labour has ruled out raising income tax, national insurance or VAT over the next parliament, saying it wants to ensure tax on “working people” is as “low as possible”. However, Sir Keir Starmer confirmed he would go ahead with the Tories’ planned freeze on income tax thresholds and his manifesto does not rule out increasing other taxes such as capital gains. Labour says it will remove the VAT and business rates exemptions on private schools. It also wants to abolish non-dom status, which allows foreigners living in the UK to avoid paying tax on overseas income for up to 14 years. The party has committed itself not to increase corporation tax and says it will replace business rates with a new system. Like the Tories, Labour believes it can raise money by tackling tax evasion and avoidance. It puts this figure at £5 billion. Will it work? Labour’s planned tax rises amount to little more than a few billion pounds in extra revenue. And it will do nothing to fill the £10 billion black hole in government spending plans that economists say will lead to cuts in public spending. Starmer said he would not oversee a new wave of austerity, which raises the question of how he will fill the gap. The suspicion will be that while Starmer has “no plans” to raise certain taxes now, plans will materialise if Labour wins. GROWTH What Labour will do The party is promising to ensure Britain has the highest economic growth in the G7, saying it can achieve this through restoring political stability, building more and a new industrial strategy. Starmer argues that this will allow better funded public services without tax rises. As part of this Labour says it will set up a national wealth fund with £7.3 billion of public money to support capital investment in the transition to net zero. Will it work? Starmer’s plans to expand the economy with supply-side reforms, such as changes to the planning laws, should help lift GDP. But these are changes that will take years to filter through to the real economy and may not have the kind of impact that Starmer is gambling on. GDP growth is also disproportionately affected by changes outside the government’s control, such as oil prices. WORKERS’ RIGHTS What Labour will do Starmer pledges the biggest overhaul of employee rights in a generation. Plans include banning zero-hours contracts, ending fire-and-rehire, offering higher sick pay and the repeal of trade union laws. It says it will introduce this legislation within 100 days but will “consult fully” with businesses. Will it work? If it wins the election by the margin expected, Labour will have no problem forcing its package through parliament. However, for a leader gambling on economic growth, such extra costs on businesses could be counterproductive. HEALTH What Labour will do Labour’s signature pledge on the NHS is a promise to provide an extra two million scans and appointments in the first year to bring down waiting lists. This would be achieved by paying NHS staff more to work overtime. The party also promises 700,000 more dental appointments and says it will ban the advertising of junk food to children. It has also said it would ban the sale of high-caffeine energy drinks to the under-16s. However, it has rejected a ban on buy-one-getone-free deals for unhealthy food. Will it work? The manifesto was published shortly after NHS figures revealed waiting lists had risen to 7.6 million. Health chiefs doubt it will be possible to bring them down significantly without billions of pounds in new NHS funding. Apart from targeted boosts adding up to little more than £1 billion, Labour has not said how much it would spend on the NHS. Many of Labour’s policies will undoubtedly help make a big dent in the waiting list. But their plan to meet all significant NHS targets by the end of a first term is seen as ambitious. SOCIAL CARE What will Labour do Labour is promising to implement Boris Johnson’s £86,000 lifetime cap on social care costs as the first step towards wider reform. Starmer is promising a national care service that in effect sets quality standards. He is also promising carers a pay rise. Will it work? A pay rise for carers could help to resolve the crisis in recruitment that means care homes are having to shut to new residents, who end up stranded in hospital. However, successive governments have been elected on a promise to reform social care only for plans to be scrapped following internal battles. Unless Starmer provides more details of how he will fund care, it is easy to see his government also falling into this trap. EDUCATION AND CHILDCARE What Labour will do Labour is promising to recruit 6,500 teachers in subjects where there is a shortage. It is also promising free breakfast clubs for children in every primary school and mental health support for secondary pupils. This will be paid for by imposing VAT on private schools. On childcare Labour says it will create 100,000 places by converting primary school classrooms into nurseries. Last year Labour promised that graduates would pay less tax but there is nothing in the manifesto to immediately reduce their payments. Will it work? Labour calculates that VAT on private schools will raise £1.6 billion, which would cover the cost of 6,500 teachers, but several analyses have challenged whether this amount would be raised. It would also take cultural change and higher salaries to attract new graduates. The 6,500 would equate to less than one teacher for every three schools in England. On higher education Labour would inherit a situation where universities Sir Keir Starmer launched his manifesto in Manchester yesterday, promising to grow the economy. A protester disrupted are underfunded because tuition fees have been in effect frozen but raising fees would cause an outcry. MIGRATION AND SMALL BOATS What Labour will do The manifesto commits the party to cutting net migration, which stood at 685,000 at the end of last year, but does not set an overall target. It will aim to reduce the need for overseas workers by improving the training of the domestic workforce. On small boats Labour will scrap the Rwanda policy and use £75 million earmarked for the scheme to set up a new border security command to target the gangs who facilitate illegal migration. The party will also pursue a migrant returns deal with the EU. Will it work? A pledge to reduce net migration is one of the least ambitious of the manifesto promises, given it has hit record levels in recent years. Formally linking immigration and skills strategy will be welcomed by sectors suffering from labour shortages but will not lead to an immediate fall in immigration as it will take time for domestic workers to be trained. On illegal migration, Labour is focusing heavily on committing more resources to law enforcement to “smash the gangs”. However, Labour lacks a solution for arrivals from countries such as Afghanistan and Syria who cannot be sent back to their home countries. CRIME AND JUSTICE What Labour will do Labour will dedicate 13,000 police officers to tackling neighbourhood crime. The manifesto also pledges to introduce “respect orders” to punish adults guilty of persistent anti-social behaviour. It pledges to halve knife crime and violence against women and girls. The manifesto promises to build the remaining 12,000 prison places promised by the government that have been stalled by delays to planning permission. It says it will designate new prisons as being of “national importance” on public safety grounds. Will it work? Crime is a complex concept to evaluate, as the Conservatives have found over the past decade, because although statistics show crime has broadly fallen, this has not translated to public perception. That is why Labour is focusing on restoring faith in the criminal justice system, whether that is tougher vetting processes for the police or specialist rape units in forces to ensure more perpetrators are brought to justice. Labour hopes its measures will restore the public’s faith in their local police because it believes this will address the problems it is trying to tackle, from antisocial behaviour to run-down town centres. Its approach is as much focused on preventing crime as it is catching criminals. ENERGY AND NET ZERO What Labour will do Labour calls climate change the “greatest long-term challenge”, and lists making Britain a “clean energy superpower” as one of its five core missions. The manifesto strikes a positive tone about reaching net zero: the Tories framed it as needing a “proportionate approach”, while Labour called it a “huge opportunity to create growth”. One dividing line is Labour’s 2030 deadline for a clean electricity grid,
7 the times | Friday June 14 2024 News News change, but can party deliver? TRANSPORT What Labour will do The party says it will fill in one million potholes in five years. It will also create a new nationalised body to oversee the railways. It promises to give local authorities more power over bus services. Most radical is the blueprint for the railways, which expands on Tory plans for Great British Railways (GBR). At its heart will be the renationalisation of the whole network, with train operating companies brought into public ownership as contracts expire. Will it work? A full-fat version of GBR is urgently needed to get work started on any meaningful reform. The new system will also need the support of the unions and will inevitably involve some uncomfortable discussions for Labour. How deftly the transport secretary handles this will have a big impact on whether it improves passengers’ lives. On the buses, it is a no-brainer to hand more power to local leaders to put out services to franchise. The big test will be whether there are more services in five years. On roads the reality is that a onetime catch up in pothole repairs would cost an estimated £16.3 billion and would take ten years. An extra £320 million, while welcome, will barely scratch the surface. the speech with a banner saying “youth deserve better”, while aides found a novel way to shelter from the northern rain versus the Conservatives’ target of 2035. Another is the contrast on new North Sea oil and gas licences, which Labour would end. The party would reverse Sunak’s decision to scrap energy efficiency standards for landlords. Funding for insulating and making buildings more efficient is double the Tory pledge. Will it work? A Labour government should quickly be able to change the rules holding back onshore wind farms. Setting up its £1.7 billion-a-year Great British Energy company in Scotland will take longer, and it will take time for households to see any promised cuts in bills. The 2030 clean power goal is considered Herculean but industry figures think it will at least pull the sector faster in the right direction. HOUSING What Labour will do Labour is pledging to build 1.5 million homes within five years. Its plans include changes to planning laws to allow some greenbelt land to be built on and the creation of the “the next generation of new towns”. Starmer has set a home ownership target of 70 per cent, up from 50 per cent, and promised a new mortgage guarantee scheme. Local authorities will have to have a target of at least 50 per cent affordable housing. Will it work? Labour’s house building targets do not lack ambition but as successive governments have found, ambition is not the same as delivery. The big problem Labour will have is how to deal with councils that drag their feet on setting realistic housing plans. It has pledged that in these circumstances it will impose plans, but this will be time consuming and will almost certainly be challenged in the courts. It will also take time for the industry to increase capacity to build the extra houses and some companies may be reluctant to build too many houses at once in case it cuts profits. DEFENCE What Labour will do Labour will “set out the path” to increase defence spending from 2.3 per cent of national income to 2.5 per cent, conduct a defence review, maintain the nuclear deterrent, establish an armed forces commissioner to improve service life and create a military strategic headquarters and director of national armaments. Will it work? Unlike the Tories, Labour has not given any indication of when and how it might increase the defence budget and nor is there anything about trying serious offences within the military, such as rapes, in civilian courts rather than military ones, as previously called for by the party. A strategic headquarters is intended to provide greater oversight in the Ministry of Defence so there is a joined-up approach between the services, a much needed, sensible reform which would make procurement more efficient. Morale in the military has worsened since 2021, so improving service life, such as by tackling rat-infested, damp houses, should be easily solved and is crucial if Labour is to overcome recruitment and retention problems. ENVIRONMENT What Labour will do Improving the state of rivers and seas is the party’s top environmental priority. The key promise is a ban on bonuses for the bosses of polluting water firms, a policy the Tories have pinched. There is no new money for farming subsidies or environmental regulators, though there are pledges to expand wetlands and create three national forests to join the existing one. Will it work? Reforming rules on water companies will be a priority. Labour is unlikely to face huge opposition from companies that have been expecting such changes and are trying to rehabilitate their image on the environment while seeking to invest more. The party is clear on its commitment to meeting the Environment Act goals but fuzzier on how it will do so. There is a lack of numbers on the promises about treeplanting and peatland restoration. CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM What Labour will do Labour is promising to allow 16 and 17-year-olds to vote. It would create an independent ethics and integrity commission to ensure probity in government. It would also introduce legislation to remove the right of hereditary peers to sit and vote in the House of Lords and create a mandatory retirement age of 80. Labour will also support an immediate ban on MPs from taking up paid advisory or consultancy roles and set up a committee to reform Commons procedures, raise standards and improve working practices. Will it work? Apart from the voting age most of Labour’s constitutional reforms are incremental and, with a large majority, should be uncontentious. But with potentially hundreds of MPs on their own back benches with little to do, banning them from taking up consultancy roles could prove controversial, particularly if MPs’ pay does not increase. FOOTBALL What Labour will do The manifesto promises to introduce a Football Governance Bill that will set up an independent regulator to ensure the financial sustainability of football clubs in England. The legislation will give fans a formal say in the way their clubs are run. Will it work? The legislation is almost certain to get through because there is broad crossparty consensus on the need for a regulator. However, the Premier League and English Football League remain at loggerheads over the regulator’s proposed powers to enforce financial redistribution down the football leagues. BREXIT AND EUROPE What Labour will do The manifesto rules out rejoining the European Union or the single market and customs union. However, Labour has proposed measures that would bring the UK and the EU closer, including a mutual recognition of conformity assessments that could reduce checks on goods crossing the Channel. Will it work? The problem Starmer will face is that many Labour MPs want him to go further and set the UK on a path to greater integration with the EU. They are keeping quiet for now but expect those calls to become louder and stronger if the party wins power. TRANSGENDER RIGHTS What Labour will do Labour has promised to “modernise, simplify and reform” the laws concerning those who want to legally change gender. This will “remove indignities” for transgender people, who deserve acceptance, while retaining the need for a diagnosis of gender dysphoria from a specialist doctor, it says. Labour’s manifesto also commits it to continuing protection for single-sex spaces under the Equality Act. It says it will bring in the recommendations of the Cass review of trans healthcare to give those with gender dysphoria “appropriate” NHS care. The party also promises a “full trans-inclusive ban on conversion practices” . Will it work? Labour’s plans to reform laws on the changing of gender on official documents have been branded “selfID by the back door” by campaigners. Critics want Labour to clarify how sex is defined in the Equality Act, to increase support for single-sex spaces. A ban on conversion practices may be tricky for Labour. Experts have said that while no LGBT group should be subject to conversion practices, doctors and psychologists should not be criminalised for exploring a child’s gender distress. Additional reporting: Eleanor Hayward, Adam Vaughan, Ben Clatworthy, James Beal and Nicola Woolcock
8 Friday June 14 2024 | the times News News Politics From migrants to defence — what Labour didn’t say Chris Smyth Whitehall Editor Matt Dathan Home Affairs Editor Sir Keir Starmer made a virtue of the lack of surprises in Labour’s manifesto, insisting people who wanted “rabbits” should go to the circus. But for most voters, of more concern than the absence of new policies will be the absence of answers to familiar questions about the party’s plans. The manifesto includes more than a dozen reviews, eight strategies and promises of unspecified reform. Labour argues that this is inevitable given the limited resources of opposition, but it means the manifesto gives more of a sense of direction than concrete plans. tax, spending and growth The biggest uncertainty is over what would happen if Starmer’s growth plan falters: would he cut spending or raise taxes? At the manifesto launch, he refused to countenance the question, saying it was “defeatist” to consider. Labour insists growth forecasts will be revised upwards as soon as independent experts see its plans in action. But one does not have to be unduly cynical to believe growth will not remove all the difficult trade-offs facing an incoming government. immigration Labour pledges to “reduce net migration” but does not set a target. Starmer dodged the question when asked about specific numbers. The party is promising to “reform the points-based immigration system” but does not commit to anything beyond “appropriate restrictions” on visas. It will formally link immigration and skills strategy, but the only industries mentioned were health and social care and construction. small boats Labour pledges to scrap the Rwanda policy but does not say what would happen to the tens of thousands of illegal migrants who cannot be returned to their home countries, such as Afghans, Iranians and Syrians. The party commits more money, staff and resources to law enforcement agencies to “smash the criminal boat gangs”. However, the manifesto gives very little detail on how its approach would differ significantly from what the government is already doing on that. education While Starmer says education is a priority, questions remain about the future of schools and universities. Labour is promising an “expert-led” curriculum review, and declares that higher education is “in crisis” and university financing broken. But after Starmer dropped the pledge to scrap tuition fees, it’s not clear whether they would rise or be replaced. Labour is promising only to “act to create a secure future for higher education”. private schools Starmer has previously said that he would impose VAT on private school fees “straight away”. However, Labour’s manifesto does not provide clarity on timing. Labour is planning to hold a Starmer apes Truss approach Analysis T o listen to some of Sir Keir Starmer’s rhetoric around the Labour manifesto launch, you might be forgiven for thinking he had come to the unexpected conclusion that Liz Truss was right (Chris Smyth and Oliver Wright write). Of course the Labour leader would never say any such thing, having amassed a 20-point poll lead in no small part because of Truss’s disastrous premiership. However, Starmer’s insistence that economic growth is his “number one priority” is ironically similar to the argument at the heart of Truss’s plan for government. Britain, both Starmer and Truss argue, is stuck in a malaise because of a decade or more of anaemic growth that has left families struggling and public services battered. Both, furthermore, argue that a series of supply-side reforms Liz Truss also sought supply-side reforms around planning, national infrastructure and investment will transform the UK’s growth prospects and deliver higher-thananticipated tax receipts. There are big differences of course. Truss hoped to achieve this through radical disruption and deregulation. In contrast, Starmer’s manifesto is a model of restraint, and he is deliberately pitching dullness as a strength. Although he says that he will make growth a Labour government’s number one priority, there is not a single spending pledge in Labour’s manifesto that would necessitate it. Indeed he argues that economic stability and caution are essential to the end budget in the autumn, by which time the academic year will have started. Labour has also said that the policy would cover the cost of 6,500 new state school teachers, but some have challenged whether this amount would be raised. welfare The manifesto also gives little detail of the party’s far-reaching welfare reform plans. Labour wants to reform welfare to get people back to work because rising sickness has become a defining economic challenge. The party says it would “reform employment support so it drives growth and opportunity”, but whether this involves changes to rates or amounts of benefits is not set out. The party’s “ambitious strategy to reduce child poverty” seems to be that it will not remove the two-child benefit cap. The party is promising to work with voluntary organisations and business to come up with other plans. Similarly Labour is promising to put Britain “back on track to ending homelessness” — but the details are not clear. health and social care On the NHS, the party has more specif- goal. The difference is that Starmer is hoping to invest any proceeds of growth in areas such as the NHS and education rather than tax cuts. And the logic is understandable: If Starmer can return to average growth rates seen at the start of the New Labour years, this would amount to more than £30 billion of headroom to spend on his party’s priorities. He would, at least in terms of this manifesto, have under-promised and over-delivered. Of course, if his plan for growth works, the need for such tough choices will abate significantly, although Britain’s older, sicker population means it is never going to vanish entirely. However, even optimistic analysts believe it will be several years before Starmer can start to top up spending. The key question for an incoming Labour government is whether voters, and more importantly his own party, have the patience to stick with the plan. From left, Angela Rayner (Labour), Daisy Cooper (Liberal Democrats), Penny Mordaunt (Conservatives), Carla Denyer (Greens), Nigel Farage (Reform UK), Stephen Flynn (SNP) and Rhun ap Iorwerth (Plaid Cymru) took part in the ITV debate moderated by Julie Etchingham ic commitments on extra appointments and scans. Most analysts do not believe Starmer’s proposals are enough to ensure big reductions in NHS waiting lists without far more money. Few would disagree with Labour’s argument that social care “needs deep reform”. But it is not yet clear whether its promised national care service would amount to more than a set of minimum standards, nor how much its promise of “fair pay” will boost wages. net zero An industrial strategy that uses government investment to kick-start green industries is at the heart of plans for both regional growth and cutting energy bills through clean power. But after the original £28-billion-ayear promise was scaled back, there are questions about whether it would be enough either to decarbonise the electricity grid by 2030, or attract the private investment needed for green jobs. housing Starmer and Rachel Reeves, the shadow chancellor, both cite planning reform as the fastest thing they can do to increase growth, promising changes within 100 days. So while there is more detail on its housing plans than in many other areas, questions need to be addressed. Will the party impose housing plans on councils that drag their feet on hitting targets? Is it planning to change compulsory purchase rules to allow the government to buy undeveloped land far more cheaply? Is it willing to change the rules to curtail local residents’ rights to object? crime Labour is promising to “return law and order to our streets” with a series of promises on neighbourhood policing, banning persistent antisocial offenders from town centres and mandatory plans for those caught carrying knives to prevent reoffending. But it is not clear if a promised review of sentencing would see more offenders sent to jail. There are pledges to halve knife crime and violence against women and girls over the next decade, but with no detail on how this would be measured. defence Labour is planning to have a strategic defence review before it gives answers about the size of the armed forces and how it responds to growing threats around the world. While it is promising to put Britain “on the path” to spend 2.5 per cent of GDP on defence, it is not clear how long it would take to do so. trade While Labour is ruling out a return to the single market and customs union, it is also not specifying how it would improve trade with the EU beyond “tearing down unnecessary barriers”. constitutional reform Labour vows to restore trust in government through an ethics overhaul. But it appears to have softened its ban on MPs holding second jobs, which now applies only to consultancy roles. Only jobs that “stop them serving their constituents and the country” will be prohibited, but it is not clear if that applies to certain areas, such as legal work. While Labour remains committed to abolishing the House of Lords, the manifesto kicks this into the long grass with a pledge to make members retire at 80 and eliminate hereditary peers.
the times | Friday June 14 2024 9 S1 News News Rayner tight-lipped on capital gains tax A ngela Rayner declined to say last night whether Labour would raise capital gains tax if it won the election as she clashed with Penny Mordaunt during a seven-way televised debate (Steven Swinford and Oliver Wright write). Mordaunt, for the Tories, asked Rayner during the ITV debate whether Labour would raise the tax, which is levied on the sale of assets such as shares or property. She asked: “Will you commit to ruling that out now?” Rayner, Labour’s deputy leader, responded by saying that Labour would not raise taxes on working people. “We have set out that we would not raise income tax, national insurance and VAT,” she said. “We do not need to raise taxes on working people because our manifesto is fully costed, unlike the Conservatives.” Pressed further she added: “There is nothing in our manifesto that requires us to raise capital gains tax.” However, she did not rule out doing so if Labour won the election. Rayner said that the Tories could not be trusted after raising the tax burden to record levels. During the debate Nigel Farage declared Reform the “opposition to Labour” after a poll found that his party had overtaken the Tories for the first time. He said: “Just before we came on air we overtook the Conservatives in the national opinion polls. We are now the opposition to Labour.” Farage was accused by Mordaunt of being a “Labour enabler”, to which he responded: “We are now ahead of you in the national polls. A vote for you is a vote for Labour.” The party representatives clashed on policy issues including the state of public services, migration and Brexit. Rayner appeared to go beyond the party’s official policy when she said Labour would not ever support taking Britain back into the European Union or single market. On the NHS, Farage blamed the “exploding population” for longer waiting lists and suggested that Britain should move to a French-style national insurance system. Mordaunt claimed that Labour would cut spending on the NHS — something Rayner denied. In an early exchange on tax, Mordaunt claimed that Labour had a “black hole” of £38.5 billion in its plans. The only way they were going to fill it, she said, was by raising taxes. Rayner highlighted tax rises under successive Conservative governments, telling the audience: “You can’t afford another five years of the Tories.” Farage claimed that problems in England’s schools were directly related to migration and accused other parties of not acknowledging the issue. “There is a problem that nobody wants to discuss,” he said. “The exploding population means our class sizes are getting bigger. And it’s a constant problem that none of the other panellists even want to discuss.” This was denied by Rayner who said that pupil numbers were actually declining. On migration, Rayner said that under the Tories the government had been “overreliant on overseas workers”. Farage said that Labour had failed to include migration in its six key priorities. He said Reform would introduce a new policy of zero net migration. Farage was accused of “dogwhistle” politics, criticism that he dismissed as “nonsense”. Mordaunt said the Conservatives would cap family and work visas. The Liberal Democrats, the SNP and the Green Party spoke positively of migration. Stephen Flynn of the SNP said he was “in favour”. Keir goes for growth, the marvellous medicine to cure Britain’s ills Tom Peck Political Sketch T here was just one word written on the lectern, the same one as on the backdrop: change. That little touch was new. Other than that, Labour’s manifesto launch was entirely unchanged from the past two times they’ve done it. It was, almost down to every last word in the script, an event kept meticulously identical to the one they had barely a month ago, which it was too late to cancel when the snap May election never happened. It may have been the bestrehearsed manifesto launch there’s ever been, and if it wasn’t it certainly felt like it. Hecklers can no longer derail the slow-moving Starmer juggernaut. He kicked the eternal protester, Jeremy Corbyn, out of the party altogether, so a polite young woman from a protest movement called the Green New Deal wasn’t going to stop him. Before the event there were four of them gathered outside behind a giant placard, shouting the words “Youth Deserve Better”. One attempted to do the same during the event itself and so at the end there were only three. The fourth was assisting with inquiries behind a police van. The Labour leader was back at one of his favourite places, the atrium of the Co-op headquarters in Manchester. Fifteen storeys worth of balconies rise up above it like a kind of corporate panopticon. On each, staff had gathered to gaze down and applaud. They presumably don’t find it hard to get tickets to Co-op Live across town, which finally opened last month and was graced by Barry Manilow. On this evidence they don’t need them. Starmer is more than enough. He was introduced, as has now become almost customary, by Nathaniel Dye, a cancer patient who has been given three years to live, for which he blames the NHS missing many targets during his diagnosis. The one switch on the undercard from the last time Labour did this was that now they had the Iceland boss Richard Walker doing the bit about how Labour is the party of business. Last time out it was Sebastian James, managing director of Boots and David Cameron’s old mate from the Bullingdon. Walker understands change better than most: this time last year he was trying to become a Conservative election candidate. If this was the new dawn breaking then it must again be pointed out that Starmer was not dressed for it. He must have been hoping that by mid-June he would have stopped being the only person in the room on these occasions without a jacket on. This was, again, not the case. Judging by the number of coats on the back of chairs, the new dawn remains worryingly autumnal. Starmer reckons the country needs a “total change of direction” but what’s coming up on the sat nav feels frighteningly familiar. “Our manifesto in two words: economic growth,” announced Rachel Reeves on her social media channels as the manifesto was launched. They are betting everything on growth. “The growth lever is the first lever we will reach for,” said Starmer, for approximately the hundredth time. “We don’t have a magic wand,” he also said at one point, but he does have extremely high hopes for the magic growth lever, which really does not exist. He was asked, by The Times, what he might do if the growth lever is not as responsive to his aggressive yanking as he hopes. There are only three alternatives after all — borrowing, cutting spending, or raising taxes. All three were ruled out. It’s going to be growth. It’s the only way. It’d better work. Starmer wants politics to be boring again, or as he calls it, “to put politics back into the service of working people”. But there’s a difference between boring politicians and boring politics. Neville Chamberlain was a very boring man who found himself unable to prevent things getting quite lively. While Starmer spoke, various NHS think tanks spoke of the “profound political challenges” in getting NHS waiting lists down. In such circumstances, it is arguably unwise to have as a de facto member of your campaign team a very sick man telling everyone that you’re going to heal the nation. If you want to make yourself look like Jesus, you best be sure you can pull off a miracle. If you can’t, the hungry crowds won’t be as bored as you hope.
10 S1 Friday June 14 2024 | the times News News Politics G7 deal boosts Ukraine’s war chest by $50 billion Aubrey Allegretti Chief Political Correspondent, Puglia Ukraine has been handed a $50 billion boost to its war chest after G7 countries struck a deal to pay a loan funded by frozen Russian assets. Rishi Sunak described the move as a “game-changing package of support” and said western countries were determined to do “whatever it takes” to beat Russia in its war against Ukraine. The prime minister met President Zelensky of Ukraine at the G7 summit in Puglia, Italy, where he reiterated Britain’s unwavering support. Sunak was forced to deny that he had been snubbed by other G7 leaders after holding no one-to-one meetings with them on the first day of the summit. The $50 billion will be underwritten by the interest accrued on Russian money that has been frozen in bank accounts since sanctions were imposed at the start of President Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The sum is about a fifth of the total value of Russian assets that were frozen, but G7 countries have struggled to agree on a plan for how to use the money to fund the war effort. Complex legal and financial frameworks have hampered the discussions, as well as the fact that assets have been seized at different times and in different ways. The money is earmarked for rebuilding Ukraine after the conflict. Sunak held bilateral meetings with Zelensky and Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, yesterday, but had no one-to-one audiences with other G7 leaders. He denied suggestions that he had been snubbed because his chances of remaining prime minister looked slim. Sunak said: “We’ve been here a half a day already and I sat down with a bunch of people I need to in the margins. Justin Trudeau, of Canada, who is tanking in the polls before elections next year, and the scandal-plagued Japanese prime minister, Fumio Kishida. Things are almost as bad for some of the special guests, including Narendra Modi, the prime minister of India, and President Ramaphosa of South Africa, who have both lost their majorities in recent elections. President Zelensky of Ukraine will be worried that the pro-Kyiv consensus of the group will ebb if the present batch of leaders is ousted by right-wingers such as Donald Trump. At least Zelensky can rely on Meloni sticking around after she boosted her support at the EU vote and arrived in Puglia claiming she had “the strongest government of all”. As a sign of her swagger, Meloni has put migration and the perils of AI on the agenda — two of her favourite topics — and irked the French by allegedly trying to water down a G7 declaration on safeguarding abortion rights. Now seen as a kingmaker at the Meloni welcomes leaders united by election woes P unished by voters and plummeting in the polls, G7 leaders have gathered in Italy for what is being described as a lame duck summit at which quick deals will be struck by protagonists fearful of being ousted from office (Tom Kington writes). The leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Japan, the UK and the US were all smiles when they joined Giorgia Meloni, the Italian prime minister, yesterday at the Borgo Egnazia resort in Puglia, but the underlying mood was gloomy. Battered by his rival, Marine Le Pen, at last weekend’s EU elections, President Macron has called snap national elections while Olaf Scholz, the German chancellor, finished behind the hard-right Alternative for Germany in the vote. The future is just as grim for Rishi Sunak, who risks electoral oblivion next month. “Forget the G7s of Angela Merkel when there was a solid European bloc, this time the continent has broken bones and the auspices are not good,” said Teresa Coratella, deputy head of the Rome office of the European Council on Foreign Relations, a think tank. The Europeans were joined in Puglia by President Biden, who faces a tough election in November, Aide says July 4 bet was ‘huge error’ Religious voters more likely Aubrey Allegretti The aide who acts as Rishi Sunak’s eyes and ears among MPs has said he made a “huge error of judgment” by placing a bet on the election date three days before the prime minister called it. Craig Williams apologised yesterday but refused to say whether he knew the date at the time he placed the bet. Sunak said the news was “very disappointing”. He declined to say whether Williams had been present at any meetings about calling the election. Williams, who is defending the seat of Montgomeryshire & Glyndwr, is alleged to have placed a £100 bet three days before Sunak named the date as July 4. He did so at a Ladbrokes in his constituency and got odds of 5-1, The Guardian said. Since Sunak became prime minister in October 2022, Williams has been his parliamentary private secretary. He is one of Sunak’s closest advisers. He told the BBC yesterday: “I clearly made a huge error of judgment, that’s for sure, and I apologise.” Sunak would not say what should happen to Williams, including if he would be disowned as a candidate. “It’s very disappointing news ... You’ll know that there’s an independent inquiry, which is necessarily confidential. I’m sure you’ll understand that it wouldn’t be appropriate for me to comment while that inquiry is ongoing.” Lord Cameron of Chipping Norton, the foreign secretary, called Williams’s action “very foolish”. He said that as Williams was already standing as a Conservative Party candidate “I don’t think we can change that”. The Liberal Democrats called for a Cabinet Office inquiry to look into what information Williams had at the time he placed his bet. Sir Ed Davey, the party leader, told broadcasters in Kent: “If someone knows the outcome of something, it seems to me morally questionable for them to put a bet on it.” Daisy Cooper, the Lib Dems’ deputy leader, called it an example of “endless sleaze and scandal”, adding: “The British people are sick to their back teeth with it.” The Guardian reported that the Gambling Commission had written to all licensed bookmakers this week requesting information on anyone who stood to gain more than £199 by betting on a July election. The watchdog asked bookmakers to confine the search to all customers making such bets in the first three weeks of May. to back government’s record Kaya Burgess Religious Affairs Correspondent Anglicans are more likely than the general population to think the government has handled the cost of living crisis well, while Muslims are more likely to support their running of the NHS, according to an analysis of views by the British Election Study. Non-religious people are the harshest judges of the government’s record on most issues. The research among six groups, Anglican, Catholic, other Christian, Islam, other religion and no religion, conducted in May via YouGov, found 8 per cent of the population thinks the government has handled the cost of living crisis “well” or “very well”. This falls to 7 per cent among Muslims, is 13 per cent among Anglicans and 9 per cent among Catholics. Overall approval ratings for the Tories’ handling of the NHS are 6 per cent. This falls to 4 per cent among people with no religion, but rises to 9 per cent among Muslims and Anglicans. On immigration, 5 per cent of people think the government has handled it well. This rises to 9 per cent among non-Anglican and non-Catholic Christians, 7 per cent among Muslims and 8 per cent among “other religion”, which includes Hindus, Sikhs and Jews. It falls to 4 per cent among the non-religious. Muslims are the only group who believe, albeit only narrowly, that Britain should allow in more asylum seekers.
11 the times | Friday June 14 2024 News News That’s kind of how these things work.” He highlighted his garden walk with Zelensky and said he spoke directly to President Macron of France. Sunak suggested that Britain’s commitment to supporting Ukraine would be under threat if Sir Keir Starmer became prime minister, due to Labour not matching his pledge to raise defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP by 2030. He said: “I can sit there and tell Volodomyr [Zelensky], ‘yep, as long as it takes we will have the money to continue supporting you at the levels that we are’. And Putin can see that because we’ve been increasing our defence budget. The Labour Party can’t say that.” Security was a theme Sunak was keen to hammer home at the G7, given the summit takes him away from the campaign trail at a crucial stage, and with one international trip, to Switzerland this weekend, still ahead. Sunak joined President Biden and Justin Trudeau, the prime minister of Canada, in expressing “serious concerns” that Russia was plotting to influence elections in Moldova in October. The trio claimed Moscow was inciting protests, promoting disinformation and sowing distrust. Voters in the country, which borders Ukraine, will elect a president and participate in a referendum on its attempt to join the EU. Western leaders have grown increasingly worried about Russia’s influence. In a joint statement Sunak, Biden and Trudeau accused the Kremlin of using “lies, deceit, corruption and disinformation to undermine sovereignty and democracy”. They threw their support behind President Sandu of Moldova, who is viewed as pro-European and running for a second term. The three leaders said: “We share President Sandu’s strong concerns about the Kremlin’s use of criminal groups to finance political activities and undermine Moldova’s democratic institutions.” They accused Russia of trying to “foment negative public perceptions of western governments, Moldova’s incumbent leadership, and Moldova’s potential for EU integration”. They also raised fears of a plot to incite protests should a pro-Russia candidate not win the presidency. “Part of these [Russian] operations would include spreading lies about the incumbent president’s character and intentions, and about supposed electoral irregularities,” the statement added. Moldova became an independent country after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. There are fears that, President Putin could turn his attention towards an invasion to bring it back into Moscow’s sphere of influence by force. Russia opposes Moldova’s attempt to join the EU but has dismissed allegations of election interference. The UK had earlier announced new sanctions against Russia’s “shadow fleet” of ships secretly transporting oil to fund the war in Ukraine. The move is designed to target Russia’s “most critical revenue source”. The G7 leaders, including Giorgia Meloni, left, Rishi Sunak, far left, President Biden, right, and Justin Trudeau, below, were chauffeured to San Domenico Golf Club in Puglia to watch a parachute drop. President Macron and Olaf Scholz arrived after a humiliating defeat in EU elections last weekend. Meloni’s party received a boost at the vote, prompting her to claim she had the “strongest government” EU, she will want to huddle with the commission’s president, Ursula von der Leyen, about what top jobs she can get in Europe, in return for backing the German politician for a second term. After winning over the leaders individually with her ready Roman wit, Meloni’s toughest challenge may be whether she has the charisma to charm them all at the same time. “There is lots of work to do but I am certain that in these two days we can have a summit able to produce concrete and tangible results,” Meloni said brightly as the leaders gathered round a table for their first session. Meloni embraced Sunak at the entrance to the G7, welcoming him back to Italy seven months after he visited Rome last December to attend a rally hosted by her Brothers of Italy party. The pair are close and have a shared passion for tackling small boat crossings, which have led to far greater numbers of migrants arriving on the shores of Italy than in the English Channel. Meloni and Sunak hugged and shared a peck on the cheek when they were reunited. But Coratella said having enfeebled allies did no favours to Meloni. “This G7 is her first big multilateral test and she will have hoped for stronger members — this doesn’t help her at all,” she said. Head of King’s school calls VAT existential threat Nicola Woolcock Education Editor Labour’s VAT policy poses an existential threat to private schools, the head of Gordonstoun has said. Lisa Kerr is standing down as principal of the boarding school in Moray, Scotland — the King’s alma mater. She is to become the new head of George Watson’s College in Edinburgh. She said the independent sector should have spent the past few decades extolling its wider benefits to society. Gordonstoun, which was also attended by the King’s father, charges £53,000 a year and focuses on outdoor activities. The school near Elgin was founded in 1934 by Dr Kurt Hahn, a German educationalist. Kerr told a conference at Downe House School, near Newbury, Berk- shire, that the Labour policy posed an existential threat to many schools. She said significant change to taxation was likely to be introduced despite a superficial level of debate. Labour has pledged to add VAT to private school fees if it forms the next government. It says schools can choose whether or not to pass this on to parents. Many schools insist that they cannot afford to absorb the cost. Kerr said: “It is an existential threat, certainly for a lot of people in the sector. There’s a lack of understanding. Many of the sector bodies recognise that it would have been really great if we’d spent the last few decades building deeper understanding of the value that independent schools bring to society. In Scotland, research shows that independent schools add half a billion pounds to the economy. “The unintended consequences are really important to understand. I hope that whatever happens with the development of the policy, there will be a deep look at the consequences across education and society.” The head of a wealth management firm has urged young couples to start saving now if they planned to send any children to a private school. Lisa Kerr says private schools benefit society Chris Rudden, head of investment consultants at Moneyfarm, said that people who wanted to send their infants to a private school should invest lump sums topped up with regular contributions. “Prospective parents, particularly those from the ‘squeezed middle’ may now feel that they have to give up on the idea of privately educating their children or take on debt,” he said. “School fees are not just about your salary but also about how you invest. “The sooner people start investing, the better, which is why even people in their 20s would be well advised to take the plunge, even before children come along, if private schooling is their desired choice.” Farage backs candidates over fascist ‘cobblers’ Tom Witherow, Aubrey Allegretti Nigel Farage has defended the 41 Reform UK candidates found to be social media “friends” of a fascist leader, saying: “I apologise that not all of our candidates have been to Eton.” Close to one in ten candidates for the party in England were connected on Facebook with Gary Raikes, the British fascist leader, The Times found. Yesterday Farage claimed it was “utter cobblers” to say they had Nazi sympathies because “on Facebook mates send each other things” without “having any idea where it comes from”. During a phone-in segment on an LBC radio show, he said: “I can only apologise that not all of our candidates have been to Eton, to Oxford, not all of our candidates are part of the London set.” Raikes, a former organiser for the British National Party, founded the New British Union in the image of Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists, and has called for a “fascist revolution”. Farage said he would consider disowning some candidates, but that they could not be deselected because they were legally on the ballot paper. Farage, who this month announced that he would lead Reform UK and fight for the parliamentary seat of Clacton in Essex, defended his candidates, saying that many of the comments highlighted by newspapers reflected how ordinary people spoke. “They’re ordinary people ... that’s how they feel,” he told the presenter Nick Ferrari. “People are allowed to have opinions.” When asked whether he would withdraw support from a candidate who said “Islam and Nazis are the same thing”, he said “probably not”, adding: “Winston Churchill was clearly a very bad man because he thought the same.” The Times revealed last week that Reform’s prospective MPs included a racist who referred to a group of black people as “baboons” and a magazine publisher who suggested that the convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell did her teenage victims “a favour”. The party said its vetting procedures had been “truncated” by the snap election, but only two of the list of about a dozen names passed to the party were deselected. Farage said he was unable to remove Ian Gribbin, the candidate for Bexhill & Battle, East Sussex, who said that Britain should have accepted Hitler’s offer of neutrality before the Second World War. “What can you do, his name’s on the ballot paper,” he said. When asked whether he would disown his candidates, he added: “I may well do that, I haven’t had time to think.” The Times can reveal that Matthew Warnes, the Reform candidate in Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, who runs a children’s entertainment firm, called a Polish man “a job stealing twat that can’t read English”. He previously changed his Facebook profile picture to a graphic featuring the video game character Mario, which read: “Don’t be a racist, be like Mario”, adding that he “jumps like a black man and grabs coins like a Jew”. Robert Lomas, a Reform candidate in Barnsley North, wrote online that asylum seekers had it “in their DNA to lie” and that “black people of Britain” were “grifting the race card” and should “get up off your lazy arses”. Warnes and Reform did not respond to a request for comment.

the times | Friday June 14 2024 13 S1 News The gold ring belonged to George Grenville, a Whig who was prime minister for two years in the 18th century. It was found by Tom Clark, 85, in a field in Aylesbury near the residence of Grenville’s son and has now sold for £9,500 at auction Former PM’s gold ring found in field A gold ring unearthed by a metal detectorist in a Buckinghamshire sheep field has sold for £9,500 at auction after it was found to have once been in the possession of an 18th-century prime minister (Jack Blackburn writes). The “seal” ring had the name Grenvil inscribed on it, which led experts to discover that it belonged to George Grenville, who was prime minister between 1763 and 1765. “Just as the country focuses on who will be the next prime minister, we are pleased to be looking back to who was in power 260 years ago,” said Nigel Mills of the auctioneers Noonans, who sold the ring this week. The field in which it was found was close to the home of Grenville’s son, also named George, to whom the jewellery was bequeathed. It is not clear when the ring was lost. It was found by Tom Clark, 85, near Aylesbury last year, 10in beneath the surface. “I didn’t watch Families of Nottingham victims demand action on police failings Will Humphries Families and friends of the victims of the Nottingham attacks laid roses where the two students were murdered on the anniversary of their killing. Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley-Kumar, both 19, were stabbed by Valdo Calocane, 32, as they walked home after a night out celebrating the end of exams on June 13 last year. He also fatally stabbed Ian Coates, 65, a school caretaker, who had been on his way to work. Remembering the victims yesterday morning, a trail of flowers was laid on Ilkeston Road where the students died, near their halls of residence. In a joint statement, the families of the three victims said that they would “pause to reflect upon that tragic day and remember the souls of the three vibrant, caring, hard-working and much loved family members who are no longer here”. They said the “brutal, calculated and unprovoked attack” by Calocane was “carefully planned” and despite his mental health issues they maintain that “he knew what he was doing, he knew it was wrong, but he did it anyway”. Last month the Court of Appeal concluded that there was “no error” when Calocane was given an indefinite hospital order instead of a prison sentence because he was in the “grip of a severe psychotic episode” during the attacks. Calocane’s sentence for manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility was upheld by the judges, who said they had the “greatest possible sympathy” for the victims and their families but that the right sentence had been Sinead O’Malley, far left, was hugged yesterday a year to the day after her daughter Grace, Barnaby Webber and Ian Coates were stabbed to death handed down. The families say that the authorities have failed to answer their questions of why, if he was so unstable, Calocane received no immediate mental health assessment in custody, no treatment until mid-September and remained in prison until November. They have also raised concerns about shortcomings in the police investigation, including why toxicology tests were not taken to rule out drug-taking. Nottinghamshire police said that Calocane had no history of drug abuse, but the families found out that he had attended a barbecue with a violent, cannabis-using gangster two days before the stabbings. He would not have had the option of a diminished responsibility plea if he had taken drugs. O’Malley-Kumar’s father, Dr Sanjoy Kumar, a GP and former forensic medical examiner for the police, has asked for police statements, psychiatric reports and a transcript of Calocane’s interview. All have been denied. The authorities cite the myriad continuing independent inquiries into decision-making and failings. In a statement released on the anniversary of the killings, the victims’ families said: “Today is not the day for fight but tomorrow is. “We continue in our dogged pursuit for appropriate justice, individual and organisational accountability and real lasting change to our society and laws that will provide more protection and public safety, appropriate punishment for crimes and proper support for victims and their families. As three fami- lies we stand united by grief and loss, but fuelled by our anger at the scale of failings, poor policing, weak prosecution, dereliction of duty in medical care and a series of catastrophic missed opportunities that would and should have stopped these entirely preventable deaths.” The families said they had accepted an offer of support in their legal fight from Neil Hudgell of Hudgell Solicitors, and Tim Moloney KC, of Doughty Street Chambers, and their legal teams. “We have had to face so much over the past 12 painful and agonising months in our fight for answers and justice and are utterly exhausted,” the families said. “Up until this point we have been powerless and forced to be passive. It is time to take the lead; and with this support, to ensure our answers are met and failures of Leicester Police, Nottingham Police, Nottingham Mental Health Trust, amongst others, are exposed. No stone will be left unturned as we will continue for however long this may take.” Hudgell said: “It is our responsibility to ensure that we do everything we can to help these families establish the truth, effect change and find redress, putting all those agencies who played a part in these tragic events under the most powerful of spotlights.” O’Malley-Kumar’s mother, Sinead O’Malley, said she had not read a letter sent to her by Calocane’s family but understands that they blame the killings on failings by the authorities. “I don’t want to look into the faces of the people that brought this monster into the world,” she told the Daily Mirror. the sale as I was out metal-detecting,” Clark said. He said of the auction: “I am very pleased ... I would like to put the money in my bank account, but I am sure that my wife will have ideas of how to spend it.” Grenville was not one of our more memorable prime ministers and had one of the shorter tenures too, at two years and 85 days. His time in office, however, comfortably eclipses that of Liz Truss, who became the shortestserving prime minister when she resigned after only 45 days. Grenville’s chief impact was in the runup to the American Revolutionary War. “He tried to reduce Britain’s growing debt by raising revenue in the American colonies with the introduction of the Sugar Act, the Currency Act and the Stamp Act,” Mills said. “These new laws ... were strongly objected to by the colonists and stirred up protests, which resulted in George III dismissing Grenville.” US ‘contempt’ over Harry Dunn inquest Lara Wildenberg The United States “obstructed” the inquest into the death of Harry Dunn and has treated British lives with “contempt”, his family said. Dunn, 19, was killed when a car driven by Anne Sacoolas, 46, a US government employee, collided with his motorcycle outside an RAF base in Northamptonshire in 2019. Sacoolas then fled the country and refused to return to give evidence, with the US government asserting diplomatic immunity on her behalf. Neither representatives of the US embassy nor Sacoolas attended the four-day inquest into Dunn’s death this week. This prompted Radd Seiger, the Dunn family spokesman, to suggest the US government’s position was that “lives of UK citizens like Harry ultimately do not matter”. Speaking after the inquest concluded yesterday, Seiger said: “They have positively obstructed the coroner’s inquiry and deprived the family of the answers they were entitled to as to why no one has ever addressed the issue of safety of UK citizens.” Sacoolas said that she had made a “tragic mistake” by driving on the wrong side of the road in statements read out at the inquest. In 2022 she admitted death by careless driving and received an eight-month prison sentence, suspended for 12 months. Anne Pember, the Northamptonshire coroner, criticised the US government over a lack of training for diplomatic personnel at RAF Croughton. She recorded Dunn’s death as being a result of “injuries sustained during a head-on collision” with a car.
14 Friday June 14 2024 | the times News Dress to impress Clothes from Dame Vivienne Westwood’s own collection go on show at Christie’s in London today until June 24, before being auctioned to benefit the late couturier’s foundation and Médecins Sans Frontières. The sale has more than 200 lots of clothes, dating back 40 years Disabled tenants ‘still at risk’ after Grenfell report James Beal Social Affairs Editor The failure to implement recommendations from the Grenfell inquiry is putting the lives of disabled people at risk, campaigners said on the seventh anniversary of the fire. The inquiry’s phase-one report in 2019 called for a change in the law to force owners and managers of buildings to prepare personal emergency evacuation plans (Peeps) for disabled tenants. The government, however, has failed to impose the law, leaving vulnerable people in jeopardy. Adam Gabsi, chairman of Harrow Association of Disabled People in northwest London, said before the seventh anniversary of the Grenfell fire today that a law change on Peeps was needed urgently. Gabsi, 38, who has multiple sclerosis and uses a wheelchair, said landlords were able to place a value on a tenancy but could disregard the value of their tenants’ lives. The second and final report into the Grenfell Tower disaster, in which 15 of the 37 disabled residents (41 per cent) were killed, is due in September. Gabsi, who lives on the sixth floor of a high-rise building that is covered in cladding, said: “How can we be confident they are going to implement phase two’s recommendations when they haven’t even done phase one? “Regardless of who the next government is, they need to implement Peeps. The government should be legally bound to do this.” Phase one of the report into the west London fire that killed 72 people on June 14, 2017, was released in October two years later with 15 recommendations. The Conservative government has previously indicated that it would not be enforcing the recommendation of Peeps amid concerns about the practicality and cost. A spokesman for Grenfell United, the organisation of survivors and bereaved families that is demanding justice, said: “Disabled residents are in the same position they were in Grenfell Tower that night — 41 per cent of the tower’s disabled residents died. “With a single staircase as the only means of escape, they didn’t stand a chance. We are calling on the next government to implement personal emergency evacuation plans for disabled residents. “This crucial recommendation from the phase-one report would mean residents have a personal plan to get them out of a building safely in the event of a fire. The government has dragged its feet for five years, telling us it’s too costly. But you can’t put a price on people’s lives. We lost 72. How many more people need to die before we see action? “This must now be a cross-party priority to implement this vital lifesaving recommendation. Everyone deserves to be safe in their homes.” The government has implemented 11 of the 15 phase-one recommendations from the Grenfell inquiry. It ran a public consultation, seeking views on its plans to deliver the Peeps-related recommendations in 2022. It emerged last month that survivors and bereaved families might wait almost ten years after the fire before they get justice and those responsible for it are brought before a court. The Metropolitan Police said that files would be sent to the Crown Prosecution Service next year, with criminal charges unlikely before the end of 2026. Bills for insurance, phones and broadband hit budgets Andrew Ellson Consumer Affairs Correspondent A growing number of Britons are battling to stay afloat financially, new data shows, after disposable incomes slipped as households struggled to absorb higher telecoms and insurance bills. The average household is now having to find an extra £133 a month to pay their usual outgoings, an increase of nearly 10 per cent since February. The Household Money Index, which tracks how much is spent on more than 30 regular outgoings, including groceries, mortgage and rent, found that Britons are spending 35 per cent more on phone, life, health and pet insurance than at the start of the year. The rises have more than offset higher earnings and the effects of tax cuts. The index revealed that gross income has increased by 3.2 per cent to an average of £31,642.30, with monthly income up 5.5 per cent because of the reduction in national insurance in April. When taking all these factors into account, people have £20 less disposable income a month than three months ago. The findings will be unwelcome news for Rishi Sunak as he tries to convince voters to give the Tories a record fifth term. The prime minister met his pledge, made at the beginning of last year, to halve inflation, which was running at 10.7 per cent, with the most recent data showing the consumer prices index now at 2.3 per cent. However, even if price rises have been constrained for now, voters are unlikely to feel much benefit. Part of the problem has been rising telecoms costs, with broadband and mobile phone providers increasing bills sharply in April. All the main providers raise costs annually in line with inflation plus an extra amount for network investment. For example, Virgin Media raised prices by 8.8 per cent, February’s retail prices index plus 3.9 per cent while BT put its prices up by 7.9 per cent, which was CPI plus 3.9 per cent. Insurance costs have also been rising. The index found spending on pet insurance was up by 25 per cent while health insurance premiums rose by 22 per cent. Car, phone and life insurance have all also increased. Spending on nonessentials like streaming services and gaming has risen as providers have increased prices across the board. The only areas where bills have fallen are groceries, down 0.9 per cent, energy bills that are down 2.2 per cent and loan repayments (excluding mortgages) which are down 3.4 per cent.
15 the times | Friday June 14 2024 News Former Spandau Ballet singer, 36, accused of raping three women Laurence Sleator A former singer with the pop group Spandau Ballet, who has been accused of raping three women as they slept, told one that she “deserved” it, a court has been told. Ross Davidson, 36, who was the group’s frontman for a year in 2018, replacing Tony Hadley, is accused of sex offences against five women and raping three between 2013 and 2023. Davidson, whose stage name is Ross William Wild, also faces charges of voyeurism, intimidation and controlling behaviour. At the start of his trial Wood Green crown court in north London was told that Davidson had a “darker side” to the outgoing pop star he portrayed himself as, and that he used one woman as a “sexual slave”. The first incident was said to have taken place at his flat in north London in October 2013, where he secretly filmed himself raping the woman after an argument. She said: “I was in tears, we were having an argument. He suddenly became calm and was telling me that this is what I want, this is what I deserve. He then pushed me back on to the bed, my top was down and he unbuckled my jeans and pulled my jeans down somehow.” She added: “The whole time I was crying, it was pretty obvious I did not want him on top of me, it was not my choice for him to be there. He then said, ‘You look like you have just been raped.’ At the time, I was like, ‘Surely that did not just happen.’” She said that she did not report the incident straight away because it took her a long time to process what had happened. Davidson was also said to have filmed himself touching another woman’s One woman said that she was crying while Ross Davidson was on top of her breasts. This woman was interviewed by police. A third woman was allegedly raped as she slept in Cannes, where the musician was attending the film festival in May 2018, an incident the prosecution described as “bizarre and perverted”. He is accused of treating a fourth woman as a “sexual slave” and filmed a sex act without her consent. Afterwards she went to the bathroom and rang her mother, saying she’d been hurt. Davidson denies all charges and said all interactions were consensual. The trial continues. American fans’ goal is getting to the Euros Andrew Ellson, Charlie Parker Tracey Boles With the T20 World Cup being held on US soil for the first time, Americans are having their first proper taste of international cricket. However, when it comes to sports invented by the British, it appears that football is their first love. Sales data shared with The Times show that Americans are snapping up more spare Euro 2024 tickets than any other nationality. Viagogo, the ticket exchange website, has said football fans from the US have bought more seats on its platform than even the Germans, who are hosting the tournament. Canadians are the third most frequent purchasers with Britons back in eighth, although tickets for England’s matches are unavailable on the website. The final, which will be held in Berlin next month, is the most popular match based on ticket sales. It is followed by the opening match between Germany and Scotland, which kicks off in Munich at 8pm tonight. Viagogo is a secondary ticketing website where people who already have tickets can sell them. Prices are usually well in excess of their face value. Uefa’s terms and conditions ban the resale of Euro 2024 tickets except on its own exchange, where they must be sold at face value. Nonetheless, this official exchange usually has few if any tickets available while seats can almost always be purchased on secondary ticketing sites, such as Viagogo, albeit at vastly inflated prices. For example, the cheapest ticket for the match between Portugal and the Czech Republic on June 18 is £313, and the face value of the ticket is £100. Uefa said it reserves the right to cancel any tickets resold through unofficial channels, but in practice, that rarely happens. Viagogo, meanwhile, has said it offers buyers a guarantee that they will get their money back if they are denied entry. Euro 2024 tickets are in high demand among Americans because of the growing popularity of football — or soccer, as they call it — across the Atlantic. In 2004, only 2 per cent of Americans named soccer as their Football has soared in popularity in the US. Enrique Quintero and Andrea Vera, inset, travelled from Texas for the “vibe” favourite sport, but last year that figure had grown to 8 per cent, driven largely by young people. Growing numbers also watch the game on television, with the Premier League and international tournaments most popular. The most recent World Cup final in 2022 received an average of almost 26 million viewers in America, which was more than twice the average of the 2023 NBA basketball finals. Football’s popularity across the Atlantic has also been boosted by highprofile celebrities attending games or buying British football clubs. Last year, Kim Kardashian was pictured at an Arsenal game with her seven-year-old son, Saint. Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, the Hollywood actors, have also helped fuel interest in the game after buying Wrexham football club and filming their efforts for a documentary series on Disney Plus. In Germany, “soccer-mad” Americans were scattered among thousands of Scots in Munich before tonight’s opening game. One couple from the United States told The Times they were desperate to “catch a game” and had planned their entire tour of Europe around Euro 2024 fixtures. Enrique Quintero and Andrea Vera, from Texas, said they “want to experience what it feels like to be in a game here in Europe” because it “might be a different atmosphere than the US”. As bagpipes blared behind him, Quintero, 42, said: “We know how it is in America, so we’re trying to get the European vibe.” German police fear Serbian ‘ultras’ threat to England supporters Charlie Parker Germany Hooliganism fears are growing at the European Football Championship after thousands of Serbian supporters confronted police at their team’s camp. Fans threw a flare at officers at the Rosenau stadium in Augsburg, Bavaria, where the Serbian squad is preparing to play England on Sunday. Up to 8,000 Serbians were reported to have tried to enter the ground on Wednesday but fewer than 3,000 were allowed in, leaving many outside. Police in the stadium had to stop a fan who tried to race towards the players while they did drills on the pitch. The crowd booed and a burning flare was thrown at officers when they led away the man. Uefa has banned pyrotechnics, including flares, fireworks and smoke bombs, from all stadiums during the tournament. The German newspaper Bild reported that the man who threw the flare escaped from the police. The training session was halted briefly as officers calmed the situation. A witness said: “Serbians here sure are rowdy.” Up to 500 Serbian “ultras” are feared to be looking for trouble at England’s first Euro 2024 match in Gelsenkirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia. Uefa has designated the match as “high risk”. Peter Both, the city’s chief of police, said the biggest challenge his officers faced was identifying and intercepting “violence-seeking Serbian hooligans”. Supporters from both sides will be limited to low-alcohol beer. The strong lager normally served in Arena AufSchalke has been replaced with a half-strength beer. A security operation involving 1,000 police will keep apart the two sets of fans. While most Serbian supporters who have travelled to Germany are expected to be peaceful, officials are worried by the small “criminal element”. A Serbian fan said of the England team: “On the pitch you will probably win but off the pitch it’s not a contest. We aren’t afraid of anyone.” He told the Daily Mirror: “We learnt everything we know from the Italians and the English but they are no match for strong Serbian men.” An estimated 40,000 English fans are expected at the game along with about 8,000 Serbian supporters.

17 the times | Friday June 14 2024 News Blair Witch cast haunted by missing out on millions Alex Farber Media Correspondent The original poster for the immersive horror film The Blair Witch Project featured pictures of its three stars under a “Missing” banner. But 25 years after the release of the influential low-budget “found footage” movie, which went on to gross $248 million (£200 million), the actors have complained that it is their money that has got lost. Heather Donahue, Michael C Williams and Joshua Leonard have written to the entertainment company Lionsgate, which holds the rights to the film, to demand “retroactive and future residual payments” for their acting services equivalent to the amount that they would have earned if they had union or legal representation at the time they were cast. Williams said that their decision as young actors to accept $500 a week to appear in the film was a cautionary tale. He told Variety: “I did a lot of work for no pay so you’re like, ‘Oh, maybe I can be a professional.’ Giant corporations don’t care that this happens to young artists and that’s got to change somehow. Hopefully, we will help somebody to see: don’t do what we did.” Their letter was sparked by a deal struck in April by Lionsgate with the horror film producer Blumhouse to revive the franchise to follow the second and third instalments: Book of Shadows in 2000 and Blair Witch in 2016. Leonard called the revival “classless” and accused Lionsgate of taking advantage of the trio. He said: “It’s 25 years of disrespect from the folks who’ve pocketed the lion’s share of the profits from our work. Art isn’t a write-off, and workers shouldn’t be expendable.” In their open letter to Lionsgate, the actors wrote: “Our film has now been rebooted twice, both times were a disappointment from a fan, box office and critical perspective.” Donahue claimed that the actors had also been taken advantage of by retailers selling merchandise. She said: “It became obvious that the uses [of the film] were going to be constant. At that point I thought to myself, ‘If this is what success looks like, I would like to get out of this business’.” They have requested TMS diary@thetimes.co.uk | @timesdiary Queen versus dotty David Whatever happens on July 4, officials in Downing Street and Buckingham Palace will be spared the dilemma in 2015 of a prime minister in a coalition winning his own majority. Lord Young of Old Windsor, the late Queen’s private secretary, says there was a late “constitutional pickle” over the wording of David Cameron’s victory speech. Normally a PM whose party is returned will say they have “informed” the monarch that they will form a government, while a new PM will have been “invited” to form one. In 2015, the government wanted one phrasing, the Queen the other. They were still arguing as Cameron’s car came down the Mall, Young says, but an official found a fudge in an Agatha Christie book, specifically an ellipsis that is a turning point in The Murder of Roger Ackroyd. “I have been to see the Queen … and I will now form a majority Conservative government,” Cameron said, those “unspoken three dots” handling the quandary neatly. “Some things are better left unsaid,” Young says. Being able to cook fudge helps in Whitehall. Lord O’Donnell, the former cabinet secretary, says that old projects can be made appealing to a new government simply by changing the badge. In 2010, Cameron scrapped the PM’s “delivery unit”. Too Blairite. It was replaced by the “implementation unit” in 2012. As O’Donnell tells Heywood Quarterly: “I struggled to see any real difference.” rowing blues The Olympic rower James Cracknell, who is standing for the Tories in Colchester, was bemused when his local party told him to buy a wooden spoon. This was not a pessimistic prediction of his chances, he tells the Political Party, but an important tool for canvassing, as he realised when his fingers were first nibbled by a voter’s dog as he pushed a leaflet through the letterbox. Surely an oar would be even better? But Cracknell, below, is a bit disappointed over the timing of the election. “He’s put it slap-bang in the middle of Henley Royal Regatta,” he said. some things borrowed A good vicar must be prepared for every eventuality. The Rev Kate Bottley was about to preside at a wedding when the bride’s mother broke the heel of a shoe as she entered church. “Fortunately she was my size, so she wore my heels,” Bottley said, “and I had to wear the only other shoes I’d got in the car.” Which explains why that couple’s wedding photos memorably show the vicar wearing a pair of wellington boots. Subliminal messaging matters in elections, so it was perhaps an odd decision of the Conservative candidate for Tottenham to do a photoshoot in a graveyard. “Tottenham needs someone who will stand up for our community,” he tweeted. And the dead shall rise and vote Tory on judgment day? chef’s cookery lesson Being the child of a restaurateur is no picnic. When Ruth Rogers was starting the River Café, it influenced the food that she served at home, to the regret of her son. On her podcast, the chef said she didn’t realise the level of his discontent until he rang her asking to be collected from a playdate where he had feasted on jam sandwiches and sweets. Rogers pointed out that the friend only lived around the corner and he could easily walk home himself, but he insisted that she come over. “He wanted me to see what a good mother’s fridge looked like,” she says. patrick kidd “meaningful consultation” around any Blair Witch-related spin-off projects including prequels, sequels, toys and games in which their names or images are used. Williams said that he was forced to continue working in furniture removals after the film’s release despite being on the cover of Newsweek magazine. “I’m embarrassed that I let this happen to me,” he said. “Everybody’s wondering what happened, and your wife is in the grocery line and she can’t pay because a cheque bounced. You’re in the most successful independent movie of all time and you can’t take care of your loved ones.” The film, in which The film’s stars Michael C Williams, Joshua Leonard and Heather Donahue the three actors appeared using their own names, was shot on a shoestring budget. Its story is told using footage from cameras that are discovered a year after they go missing in woods in Maryland while investigating a local myth about a murderous supernatural entity, the Blair Witch. The film’s directors and producers said: “We’re hopeful Heather, Joshua and Mike find a satisfying conclusion to their conversations with Lionsgate.” Leonard said that around the release of the second film the actors had agreed a settlement of about $300,000 each from a buyout of their ownership points.
18 Friday June 14 2024 | the times News ‘Wanton’ law puts drunken cyclist in prison after crash Laurence Sleator Underground art Shadows on the Wall, drawings and models of scenes at Tube stations during the war by Henry Moore, centre, feature alongside photographs taken by Roger Mayne in The Courtauld Gallery’s summer exhibition in London Join us for election insight and debate What will the election mean for Britain? As we countdown to July 4, join our free newsroom livestreams every week. Renowned Times journalists and presenters break down the key election issues, from business and the economy to education and the environment. A drunk cyclist using a bicycle with no brakes has been jailed after knocking over a woman and leaving her needing a new hip. Lisa Wade, 46, was riding at a “furious” speed when she hit Ruth Kitching, 65, who was chatting on a pavement in York in March last year. At York crown court, Wade admitted causing bodily harm by wanton and furious driving and was sentenced to eight months in prison. The charge comes under section 35 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861, a law originally drawn up to address the risk of horse-drawn carriages. The court had been told that Wade, who was “highly impaired” by alcohol, came “flying” round a blind corner. Wade was riding on the pavement one-handed and carrying a large bag of dog food. A police officer called to the scene also later noticed there was “no braking mechanism” on the bicycle. Laura McBride, for the prosecution, said that Kitching was standing on a footpath when she was hit and was left with “catastrophic” injuries. After the crash Kitching lay on the pavement waiting for an ambulance for two hours. She was eventually taken to Leeds General Infirmary and had a hip replacement. She was discharged from hospital on crutches the following month and relied on friends and family to do basic tasks. Nicholas Hammond, representing Wade, said that her actions were “reckless in the extreme” but she was “genuinely remorseful”. Recorder Taryn Turner told her: “You shouldn’t have been on the pave- ment and your bike should have been mechanically sound, but it wasn’t. I’m quite satisfied you made a deliberate decision to ignore the rules of the road and had a total disregard for the risk that your riding of this bike presented [to others], which was obviously highly dangerous.” In 2022 Hilda Griffiths, 81, died from head injuries 59 days after she was hit by a cyclist doing timed laps of Regent’s Park in London. An inquest last month was told that cyclists are not required to obey speed limits. Detective Sergeant Ropafadzo Bungo told Inner West London coroner’s court that there were “no specific” speed limit signs for cyclists and a police review had found “there were no crimiLisa Wade was sentenced to eight months in jail nal acts which would allow prosecution” for cyclists who exceed limits. Families of those killed or injured by cyclists have long campaigned for new legislation. Matt Briggs, 53, whose wife, Kim, 44, was killed by a cyclist in east London, and who has been campaigning for a tougher stance, said last month: “The humble pedestrian lacks the support in law. Your tragedy is compounded by legal confusion.” The cyclist in that case, who was riding a fixed-gear bike with no front brakes, was jailed for 18 months after he was found guilty under the 1861 law. Gender-critical activists are anti-rights, says UN group Join our hosts every Wednesday from 7pm to 8pm James Beal Social Affairs Editor June 19 with Manveen Rana June 26 with Stig Abell FromWestminster to your World Register today: Visit times-event.com/election or scan the QR code THE ELECTION STATION The organisation UN Women has been criticised for saying that women’s rights activists were “falsely” trying to claim that transgender people pose a threat to single-sex spaces. UN Women, whose advocates include the Duchess of Sussex, had made several statements about gender on Instagram for Pride month. It said there was an “antirights movement” which was seeking to “falsely portray the rights of LGBTQ+ people as competing with women’s rights”. UN Women added: “Some try to frame the human rights of transgender people as being at odds with women’s rights. For instance, asserting that trans women pose a threat to the rights, spaces and safety of cisgender women.” UN Women is charged with working for gender equality and the empowerment of women. The Duchess of Sussex has previously been an advocate for the group, while Emma Watson, the actress known for her role as Hermione in the Harry Potter films, was a goodwill ambassador. UN Women also linked to a 1,300word “explainer” titled LGBTIQ+ Communities and the Anti-rights Pushback: Five Things to Know. The document included the claim that “state and non-state actors” in many countries were attempting to roll back rights and entrench stigma, “endangering the rights and lives” of LGBT people. The explainer said there was a long tradition in which anti-rights movements frame equality for women and LGBT people as a threat to “traditional” family values, which “gender-critical” campaigners have taken to extremes. Fiona McAnena, director of campaigns at the charity Sex Matters, said: “It’s a sad day when UN Women lectures women’s rights campaigners on the need to include men with transgender identities in our work. “Labelling the grassroots campaigners and groups who are defending women’s rights against a global tidal wave of gender-identity ideology as an ‘anti-rights movement’ is outrageous. “There is simply no way to defend the claim that trans rights don’t compete with women’s rights, so UN Women had to resort to conflating the rights of lesbian, gay and bisexual people with those of people who claim a gender identity in order to make its point. “UN Women’s claim that campaigners are ‘putting lives at risk’ has been refuted time and time again — this is dangerous and irresponsible propaganda.” UN Women has been contacted for comment.
19 the times | Friday June 14 2024 News Henry Winkler posed with firefighters after his hotel in Dublin was evacuated. He played The Fonz, below, for a decade Fonz keeps his cool after Irish hotel fire T o those who find themselves in a tricky situation, Arthur “The Fonz” Fonzarelli would always offer the same advice: stay cool (Joshua Thurston and Laurence Sleator write). Henry Winkler, who played the Happy Days character for a decade from 1974 and 1984, seems to have taken his character’s advice to heart. The American actor unexpectedly appeared during a news report by Ireland’s national broadcaster about a fire at a historic Dublin hotel. Despite being rushed out of the Shelbourne, Winkler was happy to offer an impromptu interview. “When I heard the fire alarm, I thought it was the clock radio,” the 78-year-old, more recently known for his role in the sitcom Arrested Development and dark comedy Barry, told RTE News. “I thought somebody had set the alarm before we got there — like, another guest. Finally, I went into another room, and it was still buzzing, so I called downstairs. The woman said in a very calm voice ‘Yes, we’re all evacuating. You must evacuate right now’. And I left.” Staff and guests were forced to leave the hotel, known as the Grand Dame of Dublin, on Wednesday after an alarm was raised at 10.30am. The blaze was brought under control in less than an hour. Winkler posed for photographs with crew from the six engines that were sent to deal with the fire on the fifth floor of the hotel. “Firemen are some of my favourite human beings, firemen and firewomen. They run in when other people are running out. I think [their hands] deserve to be shook,” said Winkler, who is in the Irish Childminder who fatally shook baby boy sentenced to 12 years Mario Ledwith, Laurence Sleator A childminder who fatally shook a nine-month-old boy before trying to cover up his death as an accidental choking has been jailed for 12 years. Karen Foster, 63, snapped after Harlow Collinge fell out of his high chair and started to cry. Harlow was taken to hospital after the incident on March 1, 2022, where Foster hugged his mother and said that she had tried to help him after the “choking”. He died four days later. A CT scan later showed that he had suffered significant injuries to the brain, with bleeding on both sides and swelling. The injury caused cardiorespiratory arrest with a lack of oxygen to his brain for a critical period, Preston crown court was told. When Foster dialled 999 she said that Harlow had “something like a fit” in what investigators said was part of a “web of lies” to hide her actions. She later tried to blame the injuries on his mother, Gemma Collinge, who had left him at Foster’s home in Hapton, near Burnley. Foster had been due to go on trial for murder but pleaded guilty to manslaughter last week, and admitted that “forceful shaking” led to his death. Despite claiming benefits for ill health, Foster was a registered childminder with nine years’ experience who had been breaching care guidelines to make more money. She exceeded Ofsted guidance on the maximum number and ages of children who should be in her care. At a sentencing hearing, Foster was told by Mr Justice Barry Cotter she would be jailed for 12 years and seven months. The judge said that Foster, despite suffering ill health including hip pain, chose to carry on looking after more children than she should have and this contributed to her “loss of temper”. He said: “You should have been a safe pair of hands to which Gemma Collinge could ensure her precious child. I have no doubt you snapped on March 1, 2022, in part due to the fact Karen Foster admitted manslaughter that you were not coping with the demands of caring for four children. You lost your temper and he was on the receiving end. You shook an almost tenmonth-old child so violently to cause devastating injuries. His death was caused in the course of an assault.” Harlow’s mother, his father, Allen Frangleton, older siblings and wider family wept in the public gallery. In a victim impact statement, Collinge said: “How do I explain losing my son in such horrific circumstances? Harlow was enjoying his little life. He was a happy, smiling baby.” She said that she had been racked with guilt since his death and had missed “red flags” about Foster. She had made arrangements to move Harlow to a nursery six weeks after first using Foster as a childminder, because of concerns about her workload. She had told the court that Foster had tried to comfort her, claiming that Harlow had choked on pasta. “She even put her arms around me,” Collinge said. “I can’t think of anything more evil. It is despicable. I blame myself every day for my son’s death. This monster, Karen Foster, deserves nothing. I hope her actions haunt her.” The family want cameras installed in places where childminders work. Shops sell machete like one used by young killers David Woode Crime Correspondent Matt Dathan, Ben Ellery Online “survival” stores are selling a machete similar to that used by two 12-year-old boys to murder Shawn Seesahai, 19, last year. The Anglo Arms Panther machete has a 16in blade and “grooved rubberised handle” and is sold for £24.95. Springfields, an online shop selling it, said that it worked with the Metropolitan Police and was “committed to preventing knife crime and promoting safe and responsible knife ownership”. It said that it had not sold the murder weapon. A spokesman said: “We work closely with trading standards, the Metropolitan Police and the Home Office to try to push the industry forward to ensure retailers are doing everything they can to keep bladed items from being obtained for the wrong reasons.” The company took part in a meeting with the police about the online sale of Labour says that if it was elected it would tighten the rules on knife sales knives and is part of the National Police Chiefs’ Council’s knife crime working group. “Our checks are industry leading and our staff are trained to spot fake IDs. If anyone tries to obtain a bladed item using a fake ID, we pass those details on to the police,” he said. Legislation making it illegal to possess, sell, manufacture or transport “zombie” knives and machetes will take effect in September. However, Labour said that it plans to ban a wider range of weapons not covered by existing laws. capital promoting his memoir Being Henry — The Fonz and Beyond. He described the incident as an “amazing adventure”, adding he “cannot wait to see the rest of Dublin”. The fire was not the first time that Winkler had made an unexpected appearance on a news broadcast. In 2013, the actor was stopped by a BBC reporter in London and asked about the expansion of Heathrow. On that occasion, Winkler was performing in a pantomime in Richmond, playing Captain Hook in Peter Pan. When asked about concerns of noise pollution in Richmond, he said it was “ a lovely place”, adding: “I watch the planes go every day. I hear nothing.” Briton dies in French river kayak tragedy David Chazan Paris A British man has died after his kayak capsized on a river in southeastern France. It is the second such fatality in the area this week. The man, described as an experienced kayaker in his fifties, was part of a group of 11 on the River Durance. “They got into trouble ten minutes after entering the river,” Marion Lozac’hmeur, a local prosecutor, said. Rivers in southern France are unusually fast-flowing after heavy rain this spring. Groups in some areas have cancelled kayaking expeditions because of the danger. Police and firefighters began a search operation along the Durance after receiving reports of kayakers in difficulty on Tuesday afternoon. They found three kayakers struggling in the water, two of whom were trying to help the third, who was unconscious. The two were pulled out of the river unhurt, but the third died in the water and paramedics were unable to resuscitate him. The prosecutor said the group entered the river in Briançon, in the Hautes-Alpes region. The man’s body was retrieved from the river about an hour after they set out. She declined to give his name and said the British consulate was contacting his family. A day earlier, a 73-year-old Irish man had died while kayaking on the River Ubaye near the Italian border, about 40 miles from Tuesday’s accident. Last month a British kayaker died in Switzerland. Bren Orton, 29, went missing on the River Melezza on May 16. His body was found two weeks later. The Foreign Office was contacted for comment.

21 the times | Friday June 14 2024 News Protesters derail Oxford’s exams Royals The with Will Humphries University of Oxford exams were cancelled yesterday morning after pro-Palestinian protesters entered a building waving flags and chanting. The Oxford Action for Palestine group (OA4P), who have staged encampments in the city since May 6 and occupied a university administrative building last month, said it was not aligned with the latest protest. A member of the public, who wished to remain anonymous, told the Oxford Mail that about six protesters, some with their faces covered, caused disruption to students taking exams in the East Writing School building. The witness said the protesters “hung the flag and chanted out the window” but were then brought “under control”. Cherwell, an Oxford student newspaper, said the gates to the Exam Schools buildings had been locked after the protest and students were not allowed to enter or leave the marquee where they wait before tests. Exams being sat yesterday included preliminary and final examinations. A spokeswoman for the University of Oxford said: “The university is disappointed with this morning’s occupation of the Exam Schools and the absolutely unacceptable disruption caused to our students. “We are putting into place contingency plans to ensure all students will have the opportunity to sit their examinations with as little disruption as possible. It is unclear who the occu- Roya and Kate Will the Princess of Wales attend Trooping the Colour? Chanting protesters entered the Exam Schools at Oxford University, causing disruption to students trying to sit papers pying group are representing, as they claim to be acting without the knowledge of the OA4P encampments. “While the university supports the right to peaceful protest within the law and our rules, this action goes beyond the bounds of acceptable protest.” Last month 16 student protesters from OA4P jumped over the reception desk of the university’s administrative office and allegedly pushed past staff before telling Irene Tracey, the vicechancellor, in her office that the university must “divest from Israeli genocide, apartheid, and occupation” in the Palestinian territories. Tracey ordered an evacuation of the building and the students locked themselves in a room before being arrested on suspicion of aggravated trespass. Oxford has accused the activist group of spreading lies about the university, defaming the vice-chancellor and lacking transparency about its membership and interests. In a statement about the latest demonstration, the OA4P group said the “autonomous group of protesters” were unaffiliated with them and the protest was undertaken without its knowledge. Thames Valley police said no arrests had been made. The Times and Sunday Times royal editors Kate Mansey and Roya Nikkhah preview tomorrow’s ceremony in the newest edition of our podcast Listen now on Apple, Spotify and wherever you get your podcasts
22 Friday June 14 2024 | the times News A crowded stage means some swans get in a flap Dance Donald Hutera Swan Lake Royal Albert Hall, 170min HHHII Premiered in 1997 during his tenure as English National Ballet’s artistic director, Derek Deane’s expansive staging of the Tchaikovsky classic returns for the ninth time to its original home at the Royal Albert Hall. Tastefully designed for mainstream consumption (and said to have been seen by more than half a million people worldwide), the production’s most memorable element remains the corps of 60 swan maidens manoeuvring their melancholy way through some mesmeric —almost militaristic — formations. Impressive? Yes, highly, even if this year’s opening-night performance was otherwise rarely truly transporting. In the scene-setting first act the stage swarms with townsfolk, Derek Deane’s impressive production, which premiered in 1997, features swan maidens by the dozen — but the sizeable ensemble take some time to find their feet courtiers and their ladies, and even a handful of jugglers and acrobats, gathered to mark the birthday of Prince Siegfried (Gareth Haw, making his debut in the role). Kept on the hop by Gavin Sutherland, conducting ENB’s in-house orchestra, it took a while for the company’s large ensemble to find their feet. It takes us time, too, to adjust to the distances the dancers must cover while retaining their expressive musicality. Or, depending on where you are seated, to realise that sightlines might be temporarily blocked by dancers waiting to spring into action. After all the hubbub, the prince’s first solo comes as a relief. Haw, a strong and refined dancer, did it justice, even if his emotional conviction was less persuasive than his technique. It is in the later acts that Deane’s Swan Lake comes into its own. Loads of dry ice by the lakeside. The half-man, half-bird sorcerer Rothbart (James Streeter; excellent within the role’s limitations) sweeping about fiendishly. And all those downcast-eyed swans, superbly drilled and in thrall to him. Chief among them was the long, languid-limbed Sangeun Lee (also making her debut) as Odette. She was even better as the sharp-footed, alluring trickster Odile in a third act peppered with a swift string of zesty national dances. Love triumphs at the end of this version, with Siegfried circling while raising the liberated Odette aloft — a fine and transcendent image, even if the feelings it left me with were less than swooningly deep. To June 24, ballet.org.uk Sunshine dumbs down political debate Rhys Blakely Science Correspondent As an election approaches, many voters will be lamenting the quality of political debate — but if the weather had been better, could it have been even worse? A study suggests that as temperatures rise, political discourse dumbs down. The research examined more than seven million parliamentary speeches made in eight countries, including England, since the 1950s, and found that higher temperatures were linked to a significant reduction in the complexity of language used by MPs. “Heat has long been associated with a range of negative health outcomes, including increased risk of decreased productivity and cognitive performance,” Dr Risto Conte Keivabu of the Max Planck Institute in Germany said. “Our study highlights that this phenomenon extends to politicians.” Previous studies have linked hot weather to a greater chance of political rebellions and riots, but also to higher voter turnouts and more support for the incumbent party. Researchers have also highlighted a steady decrease in the complexity of political language over the past 200 years, with some believing this af- fects how we are governed. “Concerns are often brought forward in connection to rising populist movements and prominent populist leaders, who allegedly use less complex political language in order to strategically appeal to and manipulate their voters,” Conte Keivabu and his colleagues wrote. Their study, published in the journal iScience, looked at speeches by more than 28,000 politicians. Computer programs were used to explore the connection between their language and daily temperatures. They also found evidence that older politicians tended to be affected by warm days more than younger ones, with the effect kicking in when temperatures reached about 21C. “This result increases our confidence in the study’s findings. It is logical that older individuals might be more susceptible to extreme temperatures, which aligns with our observation and underscores the robustness of our conclusions,” Conte Keivabu said. He and his colleagues speculate that hot weather may disrupt sleep and keep politicians indoors and away from fresh air, making them sluggish. Dr Tobias Widmann of the Aarhus University in Denmark, a co-author of the study, said that the findings “suggest that heat can negatively affect cognitive functions even in professional settings where precise and complex language is crucial”. He added: “The simplification of political discourse has mixed implications; while simpler language can enhance public understanding and engagement, it might also signal reduced cognitive performance. “The impact of extreme temperatures on their cognitive performance could have profound and far-reaching consequences.”
23 the times | Friday June 14 2024 It’s the eve of the Euros and Berlin’s off the rails Martin Samuel Page 24 Comment Labour super-majority doesn’t mean red alert Far from unleashing hard socialism, party bigwigs such as Pat McFadden will want to implement public sector reforms Patrick Maguire @patrickkmaguire O ne morning Pat McFadden wakes up and discovers there are no limits to his power. What do you suppose he does? I don’t expect you to have considered this question before. But in three weeks its answer could determine the course of your life and mine. Sir Keir Starmer’s national campaign co-ordinator is one of the most important people in the Labour Party. Soon he will be one of the four most important cabinet ministers in the government. And if we are to believe Grant Shapps and the opinion polls, ministers such as McFadden will rule with a parliamentary majority of such outlandish scale that it can do anything it likes. So what do you suppose a government run by McFadden does if it can do absolutely anything? When Conservatives like Shapps and indeed Rishi Sunak warn of the dangers of this scenario, what they mean is that it will do the opposite of what a Labour election campaign run by McFadden now says it will do. It veers immediately, and violently, to the left. The front of the Daily Mail put it more succinctly yesterday: “A Tory Wipeout Risks One-Party Socialist State”. Whether our democracy would be in a healthier place with a Labour majority of 200 and an official opposition of 75 squabbling Tories — or even 60 delighted Liberal Democrats — is a question worth asking, regardless of which party is doing the winning. Whether that means this Labour Party dispenses with every position it now holds and starts running Britain as if it were Cuba is quite another. Team Starmer liken this argument to that unsuccessfully deployed by Ken Livingstone against Boris Johnson in 2008: that his rival for London mayor was both a clown without a plan and dangerously right-wing. He couldn’t possibly have been both. There are a few things I can imagine McFadden doing if there were no limits to his power. Maybe he would legislate to proscribe Glasgow Rangers or put up a statue of Bruce Springsteen on Whitehall, provided both proposals were fully costed. What he wouldn’t do is seize the opportunity to implement socialism in one country. I can say this with some confidence because McFadden has worked for a Labour government with a very big The mushy middle of the parliamentary party is more problematic majority and dysfunctional opposition before. When he went to advise Tony Blair in Downing Street after running an election campaign that looked an awful lot like this one in 1997, McFadden did not then say it was time to implement Michael Foot’s red-blooded manifesto of 1983. One of the perennial criticisms the left makes of New Labour is that it did not spend its vast reserves of political capital governing like Old Labour when it had a majority of 179 seats. People such as Blair, McFadden and Peter Mandelson could have done, had they wanted to. But they didn’t, because they didn’t want to. Why would things be any different this time? It’s true, yes, that a Labour government could well end up raising taxes. On railways, industrial strategy and energy Starmer is well to the left of New Labour, and in choosing to separate day-to-day and capital spending on its balance sheet, it will also give itself more room for borrowing than its rhetoric implies. It is also true that four years ago this Labour leader promised to do lots of things that Blair unthinkingly dismissed as mad, bad and dangerous. Blair once said that he would not run for election on a Jeremy Corbyn manifesto even if it would guarantee him victory. In 2020, Starmer described those policies as the bedrock of his leadership. But he doesn’t say so any more and won’t say so again, largely because he is now surrounded by people like McFadden. This is not a shadow cabinet that talks about fiscal rectitude and an NHS that embraces the private sector because it’s politically expedient. Rachel Reeves and Wes Streeting are not pretending to hold these positions until such a time that they can turn their Billy Bragg records up again. What leftward pressure is exerted on a Starmer government won’t come from within his inner cabinet, because that is a road they would not take anyway. We might reasonably ask whether Starmer will be glad to be done with the nasty business of electoral politics and revert to technocratic type when safely installed at the heart of the mandarin class, but his aides — wary of Joe Biden’s failure to spin a success story to voters in the Rust Belt — speak of a permanent campaign. Labour MPs are a trickier proposition. Sir Alan Campbell, who in three weeks will be the government chief whip, has not been war-gaming majorities of varying sizes but believes the magic number is 60. Should his Unbeatable Euros coverage from our team of expert writers Don’t miss unbeatable coverage, news and analysis throughout the tournament from our team of expert writers, including Martin Samuel, Jonathan Northcroft and James Gheerbrant. Keep up with Euro 2024 with The Times and Sunday Times Pat McFadden advised Tony Blair after a Labour campaign similar to this one majority exceed that threshold, Starmer could easily survive any mass rebellion by the Socialist Campaign Group of Corbynite backbenchers, which has already all but ceased to exist as a going concern. More problematic for a cabinet set on crunchy reforms to public services is what we might call the mushy middle of the parliamentary Labour Party. Frontbenchers with long memories know that Blair twice mislaid his massive majority on tuition fees and foundation hospitals. Labour’s candidate selection machine is often described as if it were J Edgar Hoover’s FBI: ruthless, relaxed about extrajudicial killings and utterly intolerant of left-wing thought. Whether this is true will only come out in the wash of government. Some candidates are unconvinced that the new intake is entirely of like mind. They deride other incomers as “sopping wet” and question whether all will cope with activist opprobrium. Will every new MP hold their nerve when Reeves refuses to reverse welfare cuts, their inboxes are full of invective and Andy Burnham is tweeting his disapproval? Then there is Sir Alan’s other magic number: 95, the maximum size of the ministerial payroll in the Commons. Should Labour win 400 or more MPs, not everyone is getting a job. Some shadow ministers will end up like Tom Pendry, who was passed over for office in 1997 and subsequently published a memoir whose dust jacket bore the faintly tragic testimonial: “The best sports minister we never had”. I’m told some will be directed towards the chairmanships of select committees instead, but even then these ranks of the dispossessed, underemployed and vain will be sizeable. Put that scenario to the Labour leadership and the response is blunt: get real. Having reached government via a road paved with Conservative seats, they believe their new MPs will have every incentive to stay the course. And with his campaign director, Morgan McSweeney, Starmer has chosen time and again to take decisions that cut sharply across the leftish sensibilities of his MPs and party members and speak to the anxieties of voters in deep England. If the prevailing voices at the commanding heights of a Labour government are those of Reeves, McFadden, McSweeney, Streeting and others like Bridget Phillipson, the incoming education secretary, and Shabana Mahmood, who will be justice secretary, this will not be a government that interprets its mandate as a blank cheque to the broad left — just look at their manifesto. Instead it will take it as licence to offend and disappoint them.
24 V2 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Comment If Britain were a stock, I would be buying The economic fundamentals are good and governance is likely to improve after the election Emma Duncan A lthough I’ve been sentient for 12 general elections, I’ve never known a more boring or depressing campaign than this. It’s boring because we all know what the outcome will be, Labour refuses to say anything that might frighten the horses and nobody is listening to the Conservatives. It’s depressing because the economy is in a godawful mess and trust in politicians is at a nadir. The gloom is unusually deep because both right and left are at one about the state of the country. Normally, if the right reckons that the nation is going to hell in a handcart, the left takes the view that we’re headed for the sunlit uplands; and if the left believes that we’re on the primrose path to everlasting damnation, then the right thinks that we’re shaping up pretty nicely. Now, however, the left thinks that the country has been ruined by a combination of Thatcherism, austerity and Brexit, while the right has worked itself into a ferment about the approaching end of civilisation. Add to that the Greens’ conviction that global self-immolation is just round the corner, along with the latest data showing that the economy has slumped back to stagnation, and we have a nation sitting at the bar with its head in its drink, the only jollity provided by Sir Ed Davey, who has apparently decided that flinging himself into every polluted waterway within a 50-mile radius is a foolproof electoral strategy. I am not widely regarded as a ray of sunshine but I reckon that the gloom is overdone. If Britain were a stock, I’d buy: the price is low, the fundamentals are good and the quality of governance is bound to rise after the election. Politics looks particularly grim right now because a party that has been in power for too long always ends up angry, divided and scraping the bottom of the barrel for ministerial talent. This lot have known for two years that they’re on their way out, so nothing they say matters and their time horizons stretch about as far as The new government’s morale will be high and time horizons long the weekend. Labour seems likely to have a huge majority and the Conservative Party will need to spend some years sorting itself out. The new government’s morale is therefore likely to be high and its time horizons long. That in itself will make a huge difference to the economy, the primary determinant of the national mood. What Britain needs is investment, and what investors need is stability. That’s precisely what has been lacking for the past decade. Business investment as a share of GDP stalled in 2016, while it continued on its normal trajectory elsewhere in the world. Uncertainty, as much as Brexit, explains Britain’s underperformance. I can illustrate the Conservative government’s failure to provide business with the stability it craves without even mentioning the words Liz or Truss, merely by looking at the principal tax that firms face. Under the Tories, the rate of corporation tax has gone from 28 per cent to 20, to 19, to 25. The rise to 25 per cent was then cancelled, then reinstated. Businesses make their plans on the basis of expected future returns. If they have no idea how much of their future profit the British government is going to take from them, they will either invest their money elsewhere or spend it on a Caribbean holiday. So merely by not changing its mind every five minutes the next government can improve economic governance. And simply by leaving ministers in place for more than a couple of weeks they can improve political decision-making. Sir Keir Starmer shows signs of having understood that. Look at housing: in the period during which the government has had seven housing ministers, Labour has had one shadow housing minister, Matthew Pennycook. A brainy fellow who got the best degree in his year at the London School of Economics, he knows his brief inside out and will therefore be in a far better position to get stuff done than were his transient predecessors. His brief is another reason for optimism. Housing provides the next government with a single lever to pull that can make a big difference. Rather as deregulating the labour market in the 1980s got Britain working again, so liberalising the planning rules can get Britain building again. The costs to the Treasury are zero; the potential benefits huge. If “planning” were translated not as “stopping development” but as “enabling good settlements”, young people would have a chance of buying homes, businesses could more easily expand, the shrinking construction sector would revive and our dodgy infrastructure could be upgraded. Further down the track, there’s another cost-free, pro-growth policy available to the next government. It’s a crazy idea, but what if we were to lower trade barriers with our biggest trading partner? Given that the country seems to be coming to its senses and realising that Brexit was stupid, a party less implicated in it than the Tories will be in a good position to start talks on reversing the largest unforced political error in living memory and thus recouping some of the growth that we have lost as a result of it. None of this would help much if the fundamentals weren’t strong, but they are. Britons are, according to the OECD’s Pisa score, better educated than the people of any other big European country. We’re the second-biggest exporter of services in the world. Our physical and digital infrastructure are not up to scratch, but that in itself is a source of potential growth: merely by catching up with our peers, we can accelerate our economic engine. None of this is inevitable. The next government can easily mess things up if it either sprays money around or allows regulation to throttle growth. Things will not necessarily get better. But, on balance, I reckon they will. “significantly reduced speeds”, which seems a contradiction. I’m no Aimee Betro — I don’t have the hair for it — but even I think I could hit a slowmoving train if required. Not that I’m planning to. I just want to get my ticket for Saturday’s match. they did. My hotel room looks into a courtyard, beloved by pigeons, judging by the window ledges. So the owners have erected a model of a bird suspended on a wire as a deterrent. Except the bird looks a lot like, well, a pigeon. Certainly, the other pigeons seem to regard him as an ally. “See old Dave’s hanging about in that courtyard again. He must love it down there. We should give it a try.” Either way, it’s not working. Martin Samuel Notebook It’s the eve of the Euros and Berlin’s off the rails ‘W hat’s it like out there?” everybody keeps asking. Football fever on the streets, the atmosphere building, the big kick-off just a matter of hours away. Folks, I’m in Berlin. It’s shut. Not all of it, obviously. Just the bit I need to get through. I arrived on Monday night, something called the Ukraine Recovery Conference kicked off the next day. More than 2,000 participants from 60 countries, most notably Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukraine president. You can see why they’re skittish. It’s not exactly a low-profile trip. Archduke Franz Ferdinand’s blood-soaked uniform is still on display in an adjacent country. Things don’t always go so well in these parts if you fail to look after visiting VIPs. And also, you may think, stereotypical German efficiency at play. Except it wasn’t. It was chaos, just like our place. There were no trains, but no one told you there were no trains. And what trains there were just went back the way they came, but no one told you that either. You could have shot a cannon through the S-Bahn platform at Friedrichstrasse station and not harmed anyone in a hi-viz jacket. Even the locals looked bemused. The tourists just pointed their phones at the sign that read Staatbesuch! and hit Google Translate. “State visit!” we were informed. Service interrupted. But it wasn’t interrupted. It was kaputt. And prone to further outbreaks of kaputtness, even when you thought you were getting somewhere. The U-Bahn, Berlin’s metro, was running, but then sometimes wasn’t. And when it wasn’t we all just milled around like poor lost souls on Avanti West Coast, wondering what the hell was going on. The fear, apparently, was of stationary trains on open stretches of track becoming a target. Yet there was also a directive that trains would be driven at Kick-off chaos I t’s an unpromising start, because the one hope you have of a football tournament held in Germany is organisational excellence. I did the African Cup of Nations in Burkina Faso in 1998 and our passage to one game was held up by elephants on the motorway. I was in Portugal for the European Championships in 2004 and that was actually worse. Baboons would have been more useful at imparting information than some of the staff. Hold anything in France and all the public services use it as a negotiating tool and go on strike. (The Olympics are there later this summer — just wait.) But Germany? They know how to get stuff done. Or Shoehorned out A nd then you can have too much efficiency. I’m currently engaged in a war with the maid over the placement of things. I keep a tidy room, I’m not scared to admit it. I’m not one of those travellers whose space looks like someone detonated their suitcase. I hang up, I fold. I keep the work area separate. It’s a little OCD, I know. The maid, though. She’s something else. I put a shoehorn on the bedside table to the left, because that’s where I put my shoes on. The next day, gone. Tidied. Couldn’t find it anywhere. Same with my room shorts. Shorts I sleep in, or wear to potter around. Left on the bed, neatly folded. Gone. Still haven’t turned up. But good news. While turning the room upside down, I did locate the shoehorn. Turns out I’m the Goldilocks of efficiency. This one’s too efficient, that one’s not efficient enough. Labour must prove it’s serious about recruiting teachers Harry Hudson S uch is the furore surrounding Labour’s plans to place VAT on private schools that it’s almost a surprise Billy Bunter and Tom Brown haven’t yet been called to arms. But amid the rancour, one thing has received considerably less scrutiny — how exactly does Labour intend to spend the produce of its tax raid? When Keir Starmer announced Labour’s six “first steps for change”, he thrust the increasingly desperate issue of teacher recruitment high up the political agenda — and was right to do so. The dire state of recruitment is finally starting to percolate through to the political classes. To take just one statistic, the recruitment target for secondary teachers was missed by 50 per cent this year. Little wonder that many schools are finding it literally impossible to hire. In this context, the ambition to employ 6,500 more teachers is the right approach. Nothing else that Labour might want to achieve in education can hope to succeed without a sufficient number of highquality teachers. But it’s one thing to identify the problem and quite another to propose its solution. Even assuming that the tax hike does survive the private school lobby and raises the much-vaunted £1.6 billion figure, the party has been reticent to put forward concrete proposals for how this will actually lead to more teachers. Precise detail was conspicuous by its absence in a Labour policy document released earlier this year. Amid flummery about valuing teachers, there were vague points about reviewing bursaries and restructuring retention payments — measures which might have some limited impact in the short term, but certainly nothing close to what’s needed to effect a significant and sustained increase. Only a net 259 full-time teachers were added to the workforce in the year to November 2023, meaning a 25-fold increase in recruitment will be required for Labour to fulfil its pledge. Yet no government is going to be able to raise salaries to an extent that will make people seriously re-evaluate their perceptions of teaching as a career. Labour therefore must think more innovatively about facilitating career-changers into teaching, allowing more flexible working patterns, and even reconsidering the position of teachers in society. Labour has an opportunity here. It has fixed upon a real and growing problem but tinkering around the edges won’t cut it. It needs to raise the level of its ambition, and in doing so could become the party that finally raises teaching from the trough into which it has fallen and recasts it as a high-status profession for the 21st century. That would be something really worth voting for.
25 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Comment Buy prints or signed copies of Times cartoons from our Print Gallery at timescartoons.com or call 0800 912 7136 On the contrary, US justice hasn’t shed its tiers Don’t fall for the idea that Hunter Biden’s felony conviction proves there’s no bias in the American judicial system Gerard Baker @gerardtbaker ‘H unter Biden’s conviction shows there is not a twotier system of justice”, declared a headline in the Washington Post this week. It’s a claim that has been widely made by Democrats and their friends in the media since the president’s son was convicted on gun charges this week — and on the face of it, there’s a certain plausibility. Following his conviction last month by a Manhattan jury, Donald Trump and his fellow Republicans fumed that the judicial system was politically rigged against him. A Democratic prosecutor got a jury in a heavily Democratic jurisdiction to convict the Republican candidate for president on highly dubious felony charges. But now the Democratic president’s own son has been found guilty by a jury in a heavily Democratic state — Delaware, the president’s home state, no less — on felony charges. So the accusations of biased, politically motivated “lawfare” conducted by Democrats against Republicans must be baseless. Prosecutors prosecute without regard to politics; juries reach verdicts on the basis of the law and the facts; the American system works like Solon to deliver justice without fear or favour. Don’t believe it for a second. First, consider the vast difference in the legal basis on which each case was brought. As I have explained before, the case against Trump was a mountainous confection of waferthin legal theory built on a trivial breach of the law that rarely results in real punishment. The Democratic prosecutor turned what would normally have been at worst a misdemeanour over a bookkeeping deception — the hush-money Trump paid to a porn star in 2016, a charge that carries the penalty of a small fine at most — into an alleged felony (with potential jail time). All on a highly dubious legal claim that it was done with the intent of committing some other crime. Even in the view of lawyers deeply unsympathetic to Trump, this was prosecutorial overreach of a high order. Elie Honig, a former federal prosecutor and commentator for CNN, not exactly a Maga-friendly figure, wrote in the New Yorker that the prosecutor had “contorted” the case against Trump, saying the charges brought were “bespoke, seemingly crafted individually for the former president and no one else”. Contrast that with the Hunter Biden charges — about as open and shut a case as you can bring in front of a jury. Biden was convicted on several counts of lying on documents in order to obtain a firearm while he was under the influence of drugs, a clear felony in breach of federal gun protection statutes. The evidence the prosecution produced was incontrovertible — troves of videos, emails, text messages, etc documenting Biden’s addiction to cocaine at the very time he signed the gun papers. Ah, you might say, the evidence may have been persuasive but there The trial also gave us definitive proof of the wider institutional bias was no obligation on the government to bring the case against him in the first place. Surely if these lawyers — justice department prosecutors — were politically driven, they would never have gone after the son of the man to whom their department ultimately answers? But that’s not how it happened. The federal prosecutor in charge of the case, David Weiss, was appointed by Trump when he was president, but as is customary, principally on the recommendation of Democratic senators in his state of Delaware. Hunter’s crimes were committed in October 2018 and known to law enforcement almost immediately, but for years the justice department sat on the investigation and, according to two internal whistleblowers who came forward last year, actively tried to avoid prosecuting Hunter on separate tax fraud charges for which he was being investigated. After all this became public, those same prosecutors then struck a plea deal with Hunter on both the gun and the tax charges that would not only have let him off with the lightest of penalties but would have immunised him against potential charges relating to an entire five-year period in which he has been convincingly accused of lucrative influence-peddling while his father was vice president. It was only when an inquisitive judge questioned the scope of the plea deal as it was about to be signed off last summer that it fell apart. Federal prosecutors then finally took the gun charges to court, along with the tax fraud charges, which will go to trial in September. As Andrew McCarthy, another former federal prosecutor and critic of the Bidens, wrote in National Review this week: “If Weiss and the Biden justice department had had their way, [the prosecution] wouldn’t have happened at all.” That’s not all, of course. The trial that concluded this week showed that it’s not just justice that is politicised in America, with prosecutors under control of a particular party favouring one type of defendant over another. The trial also gave us definitive proof of the wider institutional bias — in the media, tech companies, government bureaucracy and elsewhere — that leans in the same direction. Much of the evidence on which Hunter Biden was convicted — the proof of his drug addiction — came from a certain laptop. This laptop, you may recall, first came to public attention in the latter stages of the 2020 presidential election, when it was uncovered by the New York Post (a sister publication of The Times), along with more allegations about Hunter’s nefarious activities. Days before a close election, nearly all mainstream media outlets not only ignored the story but actually discredited it. Twitter and Facebook actually blocked access to the entire content of the New York Post. Fifty former US intelligence officials came forward — with absolutely no evidence — to claim that the laptop was a piece of Russian disinformation designed to sway voters. It was only long after the election when Biden Senior was safely in the White House that the laptop was acknowledged to be real — and formed the basis for the long-delayed justice for his son. So yes. It’s true. Let’s hear it: two tiers for truth, justice and the American way.
26 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Letters to the Editor should be sent to letters@thetimes.co.uk or by post to 1 London Bridge Street, London SE1 9GF Letters to the Editor Labour’s focus on growth and prosperity Economic activity Sir, Regarding your report “More than nine million people economically inactive, says ONS” (Jun 12), these people so described might be painting a room, investing their time studying to get a well-paid job or caring for a family member rather than relying on a carer employed by their local authority. Economic activity was going on for thousands of years everywhere in the world before the Office for National Statistics adopted the definition used today. It counts only those age 16 to 64 in jobs known to government agencies. It thus dismisses as inactive the majority of teenagers investing in full-time study, often up to the age of 21. It also assumes that those who start working at 16, often in arduous manual jobs, should work for 48 years before retiring. The need to mobilise more people to fill gaps in the labour market is real. However, recruiting people into paid employment will also reduce the output of unpaid workers. It will also encourage youths to stop studying at 16 and start earning money in dead end unskilled jobs. Professor Richard Rose Author, Welfare Goes Global; Helensburgh, Argyll & Bute Charging patients Sir, I disagree with Dr Michael Rivlin that GP co-payments would cost the NHS substantial amounts of money (letter, Jun 13). In Jersey we pay about half the cost of a GP visit (£24-£40) and more for a home call-out (£90-£100). Pensioners and those on income support get further reductions or are exempt — and have a card — while those new to the island pay the full amount. Friendly receptionists take payment after your visit. Admin costs are very low and are largely borne by the GP. There is no evidence that this retards visits to doctors for serious conditions. The result is of incalculable social and medical benefit: I can get a 20-minute appointment today or tomorrow with a GP who actually knows me. Simon Boas Trinity, Jersey Senseless phrases Sir, I agree with Carol Midgley in her castigation of meaningless words and phrases (Times2, Jun 12). The ones she quotes are annoying but the phrase that I hate most is “to die for”. It is used, always inappropriately, to describe the most mundane things — food, clothes, random objects. It is an abomination. Nina Essex London SW17 Corrections and clarifications We are committed to abiding by the Independent Press Standards Organisation rules and regulations and the Editors’ Code of Practice that IPSO enforces. Requests for corrections or clarifications should be sent to feedback@thetimes.co.uk Sir, Sir Keir Starmer says that a Labour government’s “No 1 priority” will be growth (“Growth and prosperity our priority, says Starmer”, Jun 13). Not defence? The recent commemoration of the 80th anniversary of D-Day reminds us of the extreme cost of having to fight a major war. Avoiding the need for any sort of repetition is essential and is best achieved by ensuring that our defences are so strong that any tyrant with designs on our country is clear that victory would be impossible. Whether the amount spent on defence is 2.5 per cent, 3.5 per cent or 4.5 per cent of GDP pales into insignificance when compared with the price our forbears paid. Our next government has a clear responsibility. Rob Tooze Darlington, Co Durham Sir, As a Conservative supporter of many years, there is no doubt in my mind that the party does not deserve to be re-elected. Having read your summary of Labour’s manifesto, and Peter Mandelson’s article (“Labour won’t turn from tough road ahead”, Jun 13), I think there are many laudable aims within the manifesto. However, as a resident of Sheffield, where the national party has put Sheffield Labour into special measures and still enforces central control, I have serious concerns about Sir Keir Starmer’s intention to devolve powers from central government to the regions. Bringing local interests in line with central government intentions is not a given. James Hunt Sheffield parents who send their children to fee-paying schools make considerable sacrifices to do so, and have also already contributed to state school costs through their taxes, so in effect are paying twice. Why, then, is VAT on school fees not considered to be a tax on working people, which he has publicly stated will not take place? Sally Acloque Norwich Sir, Peter Mandelson advises that when Labour says on entering government that “nothing in our plans requires any additional tax to be increased” it has to mean it. On the other hand he opposes “at best irrelevant or at worst dangerous” tax cuts. However, any self-respecting socialist leader will sooner or later target those who work hard for a living — especially if they are making profits. Gerald Heath Box, Wilts Sir, Rishi Sunak urges people not to judge him because of Liz Truss’s actions. The Truss disaster came about because the Conservative Party gives the ultimate choice of a new prime minister between general elections to its party members rather than MPs. Sunak’s plea would be more persuasive if, having seen the result of that system, the party had abolished it. Dr Dorian Gerhold London SW15 Sir, In his manifesto Sir Keir Starmer states there will be no increase in taxes for working people. He also states that he aspires to create growth, and that good education is one of the paths to success. Many Malnutrition check Cancel culture Sir, It is positive to see that screening for malnutrition is part of NHS England’s health MoTs and a clear sign that prevention in healthcare is being taken more seriously (“NHS to offer health check-ups for older patients at A&E”, Jun 12). Without a greater focus on prevention, pressure on NHS resources will continue to rise, and malnutrition alone is already projected to cost £26.6 billion a year by 2035. At present only 2 per cent of people in England admitted to hospital with disease-related malnutrition are receiving a diagnosis, so these measures will help to support patients and reduce pressure on the NHS. Earlier screening, diagnosis and better nutritional support for patients in the community can help to prevent or reduce hospital stays and support recovery. We need to see more proactive measures like this put in place by the next government, so as to tackle a health issue that affects millions of people and costs billions of pounds. Richard Hall General secretary, Danone UK & Ireland ITALIAN SOCIALIST ABDUCTED from the times june 14, 1924 Signor Matteotti, the Socialist Deputy, was abducted in Rome on Tuesday and has not been seen since. He was one of the leaders of the Reformist Socialists. Last night in Parliament Signor Mussolini read the following statement: “I believe the House will be anxious to have some information about Signor Matteotti, who disappeared on Tuesday afternoon in Rome in circumstances justifying the supposition of a crime calculated, if it had been really committed, to arouse the indignation and grief both of the Government and of Sir, Recommending a broadening of a curriculum is one thing; rejecting the work of some of the greatest thinkers of any age on the basis of ad hominem descriptions of them as “dead white men” and “colonial” is quite another (“Schools urged to ‘decolonise’ their philosophy classes”, Jun 13). The purpose of philosophy is to teach people to think clearly. The apparent criticism of these thinkers for being logicians is harder to understand, unless of course there is some hitherto unknown form of logic that our learned reformers have discovered. Peter Smith Woking, Surrey In defence of yoga Sir, Being one myself, I write in defence of yoga teachers (“Naomi Klein has a conspiracy theory — it’s all the fault of yoga teachers”, Times2, Jun 12). Yoga teachers are far from the glossy, authoritarian, self-optimising gurus trained in a few weeks who are portrayed in the article. I am not on Instagram and am not an influencer Parliament. I myself gave direct orders to the police for the search, and the police are already in a position to identify the culprits.” Opposition groups met today and passed a resolution stating that they “consider it impossible to take part in the work of Parliament until some light has been thrown on the sinister episode, of which Signor Matteotti has been the victim”. From the story of two or three witnesses, it appears that at half-past four on Tuesday afternoon Signor Matteotti was going home when he was seized in the street by five persons and flung into a motor-car. A lawyer who was at his window witnessed the scene and said that Signor Matteotti struggled violently and cried for help. The lawyer reached the street as the motor-car was making off. He, however, saw the number of the car and communicated this to the police yesterday. It is supposed that the car left Rome and Sir, The Tories are worried about Labour gaining a huge majority (“Tory rethink amid fears of a Labour super-majority”, Jun 13). This wouldn’t happen if we had proportional representation. Just saying. Philip Sykes Murviel-lès-Béziers, France or “wellness” practitioner or conspiracy theorist. I do not profess to have a higher form of knowledge. My aim is simply to teach yoga well and for my students to practise it with enjoyment. That is all. Fran Stuart Carlisle, Cumbria Club’s sticky wicket Sir, I was alarmed to read of the potential new development at Fenner’s, which would make playing cricket there an ever less attractive proposition (“Student housing puts historic club on sticky wicket”, Jun 13). When Francis Fenner opened the ground in 1848 it was partly to keep out the general public, who were regarded as a nuisance on the freefor-all of Parker’s Piece. Perhaps it is time to invite that public back in by offering its facilities to a wider range of local teams, especially during the long summer holidays? If such genuine community benefit could be shown, perhaps it would not be too late to halt the march of progress. Giles Phillips Author, On Fenner’s Sward: a History of Cambridge University Cricket Club went out into the open country, but the direction it took is still unknown. A man of large private means Signor Matteotti had given all his activities to the cause of Socialism, and was the most disliked and most powerful opponent the Fascisti had in the new Parliament. In consequence of Fascist action he was unable to live in his native province of Rovigo, but he went there from time to time in disguise in order to see his mother. Once before, two years ago, Signor Matteotti had been kidnapped, being taken by Fascists out into the country and left there in a pitiable condition. He was a man full of pluck and tenacity, and his speech on the Address, which dealt chiefly with the illegalities committed at the general election, had very much irritated the majority. thetimes.co.uk/archive Funding the arts Sir, I agree with Lord Browne of Madingley about arts funding: “If sponsors are driven away, where will arts funding come from?” (Jun 13). He suggests four things, the first of which is for the leadership of companies and arts organisations to align their own teams and purpose with the society they serve, and the last whether performers, artists and writers should consider whether they are achieving anything other than virtue signalling. Unfortunately virtue signalling, promulgating irrelevant partisan agendas and a lack of altruism using millions of pounds of “public” money (actually levies on business) is the way that Arts Council England works. That ACE talks of “investing”, rather than spending, is comparable to the Post Office’s use of double-speak. The Labour Party has published “Creating Growth”, a proposed review of the creative sector, and one hopes that an incoming government will carry out a wide review and restore ACE to serve the nation, as Lord Browne suggests. Patrick Hogan Member, Arts Council England southeast area council 2020-21; Beaconsfield, Bucks Sir, I am bemused by arts bodies choosing, or being forced, to refuse donations from organisations deemed to be morally suspect. Surely we should be forcing such organisations to donate even more heavily? What next — refusing to fine criminals on the same grounds? Christopher Gadsden London EC2 Evocative scents Sir, To Giles Coren’s list of evocative smells (Notebook, Jun 11) I would add the smell of Castrol R racing oil, used by prewar and postwar racers in their race cars and motorcycles. As lads, many of us put a squirt of R in the petrol tank of their road car to evoke that heady smell from the exhaust. Roger Skipp Ex-classic motorbike and car racer, South Godstone, Surrey Sir, Not the smell of a coal fire (letter, Jun 13) but rather a Hebridean peat fire. It has fewer nasties in it than coal smoke and is reminiscent of so much more. Roberta Kerr Romsey, Hants Sir, May I add the smell of a horse and its warm leather saddle after a summer’s evening riding in stubble fields? And the tang of fresh dung, knowing the delights it will bring to my garden later on. Lesley Thompson Lavenham, Suffolk Dazzled by science Sir, Further to Dr John McCarthy’s letter (Jun 12), it is possible for dental students to enjoy fancy phrases too. During a viva voce examination in the mid-1970s two clinical academics (wearing half-moon gold-rimmed spectacles for the full effect) asked me my first question. On my answering “Polycythaemia rubra vera” with no hesitation, they looked at each other and then turned to me a little startled and said: “Thank you Mr Mills, I think that will be all.” Dr Robin Mills Devizes, Wilts Letters to The Times must be exclusive and may be edited. Please include a full address and daytime telephone number.
27 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Leading articles Daily Universal Register UK: King’s birthday honours list published this evening. South Africa: Parliament meets to elect president after May 29 elections. Nature notes Perhaps it’s time to rethink our image of Ratty. When many of us picture a water vole, we immediately see the languid boatman of Kenneth Grahame’s The Wind in the Willows, a riparian inhabitant who can only ever live by the river. But though water voles are semi-aquatic and perfectly adapted for riverside life, there is a growing population of these little mammals that live significant distances from water, at least a kilometre. Easterhouse in Glasgow is one of the best places to see Ratty in his new, dryland habitat. These animals are increasingly becoming fossorial, foraging above the ground but living in subterranean holes — more like Mole. Has the Glaswegian Ratty found a way of avoiding the American mink? jonathan tulloch Birthdays today Steffi Graf, pictured, former world No 1 tennis player, winner of 22 grand slam singles titles, 55; Rod Argent, musician, the Zombies, 79; Dominic Blakemore, chief executive, Compass Group, 55; Sir Leonard Blavatnik, businessman, vice-chairman of Warner Music Group, and philanthropist, 67; Lord (Paul) Boateng, chairman, Archbishops’ Racial Justice Commission, Labour MP (1987-2005), 73; Alan Carr, entertainer, Amanda & Alan’s Italian Job (2023-24), 48; Declan Collier, chairman, Office of Rail and Road, 69; Stanley Druckenmiller, hedge fund manager, founder of Duquesne Capital, 71; Ven Stephen Dunwoody, chaplain to the Forces and archdeacon to the British Army, 53; Erik Engstrom, chief executive, RELX Group, 61; Boy George, singer-songwriter with Culture Club and DJ, 63; David Kerr, professor of cancer medicine, University of Oxford, 68; Lang Lang, pianist, 42; Andrew Law, hedge fund manager, chairman and chief executive, Caxton Associates, 58; Jim Lea, musician, Slade, 75; Lord (Roger) Liddle, special adviser on European affairs to Tony Blair (1997-2004), 77; Dr Robin Lovell-Badge, stem cell biologist, 71; Alfred Lowe, recipient of the George Cross, “for gallantry in attempting to save life at sea” in 1948, 93; Most Rev Malcolm McMahon, Roman Catholic archbishop of Liverpool, 75; Dame Yvonne Moores, chairwoman, Florence Nightingale Foundation (2019-22), 83; Olaf Scholz, chancellor of Germany, 66; June Spencer, actress, The Archers (1950-54, 1961-2022), 105; Colin Thubron, travel writer and novelist, 85; Donald Trump, president of the US (2017-21) and businessman, 78; Rt Rev Lord (Rowan) Williams of Oystermouth, Archbishop of Canterbury (2003-12), 74; Joe Worsley, rugby union player, England (1999-2011), 47. On this day In 1919 the American actor and director Sam Wanamaker was born. He initiated the project to rebuild Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, London, in 1949. He died in 1993 before the project was completed. The last word “Sometimes a writer has to smash the mirror — for it is on the other side of that mirror that the truth stares at us.” Harold Pinter, English playwright, actor and director, (Nobel lecture, December 7, 2005) Riding to the Rescue With tax and spend promises he cannot truly reconcile, Sir Keir Starmer is pinning his hopes on a construction and tech boom to fuel growth and balance the books Fans of old western films will recall how, just when the surrounded settlers are about to be overwhelmed by the Apache, the bugle sounds and, as out of nowhere, the 7th Cavalry appears, sabres drawn, charging to the rescue. For Labour’s embattled wagon train the cavalry is economic growth. Because if it does not turn up on time and in strength the party’s tax and spend promises, enshrined in its manifesto, will be cut to pieces by the pitiless forces of fiscal reality. With victory within his grasp, and the Conservatives in seemingly terminal disarray, Sir Keir Starmer, Labour’s leader, should have been unassailable yesterday as he launched his manifesto in Manchester. But there was unease in the wings, not about the election but about the shaky foundations upon which Labour’s future plans rest. Over the last year Labour has progressively boxed itself into a series of restrictions and promises (some explicit, some implicit) that simply cannot be reconciled under current conditions. For Sir Keir and Rachel Reeves, his shadow chancellor, there is one way only to square the circle: the economy must grow, and grow quickly. Otherwise they will have to start breaking promises, destroying the credibility they so assiduously cultivated to make Labour electable. The facts are simple. Yesterday, Sir Keir ruled out absolutely a return to austerity. Presumably, this means no substantial cuts to already-strained departmental budgets. There are two ways to fund public spending: tax and borrowing. If spending is not reduced and the economy does not grow taxes will have to rise to fund existing and new commitments. But Sir Keir and Ms Reeves have been busy closing off their options: income tax, national insurance, value added tax and corporation tax, none of these will be raised. That is three quarters of the tax take. Sir Keir is coy about capital gains tax so there is some scope there, and a windfall tax on oil and gas giants will help fund a “green prosperity plan” (which will still require £17.5 billion of borrowing). This is a brutally restrictive straitjacket. Borrowing is equally problematic. Labour has signed up to the Tory commitment to have government debt falling as a proportion of GDP at the end of the parliament. Without growth this target is another paralysing constraint. Healthy growth would change everything. Tax receipts could rise without rates going up, and the government could borrow more and still meet its borrowing target, so long as the expansion of the economy outpaced the growth in public debt. What is striking about Labour’s manifesto is the modesty of its spending. The promised 40,000 extra NHS appointments a week, together with more dentistry, scanners, teachers, nurseries and breakfast clubs, will cost £4.8 billion in 2028. A drop in a public spending ocean of £1.2 trillion. Yet, given parlous public finances, even these must be based on rickety assurances about ending tax avoidance and penalising non-doms, the latter a pointless measure also foolishly backed by the Conservatives. Or levying VAT on private school fees, a vindictive exercise in class warfare supposed to raise £1.5 billion. Equally striking is how this fiscally-conservative prospectus contrasts with the 2019 manifesto issued by Corbynist Labour, and endorsed by Sir Keir. It proposed wholesale nationalisation. While new spending is tiny, Sir Keir lists a whole series of wrongs — failing social care, bankrupt councils, child poverty — that must be righted. But this would cost billions that are not there. It is business, specifically tech and construction, that Sir Keir hopes will ride to the rescue. A bonfire of planning restrictions, an explosion of urban home building, handsome new towns in the green belt. These are his cavalry, bringing with them precious growth. But will the bugle sound in time? Or will his government end in broken promises? Dangerous Company If Reform UK aspires to electoral success, it cannot indulge the far right in its ranks Nigel Farage, the leader of Reform UK and a late entrant to the general election race, is becoming increasingly grandiose in his ambitions. With a recent YouGov poll placing Reform one point ahead of the Conservatives in the polls, he has begun to speak publicly of “a tipping point” whereby he emerges as the leader of a “national opposition” to a Labour majority. At the same time, however, the Reform campaign has been dogged by deeply unsavoury revelations about its candidates. The party has already been compelled to withdraw support for some of these prospective MPs, including one who compared black people to “baboons” and another who liked a Facebook post labelling the London mayor Sadiq Khan “an undercover Jihadist”. Yet numerous others who have expressed inflammatory views remain comfortably under the party banner. While every political party suffers from rogue representatives, Reform’s issues are of a different scale and nature to most. An investigation by The Times found that at least 41 Reform parliamentary candidates, close to one in ten, are Facebook friends with Gary Raikes, the British leader of a group founded in the image of Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists. Mr Raikes’s activists call themselves “blackshirts” and view parliamentary democracy as an “obstruction”. Against this worrisome backdrop, it is scarcely reassuring that the party is standing by Ian Gribbin, its candidate in Bexhill & Battle in East Sussex, who posted comments online in 2022 alleging that Britain would be “in a far better state today” if the country had “taken Hitler up on his offer of neutrality” in the run-up to the Second World War. Although Mr Gribbin later apologised and withdrew the comments, the Reform party spokesperson defended them as “probably true”. The physical attacks upon Mr Farage are to be heavily condemned and punished: such intimidation must not be permitted to entrench itself in our political culture. For his part, however, Mr Farage’s response to legitimate concerns about farright elements exploiting Reform has thus far been a blend of defiance, bluster and calculated ambiguity. He shrugged off the link between party candidates and Mr Raikes as “utter cobblers” and defended disturbing remarks by candidates as “ordinary folk down the pub-speak”. Such relaxed tolerance is in sharp contrast to his treatment of the prime minister’s miscalculation in returning early from D-Day commemorations. Mr Farage went far beyond other politicians in his attack, alleging Mr Sunak was “not patriotic” and didn’t care about “our culture”. Those comments were interpreted by many as a coded reference to Mr Sunak’s immigrant background, a charge which Mr Farage strongly denied. The vast majority of Britons are rightly proud of the role that this country, along with an estimated two and a half million troops from the Indian subcontinent, played in defeating fascism. Nor is it simply a faraway story to be weaponised for current political advantage. The ideas espoused by Adolf Hitler and Oswald Mosley are as insidious and repellent as they ever were, something it behoves any credible UK politician to recognise and root out where necessary. Yet Mr Farage has instead complained that because of the snap election it’s been “impossible” for Reform “to do full vetting of candidates”. In that case the answer is clear: if in doubt, he should not be running them. Prophetic Pooch The arrival of Euro 2024 will once again test the powers of prognosticating pets This year’s bumper summer of international sport, kicking off today with the start of the group stages of the Uefa European Football Championship, provides an unsurpassed opportunity for the attainment of sporting glory. Individual reputations will be broken or made under a vast global spotlight. This applies to the competitions’ human and non-human participants alike. As recent tradition dictates, an oracular animal has already been lined up to forecast the results of the Euros. Ludwig, a three-year-old sausage dog from Munich, delivers his verdicts by choosing between three bowls of his favoured chicken treats, each representing victory, defeat or a draw. Playing it safe, the patriotic pooch’s first prediction is that host nation Germany will defeat Scotland in the tournament’s opening match. Depending on whether or not Ludwig proves to be barking up the right tree, his star could rise and rise over the coming weeks. Despite the national stereotype for cool-headed rationality, the Germans have long been content to defer to animal instinct when it comes to divining sporting success. The all-time great of the game was of course Paul the Octopus, the German cephalopod who went out on all eight of his limbs, correctly predicting the results of all Germany’s fixtures as well as an eventual Spanish victory in the final of the 2010 World Cup. Revered for his clairvoyant power, Paul was made an honorary citizen of a Spanish village, and offered eye-watering transfer fees from rival aquariums. Paul’s legacy has been to give rise to a thriving cottage industry in fortune-telling ferrets, clairvoyant cats and soothsaying seals, all of whom have tried in vain to match his unbeaten record. That baton now passes to Ludwig. Though the odds are against him, he can hope that fortune will favour the underdog.
28 Friday June 14 2024 | the times World Milei defiant after spending cuts Argentina Stephen Gibbs Latin America correspondent Hundreds of protesters threw petrol bombs and clashed with riot police outside Argentina’s parliament yesterday after the senate narrowly approved the first stage of a sweeping austerity package backed by President Milei. The reforms, including pensions cuts and tax incentives for foreign investors, form the foundation of an economic “shock therapy” plan that Milei hopes to bring to the South American nation. The legislation, called the Base Law, has taken months to work its way through Argentina’s upper and lower houses, and has been significantly amended from its original version. After a marathon 21-hour debate in the senate that continued until the early hours of yesterday, the vote was drawn at 36-36. Victoria Villarruel, the vice-president and head of the chamber, broke the tie by supporting the bill. “For those Argentines who suffer, who wait, who do not want to see their children leave the country ... my vote is affirmative,” she said. Outside there were scenes of mayhem, as the police fired rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannon to disperse protesters who vowed that they would go to almost any lengths to stop Milei from carrying out what they portrayed as a package targeting the poor. “This poison has failed several times in Argentina and we won’t allow this to carry on,” Luis D’Elia, the activist and picket leader, said. Two cars and a row of city hire bicycles were set on fire during the protest. At least 20 police officers were injured and 15 people were arrested. Supporters of the reforms pointed to the protests as proof of why the country needed change. “Today there are two Argentinas,” Villarruel said. “A violent Argentina that sets a car on fire, throws rocks and questions the exercise of democracy. And another Argentina, with workers waiting with great pain and sacrifice for the change that they voted for.” Milei’s office issued a statement thanking the police and security forces for their handling of “terrorists” who were attempting a coup d’état. “We are going to change Argentina, we are going to make it the most liberal country in the world,” Milei told a conference in Buenos Aires. Included in the reform package are measures designed to make the country more attractive, including a 30-year tax break for investors and the weakening of labour laws that heavily favour employees at present. It also includes plans to privatise about a dozen public companies. Other measures among the bill’s 238 articles deal with reducing access to minimum retirement allowances, and have been criticised by Milei’s left-wing opponents. Argentina has been ranked as one of the most expensive countries in which to run a business, in part because of the prohibitive costs that companies need to pay to dismiss workers. For decades, trade unions in Argentina have played a dominant role in the country’s politics — a legacy going back to the time of Juan Perón, the army general who became president in 1946, promising to protect workers’ rights. His followers, Peronists, have ruled the country for much of the past 70 years, during which time Argentina’s economy, once one of the strongest in the world, has been mostly in decline or stagnation. Milei, a right-wing economist and former television pundit, totally rejects Peronism and has instead expressed his Russian spies pose as diplomats to attack Europe, says Nato chief Russia Bruno Waterfield Brussels The Russian diplomatic corps is a thinly veiled front for spies preparing “acts of sabotage” as part of President Putin’s covert campaign to fracture European unity, western allies have said. After a wave of Russian cyberattacks and disinformation campaigns during European elections, Nato defence ministers have gathered to discuss the increased threat and restricting travel rights for Russian embassy officials. Jens Stoltenberg, the Nato secretarygeneral, said Kremlin spies, operating under the Federal Security Service (FSB), the successor agency to the KGB, were becoming “more active” in Europe. Accredited diplomats, including spies running clandestine operations, are able to roam the Schengen border-free area without restrictions. Now the allies are seeking to crack down, drawing up “tighter restrictions on Russian intelligence personnel”. Reports of Russian attacks in Britain, Germany, Poland, the Baltic states and the Czech Republic were discussed by Nato defence ministers yesterday in Brussels. Later this month the EU will discuss calls to restrict the travel of Russian diplomats. “We have seen arson attacks, we have seen sabotage against critical infrastructure,” said Stoltenberg. “We have seen cyberattacks and we have seen more of those over the last weeks and months than we have seen before.” He added: “We are helping to make allies aware that this is not an isolated instance, this is actually a result of Russian intelligence President Putin is testing western resolve in Europe being more active. And therefore, Nato is increasing awareness, we are sharing information, sharing intelligence. “ The Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland and Romania are concerned that the free movement rights help Russian intelligence and that “preparation of sabotage acts are the main workload for a large number of Russian ‘diplomats’ in the EU”. A letter, signed by the eight countries and sent to Josep Borrell, the EU’s diplomatic chief, on Tuesday, said: “Free movement of holders of Russian diplomatic and service passports, accredited in one host state, across the whole Schengen area, is [enabling] ma- lign activities.” Measures would “restrict the movement of members of Russian diplomatic missions and their family members to territory of a state of their accreditation only”, allowing the authorities to detain and expel those found out of bounds. EU diplomats said new restrictions were long overdue. “The EU is a soft touch and open door for Russian operatives using diplomatic cover. It has to stop,” a senior diplomat said. Nato has been alarmed by a wave of Russian sabotage attempts including an arson attack targeting a Ukrainian business in east London, leading to two arrests, as well as other attacks across Europe.
29 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Tourist’s escape from Isis gunmen Page 30 provoke violence Riot police fired tear gas and rubber bullets yesterday as they clashed with protesters who set light to cars outside the National Congress in Buenos Aires, below, where a controversial austerity package was passed by one vote admiration for free-marketeers — including Margaret Thatcher, an especially controversial position in Argentina, where feelings still run high over the Falklands conflict of 1982. A fierce critic of left-wing politicians of all guises, the president believes that only free enterprise capitalism, with absolutely minimal state interference, can lift people out of poverty. The self-described “anarcho-capitalist” took office in December on a mandate of radical economic reform. His push for a balanced budget marks a stark reversal from that of most Argentinian governments over the past two decades, which have built up vast deficits financed by printing money. Since 2001 Argentina has defaulted on its international sovereign debt three times, a world record. Milei famously brandished a chainsaw on the campaign trail as he vowed to slash public spending. “What happened tonight is a triumph for the Argentinian people and the first step to recovering our greatness,” Milei’s office said in a statement. He also called the measures the “most ambitious legislative reform of the past 40 years”. But the legislative battle is not over yet. The package will need to return to the lower house of Congress for final approval. The resistance it will continue to face was clear throughout Wednesday night. Five serving members of Congress were among a group of protesters who were pepper-sprayed and needed hospital treatment. Dozens of others received medical attention at the scene, according to the health ministry. Protesters were heard to chant: “The country is not for sale”, and one banner held aloft read: “How can a head of state hate the state?” One demonstrator, Miriam Rajovitcher, 54, a teacher, said: “If this law passes, we are going to lose so many of our labour and pension rights. I am so much worse off.” Another, Fabio Nunez, 55, a lawyer, said the law would put Argentina “ back 100 years”, reported the AFP news agency. In order to get the legislation passed, the government put on hold some of its more controversial privatisation plans, including proposals to sell off the Aerolíneas Argentinas state airline and the national post office. Only a handful of state-owned firms, such as the national nuclear power company, are now likely to be privatised in the short term. Another unpopular measure, to lower the income tax threshold to include thousands more workers, also failed to pass the second round of Senate voting. Milei’s political party, Freedom Advances, which was founded only three years ago, holds only 15 per cent of seats in the lower house and 10 per cent in the Senate, limiting his ability to push through his promised reforms. Argentina’s bonds were sharply up on international markets yesterday as investors welcomed the passing of the reform package. ‘Houston, we don’t have a problem’ United States Kaya Burgess Science Reporter As the International Space Station orbited 250 miles above Earth a female voice brought bad news. She said its commander was unwell and must be put in a space suit for “hyperbaric treatment”. He had severe decompression sickness and would be lucky to live. Soon, word reached those on Earth tuned into Nasa’s live feed from the station. “Get [the] commander back in his suit [and] get it sealed,” the voice said. The commander, the Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko, had only a “tenuous” chance of survival, the voice said. As panic spread about the distress message and a medical emergency, Nasa scrambled to clarify that it was in fact part of a simulation that was “inadvertently” broadcast worldwide. The voice, which appeared to be coming from a flight surgeon, a doctor who works with mission controllers on the ground, asked crew members to check the patient’s pulse and give him oxygen and said: “Whatever you can do is going to be better than doing nothing.” They were advised to attach a mask to their crewmate while attempting to put his spacesuit on. The voice was later heard to tell colleagues: “Unfortunately, the prognosis for [the] commander is relatively tenuous”, adding that they were seeking a hospital with “critical care facilities”. In the early hours of yesterday, Nasa posted a clarification on the ISS’s feed on Twitter/X, stating: “There is no emergency situation going on aboard the International Space Station.” In a twist, however, a planned spacewalk was postponed hours later after one of the crew reported a “spacesuit discomfort issue”. The astronauts Tracy Dyson and Matt Dominick had to climb back out of their suits about an hour before their planned exit into space. About 30 astronauts and cosmonauts have died while on active duty, but only three died in space, on board Russia’s Soyuz 11 capsule in 1971. Can Hollywood glamour rescue President Biden? Page 31 Le Pen surges towards victory as rivals implode France Plus ça change Charles Bremner Paris The populist party of Marine Le Pen appeared to be on course for a parliamentary majority on the fourth day of France’s snap election campaign yesterday as the mainstream conservative party tore itself apart and a new leftwing alliance pulled ahead of President Macron’s centrist bloc. Le Pen’s anti-immigrant National Rally is gaining momentum, polls show, as voters turn a deaf ear to Macron’s warnings of disaster if it emerges with the strongest hand after the two rounds of voting on June 30 and July 7. The Rally, whose landslide in European elections prompted Macron’s gamble on Sunday, is on course to increase its seats in the National Assembly from 88 now to between 220 and 270, according to a survey by Elabe for the French news channel BFMTV. That is not far short of the 289 seats that would give it an absolute majority, forcing Macron to ask it to govern in opposition to his presidency. Macron’s centrist Renaissance bloc, which is now the laregst party but is well short of a majority, would be further diminished and overtaken by the New Popular Front, a revived alliance of the centre-left Socialist Party, the radical France Unbowed, Greens and Communists, the survey suggested. To reach power, Le Pen and Jordan Bardella, her protégé and campaign leader, are trying to forge an alliance with sections of the imploding Republicans, heirs to the conservative movement founded by Charles de Gaulle. Weakened for years by the rise of Macron’s centrist bloc and Le Pen’s Rally, the Republicans’ leadership collapsed this week after Éric Ciotti, its chief, announced a pact with the Rally without consulting colleagues. Yesterday they united to dismiss the hardline MP from Nice and expelled him from the party, but he has refused to go. He turned up for work at party headquarters in central Paris and said he had opened legal proceedings to annul the “illegal” decision to oust him. That was taken by heavyweights including Valérie Pécresse, president of the Paris region, and Gérard Larcher, president of the Senate, the upper house of parliament. “I’m president of the party, I’m going to my office and that’s it,” Ciotti said as he entered the headquarters. He said his party’s grassroots wants an alliance with the Rally. His colleagues were “far out of touch with reality when they hammer on about the ‘dangers of fascism’,” he said. Bardella has said Ciotti is bringing “dozens” of Republicans candidates to join the Rally camp, including sitting MPs, but none has emerged so far. The Rally is preparing President Macron’s election gamble has brought another career change for Marion Maréchal, the 34year-old niece of Marine Le Pen. Freshly elected as an MEP after heading the campaign for Éric Zemmour’s anti-Muslim Reconquest party, she fell out with her boss. He sacked her for trying to ally with her aunt’s triumphant National Rally, which he regards as his enemy. “I am sickened and wounded by this world record of betrayal,” he said. Elected as National Rally MP at the age of 22, Maréchal, below, has experience of switching sides after she turned her back on the Le Pen clan to join Zemmour in the 2022 presidential elections. By scoring 5.47 per cent of the French vote, her campaign won five Brussels seats for Zemmour’s party, its first anywhere. She has accused Zemmour of stirring division in the nationalist camp but denied that she is rejoining the Rally, and says she will take up the European parliament seat that she won on Sunday as an independent. a future government that will include experienced conservatives from outside its ranks, it says. “What we want to do is a national unity government,” Laurent Jacobelli, a spokesman, said. Another breach was made in the firewall between the parties when François-Xavier Bellamy, one of the Republicans’ two interim leaders, said he would vote for the Rally candidate in a run-off if the only choice was a member of the left-wing coalition. “I will do everything to stop France Unbowed reaching power,” Bellamy said. The revolutionary party and its firebrand leader, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, 72, dominate the parliamentary opposition but their presence in the new coalition unsettles many in the moderate Socialist Party. Macron mocked the alliance as “unnatural, baroque and indecent”. He wondered, he said, how it would reconcile the radicals’ support for Gaza, hostility to the EU and approval of President Putin with the Socialists’ pro-European and proUkraine doctrines. On Wednesday, Macron depicted France Unbowed as extremists who are as “dangerous” as Le Pen’s hard-right movement but the president’s “project fear” approach seems to be having little impact. The Elabe poll of voting intentions showed the leftwing front on 28 per cent, compared with 31 per cent for the National Rally and 18 per cent for Macron’s Renaissance.
30 Friday June 14 2024 | the times World Tourist dived under car for refuge from Isis gunman Attempts by the Taliban to open up Afghanistan are fraught with danger, Geoff Hiscock and Haroon Janjua write As he lay in the dirt beneath the car, Joe McDowell could just about make out the leather sandals of the man who had shot him. Standing a metre away, all the gunman had to do was bend down and shoot again and it would be all over. Remarkably, however, the Australian holidaymaker escaped the attack that left five travelling companions dead. “I was watching his feet and estimated he was far enough for me to wriggle out the same side of the car I’d rolled under,” McDowell said after returning home to Perth in Western Australia, where he is recovering from taking a bullet to the rear. “I made a dash for a nearby alley and escaped that way.” McDowell, 38, a mechanic, was with a group of 17 people, including two guides, who had travelled to see the remnants of Afghanistan’s Buddha statues in Bamiyan, 130km west of Kabul. The carved giant Buddhas, Joe McDowell survived a shooting on a visit to the Buddha statues in Bamiyan which date from the 6th century, were destroyed by the Taliban in one of its most notorious acts in 2001. Having returned to power 20 years later, the Taliban has been attempting to use the site to foster a nascent tourism industry. According to them, visitor numbers are on the rise, with a 120 per cent increase last year to nearly 5,200. It was tourists, however, that found themselves the targets of a shooting on May 17, day two of a ten-day tour. Three Spaniards and two Afghan guides were killed, along with another civilian caught up in the attack. Five, including McDowell, were hurt. “It was about 5.45pm, and our van was parked on the street outside some shops,” McDowell said. “We heard some noise, like firecrackers, or maybe shooting further away. Nobody realised at first just how close the gunman was.” Sitting in the front seat of the van and talking to the passengers behind him, McDowell was suddenly confronted with a bullet smashing into the windscreen. “It was a bad situation. I felt trapped in the van, so I opened the door and started running away. I didn’t have any real plan — just to get away from there,” he said. His fellow tourists were in a worse position. They could not easily get to the van’s side doors. But the gunman’s first target was apparently McDowell. He fired at least one shot at him, hitting his behind. “I turned around. The gunman was looking at me with his gun pointing at me, but for some reason he didn’t fire any more bullets at me. I don’t know why — maybe he was distracted by something.” That is when he rolled under a car, certain that the gunman knew he was under there. “At this point I felt very concerned. I thought to myself — I can’t move, I’m trapped,” he said. After the shooting stopped and feeling lucky to be alive, he returned to the van. “I could see the dead and wounded. One of our guides told me to get into a sedan that pulled up in the street, and I was taken to hospital. They also put the dead civilian in the car. Some people said he was a Taliban security man, but I don’t know that for sure.” In hospital, the authorities showed McDowell pictures of various people to see if he could identify the gunman. “I couldn’t remember his face, but I was able to describe the leather sandals that he was wearing, along with the colour of his pants. They were surprised by the sandals — ‘not boots?’ they asked.” Responsibility was claimed later by Islamic State Khorasan (Isis-K), a regional chapter of the terrorist group. It operates in parts of Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan and was behind the suicide bombing at Kabul airport in 2021 that killed at least 170 Afghan civilians and 13 US service members. Western officials also blamed Isis-K for an attack on a Moscow concert hall in March this year in which 144 people were killed. In April, Germany charged seven foreigners with plotting terrorist attacks on behalf of Isis-K, saying they intended to carry out attacks across western Europe. In a statement issued after the attack, Abdul Mateen Qani, spokesman for Afghanistan’s interior ministry, said a number of people had been arrested and he was “confident that the criminals would be brought to justice”. The shooting represents part of a bloody war that the Taliban has fought against Isis-K since coming to power, one that it is keen not to let stand in the way of its tourism industry. While there is clear incentive for the Taliban to downplay the extent of the terrorist threat in Afghanistan, they have boosted their intelligence capabilities to prevent the emergence of more Isis-K cells, said Omar Samad, senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and the former Afghan ambassador to the EU. For McDowell the drama of his visit has not ruled out another one. “Maybe I’ll go back in a year or so,” he said. “I like to meet people, and get a sense of a country that way. I’m definitely lucky to have survived this. It was quite an experience — not the one I wanted, and certainly one I won’t forget.” Demobbed K-pop star embraces freedom F or a year and a half they have lived in obscurity, isolated from their fans and one another, doing their part to defend their country against a North Korean invasion (Richard Lloyd Parry writes). Now the South Korean boy band BTS, one of the most successful pop groups in the world, have begun their return to public life, after the first of their seven members completed his military service. Kim Seok-jin, who performs as Jin, was discharged on Wednesday after 18 months in the army. He marked his first day as a civilian yesterday by embracing a thousand of the band’s millions of fans at a “hugathon” in a stadium in Seoul. Cheering fans, most of them women, formed a long queue and mounted the stage for a fleeting embrace from their hero. Many more queued for hours for limited-edition memorabilia. “I tried not to cry, but I cried twice because I was Thousands of fans queued to hug the pop star Jin, who was greeted by his BTS bandmate after leaving the army so happy,” Jin, 31, said during a live stream broadcast. “I insisted on holding the ‘free hug’ event. I really wanted to go ahead with it because I wanted to give warm hugs to fans who waited the long year and a half.” The other six members of BTS are still doing their national service and the last will not be discharged for a year. In a concession not allowed to many recruits, they were allowed out to meet Jin as he emerged from the 5th Infantry Division training centre in Gyeonggi province. The leader of BTS, Kim Nam-joon, 29, known as RM, played the band’s song Dynamite on the saxophone. “I, along with many other people, applaud you for completing your duties without any chicanery or privileges and becoming an exemplary model for everyone else,” Oh Se-hoon, the mayor of Seoul, wrote on Facebook. Exemptions from service are given to international athletes and classical musicians, but not to pop stars, to the frustration of BTS fans. There was talk of changing the law to exempt K-pop stars of international standing, although the idea is opposed by many young South Koreans. BTS were the first South Korean band to find lasting success outside east Asia. However, when they announced their hiatus in 2022, band members gave the impression that it had as much to do with emotional and physical exhaustion from the pressures of stardom as their military obligations.
31 the times | Friday June 14 2024 World Voters doubt VP ready for Oval Office United States Hugh Tomlinson Only a third of voters believe that Kamala Harris would win a presidential election, a poll has found. The vice-president has suffered persistently low approval ratings since taking office and struggled to convince voters as a potential leader while defining her own policy positions. Three out of five Democrats and only a quarter of independents think Harris would win an election if she became the Democratic nominee in 2028, the Politico/Morning Consult poll found. With Biden’s own approval ratings dogged by concerns about his age and ability to serve a full second term, it underscores doubts about her ability to step up if it were necessary. Harris, 59, has an approval rating of 42 per cent, a point behind Biden on 43 per cent. She has taken a key role in Biden’s campaign, touting White House achievements, touring the country and leading the offensive against Donald Trump over abortion rights. As the first black woman to be elected vice-president, Harris has also spearheaded the push to win back African American voters who have drifted towards Trump over Biden’s handling of the economy. On those issues, Harris polls strongly. The survey showed her outperforming Biden among such voters and polling well on abortion, healthcare and LGBT rights. Favourability among Hispanic voters also betters Biden’s. RL Miller, an outgoing member of the Democratic National Committee, told Politico that concerns about Harris within her own party are underpinned by the lingering trauma at Hillary Clinton’s defeat to Trump in 2016. “I am afraid Democrats have internalised the Hillary Clinton lesson — that a woman can’t win. And I think it’s sad,” Miller said. Trump revels in his Capitol Hill return A packed room of Republicans sang Happy Birthday to Donald Trump, who turns 78 today, as he visited Capitol Hill for the first time since the rampage by a mob of his supporters after the 2020 election (David Charter writes). Trump set out his re-election plans to separate meetings of congressmen and senators at a private venue near Congress. They were shunned by the handful of Donald Trump returned to Capitol Hill yesterday for the first time since the riots on January 6, 2021 members who oppose his return and have not been purged or resigned. “We’re excited to welcome President Trump back,” Mike Johnson, the House Speaker, said. Asked if he pushed Trump to respect the peaceful transfer of power, unlike the violent scenes on January 6, 2021, Johnson said: “Of course he respects that, we all do, and we’ve all talked about it, ad nauseam.” Mitch McConnell, the outgoing Senate Republican leader who once blamed Trump for the “disgraceful ... insurrection”, said he now endorsed him. “He’s earned the nomination by the voters all across the country,” he said. The moderate senators Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski and Mitt Romney, all of whom voted to convict Trump after his impeachment trial, did not attend, citing scheduling conflicts. Bill Cassidy, who also voted to convict, said he would probably join the senators’ meeting. “He’s going to be the next president, so you have to work together,” he said. Republicans are hopeful they will reverse the Democrats’ 51-49 advantage in the Senate when a third of seats are contested in November. Bennie Thompson, a Democratic House member from Mississippi who chaired the select committee investigating the riot, said: “After inciting a deadly insurrection that defiled the halls of Congress, how dare Trump show his face on these grounds? ... He still presents the same dire threat to our democracy that he did three years ago.” Biden seeks star power in La La Land Hollywood stars could sway the key voters who will decide the White House race, writes Will Pavia Occasionally on screen, George Clooney and Julia Roberts have played ex-partners thrust together once more to complete a difficult task, such as stopping their daughter from marrying a man she loves, or pinching millions from a casino, or stealing a Fabergé egg. Tomorrow they will be reunited in downtown Los Angeles for another mission: to raise millions of dollars fast and help a man in his eighties to win re-election to the White House Clooney and Roberts are the stars of a Hollywood fundraiser for President Biden’s re-election campaign that will also feature Barack Obama, in a supporting role. The Biden campaign has said that besides speaking at the event, at the Peacock Theatre, the two actors will be part of a contest, broadcast on social media, to engage with small donors and to draw in other members of the Hollywood elite. It could also test whether Hollywood stars have any sway at all with the swing voters who may decide this contest. Evidence of this has tended to elude political scientists, though it has been tried time and again, since the Warren G Harding campaign of 1920, for which the actor Al Jolson sang, “We’re here to make a fuss, Warren Harding, you’re the man for us!” “Frank Sinatra backed FDR,” said Mark Harvey, author of Celebrity Influence. But before the 1960s, most actors had contracts that stopped them from making endorsements, he said. George McGovern, the Democratic presidential candidate in 1972, was helped by Warren Beatty. McGovern actually described Beatty as “the third or fourth most important person in the campaign”, albeit one that failed. Summarising these and later celebrity-assisted campaigns in a 2008 study, two economists offered evidence that Oprah WinGeorge Clooney and Julia Roberts are helping the Biden campaign frey’s endorsement of Obama had drawn a million extra votes for the candidate. But this was in the Democratic primary, where voters were choosing between Democrats. It would take a far greater force, most think, in a presidential election. “What would it take a Biden supporter to vote for Trump or a Trump supporter to vote for Biden?” asked Matthew Beckmann, an associate professor of political science at the University of California, Irvine. “The answer: a hell of a lot more than a celebrity endorsement.” The all-important swing voters tend to be “less interested and informed about politics generally”, which in turn means they are less likely to notice or remember a celebrity endorsement, he said. In a presidential election, “the ocean is so big and the tides are so strong,” he said. By ocean, he did not mean Danny Ocean, of Ocean’s Eleven, in which Clooney and Roberts both star. He meant the metaphorical ocean of all voters’ issues and concerns: “the economy, foreign policy, partisan ideology. It’s very hard to think of how you would change the ocean.” On the other hand, Hollywood actors are clearly very helpful when it comes to raising money. Jeffrey Katzenberg, who co-founded the studio DreamWorks Pictures, was an early supporter of Obama. He staged a fundraiser for Obama in 2012 — held at Clooney’s house — that raised $15 million. Last year, Biden made Katzenberg one of seven co-chairs of his re-election campaign. Part of his job was fundraising, but it was also said that he could offer the insight of a captain of the great storytelling industry of Hollywood, on how Biden should present himself to the nation. “I always just say, look, everybody keeps coming into Hollywood for cash, and they don’t come to us for the one thing we do better than anybody, which is tell stories,” Clooney told the Wall Street Journal last year. “And so I think it’s probably a very good idea that they’re going to Jeffrey not just for raising money, but for narratives.” Katzenberg was said to have told Biden to “own” his age and to regard it as an advantage. In Hollywood, after all, Harrison Ford, 81, recently reprised the role of Indiana Jones, and Ridley Scott, who is 86, keeps up an exacting sched- ule as a director. Tom Rothman, head of Sony’s film division, that distributed the director’s 2023 film Napoleon, told the New Yorker that “Ridley Scott is the single best argument for a second term for Joe Biden.” Besides Katzenberg, Steven Spielberg, 77, his friend and a co-founder of DreamWorks, is credited with helping to prepare Biden on his speech to commemorate the D-Day anniversary in Normandy. He has also been advising the campaign on how best to present Biden at the Democratic National Convention in August. There have been suggestions that the deployment of Hollywood moguls might backfire. During the Iowa caucuses in January, a reporter asked Katzenberg if his position on the campaign might serve to “underscore” a Republican argument that his party was dominated by coastal elites and had lost touch with the working class. The mogul bristled at the question. New York Magazine, which reported the exchange, also reported that Katzenberg had once insisted, to an employee, that he was well-placed to reach younger people. “I’m not a child or mother, but I made movies children and mothers loved. I know millennials better than millennials.”
32 V2 Friday June 14 2024 | the times World Goalie saves China’s football dream China Richard Spencer China Correspondent Chinese football fans rarely have much to cheer about. Of all the sports in which the People’s Republic has aimed for world leadership, success at the beautiful game has been the most elusive. The national team last made it to the World Cup finals in 2002. It lost all three games at the group stage. Its professional league is constantly mired in corruption and match-fixing scandals. But at last the nation has a footballing hero on whom it can shower its love. The fact that he is a Singaporean semi-professional does not matter. Fans have lavished Hassan Sunny with praise and Chinese tourists have mobbed the food stall in a shopping mall where he does his day job as a chef. Grateful Chinese stuck back home have even uncovered the stall’s mobile payment system and sent him random sums of money in gratitude. Sunny’s performance in goal was undoubtedly heroic, albeit in a losing cause. Singapore lost 3-1 to Thailand in a 2026 World Cup qualifying match on Tuesday — Singapore, a small island nation, rarely wins the big games either. However, Thailand needed to win by 14 DAYS FROM £2,990* per person Inspiring India Departures | October 2024 to November 2025 Temples, tigers, timeless fortresses, and hidden gems abound in this tour inspired by the classic sights of India’s Golden Triangle – an ideal option for a first-time tour of India. B egin this extraordinary tour by immersing yourself in the sights and sounds of Old Delhi – charming and chaotic in equal measure. Next is an exquisite Taj Mahal sunrise before a complete change of pace in stunning Ranthambore, where you’ll be looking for majestic Bengal tigers. Hidden gems, including Bundi and Chittor Fort, await before an exploration of Udaipur, also known as the ‘Venice of the East’. Visit one of India’s most sacred lakes in Pushkar before arriving in Jaipur, the ‘Pink City’. From here, you’ll visit the legendary Amber Fort before returning to Dehli to conclude your unforgettable Indian odyssey. Price includes International flights and current taxes Accommodation: 12 nights in three+ / four-star accommodation 12 breakfasts, 11 lunches and 12 dinners Touring with Guides and entrance fees Cruise on Lake Pichola Carpet Weaving Demonstration Exclusive FREE pre-night hotel with breakfast and transfers for Times readers CALL TODAY ON 0808 115 5204 *Prices listed are based on two sharing a twin/double room. Single supplement on request. Flights on holidays booked more than 11 months in advance may be subject to supplements when airline fares are published. Operated by and subject to the booking conditions of Wendy Wu, ABTA W7994 ATOL 6639, a company wholly independent of News UK. Our trusted partner thetimes.co.uk/ww-india QUOTE TIMES-ON^ three clear goals to go through to the next round at the expense of China. The difference was the 11 sometimes startling saves the veteran 40-year-old goalkeeper made to prevent Thailand achieving that. Online, commentators called him “China’s honorary 12th man” and “a godlike creature”. Several fans promised to pay a visit to his food stall, which sells nasi lemak, the Malaysian national rice dish, next time they visited Singapore. As local Singaporean journalists who checked for themselves discovered, they were too late — there was already no nasi lemak left. Instead, the seating area in front of the stall, called Dapur Hassan, in Tampines mall, was full of Chinese social media influencers taking photographs of each other. Despite playing only semi-professionally Sunny is highly regarded as Singapore’s goalkeeper of 20 years’ standing, The veteran Singapore goalkeeper Hassan Sunny’s heroics kept China in the running for a World Cup place earning 115 caps. Given Singapore’s defensive record, he has had a lot of goal-saving practice, and was once ranked among the world’s best. In Tuesday’s match he was recorded as having made 11 saves from 35 attempts on goal by Thailand, particularly in a frenetic last few minutes as the attacking side went all-out for the goal that would have taken them to the third World Cup qualifying stage. The qualifiers are a particularly gruelling ordeal for Asian fans. The continent’s large number of countries and relative lack of success — its best performance was South Korea’s losing semi-final spot against Germany in its home tournament in 2002 — means a long and complicated qualification process. In this round, China’s 1-0 defeat by group leaders South Korea meant that the 3-1 win by Thailand left both countries on the same points and with the same goal difference. China went through by virtue of a better head-to-head record. World Cup glory is by no means assured, though. The third round of qualifying has 18 teams, six of which can go straight through to the finals but another six of which have to make their fans suffer potential fourth, fifth and sixth rounds. President Xi would eschew British politicians’ fantasies of there being a link between football performance and political standings for the ruling party. China’s ruling Communist Party has, however, made success in the Olympic Games a key matter of national pride and Xi, a noted football fan as well as being the man who oversaw the 2008 Beijing Olympics, has made clearing up corruption in the national football league a personal project. The financial instinct dies hard, however. One fan posted 100 Singapore dollars — about £60 — to Hassan’s shop account. Such post-match “bungs” are on a different ethical scale from those usually faced by Chinese football, however: the head of the Chinese Football Association was jailed for life in March for accepting £8 million in bribes. Sunny has accepted the Chinese fans’ thanks with the good grace that has marked his career, posting a video to Weibo, the Chinese equivalent of Twitter, thanking them in Mandarin. Ludwig sniffs German Euro 24 win Germany David Crossland Berlin Paul the Octopus won a huge following as a sporting soothsayer in the 2008 Euros and 2010 World Cup. Fellow fortune-tellers have included Emma the pig, Nelly the elephant, Konstantin the elk, the ferrets Snow White and Freddy, Lorenzo the parrot, Fedor the tiger, Daisy the seal, Nanook the polar bear cub and Flocke the penguin. Now Germany has revived the tradition of football tournament prediction, with Ludwig the dachshund having picked the home team to beat Scotland in tonight’s opening match of Euro 2024. At an event in his native Munich, the “Dachshund Oracle” was presented with three bowls of chicken treats: one by the German flag, one by the cross of St Andrew and one by both, meaning a draw. “He trotted determinedly over to the German bowl,” said Philipp Paulus, whose marketing company organised the event. “So Ludwig believes the German team will win the opener against the Scottish team.” The three-year-old dog, unfazed by the photographers, also picked the tournament winner: Portugal. A local radio station may ask Ludwig for more predictions, depending on the outcome of the match. There are hopes Ludwig will be more Ludwig the dachshund was enticed more by the bowl of chicken treats by the German flag — indicating a home win in their opening Euro 2024 match against Scotland accurate than Sisi, his predecessor as Munich’s Dachshund Oracle, who picked Bayern Munich to beat Chelsea in the 2012 Champions League Final and was “just a little off the mark”, said Paulus (the Bavarians lost on penalties). Volker Hiddemann, Ludwig’s owner, has confidence in him. “He is a very relaxed, even-tempered and thoughtful character — especially for a dachshund.” Germany’s fascination with animal oracles dates back to Paul the Octopus, who lived in the Sea Life Centre in Oberhausen. He correctly picked the winner in four of Germany’s six Euro 2008 matches and all seven of their matches in the 2010 World Cup, as well as predicting that Spain would win. Each time, Paul was offered two transparent boxes marked with a national flag and containing a mussel. The first opened marked the winner. His fame grew with every correct prediction and at one point his hosts at the Oberhausen Sea Life Centre posted a security guard outside his tank . Paul was made an honorary citizen of the Spanish village of Carballiño and Russian reporters travelled to Oberhausen to ask him to pick the winner of the next presidential election.
the times | Friday June 14 2024 33 S1 Business world markets (Change on the day) commodities FTSE 100 8,163.67 (-51.81) Gold $2,298.31 (-36.66) May 15 22 30 Dow Jones 38,647.10 (-65.11) June 6 13 currencies $ Brent crude (6pm) $82.70 (-0.05) $ £/$ $1.2763 (+0.0077) £/€ €1.1864 (+0.0022) $ ¤ 8,500 42,500 2,600 120 1.400 1.300 8,000 40,000 2,400 100 1.300 1.200 7,500 37,500 2,200 80 1.200 1.100 7,000 35,000 2,000 60 13 1.100 May 15 22 30 June 6 13 May 16 23 30 June 6 13 May 16 23 30 June 6 May 16 23 30 June 6 13 1.000 May 16 23 30 June 6 13 Bellway reveals it has made several offers for embattled Crest Tom Saunders Bellway confirmed last night that it had made several takeover offers for Crest Nicholson, with the news emerging only hours after the latest in a string of profit warnings by its embattled housebuilding rival. Its latest bid, made on May 7 and rejected by the target company’s board, would have been equivalent to about 253p per Crest Nicholson share, valu- ing the business at £667 million. Shares in Crest Nicholson tumbled by 28p, or 11.6 per cent, to 212¾p yesterday after it issued its profit alert. Bellway said it believed there was a “compelling strategic and financial rationale” for a combination of the two businesses, which would allow Crest Nicholson to benefit from “a reduced risk profile, lower indebtedness and an enhanced land bank”. It suggested that this had been only the “latest non-binding all-share offer” for the rival company, which has been plagued by operational issues, most recently a string of building defects at about 140 of its sites. Crest Nicholson disclosed yesterday that it would have to spend £31.4 million rectifying the issues, more than double its original estimate of about £15 million, after it expanded the scope of its review. The housebuilder’s shares have underperformed the wider sector in the past 18 months, although it retains an attractive land bank. Analysts at Investec, the broker, noted that only about 5 per cent of its plots could be considered “lower-margin” sites. Crest has been working through its lower-margin developments, which has affected its overall profitability, while it also has struggled with a drop in demand, which it blamed on “volatility in mortgage rates”. News of the bid came hours before Martyn Clark is set to take the top job at Crest Nicholson from Peter Truscott, who announced his plan to step down as chief executive in January. Clark formerly was the chief commercial officer at Persimmon, a larger listed competitor. Truscott, who has been in charge since 2019, announced his plan to resign after the company issued its third profit warning in five months earlier in the year. Musk wins backing for record pay Tesla investors vote in favour of $56bn package Louisa Clarence-Smith US Business Editor Elon Musk, Tesla’s chief executive, has received shareholder backing to reinstate his $56 billion pay package — the biggest in American corporate history. Tesla confirmed that proposals to ratify Musk’s pay deal and move the company’s legal home to Texas had been approved by shareholders, who chanted “Elon Musk, Elon Musk” after the preliminary results were revealed at the company’s annual meeting at its headquarters in Austin, Texas. Speaking to shareholders after the results were announced, Musk said: “Hot damn, I love you guys.” Musk has been fighting to get his hands on the payout, first agreed in 2018, after a judge in Delaware, where Tesla is presently incorporated, voided the pay deal in January over concerns about the board’s transparency and independence when it was approved. Musk and Tesla’s board have spent two months trying to convince shareholders to back the deal, to bolster their chances of a successful appeal to the Delaware ruling. The vote has been interpreted on Wall Street as a test of confidence in Musk’s leadership of Tesla. Shares in the carmaker are down 60 per cent from their 2021 peak as EV sales have slowed, leading to criticism that Musk’s attention has been too divided between Tesla and his other companies. Tesla’s board has argued that Musk deserves the package because he hit targets on market value, revenue and profitability. Shares in Tesla jumped 2.9 per cent, or $5.18, to close at $182.47 yesterday after Musk said preliminary voting showed the key proposals had been approved by “wide margins”. The vote win is a significant boost to Musk, who this week has faced allegations that he pursued several female employees at his company SpaceX for sex. Musk has not responded to the claims, published in a detailed report by the Wall Street Journal. However, he still faces a battle to secure legal approval for the payout. “Even if the shareholders do approve the old package, it is not clear that the Delaware court will allow that vote to be effective,” said Adam Badawi, a law professor at UC Berkeley. Robyn Denholm, Tesla’s chair, had suggested that Musk would leave the company if investors voted against the pay deal . Meanwhile, Musk had threatened to build AI and robotics products outside Tesla should he fail to gain enough voting control, which requires the 2018 pay package to be approved. The payout divided shareholders. Those in favour included Ron Baron of Baron Capital, who said Musk, with his “relentless drive and uncompromising standards”, was integral to Tesla. Baillie Gifford & Co, the Scottish asset manager, and Ark Investment Management, the investment firm, also backed the deal. Norges Bank, Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, and the California Public Employees’ Retirement System intended to vote against. Glass Lewis and Institutional Shareholder Services, the shareholder advisory firms, had also urged investors to reject the pay package. Yazmin Oukhellou and Scott Timlin, a Celebrity Big Brother winner, arrive at Westminster magistrates’ court yesterday Influencers accused over trading scheme Jonathan Ames Legal Editor A reality television influencer has pleaded not guilty to illegally plugging unauthorised investment schemes on social media. Scott Timlin, who appeared on the MTV show Geordie Shore, is one of nine financial influencers charged by the Financial Conduct Authority in relation to an unauthorised foreignexchange trading scheme. Investigators have alleged that Timlin, 36, along with Emmanuel Nwanze, 30, and Holly Thompson, 34, used an Instagram account to provide unauthorised advice on buying and selling contracts-for-difference. These are agreements between investors and brokers to exchange the difference in the value of a financial product between the time the contract opens and closes. They were said to be high-risk derivatives, with 80 per cent of customers investing in them losing money. Officials at the regulator described the contracts as being “highly leveraged”, using debt in an effort to amplify returns, “which can result in investors losing more than they invested”. In court the authority further alleged that Nwanze had paid other social media influencers to promote the account to a combined 4.5 million Instagram followers. They were Lauren Goodger, 37, Yazmin Oukhellou, 30, and Eva Zapico, 25, all of whom starred in ITV’s The Only Way is Essex, and Chris Biggs, 32, Jamie Clayton, 32, and Rebecca Gormley, 26, contestants on Love Island, also on ITV. All of the defendants face one count of issuing unauthorised communications of financial promotions. Nwanze also faces one count of breaching a general prohibition under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000, which prohibits the unauthorised conduct of regulated activities in the UK. Timlin, who won Channel 5’s Celebrity Big Brother in 2016, appeared in person at Westminster magistrates’ court in London alongside Oukhellou, Nwanze and Zapico. He pleaded not guilty to one count of unauthorised communications of financial promotions. Nwanze pleaded not guilty to the same charge, as well as one count of breaching the general prohibition. Thompson, who appeared via video link alongside Goodger, pleaded not guilty to one count of unauthorised communications of financial promotions. The remaining defendants provided no indication of their pleas. Another hearing has been set for July 3.
34 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Business Need to know 1 Elon Musk has declared victory in a campaign to win investors’ backing to reinstate his $56 billion pay package. Shares in Tesla rose after he claimed that preliminary results showed that shareholders had backed proposals to ratify his pay deal. 2 Bellway, the housebuilder, confirmed that it had made several takeover offers for its rival Crest Nicholson, which issued the latest in a string of profit warnings yesterday. Its latest bid would have valued the company at £6.5 billion. 3 A reality TV influencer has pleaded not guilty to illegally plugging unauthorised investments on social media. Scott Timlin, who appeared on the MTV show Geordie Shore, is one of nine influencers charged by the Financial Conduct Authority over a high-risk scheme. 4 England and Scotland football fans drinking a pint while watching the Euros will be paying four times more duty than the European average. Scottish fans will pay 54.2p in duty, compared with the 4.6p that German fans pay when Scotland v Germany kicks off tonight. 5 A key measure of US producer prices fell last month and more Americans claimed unemployment benefits, raising the prospect of interest rate cuts. Monthly producer prices inflation fell by 0.2 per cent in May after a 0.5 per cent increase in April. 6 Labour’s charm offensive with business has soured slightly over plans to reform workers’ rights. So it will likely see the generally upbeat response from industry to its manifesto as a victory. Paul Johnson, the economist, captured the mood as he criticised the lack of “big numbers” in its tax and spending plans but welcomed the focus on “growth and stability”. 7 More than 50 years after he founded the company, the executive chairman of Renishaw is stepping down. Sir David McMurtry, 84, a prominent engineer, will become a nonexecutive director at the engineering business from the start of July. 8 As much as £1 billion was wiped off the value of Wise after the money transfer platform said it expected income growth to slow. Kristo Kaarmann, Wise’s billionaire co-founder, hailed “another very strong year”, but the City was more focused on his warning. 9 There are “tentative signs of recovery” in the City after the deals and trading drought of the past two years, according to the boss of Peel Hunt. Steven Fine pointed to recent initial public offerings in London and a pick-up in trading volumes. 10 Across the board increases in revenue, profit, margins and its dividend have cemented Halma’s place as a FTSE 100 favourite. Shares in the conglomerate closed up by 13.4 per cent after a bumper set of figures for the year to the end of March. Crest looks to start rebuild as rising costs dent profits Tom Howard Crest Nicholson is having to spend twice as much money as it had originally estimated fixing defects and issues at dozens of its older developments, which will put a big dent in this year’s profits. The housebuilder, which has lurched from one problem to another over the past year, said it would have to spend £31.4 million rectifying the issues at about 140 sites nationwide, most of which were completed before 2019. Until now it had thought that £15 million would be enough to cover extra work. The additional costs partly explain why Crest now believes that its adjusted pre-tax profit for the current financial year, which runs until October, will be between £22 million and £39 million. City analysts had been forecasting a number nearer to £40 million. The profit warning, the latest in a string of gloomy updates from the company, sent Crest’s shares down by 28p, or 11.6 per cent, to close at 212¾p. Crest Nicholson was founded in the 1960s and is now one of Britain’s biggest housebuilders. Its recent problems have included repeated cost overruns at a troublesome regeneration project in Farnham, Surrey; a fire in a block of flats that it built; and the recent discovery of construction defects at four sites. Shareholders first learnt of those defects in March, when Crest said it would spend about £15 million fixing them. It then reviewed the rest of its older sites to see if there was anything else that might need doing. As part of that review, Crest did not find any other build defects, but it did reassess how much it needed to spend going back and finishing off surrounding infrastructure such as roads, drains and open spaces at 140 other older de- velopments. A third-party consultant also told the company that the £15 million it had set aside to fix defects at the first four sites was actually going to cost nearly £20 million. “It wasn’t that we found any new issues, it’s just that we’ve tidied up the cost of the liabilities,” Peter Truscott, the chief executive of Crest, said. “It was a thorough comprehensive review so that we can give our board and our investors some confidence that we’re on top of everything.” Analysts suggested that this might be Truscott, 61, “clearing the decks” for his successor, Martyn Clark, who formally takes over tomorrow. The extra costs contributed to Crest falling to a pre-tax loss of £30.9 million between November and April, the first half of its financial year. That compared with a first-half profit of £28.4 million in the same period a year earlier. Crest’s profitability has been affected further as it works its way through the last of its lower-margin developments, while there has been a drop-off in demand for new homes over the past couple of months, which it blamed on the renewed “volatility in mortgage rates”. “I think people are just waiting to see the direction of travel on rates,” Truscott said. “Discretionary buyers are more likely to be sitting on their hands until they’re sure of which way they are going to go.” Crest delivered 788 homes in the first half and had expected to complete up to 2,000 over the entire financial year. However, it now thinks that 1,900, at best, is a more realistic figure. “The sales rate is as expected, but we’ve got fewer outlets because it’s taking longer to get planning consents,” Truscott said. “Planning takes at least twice as long as it did [30 years ago] and probably a lot longer. You get there in the end, but everything is delayed.” Rocky foundations Crest Nicholson counts cost of its summer sales washout Aug 22, 2023 Crest suffers profits warning after a summer slump in sales Nov 17, 2023 Second profit warning blamed on “continued weakness" in the market" 2023 Jul Aug Sep Behind the story P eter Truscott, the outgoing chief executive of Crest Nicholson, freely admits that he and his team were too slow to identify some of the issues he inherited when he joined in September 2019 (Tom Howard writes). “The overall operating platform that we’ve got is much better [than five years ago], but there have been some slip-ups in recent years,” he said. “We haven’t identified some of this legacy stuff as early as we would’ve ideally liked.” Brightwells Yard, a complex Oct Nov Dec regeneration scheme in Farnham, Surrey, comprising several blocks of flats, bars, restaurants and a shopping centre, perhaps has been the biggest thorn in Truscott’s side. Work there has nearly finished, but it has run way over schedule and millions of pounds above budget, so much so that Crest does not expect to make any money out of it. There are several other low or even zero-margin developments that the company has been working through during Truscott’s tenure, including in Hove and in Waltonon-Thames. The hope is that they will be cleared by the end of 2025. This year Crest delivered another England fans pay most duty for a pint during Euros Dominic Walsh When England and Scotland football fans sip a pint while watching their teams in the Euros this weekend, they will be paying four times more duty than the European average and a dozen times more than fans in Germany, the tournament’s host country. Scottish football fans will pay 54.2p in duty, compared with the 4.6p that German fans pay when the first game of the competition, Scotland v Germany, kicks off tonight. England fans, who will watch their team play Serbia on Sunday, also also will pay 54.2p, rather more than the 12.7p that Serbian fans will pay. The British Beer & Pub Association, whose members brew 90 per cent of the beer sold in the UK and which between them own more than 20,000 pubs, has written to the leaders of the three leading political parties calling for “fair recognition” of the industry’s value. It says it is “imperative that the next government provides a sustainable and proportionate fiscal and regulatory framework”. The association, which represents numerous family-run regional brewers and national pub companies, says that since the turn of the century a quarter of Britain’s pubs have closed permanently, with taxes being one of the main factors. It says that to secure the industry’s future, a step-change is required in the way it is dealt with. Like the rest of the hospitality industry, it has been hit badly by Covid and the cost of living crisis. The government has frozen beer duty since 2020 and the present rate will remain in place until February next year. The trade body’s members have demanded a cut in duty as a first step towards bringing the sum they pay down to the European average. They are also asking for the amount that pubs pay in business rates to be reduced. Pubs alone pay £500 million a Duty paid on a 5% beer In the Euro nations England 54.2p Scotland 54.2p Turkey 43.7p Slovenia 29.5p France 19p Netherlands 18.5p Average 18.1p Italy 17.4p Denmark 15.9p Croatia 12.9p Switzerland 12.9p Serbia 12.7p Poland 12.3p Belgium 11.7p Austria 11.7p Hungary 11.1p Portugal 10.7p Slovakia 8.7p Czech R 7.7p Romania 5p Spain 4.8p Germany 4.6p year in business rates, almost 3 per cent of the total amount raised, but bring in only 0.5 per cent of turnover across all UK businesses. According to the association, if business rates relief was removed, most pubs would close overnight. The association also wants VAT on non-alcoholic drinks and on food sold in in pubs to be removed to bring it in line with the retail sector. More than 80 brewing and pub company bosses have signed the letters. They include Emma McClarkin, the association’s chief executive; Nick Mackenzie, the chief executive of Greene King and chairman of the BBPA; Simon Emeny, the chief executive of Fuller, Smith & Turner; Kevin Georgel, the boss of St Austell Brewery; David McDowall, chief executive of Stonegate Group, Britain’s biggest pubs company; and Lawson Mountstevens, the managing director of Star Pubs & Bars, which is owned by Heineken.
35 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Business 260p Jan 15, 2024 Profit warning number three as interest rates rise and legacy costs escalate 240 220 200 Jan 24, 2024 Former chief executive Peter Truscott steps down after the hat-trick of warnings 180 160 2024 Jan 140 Feb Mar Apr blow to its shareholders by revealing that it needed to spend £15 million fixing defects at four older developments. It has not said where they are, but at one it needs to sort out a car park, the roof needs replacing at another and the remaining two have the same “particular construction defect issue”. It has not been disclosed what that defect is, but it is not thought to be safetyrelated. An external consultancy has told Crest that its £15 million estimate is too low and that £20 million is likely to be needed to sort those out. Now it has emerged that there May Jun Source: FactSet are 140 other developments that need some work to properly finish off. Crest said it had known about these but that it hadn’t quite understood how much it was all going to cost. Somewhere north of £10 million, it turns out. None of the issues are to do with building safety but are more related to the surrounding infrastructure — completing roads, getting them adopted and finishing off the drains. “A lot of the heavy lifting has been done,” Truscott said, “but I would’ve liked to have got through some of this legacy stuff earlier and getting the cost estimates right sooner.” UK property prices set to stagnate Housing manifesto subject to survey Tom Howard business commentary Alistair Osborne House prices are now unlikely to rise by much, if at all, this year, one prominent forecasting house has claimed. Capital Economics had expected prices to rise by 2 per cent in 2024, but it now thinks that growth of 0.5 per cent at best is more likely. Its about-turn came after the latest survey from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors showed that estate agents were taking fewer enquiries from would-be buyers, were agreeing fewer sales and were reporting more price reductions than they were only a month or so ago. Agents blamed the recent rise in mortgage rates for sapping the confidence of would-be buyers, with the average five-year fixed-rate mortgage now back above 5 per cent for the first time since January. “This softening in demand has come at the same time as the most significant sustained increase in supply since 2013, aside from when the housing market reopened after lockdown,” Andrew Wishart, senior UK economist at Capital Economics, said. House prices have held much firmer than most had expected over the past 18 months, given the rapid increase in mortgage costs. Most analysts agree that is because the fall in demand has been met with a decline in supply, with fewer people putting their houses up for sale. However, the institution reported a rise in new listings coming on to the market last month. As such, Wishart now expects “the market will move into a state of excess supply” in the coming weeks, which will cause prices to dip over the summer. The combination of more homes on the market and mortgage rates staying higher for longer than most economists had forecast has prompted Wishart to reduce his estimates for this year. Other economists remain convinced that house prices will end this year comfortably higher than where they began. Rob Wood, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, another consultancy, noted that “higher mortgage rates [are taking] a toll’, but he still expected the Bank of England to cut interest rates this year, which would “light the way to renewed buyer interest” and would push up prices by 3 per cent in 2024. US inflation fall adds to rate cut hopes Mehreen Khan Economics Editor A key measure of producer prices in the United States contracted last month and more Americans claimed unemployment benefits, raising the prospect of earlier interest rate cuts in the world’s largest economy. Monthly producer prices inflation declined by 0.2 per cent in May after a 0.5 per cent increase in April. Economists had forecast a rise of 0.1 per cent for last month. It was the second consecutive “disinflationary” surprise, after May’s measure of American consumer prices also eased by more than expected to 3.3 per cent. The inflation data came as the US Federal Reserve drastically cut back its forecasts for interest rate cuts from three to one this year. A measure of jobless claims also rose by 242,000 last week, the highest figure in ten months, reflecting softening in the labour market, where unemploy- ment has been steadily rising this year. The Fed kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged this week at a range of 5.25 per cent to 5.5 per cent and said that there had been only “modest progress” on bringing inflation back to its 2 per cent target. Analysts at Bank of America said the Jerome Powell has said that inflation is still “too high” May inflation data could prompt the central bank into loosening monetary policy in September, before November’s presidential election. “An easing cycle that begins in September remains a possibility, particularly if shelter inflation were to moderate further in the next couple of months, but we continue to see a December cut as more likely,” Stephen Juneau, of the bank, said. Forecasts published on Wednesday show that the US economy is still expected to grow at a slightly abovetrend 2.1 per cent this year, with the unemployment rate remaining at its current 4 per cent through the year. The median projection from ratesetters was for one quarter-point interest rate cut this year. Four Fed policymakers said there should be no cuts this year. Seven said they would like to make one quarter-point cut, while eight supported two cuts. Jerome Powell, the Fed chairman, said inflation “has eased substantially” but was “still too high”. Wall Street stocks were mixed in choppy trading yesterday and US Treasury yields touched their lowest since early April as investors reconciled the cooler-than-expected inflation data with tempered rate cut expectations from the Federal Reserve. H ome truths can spoil a manifesto launch. A simple one? That since 2006, when a UK government first set its 300,000 a year target for building new houses, Britain hasn’t hit it once. Governments of both stripes have routinely missed, often by 100,000plus units a year. So plenty has to be taken on trust with Sir Keir Starmer’s pledge of building a fresh 1.5 million abodes to “restore the dream of home ownership” over the next parliament (report, page 36). At least he’s started with a bit of ambition, even if you wonder if selfpromotion, not getting stuff done, is his key skill: did he really have to put 32 pictures of himself in Labour’s 136-page election missive? Whatever, after the Tories’ bleak house regime, Starmer doesn’t have a lot to beat. This year Britain will be lucky to get to half the target for new-builds. And Starmer has spotted the key problem: the mix of Nimbyism and planning gloop exemplified by Rishi Sunak caving in to a backbench Tory revolt just after becoming PM and junking mandatory housebuilding targets for local authorities. The result? More than 60 withdrew their plans for new homes, instead spending £50 million on planning appeals — a move that consultancy Lichfields reckoned would lead to 75,000 fewer homes being built each year. The damage is clear. The latest housing pipeline report from the Home Builders Federation shows that in the first quarter of this year only 2,472 sites were given planning permission, the lowest figure since 2006. On top is a staff shortage. The Royal Town Planning Institute found net spend on local authority planning wings fell by a real-terms 55 per cent to £480 million between 2009-10 and 2020-21. Starmer says he’ll “immediately” work to put all that right, “restoring mandatory housing targets”, ensuring authorities have up-todate “local plans”, using government “intervention powers” where necessary and hiring 300 planning officers — funded by some of the £40 million earmarked from a 1 per cent hike in stamp duty for non-UK buyers of residential properties. Yet none of this is a quick fix. New planning officers have to be trained. And, as RBC analysts noted, the industry reckons “£500 million will be required over four years” to tackle planning delays and the drop in departmental funding. Some of Starmer’s stuff is wishywashy, too. About 160,000 homes remain unbuilt due to “nutrient neutrality” rules — the need to mitigate any extra nutrient load from developments. Starmer glibly says he’ll “unlock the building” of such homes “without weakening environmental protections”. But how, exactly? He also plans to deliver the biggest rise in affordable homes “in a generation”. But aren’t they the least profitable to build? Dean Finch, the Persimmon boss, is not alone, either, in calling for more than a “mortgage guarantee scheme” to get first-time buyers struggling to raise a deposit on the ladder — not least with interest rates on the rise again. “Without a stimulant, I don’t see how Labour is going to hit its numbers,” he says. And even if demand picks up, Britain has an ageing construction workforce and skills shortage — not helped by post-Brexit resistance to importing foreign labour. There’s also a lack of smaller builders for the sites of ten homes or fewer that the big guns, such as Barratt, Persimmon and Taylor Wimpey, won’t touch. In short, Starmer’s target is no easy hit. Still, at least he’d be trying to bring it home. Return to sender? M aybe Daniel Kretinsky will hand over to the posties one of his polluting coal-fired power plants. Or a few metres of the Eustream gas pipeline. Or perhaps a stake in West Ham United. How else, you wonder, can the Czech billionaire fulfil the demands of Dave Ward, the Communications and Workers Union chief, to give his 110,000 Royal Mail members a “significant and meaningful” stake in the business? Or, for that matter, meet the ambitions of Starmer, who says vaguely that he’ll “explore new business and governance models for Royal Mail”. If Kretinsky succeeds with his £3.6 billion takeover of the Royal Mail’s owner, International Distribution Services, it’ll be subsumed into his EP Group. He’s said it will become a “core subsidiary” — part of maintaining EP’s investment-grade credit rating. This is a private company owned by him. So what mechanism is he supposed to use to give the posties a stake in EP’s Royal Mail subsidiary? Some weird illiquid share scheme that no one can value? True, maybe he could offer some sort of Royal Mail profit share. But if Ward wants his workers to have a stake in the business, it would be far easier if it wasn’t sold to the Czech Sphinx. Share options in a listed business would do the trick nicely. Frozen assets W annabe Tory MP one minute, warm-up act for Starmer the next. The human chameleon Richard Walker — the executive chairman of Iceland — has thawed from blue to red in no time. But even he can’t totally reinvent his past. Who can forget the puzzler he posed in February 2021? “Why has Iceland not followed some of the other grocers in returning our pandemic business rates relief to the government?” The answer? Because he and his dad, Sir Malcolm Walker, spent some of the £40 million freebie buying the frozen foods company for themselves. Thanks to the largesse of the Tories, who Walker Jr is now so “sick and tired” of, the family — plus a few mates — had some extra readies to buy out the 63 per cent stake in the business held by South Africa’s Brait. How lucky was that! Who knew freeloaders cut so much ice in the Labour Party? alistair.osborne@thetimes.co.uk
36 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Business ‘Details are thin but focus is right’ Business leaders and experts react to the launch of Labour’s manifesto, write James Hurley, Robert Lea and Jessica Newman industry, however. Analysts at Jefferies said it appeared to dispel speculation that “Labour would do something drastic with Ofwat, such as replacing or scrapping it”, which they view “as helpful for regulation stability”. Prices of listed water companies rose. royal mail Labour indicated that it would intervene in the £3.6 billion recommended takeover of International Distribution Services, the Royal Mail owner, by Daniel Kretinsky, the Czech billionaire, promising “robust scrutiny” and “appropriate guarantees” for employees. As reported in The Times yesterday, Royal Mail’s main trade union is open to a takeover, but only if Kretinsky grants workers a stake and input into the management of the group by an employee collective trust. Labour’s charm offensive with business leaders has soured slightly in recent months over its plans to reform workers’ rights. As such, it is likely to see the generally upbeat if muted reaction from industry to its manifesto launch as a victory. Paul Johnson, the economist, captured the mood when he criticised the lack of “big numbers” in the party’s tax and spending plans but welcomed the focus in the manifesto on “economic growth and stability”. “Planning reform, an effective industrial strategy, promises of regulatory reform, all are needed,” he said. “Details remain thin, but the focus looks broadly right. However, delivering genuine change almost certainly also will require putting actual resources on the table.” Here are Labour’s key business pledges. business tax Looking to cement its concerted efforts to be seen as pro-business, Labour said it would cap corporation tax at 25 per cent until the next parliament. It will be more tricky to deliver its plan to overhaul business rates. The commercial property tax is seen as outmoded and unfair on high street retailers, but it is also a significant source of revenue, one that is easy to collect and hard to avoid. Nik Moore, head of business rates at Rapleys, a property consultancy, warned: “It will be hard for any really meaningful change to happen.” The lack of a promise not to increase capital gains tax fuelled speculation that it could rise. Rachael Griffin, tax and financial planning expert at Quilter, the wealth manager, said: “Labour has explicitly ruled out increases to income tax, national insurance, VAT and corporation tax, but makes no mention of CGT.” private equity One of the more contentious areas of Labour business policy is its commitment to close the carried interest loophole enjoyed by workers’ rights Labour has faced criticism from unions over fears that it was watering down plans for stronger workers’ rights, while boardrooms feared disruption and additional costs. Its well-trailed proposals in the manifesto include banning zero hours contracts, ending “fire and rehire” (whereby workers are sacked and then immediately given a new contract on new, less favourable terms) and introducing basic rights from “day one” to parental leave, sick pay and protection from unfair dismissal. Labour promised the steel industry £2.5 billion investment and said it would also get Hinkley Point C, below, “over the line” private equity executives. This allows them to have profits taxed at 28 per cent, the rate of capital gains tax, rather than the combined income tax and national insurance rate of 47 per cent. Labour had been warned that closing the loophole could trigger an exodus of financial services workers. This led to speculation that the party would quietly drop its promise, but the manifesto noted that private equity was the “only industry where performance-related pay is treated as capital gains”. It reckons that ending the tax break will raise £565 million a year by 2029, but Jason Clatworthy, managing director at Alvarez & Marsal, the consulting firm, noted that many European nations had carried interest in their tax regimes, so “private equity managers are already evaluating their options and could aim to be ‘bag ready’ when the reform comes in”. building and planning Labour promised to “get Britain building again”, with 1.5 million new homes during the next parliament, and said wider planning reform would allow the nation to “forge ahead with nationally significant infrastructure”. Proposed planning reforms include a stronger presumption in favour of sustainable developments, funding for more planning officers and a pledge that government will intervene where councils are seen to be blocking “the houses we need”. It added that it would restore mandatory housing targets. Peter Truscott, the outgoing chief executive of Crest Nicholson, warned: “Land supply side is very constrained and, regardless of which party wins the election, this will not change quickly.” utilities Amid pledges to double onshore wind, triple solar power and quadruple offshore wind by 2030, North Sea-focused energy stocks dipped in response to the manifesto after confirmation that Labour would continue taxing big energy producers and would not issue new North Sea oil licences. Those whose share prices were hit included Harbour Energy, Serica Energy, Enquest, Ithaca and Deltic. The party also promised to get the much-delayed Hinkley Point C “over the line”, to create a new publicly owned energy company and to invest in carbon capture and storage, hydrogen and marine energy. Offshore Energies UK, a trade body, warned: “Ramping up more carbonintensive imports from abroad will not bring down energy bills for consumers or attract the investment and skills we need to decarbonise our economy.” There were no nasty surprises in the manifesto for the embattled water industrial strategy Certainty for industrial investment will come with a ten-year plan overseen by two new bodies, an Industrial Strategy Council and a National Infrastructure and Service Transformation Authority, backed up by the creation of a £7.3 billion National Wealth Fund. That will allocate £1.8 billion to ports; £1.5 billion to battery-making automotive gigafactories; £2.5 billion for the steel industry; £1 billion for carbon capture schemes; and £500 million for green hydrogen production. Stephen Phipson, the chief executive of Make UK, the manufacturers’ body, said the manifesto sent a “powerful signal on the importance of domestic manufacturing”. electric cars Motor manufacturers and dealers will be back to square one with the commitment to bring back the ban on the sale of new combustion engine cars to 2030. Rishi Sunak’s U-turn last autumn had put the ban back to 2035. Mike Hawes, chief executive of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, said “concerns over affordability and charging accessibility remain significant barriers” to adoption. Reeves hosts breakfast club in attempt to win over bosses Katie Prescott Technology Business Editor Tom Howard Labour is stepping up its charm offensive on the City, bringing together the bosses of some of Britain’s biggest businesses to discuss its manifesto. Sean Doyle, the chief executive of British Airways, Clare Barclay, the chief executive of Microsoft in the UK, Nicola Hodson, of IBM UK and Ireland, and Rob Perrins, the boss of Berkeley Group, are among those expected to meet Rachel Reeves, the shadow chancellor, and Jonathan Reynolds, the shadow business secretary, in the City for breakfast this morning. Others on the list, seen by The Times, include: Jody Ford, the chief executive of Trainline; Sebastian James, the managing director of Boots UK; Mark Allan, chief executive at Land Securities; Shai Weiss, managing director of Virgin Atlantic; and Simon Carter, chief executive of British Land. From the financial world, Matt Hammerstein, the chief executive of Barclays UK corporate bank, Clare Woodman, the head of EMEA and chief executive of Morgan Stanley, TS Anil, chief executive of Monzo, and Francesca Carlesi, the chief executive of Revolut, are due to join the Labour leaders. Euan Blair, the chief executive of Multiverse, an educational technology company, and the son of Tony Blair, the former Labour prime minister, is also expected to attend the “senior business leaders breakfast”. Although no full agenda was set out on the brief invitation, it will give business leaders an opportunity to grill the Labour leadership on the party’s economic plans. Business is wary of aligning itself to one party during an election. An insider said that several companies had asked not to be named publicly because it would be “too political”. One of those attending said they planned to join because “it was likely Labour would be in power in a month’s time” so it made sense to spend time with the leadership and hear what they had to say. A recent letter that Labour organised to try to drum up business support had a list of start-up bosses and former chief executives but a paucity of active FTSE company bosses. Repairing relations with UK plc has been a priority for Labour since the years when Jeremy Corbyn led the party. Reeves has spent time wooing the City and engaging with businesses on what has been called the “scrambled eggs and smoked salmon offensive”. The economy was top of the agenda for yesterday’s manifesto launch and Sir Keir Starmer said that Labour would make wealth creation its “No 1 priority” and that he was seeking a “mandate” for economic growth. There have been some concerns about Labour’s plans to reform workers’ rights, such as banning zero hour contracts, a “right to switch off” from work and giving workers full employment protections on day one of a new job, but the party has planned a “full and comprehensive” consultation with business and has diluted some of the pledges. Starmer has announced that he will not raise income tax, national insurance or VAT. Labour also has circulated a letter around technology businesses aimed at encouraging support for its policies. It has not yet published the signatories to the letter, but the Labour Digital group said it had a “significant number” of names on the list. Peter Kyle, the shadow technology secretary, set out his plans for the sector this week, including easing planning regulation to make data centres easier to build, boosting the adoption of artificial intelligence and strengthening regulation.
37 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Business Harry Wallop Founder of engineer Renishaw to step down Therapy dogs? Old-fashioned management skills have more bite ‘‘ This week, I attended the Festival of Work, which sounds as if it were a jolly gathering held in a large tent in a Herefordshire field. It was, in fact, the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development’s annual conference, a shindig for HR executives, held in the bleak ExCel Centre in London, which large amounts of bunting and a campervan selling tacos could not disguise. It was, in many ways, like all conferences held at the ExCel. There were “fireside chats”, talks on “how to diversify your workforce” and an endless supply of corporate-branded free ballpoint pens. But what really struck me was how those in charge of recruiting, managing and sacking workers have had to morph into quasi-therapists. Not only were there four therapy dogs on site — the queue for the Cuddle Club’s French bulldog was far longer than the one for the tacos — but also there was an astonishing number of companies specialising in workplace mental health. OpenUp is a firm that puts workers in touch with psychologists. “Support your employees, managers and their families” is its pitch. It had a stand next to YuLife, which runs Tesco and Santander’s in-house “wellbeing hubs”. There were divorce coaches, wellbeing first responders and companies offering desk yoga. When did offices start to resemble less a place to, er, work and more a therapist’s couch? Max Donaldson, at OpenUp, identified the main reasons workers were accessing psychologists as “stress and anxiety, and work performance — ‘I don’t feel motivated to turn up to work today’ or ‘I don’t feel I am being my best self at work’.” Many workers are finding work a drag. This week Gallup, the vast American polling company, published its State of the Global Workplace report, which it has been running for the past 15 years. One finding caught the eye of headline writers in the UK, namely that 90 per cent of British workers are “quiet quitting”, costing the economy £257 billion in lost GDP. Quiet quitting, for those unaware of the Collins Dictionary words of the year 2022, is a post-Covid version of work-to-rule. Employees turn up on time, leave on time and complete no more tasks than they are contractually obliged to undertake. In short, every boss’s worst nightmare. Can you axe them? No, because they haven’t technically done anything wrong, but they refuse to push themselves or to volunteer for any projects. On TikTok videos, work-place influencers talk about “acting your wage”. Want me to work beyond 5pm? Then pay me more. Jeremie Brecheisen, UK managing partner at Gallup, said baldly: “The dangerous threat to the UK economy right now is a workforce that has essentially given up.” Is it really that bleak in UK plc? I’m not so sure. The figure of 90 per cent being quiet quitters was extrapolated from a part of the survey that measured employee engagement. It found that only 10 per cent of workers in Britain were actively engaged in their work. This isn’t a great figure, but it is only slightly worse than the European-wide figure of 13 per cent. We came 33rd out of 38 countries for engagement in Europe, but we beat France, which economists often view jealously for its higher rates of productivity while enjoying roséinduced siestas and a 35-hour week. The top-ranked countries in the world, all on 41 per cent, were El Salvador, Uzbekistan and Mongolia. I am sure working for Gobi Cashmere is very fulfilling, but I am not rushing off to Ulaanbaatar, which has some of the longest working hours in the world. And not being actively engaged does not mean that you are a modern-day machine breaker. Maybe Brits just find it hard to enthuse about Wall-to-wall laughter Buy fine art, signed and framed prints by our cartoonists Peter Brookes, Morten Morland, Peter Schrank and Nick Newman. Exclusively at The Times Print Gallery at timescartoons.com or call us on 0800 912 7136 their jobs. “I think there’s a lot of unhelpful noise around the idea of quiet quitting, especially on social media,” said David D’Souza, membership director for the CIPD, who is deeply sceptical of the idea of a workforce in mass revolt. “I think we would notice if 90 per cent of our fellow workers were actively disengaged from work.” However, he did admit that there is an increasing trend for Britain’s workers to see their job in primarily transactional terms. The CIPD itself published its Good Work Index this week, which found that 47 per cent of workers saw their job as “just about the money and nothing else”, a big jump from the 36 per cent who said this in 2019, before Covid. The number of people agreeing “yes” to the statement “I am willing to work harder than I need” has fallen from 57 per cent, but is still — just — in the majority at 51 per cent. It is a complex picture. While the majority say they would enjoy a paid job even if they did not need the money, there is a growing minority of people, especially younger workers, who derive no real purpose and certainly no identity from their work. This is clearly a threat to some people over the age of 45, who enjoy swapping war stories about sleeping under desks and dropping everything to fly to the other side of the world on a boss’s whim. Their early working life was defined by forging a career and earning enough money to put a deposit down on a flat. Should they be surprised when young workers — who will never be able to afford to buy property and see many industries under threat from AI — do not want to work very hard? The answer is neither to blame a whole generation for “giving up” nor to hire endless therapy dogs in a desperate attempt to prove you are a good employer. It is old-fashioned management, offering training, support and career progression. And accepting that some workers never see their job as anything other than a pay cheque. ’’ Harry Wallop is a consumer journalist and broadcaster. Follow him on Twitter @hwallop ORDER TODAY Katie Prescott More than 50 years after he founded the company, the executive chairman of Renishaw is stepping down from hsi role. Sir David McMurtry, 84, one of Britain’s most prominent engineers and businessmen, will become a non-executive director at the FTSE 250 engineering firm from the start of July. Richard McMurtry, his son, has been appointed to the board as non-executive director. Like his father, he trained as an engineer and played a key role in product development and robotic systems, the company said. Born in Dublin in 1940, McMurtry studied mechanical engineering at what is now the Technological University Dublin. He completed an apprenticeship with Rolls-Royce, where he worked his way up to become assistant chief designer. Here he became frustrated by the limitations of existing measuring tools, in particular the inability to find a device with the accuracy needed to measure precision parts for use in Concorde. Tinkering in his garage one day, he decided to build one himself. McMurtry started to develop the idea for a device that froze readings at the point of touch to get around the issue of knocking such tools when they were being used, giving inaccurate results. It was called the “touch-trigger probe”. This inspiration led to the birth of Renishaw, based in Gloucestershire, which McMurtry co-founded with John Deer in 1973. The devices became game-changers in the manufacturing world because they allowed companies to make parts with unprecedented accuracy. He was knighted in 2001 for services to design and innovation. The company grew steadily and its range now encompasses measurement tools from laser encoders to inspection systems. The technology is used in industries from aerospace to healthcare. Renishaw was floated in London in 1984 and its share price has risen more than 2,000 per cent since then. Last night it closed up 15p, or 0.4 per cent, at £40. With about 5,000 employees — 3,000 in the UK — most of its research and development is based in Britain. It also has plants in Ireland and India. In the six months to the end of 2023, the company made a profit before tax of £56.5 million, down 27 per cent from the year before. McMurtry is known for his philanthropic work, in particular his support for engineering education. GIFTS
38 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Business Wise warning of slowdown in growth takes heavy toll Patrick Hosking Financial Editor As much as £1 billion was wiped off the value of Wise after the money transfer platform said that it expected its income growth to slow this year. Kristo Kaarmann, Wise’s billionaire co-founder and chief executive, hailed “another very strong year” for the group, but the City was more focused on his warning that the galloping growth of the past three years would slow to a comparative canter. Underlying income growth in the medium term would be 15 per cent to 20 per cent, which was also Kaarmann’s new estimate for the year to March 2025. The shares promptly slumped by up to 15 per cent as analysts had pencilled in 20 per cent growth for this year. Wise, formerly Transferwise, has tended to easily beat its early guidance. A year ago, it forecast income growth for the year to March 2024 of 28 per cent to 33 per cent, but actually achieved 46.5 per cent. Wise also revealed that after a period THE ELECTION STATION of raising its prices, it had started cutting them in April as part of a policy of sharing the benefits of scale and growth with its growing customer base. Shares in Wise closed down by 97p, or 11.5 per cent, at 746½p, significantly below the 800p at which they were listed three years ago. Its valuation has dropped to about £8 billion, which normally would be enough for inclusion in the FTSE 100, but Wise’s unusual two-tier share structure, which gives Kaarmann firm control, means it is excluded from the index of London’s biggest public companies. It is the first time that Wise has set out its medium-term expectations since the listing, when it predicted growth of more than 20 per cent. The company, based in London, has been a phenomenon, grabbing market share from mainstream banks by offering a cut-price money transfer service. Active customer numbers in the year soared by 29 per cent to 12.8 million, many won through word-of-mouth recommendation. Underlying profit before tax leapt by 226 per cent to £242 million, boosted by interest earned on customer balances. Kaarmann, 43, said Wise was trying to hand back more of the cash it earned on customer balances but had been prevented from doing so in some countries by regulations. It offered an Assets product that rewarded customers for their balances and in the UK this yielded 4.66 per cent, he said. Wise also said that it aimed to make a 13 per cent to 16 per cent pre-tax profit margin, roughly equivalent to its old target of earnings before interest, tax and other charges. This would enable it to “sustainably reinvest into the flywheel of growth, while generating the capital needed to support a fast-growing global financial services business”. The profit warning came after Wise said in April that its business volumes were lower than expected. Kaarmann, who was born in Estonia, said he had had no new information from the Financial Conduct Authority, which is still investigating after it emerged in 2021 that he had been fined £365,651 over an unpaid £720,495 tax bill for the 2017-18 tax year. of the City. Cut through the spin and stay on top of the latest corporate news and market moving events with The Times As voters continue to feel Business Briefing, a the pain with borrowing twice-daily email newsletter sent direct to costs at historic highs, your inbox at 8am and business and the 12.30pm from Business economy are key Editor Richard battlegrounds in the Fletcher and general election Business News with the Tories Editor Martin and Labour Strydom. battling to win the trust Sign up at home.thetimes.com and support /myNews Business briefing BRINGING YOU THE LATEST ELECTION NEWS FROM AROUND THE COUNTRY Nationwide members to vote on boss’s bonus
39 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Business Plenty to juggle: Debbie Crosbie hopes to push through a deal to buy Virgin Money UK, a sponsor of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe M embers of Nationwide Building Society are being urged to vote in favour of a new pay package for its chief executive that will triple Debbie Crosbie’s maximum long-term bonus from £1.14 million to £3.42 million (Patrick Hosking writes). The potential pay rise was because Crosbie’s remuneration “currently sits substantially below UK banking peers of a similar size and complexity”, 16 million members were told in letters sent out this week. Crosbie’s plan to buy Virgin Money UK for £2.9 billion in cash will significantly boost the mutual’s business banking and credit card lending. A former chief executive of TSB, Crosbie, 54, could be paid up to £4.8 million, the society said, as a result of the lifting of her maximum long-term bonus to an initial 190 per cent of base pay. It appears that the plan to lift the limit to 300 per cent eventually would push the reward still higher. For the year to April 4 she was paid £2.41 million, up from £1.75 million in the previous year, although the earlier package was augmented by a one-off payment of £1.71 million to compensate her for bonuses sacrificed when she left TSB. An ad campaign with Dominic West, the actor, playing a branch-closing bank boss backfired for Crosbie when Nationwide itself was scolded by the Advertising Standards Authority for misleading viewers. Virgin Money has reported an 18 per cent increase in half-year pretax profits to £279 million, after it belatedly published full results that had been delayed by a conflict of interest at PwC, its former auditor. Last month Virgin Money shareholders voted largely in favour of the deal. Nationwide members are not being given a vote, leading to protests from some and a call to vote against all resolutions at the mutual’s annual meeting in July. The deadline for submissions to the Competition and Markets Authority, which is investigating the deal, closes on Friday. The acquisition would push Nationwide’s share of the mortgage market from 12.3 per cent to about 15.8 per cent — still smaller than Lloyds Banking Group, which owns the Halifax brand. The deal, which is being structured as a scheme of arrangement, also requires approval from the Bank of England, the Financial Conduct Authority and the courts. Peel Hunt sees ‘tentative signs of recovery’ in City Patrick Hosking Financial Editor There are “tentative signs of recovery” in the City after the deals and trading drought of the past two years, according to the chief executive of Peel Hunt. “While challenges remain, we are becoming cautiously more confident of a broader recovery in equity capital markets activity,” Steven Fine said. “A switch has been flicked.” He pointed to recent initial public offerings in London and a pick-up in trading volumes, which suggested an improvement in the malaise that has soured sentiment in Britain’s markets and has led to calls for drastic reform. Although the pipeline of possible flotations was still “not great”, he detected a more positive mood. “UK investors are increasingly receptive to high-quality companies,” he said. Peel Hunt advised on two recent London floats: Raspberry Pi, the maker of small computers, and Aoti, a woundcare technology company. However, the improvement in sentiment came too late to boost Peel Hunt in the year to March 31, for which it reported a worsening in pre-tax losses from £1.5 million last time to £3.3 million. Revenue rose by 4 per cent in the year, but this was offset by a larger increase in costs. Costs rose by 6.9 per cent, with wages going up by 5 per cent and non-employee costs — including technology supplied by Microsoft and Bloomberg — up 9.6 per cent. Peel Hunt is one of the biggest smaller-company brokers in the City, with 145 corporate clients. As well as helping companies to raise equity capital, it operates an execution-only sharedealing service. It has been a prominent cheerleader in the recent campaign to revive the City, calling for pension reforms, stamp duty cuts and listing changes to sweeten the appeal of London to companies and investors. Corporate advice revenues grew by 39 per cent as Peel Hunt won 18 new clients. Its average client size is rising and its list will soon include three FTSE 100 companies once Vistry, the housebuilder, and London Metric, the property group, are promoted to the index next week. Trading and research revenues, however, fell in the year by 12 per cent and 6 per cent, respectively. Fine said he was not talking to prospective merger partners and that the strategy of consolidation and cost-cutting being pursued by rival brokers was not the answer. “If you cut too deep, you lose your capability,” he said. Panmure Gordon is in the throes of a merger with Liberum, while FinnCap and Cenkos have combined to form Cavendish. Investors have withdrawn money out of UK-focused funds for 36 consecutive months, including £1.1 billion pulled in May. “It’s been horrendous, it’s miserable,” Fine said. He blamed the devaluation and derating of Britain in global indices, from about 8 per cent of global stocks five years ago to 4 per cent today. “That has to be wrong, but the maths says it is totally right,” he said. Fine conceded that some of the cur- £3.3m Pre-tax losses at Peel Hunt, compared with £1.5 million in the previous year rent investor scepticism about new floats in the UK was caused by the collapse in values of so many of the companies that listed in the heady days of 2021. Musicmagpie, a retailer of second-hand CDs, and ProCook, a kitchen products platform, were among the investment disasters brought to the market by Peel Hunt, although rival firms have a longer list of turkeys. Fine said the firm now advised 43 FTSE 250 companies and that the average market capitalisation of its clients had grown to £820 million. Its biggest corporate client is JD Sports, which weights at £6.3 billion. Peel Hunt has lobbied hard for a British Isa, a tax-shielded product only allowed to invest in London-listed shares. Labour has not set out whether it would pursue plans for this Conservativenurtured policy proposal. Peel Hunt shares fell 5p, or 3.6 per cent, to close at 133½p. BT attacks Vodafone merger with Three Lithium is grand prize in Katie Prescott BT has attacked the planned £18 billion merger between Vodafone and Three, saying the deal would result in higher prices for customers, poorer network quality and fewer incentives to invest. The market leader said the new company would have “a disproportionate share of capacity and spectrum, unprecedented in UK and western European mobile markets”. It argued that the deal would directly harm BT’s ability to compete and claimed that British consumers would not see the promised benefits of lower prices or greater investment in digital infrastructure. A joint venture between Vodafone’s UK business and Three UK, which is owned by the Hong Kong-listed CK Hutchison conglomerate, would create Britain’s biggest mobile network operator, bringing 27 million customers together and reducing the number of operators from four to three. BT’s was one of several responses to the Competition and Markets Author- BT said customers would not see lower prices or more investment ity issues statement published at the start of last month, which set out the main points the regulator would consider when investigating the deal. Which?, the consumer group, said there was a “substantial risk” that the deal would lead to “higher prices and lower quality for consumers”. Stephen Temple, visiting professor at Surrey University focusing on mobile technology strategy, was supportive. “The proposed merger, subject to binding investment commitments, is the only plausible option to re-energise mobile infrastructure competition,” he wrote. The competition watchdog announced in April that it was referring the transaction for a full investigation to further analyse competition concerns. It has found that the deal between the British businesses could lead to mobile customers facing higher prices and reduced quality. Ahmed Essam, chief executive of European Markets at Vodafone, said: “We aren’t surprised by the current market leader’s response and naturally we disagree with their comments. Currently the UK mobile sector needs investment, with two large and two sub-scale players. We firmly believe creating a third mobile network operator, with the scale to invest and compete, will strengthen competition in the UK’s mobile market, benefiting customers and the wider UK economy.” deal for Trident Royalties Helen Cahill An Australian lithium miner has secured board approval for a takeover of the London-listed Trident Royalties for £144 million. Deterra Global, whose parent company is listed in Sydney, has offered 49p in cash for each Trident share, representing a 22.5 per cent premium to the target’s share price on Wednesday of 40p. Trident’s shares closed up 8p, or 20 per cent, at 48p last night. Trident is a mining royalty company listed on London’s junior stock exchange. It has exposure to a range of commodities including lithium, gold, copper and iron ore, with the majority of its revenues derived from battery metals and precious metals. Deterra also has won support for the deal from investors holding 28.7 per cent of Trident’s issued share capital. These include Regal Funds Manage- ment, LIM Asia Special Situations Master Fund, Ponderosa Investments and Ashanti. Peter Bacchus, 56, the non-executive chairman of Trident, said: “While the board remains confident in our ability to succeed as an independent, Deterra offers shareholders both liquidity and an immediate cash premium. As such, it presents an opportunity for them to accelerate and de-risk the recognition of Trident’s potential future value creation and realise a certain cash exit.” The deal comes amid a flurry of activity in the mining sector, with BHP launching a £31 billion bid for Anglo American. BHP ultimately abandoned the bid as the two sides could not agree on a structure. Deterra said it was particularly interested in Trident’s lithium assets and that its La Preciosa silver royalty and Mimbula copper royalty would assist Deterra with its diversification efforts.
Fashion’s fifth capital? Visit Dubai SPONSORED CONTENT Fashion hotspot Dubai Design District Shining lights Clockwise from right: Arab Fashion Council founder Jacob Abrian; Dima Ayad designs; BLSSD ready-to-wear Just as Dubai was the clear choice to stage the region’s fashion showcase, Dubai Fashion Week’s location within the city was also never in doubt. “Dubai Design District is a fashion, creative and artistic ecosystem,” says Abrian of the hub known as d3, which hosts most of the DFW events in a newly built state-of-the-art waterfront venue. “It’s a city within the city of Dubai. Creatives from around the globe are based there, from emerging local designers to some of the world’s most important fashion labels. Over 5,000 people work in the area so you might bump into the CEO of Chanel or Hermès as you grab your morning coffee, or see important local editors and stylists. “If you want to make it in the fashion industry, it’s the place to be.” dubaidesigndistrict.com Style supremo Jacob Abrian is on a mission to establish Dubai on the world fashion week calendar – and with the city’s designers and legion of label fans, it’s fast becoming a destination for industry players, says Saska Graville S eptember 1 to 5 will see international buyers and press gather for Dubai Fashion Week (DFW), the designer showcase that brings together local and international labels over five days of trade and consumer retail events. DFW was launched in 2015, driven by Jacob Abrian, founder and chief executive of the Arab Fashion Council (AFC), whose vision was to bring the creative buzz of the world’s fashion capitals to his home region of the Middle East. As a young model and architecture student, Lebanese-born Abrian took inspiration from the city in which he was studying, Milan, as well as London, Paris and New York. His goal? To establish Dubai as the world’s fifth fashion capital – and to bring the economic opportunities that come with such a mantle. The event, founded by the AFC, which Abrian established when he was just 22, is held in partnership with Dubai Design District and showcases the fashion talent of the Designer Michael Cinco showed off his Japan collection at Dubai Fashion Week city and wider region. The sector in the Middle East is a big deal – worth $89 billion (£70 billion), according to industry publication The Business of Fashion. And Dubai’s high earners spend, on average, more than $1,000 a month each on top labels. But, for Abrian, creating a showcase in the city was much more than just a business opportunity – it was personal. “It awakened something in me,” he says of his years spent in Europe. “I realised that the Middle East region was lacking a platform, which is why local designers had to travel to Paris, New York, London and Milan to find themselves a future. “When I was modelling, I’d meet so many fashion creative directors from the Middle East who were working for top luxury brands in Europe. I always felt, why can’t they receive recognition at home? That was the main push behind both the Arab Fashion Council and Dubai Fashion Week.” The launch of the AFC unified the talents of designers from across the region under one organisation. The choice of Dubai as the council’s beating heart and the location for its biannual fashion weeks – launched as Arab Fashion Week and renamed Dubai Fashion Week last year – was never in any doubt. “Dubai was already booming back in 2015,” says Abrian. “I remember being in Rome, meeting with the ambassadors of almost every Arab country to show them the fashion week plans and secure their endorsement, and they all said that it had to be Dubai to host such an important project.” DFW has since attracted more than 150,000 visitors. “One of the big I was excited when I received a best-of-luck note from Anna Wintour fashion groups in Paris told me recently that they wanted to come but couldn’t find a vacant hotel room in the whole of Dubai during Fashion Week,” says Abrian. “The initiative has had huge benefits for local hospitality, tourism and retail.” He puts the incoming revenue since 2015 at over 15 billion dirhams (£3.2 billion), and hails the 1,000 jobs that are created every season to put the event on: “It shows the power of creative industries to wield great economies.” Even the timing of DFW on the biannual fashion calendar – before that of New York, which traditionally kicks off the international schedule– reflects Abrian’s economic ambitions. “Fashion Week is an important business platform and, by going first, ahead of New York, we can benefit from buyers’ budgets not yet being spent. We’re ahead of the game,” he explains. Placing DFW within a global context is vital for the image of Dubai fashion that Abrian wants the world to see. “There is a myth that fashion in the region means wearing traditional abayas and jalabiyas, but that’s just stereotyping,” he says. “Dubai Fashion Week has created a much broader awareness. Fashion here is a beautiful mix.” That mix is evident in the DFW roster over the years, which has boasted names such as Jean Paul Gaultier and Moschino. Meanwhile, homegrown talents include Filipino designer Michael Cinco, who moved to Dubai in the 1990s; he’s dressed Asian royalty, had gowns featured in Crazy Rich Asians, and fitted heiress to the Swarovski empire, Victoria Swarovski, for her wedding. Another is Dima Ayad, a Lebanese designer based in Dubai, who has championed diversity and body positivity in her designs. And BLSSD, which was launched by Lama Riachi to financially assist those affected by cancer, also stands out for its luxurious, elegant ready-to-wear lines. Perhaps it’s the approval of the most famous international fashion name of them all – American Vogue editor-in-chief and Condé Nast chief content officer Anna Wintour – that confirms just how far Abrian has come in realising his vision of a fifth fashion capital. “I was excited when I received a note from her to say best of luck for Dubai Fashion Week,” he recalls. “I’ve saved that in my very special inbox.” A year-round destination, Dubai is a cosmopolitan coastal city set between the desert and mountains, offering unique fashion and design, as well as accommodation and activities for all budgets. Fly direct from Birmingham, Edinburgh, Glasgow, London, Manchester and Newcastle. Be inspired at visitdubai.com
41 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Business Motorpoint steers back into profit Fuller’s boosted by return to the office T he demise of “Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays” workers — the socalled TWaTs — has given a boost to Fuller, Smith & Turner, with a rise in after-work custom across the week (Emma Taggart writes). Simon Emeny, Fuller’s chief executive, said there had been an increase in sales at the pubs group thanks to the gradual return of preCovid lifestyles as people reduce the number of days they work from home. Emeny, 58, said: “In terms of people going to offices, it is better than last year but still down on pre-Covid levels. I expect that trend to continue to improve year-on-year.” The group’s central London pubs performed particularly well, with urban pub locations reporting a 16 per cent annual increase in like-forlike sales. Emeny added that the return of tourists and events to London had made a “very positive impact” on revenues. Fuller’s, which has about 400 managed and tenanted Robert Lea Industrial Editor Fuller, Smith and Turner’s central London pubs performed particularly well, reporting a 16 per cent annual increase in like-for-like sales pubs, announced pretax profits of £14.4 million in the 12 months to March 30, up by 40 per cent from £10.3 million the previous year. Likefor-like sales grew by 11 per cent, outperforming the wider hospitality industry by four percentage points. Annual revenue increased by 9 per cent to £359.1 million, while the final dividend of 11.12p makes a total of 17.75p, up from 14.68p. However, the return of pre-pandemic spending behaviours has not fully resumed. “There’s still more to come,” Emeny said. “We don’t feel that the journey towards full recovery is over yet.” He added that he was glad to see pledges to make changes to the business rates system by both the Conservative and Labour parties, adding that it was “long overdue. You can see in high streets up and down the country the damage that business rates are doing.” Despite high levels of inflation over the past 12 months, the group reported a 14.5 per cent increase in like-for-like food sales and a 9.8 per cent increase in like- for-like drink sales. “We navigated peak inflation very well,” Emeny said, although as food and energy prices remain elevated “there is an element of that recovery still to come”. The group has enjoyed a strong start to the present financial year, with sales for the ten weeks to June 8 up by 8.8 per cent, and it expects a further boost as the Playing it safe is paying off yet again for Halma Robert Lea Industrial Editor Across the board increases in revenue, profit, margins and, for the 45th year running, its dividend have cemented Halma’s place as a FTSE 100 favourite among investors. Shares in the industrial conglomerate closed up 314p, or 13.4 per cent, at £26.64, a 29-month high, after it published a bumper set of figures for the year to the end of March. Halma has interests throughout the safety, environmental and healthcare sectors with a growing set of about 50 separate, autonomous, decentralised and localised businesses, employing 8,000 people in 20 countries. The secret of its success has been finding technology niches in which it can enjoy rich margins that in turn fund its continuous acquisition of similar businesses. In the past year or so it has acquired another nine companies at a cost of £336 million. With acquisitions accounting for about a third of its growth in the year to the end of March, Halma, which is based in Amersham, Buckinghamshire, reported 10 per cent growth in revenues to £2.03 billion; 10 per cent growth in its preferred measure of pre-tax profit to £396 million; operating margins at 20.8 per cent; and a dividend increase of 7 per cent to 21.61p. With its present order intake ahead of last year, it expects further revenue growth even before the addition of acquisitions and profit margins of 21 per cent. The numbers exceeded City analysts’ forecasts. Halma started life in the 19th century as the Nahalma Tea Estate Company Chief executive Marc Ronchetti said that “diversity gives us resilience” but had become a diversified engineering company by the time it had floated 50 years ago. Today it is worth more than £10 billion on the stock market. Its share price peak was £32 in the depths of the pandemic, when it proved largely immune to the economic destruction suffered by other sectors. Marc Ronchetti, 48, who stepped up from finance director to become its chief executive a little over a year ago, said: “Diversity gives us resilience in challenging economic times. What unites us is delivering a safer, cleaner, healthier world. The scale of opportunity is huge — as is the premium for solving problems.” The year was not all plain sailing. The United States, which accounts for 44 per cent of the group’s business, delivered growth of 15 per cent. China, which accounts for much of the 15 per cent of the group in the Asia Pacific region, was in decline. Britain, which accounts for another 15 per cent of the group, achieved growth of 14 per cent. Safety, the bedrock of the company in recent times with the group’s proprietary fire-detection sensor businesses, accounts for more than 40 per cent of the group, and grew by 10 per cent. Environment and analysis, comprising about a third of Halma’s activity, grew by 19 per cent, with its businesses involved in photonics helping in digital capabilities, data centres and analytics all booming. However, healthcare, which accounts for the rest of the group, saw a marginal downturn, which the company blamed on constrained medical budgets and destocking by life sciences companies in the wake of supply chain dislocations during the pandemic. Euro 2024 football tournament begins. “People like to have tables, they like to have a meal, they like to pre-order drinks, and therefore we are seeing a big increase in bookings. But clearly it’s very dependent on England performing well,” Emeny said. Shares in Fuller, Smith & Turner closed up by 8p, or 1.1 per cent, at 728p. The road back to stability in the secondhand car market after the pandemic is being helped for Motorpoint by several of its rivals ending up in the ditch. Motorpoint is Britain’s leading independent operator of used-car supermarkets, with businesses in 20 locations. After the post-pandemic flurry of mergers and acquisitions in the sector, it is one of only two car dealers left on the stock market, the other being Vertu Motors. This appears to be good news for Motorpoint after a difficult 2023, when potential buyers sat on their hands as the cost of car financing soared. In its financial year to the end of March, it reported a widening pre-tax loss of £10.4 million on revenues down by a quarter at £1.09 billion. “The past financial year was the most difficult in our history,” Mark Carpenter, 52, Motorpoint’s chief executive, said, “with multiple negative headwinds in the macro-environment, such as rising borrowing costs and subdued customer demand, coupled with industry-specific issues such as lower inventory and deflation.” However, since the start of 2024 Motorpoint says it has profitable in every month. It is also claiming a higher market share, with volumes in the first three months of 2024 up 8.9 per cent compared with a nationwide rise of 6.5 per cent. The City believes Motorpoint’s recovery will be slow, with profits this year of not much more than £5 million and in 2025-26 no greater than £9 million. In the days before the pandemic, Motorpoint was making £22 million. “We are comfortable with those forecasts,” Carpenter said. “They are cautious and we would expect to beat them.” Shares in Motorpoint fell 2½p, or 1.8 per cent, to 140p last night. Wolseley restaurant owner calls in restructuring advisers Helen Cahill The owner of the restaurant company behind The Wolseley in the West End of London has turned to restructuring advisers two years after it was bought out of administration. Minor Hotels, owner of The Wolseley Hospitality Group, is being advised by AlixPartners on cashflow issues. The group, which also owns the London restaurants The Delaunay, Brasserie Zédel and Colbert, is seeking external advice on how to improve the business’s strategy, according to Sky News. Hospitality groups have struggled in recent years with sharp increases in interest rates, labour costs and other bills, which many have been forced to pass on to customers through higher prices. The Wolseley opened its doors in Piccadilly in 2003 and it has now launched a City branch of the restaurant. Baton Berisha, 42, chief executive of the group, has said that it is “well positioned to grow the business both in the UK and overseas”. Minor International, the Thai hotel group that owns Minor Hotels, has raised the prospect of opening Wolseleys in Hong Kong, Shanghai and Singapore. In 2022 Jeremy King, the co-founder of Corbin & King, was ousted by Minor International, which had acquired a majority shareholding five years earlier. Minor used its controlling stake to tip the business into administration, claiming that Corbin & King was “unable to meet its financial obligations”. The Thai group went on to win an auction held by FRP Advisory, the administrator, with an estimated £60 million-plus bid. King has now re-entered the hospitality business with the opening of three new restaurants, the Arlington, the Park and a reboot of Simpson’s in the Strand, central London. In an interview with The Times last year, King said: “I did not want to lose the Wolseley and those restaurants. I never wanted to walk away from the staff without even the opportunity to say goodbye. Not being able to say goodbye felt like a bereavement in many ways.” The Wolseley Hospitality Group reported a revenue increase of 60.7 per cent to a record £53.7 million for the year to the end of December 2022, compared with £33.4 million in the previous 12 months. Adjusted earnings before interest, tax and other charges also reached a new high of £5.7 million, up from £2.3 million.
42 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Business Markets news in brief Lauren Almeida Tempus Buy, sell or hold: today’s best share tips IP Group sells Garrison AI gives Apple users appetite for more Market cap $3trn Compute”, where data is not stored nor made accessible to Apple. Seeking an upgrade apple PEG ratio 3.1 Market cap T apple waking up to ai Apple announced “Apple Intelligence”, a suite of new AI features for its iPhone, Mac and other devices. Starting later in 2024, Apple will roll out a more “conversational” version of Siri, its 12-year-old voice assistant, as well as ChatGPT access that enables Siri to use OpenAI’s chatbot when it cannot answer a question by itself. Its new AI tools are based less on large-language models and more on learning “personal relevance” from data it has accumulated from its users. At the developer conference, Apple offered an example of a user asking Siri when her mother’s flight was landing; the digital assistant then finds the flight details in her email and cross-references them with realtime flight tracking to give an arrival time. The AI features will be available from this autumn on the iPhone 15 Pro and the 15 Pro Max, as well as iPads or Macs with M1 or later chips, and when the language is set to American English. The big question is whether this smarter iPhone can trigger a new upgrade cycle. The iPhone remains Apple’s most popular product, accounting for more than half its net sales, but they have been slipping. Its iPhone unit sales 250m 3 200 2.5 150 2 100 1.5 1 Source: FactSet he artificial intelligence rally in Silicon Valley threatened to leave Apple trailing in the dust earlier in the year. The company had been dismissed as a laggard in the space, with no discernible strategy and no generative AI products of its own. It was overtaken by both Microsoft and Nvidia, the chipmaker, in market value, with both hitting the enormous $3 trillion milestone before the iPhone maker. However, Apple famously likes to be the best, not first. So it was with huge excitement that investors greeted its new AI strategy at its annual developer conference this week, enough, indeed, to push the shares up by more than 10 per cent and earning it a belated spot in the $3 trillion club. $3.5 trn Apple Microsoft Nvidia 50 0.5 2020 21 22 23 24 0 ADVICE Hold WHY AI strategy could drive strong upgrade cycle but does not meaningfully differentiate between Apple from its rivals latest quarterly results showed a 10 per cent year-on-year decline and the biggest drop in sales since the summer of 2020, when many of its factories were closed. The new AI features may be just the thing to convince the billions of people who already own iPhones to upgrade to a new device. Bulls believe it could catalyse a longawaited “super cycle”, as there are about 270 million iPhone owners who have not upgraded their phone in more than four years, according to estimates by analysts at Wedbush, the broker. In the long term, they suggest that Apple could even develop a bundled service around its growing AI capabilities, which could be a boost to its $85 billion services business. In the more immediate future, there is hope that the incoming upgrade cycle will convince some people to switch to the iPhone from other smartphones, such as the Google Pixel and Samsung Galaxy. Yet there are concerns about how much the AI features will appeal to iPhone owners in China, its third biggest market, and whether they 0 2022 23 24e 25e Source: Bank of America analysis, FactSet consensus estimates will be enough to persuade the Chinese to upgrade. Most smartphone users in China prefer the We Chat social media and texting app over iMessage, which makes it harder for Apple’s AI to gather information and personalise its responses. Apple is also not the only smartphone maker to integrate AI tools into its user experience. Google already offers Gemini, its own generative AI system, formerly Bard, and it unveiled its Astra AI assistant last month. Some of Apple’s new AIpowered writing and edit features already exist at Google and Microsoft. There is lots of interest in Apple’s partnership with ChatGPT, but it should not be overstated. Its role in Apple’s AI system is relatively limited, taking only questions that Siri cannot handle itself. But the deal has troubled Elon Musk, who set up his own AI company, xAI, last year to compete with Open AI. The tycoon wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter, that it was “absurd” that Apple “isn’t smart enough to make their own AI, yet is somehow capable of ensuring that OpenAI will protect your security & privacy!”. He has threatened to bar Apple devices from his companies if it goes ahead with the deal. Nevertheless, Apple has a good reputation for its privacy management and it is selling this heavily in its AI package. It will use what it calls “Private Cloud eyes on washington Apple’s foray into AI, though arguably long overdue, is likely to draw even more attention from regulators. The Federal Trade Commission, the American competition regulator, has been inspecting AI investments made by big technology companies, including the deal between Microsoft and OpenAI. Lina Khan, who chairs the body, previously has expressed concern that the dominance of powerhouses in California could risk distorting innovation. No doubt Apple shareholders have grown accustomed to regulatory risk. This year a lawsuit filed by the US Department of Justice alleged that Apple had reached its “astronomical valuation” by “making it harder or more expensive for its users and developers to leave than by making it more attractive for them to stay”. Apple denies this, but investors love its “walled garden”, an ecosystem of connected devices and services that keep its users within the Apple universe. are apple shares too expensive? Bullish investors believe that an AI revolution could lead to an extra $1 trillion of spending over the next decade. Nvidia, Microsoft and Apple are among the early leaders and all are now worth more than $3 trillion. The next race will be to the $4 trillion milestone and investors appear to be particularly confident in Apple, with a forward price-toearnings to growth ratio of 3.1, above both Microsoft and Nvidia, at 2.3 and 1.1, respectively. A multiple below 1 is generally considered decent value for a growth stock. This column last rated Apple as a “hold” in March, reasoning that while it remained an extremely high-quality business, its future depended on how rapidly it could find the next product to revolutionise consumer technology. A smarter smartphone may be the key to this, but the 11 per cent surge in the shares since the conference appears to be based more on joy that Apple has waded into the AI race after a long silence. PRICES Major indices London Financial Futures © 2021 Tradeweb Markets LLC. All rights reserved. The Tradeweb FTSE Gilt Closing Prices information contained herein is proprietary to Tradeweb; may not be copied or re-distributed; is not warranted to be accurate, complete or timely; and does not constitute investment advice. Tradeweb is not responsible for any loss or damage that might result from the use of this information. Commodities IP Group, the intellectual property business, has sold Garrison Technology to Everfox, of the United States. Garrison was founded by two security professionals who previously worked at BAE Systems. The company builds cybersecurity tools for governments, with a focus on hardware-enforced security. Everfox and Garrison had been working as partners for several years. The transaction is subject to regulatory review and is expected to be completed this summer. Citi served as financial advisor to Everfox. St James’s Place hire St James’s Place has hired Caroline Waddington, from UBS, as its chief financial officer as it seeks to reform its practices amid scrutiny of its high fees. Waddington will replace Craig Gentle, who joined the wealth manager in 2016. The move comes as the business took a £426 million provision this year for potential redress to customers who had not received sufficient advice after the Financial Conduct Authority introduced its new consumer duty rules. Smurfit deal wins vote Shareholders of Smurfit Kappa, the Irish paper and packaging company, and WestRock, its American rival, voted to approve a proposed merger. If the deal is completed, Smurfit Kappa’s investors would own 50.4 per cent of the new $25 billion group. The companies expect the deal to be finalised on July 5, with trading in Smurfit WestRock starting on the New York Stock Exchange on July 8. They first revealed advanced talks to merge last September. Centrica pours cash in Centrica, the owner of British Gas, has invested £300 million in a new “liquid air” energy project along with the UK Infrastructure Bank and several other partners. Highview Power designed the technology, which can store renewable energy for several weeks. It will use the money to construct of one of the world’s largest long-duration energy storage facilities in Manchester. Due to open in early 2026, its construction will support more than 700 jobs.
43 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Markets Business Investors disembark with Tracsis in election hiatus Jessica Newman Market report T Boeing has a riveting new setback T he woes affecting Boeing have grown still further with the news that it has issues with the rivets on its 787 Dreamliner long-haul passenger jet (Robert Lea writes). The American manufacturer confirmed that fasteners on some 787 fuselages had been installed incorrectly. Boeing found that the problem involved hundreds of rivets on two undelivered jets. “Our 787 team is checking fasteners in the side-of-body area of some undelivered 787 Dreamliner airplanes to ensure they meet our engineering specifications,” a Boeing official said. “The in-service fleet can continue to safely operate. We are taking the time necessary to ensure all airplanes meet our delivery standards prior to delivery. We are working closely with our customers and the FAA and keeping them updated.” The US Federal Aviation Administration did not comment. Reports suggested that it was not necessarily the mechanical rivets or fasteners themselves that were the problem but their incorrect installation, or that they had not been tightened to the right torque. There are about 900 fasteners on each 787 fuselage section. There was no indication of how much remedial work would be needed or whether it would affect delivery schedules. The company is already burning through cash at a rate of $2 million an hour over production issues, mostly surrounding the Boeing 737 Max shorthaul jetliner. It remains under investigation by the FAA since January’s inflight blowout of a panel on an Alaska Airlines 737 Max. United Airlines has the largest order of unfulfilled deliveries of Dreamliners, at 221. Shares in Boeing fell by $1.99, or 1.1 per cent, to $180.68. The day’s biggest movers Gold/Precious metals he freezing of decisionmaking in the weeks before the general election hasn’t helped Tracsis. The technology company, whose services are used for train timetabling, rail safety and road traffic management, has warned that because of a “period of pre-election activity restrictions” affecting the ability of government and companies to make decisions in the transport sector, there will be a “one-off impact” on its performance in the final two months of its financial year. The Aim-listed group also highlighted troubles it faces in the United States, with Tracsis now expecting that revenues associated with its North American pipeline will not be realised in the present Wall Street report Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit new records, the former closing on 5,433.74, up 12.71 points, or 0.2 per cent, and the tech-heavy latter rising 59.13, 0.3 per cent, to 17,667.56. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 65.11, 0.2 per cent, to 38,647.10. financial year. The two issues have forced Tracsis to cut its full-year sales outlook. It now expects revenue, which analysts had predicted to be between £84 million and £85.9 million, to be in the range of £80 million to £82 million. Chris Barnes, its chief executive, acknowledged that the update was “unquestionably disappointing”, but said it was “an isolated event outside of our control”. He also was confident that any potential government changes on either side of the Atlantic would not adversely affect the group’s growth prospects next year. Analysts at Stifel argued that investors should look beyond the onetime election effect and even to take advantage of the share price weakness. Investors, however, were not so confident as shares in Tracsis tumbled by 100p, or 11.2 per cent, to a six-month low of 795p. The wider market was also reeling as investors reacted to a hawkish monetary policy forecast from the US Money rates % outsourcing Capita to focus on core interests L egal & General’s investor day may have gone down like a lead balloon this week, but Capita’s capital markets event got a much warmer reception from the City. The outsourcing group unveiled plans to focus on its core segments as it aims to improve its financial performance and cash generation. It said it would focus on its public services, contact centres and pension business and would restructure to reduce costs and drive efficiency. It also revealed targets that The outsourcer delivers shore-based training to the Royal Marines include improving margins to between 6 per ent and 8 per cent, low-to-mid-digit revenue growth and free cashflow generation from 2025. The move comes months after Capita said it would Federal Reserve, which now projects only one interest rate cut this year. The FTSE 100 slipped by 51.81 points, or 0.6 per cent, to 8,163.67 and the FTSE 250 shed 301.45 points, or 1.5 per cent, to 20,195.95. Fresnillo, the Chilean goldminer, was among the biggest fallers in the leading index, sliding by 15½p, or 2.8 per cent, to 539p as rate fears put pressure on prices of the yellow metal. Also lingering at the foot of the index were Intermediate Capital Group and Land Securities, which fell by 126p, or 5.4 per cent, to £22.26 and by 20½p, or 3.2 per cent, to 622p, respectively, as the pair traded exdividend. Rate fears and Crest Nicholson’s profit warning overshadowed Labour’s pledge to build up Britain’s housing supply, leaving Persimmon down 57p, or 3.8 per cent, at £14.41 and Barratt Developments lower by 9½p, or 1.9 per cent, at 500¼p. But it was Crest that had to endure the most Dollar rates implement £100 million of costcutting measures after swinging to a pre-tax loss of £106.6 million last year. Adolfo Hernández, its chief executive, said: “Our technology strategy will be organic with low capital intensity , principally funded through partial reinvestment of our previously announced £160 million costsaving programme and refocusing towards more profitable customer solutions.” Capita’s shares rose by ½p, or 2.7 per cent, to 14½p. bruising session, its shares closing down 28p, or 11.6 per cent, at 212¾p. Given that there were no nasty surprises in Labour’s manifesto regarding the water sector, Severn Trent’s shares flowed 101p, or 4.2 per cent, higher to £25.20 and United Utilities rose 31p, or 3 per cent, to £10.50½. Analysts at Jefferies noted that messaging from the manifesto appeared to dispel speculation that Labour would “do something drastic with Ofwat, such as replacing or scrapping it, which we see as helpful for regulation stability in UK water”. Other decent performers included BT, up 5½p, or 4.3 per cent, at 135p, as investors reacted positively to Carlos Slim, the Mexican billionaire, amassing a 3.2 per cent stake in the British telecoms company. Halma was the real star, though, climbing 314p, or 13.4 per cent, to £26.64 after the maker of health and safety instruments delivered stellar annual results. Exchange rates Because of a technical issue, the gold fix prices are from Wednesday. Sterling spot and forward rates Other Sterling European money deposits % Data as shown is for information purposes only. No offer is made by Morningstar or this publication

45 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Unit Trusts Business The Times unit trust information service Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % Sell Buy +/­ Yld % British funds SIMPLE AND CONVENIENT YOUR ONE-STOP SHOP FOR SAVINGS Simple & convenient to use Competitive savings rates Manage multiple accounts with a single login raisin.co.uk/offer-tmm0424 This is a paid for information service. For further details on a particular fund, readers should contact their fund manager. Data as shown is for information purposes only. No offer is made by Morningstar or this publication
46 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Business Equity prices Dividend yields Please note dividend yields are supplied by Morningstar. The yield is the sum of a company’s trailing 12-month dividend payments divided by the last day’s closing share price. 12-month high and low Unfortunately, due to a technical problem with our data provider, the 12-month highs and lows are currently inaccurate. 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company v v v v v Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v v v v v Automobiles & parts Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v v v 12 month High Low Company 12 month High Low Company v v v v v Banking & finance v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Consumer goods v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Investment companies 12 month High Low Company Price Yld Dis(-) (p) +/- % or Pm v 12 month High Low Company v v Price Yld Dis(-) (p) +/- % or Pm v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Health v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Engineering Construction & property v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v
47 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Equity prices Business 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v v 12 month High Low Company Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v v v v v v v v v v Price (p) +/- Yld% P/E v v v 12 month High Low Company v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Real estate v Industrials v Professional & support services v v v v v v v Retailing v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Telecoms v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Natural resources v v v v v v v v v v v v Leisure v v v v Transport v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Technology v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Utilities v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Media v v v v s v v v v v v t v v v v v v v v u v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v v Data as shown is for information purposes only. No offer is made by Morningstar or this publication
48 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Business Recruitment Do you have bottle for this industry? The British wine sector is expanding rapidly and it is calling out for more workers, reports Jane Hamilton With 1,030 vineyards, 221 wineries and a vibrant community of wine experts, it’s one of the most sought-after places to work in the global wine trade. So are we talking about Tuscany? Or Bordeaux? Or Napa Valley? No, Britain. English and Welsh bottles are the toast of the wine world, with a string of award-winners, including Hambledon Vineyard’s première cuvée brut NV and Three Choirs Vineyards’ white wines. Seven per cent of UK wine is now exported abroad, with rising demand for its crisp, elegant flavours. A recent report by Aldi showed that 15 per cent of customers considered UK-produced wine to be the best in the world, with the supermarket chain reporting a 60 per cent surge in sales over the past year. To keep up with rising global sales, the wine industry is expanding rapidly and is now the nation’s fastest-growing agricultural sector. Total hectarage has risen by 123 per cent in ten years, with experts predicting it will almost double again by 2032. According to Nicola Bates, chief executive of WineGB, the national trade body: “The English and Welsh wine industry is innovative, internationally recognised as a standard for high quality and growing at pace. It is levelling up agricultural communities through the provision of highly skilled labour and a sustainable and increasingly high-tech sector.” Tomorrow is the start of English Wine Week, with employment opportunities being highlighted at growers nationwide. The industry employs 2,300 full-time and 8,300 part-time and seasonal staff, but with production levels predicted to hit 28.8 million bottles by 2032, a fresh influx of employees is needed to meet targets. “The prospect for the domestic wine industry is astonishing. English still and sparkling wines are now widely seen on wine lists throughout the hospitality business and this will continue to grow,” Michael Saunders, chief executive of Coterie Holdings, a holding company for wine interests including merchants, warehousing and wine lending, said. “It’s a rapidly growing sector and one that is now attracting people from a wide range of backgrounds, from traditional agriculturists and viticulturists to marketers and brand developers and even, in some cases, data analysts and technologists.” WineGB’s analysis shows strong demand for new vineyard managers and workers, as well as winemakers, operations managers and cellar hands. Alongside this, wine tourism is proving popular with British and international Six from the best A third of the world’s food is wasted and Mette Lykke, chief executive of Too Good To Go, is dedicated to changing this. As the world’s largest surplus food marketplace, with 90 million users and 155,000 partners in 17 countries, the platform fights food waste. Here is her advice for purpose-driven businesses. People are inspired by people, not by machines. Be yourself. Showing vulnerability gives your team permission to do the same. 1 Being a leader is being a lifelong student. Stay humble. The most important thing for leaders is realising that you have a lot to learn. 2 Your ability to attract and retain amazing talent will be key. for your success. There’s only so much you can do on your own. Talented people want autonomy and the right mix of challenges and psychological safety. 3 Actively welcome change. The world is changing fast, especially in a growth company. You have to make sure the company, your team and you develop fast enough to continue being successful. 4 Revelling in thrill of the harvest Case study N ick CranCrombie, 52, is the vineyard manager at Hambledon Vineyard near Waterlooville, Hampshire. He worked in the music industry for 20 years and then managed a wine merchants before taking up the role in 2018. For him, the best parts of the job are “working alongside nature and the biodiversity in the beautiful South Downs National Park and being part of a likeminded team producing world-class sparkling wines. “Vineyard managers need good attention to detail and confidence in decision-making. Tips of the trade The wine trade is a competitive industry to break into, so James Osborn, from WineGB and Hambledon Vineyard, offers these tips. 6 Don’t wait for the job advert but get in touch directly with the wine business or vineyard owner. Highlight your transferable skills and the value you could bring to their business. 6 Start your learning at Plumpton College. See plumpton.ac.uk/ courses/wine-division/ 6 Get qualified with Wine & Spirit Education Trust courses. See wsetglobal.com 6 Consider work experience at a vineyard or winery. Working a harvest or picking grapes is a good start. 6 Network at industry events. Wine is a small, collegiate industry full of people happy to make introductions. 6 Decide on an area that you’d like to specialise in: winemaking, viticulture, sales, operations and export, tourism and hospitality or marketing and communications. 6 Find a mentor. There are lots of experienced people who are willing to support training. 6 Search for roles at winejobsengland.com/ 6 Apply for an apprenticeship at any age. Plenty of people are retraining to work in wine in their fifties. Delegating tasks to teams is essential with 90 hectares of vineyards to manage. I do have WSET [Wine & Spirit Education Trust] and RHS [Royal Horticultural Society] qualifications, which are beneficial, although an overall passion for viticulture is the best quality for anyone working in wine.” visitors, accounting for 24 per cent of income, according to its 2023 industry report. Some vineyards are investing in on-site restaurants and accommodation, opening up roles for hospitality managers and staff. The premier route into the sector is to study at Plumpton College, East Sussex, which offers industry-leading courses. As managing director of the awardwinning Hambledon Vineyard, James Osborn is at the forefront of the industry’s growth. “Right now,” he said, “the UK wine industry is a very exciting place to be. I would encourage anyone with a passion for wine, being in nature and working in a sustainable business to consider a career in English winemaking. The time is ripe for more inclusivity and diversity in the sector.” Working week Supporting charities AI can bring ‘meaning’ ‘Labour hoarding’ Euros sick-note warning With almost two in five charities facing a skills shortage, The Well Placed, a not-for-profit organisation, is linking experienced mid-life commercial marketers with six-month paid placements in the sector in areas such as fundraising, campaigns and membership. Maya Bhose, its founder, said it offered over-50s “a chance to turn their expertise into purpose and to help charities to find a solution to their skills shortages”. Staff in the UK spend a third of their working day on “meaningless” tasks, a study from Slack, the communication platform, claims. The most common low-value work includes unnecessary meetings, unimportant emails and excessive paperwork or data entry. Christina Janzer, head of Workforce Lab at Slack, urged companies to adopt artificial intelligence for basic tasks “to unlock a smarter, simpler and more satisfying way of working”. Robert Half, the recruitment agency, has identified a new trend called “labour hoarding”, with businesses seeking to retain staff in light of a dearth of specialist talent. According to Matt Weston, its senior managing director: “Employers are recognising that if they can’t source the talent they need when the economy is weak, they will have less chance when it bounces back. As such, they’re doing their best to retain workers.” Football fans are being warned they could be disciplined, or even sacked, if they call in sick after England’s Euro 2024 opener against Serbia. Jayne Harrison, of Richard Nelson, a law firm, said: “Due to the game being on a Sunday night, it’s likely many supporters enjoy a few drinks. If an employer thinks their employee has called in sick and it is not genuine — such as to recover from a hangover — they may take disciplinary action.” Hang in there. There are times where you have fun and times where you struggle. You grow and learn during the latter. 5 Have a life outside work. Spend time with loved ones, exercise, practise your hobbies: whatever gives you energy, make sure you prioritise it. 6 Appointment of the week Joining the nation’s fight against terrorism Counter Terrorism Policing is recruiting for a business change support officer to deliver a portfolio of change across its network. The role will involve supporting a team of change managers to implement complex projects and programmes, which deliver sustainable change across the national counterterrorism policing network. Candidates will need experience of supporting change, alongside excellent IT and Microsoft Office skills, plus strong attention to detail so that outputs are accurate and contain necessary information to support effective decision-making. Further experience working for a government, security agency or within a policing environment would be valued, as would experience of working in a project environment. Applicants must hold or undergo a national security vetting check, with a willingness to undergo developed vetting once in post. Additionally, the role is restricted to UK nationals or, in approved circumstances, dual nationals of which one element is British. Apply at appointments.thetimes.co.uk by July 10.

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51 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Celebrated songwriter of Suspicious Minds Mark James Page 52 Register Obituaries John Burnside Acclaimed Scottish poet, novelist and memoirist whose lyrical writing stemmed from a childhood of poverty and addiction “Who wants to be safe?” wrote John Burnside in his memoir Waking up in Toytown. “Who wants to be sane? Who wants to be normal?” Burnside epitomised the maxim that art imitates life. His writing — elliptical, surreal, shadowy — reflected a mind that was singularly strange. Insanity was, for him, a temperament to be admired, even coveted. “A mad person isn’t someone who sees what isn’t there, he’s someone who sees what is there, but that others can’t see,” he said. “I really believe that.” If he had shades of the William Blake visionary about him then such an attitude was also gleaned from a childhood of poverty, in which he was raised by a violent father and struggled with drug and alcohol addiction. “The only gift is knowing we belong”, he wrote in one poem, “to nothing”. A literary jack of all trades, Burnside wrote three memoirs, 17 poetry collections and ten novels; he was part of a lauded group of young Scottish writers published by Jonathan Cape under the editor Robin Robertson, including Irvine Welsh and Alan Warner; The Spectator called him “by far the best British poet alive”. Yet he had only begun publishing in his thirties. He barely wrote as a child — except to impress girls — because his father had stamped on any burgeoning interests and wanted to “kill off my finer — and so, weaker — self”. He taught him to trust no one and never rise above his station. And for a while, he did just that. In his teenage years Burnside evolved into “a socially clumsy working-class melancholic” and by 16 he was regularly taking LSD. “Psychiatrists would say to me, ‘How are you going to adapt?’ But I kind of agree with Henry Miller when he says: what kind of person would you be if you had managed to adapt successfully to this society?” When he was admitted to Fulbourn mental hospital a friend asked him if he was working on anything. He replied: “I am not here to write, but to be mad.” Diagnosed with apophenia, a condition in which someone searches for meaning in random things, he began lining up a dozen glass bottles filled with blood, honey, alcohol, olive oil and urine and balancing a feather on top, a spell of sorts to “keep the universe in order”. He sought God or the Devil in the last scraps of a Pot Noodle. After his second stint on the psychiatric ward he tried to create a sedate life in the suburbs of Surrey, where he worked as a civil servant, then a computer software engineer. He craved middle-class convention. “I wanted a normal life,” he said. “Sober. Drug-free. Dreamless. In gainful employment. A householder. A taxpayer. A name on the electoral roll.” Yet his wayward nature crept, perhaps inevitably, back in. Humdrum days were peppered with nights of binge drinking, tawdry affairs and visions; he went on odysseys with a mother who laced her children’s orange juice with Valium and a lover called Crystal who once held a knife over him as he slept. The poems he began to write after work were cryptic and elusive — populated by ghosts and lost souls. His “nor- Wonderland (he felt most comfortable playing the Mad Hatter in the school play). “Naturally, Alice herself bored me, but the other characters felt like the friends and neighbours I should have had,” he recalled. “It took me some time to realise that, secretly, some of the dull folk in my workaday world were actually members of that divine cast of lunatics. My music teacher was definitely a White Knight, one of our priests was a Mock Turtle and, for a while there, the love of my life bore a striking resemblance to the Cheshire Cat.” His mother died when he was 22 but lived long enough to see him study, at her bidding, English and European thought at Cambridge Polytechnic. “Her memory of me would be the kid who got expelled from school [for smoking weed] when everybody’s saying he’s super smart, goes to college to please her and then works in a factory — because I didn’t want to be part of the system,” he said in one of his final interviews this year. “And now I’m a professor [in creative writing, from 2009] at the University of St Andrews — she’d have loved that.” Burnside, though burly, was a quietly His drunk and violent father once threw his sister down the stairs A literary jack of all trades, Burnside wrote three memoirs, 17 poetry collections and ten novels, though the slippery medium of poetry was his natural stomping ground mal life” finally ruptured one morning after a raucous office party in which he arrived back at his keyboard to find a sheet that read: “Jesus loves you but everyone else thinks you’re an arsehole.” He quit the job and sent his poems to magazines. His first collection, The Hoop, was published in 1988, when he was 33. It was his wife Sarah Dunsby, who he met at one of his poetry readings, who persuaded him to send his work to the poetry editor at Jonathan Cape. She survives him with two sons, Lucas and Gil. Though he was a literary polymath, the slippery medium of poetry was Burnside’s natural stomping ground. His poems “yearned for the wild edges of the world”, wrote Christina Patterson in The Independent, hovering perilously close to the supernatural. Black Cat Bone (2011), his most famous collection, which won the TS Eliot and the Forward prizes, was filled with unnerving poems about tenebrous figures such as a hunter who loses himself in the woods in search of a mythical quarry. It was, one Guardian reviewer noted, “a tour de force of liminal expression”, but the intention had been to pare back the mystery a little. “I realised I’d spent a lot of time in my poetry trying to find a way of talking about that whereof we cannot speak,” he says. “This new book is about things that nobody can deny ... it’s about sex, love, death.” He found novels much harder to tackle. They were predictably strange: his first, The Dumb House (1997), is narrated by a psychopath who performs surgical acts on his twin children. The Locust Room (2001) is about the 1970s “Cambridge rapist” and in A Summer of Drowning (2011) a malign spirit called “the huldra” stalks a small island in the Arctic Circle (to research the book he walked alone in the Arctic Circle with- ‘The only gift is knowing we belong’, he wrote in one poem, ‘to nothing’ out a map or compass). “Burnside’s poetry is a thing of softness and shadows, of small, shifting sounds,” wrote Catherine Lockerbie in the Scotsman. “John Burnside’s novel is a thing of ice and steel, scalpel-sharp, chilling the very heart.” Yet neither his poems nor his novels truly grappled with his past and in 2006 Burnside wrote his first volume of memoir, A Lie About My Father (Waking Up in Toytown was published in 2010 and I Put a Spell On You in 2014). “This book is best treated as a work of fiction,” declared the overleaf. “If he were here to discuss it, my father would agree, I’m sure, that it’s as true to say that I never had a father as it is to say that he never had a son.” He died in 1988, the year Burnside published his first book. When his own son was born Burnside visited an aunt who told him that his father had been left on a doorstep in Fife. He wrote the memoir as a way to come to terms with the truth about his father, and the bitter dregs he had left. “I had carried him with me,” he said, “an ember of selfloathing in the quick of my mind, caustic and unquenchable.” John Burnside was born in 1955 in Dunfermline. He was raised in Cowdenbeath, west Fife, and Corby, an industrial new town in Northamptonshire known as “little Scotland”. His father was a Catholic factory worker known as Tommy to his friends and George to his wife and John’s mother, Tess. He was unpredictable and violent; he once threw John’s sister down the stairs and burnt his favourite teddy bear. He disappeared for days at a time and drank away his wages so that his wife had to beg food off their neighbours. At one point John waited in an alleyway with a knife, intent upon murdering him. There were no books in the house, aside from the Bible, but Burnside’s imagination was lit by “a whole circus of exterminating angels and wilderness visions” and he read in the public library. His favourite book was Alice in spoken and thoughtful man. Yet his intellect was of the unkempt, mad kind. His whole body shook when he laughed (sometimes uncontrollably) and he was famous for his two-hour chats with students in pubs. One recalled discussing paganism, Scottish history and whether a cooked heart bleeds or not. He was self-deprecating to a fault — when he won the David Cohen Prize for Literature last year he thought it was “some kind of prank” — but unapologetic when it came to the obscurity of his work. “If you want something completely self-explanatory,” he once said, “read the dictionary.” One of the reasons Burnside was so prolific was that he was a lifelong insomniac. In 2021 he published the poetry collection Learning to Sleep after surviving heart failure in a hospital ward during the pandemic. He spoke the following year on BBC Radio 4 about the hallucinations he had experienced when his heart stopped and he was, in his words, brought back to life. When he died, he predicted that he would be reincarnated into a hyena. He wanted a sky burial, he told his wife, “where they put your dead body on a platform in the open air and let the birds eat you” (their solicitor said sky burials were illegal in Britain). Yet he was oddly rational in the face of death. Perhaps it was the perfect stillness, or the uncertainty, that he craved. “I like it that I am going to die,” he said. “It beats the alternative of living for ever. Imagine the horror of that.” John Burnside, writer, was born on March 19, 1955. He died after a short illness on May 29, 2024, aged 69
52 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Register Mark James Songwriter who riffed on his own marital difficulties to compose Suspicious Minds and revive Elvis Presley’s flagging career Mark James was caught in a trap. Living with his first wife in Memphis, he still carried a torch for an old girlfriend back in his home town of Houston. She had since married someone else but they had kept in touch and his jealous wife was full of suspicions. “I was in a situation where my heart didn’t belong and my wife suspected I had those feelings, so it was a confusing time for me,” James recalled many years later. He decided to work through his confusion by doing what he did best — writing a song. “Late one night, fooling around on my Fender guitar, I came up with a catchy melody,” he recalled. Then, as he thought about his personal predicament, a lyric began to take shape: “We’re caught in a trap, I can’t walk out.” A chorus swiftly followed: “We can’t go on together with suspicious minds ...” The marriage did not endure but the song did, although when James first recorded and released the song in 1968 under his own name, it flopped. However, a year later Elvis Presley booked into a Memphis studio with a plan to make a comeback album produced by Chips Moman, who had also produced James’s version of Suspicious Minds. At the time Presley’s career was in a slump. He had not had a No 1 single in the American charts since 1962 and had spent the previous few years making formulaic films and releasing assembly-line soundtracks of sentimental ballads. His popularity had waned. His previous album, the soundtrack to the 1968 film Speedway, had not even made the top 50. The team around the singer decided that the way to renew his fading appeal was to return to a more rocking style. The relaunch began when he dressed in black leather for a 1968 Christmas TV special. Three weeks after the show was broadcast, he arrived in Moman’s studio on a mission to record the earthiest, funkiest record he had made in years. Keen to submit a song for Presley’s comeback album, James toiled fruitlessly trying to compose something suitable. “He needed a mature rock’n’roll song to bring him back but it just wouldn’t come for me,” he recalled. Then, three days before Presley was due to begin recording and with panic setting in, James’s publisher suggested he forget about writing a new song; was there an old number in his back catalogue that might fit the bill? “I’d forgotten about Suspicious Minds, then I realised that was the song I’d been looking for,” James later said in an interview on the podcast Songcraft: Spotlight On Songwriters. “I looked up at the wall and I swear I saw a golden No 1. And what was great about it was it was already written and I didn’t have to roll up my sleeves. It was perfect for Elvis. I wanted to go and shake him and say this is the song for you.” He didn’t, of course, and instead adopted a subtler ploy by asking Moman to play the song he had cut a year earlier to Presley on his arrival at the studio. He immediately fell in love not only with the song but with James’s version of it and went on to record Suspicious Minds with an almost identical arrangement. Yet the fight had still to be won. It was the custom of Presley’s management to take half of the publishing rights to the songs he recorded. Moman refused, told them in no uncertain terms it was blatant theft and threatened to halt the recording session and burn the tapes. Fortunately, Presley had “gone crazy for the song” and took Moman’s side. It was a fateful intervention. When Suspicious Minds went to No 1 on its release in August 1969, it unleashed a flow of royalties that would keep James in clover for the rest of his life. Meanwhile, the writer had managed to extract himself from his own Suspicious Minds scenario and after getting 1940 in Houston, Texas, he was the son of an Italian-born building contractor and a school teacher. In his youth he played the violin and conducted his high school orchestra. “But I don’t think I realised how much I loved music until I picked up a guitar,” he recalled. When he began performing in the Houston clubs he was soon told that the name Francis Zambon was a non-starter and he became Mark James. At the time it was his intention to record his songs himself rather than give them to other artists and he released his first single Jive Note in 1959. Several more ‘I was in a situation with my marriage where my heart didn’t belong’ Presley enlisted James’s producer for a comeback album after his 1968 Christmas TV special relaunch divorced, he married his second wife, Karen Taylor, in 1971. She survives him with his daughters Sammie and Dana. Presley went on to record further songs by James including It’s Only Love, Raised On Rock, Moody Blue and Always On My Mind. The latter was released by Presley in 1972 and was a hit again a decade later for Willie Nelson, whose version won James and his co-writers Johnny Christopher and Wayne Carson a Grammy award as song of the year. It became a hit for a third time when the Pet Shop Boys had a UK No 1 with a synth-pop version in 1987. “I’d been working in the studio night and day and was tired when I wrote that song,” James recalled. “I needed a break and was planning to go and see a movie to watch someone else’s story for a change. I was walking out when Wayne said, ‘Mark, would you like to help us write a song?’” Reluctantly but felicitously, he agreed and in a 2013 poll conducted by ITV to find “the nation’s favourite Elvis songs”, Always On My Mind was voted No 1 while Suspicious Minds was ranked in second place. “Elvis trusted what I sent to him,” James said. “After he died, I heard he’d always asked the guys in the studio, ‘Did Mark send me any more songs?’ Golly, I wish I had known that.” Born Francis Rodney Zambon in followed as the Mark James Trio, including Running Back, a local hit in 1963, but his progress was halted a couple of years later when he was drafted into the US army to serve in Vietnam with the First Infantry Division. On his discharge he moved to Memphis in 1968 to work for Moman’s publishing company as a staff songwriter. His first top ten hit came with Hooked On A Feeling, recorded by BJ Thomas, an old friend from Houston. Inspired by the same former girlfriend who was to spark Suspicious Minds, the song became an even bigger hit in 1973 when a cover by Blue Swede went to No 1 in the American singles chart. He was still writing songs more than half a century later. “You’re only as hot as your last record,” he said in 2017. “You hope to write a song that becomes a standard. But if you don’t move on and try to come up with something unique and new, you’re history.” Mark James, songwriter, was born on November 29, 1940. He died of undisclosed causes on June 8, 2024, aged 83 Tin Oo Former commander of Myanmar’s army who became a close ally of Aung San Suu Kyi and was imprisoned for his beliefs Aung San Suu Kyi, the long-imprisoned Myanmar politician, is known the world over. Tin Oo was less renowned, but he was her close ally for four decades and his story was in many ways even more remarkable. He spent the first half of his adult life in the Tatmadaw (armed forces) in Burma, now known as Myanmar, rising to become commander-in-chief and overseeing periods of brutal repression by the country’s military regime. He was then ousted and imprisoned by that same regime, and became a fervent convert to the cause of democracy. He co-founded the National League for Democracy (NLD) with Suu Kyi, was arrested again and spent 14 of the next 21 years in a prison or under house arrest. During a brief period of freedom he and Suu Kyi narrowly escaped death when a mob of regime thugs attacked their car. The two leaders were finally released in 2010 as the regime relaxed its grip on power, and under their leadership the NLD went on to win Myanmar’s first genuinely free election in 2015. Tin Oo, by then in his late eighties, declined to become president. The NLD won again in 2020, but the military staged a coup, threw Suu Kyi back in prison, and curtailed the country’s brief experiment with democracy. Tin Oo, debilitated by a stroke, was allowed to live at home, but resisted overtures from the military. Tin Oo helped found the National League for Democracy with Aung San Suu Kyi “I love the military, but I love the people more,” he told The New York Times. “That is why I stood by the people.” U Tin Oo was born in the port city of Pathein in 1927 when Burma was part of British-ruled India. He was the oldest of six children of a land surveyor. He joined the military as a second lieutenant in 1946, two years before Burma won independence, and rose steadily through the ranks. He was decorated for leading campaigns against insurrections by Burma’s ethnic minorities and its Communist Party. He met his wife, Tin Moe Wai, a doctor, while being treated for injuries and they later had two sons. In 1974 he was appointed commander-in-chief of the Tatmadaw by General Ne Win, Burma’s military dictator. In that role he oversaw a bloody crackdown on student protests that erupted in Rangoon after the death of U Thant, the former Burmese secretary-general of the United Nations and regime critic. Within two years Tin Oo was stripped of his position and convicted on dubious charges of corruption and keeping secret a failed coup attempt: his supporters said he was the victim of a power struggle. He was sentenced to seven years’ hard labour, but released in 1980 under a general amnesty. Thereafter Tin Oo’s life changed dramatically. He earned a law degree, and in 1988 he and Suu Kyi co-founded the NLD after the regime crushed a series of pro-democracy protests. The NLD won a sweeping victory in the 1990 parliamentary elections, taking 59 per cent of the vote, but the ruling military junta refused to surrender power. By that stage Tin Oo, the NLD’s president, had already been imprisoned. Suu Kyi, its secretary general, was placed under house arrest and became one of the world’s most famous political prisoners, winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991. Both were deprived of their liberty for most of the next 20 years, but during a brief period of freedom in 2003 their motorcade was ambushed near a village in northern Myanmar by a regimeorchestrated mob. They escaped, but scores of their supporters were injured or killed. Suu Kyi and Tin Oo were swiftly returned to house arrest. Tin Oo was one of a small group of former military officers who advised Suu Kyi during her imprisonment and were dubbed “the uncles”. Suu Kyi suggested her relationship with Tin Oo was even closer. He was “like a father to me”, she said. The pair were finally released in 2010 as Myanmar edged towards democracy, and in 2015 the NLD won a landslide general election victory with Tin Oo playing a prominent role. Suu Kyi was constitutionally barred from becoming president because she had a foreign husband and children, so Tin Oo was touted for the job. He refused, saying Suu Kyi should have the post, and she became de facto prime minister. In 2017 a stroke curtailed his political activities. In 2020 the NDL won a second landslide victory, but this time the military staged a coup. Suu Kyi was returned to prison. General Min Aung Hlaing, head of the military government, visited Tin Oo in his Yagon home, but Tin Oo refused to support him. His family instead hung a sign on his front door reading: “No Visitors Allowed.” “I have been a general, a political prisoner, a monk, a law student, a lawyer and a founding member of a political party,” he once said. “I have had to face up to the harm I did to people when I served in the army. For this I have apologised and committed myself to the cause of human rights and democracy.” Tin Oo, soldier and politician, was born on March 11, 1927. He died on June 1, 2024, aged 97 Email: obituaries@thetimes.co.uk
53 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Register Court Circular Births, Marriages and Deaths Kensington Palace 13th June, 2024 The Prince of Wales this afternoon visited the Secret Intelligence Service. Buckingham Palace 13th June, 2024 The King and Queen were present at the Service of Celebration for the Life of the late Lord Rothschild OM which was held at Waddesdon Manor, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, this morning. By command of His Majesty, Mr Alistair Harrison (Marshal of the Diplomatic Corps) called upon His Excellency Mr Fahad bin Mohammed Abdulla Abdulla Al-Attiyah at 1 South Audley Street, London W1, this afternoon in order to bid farewell to His Excellency upon relinquishing his appointment as Ambassador from the State of Qatar to the Court of St James’s. St James’s Palace 13th June, 2024 The Duke of Edinburgh, Chairman, The Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award Foundation, this morning attended a Trustees’ Meeting at Kents Hill Park Training and Conference Centre, Swallow House, Timbold Drive, Kents Hill, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire. His Royal Highness, Chairman, The Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award Foundation, this evening held a Dinner at St James’s Palace. St James’s Palace 13th June, 2024 The Princess Royal, Patron, Transaid, this morning visited the Multimodal 2024 Exhibition at the National Exhibition Centre, Birmingham, and was received by His Majesty’s Lord- Lieutenant of West Midlands (Sir John Crabtree). Her Royal Highness, Patron, Townswomen’s Guilds, afterwards attended the Annual General Meeting at CLM Conferencing and Events, the Welcome Centre, 47 Parkside, Coventry, and was received by Ms Carmen Watson (Deputy Lieutenant of West Midlands). The Princess Royal, Patron, Foundation for Future London, this afternoon attended the UK Cultural Exchange launch at Talent House, 3 Sugar House Lane, London E15, and was received by Mr Kim Bromley-Derry (Deputy Lieutenant of Greater London). Her Royal Highness, President, the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, accompanied by Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence, this evening attended the President’s Panel Discussion and Dinner at 8 John Adam Street, London WC2, and was received by His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of Greater London (Sir Kenneth Olisa). Kensington Palace 13th June, 2024 The Duke of Gloucester, Vice Royal Patron, the Almshouse Association, this morning visited Girton Town Almshouse, 22 High Street, Girton, Cambridge, and was received by His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire (Mrs Julie Spence). His Royal Highness this afternoon visited Isle of Ely Rowing Club, Kiln Lane, Ely, Cambridgeshire. The Duke of Gloucester afterwards attended the Centenary Celebration of Cambridgeshire ACRE (Action with Communities in Rural England) at St Mary’s Church, St Mary’s Street, Ely. St James’s Palace 13th June, 2024 The Duke of Kent, former Colonel, Scots Guards, this evening attended the Tumbledown Dinner at Boodle’s, 28 St James’s Street, London SW1. To book a Birth, Marriage or Death announcement in the Register, visit: newsukadvertising.co.uk for help, please call 020 7782 7553 or email BMDs@thetimes.co.uk MAY I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world. Neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything; what counts is the new creation. Peace and mercy to all who follow this rule — to the Israel of God. Galatians 6.14-16 (NIV) Bible verses are provided by the Bible Society Births ONSTENK on 7th June 2024 to Claire (née Ford) and James, a son, Rupert Montgomery Peter, brother to Kit. Forthcoming Marriages MR F. W. L. ROBSON AND MISS E. LEEDS ARMSTRONG The engagement is announced between Frederick, eldest son of Mr and Mrs Rupert and Alexandra Robson of Gloucestershire and Switzerland, and Emma, daughter of Mr and Mrs Richard and Andrea Leeds Armstrong of Charlottesville, Virginia. DR C. J. D. FRENCH AND MR N. M. LUNGU The engagement is announced between Christian and Narcis-Mihai, who will be married at Portmeirion, Penrhyndeudraeth on Saturday 14th September 2024 at noon. Iti dau inima mea. MR F. MCNEIL AND MISS Z. E. PLANT A new podcast looking back on the remarkable lives that have shaped our times The engagement is announced between Fraser, middle son of Mr and Mrs McNeil of Urmston, Lancashire, and Zoë, daughter of Mr Plant and Ms Smailes of Tickenham, Somerset. Deaths ATWELL Michael James (Jamie) died peacefully on 29th May 2024, aged 68. Widower of Amanda, devoted father to Rachel and much-loved grandfather of Isabel and Robin. Private family funeral followed by a thanksgiving service at All Saints, Fulham, on Monday 1st July at 1pm. No flowers please, but any donations to Fulham Palace Trust, Fulham Palace, Bishop’s Avenue, Fulham, SW6 6EA. Listen to Your History for free via the QR code, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. on 6th June 2024, aged 76, at St Wilfrid’s Hospice, Bosham. Beloved husband of Jane, proud and loving father and grandfather. Funeral at St John’s Church, Westbourne, PO10 8UL, on Wednesday 3rd July 2024 at 2pm. No flowers please. Donations to the Shipwrecked Mariners’ Society may be sent c/o Reynolds of Chichester, Tel: 01243 773311. REEVES Eleanor died peacefully on 23rd May, aged 87. Overcame a challenging childhood to become a much-loved headteacher and create her own happy family. Service at Kingston Crematorium on 21st June. No flowers please. RUDDLE Fiona Eileen (née Forbes) died peacefully on 31st May 2024. Mother of Claire and Rachel, grandmother and greatgrandmother. SCANLON Thomas William (Tom) died on 17th May 2024, aged 93. Beloved husband of the late Elisabeth Margaret Scanlon and dearly-loved father, grandfather, greatgrandfather, brother and uncle. Retired teacher and ex-Royal Navy. Funeral at St Charles Church, Gosforth, Newcastle upon Tyne at 9.45am on 21st June 2024. Family flowers only. Donations, if desired, to ‘SSAFA’ c/o W.S. Harrison Funeral Directors, 157 Salters Road, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE3 4HJ. WEIR Arthur Buchanan Spottiswoode died peacefully on 2nd June 2024, aged 91. Deputy Chancery Master and President of the Holborn and Westminster Law Society. Beloved husband of the late Drina and Penny, and father to Charles, Kirsty, Malcolm and Pippa. A service will be held at St Botolph’s Church, Swyncombe on Friday 28th June at 1pm. Family flowers only. Donations if desired will be given to the Henley Youth Choir. These can be sent online at https://arthurweir.muchloved.com/ or sent c/o Tomalin & Son Funeral Directors. The simple way to place your Birth, Marriage or Death announcement in the Register. Available 24 hours a day. Go to: newsukadvertising.co.uk BEAVEN Christopher John died on 29th May 2024, aged 80. Brother of Maggs, uncle of Shona and great uncle of Samuel and Sarah. With thanks to the NHS in Leeds especially the TAVI team at the LGI. The funeral is to be arranged by the undertakers Thomasons. 01294307892. BUDWORTH Mrs Julia (of Earl Stonham). Join Anna Temkin, deputy obituaries editor of The Times, every week and discover endlessly fascinating stories. HOPKINS Laurie, Cdre, LVO, peacefully Died peacefully at home on Sunday 19th May 2024, aged 92. Funeral service will be held at St Marys Church in Earl Stonham, near Stowmarket, Suffolk at 2pm on Friday 28th June. Flowers welcome. Inquiries to L. Fulcher Funeral Directors 01284 754049. LEGAL, PUBLIC, COMPANY & PARLIAMENTARY NOTICES To place notices for these sections please call 020 7782 7553 Notices are subject to confirmation and should be received by 11.30am three days prior to insertion Legal Notices RATE INFORMATION SERVICES LIMITED Company No. 03017005 (In Members’ Voluntary Liquidation) Trading Address: 69 Conifer Crest, Newbury, Berkshire, RG14 6RS Notice is hereby given that creditors of the Company are required, on or before 7 August 2024, to prove their debts by delivering their proofs (in the format specified in Rule 14.4 of the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016) to the Joint Liquidators, Paul Ellison and David Taylor (appointed 7 June 2024), at KRE Corporate Recovery Limited, Unit 8, The Aquarium, 1-7 King Street, Reading, RG1 2AN or info@krecr.co.uk. If so required by notice from the Joint Liquidators, creditors must produce any document or other evidence which the Joint Liquidators consider is necessary to substantiate the whole or any part of a claim. Note:The Directors of the Company have made a declaration of solvency and it is expected that all creditors will be paid in full. Contact details for Joint Liquidators: Lee Lloyd, Email: info@krecr.co.uk or telephone 01189 479090. Paul Ellison, Joint Liquidator In the matter of DIANA FOOD LIMITED (Company Number 04410778) (formerly Map Technologies Limited (until 18 Dec 2014)) (in Members’ Voluntary Liquidation) (“the Company”) and in the matter of the Insolvency Act 1986 and the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016 Notice is hereby given that written resolutions were passed by the members of the Company on 25 April 2024 placing the Company into Members` Voluntary Liquidation (solvent liquidation) and appointing Nicholas James Timpson and Howard Smith of Interpath Ltd as Joint Liquidators. Notice is also hereby given, pursuant to Rule 14.28 of the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016, that the Joint Liquidators of the Company intend to declare a distribution to the creditors of the Company within two months of 17 July 2024. Creditors who have not yet done so must prove their debts by sending their full names and addresses, particulars of their debts and the names and addresses of their solicitors (if any) to the Joint Liquidators at Interpath Ltd, 5th Floor, 130 St Vincent Street, Glasgow, G2 5HF by no later than 17 July 2024 (the last date for proving). The intended distribution is a sole distribution and may be made without regard to the claim of any person in respect of a debt not proved by 17 July 2024. Any creditor who has not proved his debt by that date, or who increases the debt in his proof after that date, will not be entitled to disturb the intended sole distribution. The Joint Liquidators intend that, after paying or providing for a sole distribution in respect of creditors who have proved their debts, all funds remaining in the Joint Liquidators` hands following the sole distribution to creditors shall be distributed to the shareholders of the Company absolutely. The Company is able to pay all its known liabilities in full. Joint Liquidators: Nicholas James Timpson (IP number 20610) and Howard Smith (IP number 9341) both of Interpath Ltd, 10 Fleet Place, London, EC4M 7RB. For further details contact Marion Anderson on +44 (0) 203 307 4214 or at Marion.Anderson@interpath.com Dated: 7th June 2024 Nicholas James Timpson, Joint Liquidator

55 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Weather Weather Eye Paul Simons Today Rain in northern and western Scotland. Scattered heavy showers elsewhere. Max 19C (66F), min 4C (39F) Five days ahead Around Britain Key: b=bright, c=cloud, d=drizzle, pc=partly cloudy du=dull, f=fair, fg=fog, h=hail, m=mist, r=rain, sh=showers, sl=sleet, sn=snow, s=sun, t=thunder *=previous day **=data not available Temp C Rain mm Sun hr* midday yesterday 24 hrs to 5pm yesterday Aberdeen Aberporth Anglesey Aviemore Barnstaple Bedford Belfast Birmingham Bournemouth Bridlington Bristol Camborne Cardiff Edinburgh Eskdalemuir Glasgow Hereford Herstmonceux Ipswich Isle of Man Isle of Wight Jersey Keswick Kinloss Leeds Lerwick Leuchars Lincoln Liverpool London Lyneham Manchester Margate Milford Haven Newcastle Nottingham Orkney Oxford Plymouth Portland Scilly, St Mary’s Shoreham Shrewsbury Snowdonia Southend South Uist Stornoway Tiree Whitehaven Wick Yeovilton 13 12 13 15 13 15 13 14 15 15 14 13 13 14 10 14 13 16 16 12 15 15 14 12 14 9 12 16 14 17 14 15 16 13 15 15 12 16 13 14 13 15 13 11 17 12 12 13 13 12 14 PC C C S R S R PC C C PC R R C C C C PC PC C C PC C PC C C C PC C C PC C C R C C C C C C D C C R PC C C C C C C 0.0 2.4 2.0 0.0 0.6 0.0 5.6 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.0 17.0 4.4 0.0 0.2 0.2 0.0 0.2 0.0 6.6 0.0 1.0 0.6 0.0 0.2 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.8 0.0 0.8 0.4 0.0 12.6 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 10.0 2.0 10.4 0.0 1.0 6.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 1.6 0.0 0.6 0.0 9.9 7.9 0.1 ** ** 1.1 ** 3.9 ** 4.1 13.2 5.2 4.1 4.0 5.2 ** 2.7 0.8 1.1 ** 12.5 ** 1.9 ** 0.0 3.8 0.3 ** 1.8 3.6 3.9 0.8 ** ** 1.2 0.1 ** ** ** ** 3.0 6.5 ** 1.2 ** 2.3 ** 7.3 ** 6.5 Unsettled with outbreaks of rain and showers, turning a touch warmer from Sunday Tomorrow An unsettled day with a mixture of sunny spells and scattered heavy and perhaps thundery showers. Showers may merge into longer spells of rain in Scotland. Max 19C, min 6C 15 PC PC PC PC S SH B T PC PC DU SH ** S B S S B PC S B S PC PC B PC S S PC PC C S S PC B B B B S PC B PC PC PC S B PC 22 Slight Temperature 23 Moderate Rough 28 (degrees C) 13 16 At 17:00 on Thursday there were eight flood alerts and no warnings in England and no flood alerts or warnings in Wales or Scotland. For further information and updates in England visit flood-warninginformation.service.gov.uk, for Wales naturalresources.wales/flooding and for Scotland SEPA.org.uk 15 21 Aberdeen NORTH SEA Edinburgh Glasgow 23 Sunday 17 Dublin Llandudno 16 16 Sunny spells with the chance of a few showers, some of these may be heavy in eastern areas. Max 22C, min 6C Tuesday 17 Bristol 20 20 Wednesday Sunny spells with the chance of a few showers, heaviest and most widespread across Scotland and northeast England. Driest and sunniest in Wales and Northern Ireland. Max 18C, min 4C 16 17 16 18 The Times weather page is provided by Today Aberdeen Avonmouth Belfast Cardiff Devonport Dover Dublin Falmouth Greenock Harwich Holyhead Hull Leith Liverpool London Bridge Lowestoft Milford Haven Morecambe Newhaven Newquay Oban Penzance Portsmouth Shoreham Southampton Swansea Tees Weymouth 14 5 Cambridge London Brighton CHANNEL scattered thundery showers. Moderate southwesterly winds. Maximum 19C (66F), minimum 7C (45F). SW Scotland, Glasgow, Argyll, Borders, Edinburgh and Dundee, Lake District, IoM, Moray Firth, Cen Highland, Aberdeen: Cloudy with outbreaks of rain in the morning, turning brighter in the afternoon although there will still be a scattering of heavy showers. Gentle south or southwesterly winds. Maximum 16C (61F), minimum 4C (39F). Noon today 22 NW Scotland, NE Scotland, N Isles: A cloudy and wet morning. Mostly cloudy in the afternoon with showery rain. Fresh to strong southeasterly winds in the Northern and Western Isles, light winds elsewhere. Maximum 16C (61F), minimum 7C (45F). Wales, SW Eng, NE Eng, NW Eng, Cen N Eng, Channel Is: Sunny spells with scattered heavy and perhaps thundery showers. Gentle to moderate southwesterly winds. Maximum 18C (64F), minimum 5C (41F). HIGH 1016 07:44 --:-05:20 --:---:-05:26 06:04 11:33 06:05 05:55 04:30 --:-09:06 05:17 07:55 04:41 --:-05:30 05:08 11:37 --:-11:12 05:34 05:19 04:31 --:-10:01 --:-- Ht 3.5 -3.2 --5.3 3.5 4.0 3.1 3.3 4.6 -4.5 7.6 5.9 2.0 -7.5 5.1 5.3 -4.2 3.8 4.8 3.6 -4.6 -- 20:35 13:18 18:07 13:11 12:00 17:44 18:50 23:49 19:25 18:07 17:19 12:18 21:36 17:51 20:04 15:41 12:40 18:05 17:44 --:-12:27 23:36 18:18 17:55 17:16 12:40 22:53 12:48 Ht 3.3 9.9 2.7 9.3 4.3 5.5 3.2 4.2 2.7 3.3 4.3 5.9 4.3 7.2 5.7 2.3 5.2 7.1 5.3 -2.8 4.4 4.0 5.0 3.8 7.2 4.4 1.3 1016 LOW HIGH 1016 HIGH HIGH 1016 1000 LOW 1008 LOW LOW LOW 992 1000 1008 1008 1016 1016 HIGH LOW 1024 HIGH Synoptic situation An occlusion associated with an area of low pressure tracking slowly eastwards across Scotland will bring outbreaks of rain to northern Scotland through today. Elsewhere, a series of troughs and occlusions will bring a day of sunny spells and scattered showers. Some of the showers will be heavy and thundery, especially in southern and eastern England. Explore Jaipur, Agra and New Delhi before a seven-night river cruise on the Ganges. Times+ members can save £300 per person, including airport lounge access. Visit mytimesplus.co.uk/travel 23 -15 Southampton eter Exeter Plymouth Tidal predictions. Heights in metres 18 32 16 15 Tides 0 -5 -10 19 19 18 Outbreaks of rain will spread into Scotland through the day. Sunny spells with the risk of isolated showers elsewhere. A longer spell of rain may push into southern England later. Max 21C, min 5C 41 Oxford 16 21 50 5 18 Birmingham Cardiff CELTIC SEA General situation: Outbreaks of rain in northern and western Scotland. Elsewhere, sunny spells with scattered heavy and perhaps thundery showers. N Ireland, Republic of Ireland: Sunny spells with scattered heavy and perhaps thundery showers. Cloud and rain will spread into the far west later. Gentle to moderate west or southwesterly winds. Maximum 17C (63F), minimum 7C (45F). London, SE Eng, E Anglia, Cen S Eng, Mids, E Eng: Spells of sunshine with 59 10 Nottingham Swansea 19 18 68 15 Sheffield 15 15 Channel Islands 77 20 Norwich 12 Cork 25 Hull 17 17 Shrewsbury 20 19 Manchester Liverpoo Liverpool IRISH SEA Galway 86 rk York 16 15 F 95 30 17 14 16 C 35 Newcastle Carlisle Belfast Save £300 on a luxury cruise holiday to India T&Cs apply. 16 Londonderry ATLANTIC OCEAN Showery rain in Ireland, Scotland and northern England. Elsewhere, a day of sunny spells and scattered showers. Max 20C, min 6C 13 22 Flood alerts and warnings 18 Monday Shetland 15 14 20 22 Madeira 25 Madrid 24 Malaga 23 Mallorca 28 Malta 9 Melbourne Mexico City 27 27 Miami 20 Milan 31 Mombasa 18 Montreal 21 Moscow 31 Mumbai 16 Munich 23 Nairobi 26 Naples New Orleans 32 23 New York 23 Nice 33 Nicosia 14 Oslo 20 Paris 19 Perth 17 Prague 14 Reykjavik 17 Riga Rio de Janeiro 28 42 Riyadh 24 Rome San Francisco 21 11 Santiago 25 São Paulo 24 Seoul 29 Seychelles 33 Singapore St Petersburg 18 14 Stockholm 16 Sydney 32 Tel Aviv 24 Tenerife 23 Tokyo 16 Vancouver 20 Venice 19 Vienna 18 Warsaw Washington 27 18 Zurich Orkney Calm 17 18 B PC S PC S PC PC PC S S B PC C S PC PC PC M S ** S S B R B S S R S B S S PC PC PC B S S PC PC ** PC PC DU S PC S Sea state (mph) 16 All readings local midday yesterday 23 17 37 15 38 33 31 21 31 29 20 18 28 23 18 30 20 20 39 35 9 20 32 14 29 44 39 12 23 23 19 20 22 16 32 28 29 32 18 32 ** 25 24 16 24 21 40 34 16 The world Alicante Amsterdam Athens Auckland Bahrain Bangkok Barbados Barcelona Beijing Beirut Belgrade Berlin Bermuda Bordeaux Brussels Bucharest Budapest Buenos Aires Cairo Calcutta Canberra Cape Town Chicago Copenhagen Corfu Delhi Dubai Dublin Faro Florence Frankfurt Geneva Gibraltar Helsinki Hong Kong Honolulu Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Kuala Lumpur Kyiv Lanzarote Las Palmas Lima Lisbon Los Angeles Luxor Wind speed Highs and lows 24hrs to 5pm yesterday Warmest: Kinlochewe, Ross and Cromarty, 17.9C Coldest: Kinbrace, -1.6C Wettest: Scolton Country Park, Pembrokeshire, 20.6mm Sunniest: Camborne, 13.2hrs* Sun and moon For Greenwich Sun rises: 04.42 Sun sets: 21.18 Moon rises: 13.06 Moon sets: 01.34 Sat Full Moon: June 22 Cold front Warm front Occluded front Trough Hours of darkness Aberdeen Belfast Birmingham Cardiff Exeter Glasgow Liverpool London Manchester Newcastle Norwich Penzance Sheffield 22:35-03:42 22:31-04:16 22:01-04:14 22:01-04:25 21:58-04:30 22:33-04:01 22:11-04:12 21:49-04:12 22:09-04:09 22:16-03:56 21:49-04:00 22:03-04:41 22:05-04:06 O n this day in 1919, Captain John Alcock and Lieutenant Arthur Whitten Brown took off in a First World War biplane from Newfoundland, Canada, in a competition to fly nonstop across the Atlantic. Their twin-engine Vickers Vimy only just managed to clear woodland before turning towards Ireland. A few hours in, the aircraft flew into dense fog that prevented Brown from using his sextant to navigate and he had to rely on dead reckoning. “The fog was very dense, and at times we had to descend to within 300 feet of the sea,” reported Alcock. To make matters worse, the electric generator used for powering their radio and providing heat packed up shortly after take-off. Just after midnight the skies cleared and they used the stars to work out that they were on course, but the good weather did not last. At 3am they flew into a large storm that hurled them around in violent turbulence and drenched the open cockpit in freezing rain, sleet and snow. The aircraft was covered in ice, and it was in danger of stalling and crashing. Alcock struggled to regain control until he made a steep nosedive before levelling out feet above the sea surface, just enough to melt the ice away. At about 8.40am the adventurers finally caught sight of Ireland and the town of Clifden in County Galway. Flying low, they saw what looked like a promising flat green meadow and came into land, but it was a bog. The plane ploughed into thick mud and fell over upright on its nose, but Alcock and Brown escaped unhurt. They had flown 1,890 miles in 16 hours, 12 minutes, averaging 120mph, an extraordinary aviation achievement and a hair-raising venture. It earnt them a prize of £10,000 for the first nonstop transatlantic flight, and was also the longest distance flown by man at the time. The flight became front page news across the world, Alcock and Brown were hailed as heroes, and were later knighted by King George V. Speak directly to one of our forecasters on 09065 777675 8am to 5pm daily (calls are charged at £1.55 plus network extras) weatherquest .co.uk
56 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Sport Tour de France to trial yellow cards Cycling ‘Bookable’ offences include: Elgan Alderman The world’s best cyclists compete for the Yellow Jersey at the Tour de France but they will soon have to avoid receiving a yellow card after the sport’s governing body, the UCI, announced a system to punish those who break the rules. The yellow card will be trialled at this summer’s Tour de France before being introduced in full on August 1. It will not involve the sight of a referee brandishing a physical object, but rather will simply be noted as a violation. Riders, team staff and drivers are all eligible to receive the new penalty. Among the violations are a range of offences, including dangerous sprinting, taking off a mandatory helmet during a race and improper conduct such as assaulting spectators or other riders. The UCI has introduced three measures that will be trialled this year as part of its “SafeR” project, including at “select stages” of the Tour. As well as the yellow card, the rule that gives riders the same time as their original group if they crash or break down during the final 3km of a flat stage will become more flexible, increasing to 5km at the Tour. Thirdly, the maximum time gap between groups will increase from one to three seconds (about 17 to 50 metres), • Taking off a helmet during the race • Disposing of waste outside litter zone • Madison-style hand slings between team-mates or other riders • Holding on to a team car or getting mechanical assistance from vehicle • Sheltering behind vehicle’s slipstream • Irregular feeding (sticky bottle) • Irregular sprinting (includes physical contact, deviating from line, etc) • Deviation from race route • Use of sidewalks/pavements/paths that are not part of the race route • Improper conduct (assaulting spectators or other riders, indecent behaviour) • Interviewing riders during race (includes media vehicle drivers and journalists). meaning non-sprinters can sit further behind a sprint and not sacrifice time in the general classification. Until January 1 next year, the yellow card will lead to riders being docked points and fined. After that, repeat offences could bring suspensions. The proposals range from a seven-day ban, for two yellows in a race, to a 30-day suspension for six in a year. If a rider is suspended during a race, they will be ejected but will retain any results or points gained on that stage. Ready to tumble Team GB yesterday announced the gymnastics squad for this summer’s Paris Games, featuring (from left to right) back row: Alice Kinsella, Luke Whitehouse, Bryony Page, Izzy Songhurst, Georgia-Mae Fenton; middle row: Harry Hepworth, Max Whitlock, Becky Downie, Ruby Evans; front row: Joe Fraser, Jake Jarman, Abi Martin and Zak Perzamanos British runner gets epilepsy diagnosis Athletics Rick Broadbent The British runner Jess Warner-Judd has provisionally had focal epilepsy diagnosed after suffering a seizure during the 10,000m at the European Championships on Tuesday. Warner-Judd, 29, dropped out on the penultimate lap and had to be sedated before spending the night in hospital. The Olympian, who suffered a mid-race seizure in March, wrote on X: “It has been an incredibly tough couple of months. I’m not sure what the future holds. I’m not sure what my year will look like but I’m eager not to let this stop me and be back running soon.” The 10,000m in Rome’s Stadio Olimpico drew some criticism for the overcrowded field and the lack of sponges to cool down runners, but Warner-Judd praised British Athletics’ medical staff for their swift action. “From getting off the bus to the warm-up track, I can’t explain it, something felt off,” WarnerJudd wrote. “I don’t remember much about the race apart from, around 3k in, my head felt incredibly tight, but I stubbornly persevered. With 600m to go I suffered a seizure and was taken to the medical centre. I suffered a further seizure and so was sedated and taken to hospital where I spent the night.” After a disappointing run in last month’s Diamond League in Oslo, Warner-Judd said “it’s just not happening” and revealed she had suffered a seizure during a 10,000m race in California in March. Warner-Judd is the third-fastest British woman over 10,000m behind Eilish McColgan and Paula Radcliffe. Yesterday’s racing results Newbury Going: good to firm 1.45 (1m 2f) 1, Blue Yonder (Miss B Hampson, 14-1); 2, Expert Witness (10-3 fav); 3, Gert Lush (11-1). 13 ran. NR: Sea Of Charm, Stormingin. l, 1 l. A Watson. 2.20 (6f 110yd) 1, Anno Domini (W Buick, 11-8 fav); 2, Wild Clary (8-1); 3, Invited (18-1). 11 ran. l, nk. C Appleby. 2.50 (1m) 1, Charming Whisper (Rossa Ryan, 7-2); 2, Sugarloaf Lenny (15-2); 3, Havanarama (9-1). 10 ran. NR: Show Biz Kid. Nk, ns. P J McBride. 3.25 (1m) 1, Great Acclaim (C Bishop, 7-1); 2, Tayala (7-1); 3, Double Red (33-1). 10 ran. NR: Global Asset. 1 l, nk. Eve Johnson Houghton. 4.00 (1m) 1, Clove Hitch (Oisin Murphy, 4-6 fav); 2, Izipizi (6-1); 3, Fior Di Bosco (8-1). 11 ran. NR: Bernalda. 8l, 8l. A M Balding. 4.30 (7f) 1, Sterling Knight (Rossa Ryan, 18-1); 2, Metaverse (15-2); 3, Zouzanna (6-1). 11 ran. Hd, 1 l. E A L Dunlop. 5.05 (6f) 1, Sixties Chic (C Bishop, 13-2); 2, Starproof (13-2); 3, Whenthedealinsdone (9-1). 12 ran. l, l. J Channon. 5.40 (1m 4f) 1, Wonder Kid (Oisin Murphy, 11-2); 2, Aulis (9-2); 3, Al Khawaneej River (12-1). 10 ran. 4 l, l. H Palmer. 6.15 (7f) 1, Fareedhat El Izz ( (D Muscutt, 17-2); 3, Rich Pulls Pitch ( (11-2). 7 ran. 1 l, 4 l. J Owen. Placepot: £467.70. Quadpot: £72.10. Nottingham Going: good (good to firm in places) 2.10 (6f 18yd) 1, Aomori City (J Doyle, 4-6 fav); 2, Intrusively (4-1); 3, Dr T H G (11-1). 6 ran. l, 12l. C Appleby. 2.40 (1m 75yd) 1, Indemnity (J Doyle, 1-2 fav); 2, Devious Devan (6-1); 3, Washeek (17-2). 10 ran. NR: Pacific Prince. 2l, nk. R Varian. 3.10 (1m 75yd) 1, Post Rider (S De Sousa, 15-8 fav); 2, Delicacy (100-30); 3, Phoenix Duchess (6-1). 11 ran. Nk, l. P & O Cole. 3.45 (1m 75yd) 1, Great Blasket (Hollie Doyle, 3-1); 2, Obelix (18-1); 3, Benacre (11-2). 7 ran. l, nk. Dr R Newland & J Insole. 4.20 (6f 18yd) 1, Lipsink (A Rawlinson, 16-1); 2, Enderman (4-1); 3, Rhythmic Acclaim (2-1 fav). 12 ran. NR: Prince Of Bel Lir. 1l, sh hd. M Appleby. 4.55 (5f 8yd) 1, Sir Benedict (J Hart, 8-1); 2, Mrs Trump (3-1 fav); 3, Toptime (100-30). 11 ran. Nk, ns. Mrs Stella Barclay. 5.30 (1m 2f 50yd) 1, Cryptos Dream (J Doughty, 10-1); 2, Stintino Sunset (4-1 jt-fav); 3, Khangai (9-2). 11 ran. NR: Hurtle, Regency Boy. Nk, hd. A W Carroll. Placepot: £10.40. Quadpot: £8.00. Yarmouth Going: soft 2.00 (7f 3yd) 1, Anif (S Feilden, 12-1); 2, Alexander James (13-2); 3, Realised (7-2). 7 ran. 1 l, 1 l. M Herrington. 2.30 (6f 3yd) 1, Good Good Good (B Loughnane, 7-4); 2, Arkhalia Flynn (15-2); 3, Shibuya Storm (40-1). 6 ran. NR: Rhapsody In Blue. 3 l, hd. G Boughey. 3.00 (1m 6f 17yd) 1, Hidden Pearl (Gina Mangan, 15-2); 2, Henry The Fifth (20-1); 3, Kissininthebackrow (17-2). 9 ran. 2 l, l. J Berry. 3.35 (1m 3yd) 1, Atlantic Gamble (C Shepherd, 7-2); 2, Salamanca City (11-4); 3, Saachi (7-1). 9 ran. NR: Baroque Buoy, Beach Point, Duke Wellington, Heavenly Fire. 1 l, 6l. W J Knight. 4.10 (6f 3yd) 1, Piper’s Fort (L Morris, 12-1); 2, Reine Des Coeurs (7-2); 3, Carmarthen (6-1). 9 ran. NR: Another Jack, Moreginplease. 2 l, nk. A Watson. 4.40 (6f 3yd) 1, Porfin (L Morris, 100-30); 2, Mehigburn (16-1); 3, Bernard Spierpoint (18-1). 9 ran. NR: Autumn Flight. 2l, 1l. P S McEntee. Placepot: £2,810.90. Quadpot: £146.70. Musselburgh Going: good to firm (good in places) 6.10 (1m 2yd) 1, First Alliance (D Tudhope, 9-4); 2, National Interest (10-11 fav); 3, Dain Ma Nut In (15-2). 10 ran. 1 l, hd. K R Burke. 6.40 (1m 7f 217yd) 1, Red Force One (C Beasley, 3-1); 2, Tafsir (6-5 fav); 3, Desert Quest (4-1). 4 ran. 4 l, 3 l. P A Kirby. 7.10 (5f 1yd) 1, Unspoken Love (D Tudhope, 2-11 fav); 2, J Street (10-1); 3, Harswell Dandy (10-1). 5 ran. Nk, 4l. K R Burke. 7.40 (1m 208yd) 1, Rosenzoo (A Mullen, 13-2); 2, Elemental Eye (7-1); 3, Count Palatine (7-1). 5 ran. 1 l, nk. C Johnston. 8.15 (7f 15yd) 1, Patontheback (R Scott, 13-8 fav); 2, Moondial (33-1); 3, Scarriff (5-2). 9 ran. 2 l, l. G Tutty. 8.45 (5f 1yd) 1, Protest Rally (B Garritty, 11-1); 2, Havagomecca (9-4 jt-fav); 3, Golden Rainbow (9-4 jt-fav). 8 ran. 1 l, 1 l. L Bailey. Placepot: £59.80. Quadpot: £11.60. Worcester Going: good 5.50 (2m 4f ch) 1, Calvic (C Hammond, 7-2); 2, Jac Jumper (22-1); 3, Blazing Court (11-1). 9 ran. NR: Noah’s Light, Sunshine Girl. Sh hd, 4 l. S Edmunds. 6.20 (2m 110yd ch) 1, Matterhorn (H Cobden, 3-1); 2, Boombawn (2-1 fav); 3, Parc d’Amour (11-4). 4 ran. 4 l, l. P F Nicholls. 6.50 (2m 7f ch) 1, Tiger Orchid (C Hammond, 15-2); 2, Ajp Kingdom (13-2); 3, Scrum Diddly (6-4 fav). 8 ran. 1l, 1 l. Dr R Newland & J Insole. 7.25 (2m 7f hdle) 1, Bucko’s Boy (G Sheehan, 9-1); 2, Lallygag (7-2); 3, Mr Yeats (12-1). 10 ran. 5 l, 2l. Jamie Snowden. 7.55 (2m hdle) 1, Vocito (S Bowen, 8-11 fav); 2, Jacobs Acre (17-2); 3, Ebony Warrior (14-1). 10 ran. NR: Ghost Pepper, Groundbreaker. 4 l, 6 l. O Murphy. 8.25 (2m hdle) 1, Garitsa Bay (C J Todd, 100-30 jt-fav); 2, Ascension Day (7-2); 3, Quick Of The Night (33-1). 9 ran. NR: Cawthorne Cracker, The Sad Shepherd. Hd, 3 l. I Williams. 9.00 (2m 4f hdle) 1, Giulietta (H Skelton, 7-2 fav); 2, Mays Hill (13-2); 3, Asa (11-2). 11 ran. 11l, l. D Skelton. Placepot: £97.80. Quadpot: £10.40. LICENSED RADIO PARTNER
57 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Racing Sport York Chester 1.50 1.40 Rob Wright Handicap (£10,468: 7f) (16) Rob Wright Handicap (£7,246: 7f) (10) 2.05 Handicap (£6,019: 5f) (16) 6.40 Handicap (£6,621: 1m 6f) (9) 8.05 Handicap Hurdle (£3,697: 2m 7f) (11) 7.15 Handicap (3-Y-O: £5,574: 6f) (8) 2.15 Handicap (3-Y-O: £7,644: 6f) (12) Newton Abbot Rob Wright 2.40 2.25 Maiden Stakes (2-Y-O: £5,400: 7f) (12) Selling Stakes (2-Y-O: £12,885: 6f) (15) 7.50 Handicap (3-Y-O: £6,621: 5f) (7) 2.50 5.35 Novices' Hurdle (£4,805: 2m 1f) (14) Selling Stakes (2-Y-O: £12,740: 7f) (12) 3.15 Handicap (£7,731: 1m 2f) (11) 8.20 3.00 Handicap (£6,283: 1m) (11) Handicap (£18,039: 6f) (13) 3.25 6.10 Handicap Chase (£9,849: 2m) (8) 6.45 Handicap Hurdle Handicap (3-Y-O: £7,644: 1m 2f) (12) 3.50 Handicap (3-Y-O: £6,019: 1m 2f) (10) Market Rasen (£6,680: 2m 2f 110yd) (9) Rob Wright 4.00 3.35 Handicap (Div I: £7,644: 1m) (10) Novice Stakes (2-Y-O: £15,462: 5f) (7) 4.25 Handicap 5.15 (3-Y-O: £4,449: 7f) (12) 4.10 Handicap (£36,078: 1m 2f) (17) 4.35 Handicap Hurdle (£5,281: 2m 5f) (12) 7.20 Handicap Chase (£7,341: 3m 2f) (5) 7.55 Handicap Hurdle Handicap (Div II: £7,644: 1m) (10) 5.00 (£5,800: 3m 2f 105yd) (13) Handicap (3-Y-O: £4,449: 1m 6f) (6) 5.50 Juvenile Hurdle (3-Y-O: £4,084: 2m 1f) (12) 5.10 Handicap (3-Y-O: £7,644: 1m) (13) Goodwood Rob Wright 8.25 4.45 Handicap (£10,468: 1m 2f) (16) 5.30 Fillies' Stakes 6.25 (2-Y-O: £7,851: 6f) (14) Handicap Hurdle (£5,624: 2m 1f) (13) Handicap Chase (£5,677: 2m 5f) (7) Sandown Park Rob Wright 7.00 Handicap Hurdle (£5,281: 2m 1f) (7) 9.00 Open NH Flat Race (£3,812: 2m 1f) (9) 1.30 Novice Stakes 6.05 Handicap (3-Y-O: £5,574: 1m 2f) (13) (2-Y-O: £5,400: 5f) (12) 7.35 Handicap Chase (£5,677: 2m 1f) (7)
58 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Sport Tennis Raducanu unveils lethal new serve E Raducanu (GB) 6 6 D Snigur (Ukraine) 2 2 Taking chances on serve In her two matches on grass this season, Emma Raducanu has doubled her ace percentage Ace percentage Hard 3.6% Clay 3.6% Grass 8.7% Source: Opta John Westerby Emma Raducanu battled illness and blustery conditions to book her place in the quarter-finals of the Rothesay Open in Nottingham, overcoming Daria Snigur, the world No 127 from Ukraine, 6-2, 6-2 in 79 minutes. Raducanu, the world No 209, coughed and spluttered her way through much of the contest, but said that she was merely suffering from the type of low-level illness familiar to many people at this stage of a damp summer. She will now face either Fran Jones or Ashlyn Krueger for a place in the semi-final, where she could meet Katie Boulter, the British No 1. At the start of the grass-court season, her first for two years after missing last summer to recover from surgery, Raducanu, 21, was able to point to real signs of progress after her victory over Snigur. The first relates to the potency of her first serve, which she has been working hard to improve in recent months. She hit 11 aces, elbowed her way out of some tight corners with punchy first serves, and reached speeds of 111mph. “The serve is very important, we’ve been practising and I’m pleased to see the rewards in competition,” she said. “I don’t look at the speed gun, but when I raise my game, like at break point down, it’s nice to get a couple of free points a game; it makes a huge difference. At the start of the year, I don’t think I was able to get that.” While her ranking has slipped after her eight-month spell on the sidelines last year, the 2021 US Open champion is still measuring herself in anticipation of future contests against the world’s best players. “I’ve realised when playing top opponents, like Iga [Swiatek] or Aryna [Sabalenka], you need a first serve to play them. They’re very comfortable holding serve and if you don’t have one yourself then it’s very difficult to be on a level playing field.” After coming to terms with a breeze that made ball-tossing tricky, Raducanu began to find her range with her serve and developed the happy knack of producing her best when it was most needed. When Snigur, 22, had two break points in the fourth game of the first set, Raducanu responded with three consecutive pinpoint first serves. In the second set, leading 3-2 with a service break, she faced two more break points. Snigur was unable to return serve on the first and the second was another ace. She then broke Snigur again and held serve to earn her passage to a second quarter-final of the season. The other area of progress that gave Raducanu particular pleasure was the way in which she adapted to the windy, First-serve percentage 65.7% 65.7% 58.7% Points won behind first serve 63.2% 63.8% 70.4% Raducanu had to contend with blustery conditions in Nottingham which affected her ball toss but eventually got to grips with the wind to seal her quarter-final place chilly conditions. At the Australian Open in January, she had faced Yang Wafan, the world No 94, on a similarly blustery day in Melbourne and lost in three sets as her opponent adjusted more smartly. In Nottingham, Raducanu felt that she was learning how to tailor her game to the conditions. “Dealing with the wind, dealing with rain, with [umpiring] calls, it’s all part of it,” she said. “In Australia, it was incredibly windy and I don’t think I managed it too well. It showed more maturity, my performance today. To overcome [the conditions] and be in a better position, I’m proud of my development.” She had experienced frustration with umpiring calls during her first-round match two days earlier — she had claimed she was playing “two versus one”, against Ena Shibahara and the umpire — and while there were occasional quibbles with line calls here, they were mostly dealt with in good humour. On one occasion, when she felt a Snigur serve had drifted long, she pointed out to the umpire that a member of the crowd agreed with her. “I have my line judge there,” she said. “I’m not sure we’ll be using them,” the umpire responded. Raducanu had spoken this week about how healthy she was feeling, but she has since picked up a minor bug, and was coughing into her towel at the change of ends. “I’m a bit sick, but who isn’t?” she said. “It doesn’t matter.” In the quarter-final, she will either face Jones, her close friend and fellow British player, who is ranked No 249, or Krueger, the American world No 70. Jones, 23, was within two points of beating Krueger when the rain came down in Nottingham, serving at 6-5 up in the third set, only to be made to wait. “She’s someone I’ve become close to and she’s playing great tennis,” Raducanu said of Jones. “We’re similar in the way we think, we both have interests outside and our conversations aren’t only on tennis, which is refreshing. That’s one of the main reasons we’ve become close.” Meanwhile, Cameron Norrie suffered his latest setback when he was beaten 6-1, 4-6, 4-6 by Jack Pinnington Jones, the 21-year-old from Surrey who is ranked No 773 in the world, in the second round of the ATP Challenger event in Nottingham. The defeat means Jack Draper will overtake Norrie and become the new British No 1 next week. Wimbledon rejects Murray’s plea for earlier Centre Court starts Stuart Fraser Tennis Correspondent Wimbledon organisers have rejected calls from Andy Murray and Novak Djokovic for an earlier start time on Centre Court. After a review of scheduling at last year’s tournament, the All England Club has decided that the three-match session on the main court will again commence at 1.30pm this year. This runs the risk of the match in the third slot being postponed until the next day because of an 11pm curfew imposed by Merton council. Djokovic and Murray were both affected by the scheduling last year, with their respective fourth-round and second-round matches spreading over two days. Murray also made clear his concerns about changing playing conditions for non-weather-related reasons, with the last match often taking place outdoors for the first part and under the floodlit roof for the second part after sunset. The feedback from two of the sport’s most high-profile players was dismissed yesterday by Wimbledon chiefs, however, who insist that the scheduling format does not require a change. Although never acknowledged by the club in public, it is well known in tennis circles that the later start time of 1.30pm was introduced in 2022 to allow for more primetime coverage on the BBC. “We’re very happy with what we concluded,” Sally Bolton, the All England Club chief executive, said. “We’ve reviewed it, we’ve thought long and hard, looked at the data around the length of matches and the trends that are occurring in that space. We’re very confident and happy with the decision we have made.” At least Murray, 37, is set to receive a fitting tribute from the club if he decides to proceed with his plan to retire this year. Organisers have acknowledged that “plans are in place” to honour Nadal will miss Wimbledon to focus on preparing for the Paris Olympics the two-times singles champion should he indicate to them that this is his final Wimbledon. The suggestion from one reporter of a statue was not confirmed but there is clearly a ceremony of some sort ready to go ahead if needed. “We’re ready and prepared but ultimately it is Andy’s decision,” Bolton said. “We have plans that are very adaptable.” Meanwhile, Rafael Nadal has confirmed that he has withdrawn from Wimbledon to focus on his preparation for the Olympics. The 38-year-old had in effect announced this after his firstround exit at the French Open but finally went through the process yesterday of removing his name from the entry list. Nadal will return to action on clay at the Bastad Open from July 15 before heading to Paris. “We believe that the best for my body is not to change surface and keep playing on clay until then,” Nadal wrote on social media. “It’s for this reason that I will miss playing this year at Wimbledon. I am saddened not to be able to live the great atmosphere of that amazing event that will always be in my heart, and to be with all the British fans that always gave me great support.”
the times | Friday June 14 2024 59 S2 US Open Sport Bogey-free McIlroy looks in mood to end drought Early first-round scores Tom Kershaw Pinehurst There are several words to describe Rory McIlroy’s travails at major championships over the past decade but boring is not one of them. There have been dramatic and dreary collapses, daring but unfulfilled comebacks, and even the occasional bout of tears as his decade-long drought has endured. This US Open was bound to be no exception after news emerged that the Northern Irishman had reconciled with his wife, Erica, shortly after he declared that he has never felt closer to the cusp of catharsis. You can only admire McIlroy’s optimism, but nobody was falling for his other claim that he would play “boring” golf this week. A five under par round of 65 was ignited by a chip-in from 22 yards at the 5th hole. There was a 329yard stinger at the 12th, a club thrown at the 13th after a fine shot that settled on the green. It was a measured bogey-free display to top the leaderboard, but taming Pinehurst’s treacherous terrain is not a dull task. Patrick Cantlay is not so well regarded for an effusive personality, but the American will go into the second round tied for the lead with McIlroy after his own magnificent 65. Ludvig Aberg occupied solo second after yet another round that evidenced his preternatural composure. Bryson DeChambeau was among the late starters and had preached a similar narrative about playing conservatively. The 2020 champion barely missed a fairway either, but averaging over 330 yards off the tee did not want for excitement and he should be in contention barring a late fiasco. Matthieu Pavon, aiming to become the first Frenchman to win a major since Arnaud Massy in 1907, is two shots back, while Tyrrell Hatton and Martin Kaymer, who so spectacularly defied Pinehurst’s peril in 2014, were progressing well at two and one under par respectively. The prospect of carnage on the putting greens had loomed heavily over this corner of North Carolina, with the USGA insisting they would be “tough United States unless stated * denotes amateur Par 70 65 P Cantlay, R McIlroy (N Ire). 66 L Aberg (Swe). 67 M Pavon (Fr). 68 T Finau. 69 S Bennett, C Conners (Can), S García (Sp), Kim Seong-hyeon (S Kor), A Rai (Eng). 70 Z Blair, E Grillo (Arg), R Henley, S Jäger (Ger), B Koepka, L McAllister, C Morikawa, R Rock (Eng), I Salinda, *N Shipley, D Thompson, H English, X Schauffele. 71 R Fowler, M Greyserman, Kim Si-woo (S Kor), W Mack III, S Power (Ire), C Smith (Aus), T Widing (Swe), C Bezuidenhout (SA), Kim Joo-hyung (S Kor), J Day (Aus), S Scheffler. 72 N Echavarria (Col), A Eckroat, N Hoejgaard (Den), *B Kim, F Kjettrup (Den), M Kuchar, J Lower, M Meissner, E Molinari (It), G Woodland, B Thompson (Eng). 73 D Berger, S Burns, M Fitzpatrick (Eng), R Fox (NZ), C Jarvis (SA), C Jenkins, Lee Min-woo (Aus), F Molinari (It), *O Morales (Mex), J Rose (Eng), K Kitayama, A Svensson (Can). 74 An Byeong-hun (S Kor), D Burmester (SA), L Glover, A Hadwin (Can), J Herman, Im Sungjae (S Kor), D Johnson, T McKibbin (N Ire), T Woods, J Scrivener (Aus), M Hubbard, B Hossler. 75 *A McCulloch (Can), W Simpson, W Zalatoris, E Chacarra (Sp), *W Williams, C Hadley, V Perez (Fr). but fair”. Phil Mickelson might beg to differ after a miserable round of 79 that left him tied in dead last. Collin Morikawa would also be forgiven for feeling aggrieved after his bunker shot trickled past the 9th hole and finally came to a rest 43 yards away on the fairway, but this was a great test that demanded far more poise and imagination from the world’s best players than the soft conditions at the US PGA Championship. Cantlay might have drawn inspiration from his close friend Xander Schauffele’s victory there, even if it meant he arguably inherited the millstone of being the best current player yet to win a major. He has an underwhelming record at all four and Can- There was no shortage of drama in McIlroy’s round but he offered hope that he can finally break his major drought with a 65 tlay’s form has wavered this season as he has become an increasingly influential voice on the PGA Tour’s policy board, but beautiful ball-striking was married with a deft touch on and around the small and fiercely undulating greens. “I’ve been working really hard on my game, and usually when you make just a couple changes and you’re working really hard, it’s just a matter of time,” Cantlay said. “The course played pretty difficult, but I drove it well and I left it in the right spots most of the time.” Schauffele started less convincingly with three errant drives eliciting bogeys on the front nine but he recovered to remain in contention at even par alongside Brooks Koepka, for whom courses set up to inflict misery have always proven a happy hunting ground, most famously at Shinnecock Hills in 2018, when the USGA was accused of “losing the greens” and Mickelson infamously putted his ball while it was still moving in protest. Scottie Scheffler was also out of sorts and made just two birdies in a round of 71 but his talent means he is certainly within reach. Robert Rock was playing his first US Open since 2012 and harboured few expectations after making it through 36- hole qualifying, but the 47-year-old En- fight to make it to the weekend, when glishman somehow managed to finish the greens might well become even one shot ahead of the world No 1. The more unforgiving. The contrast to feverish obsession with Tiger Woods’ Aberg, their Ryder Cup team-mate in ability to roll back the years did not pro- Rome, was somewhat absurd given this duce as satisfactory a result, though. A is still only his third appearance in a lively crowd cooed after his every shot, major — a fact easily forgotten given all but there were more of them than the his success in less than a year as a 48-year-old would have hoped after a professional, including a runner-up bright start during which he clung finish at the Masters in April. His to the first page of the leaderrelentless accuracy almost board. Woods drove the ball does provide the illusion of well but sloppy approach “boring golf”, with the Day Two play betrayed the fact this Swede failing to miss a was only the eighth comfairway in his round, and US Open, second petitive round he has comthat positioning off the tee round pleted this year and a round TV: Sky Sports, from and mental discipline of 74 left him in stark danger could make him particular12.30pm of missing the cut. ly difficult to dislodge. “The complexes are just so “It’s really hard, especially difficult and so severe that there arwhen you have a wedge in your en’t that many scores that are low. It’s hand where normally you would go at hard to get the ball close,” Woods said. the pin, but you can’t really do that here. “In most golf courses you play, you hit It’s the US Open, it’s supposed to be shots into where it’s feeding off of slopes hard,” he said. into flags, where it’s collecting. Here, It will become even harder, with everything is repelling. If you miss it on Woods’s description of the week as a the short side, you know it’s an auto- “war of attrition” prescient. McIlroy matic bogey or higher.” nullified it brilliantly for 18 holes here, Past champions Matt Fitzpatrick and but history assures there will be no Justin Rose did not fare much better shortage of drama, heroics and heartwith a pair of 73s and now also face a ache over the next three rounds. Results Fixtures Football International matches Ecuador (2) 3 Bolivia Valencia 18 Yeboah 25 Caicedo 70 (pen) Terceros 88 United States (1) 1 Brazil Pulisic 26 60,016 Rodrygo 17 (0) 1 (1) 1 Cycling Tour of Switzerland Leading positions: Fifth stage (Ambrì to Carì, 148.6km): 1, A Yates (GB, UAE Team Emirates) 3hr 54min 37sec; 2, J Almeida (Por, UAE Team Emirates) at 5sec behind; 3, E Bernal (Col, INEOS Grenadiers) 16; 4, M Riccitello (US, Israel-Premier Tech) 18; 5, E Mas (Sp, Movistar Team) 22. Other British 6, O Onley (Team dsm-firmenich PostNL) 54; 7, T Pidcock (INEOS Grenadiers) same time; 18, F Pickering (Bahrain Victorious) 2min 34sec; 23, J Shaw (EF Education-EasyPost) 3:06; 33, H Wood (Cofidis) 5:16; 44, B Tulett (Team Visma Lease a Bike) 8:37; 55, E Hayter (INEOS Grenadiers) 10:12. Overall 1, Yates 15:44:35; 2, Almeida at 35sec behind; 3, Bernal 1:11; 4, Mas 1:49; 5, Riccitello 1:53. Other British 7, Onley 2:21; 8, Pidcock 2:46; 22, Pickering 5:41; 37, Hayter 13:14; 38, Tulett 13:36; 46, Shaw 17:18. Tennis ATP Boss Open Stuttgart: Second round B Nakashima (US) bt R Gasquet (Fr) 6-3 6-4; J Struff (Ger) bt A Rinderknech (Fr) 6-4 7-6 (7-0); M Berrettini (It) bt D Shapovalov (Can) 6-4 6-4; J Duckworth (Aus) bt B Shelton (US) 7-6 (7-5) 4-6 6-3. Libema Open ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands: Second round: Men S Korda (US) bt L Nardi (It) 7-5, 7-5; T Paul(US) bt A Popyrin (Aus) 5-7, 6-4, 6-3; A Vukic (Aus) bt K Khachanov (Russ) 6-4, 5-7, 7-6 (7-4); A de Minaur (Aus) bt Z Bergs (Bel) 7-5, 6-4; M Raonic (Can) bt R Bautista Agut (Sp) 4-6, 6-2, 7-5. Women E Alexandrova (Russ) bt E Bektas (US) 7-5, 6-4; D Galfi (Hun) bt V Kudermetova (Russ) 6-3 3-6, 7-5; A Krunic (Ser) bt J Pegula (US) 7-6 (7-3), 6-7 (3-7), 6-4; L Samsonova (Russ) bt C Naef (Switz) 7-5, 6-2; R Montgomery (US) bt J Niemeier (Ger) 6-3, 6-3. WTA Rothesay Open Lexus Tennis Centre, Nottingham: Second round E Raducanu (GB) bt D Snigur (Ukr) 6-2, 6-2; M Frech (Pol) bt T Maria (Ger) 3-6, 6-3, 6-1; F Jones (GB) leads A Krueger (US) 6-4, 4-6, 6-5 — play suspended, rain. Football European Championship: Group A Germany v Scotland (8.0, Allianz Arena, Munich). Outlaws (5.30). South group: Chelmsford Essex v Sussex Sharks (7.0). Utilita Bowl Hampshire Hawks v Middlesex (7.0). Taunton Somerset v Kent Spitfires. Kia Oval Surrey v Gloucestershire. Cricket Rugby league T20 World Cup: Group A: Lauderhill United States v Ireland (3.30). Vitality Blast (6.30 unless stated): North Group: Edgbaston Birmingham Bears v Yorkshire Vikings. Derby Derbyshire Falcons v Northants Steelbacks (7.0). Leicester Leicestershire Foxes v Lancashire Lightning. Worcester Worcestershire Rapids v Notts Betfred Super League (8.0): Castleford Tigers v Wigan Warriors; Hull Kingston Rovers v Huddersfield Giants; Warrington Wolves v Salford Red Devils. Tennis Lexus Nottingham Tennis Centre Rothesay Open.
60 S1 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Sport T20 World Cup England exploit painful gulf in class Mike Atherton Group B scoreboard Chief Cricket Correspondent, Antigua Oman (balls) †Pratik Athavale c Salt b Archer 5 (3) Kashyap Prajapati c Livingstone b Wood 9 (16) *Aqib Ilyas c Jacks b Archer 8 (10) Zeeshan Maqsood c and b Wood 1 (5) Khalid Kail st Buttler b Rashid 1 (3) Ayaan Khan b Wood 1 (5) Shoaib Khan c Buttler b Archer 11 (23) Mehran Khan c Ali b Rashid 0 (2) Fayyaz Butt b Rashid 2 (7) Kaleemullah b Rashid 5 (5) Bilal Khan not out 0 (1) Extras (w 4) 4 Total (13.2 overs) 47 Fall of wickets 1-6, 2-16, 3-24, 4-25, 5-25, 6-32, 7-33, 8-36, 9-47. Bowling Topley 3-0-12-0; Archer 3.2-1-12-3; Wood 3-0-12-3; Rashid 4-0-11-4. England (balls) P D Salt b B Khan 12 (3) *†J C Buttler not out 24 (8) W G Jacks c Prajapati b Kaleemullah 5 (7) J M Bairstow not out 8 (2) Extras (nb 1) 1 Total (2 wkts, 3.1 overs) 50 H C Brook, M M Ali, L S Livingstone, J C Archer, A U Rashid, M A Wood and R J W Topley did not bat. Fall of wickets 1-12, 2-20. Bowling B Khan 2-0-36-1; Kaleemullah 1-0-10-1; Butt 0.1-0-4-0. P W L T NR Pts NRR Australia (Q) 3 3 0 0 0 6 3.58 Scotland 3 2 0 0 1 5 2.16 England 3 1 1 0 1 3 3.08 Namibia 3 1 2 0 0 2 -2.10 Oman 4 0 4 0 0 0 -3.06 England v Oman North Sound (England won toss): England (2pts) beat Oman by eight wickets In need of a mighty boost to their net run rate, England found the perfect opponents in hapless Oman, who were ripe for the plucking and were totally outclassed. On a hot and breezy day at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium in North Sound, England bowled Oman out in 13.2 overs for only 47, the fourth-lowest score at a T20 World Cup, and finished the match in time for a sundowner. Jos Buttler, the England captain, had spoken about concentrating on the win first and foremost and not being consumed by run rates, but at the halfway mark, the contest was done. It was only a matter, then, of how quickly England could complete the task and how far they could move the dial on their net run rate, both of which were achieved to satisfaction. In the end it took them only 19 balls to knock off the runs, amid much heaving and swinging, with the result that their net run rate moved a long way into positive territory, from minus 1.8 to 3.081 — superior to Scotland’s 2.164. The task in front of them has become much more straightforward now. Over in St Lucia, Scotland’s rum punches might have tasted a touch sour. The gulf in class was painful to watch. Oman had started their tournament brightly, losing on a Super Over to Namibia, and had held Australia in check for a considerable time in their second match. But against Scotland in Antigua there were clear signs of trouble and here they had nothing to offer in the face of some quick and hostile bowling from Mark Wood and Jofra Archer and some teasing leg spin from Adil Rashid. Those three shared the ten wickets to fall. England were not quite pitch perfect in the opening powerplay, when four wickets fell, with Moeen Ali dropping a straightforward catch at first slip, but they gave themselves a near-perfect start. The wickets fell to the two quicks, Archer and Wood, who enjoyed a firmer pitch than in Barbados, one that offered more pace and bounce. Rashid was the pick of the bowlers, taking four for 11 Buttler hit 24 runs from eight balls as England’s batsmen set about scoring quickly to improve the net run rate There was no need for Will Jacks’ off spin on this occasion, nor any need for cutters and, of course, there was little in the opposition ranks to worry them. Retaining Wood over Chris Jordan was a positive call and the right one. Jordan offers greater depth of batting, and brilliant fielding, but associate nations such as Oman rarely see bowlers who bowl at more than 145kph, as Wood does, and they were clearly rattled by the pace here. Oman’s captain Aqib Ilyas admitted as much. “Archer and Wood are the fastest bowlers in cricket and in the back of your mind is that they might hit you,” he said. “We tried to take them on too early.” Only Shoaib Khan at No 7 made it into double figures, scoring 11, on a sorrylooking scorecard. Reece Topley had returned to the team in place of Jordan and looked in good order with the new ball, finding swing from a strong cross-breeze. Leftarmers have gone well in the tournament so far, with Fazalhaq Farooqi of Afghanistan looking among the most threatening bowlers at the start of an innings. Topley went wicketless, but bowled well enough to be given three overs in the opening powerplay, and should retain his place against Namibia tomorrow. Further evidence of England’s aggressive intent came with the catches taken by Phil Salt and Jacks off Archer, both men being tight in on the singles to narrow the angle, at cover and backward point respectively. When Archer gave way, Wood came steaming in, taking a simple return catch from Zeeshan Maqsood off his first ball, before bowling Ayaan Khan, to pocket his 50th wicket in T20 internationals. Wood’s jig of delight after his first wicket spoke of a man relieved to see an upturn in fortunes. Buttler was then able to call upon a classic combination when Rashid replaced Topley. Leg spin at one end, high pace at the other. Rashid found drift on the breeze and sharp spin from the dry surface and looked a constant threat, taking wickets in his opening two overs and bowling through for figures of 4-0- 11-4. His final two wickets were taken with perfectly pitched googlies that spun back to clatter the stumps. Buttler said afterwards that “with the bat we just wanted to be ultra-positive” and the intent was clear to see when Salt smashed his first two balls for six, before swinging across the line to Bilal Khan and getting his off stump flattened. He waltzed off with a cool strike rate of 400, to be replaced by Jacks who skied a catch from his seventh ball. The cricket had a slight air of madness at this point, with England’s batsmen swinging and carving at every delivery. It was left to Buttler, who has exuded an air of confidence and relaxation all week, to apply the finishing touch. He made 24 in eight balls, including four fours and a six, and took 22 from Bilal’s second over. Jonny Bairstow completed the win with a pull to the square-leg boundary and the players walked off at 4.50pm local time after a game that lasted fewer than a hundred balls. It was a totally one-sided contest, but a contest was precisely what England did not want in the situation they found themselves. What they wanted was a facile win and that is what they got. It’s Namibia next tomorrow and a win in that game — and a win for Australia, who have never lost to an associate nation in a World Cup, against Scotland — will ensure England progress to the super eight stage. England remain very much in the hunt. Cricket scoreboards T20 World Cup: Grouo C West Indies v New Zealand Tarouba, Trinidad and Tobago (New Zealand won toss): West Indies (2pts) beat New Zealand by 13 runs West Indies (balls) B A King c Conway b Neesham 9 (12) J Charles b Boult 0 (5) †N Pooran c Conway b Southee 17 (12) R L Chase c Ravindra b Ferguson 0 (3) *R Powell c Conway b Southee 1 (5) S E Rutherford not out 68 (39) A J Hosein c Neesham b Santner 15 (17) A D Russell c Ferguson b Boult 14 (7) R Shepherd lbw b Ferguson 13 (13) A S Joseph b Boult 6 (6) G Motie not out 0 (1) Extras (lb 3, w 3) 6 Total (9 wkts, 20 overs) 149 Fall of wickets 1-1, 2-20, 3-21, 4-22, 5-30, 6-58, 7-76, 8-103, 9-112. Bowling Boult 4-1-16-3; Southee 4-0-21-2; Ferguson 4-0-27-2; Neesham 4-0-27-1; Phillips 1-0-9-0; Santner 2-0-27-1; Mitchell 1-0-19-0. New Zealand (balls) †D P Conway c Chase b Hosein 5 (8) F H Allen c Russell b Joseph 26 (23) R Ravindra c Russell b Motie 10 (13) *K S Williamson c Pooran b Motie 1 (2) D J Mitchell b Motie 12 (13) G D Phillips c Powell b Joseph 40 (33) J D S Neesham c King b Joseph 10 (11) M J Santner not out 21 (12) T G Southee c and b Joseph 0 (1) T A Boult c Chase b Russell 7 (4) L H Ferguson not out 0 (0) Extras (lb 1, w 3) 4 Total (9 wkts, 20 overs) 136 Fall of wickets 1-20, 2-34, 3-39, 4-54, 5-63, 6-85, 7-108, 8-108, 9-117. Bowling Hosein 4-0-21-1; Shepherd 3-0-36-0; Russell 4-0-30-1; Joseph 4-0-19-4; Motie 4-0-25-3; Chase 1-0-4-0. P W L T NR Pts NRR West Indies 3 3 0 0 0 6 2.60 Afghanistan 2 2 0 0 0 4 5.22 Uganda 3 1 2 0 0 2 -4.22 PNG 2 0 2 0 0 0 -0.43 NZ 2 0 2 0 0 0 -2.42 Group D Bangladesh v Netherlands Kingstown, St Vincent (Netherlands won toss): Bangladesh (2pts) beat Netherlands by 25 runs Bangladesh (balls) Tanzid Hasan c De Leede (26) b Van Meekeren 35 *Najmul Shanto c Singh b Dutt 1 (3) †Litton Das c Engelbrecht b Dutt 1 (2) Shakib Al Hasan not out 64 (46) Towhid Hridoy b Pringle 9 (15) Mahmudullah c Engelbrecht b Van Meekeren 25 (21) Jaker Ali not out 14 (7) Extras (b 4, lb 3, w 3) 10 Total (5 wkts, 20 overs) 159 Rishad Hossain, Taskin Ahmed, Tanzim Hasan Sakib and Mustafizur Rahman did not bat. Fall of wickets 1-3, 2-23, 3-71, 4-89, 5-130. Bowling Kingma 2-0-20-0; Dutt 4-0-17-2; Van Meekeren 4-0-15-2; Van Beek 4-0-43-0; De Leede 3-0-31-0; Pringle 3-0-26-1. Netherlands (balls) M Levitt c Hridoy b Ahmed 18 (16) M P O’Dowd c and b Sakib 12 (16) V Singh st Das b Mahmudullah 26 (16) S A Engelbrecht c Sakib b Hossain 33 (22) *†S A Edwards c Ali b Rahman 25 (23) B F W de Leede st Das b Hossain 0 (2) L V van Beek c and b Hossain 2 (3) T J G Pringle b Ahmed 1 (10) A Dutt not out 15 (12) Extras (lb 1, w 1) 2 Total (8 wkts, 20 overs) 134 P A van Meekeren and V J Kingma did not bat. Fall of wickets 1-22, 2-32, 3-69, 4-111, 5-111, 6-117, 7-117, 8-134. Bowling Rahman 4-0-12-1; Sakib 3-0-23-1; Ahmed 4-0-30-2; Al Hasan 4-0-29-0; Hossain 4-0-33-3; Mahmudullah 1-0-6-1. P W L T NR Pts NRR SA 3 3 0 0 0 6 0.60 Bangladesh 3 2 1 0 0 4 0.48 Netherlands 3 1 2 0 0 2 -0.41 Nepal 2 0 1 0 1 1 -0.54 Sri Lanka 3 0 2 0 1 1 -0.78 Vitality Blast: South group Middlesex v Essex Lord’s (Middlesex won toss): Essex (2pts) beat Middlesex by 16 runs (DLS Method) Essex (balls) †A M Rossington c Cracknell (14) b Cornwell 20 D Elgar c and b Hollman 28 (17) M S Pepper b Cornwell 23 (12) J M Cox not out 31 (19) P I Walter b Higgins 18 (14) M J J Critchley not out 0 (0) Extras (lb 3, w 6) 9 Total (4 wkts, 12.4 overs) 129 D R Sams, *S R Harmer, L M Benkenstein, S Snater and A P Beard did not bat. Fall of wickets 1-24, 2-69, 3-83, 4-121. Bowling Helm 2-0-16-0; Cullen 3-0-33-0; Cornwell 2.4-0-29-2; Brookes 2-0-22-0; Hollman 2-0-20-1; Higgins 1-0-6-1. Middlesex (balls) *S S Eskinazi c Elgar b Walter 15 (10) M D E Holden not out 41 (24) R F Higgins c Harmer b Walter 2 (2) M K Andersson not out 0 (1) Extras (lb 1, w 2, nb 2) 5 Total (2 wkts, 6 overs) 63 J B Cracknell, †J L B Davies, L B K Hollman, T G Helm, H J H Brookes, B C Cullen and N B Cornwell did not bat. Fall of wickets 1-35, 2-38. Bowling Sams 2-0-20-0; Snater 1-0-15-0; Beard 1-0-11-0; Walter 2-0-16-2. Glamorgan v Hampshire Hawks Sophia Gardens (abandoned, rain): 1pt each Somerset Sussex Surrey Essex Glamorgan Hampshire Kent Gloucestershire Middlesex P 5 4 4 5 5 5 4 4 6 W 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 L 2 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 5 T NR Pts R/R 0 0 6 0.81 0 0 6 0.75 0 0 6 0.59 0 0 6 0.20 0 1 5 0.14 0 1 5 -0.47 0 0 4 -1.15 0 0 2 -0.69 0 0 2 -2.15
61 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Euro 2024 Sport ‘Pressure is all on England and I’m in the form of my life’ Aleksandar Mitrovic tells Alyson Rudd about swapping Fulham for Saudi Arabia – and issues a warning to group C rivals T o speak to Aleksandar Mitrovic is to be left with the uncomfortable notion that Serbia are far from ideal opposition for England’s opening group game at the European Championship. The former Fulham striker, who has just finished the season unbeaten with Al-Hilal in the Saudi Pro League, paints a picture of a team who have matured together and who are passionate about making a mark at their first Euros as an independent nation. Just as England were undone by Iceland’s cohesion, intimacy and energy in their final preparation game last week, so they could find Serbia to be annoyingly tenacious. “If you had to choose the hardest game to play then I think that would be England,” Mitrovic says. “Consider the talent, their history. It’s the toughest game you could ask for but it’s a challenge for us. We look forward to it. We have nothing to lose. “England, for sure, are favourites, and the pressure is on them to open the Euros in the best possible way. We will try to give our best to give them a hard time and try to win the game, to make a statement that we want to do something big that nobody has done before us. You want to make history. This is why you fight hard to be in the Euros, to play big teams.” When I ask Mitrovic to describe each of his team-mates, he offers a mix of humour and earnestness, but the overall impression is one of Dragan Stojkovic’s team being a family united by patriotism, hard work and a deep understanding of what each individual player is capable of bringing to the whole. The 29-year-old believes Serbia can reach the knockouts in Germany. “Of course, we have a lot of talent, we have done some amazing things together,” Mitrovic says. “This is our third big competition together after the World Cup in Russia, the World Cup in Qatar and now the Euros for the first time as an independent Serbia [they reached the quarter-finals as Serbia and Montenegro in 2000]. “We are confident. If we play like we know we can play we can do big things. We showed that against Portugal [Mitrovic scored the winner away from home to secure Serbia’s place at the 2022 World Cup], we showed a glimpse of it against Brazil [in Qatar when Serbia defended well for much of the game before losing 2-0]. Hopefully we will not have injuries like we had in the last World Cup [where they went out at the group stage]. It’s already history for us but hopefully we can do more.” Recent history has been controversial for Mitrovic, who had to force through a move away from Fulham last summer, much to the dismay of the supporters for whom he had become a cult figure after almost six years at the club. The striker was viewed as simply one of the many players seduced by the big salaries on offer in Saudi Arabia, but Mitrovic argues that he needed a change of pace. Does he regret, however, the manner in which he departed west London? “Not at all, it was not up to me,” he says. “I had given the club everything. I stayed a long time there, even when we got relegated and then promoted. When a lot of players were leaving I was one who stayed. I had nothing left to give. Mitrovic, who scored 28 goals for Al-Hilal this season, is confident that Serbia can reach the knockouts in Germany “It was time for change for me and my family. It was not just about Fulham; when you play a lot of years in the best league in the world you are just mentally and physically exhausted. One year in England is like two or three years in a different league in the world. “That’s why the Premier League is the hardest league in the world, and it was time for me to change. I felt I gave everything to Fulham — I had nothing left to give. I felt Al-Hilal was the right move. It was time to go somewhere where I was going to fight for trophies and score a lot of goals and play for a team who are going to create a lot of chances.” This certainly came true. Mitrovic’s tally of 28 goals was second only to Cristiano Ronaldo’s 35 last season and Al-Hilal won the league, the Saudi Super Cup and the King Cup, leaving Mitrovic with the sense that he is in the form to excel in Germany. “So far, I’ve felt the best I’ve felt in my life — physically and mentally,” he says. “I play a lot more games than I used to play at Fulham and here I play in the best team and I am scoring a lot of goals. I play almost every game. If you put that with a lot of winning then I can continue to play like that for my country. “When you start winning games, you build confidence. The more you win, the confidence grows.” Mitrovic has settled well in Riyadh. His children attend the American International School and after each Al-Hilal match, Freed from Desire is played so that the fans can sing “Mitro’s on fire”. “To be honest, we love it, we live in a compound and the life is totally different to England,” he says. “If I’m not training, I’m by the pool relaxing, life is really nice. “In England, especially in London, you get more privacy when you go out. Here they are obsessed with football and really passionate. Wherever you go you are recognised and when one person sees you everyone sees you and wants to take selfies. “But it’s part of the job, you try to give time to the fans, it’s lovely to see that they love you. It’s different but it’s really nice as well. “Since we came here we didn’t one time mention London. After eight years, six in London and two in Newcastle, it was time for us to change, and so far we love life here. “London is an amazing city and we have a lot of friends there and when we have time we will visit London. But we are enjoying the beautiful weather we didn’t have so much in London.” I first interviewed Mitrovic when he joined Fulham in 2018 and was struck by the intensity of his patriotism — something that has not dimmed. “As you mature you understand what it means to represent your people,” he says. “Everybody is watching you representing your country and not many people have the chance to do it — you don’t take those moments for granted. The team played a long time together and we grew up together. It is special. I hope I have a couple of years left and I put myself in the service of my country.” Model, warrior and Road Runner: Mitrovic on the Serbia team Dragan Stojkovic 59, manager He is a big motivator. Since he came we have done stuff no one had done before: we qualified for the last World Cup against Portugal at their own ground. We qualified out of the hardest group. He has the biggest win percentage as manager. He was the best player we ever had. So far we have done so well. He’s sometimes tough but a really positive guy. Vanja Milinkovic-Savic 27, goalkeeper Very tall. If you want one sentence, he’s really very tall, trust me. I don’t think you realise it on TV but if you see him in person you will say he’s a very, very tall guy. Nikola Milenkovic 26, defender He’s my son. He’s the guy who came into the national team very young, I took him under my wing and since then we have a good relationship. We talk a lot and he sits next to me in the dressing room. I have the feeling he is my boy. Strahinja Pavlovic 23, defender He’s too aggressive. It’s OK during the game but on the training pitch a lot of times he trains like he plays and a lot of times he steps on my foot. I tell him before the game, don’t be too aggressive. He’s a good defender and I tell him he’s born to play in the Premier League. Srdjan Babic (right) 28, defender He’s a model. He’s a tall, strong boy — good body, six pack, good hair. And he’s well dressed. Andrija Zivkovic 27, midfielder All that needs to be said is that he is the Serbian Messi! Srdan Mijailovic 30, midfielder He’s a warrior. He’s the kind of player that every manager likes to have. No matter what job you give him, he will do it well. He can play any position on the pitch. Sasa Lukic 27, midfielder He’s my brother, we’ve known each other a long time. This season he came to Fulham and I was one of the reasons he joined the club. I told him: “Look, the football you play in Italy is not the same sport.” He said, “Football is football” but after a few weeks, he said: “This is not football, it is too fast, it is not for me.” I said that I took one year to adapt after moving there and now he loves London and he loves Fulham. Filip Kostic 31, midfielder He’s another brother. He’s the guy who is the runner, a very important player for our team. He’s like Road Runner from the cartoon. Sergej Milinkovic-Savic 29, forward He’s a special player — the guy with talent, the guy who can change the game at any point. Dusan Tadic 35, forward He’s the leader, the captain, the guy who connects everything on the field and off the field. . . . and what would Tadic say about Mitrovic? “Goal machine” or something. He’s very happy with me. We have a really good connection. I can play without looking. I know where he will cross the ball, where he will pass. We can play together with closed eyes.
62 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Sport Euro 2024 Right, left or centre – time for England to see the real Foden Player of the year had a standout season for City. Now Southgate must make most of his talent, writes Paul Joyce Pep Guardiola sat Phil Foden down at the start of the season and proceeded to impart the sort of insight and advice that only a mind as sharp as his would have spotted. The Manchester City manager recognises the homegrown talent is a street footballer, and had come to hold the view that he was prone to overly complicate things. That Foden was permanently in sixth gear when sometimes in matches a spell in second was necessary. And so that was the message he relayed in his own inimitable way. “He told me, ‘Just don’t try to be Phil Foden in every action,’ ” the 23year-old said. The merit of that homespun chat would, by the end of a stellar campaign, be measured in goals, 27 of them, a host of personal accolades and a sixth Premier League title. Too much Phil Foden? The very idea sounds impossible to those England supporters who are waiting for him to leave jaws dropping in the same way he routinely does for his boyhood club. Four goals in 34 appearances for his country does not warrant the sort of highlights reel that is commonplace on YouTube from his City performances, though over the next month there stretches an opportunity to change all that. There is always a subplot for Gareth Southgate to unravel while attempting to steer England to glory, and now the demand falls on him to extract the best from the Premier League player of the year. Focus inevitably falls on where England plan to deploy Foden. Against Iceland at Wembley last Friday he was utilised in his favoured No 10 role, the position from where he dazzled at the end of City’s campaign. Yet after a bright start, he found himself marooned on the periphery, with his efforts to locate space cramped by Harry Kane’s penchant for dropping deep and Cole Palmer’s tendency to wander infield from the right. Those issues would not have occurred under Guardiola, who has drilled into City’s players every last detail on where they should be at certain times, and merely highlighted the difficulties of international football, when time on the training pitch is at a premium. It would be no surprise if Foden found himself on the left against Serbia on Sunday, with Bukayo Saka restored to the starting line-up on the right and Jude Bellingham handed the licence to roam as a No 10. That is his least-favoured position. Some of his most memorable moments for City have come when cutting in off the right, on to his favoured left foot and rifling a shot into the corner. Southgate’s rebuttal to the debate has been clear. “There’s where they start and Squad using £550 smart ring Paul Joyce Blankenhain W rapped around the index finger of Gareth Southgate’s left hand is a black metal band that England are hoping can give them the edge at Euro 2024. Southgate, inset, has started wearing an Oura Ring, the wellness tracker favoured by celebrities such as Kim Kardashian, as nothing is being left to chance in preparation before — and during — the tournament. England’s players, including Conor Gallagher, and FA staff, led by the chief executive, Mark Bullingham, have been sporting the health and sleep-tracking device, which also comes in silver and gold. The ring measures and analyses a number of metrics, including heartrate variability, blood oxygen rate, body temperature and sleep duration. That data, which has a 99 per cent heartrate accuracy and 92 per cent on body temperature, links to a phone and can then be overseen by analysts at the FA, who are able to flag up any issues. Prince Harry and a number of other A-listers are already using Oura Rings to monitor their Unlocking his potential Foden predominantly played down the centre and on the right flank during England's qualifying campaign, as this map of his touches across all his appearances shows. The role he appears most likely to be given against Serbia - on the left-flank is one he rarely filled in qualifying. 5% 2% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 14% 8% 8% 3% 2% 8% 10% 2% 2% 5% 4% 0% 1% 1% 1% 2% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 8% 3% Direction of play % of touches per 90 minuites. Source: Opta lifestyles, including the actors Will Smith and Gwyneth Paltrow, and the Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. An Oura Ring retails at between about £300 and £550 depending on which metal and style is chosen. They have also been used by the US Army and UFC competitors. A blurb on the website of the company, which is based in Finland and has sold more than one million rings worldwide, states: “Whether you’re managing a professional sports organisation or training elite forces, ensure your team is always performing at the highest level with precise biometrics. “Use accurate, continuous data to prioritise rest, adjust training schedules, monitor recovery, and detect signs of illness, injury, and fatigue.” The tracker is the latest example of how England are leaving no stone unturned in their attempt to win a first major trophy since 1966. The pitches at their base camp at the Weimarer Hotel and Spa are next to a giant white marquee, which houses exercise bikes and other equipment for the sessions that precede the main workout. where you want them to end up,” Southgate said. “And where you want them to end up is inside the pitch. That’s the key. That’s how the modern game is, isn’t it? You write a formation down but you’re never in it with or without the ball really. So it just helps for the teamsheet.” Of course, Foden must embrace that mindset but there remain times when it seems the weight of playing for his country is a burden. One of the problems with Southgate packing his squad with attackers is that it brings pressure on those who do start to justify their inclusion, allied to the threat that if they do not have an eyecatching opening half, they are 15 minutes away from being substituted. Those close to Foden regard him as being in a good place. He has always been family-minded, but his girlfriend, Rebecca Cooke, has had a big influence on him. Their third child is due this summer. Foden’s growing maturity means he has been able to ride any setbacks with City more adeptly. When he gave away a stoppage-time penalty from which Crystal Palace equalised at the Etihad last December, Guardiola’s tone was not quite so soothing and rather more acerbic. In the past that would have weighed heavily on Foden to the point that he would have obsessed over it. Instead, he moved on quickly from the mistake, and to prove the point scored in the final of the Fifa Club World Cup against Fluminense six days later. That was the third goal in a 4-0 trouncing of the Brazilians, though it is Foden’s ability to make the difference on the biggest of stages that Southgate must tap into. This season he has scored at Old Trafford and the Bernabéu, and twice on the final day of the Premier League season when City had to beat West Ham United to make sure of lift-off for another title party. The evidence against Iceland did not support it, but Foden’s England teammates have been wowed by his impact in their sessions. “He’s been out of this world in training,” Declan Rice said at the end of last week. “Everyone has been talking about him. ‘Have you seen Phil in training?’ He’s that good. So, so special. “We can perform well every week on a Premier League level, but at the European Championship, all eyes are on it. Can you step up? I’m sure our attacking players are going to thrive off that.” Will Foden find his mojo and answer in the affirmative? To do so he needs
63 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Sport Eze ready to be ‘finisher’ Southgate sorely needs Foden trains at England’s base in Germany. Above, with his pregnant partner, Rebecca Cooke, and their children Ronnie, four, and True, two the ball at his feet and to feel part of the game. That is when he is at his happiest. In the new book Dear England, written by Jonathan Northcroft, of The Times, and fellow journalist Rob Draper, there is a wonderful anecdote that sums up Foden’s obsessive nature. It relates to a warm-up game against New Zealand before the Fifa Under-17 World Cup in India seven years ago when he received a blow to the head. He passed concussion protocols, but the manager, Steve Cooper, decided to taper his training the following day and sent him inside after the warm-up. Yet when England received the phys- ical stats from that session, a familiar name remained at the top of the list. “Then we looked at the camera footage,” explained Cooper. “When we excused him from the rest of training, what he’s done is he’s got a ball, drifted on to the next pitch and he’s booting it up in the air, chasing it, doing dribbles, trying to hit the crossbar and hitting it every time. Then pulling the ball down when it comes back to him. That’s Phil. He just loves football.” Guardiola saw that and his tweaks have made him better than ever. Now Southgate must come up with a blueprint to do likewise. Substitutes have rarely been game-changers for manager but the 25-year-old could be different, says Paul Joyce A t the top of the list sits Jack Grealish closely followed by Marcus Rashford. They head a table chronicling the players who have had the biggest impact as a substitute under Gareth Southgate, though it is hardly a tale of game-changing heroics that have shaped the most important of occasions. Grealish has two goals and two assists. Rashford two and one. Indeed, of the 372 changes Southgate has made across 95 matches as England manager to date, there has been a grand total of 19 goals and 18 assists. Southgate has previously stressed that for England to prosper at the European Championship finals over the coming weeks, it will require contributions from a sizeable chunk of the squad beyond the starting XI. Neither Grealish nor Rashford made the final 26-man squad, overlooked in favour of emerging talents such as Anthony Gordon and Eberechi Eze who are both taking part in a senior tournament for the first time. Eze, Crystal Palace’s attacking midfielder, is understood to have been impressing his team-mates during training at England’s HQ at the Weimarer Land Spa and Golf resort with his ability to glide beyond rivals and put doubt in the minds of his markers. The 25-year-old is unlikely to start against Serbia in Gelsenkirchen on Sunday, but Southgate will have a role in mind for him if his training performances have been as crisp as it seems. “It’s not just about the 11,” Eze said. “It’s about the whole team, the culture, the collective. You win the tournament as a collective. It’s not just the 11 players who have started, so everyone is ready. “Everyone knows that, everyone wants to understand that. It’s putting your ego to the side and being able to focus on what’s important for the team. I feel like if you have that type of culture, which we do, you’ve got the best chance. “[The manager] has not spoken about that specifically as yet, but we understand. He spoke about finishers — we call them finishers. The players that come on to the pitch. “There is a mentality about it, there’s a way to go about it. There’s importance in that role, it’s not just about the 11.” Southgate’s use of the terminology United given boost over Branthwaite Martyn Ziegler, Gary Jacob, Charlotte Duncker Manchester United’s ambitions of signing Jarrad Branthwaite, Everton’s England defender, have been given a huge boost after the clubs agreed personal Eze, the Crystal Palace attacking midfielder, has been impressing his England team-mates in training and says: “It’s not just about the 11 players who start” “finishers” is something he borrowed from the former England rugby union head coach Eddie Jones, with whom he regularly swapped ideas. Jones’s rebranding of the term “replacements” in 2017 prompted raised eyebrows at the time, but he saw no difference in those who started and ended matches. Simply a team. Southgate has sought to implement that same outlook during his tenure and, while the buy-in has been strong, the results have, ultimately, proved mixed. England’s changes were unable to stem Croatia’s rising tide of pressure in the World Cup semi-final in Russia in 2018 and a 1-0 lead became an agonising 2-1 extra-time loss. Grealish’s impact off the bench at Euro 2020, particularly in the knockout win over Germany, helped Southgate’s side muster momentum that took them through to the final before the heart-wrenching penalty shoot-out defeat by Italy. On that occasion, two of those he brought on for spot kicks, Rashford and Jadon Sancho, missed from 12 yards. In Eze, England have someone primed to seize the chance to make a difference. A ruptured achilles suffered in train- ing on the day he received his first senior international call-up wrecked hopes of going to Euro 2020. Yet the setback only served to strengthen the resolve of a player whose resilience was already founded upon rejections from Arsenal, Fulham, Reading and Millwall, before shining at Queens Park Rangers. Eze recalled how reading that a Russian gymnast, Artur Dalaloyan, had recovered from the same injury inside four months gave him the motivation to be back playing for Palace after six months out. “Those types of experiences make you stronger, they build your character and they give you more strength going forward,” he said. “That’s the story of all footballers. Anyone that’s a professional footballer playing at the highest level, you have to be resilient, you have to be strong and be able to come back from setbacks. “You fail more than you succeed in this sport, so that’s not just me, it’ll be everyone. I’m grateful to be in this position and to have this opportunity because I believe in myself and know what I can do.” That is whether as a starter or stepping off the substitutes’ bench. terms with the player’s representatives. United have yet to agree a fee with Everton — who are believed to be holding out for about £70 million — but the agreement with the 21-year-old’s representatives is a significant step forward. It would mean Branthwaite, who just missed out on England’s Euro 2024 squad, being paid between £150,000 and £160,000 a week, according to sources with knowledge of the negotiations. Everton’s beleaguered financial situation means they may need to cash in on their star to meet spending rules. The signing would be a big statement by United. Significantly, they are understood to have moved quickly on the day the transfer window opened. Chelsea have revived their interest in signing Michael Olise from Crystal Palace, but face competition from Newcastle United, Bayern Munich and potentially Manchester United and Manchester City. Chelsea are prepared to meet Olise’s release clause, believed to be about £60 million. Chelsea are also in talks to sign Jhon Durán, 20, for whom Aston Villa want £40 million. Villa, for their part, are keen on Chelsea’s Conor Gallagher, 24. Meanwhile, players’ unions from England and France have launched a legal action against Fifa over its expanded Club World Cup.
64 Friday June 14 2024 | the times Sport Euro 2024 Munich submerged in kilts as Michael Grant Scottish Football Correspondent, Munich The Tartan Army mustered only about 600 members for the odyssey to their infamous World Cup in Argentina in 1978. Four years later came the Scotland support’s first mass mobilisation overseas, when nearly 20,000 went to Spain ’82, including those who turned up for the game against the Soviet Union with a banner that framed it as an ideological battle of “Alcoholism versus Communism”. At Italia ’90, the travelling support again stood at about 20,000. Eight years later, for the opening game of France ’98 against Brazil, the estimate was of about 60,000 Scots occupying Paris. Bigger than all of those were the movements of Scots for the famous “Wembley Weekends” against England in London in the Sixties and Seventies. Eventually, up to 70,000 flooded south to turn the precious home of English football into a yellow sea of Lion Rampant flags and a reservoir, also yellow, of processed McEwan’s Export. This was “Ally’s Tartan Army” in full force under the charismatic but ultimately doomed Ally MacLeod. Well, Wembley housed the biggest movement of Scottish fans until now, that is. Similarities between MacLeod and Steve Clarke begin and end with the fact that both men became the Scotland manager. MacLeod’s pretournament response when asked what Scotland would do after the World Cup in Argentina — “retain it” — will never be beaten, but his team were. Clarke could withstand hours of waterboarding without yielding a soundbite in the same ballpark as MacLeod’s one-liners, yet this quiet leader has inspired the most enormous travelling support Scotland has known. Clarke would happily stand unnoticed at the back of the room, letting others take the spotlight and the credit, but he is the figurehead who has created all of this. Even the most conservative estimate of how many Scots are descending on Munich for tonight’s Euro 2024 opener against Germany puts the number at 100,000, more than went to London in that chaotic heyday of invading the Wembley pitch and breaking the crossbar. Some projections, including from the British consulate in Munich, put the number at 200,000. All to follow a team and a 60-year-old grandad who spends his spare time fishing and sometimes going to the racing. The official Scotland allocation is only 10,000 tickets for each of the three group games. Clarke has inspired more Scots to pack their bags and hope for the best than even MacLeod, Jock Stein, Sir Alex Ferguson or Craig Brown managed. It is a hell of a responsibility to keep all those people upbeat, although in fairness Clarke will not be doing it alone. Beer will do a lot of the heavy lifting for Scottish fans in Munich, Cologne and Stuttgart, the host cities where they will play Germany, Switzerland and Hungary respectively in their first appearance at a major tournament overseas since France ’98. There is nothing patronising nor judgmental about making that point, merely an acknowledgement that the vast majority of the Scotland support will travel with a healthy blend of realism, anticipation and an admirably lusty enthusiasm for making the absolute most of the next couple of weeks. They have boasted of drinking Germany dry. Germany v Scotland Group A - Allianz Arena, Munich Kick off: 8pm TV: ITV1 Radio: talkSPORT, BBC 5 Live Referee: C Turpin (France) Weather: 16C GERMANY M Neuer (4-2-3-1) J Tah J Kimmich T Kroos J Musiala A Rüdiger M Mittelstädt R Andrich I Gündogan F Wirtz K Havertz C Adams J McGinn S McTominay C McGregor B Gilmour A Robertson K Tierney A Ralston G Hanley J Hendry (3-4-2-1) A Gunn SCOTLAND *Possible teams Head to head Germany 8 Draw 5 Scotland 4 First meeting: Most recent meeting: Jun 1929, Sept 2015, European friendly: Championship qualifier Germany 1, Scotland 2, Scotland 1 Germany 3 English-based players in squad Germany 2 Scotland 14 Population German 83.3m Scotland 5.4m The fact that it is their first major tournament overseas for 26 years is genuinely important and it partly explains why the travelling numbers are so astonishingly high. After France ’98, Scotland did not qualify for anything until Euro 2020, only for that tournament to be delayed by a year and then played with the handbrake on because of Covid. To add insult to injury, Scotland did not leave the British Isles. Two of their games were at Hampden with crowds of under 10,000 against the Czech Republic and Croatia, and the other one was at Wembley in front of only 20,306. Only now, free from pandemic restrictions, can a generation of supporters experience the thrill of seeing their team at a tournament abroad. A rite of passage for an entire set of fans, then, and an explanation for the torrent of stories, pictures and footage over recent days of one colourful show of faith after another. There have been all the packed flights, dozens and dozens of them taking various routes from Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen and beyond. The ferry crossings, the Eurostar journeys, the cars and buses. The camper van coming from Caithness. Then there’s the supporter who spent £10,000 on a three-game hospitality package to fly 8,000 miles from Australia. Radio Scotland told yesterday morning of fans flying from San Francisco. There are the two who cycled from Scotland to raise money for charity, and Craig Ferguson from Paisley, who was fundraising too, and arrived in Germany having walked the 1,000 miles and 1.4 million steps from Hampden. All of them have steadily submerged Munich under a friendly blanket of kilts, Scotland flags and empty bottles to a soundtrack of the drone of the bagpipes and chants of “We’ve got McGinn, super John McGinn”. McGinn, Scott McTominay, Andrew Robertson, Kieran Tierney and the rest delivered a place at Euro 2024 for them, but the leader is Clarke. It has been his pragmatic, organised, meticulous management that has taken Scotland to back-to-back European Championships for the first time in almost three decades. If he is the anti-MacLeod in terms of showmanship, it still took his quiet charisma to deliver the most important magnetism of all. Because the senior players believed in him from day one, Clarke got buy-in from the likes of Robertson and McGinn. The goodwill and respect cascaded from there and a team with a backbone of real quality have grown up together in the five years of Clarke’s reign. These guys like their manager and they like each other’s company. Gone are the days when Scotland games were a dispiriting chore, an exercise in negativity that studded their club seasons and had to be endured like a trip to the dentist or else ducked on the grounds of some spurious injury. Supporters used to find it easy to stay away too. Clarke’s predecessor, Alex McLeish, had only five home games in his brief spell in charge and not one of them drew more than 20,5000 fans to Hampden. In the past year alone under Clarke there have been nearly 50,000 for the matches against Norway, England, Georgia, Spain and Cyprus. Even friendlies against Northern Ireland and Finland drew a combined attendance of almost 75,000. The sea of humanity across Munich became real for the Scotland management and players when their bus weaved near the city centre yesterday afternoon after the 60-mile trip from the training base in Garmisch-Partenkirchen. The sights and sounds would have been thrilling and energising but the weight of responsibility may feel heavy on their shoulders too — 200,000 is a lot of people to satisfy. A lot to disappoint too. The Tartan Army are in a buoyant mood — “no Scotland, no party” is another of the anthems being sung on a loop — but it is not beyond many of them to let their feelings be known if performances are not up to scratch over the three group games. They are proud and realistic but not all are happy clappers. Their team of heroes were booed off at half-time and full-time in the defeat by Northern Ireland at Hampden in March. The mission statement has been clear: Scotland have never made it beyond the opening group of a World Cup or European Championship in 11 previous attempts, so now is the time to make history. Aaron Hickey and Lyndon Dykes are the two regular starters lost to injury and the team have won only once in their past nine games. Did they peak more than a year ago? The defence have recently averaged two goals conceded per game, a worry when Toni Kroos, Jamal Musiala, Florian Wirtz and Kai Havertz will have them in their sights. But Greece ran Germany close with compact defending and breaking on counterattacks last Friday, and Scotland — at their best — are strong at that. That was how they beat Spain last year, 2-0 at Hampden, in the signature display that showed their potential. If they are competitive against Germany, even in a narrow defeat, it can be a springboard for the games to come against Switzerland and Hungary. It is on Clarke to ensure that Scotland are talked about for more than the glorious absurdity of 4 per cent of the population following them to Germany. The biggest travelling support Scotland have assembled for a tournament with bagpipes, above, bikes, below, beer and even balls, main image, descend on Munich’s central squares for the opener against the host nation with Clarke’s team having given the Tartan Army cause for optimism Can Euros unite a Owen Slot Chief Sports Writer, Munich I n search of the heart of German football, I headed for Issing. Point yourself west from Munich and you’re pretty soon in a Bavaria that fits the chocolate box metaphor. Pretty, well-groomed villages, ornate buildings, towering pine forests. Then stop after an hour at Issing because this is where Julian Nagelsmann, the Germany coach, comes from. I meet Günther Fent, the chairman of FC Issing, who recalls the glory season of 2009-2010. That was the year that Nagelsmann, then a coach in his early twenties, decided to come back and play again with the mates he grew up with and they won promotion from level five. Not bad for a village of 1,000 people. “We are so proud of him,” Fent says. “Nobody from here achieved anything like him before.” However, he does then add that Issing once had a second division MotoGP rider and also Malik Harris who was, of course, Germany’s 2022 Eurovision entry (a disappointing 25th). Harris and the motorcyclist also played for Issing in their youth. The football ground here is particularly lovely. Two sides are hemmed in by pine forest. Behind one of the goals, boys and girls are training in the after-school club. The sun is shining, which is probably the work of the late Franz Beckenbauer. He was so omnipotent that they used to say that he could control the weather. He was a Bavarian too. Fent recounts the occasion, while Nagelsmann was Bayern Munich coach, when he turned up one day at the village school for pick-up and drove one of the kids home who he’d been told was badly ill. But I am particularly intrigued by the “maibaum” in the centre of the village. A maibaum is a maypole, but this one is blue and white-stripped and at least 100 feet tall and with decorations hanging from the sides. This is a Bavarian tradition, explains
65 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Sport 200,000 Scots descend Robertson: We’re ready to become legends now Michael Grant Germany with far right on the rise? Fent, with the maibaums being erected on May 1, but there is a clandestine competition between villages: if one village can steal the maibaum of another rival village, before May 1, it is considered a great triumph. Günther rolls his eyes and recalls the disaster of four years ago when Issing’s maibaum was captured. It cost them 100 litres of beer to get it back. The picture here is so bucolic, of wholesome communities drenched in football, sunshine and friendly competition. And if Germany’s hardright AfD party hadn’t just won 16 per cent of the national vote in the European elections, then maybe Issing would indeed be at the heart of German football. If a TV survey hadn’t just reported that 21 per cent of Germans wanted more white players in the national team “again”, then perhaps we could indeed take Issing as a snapshot of the nation. At the very time when I was in Issing on Wednesday, The Times was reporting another story: that one of the AfD’s most senior public officials was in a relationship with a former neo-Nazi who has posed with a swastika flag and portrait of Hitler. Meanwhile, there is another picture of Germany that many are referring back to, here, right now: the Germany of the 2006 World Cup. Thomas Hitzlsperger, who was in that Germany 2006 squad, recalled it in an interview with the BBC. “You were left thinking,” he said. “That this was so crazy, where did it even come from?” A similar recollection comes from Tim Jürgens, the deputy editor of the football and culture magazine, 11Freunde. Jürgens was 36 years old and recalls arriving at the opening game which was in Munich, just as this opening game will be too, and seeing German flags flying in the kind of numbers he’d never witnessed in his life. “My thoughts Nagelsmann was called on to pick more white players in a TV survey were: what is happening?” he says. “But it was something really special. A magical time.” It didn’t even matter that Germany didn’t win. The “Fan Mile” in Berlin leading up to the Brandenburg Gate was packed nightly in a kind of communal joy, and the sun shone and that was still a time when people could joke that Beckenbauer was responsible. They called it “the summer fairytale”. The whole country looked like Issing. Yet here is another snapshot. One from last night. The best football bar in Munich is the Stadion, a pilgrimage for lovers of football and beer from far and wide. Last night, the very eve of the tournament, the Stadion held a debate and the subject matter was not the national team or “Who might win Euro 2024?” but: “Football — a playing field for politics.” Jürgens was one of the speakers, as was an MP for the Green Party. Now, as much as ever, does a national football team shed light on the nation it represents and the Germany that this team currently represents is one where many do not believe Ilkay Gundogan should be the national team captain because of his Turkish heritage. The hope, then, is that, over the next four weeks, Nagelsmann’s team will be sufficiently successful on the pitch to be successful off it. And success off it means bringing people together again. Like 2006. The question though, at a time of rising nationalism across Europe, is whether too much has changed. The corruption charges against the late Beckenbauer mean the sun no longer even shines on him. There was a wholesome national rebirth in the fairytale of 2006. “I don’t know if we can do that now,” Jürgens says. A national team can give a nation cause to celebrate. There is a thin line, here, between that and a national team being a cause for nationalism. This is a troublesome time and a complicated game. The Scotland captain Andrew Robertson believes his team will become national legends if they make history by getting through to the knockout stage at a major tournament for the first time. Scotland have fallen at the first hurdle at eight World Cups and three European Championships and their attempt to halt that run begins with a formidable 90 minutes against the hosts, Germany, in the Euro 2024 opener in Munich tonight. Steve Clarke, the manager, said all of his players were fit and ready, having travelled north to Munich by coach after a final training session at their training base in GarmischPartenkirchen. Germany are the overwhelming favourites to win in Bayern Munich’s 66,000-capacity Allianz Arena but Scotland have a fighting chance of making it out of group A given that their other fixtures are against Switzerland and Hungary. “We want to make history, we know what’s at stake,” Robertson, the Liverpool full back, said. “We have so many incentives here but becoming a legendary squad is the biggest. That’s what has to drive us forward. The thought of being the first Scotland team to make a knockout round is our driving force. If we manage that? You just never know. “In the last Euros we played well in getting a draw at Wembley [0-0 v England at Euro 2020], but in the other two games we let ourselves down a bit. We could have done better. We don’t want to have any regrets this time. We have to move on from that. We believe we can be the team that makes history.” The social and mainstream media coverage of fans travelling to Germany — it has been the biggest ever mobilisation of the Tartan Army, with estimates as high as 200,000 — has been impossible to miss and the players have taken it in. “We’ve seen all the videos of them in the squares across the city,” Robertson said. “We all know so many people who are out here. It feels like most of the country’s come over.” Most of those fans have arrived in Germany without one of the precious 10,000 tickets from the official Scotland allocation. “Listen, we know they can’t all get into the stadium. We wish they could, but wherever they are, either here or at home, we want to make them proud,” Robertson said. “We’ve waited years and years for this and now there’s only one more sleep. We can’t wait.” Robertson has a happy association with tonight’s venue. The 30-year-old played in the Liverpool team which beat Bayern Munich 3-1 there in the second leg of the Champions League last 16 en route to becoming European champions in 2019. “Last time I came here was a massive win for Liverpool,” Robertson said. “A lot of people had written us off after we drew 0-0 at Anfield, but we went in front of all those Bayern supporters and beat them 3-1. It was incredible to be part of.” The defender’s German former manager recently messaged him and will be at the opening game. “Jürgen Klopp texted when I broke the record for captaining Scotland, which he didn’t need to do and which was good of him,” Robertson, who led his country for the 49th time in the 2-2 draw with Finland last Friday, said. “I know he’ll be here and I know who he’ll be supporting! I hope he enjoys his night, but not too much…”
Friday June 14 2024 | the times S2 Sport The McIlroy magic Back on track Northern Irishman shoots 65 on day one at the US Open England thrash Oman to boost qualification hopes UK-based cash bid to buy Everton Euros exclusive Paul Joyce Northern Football Correspondent Germany v Scotland Tonight ITV, 8pm Kane warning to England 6 Serbia can hurt us on Sunday, says captain 6 Robertson: We can make history for Scotland Paul Joyce, Alyson Rudd Harry Kane has warned that Serbia possess the attributes to “hurt” England and flagged their aerial presence as a significant threat in their Euro 2024 opener on Sunday. As John Stones returned to training after a 24-hour sickness bug, Kane, the England captain, outlined the dangers that their group C rivals will pose in Gelsenkirchen. Serbia are 33rd in Fifa’s world rankings and Kane said that England can ill afford to underestimate their opponents. “They’re a team that can hurt you if you’re not set up correctly and defensively they’re really strong,” Kane said. “They make it difficult with their moves and they have tall players so they can be very dangerous. If we’re not careful it could be a difficult game for us so we need to make sure we get that right.” Kane believes the present squad is arguably the best England have had and can go far by harnessing the “fearless” attitude within the group. “This squad is Times Crossword 28,943 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 18 16 17 19 21 20 22 23 24 25 27 26 28 one of the best, if not the best, we’ve ever had when you look at the form and the respective leagues that many of us have played in,” Kane, 30, said. Aleksandar Mitrovic, the Serbia striker who played in the Premier League for Newcastle United and Fulham, reinforced Kane’s message that England face a stern test. “We will try our best to give them a hard time,” he told The Times. “We want to do something big, that no [Serbia team] has done before.” The tournament begins tonight, when Scotland, backed by up to 200,000 fans who have travelled to Munich, face the hosts, Germany. The teams are in group A with Switzerland and Hungary and as many as three of the four could qualify for the knockout stage, something Scotland have never achieved. Their captain, Liverpool’s Andrew Robertson, said: “We want to make history. The thought of being the first Scotland team to make a knockout round is our driving force.” across down 1 Late reply disappointing Oliver? (2,4) 4 American eagle acquiring American identifier (8) 10 Undertakes large welcome for one needing work (4,5) 11 Beat it with small clubs and hammer (5) 12 Paris accepting blame ultimately for artist’s murder perhaps (7,7) 14 Squash item to consistently overlook or miss? (5) 16 One had on the first Apollo short fire, tragically (5,4) 18 Bias seems to corrupt missions (9) 20 Mess up, having altered central feature of spooks’ function? (5) 21 Where work is not coming to a stop? Yes and no! (7,7) 25 Cried like a kid, ill, having to swallow a tablet (5) 26 State where in the Vosges one’s intercepting climber (9) 27 All maintenance very onerous? Not all (8) 28 Bats on regardless, ultimately inconsistent (6) 1 Replacement for one off their trolley, possibly: including second announcer (10) 2 Study features at college (3,2) 3 Favour old person like me cycling! (7) 5 Strongbox not closing after chap’s put in bundle (5) 6 Philosopher to take stock of dictator? (7) 7 Article that has trashed RUC is too shocking (9) 8 Steers away from horse, making for trees (4) 9 Port originally consumed by a storyteller in private? (8) 13 A boy my lord ordered to bring a drink (6,4) 15 Cow to stand in entrance to field? Half just inside (9) 17 Busy time in game’s doubly hard for us (4,4) 19 Who knows when protests arising, indeed (7) 20 Wimp draws naval officer doing handstand? (7) 22 Material academic omitted from transatlantic flight itinerary? (5) 23 Delivered letter promoting area (5) 24 Priest caught removing clothing (4) The Everton owner Farhad Moshiri has received a fresh bid to buy the club from a UK-based investor, Vici Private Finance, which is backed by at least two billionaires. The Times understands that Vici initiated discussions with Moshiri and his advisers several months ago and has offered concrete terms within the past week. The Vici bid is being advised by Keith Harris, who was brought on to Everton’s board of directors by Moshiri in 2016 and was deputy chairman for a spell. It involves no borrowed money and it is believed proof of funds of about £1 billion in cash has been shown. As external funding is not required, an agreement could be executed quickly if Moshiri decides to give the group the green light. Vici is a newly established UK multifamily office of investment funds that has brought a financial consortium together, supported by two billionaire owners’ funds and several foundations, including a humanitarian fund. The full and comprehensive offer to Blue Heaven Holdings, the company which holds Moshiri’s 94.1 per cent stake, meets his valuation of the club and also includes provision for shortterm funding before completion to stabilise the club’s finances and an additional commitment towards restructuring and clearing debts. Everton’s short-term debt stands at about £200 million to £230 million and there would be significant money made available for squad strengthening subject to Profitability and Sustainability Rules. In addition, Vici is keen to work with the local authorities on the regeneration of the area by the club’s new 52,000-seat stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock on the banks of the River Mersey. Talks have already taken place with local politicians. Yesterday’s solution 28,942 P R BO L F E G RO M J E N GA E RCU S S I N H NG H E I E E H L L F L A T P Z Y A L F L U P U E P L OV A A L L U P M O R P T A XONOM I S S M R H E A DOV E I ONC V A S E N B R R TW I O S H L O E E PO T S A C A R O O S T Q C U RH E E A P A E RG T C H OO C I O H OO L U I C L S H K N N T Check today’s answers by ringing 0905 757 0141 by midnight. Calls cost £1 per minute plus your telephone company’s network access charge. SP: Spoke 0333 202 3390. 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ARTS June 14 | 2024 From tennis god to movie smash Roger Federer’s last 12 days — caught on film
2 Friday June 14 2024 | the times the arts column times2 Richard Morrison Art vandalism isn’t brave — it’s old hat, and should be punished properly I defer to no one in my dislike of Jonathan Yeo’s portrait of King Charles III, in which the monarch seems shrouded in pink candy floss. So perhaps I should have been mildly amused when two animal activists charged into the Philip Mould Gallery in swanky Pall Mall and stuck Wallace and Gromit stickers on the painting, apparently to protest against alleged cruelty on farms “assured” by the RSPCA (of which the King is patron). But I wasn’t mildly amused. I was more than mildly irritated. The arts are such an easy target for attention-grabbing stunts. Every day the people running galleries, theatres, museums and concert halls achieve small miracles to make their shows truly accessible to the public. That means removing as many barriers, literal and metaphorical, as possible. Which leaves the art itself, and those performing it, largely unprotected. It isn’t brave or radical to throw soup at a Van Gogh in the National Gallery or to let off an ear-splitting glitter cannon right by the orchestra at Glyndebourne. It’s infantile. It requires no cunning. And, ludicrously, it carries little risk of meaningful punishment. Well, let’s talk about punishment in a minute. First, some history. There’s nothing new about this. It’s 110 years since the suffragette Mary Richardson took a meat cleaver to the Rokeby Venus, the voluptuous Velázquez nude hanging (then as now) in the National Gallery. She was protesting not only about the arrest of Mrs Pankhurst but also, she said, about the way that “men visitors gaped at it all day long”. She probably had a point, though as a card-carrying fascist later in life she must have approved of far worse behaviour. And it’s 50 years since someone scratched the initials IRA on Rubens’ Adoration of the Magi in the chapel of King’s College, Cambridge. That wasn’t even the most notorious vandalism of an artwork in 1974. The artist Tony Shafrazi, protesting about the Vietnam War, had sprayed the words “Kill Lies All” on Picasso’s great anti-war painting Guernica, which then hung in New York’s Museum of Modern Art. (In case you were wondering, he said his odd syntax was inspired by James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake.) But such desecrations entered the history books because they were rare. They had real shock value. They may even have prompted sympathy for their perpetrators’ beliefs. What’s happening today is different. Attacking art has become a cliché. Across western Europe and the US, just in the past two years, there have been dozens of incidents. Most have been carried out by anti-fossil fuel and climate-change activists, though pro-Palestinian sympathisers are also increasingly involved — as appears to be the case with the slashing of the portrait of Lord Balfour in Trinity College, Cambridge, for which nobody has yet been charged. There are signs that other countries are finally taking steps to curb these attacks. In the US a woman who sprayed paint on the pedestal of a Degas sculpture at the National Gallery of Art has Activists stuck a picture of Wallace over the King’s portrait been sentenced to 60 days in prison followed by 150 hours of community service. She must also pay £3,100 towards cleaning what she defaced. Another activist allegedly involved is charged with “conspiracy to commit a crime against the US”, which could lead to up to five years in prison. He stands trial in August. In France, after incidents in which environmental activists threw soup at the Mona Lisa and stuck posters on Monet’s Poppy Field, the culture minister Rachida Dati wants a new law specifically to deal with attacks on art. Her point is that if no real damage is done to an artwork (as is often the case), the perpetrator ends up not being charged at all, despite causing much inconvenience. She certainly seems to have Emmanuel Macron’s support. “To attack a work of art is to attack our values,” the French president declared after an incident last year. In Italy too there’s now a law stipulating fines of up to £50,000 for people who attack monuments, though that new law itself was cited as provocation for an attack on a Botticelli painting in Florence a few months ago. And here? Britain’s response to these attacks on art can be summed up in four words: inertia and misplaced forbearance. If we apprehend the perpetrators at all, their cases take many months to come to court and rarely result in a substantial fine or custodial sentence. With the police, courts and prisons so overloaded that even robbers and rapists are going free, one can understand the reluctance to throw scarce resources at this problem. Especially when the protesters turn out to be (as was recently the case in London) two “harmless” ladies in their eighties — one a priest. Meanwhile the museums and galleries themselves, grappling with huge financial pressures, simply don’t have the funds to protect themselves with more security staff, glass coverings or airport-style scanning machines. Most don’t even search bags manually. Would a new government offer new thinking? Don’t hold your breath. You will scan the manifestos in vain for solutions to this problem. And to be fair, it’s not the most urgent crisis facing the country. Yet there is a way forward. The usual verbal challenge thrown down by those who defile art is “are you more concerned about protecting paintings than protecting the planet?” The answer is that people who value the arts are also, in my experience, likely to be highly sympathetic to environmental concerns. So it’s perverse for eco-campaigners to alienate a constituency who would otherwise be right behind them. The ideal solution would be for the activists to work that out for themselves and desist from molesting any more defenceless Old Masters. But handing out a few unexpectedly severe penalties, along the lines of what the US has done to the Degas defiler, might spur activists into abandoning these self-defeating tactics more speedily. Rory McIlroy The golfer is back with his wife only a month after he announced he was ending the marriage. Hilary Rose on the chequered love life of a champion U ntil this week all I knew about golf is that it’s played with clubs. Then Rory McIlroy called off his divorce, less than a month after he filed for it. Now I know that the US Open is this week, two men called Schauffele and Scheffler are hotly tipped, and the Divorce That Wasn’t bodes well for McIlroy’s form. McIlroy’s form! Hark at me. It’s been quite the ride, and I’m not the one married to him. Erica Stoll, on the other hand, is. On May 13 she opened the front door of their £10 million home in Palm Beach, Florida, to be greeted by a bundle of court documents and the news that her husband thought their marriage “irretrievably broken”. “The respondent is not pregnant,” the petition continued, “and no additional issue is contemplated.” How nice it must have been for Stoll to see her womb reduced to a bullet point. McIlroy’s spokesman stressed that “Rory’s desire to ensure this difficult time is as respectful and amicable as possible. He will not be making any further comment.” Four weeks later McIlroy’s made a further comment: he’s changed his mind, and now they’re undivorced. “Over the past weeks, Erica and I have realised that our best future was as a family together,” he said in a statement remarkable for its lack of joy. “Thankfully, we have resolved our differences and look forward to a new beginning.” This may or may not have implications for the status of Stoll’s womb, and one can only hope that she, and not McIlroy’s lawyer, will be the first to know. Either way she has endured a month of marital limbo and speculation. Golf is terrible for marriages, it’s been said, although if five irons also had spokesmen, they might reasonably feel aggrieved and argue that the problem isn’t the game but the men. The couple had been leading separate lives, it is said. He was away on tour for much of the year; she kept the home fires burning in Florida with their three-year-old daughter, Poppy. Rumours swirled of a liaison with a blonde TV presenter, Amanda Balionis, whose own marriage collapsed this year. McIlroy was seen flirting with her on camera, and is said to have spent time with her out of shot, in San Diego. Neither she nor McIlroy denied a romance. One friend described him as “not predictable”, adding: “He just doesn’t know what he wants.” Another told a tabloid: “He’s a nice guy, a good friend and a great golfer, but he’s not a great partner.” His first partner, Holly Sweeney, was his childhood sweetheart. They were together for six years until she was 21. She later spoke of her devastation
3 the times | Friday June 14 2024 times2 and the undivorce when he dumped her unexpectedly and soon started dating the tennis player Caroline Wozniacki. On New Year’s Day 2014 he proposed to her. Five months later he changed his mind. In a threeminute phone call, four days after the invitations had gone out, he told her he didn’t want to get married after all. “There is never a good time to end a relationship,” he said, adding that the decision was “mutual and amicable” but “the problem is all mine”. He was not, he said, ready for “all that marriage entails”, but wished Wozniacki “all the happiness she deserves”. Stoll met McIlroy in 2012. She was working for the Professional Golfers’ Association arranging transport for players during that year’s Ryder Cup. He overslept, and Stoll was tasked with arranging a police escort to get him to the course on time. Two years later, after the Wozniacki wedding invites had been pulped, she and McIlroy got together. “Erica that week was always the one that was checking us in and out,” McIlroy recalled, years later, of their first meeting. “She was there at transportation, so she was always in the car park. But yeah, it’s still cool to look around and think about that week, and obviously everything that’s happened since then.” So 2014 was a busy year for McIlroy. He was engaged to one woman at the beginning of it and dating another whom he would go on to marry at the end. Somewhere in the middle was an ambitious American actress called Meghan Markle. Tom Bower’s book Revenge recounts how McIlroy, then 25, celebrated winning the Open and Rory McIlroy with Meghan Markle in 2014. Above, clockwise from top left: speaking to Amanda Balionis last month; with his wife, Erica Stoll, and daughter, Poppy, last year; with his former partner Caroline Wozniacki in 2013 The wedding is said to have cost £400,000 the PGA Championship by partying “nonstop across Manhattan with his entourage”. The golfer was, he noted, “reported to be chasing brunettes”. By happy chance one particular brunette from Suits was staying with a friend near his hotel, and McIlroy nominated Markle to do the Ice Bucket Challenge with him. This was a popular viral phenomenon in which one person poured a bucket of ice over another to raise awareness of and money for research into motor neurone disease. Justin Timberlake and Oprah Winfrey were among many celebrities who did it, and McIlroy was duly filmed pouring ice over Markle’s head on her friend’s balcony. According to Bower they retired to his hotel for a drink and the next day, at a tournament, he was “worse for wear following a hectic night”. Markle went back home to her boyfriend in Toronto and took to her blog, The Tig, in her own inimitable style. “Rory McIlroy. THE Rory McIlroy,” she wrote, “whispered (and shouted) to be the foremost golfer in the world, loved by Tiger, respected by Palmer, and dumper of frigid water on my lone head. That Rory McIlroy. He is a force who has the propensity to actually work hard and play hard — relishing intense practices to substantiate his title, embracing nights of sipping Opus One (his bold and impressive choice of wine) ...” and on, and on. “The most endearing quality of this man is his character,” Markle continued, “as real and honest as they come, appreciating a simple smile, never shunning a fan photo, expressing a love for his parents that is rarely seen in men his age. He is not just the real deal … he is real. And perhaps that is what makes him even more cherished.” By the end of the year the woman doing the cherishing was Stoll. McIlroy proposed the year after, arranged a prenup that both signed, and they married at a 13th-century castle in Ireland on April 21, 2017. The wedding is reported to have cost £400,000, and Stevie Wonder sang to guests including Ed Sheeran, Chris Martin and Jamie Dornan, who grew up in the same town as McIlroy. Now 35, and worth an estimated £250 million, McIlroy is reported to have balked at the prospect of losing half his fortune to his 36-year-old wife and spending less time with his daughter. Friends and advisers apparently suggested that he give the marriage another six months and see how things turn out. The timing of the reconciliation could be fortuitous for his form: he won the PGA Championship days after ending his relationship with Wozniacki, and reconciled with Stoll on the eve of the US Open. “For whatever reason,” he once said, “I seem to play very good golf whenever I have a lot of stuff going on.” I note that Sky Sports is promising 45 hours of live coverage and “lots of extra tournament programming”. Is that a euphemism? I can hardly wait to find out. Forget the pub. I tried my dating app’s new run club It’s Gen Z’s answer to speed dating: a 5k jog for singles. Hannah Skelley gets set to go I t’s 10.30am on a Saturday and I’m all geared up for my usual plod — but this morning I’m not alone. I’m pounding 5km of London’s streets with 150 other singletons thrown together for a new dating running club. That’s right: this event isn’t about pace, personal bests, Strava kudos or trying out your fresh treads pre-marathon — it’s about flirting, mingling and hopefully meeting your match instead. If this sounds like your idea of hell tinted lip balms being slipped into — or a surefire way to twist an ankle running belts. I even overhear one while eyeing up the crowd — then girl say she got a spray tan especially. perhaps you’re too old. For the The boys are mostly in all black wellness-obsessed Gen Z, run clubs (wise move as sweat won’t show up) have become the hot new in-person and strutting for suitors in hunting ground. highlighter pink or yellow socks and It’s no coincidence that just as garish bright Nike trainers. And 400 nightclubs have closed across everyone’s had the same idea of the UK since lockdown, 1,263 pre-sprint spritzing: a headacheSaturday morning Parkrun events inducing cocktail of Marc Jacobs have sprung up in their place. One of Daisy perfume and Dior Sauvage my girlfriends met her partner aftershave hangs over the group. during the warm-up at Puresport’s Mike, a handsome 6ft 1in 31-yearweekly run club — they bonded old property manager, strikes up a when she accidentally walloped him conversation with me mid-star jump while doing leg swings. — which we agree is the ickiest of all No one’s meeting in the bar queue any more. According to a survey of 2,000 people by Heineken 0.0, Gen Z’s alcohol consumption has dropped 25 per cent in the past four years. Which may be why the dating app Thursday has just launched a run club (strapline: your pace or mine?) and I’ve signed up. Tinder has a run club called Solemates, in collaboration with the Runna training app. It’s one way to warm-up exercises. As we set off, set hearts racing. dodging pedestrians, I learn he At the Thursday start line, lives locally, enjoys tennis, cricket there’s a hum of nervous, and cooking, and hasn’t been to a excited energy as everyone run club before. “I enjoy running weighs up their options. anyway so why not try and meet a I’m concerned this is like-minded girl?” he says. going to turn into a “Me too!” I reply game of kiss chase. breathlessly. Though it The girls seems I’m not his likeare dressed minded match; I lose him in bright in the swell of runners Lululemon as we lap Wandsworth co-ords, micro Park. Soon I’m flanked Free People by Ally, a strapping, running shorts and flirty, 27-year-old patterned Gymshark software engineer. He runsies (all-in-ones) regularly attends various with matching mega run clubs across the city scrunchies, Oakley and has been on three sunglasses and dates as a result. “Strava chunky On Running is the new Hinge,” he or New Balance attests while panting. trainers: the fitness At the finish line people crowd’s answer to a dateswap Strava profiles rather night dress and heels. than their numbers. I gain All around me I see heads four new followers, two of of distinctively curled whom later message me ponytails made by Dyson to meet for a drink. And Hannah Skelley Airwraps, braids and full Ally? He was clearly right. faces of make-up. Some have We’re already planning contoured and I spot various our next running route. For the wellnessobsessed, they are the hot new hunting ground
4 Friday June 14 2024 | the times cover story Love, sweat and tears — the inside story of Federer’s long goodbye After Senna and Maradona, Asif Kapadia’s latest sports documentary traces the final days of the tennis champion’s extraordinary career. Geoff Dyer, who has followed every game, set and match, gets a preview A sif Kapadia’s new documentary, Federer: Twelve Final Days, is not, as the title might have implied, about his last 12 Grand Slam finals (covering a span of ten years from 2009) or even his final 12 days on the tour proper, which anticlimaxed with a straightsets defeat to Hubert Hurkacz in the Wimbledon quarter-finals of 2021. No, these are the 12 days between announcing his retirement in 2022 and his last pro match: doubles with Rafael Nadal at the Laver Cup in London, a tournament of Federer’s own contriving. The Laver is fun for fans, and the players make a fist of trying to win their matches, but it’s really an enhanced exhibition tournament — so Federer’s announcement doubled as a publicity blast for an event of minimal significance in an already crowded tennis calendar. It’s unmentioned in Kapadia’s film, but this particular ending began just a week after another, of unavoidable significance: the death of the Queen, eliciting a clever republican tribute from the French sport newspaper L’Équipe: a fullcover picture of Roger captioned “God save the king.” Quite a claim in the home of Roland Garros, where Nadal was le roi du clay. Federer, though, had qualities that surpass statistics. We can itemise these but they all flowed into each other. The pleasure of watching him began even before he served. I rank my fondness for players in inverse relation to how much time they spend before getting ready to serve. Nadal stretched not just the 25-second rule but human patience to the limits with the obsessive accumulation of tics that served as compulsive preparation. In the cases of Novak Djokovic and Alexander Zverev I measure my aversion precisely by the number of times they bounce the ball. Federer, by contrast, didn’t keep us waiting. He just got on with it. Once the point was under way there was the unhurried ease, the sense of someone apparently operating Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal after the final match of Federer’s career at the Laver Cup in 2022. Below: Federer with Anna Wintour. Bottom right: with the Princess of Wales at Wimbledon in 2023 Federer: Twelve Final Days is on Prime Video from June 20. Geoff Dyer’s most recent book, The Last Days of Roger Federer, is published by Canongate within laws of gravity that weighed on him less heavily than on everyone else. This ability to float around the court was all the more remarkable because, as the American writer David Foster Wallace pointed out, in an era of power baseliners Federer was working his magic while trading blows with the biggest hitters of all time. People talked of his effortless grace, but in the flesh one saw clearly the athletic foundation on which his elegance depended. At a press conference at Indian Wells a friend and I gasped like teenage girls when we saw him up close: he looked like a Greek god. Federer was the opposite of a grinder, and as he grew older this least attritional of players became steadily more aggressive, looking to finish points more quickly. Lots of tennis players are robotically tedious to watch; Federer was never boring. So our hunger for seeing more of him remains insatiable. It’s hard to imagine a documentary-maker who could bring more to the table than Kapadia, whose fascination with endings runs like a watermark through his work. Senna, his first documentary film, was amazing, friends said, even if you weren’t interested in Formula One. This took some believing but turned out to be true. The viewer looked into Senna’s eyes and saw him being driven by an implacable combination of forces towards death. As such it had the momentum and inevitability of Greek tragedy. Amy, about the singer Amy Winehouse, was appropriately messier but no less compulsive. Kapadia’s next subject was the most fascinating yet. Diego Maradona had not just risen to almost unimaginable heights of greatness; in a deeply religious city — Naples — he had become a god. Evidence of this can still be seen there, but relative to his well-documented genius as a footballer that metamorphosis was impossible to capture on film, and his decline lacked the teleological drama of Kapadia’s earlier films. So how would he deal with an athlete not going down the drain but simply retiring? The on-court footage would take care of itself — even people bored rigid by tennis would be spellbound by sequences of slow-mo ballet and glide — but beyond that much would depend on Federer’s easygoing charm failing to conceal the fact that his decision brought him to the edge of a precipice. Grace and ease tend to be viewed in opposition to determination. Certainly there is considerable satisfaction to be had in seeing someone fight and scrap to the death. But sometimes even willpower can manifest itself stylishly. The only time Federer seemed to give up was in that 2021 Wimbledon match against Hurkacz; in retrospect it became clear that this was because his knee had given up on him. As a teenager he had thrown tantrums; even as an adult he smashed an occasional racket. He could be imperious with umpires, but generally he was poise and calm incarnate. This didn’t stop him being ridiculous, most famously when he took to Wimbledon’s Centre Court wearing an absurd cream suit. But that was fine because — and this is crucial — he obviously had a deep-seated sense of humour. He loved joking around. And, everyone agreed, he was incredibly nice — no wonder we loved him. And boy did he monetise that love! At one point in Twelve Final Days he praises Bjorn Borg for making it possible for tennis players to be more than tennis players, opening the doors for them to become … “brand ambassadors”. Even if we accept that Federer’s sponsored Rolex has to be prominently worn in the first shots of the film, that kind of talk should not be part of the lexicon of a legend. Much of the above has been written in the past tense. And that’s what Kapadia’s film is about; not just saying goodbye to tennis but to being loved on a global scale. Will Federer’s future condemn him to the past tense, reliving moments of life-determining tension? The problem is that the last
5 the times | Friday June 14 2024 cover story a reluctance to pack it in, even as the body insists that it’s had enough. Federer was spared this long and crumbling goodbye; or at least it took place privately, in the gym and on the practice court, rather than in the unforgiving glare of continued competition, where, contra Neil Young, Andy Murray is somehow managing to both burn out and fade Times writers’ top sports documentaries Owen Slot, chief sports writer Diego Maradona 2019, Now An unflinching portrait of a genius undone by celebrity, his rise and fall in the Napoli years given the brilliant, raw Asif Kapadia treatment. I gasped when I saw him up close — he was like a Greek god 12 days documented by the film are less interesting and significant than the penultimate phase of his career. When he was beating everyone in sight we took Federer for granted. Then, with the rise of Nadal and Djokovic, we saw that the elegance had a built-in fragility; that his most beautiful shot, the single-handed backhand, was vulnerable to high and continuous assault. Having been unbeatable he was regularly bested in semis and finals by his nemeses. But even if he was past his peak he was more fun to watch than everyone else — and there was no one else people wanted so passionately to see. Our loyalty was rewarded when he came back from knee surgery in 2017 and went on a late surge that saw him beat Nadal at the Australian Open, win Wimbledon and, in 2018, the Australian Open again. That was the blaze of light near the end of the day, when we were blessed with the rare sight of the aesthetic and the functional coming together. The most beautiful way of playing was also the most efficient. It was all a sort of bonus, but we wanted more — and very nearly got it. His final final, so to speak, was tragically close, losing in a final-set tiebreak to Djokovic at Wimbledon in 2019. After the defeat to Hurkacz in 2021 he disappeared. Norman Mailer famously claimed that the great heavyweight champions “begin to have inner lives like Hemingway or Dostoevsky, Tolstoy or Faulkner”. Great tennis champions, one sometimes gets the impression, ideally have no inner lives at all. Or at least their inner lives are entirely preoccupied with … tennis! But if Mailer’s claim extends from boxing — with its unique level of existential risk — to tennis, then one can understand away. Only these titular 12 days have gone public — or perhaps one should say public relations. There is an expensively perfumed whiff of an inside job about the film: an ad-doc generated by the Federer camp as a post-career extension of brand RF. Well, that’s the nature of many sports docs these days (the series Beckham on Netflix was exemplary in this regard), and lamenting the uncompromised access on which the social documentarian Fred Wiseman depended is like pining for the quaint heyday of wooden rackets. And even if the whole package seems too pleasingly fragrant, there are some telling moments. When Federer and the other Laver guys, including Borg and John McEnroe, alongside nextgenners like Matteo Berrettini, are in the locker room or waiting around in suits, bantering more or less awkwardly, you realise — and maybe it’s the same when astrophysicists get together in a bar — that a full understanding of Federer’s achievement might not extend far beyond this gathering of stars. The star closest to him was of course Nadal, and their playing (and crying) together represented the perfect send-off. Well, not quite perfect, as they lost, but that’s the difference between sport and pageant. By all accounts other players liked Federer and, while he was the sun around which they orbited, the locker room became a friendlier place. The relationship between Federer and Nadal showed that the fiercest rivalry was compatible with good behaviour, even friendship. But the Laver cast also includes Murray and Stefanos Tsitsipas, who drove Murray mad with an extended mid-match lavatory break at the US Open in 2021 (“What’s he doing in there?” Murray asked the umpire) and who was in turn driven insane by the loutish Nick Kyrgios at Wimbledon in 2022. My interest in tennis has waned since Federer’s abdication, but last week Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz, the new generation of friendly rivals, were going toe to toe in the French Open semi-finals. Their rivalry doesn’t yet have the intensity of Federer-Nadal, but it was good to see each of them acknowledge that a line call had mistakenly been given in their favour. That might be a small part of Federer’s gigantic legacy. It’s also a reminder of something easily forgotten: that, at the end of the day, the purpose of sport is to generate sportsmanship. Alyson Rudd, senior sports writer The Last Dance 2020, Netflix Focusing on the Chicago Bulls’ sixth championship in 1998, this film has remarkable access and is beautifully constructed, allowing the viewer to understand the greatness of Michael Jordan. Even if you don’t like basketball, you’ll like this. George Foreman and Muhammad Ali during the 1974 Rumble in the Jungle, the focus of When We Were Kings. Below: Michael Jordan, whose final season with the Chicago Bulls is explored in The Last Dance Martin Samuel Do I Not Like That: The Final Chapter 1997 Accept nothing less than the full 77-minute capture of England’s tragicomic failure to qualify for the 1994 World Cup. Like with This Is Spinal Tap, you notice something new with each viewing. Unlike This Is Spinal Tap, it all happened. And I know, because I was there. James Restall, head of sport Orient: Club for a Fiver 1995, Prime Video One of the cult classic sports documentaries, this charts a chaotic season at the struggling east London football club Leyton Orient. It gets its title from the chairman Tony Wood, who put the club up for sale for £5 after his coffee business in Rwanda was seriously damaged during the genocide of 1994. But the “star” is the manager John Sitton, whose frequent X-rated rants have gone viral on YouTube. David Bates, sports news editor When We Were Kings 1996, Now It took Leon Gast 22 years to marshal the raw materials provided by Muhammad Ali’s improbable 1974 victory over George Foreman in the Rumble in the Jungle. The result is staggering. And, of course — from the lyricism of his speech to the boldness of his tactics in the ring — Ali is an unrivalled centrepiece. Stuart Fraser, tennis correspondent Tiger 2020, Sky/Now This HBO documentary didn’t tell us anything we didn’t know about Tiger Woods already. But it is worth watching for the ending of episode one alone, with a piece of music made famous by The Sopranos playing as his former mistress Rachel Uchitel walks into shot, suggesting something sinister lies ahead.
6 Friday June 14 2024 | the times arts THE CRITICS Hopkins is an uncanny Freud S igmund Freud and CS Lewis walk into a room, sit down and for roughly 100 minutes discuss nothing but the probability of God, the demands of faith and the destructive impact of sexual repression on family dynamics. That’s the entirety of this wordy and occasionally highfalutin drama adapted from the stage play by Mark St Germain, who based his work on The Question of God by the Harvard professor and editor of The Harvard Guide to Psychiatry, Armand Nicholi. So, no, not a car chase or explosion in sight, though the title Bad Boys: Ride or Die would fittingly describe a film that is, despite the precis, often thrilling. The setting is Freud’s north London home two days after the Second World War has started, where the father of psychoanalysis, played by Anthony Hopkins, is hosting the Oxford don and Christian Lewis (Matthew Goode) for an intellectual smackdown that never really happened — the meeting is fiction. It begins with Freud, who is struggling with the symptoms of debilitating oral cancer, taunting his opponent about the flimsy basis for religious faith: “Why would a man of your supreme intellect abandon truth and embrace a ludicrous dream and an insidious lie?” At 86 (three years older than the film’s Freud), Hopkins is impeccable casting from the director Matthew Brown and is the reason this film works. The Oscar-winning actor has previously played Nixon, Picasso and Hitchcock so this 20th-century figure seems a natural progression. There are pleasing echoes too of Hannibal Lecter here, in the great inquisitorial shrink gleefully placing his subject, Lewis, on the intellectual chopping block. Best of all, there’s a ghostly sense that this tête-à-tête will prove so transformative for Lewis that he will slowly morph, over time, into the later life version of the author that we encounter, played by Hopkins, in Shadowlands. As this particularly ornery Freud, Hopkins is comfortably sublime, his {{{{( It was a queer cinema blockbuster and a project that helped to redefine Australian film of the Nineties as creatively ambitious and unashamedly populist (see also Romper Stomper, Strictly Ballroom, Dark City). But the core of Stephen Elliott’s movie about three drag queens on a no-hope road trip from Sydney to Alice Springs is a warm-hearted tale about yearning for family. The lines are to die for, such as when Hugo Weaving’s Mitzi turns to Guy Pearce’s nasty Felicia and snaps, “There are two things I don’t like about you, Felicia. Your face. So how about shutting both of them?” Terence Stamp remains the film’s star turn, as the transgender woman Bernadette Bassenger. He is intensely compelling, and quite gorgeous, in the role and steals the entire movie while dancing deadpan in the outback, lathered in lipgloss, to I Will Survive. KM Rereleased in cinemas range typically immense. And if it sometimes appears that he’s coasting along half-cocked (a bit of whispering, then a bit of shouting), it’s sobering to note that Hopkins half-cocked is still more effective than most actors blasting away with both barrels. “It seems to me that we have never matured enough to face the terror of being alone in the dark,” he sighs, sadly summing up his objections to organised religion, before suddenly barking out, very Captain Bligh from The Bounty: “I have only two words to offer humanity. Grow up!” It’s not all about Hopkins, however. Goode proves a suitable foil for our octogenarian scene-stealer and is required to carry most of the larger narrative shifts, guiding the conversation from faith and God to a contentious subplot about Freud’s psychologist daughter Anna (Liv Lisa Fries), her mental health and a paternal attachment disorder that Terrific tête-à-tête: Anthony Hopkins as Sigmund Freud and Matthew Goode as CS Lewis Freud’s Last Session 12A, 109min {{{{( The Ian Charleson Awards recognise the best stage performances by actors under 30 playing a classical role. This year’s winners have just been announced, and to celebrate, Times+ members have the chance to win two tickets to The Grapes of Wrath at the National Theatre, a three-course meal at Lasdun and a stay in central London courtesy of Edwardian Hotels. T&Cs apply. The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994) 15, 103min seems to have been triggered by her father’s incessant needs. The Anna sequences don’t always work, and certainly the optics of two learned men puffing on cigars while mansplaining the neuroses of an accomplished female psychologist (Anna was director of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Training Institute) can be jarring. However, the scenes allow for some tense flashbacks to Nazi-occupied Vienna and the appearance of a suicide pill later plays a key part in Freud Sr’s demise. In the end the film’s appeal is ideas-based. Cinemagoers who feel that the global economy, immigration, general elections and cultural politics are the quintessential issues facing modern humanity will not find much to savour here. For anyone else with even a passing interest in the eternal “why” of it all, it’s sweetly essential viewing. KM In cinemas Win a London trip to see The Grapes of Wrath Visit mytimesplus.co.uk the classic film based on the novel by John Steinbeck adapted by Frank Galati Hugo Weaving as Mitzi
7 the times | Friday June 14 2024 arts film reviews Mixed emotions: Joy (Amy Poehler), Anger (Lewis Black), Disgust (Liza Lapira), Envy (Ayo Edebiri) and Anxiety (Maya Hawke) Arcadian 15, 92min {{((( Pixar hits arrested development T his is just unfair. The original Inside Out, from 2015, is widely regarded as peak Pixar. It was the moment, following three Toy Stories, a couple of misfires and the majestic Up, when Hollywood’s pre-eminent animation studio reached a creative and metaphysical apogee. The film boldly premiered at that year’s Cannes Film Festival and told the story of an 11-year-old girl from within and without, culminating in the tear-jerking revelation that, even for children, there is truth in suffering. And now there’s this, the belated sequel. And it’s just, well, fine. And so our San Francisco-based protagonist Riley (Kensington Tallman) is back, but now she’s 13 and the alarm bell marked “puberty” is suddenly, and literally, ringing inside Sasquatch Sunset 15, 88min {{{{( How audacious, beguiling and disturbing is this crazy, absurdist fantasy? Let me count the ways. It’s a year in the life of a North American Sasquatch family played by actors including Jesse Eisenberg and Riley Keough, who are hidden underneath latex make-up and not given a single line of dialogue. The story is the family’s journey down through the Pacific Northwest in the early 1990s (there’s a telling musical cue). Yet it also seems to be set in an alternative post-apocalyptic US and even, more strongly, a trippy prehistoric age that’s somehow anticipating the modern era. The notable references include 2001: A Space Odyssey, Harry and the Hendersons and Quest for Fire. It the big film The original was the studio at the height of its powers. And this belated second instalment? It’s, well, fine, says Kevin Maher Inside Out 2 U, 96min {{((( her mind. The movie is too prim to address anything as icky as Riley’s biological changes and instead uses adolescence as a handy excuse to re-establish the dramatic jeopardy from the previous instalment. And so we cut to Riley’s inner world, where prime emotions such as Joy (Amy Poehler) and Sadness (Phyllis Smith) are joined by more complex, teen-related feelings, like Anxiety (Maya Hawke), Envy (Ayo Edebiri) may be camp, crude and profoundly silly, but the cinematographer Mike Gioulakis makes it one of the most beautifully shot films of the year. It is indeed crude. These Sasquatches are unapologetically sexual, especially the frustrated alpha male, played by Nathan Zellner, who also co-directs with brother David. There are several brutal attempts at coitus, actions that seem both removed from and commenting on contemporary society. The Zellners are like that. Their film Damsel was a western where death and sex erupted into daily life despite the best civilising efforts from some of the mostly unsympathetic protagonists. Here the civilising mission is absent and all that’s left is a movie about the strange curse of being animals, being human, being animals, being human. KM In cinemas and Ennui (a fabulously jadedsounding Adèle Exarchopoulos). In the first movie our diminutive inner heroes were flung from Riley’s mental headquarters and, while enjoying some wacky misadventures, forced to retrieve a glowing orb called a “core memory”. In this one our diminutive inner heroes are flung from Riley’s mental headquarters and, while enjoying some wacky misadventures, forced to retrieve a glowing spherical web called Riley’s “sense of self”. See what they did there? The writing’s often smart, and there’s a great joke involving a fantastical gorge nicknamed the Sar-Chasm. But the climax can’t touch the original’s devastating power. Instead, the best that the Pixar brain trust can concoct here, for a rousing revelatory message, is that everyone needs a hug. Oh dear. In cinemas Wilding PG, 75min {{((( The inspiring subject of this new environmental documentary is the rewilding of the Knepp Castle estate in West Sussex. Here, 3,500 acres of barren, pesticide-drenched farmland have been slowly transformed since 2000 into a biodiverse naturescape full of turtle doves, grass snakes, pigs, ponies and beavers. The problem is that, as a piece of narrative filmmaking, Wilding is frequently bland and sometimes breathtakingly dull. “It’s the stuff of fairytales, in a way!” Isabella Tree, the conservationist and Knepp Castle co-owner, announces of her eco-friendly adventure. Well, no. Fairytales have villains, drama and extreme emotions. This is the respectable, overwhelmingly tasteful story of how two people (Tree and her husband, Charles Burrell) inherited a castle, learnt about soil and Sometimes it’s the little things that matter. This post-apocalyptic horror, starring Nicolas Cage, is set in the vastness of a mythic American landscape somewhere in the near future. It was filmed, however, in the international tax-break movie haven that is rural Ireland. And so, when Cage’s American hero Paul, and his two American sons Joseph (Jaeden Martell) and Thomas (Maxwell Jenkins), jump into the family Jeep and race across the wide American plains to escape marauding aliens, they’re actually driving across some farmer’s field in Ashford, Co Wicklow. And, wow, can you tell. It’s ridiculous, and instantly collapses any suspension of disbelief. Where are you going, boys? Dublin’s that-a-way! It might not have mattered had the film been buttressed by dramatic heft (Lars von Trier’s Palme d’Or-winning Dancer in the Dark was set in Washington state, but filmed in the Swedish countryside and it looked rubbish too). But here the plot is paper thin and achingly derivative, and the action indecipherable. It transpires that America is under attack from hairy, long-limbed aliens that appear, in the few nanosecond glances afforded to us by the director Benjamin Brewer’s insanely frenetic camera shakes, to approximate a gang of skinny Chewbaccas with flip-top skulls and pointy fingers. In a seeming nod to I Am Legend, the aliens only come out at night and, after killing most of the other citizens of Wicklow, sorry, America, they surround Paul’s cottage for a Home Alone-style finale that’s as tedious as it is unintelligible. Stop shaking the camera! On its own it does not imply excitement or tension, but merely suggests that the focus puller is having some sort of neurological episode. Beautiful score, though. Top marks for the composers Kristin Gundred and Josh Martin. KM In cinemas mycorrhizal fungi, and then, hey presto, a wildland project was born. The greatest obstacles they seem to have faced are meetings with angry farmers worried about ragwort overgrowth and then a tense period when the estate’s flora was threatened by some creeping thistle. Otherwise this is We Bought a Zoo meets The Good Life minus the laughs. The director, David Allen, unwisely attempts to foreground the funny by inserting recreations of the rewilding comedy years. Such as? There was this one time, during a charity polo match, when the Tamworth pigs broke into the catering tent and ate several boxes of powdered Mr Whippies. The Knepp Castle project is a pioneering development that suggests a sustainable future is possible for chemically denuded land. The documentary about it, alas, boasts little more ambition than a corporate video. It’s a film that seems reluctant to fully root around, with the fungi, in the mud. KM In cinemas
8 Friday June 14 2024 | the times music reviews Eerie, unnerving debut from a distinctive talent The actress Sam Morton channels PJ Harvey at her most intimate, says Will Hodgkinson Stars who sing Russell Crowe The Gladiator star fronted the poetically named 30 Odd Feet of Grunts for decades and this year plays Glastonbury with his new lineup, Indoor Garden Party. Expect, he says, “R&B, gospel, dirty country and dark waltzes”. Damian Lewis Lewis released his first album, Mission Creep, last year, described by The Times as “mellow jukebox Americana”. The Billions star plays Latitude next month — a gig we hope will be more nuanced than his epic national anthem at the British Grand Prix last summer. Kate Hudson Twenty-four years after playing a groupie in Almost Famous, Hudson released the underwhelming softrock album Glorious, full of breathy vocals and twinkling piano ballads. Maya Hawke The Stranger Things star’s third album, Chaos Angel, was described by The Times as “witty, spectral indie-folk”. We’d expect no less from a Gen Zer who grew up with her dad, the actor Ethan, in New York’s Chelsea Hotel. A lbums by actors offer a world of their own, and often it is not a world anybody wants to be stuck inside. Jared Leto putting his vanity on display in 30 Seconds to Mars, Russell Crowe being one of the lads with his straightup rock band, any number of starry types discovering their lifelong love of blues and country … all perfectly good arguments for sticking to the day job. Samantha Morton, however, is a different proposition entirely. Someone who had an early starring role in Morvern Callar, Lynne Ramsay’s 2002 psychological thriller about a young woman who pretends to have written her boyfriend’s novel after he commits suicide, was never going to make her recording debut with the usual fluff — and so it proves. PJ Harvey at her most intimate, the Velvet Underground in their quieter moments, even a psychologically disturbed individual reciting nursery rhymes before being taken away for medication time all come to mind on an eerie, unnerving album on which Morton tackles personal issues in an oddly detached fashion. The genesis of the album came from Morton’s 2020 appearance on Desert Island Discs. Richard Russell, a record producer and owner of the hugely successful XL label, was impressed by her choice of Dream Baby Dream by the New York minimalist electronic pioneers Suicide and I Remember by Molly (mother of Nick) Drake, so he pop Sam Morton Daffodils & Dirt XL {{{{( got in touch to see if she would be interested in a collaboration. Lyrically, inspiration comes from Morton growing up in the care system: on Broxtowe Girl she recalls a riot in a children’s home during which the kids played UB40’s Labour of Love II; Hungerhill Road finds her remembering a “Ghostbusters sky” mingling with “the smell of piss”, a neat evocation of the way fun fantasy and bleak reality shape the childhood experience. Everything is hazy and indistinct, like trying to capture distant memories, and it draws you in. Morton has a high, pure voice but not a particularly strong one, which she turns into a virtue via restraint. She takes on a sing-song melody for The Little White Cloud That Cried, a hit for the professional crybaby Johnnie Ray in 1951, and adopts the stark, flinty cadences of traditional English folk for Cry Without End, which, from the sounds of it, is a letter to the mother she hardly knew. Russell’s arrangements veer from the minimal and doom-laden to the lush and expansive: the fear of family violence captured in the ticking time Jansen helps Makela to find the thrills in Sibelius F innish, just 28 and very theatrical on the rostrum, Klaus Makela is the young conductor that every orchestral management seems to want. From autumn 2027 he, his baton and floppy arms will be controlling both the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam. Yet his recorded performances have not up to now been particularly thrilling except for this addition, but the reason for that is not Makela, instead the supremely wonderful Janine Jansen, right, with Makela. From her opening note in Sibelius’s Violin Concerto, the Dutch violinist (just about old enough to be Makela’s mother) grabs our ears and never lets them go. She is anguished and ardent, gutsy and tender, or whatever else the music requires, with every emotional inflection firmly embedded in the composer’s long singing lines. Playing at full strength, the Oslo Philharmonic sometimes sounds a touch blowsy, but individual details can be striking and nothing intrudes at Jansen’s expense. The one stretch where conductor and soloist obviously deserve equal applause is the concerto’s conclusion, jointly delivered in a muscular way, fully justifying the final bars that can easily seem grandiose posturing without careful preparation. Jansen’s kaleidoscopic range and technical brilliance are just as clear in the smaller, more brittle confines of Prokofiev’s Violin Concerto No 1, whether her tone is lyrical or classical Janine Jansen/ Klaus Makela Sibelius/ Prokofiev Decca {{{{( Claire Booth/ Christopher Glynn Expressionist Music Orchid Classics {{{{( Jazz album Waw! from the trio Winther / Andersson / Watts reviewed at thetimes.com/arts cynical, rough or smooth. But it’s the Sibelius that makes this album special. The booklet cover for Expressionist Music shows the soprano Claire Booth and her pianist partner, Christopher Glynn, sauntering down a street. Their nonchalance is in opposition to the music they perform: 22 songs and two piano pieces by Arnold Schoenberg, the tonality-busting founder of the Second Viennese School, famous, in the popular view, for killing off tunes. Booth and Glynn mounted this recital as a rescue mission and it’s largely a success. Cleverly grouped round the titles of eight Schoenberg paintings, the early-20th-century repertoire twists tonality into knots but doesn’t leave it a corpse. Booth lavishes close attention on every word and is thrilling when soaring into the skies. I’d like to have seen her push harder at times, but it’s a pleasure to find these gifted performers digging up beauty in thorny places and treating Schoenberg with love. Geoff Brown bomb tension of Purple Yellow, heavenly harmonies evoking dreams of salvation on Loved by God. It is all pretty serious, and at times portentous — “Once upon a time, there was a little girl who loved the flowers and the butterflies,” she announces of herself on The Shadow — but also adventurous and imaginative. Not since William “Captain Kirk” Shatner’s 1968 The Transformed Man (a misunderstood masterpiece) has an actor so fully dedicated themselves to a singular musical cause. John Cale POPtical Illusion Domino {{((( The title suggests an allegiance to Andy Warhol, the one-time manager of John Cale’s old band the Velvet Underground, but there the connection ends. Cale’s latest is challenging in all the wrong ways — art rock filled with messages on the state of the world that is too awkward and joyless for it to have much chance of being heard. Calling You Out appears to be a warning against enemies of a “shrinking world”, Company Commander imagines a fascist dictatorship, and Funkball the Brewster aims Cale’s wrath at someone or other. At 82 this lifelong proponent of the avant-garde is pushing admirably into a wide range of new directions, but this is a slog. WH
9 the times | Friday June 14 2024 first night From left: Samantha Spiro, John Hodgkinson and Siubhan Harrison pop The Killers theatre A Child of Science 3Arena, Dublin Bristol Old Vic (150min) M M {{{{( {{{{{ r Brightside had left the building when Brandon Flowers, the Killers singer, was asked about his band’s future last year. Reflecting on the neon-splashed anthems that have been the Las Vegas hit machine’s bread and butter, he painted a gloomy picture. “I don’t think you’ll see us making this type of music any more.” Ten months later, as the Killers kicked off their new “best of” tour, the mood had shifted. Flowers was coming out of his cage and doing just fine as he led his band through a murderously enjoyable set. Starting with the Springsteenesque stomper Read My Mind, Flowers never wilted. Soon to turn 43, he had the ageless, slightly uncanny look of Tom Cruise in a later Mission Impossible. The smile was sharp, the eyes pinpricks of tigerish enthusiasm as he bestrode a diamond-shaped stage decorated like a Vegas casino. He was 50 per cent pop deity, 50 per cent Thunderbirds puppet, complete with chunky eyebrows and plastic hair. Early in their career the Killers’ great brainwave was to take a fistful of British indie miserablism and chuck it into a Vegas fruit machine. Out rolled a musical bonanza, as demonstrated tonight by Jenny Was a Friend of Mine, a blustery banger that suggested Elvis fronting Joy Division. Despite Flowers’s on-the-record ambivalence about continuing to churn out huge, glittering crowdpleasers, the evening contained several zippy newish numbers. A highlight was the synth-fuelled Boy, which, on release in 2022, drew comparisons with Erasure’s A Little Respect — a connection the Killers acknowledged by going straight into a cover of the Andy Bell/Vince Clarke classic. Mr Brightside, their enduring smash and officially the biggest-selling song ever to fail to reach No 1 in the UK, was saved for the encore. First came a slowed-down synth version, prompting fears the Killers were about to pull a Bob Dylan and sabotage a high point of their catalogue. Instead they leapfrogged into an exuberantly faithful reading that set the venue ablaze with jiggling cameraphones. Grinning like a shark that’s zoned in on a kill, Flowers was in bloom and living up to his rock god status. Ed Power Manchester Co-op Live, June 18-22, then touring to July 11, thekillersmusic.com theatre Suite in Three Keys Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond (170min) {{{{( C iven what Thames Water has been up to lately, you really do fear for Sir John Falstaff when the order is given for him to be dumped in the river in this utterly joyous modern-dress production. When he finally reappears after his ordeal, the wheeler-dealer’s three-piece suit looks very mucky indeed. It’s our good fortune that we have two very different Falstaffs to choose from at the moment. In the West End, Ian McKellen gives us a gnarled minor gangster in Player Kings, Robert Icke’s condensation of Henry IV, Parts One and Two. In Stratford, John Hodgkinson — a memorably foul-mouthed FA supremo in James Graham’s Dear England — gives us a pot-bellied antihero who manages to be sleek and suave too, like some paunchy alderman who has made a tidy living selling dodgy timeshares. It’s a performance that’s every bit as engaging as McKellen’s. Hodgkinson transfixes with his cheesy grins and leering glances. You can easily understand why this ageing charmer thinks he’s in with a chance of seducing Mistress Page and Mistress Ford, Samantha Spiro and Siubhan Harrison’s upright suburban ladies. The RSC attracted publicity for its online trigger warnings about “bullying in the form of bodyshaming”, “domineering behaviour” and even, horror of horrors, “references to alcohol and characters drinking alcohol on stage”. But G there’s not a hint of puritanical tut-tutting in this zestful evening. Instead you can simply enjoy the immaculate comic timing of an ensemble in which Jason Thorpe’s Dr Caius, a smarmy dentist, splashes Clouseau-esque Gallicisms in all directions while Ian Hughes’s Welsh parson, Sir Hugh Evans, totters about on a bicycle. Shazia Nicholls gives us a sharp-elbowed Mistress Quickly. The class references are cheekily done. The knot of respectable homes on Robert Innes Hopkins’s cheery set have old-school TV aerials, while the mock Tudor pub, the Garter, sports a satellite dish. As the regulars prepare to watch England play Germany on “Pie TV”, the director Blanche McIntyre whips the intrigue along in the spirit of a frothy sitcom. Hodgkinson has a Benny Hill moment early on when Spiro has to squeeze past his mighty frame in a doorway. She gets her revenge later in the laundry basket scene, and together with Harrison puts the old rogue through more torments before he finally admits defeat with a wry shrug. John Leader’s Fenton and Tara Tijani’s Anne Page make an innocent pair of lovers. While an eight-piece band supplies breezy Latin-pop, young Patrick Walshe McBride quietly steals scene after scene as a lovelorn Slender — a dead ringer for the former chancellor George Osborne in his Bullingdon boy phase. It’s a vision of the perfect twit in a glorious evening. To September 7, rsc.org.uk ore than 12 million babies have been born by IVF, so it seems extraordinary that there was a time in living memory when tabloid journalists and the Pope were united in publicly denouncing it as an abomination. Gareth Farr’s compassionate, ingeniously crafted new play provides a sharp reminder of the faith, courage and sheer bloody-mindedness needed by the reproductive pioneer Robert Edwards and his team as they developed their revolutionary treatment. Matthew Dunster’s fleet-footed production whisks us from 1958 to 1978, using sliding glass screens to mark shifts between times and locations. This brings a filmic fluidity to a script that moves between pathos, comedy and suspense, deftly evoking the hopes and heartbreaks intrinsic to the quest to start human life outside the womb. A huge part of the play’s success lies in the fact that we never seem to be in the throes of a lecture. In the visceral first scene, a blood-stained woman — in excruciating pain after a backstreet abortion — is treated by Jamie Glover’s compelling Dr Steptoe, a gynaecologist with the radical idea that his female patients deserve empathy and respect. In one fell swoop this scene — in which the sound of the woman’s speeding heartbeat resonates through the auditorium — illustrates the extent to which Fifties reproductive medicine was in the dark ages, and why Steptoe’s humanity made him a visionary. Then, suddenly, the tone shifts to light comedy: we’re in a genetics laboratory where a female scientist is teasing her obsessive colleague Bob (played with introverted charisma by Tom Felton) about whether he prefers partying or lab mice. Bob turns out to be Robert Edwards, whose obsession — he prefers the lab mice — led to him and Steptoe presiding over the birth of the world’s first IVF baby, Louise Brown. The play is also a celebration of the women who were essential to IVF’s success, not least the nurse Jean Purdy (played with steely resolution by Meg Bellamy) and Adelle Leonce’s courageous, mouthy Margaret (Patient 38). Niamh Gaffney’s haunting sound design and Sally Ferguson’s artful lighting provide the coup de grâce in this gripping piece of storytelling. Rachel Halliburton To July 6, bristololdvic.org.uk different eras (Suite in Three Keys was written in 1965) shift beneath them. Louie Whitemore’s meticulously observed set is brittle with luxury. As Shadows of the Evening starts, Linda (Fitzgerald) darts nervously like a bird looking for a place to land as she awaits the arrival of her lover’s first wife, Anne (Fielding). Of the three “keys”, this is most obviously minor — Linda’s news is that the man they both love, George (Boxer), is dying. Though Coward (who acted in Suite in Three Keys) lived until 1973, he was so ill that they had to postpone rehearsals; this is his philosophical attempt to come to terms with love’s imperfections. Fitzgerald and Fielding are delightfully awkward as former rivals, picking their way like dressage horses through a minefield. The hostilities are more open for Come into the Garden, Maud, in which Fielding morphs into the monstrous social climber AnnaMary Conklin, who terrorises fellow socialites and minor royals with hospitality and purple rinse hair. It’s in A Song at Twilight that the underlying themes are most explicit. The Second World War has destroyed earlier chances of love, raising questions of emotional compromise that point to Coward’s homosexuality. Fitzgerald’s glamorous Carlotta appears to blackmail Boxer’s Hugo Latymer, but in a brilliant exchange neatly exposes the hypocrisy of his concerns about a young male lover. It would be another two years before homosexuality became legal — thankfully something that Coward lived to see. Rachel Halliburton To July 6, orangetreetheatre.co.uk Falling for the fat knight An exceptional RSC ensemble contribute to a glorious comic evening, says Clive Davis theatre The Merry Wives of Windsor RST, Stratford-upon-Avon (170min) {{{{{ hampagne flows as freely as the dry martini wit in this glittering trilogy of late works from Noël Coward, but the shadows are lurking too as three different scenarios unfold in the same private suite of a Swiss hotel. Emma Fielding and Stephen Boxer, right, and Tara Fitzgerald deftly switch between plays in which Coward examines love and betrayal from the darkened perspective of a man who has felt the sting of mortality. Tom Littler’s ambitious revival carries echoes from earlier work such as Private Lives and Blithe Spirit. While the characters’ witty façade endures, we can feel the tectonic plates of
10 Friday June 14 2024 | the times music Britain’s lord of the Ring classical Knussen Chamber Orchestra/Wigglesworth Snape Maltings, Suffolk {{{{( Anthony Negus, the hero of this summer’s must-see Wagner, talks to Richard Morrison W T eutonic grandeur meets English eccentricity every summer in the village of Longborough, high up in the Cotswolds. About 30 years ago Martin and Lizzie Graham, an opera-loving couple, converted an old agricultural barn on their estate into a 400-seat theatre and started a festival with the prime aim of staging Wagner’s Ring cycle: four vast evenings of mythic musictheatre that tax the resources of the world’s best-equipped opera companies. Even well-disposed observers thought they were bonkers and would imminently be bankrupt as well. Yet within a few years they had staged a “pocket” Ring (condensed in length and orchestral requirements), as well as operas by many other composers. A full-sized production followed in 2013. And this year a completely different production — with the Ring’s four constituent operas assembled one by one over the past four years — is given three cycles of performances. Besides the Grahams, one other person has been central to this extraordinary achievement. Anthony Negus conducted the entire 2013 Ring and now, as he turns 78, he has rehearsed and will conduct all three cycles starting from Sunday. He has also been tapped up by Grange Park Opera in Surrey for the company’s Ring operas later in the decade. Negus has lived, slept, prepared and conducted Wagner all his working life, and was already obsessed with the composer as a boy. “I was 15,” he says, “when my parents first took me to Bayreuth [the festival in Germany that stages Wagner in the theatre the composer built]. That was in 1961. The following year I managed to get into the pit to watch rehearsals. I did that every year until 1966, then in 1971 I auditioned successfully to be part of pop Doja Cat OVO Hydro, Glasgow {{{(( B the music staff there. So I was able to watch such great Wagner conductors as Rudolf Kempe, Karl Böhm and Horst Stein.” It was, however, a British conductor — the maverick Reginald Goodall, who conducted legendary performances of the Ring for English National Opera in the early 1970s — who made the most impression on Negus, his assistant on several productions. “He seemed to have this inner channel direct to Wagner,” Negus says. And a uniquely intensive one-to-one way of rehearsing Wagner, which extended not just to the singers but even individuals in the orchestra as well. “Yes,” Negus recalls. “I once looked through the window of a rehearsal hall and saw Goodall conducting something with tremendous passion. So I went inside and found he was rehearsing just the timpani player.” Negus’s specially assembled Longborough orchestra of about 65 players is not as big as Wagner specified. “We don’t have Wagner tubas, sadly,” he says, “and only double woodwind rather than the triple woodwind Wagner wanted. So we need to have a flute and two clarinets, onkers doesn’t do it justice. The opening night of Doja Cat’s debut UK tour was as much a booty-shaking sex show as it was a pop concert. It was also an oddball ode to hair. Always controversial, the 28-year-old from LA, who broke through in 2018 with a novelty rap about cows (Mooo! ) and had her first hits in lockdown, announced last year that she wanted to be taken more seriously. Cue a fierce rap album, Scarlet, and a visual reinvention that included shaving her head and eyebrows. At an undersold Hydro, however, it was Doja Cat’s stripper-style moves more than her music that initially got the crowd going. She arrived on stage Rebecca Afonwy-Jones, Katie Stevenson and Mari Wyn Williams as the Rhinemaidens with Mark Stone as Alberich in Longborough’s Das Rheingold. Below: Anthony Negus rather than three clarinets, playing the Rhinemaidens’ chords in Rheingold. But you would need a pretty keen ear to hear the difference.” Since he has such vivid memories of how other great Wagnerian conductors tackled the Ring, is Negus’s main challenge to find his own unique path through the work? “When I was doing the Ring ten years ago I was always checking my interpretation against Furtwängler’s,” he replies. “Now I think I am finding my own way with less and less conscious effort.” But what about people daunted by the sheer length and complexity of the Ring? How would Negus entice them? “First, I would say don’t be put off because the characters are all gods or dwarfs or giants or Valkyries,” he says. “The essential point is they all convey human emotions that are incredibly true and real. And then there’s the power of the music. When you reach the end of Götterdämmerung, you should be left in awe by what you’ve heard.” Longborough’s Ring cycles run from Sunday to July 4, lfo.org.uk wearing gigantic furry angel wings, a waist-length platinum blonde wig, a white bikini and, briefly, a white silk shirt. When the wings came off, the grinding began — every twerk of her mostly exposed bottom was greeted with a cheer. Muffled sound was partly to blame for the muted response to her early songs. A four-piece band behind her, on what appeared to be huge bales of hair, struggled to make themselves heard. The gig got going with Demons, a song from Scarlet during which the stage glowed red before catching fire. Vast pyro blasts shot into the air, toasting fans at the front and making everyone fear for all that fake hair. Can Doja Cat rap? Absolutely. When she strode down a walkway into the crowd flanked by backing singers, she was magnificent. Her 2020, TikTokaided global hit Say So was roughed up with grungey guitar and howled back at her. Ditto 2021’s Need to Know, which ended with a scorching guitar solo. Few of Scarlet’s songs fared as well as her golden oldies, but watching Doja Cat twerk on a platform high in the air was sufficient fun for some. Plus, everyone knew that the highlight was to come. Paint the Town Red, a No 1 around the world last year, sent Hydro into a frenzy. So loud was the crowd that Doja Cat gave up rapping and jiggled her breasts instead. Lisa Verrico Touring to July 14, dojacat.com hat a spectacular landscape,” the passing concertgoer said, feasting in the interval on the reed beds, wide open sky and other natural wonders surrounding the Aldeburgh Festival’s home base. Indeed it was spectacular, though the view looked small beside the landscapes the composer Judith Weir described in the piece heard on the interval’s other side: her festival commission Planet, inspired by three images of Earth, deep space and the Milky Way. Scored for an orchestra suitable for the two Mozart works sharing the Knussen Chamber Orchestra’s programme, the 15-minute piece nonetheless took a rather modest approach. It followed the example of the Eise Eisinga Planetarium, the 18thcentury orrery built into a humble Netherlands sitting room ceiling. I found Weir’s work an excellent and individual creation, recognisably English in its quasi-conservative musical lineage, but radiant with a sense of wonder — driven along by textural and harmonic niceties ranging from exhilarating ascending scales to the unnerving sounds of two thrusting double basses poking holes in a timpani tattoo. Guided by the composer/conductor/ pianist Ryan Wigglesworth, the orchestra’s mix of Royal Academy of Music students and professionals was in particularly fine fettle here. Quality dipped a bit in Mozart’s Jupiter Symphony and Piano Concerto No 24, where their enthusiastic attack tended to smudge some of the clarity this music needs. The wind section, however, shone regardless. The concerto’s slightly po-faced soloist, Wigglesworth provided other diversions from the usual course by prefacing his performance with his own festival commission, Glasmelodien. The eight-minute piano piece musing on Mozart’s little adagio movement, K356, was written for that eerie late-18th-century phenomenon, the glass harmonica. Sitting at the keys, Wigglesworth conjured disconcerting harmonies from every octave his piano offered: an achievement luckily avoided during his darkly coloured cadenza in the concerto’s first movement, though it did extend Mozart’s stylistic range by at least 120 years. Ensemble Diderot’s delightful afternoon concert at Snape Maltings shrank the musical forces to just four: two violins, one cello and a harpsichord so prettily coloured that a knot of fans gathered round in the interval to inspect it and admire. The leader Johannes Pramsohler’s enthusiasm for his 18th-century French trio sonatas and whatnots was most infectious. Highlights included the hurtling finale of the sample sonata by Jean-Marie Leclair and a rollicking chaconne from Louis-Gabriel Guillemain — a wild card with an unhappy end: death by 14 stab wounds, supposedly self-administered. Geoff Brown Festival continues to June 23, brittenpearsarts.org
11 the times | Friday June 14 2024 television & radio Penelope and Colin power a steamy second half Carol Midgley TV review Bridgerton series 3, part 2 Netflix {{{{( I t’s part two (the steamier part) of Bridgerton, folks, so brace yourselves for a sex scene between Penelope Featherington and Colin Bridgerton that lasts an uninterrupted six minutes. You may wish to make a cup of tea, feed the cat, potter about — I certainly did — and they’ll still be at it when you return. It mostly happens on a chaise longue. If they had to do a lot of takes for that scene it may need reupholstering. I am sure Bridgerton’s creative team told themselves that it was “necessary for the story” that Colin (Luke Newton) made Penelope (Nicola Coughlan) stand in front of a full- Radio choice Ben Dowell length Cheval mirror then look at herself as her dress flops to the floor, leaving us all gawping at her exposed breasts. They may at some point even have believed it. But it still looks pretty gratuitous, Penelope standing there starkers while Colin, fully clothed in a frock coat and boots, peers over her shoulder into the mirror as if showing her her own norks for the first time as if she doesn’t in fact sleep with them every night. Talk about the male gaze! But I mustn’t be too po-faced because Coughlan made a very funny retort when, at a public screening event, she was told she was “brave” for baring all. “You know it is hard because I think women with my body type — women with perfect breasts — we don’t get to see ourselves on screen enough,” she said. “I’m a very proud member of the perfect breasts community. I hope you enjoy seeing them.” Bravo. That’s a clever response. And the good news is that this second half of the series is much better than the first, weaving in the threat that Penelope’s secret that she is the gossip diarist Lady Whistledown is about to be exposed when the Queen offers a cash reward for her identity. Penelope’s friend Eloise (Claudia Jessie) knows she is Whistledown and is furious that Penelope is now engaged to her brother Colin, who doesn’t. Her scribblings will shame the Bridgerton name (or something). Times Radio Digital, web, smart speaker, app 5.00am Rosie Wright with Early Breakfast 6.00 Chloe Tilley and Calum Macdonald with Times Radio Breakfast 10.00 Matt Chorley. An insider’s take on politics 1.00pm Ayesha Hazarika 4.00 Cathy Newman with Times Radio Drive. Friday’s headlines and discussions 7.00 Ed Vaizey. The Conservative peer and former MP sits in bringing his take on the day’s news 10.00 Henry Bonsu 1.00am The Story 1.30 Highlights from Matt Chorley 2.00 The Best of Times Radio Radio 2 Heart and Soul: Last Christians of Gaza World Service, 1.30pm A moving and timely profile of George Antone, above, a member of the only Roman Catholic church in Gaza and part of a dwindling Christian community whose roots in this part of the world go back to the 4th century. When war breaks out in October 2023, Antone is convinced that staying in Gaza City is the right option — for safety, and to continue bearing witness to Christ’s teaching. During that time he keeps in contact with the BBC producer Catherine Murray, sending her WhatsApp messages from a war zone that builds a vivid picture of life on the ground. our tv newsletter FM: 88-90.2 MHz 6.30am The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show. With guests Boy George, Meghan Trainor and Kit Harington 9.30 Vernon Kay. Pet Shop Boys pick their Tracks of My Years 12.00 Jeremy Vine 2.00pm Scott Mills 3.30 Scott Mills’ Wonder Years 4.00 Sara Cox 7.00 Michelle Visage 8.30 Michelle Visage’s Handbag Hits. Feelgood party classics 9.00 The Good Groove with DJ Spoony. A mix of soulful house and lyrical garage tunes 11.00 The Rock Show with Johnnie Walker 12.00 Romesh Ranganathan: For the Love of Hip-Hop (r) 1.00am Lionel Richie at the BBC 2.00 Radio 2 Unwinds with Angela Griffin (r) 3.00 Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s Kitchen Disco Radio 3 FM: 90.2-92.4 MHz 6.30am Breakfast Petroc Trelawny presents the classical breakfast show with music that captures the mood of the morning 9.30 Essential Classics Georgia Mann plays the best in classical music, featuring new discoveries, musical surprises and plenty of familiar favourites 1.00pm Classical Live Tom McKinney showcases the best performances in unique recordings, including highlights of French chamber music from last month’s Hay-on-Wye Festival and recordings of music reflecting England. Francois Couperin/Thomas Ades (Les Baricades Mistérieuses); Ravel (Sonatine); Clarke (Viola Sonata); Purcell (”Music For A While”; Pausanias Z. 585 — ”Sweeter Than Roses”; and ”An Evening Hymn” — arr. Britten); Haydn (Symphony No. 104 in D major “London”); Ravel (Piano Trio); Vaughan Williams (On Wenlock Edge); Faure (Piano Trio); and Britten (A Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra) Luke Newton as Colin and Nicola Coughlan as Penelope 4.00 Composer of the Week: Gibbons (1583-1625) Donald Macleod looks at the considerable turmoil in the royal court, while Gibbons consolidated his position as the leading musician in the land. Gibbons (Fantasia No 1 for the Great Double Bass; Fantasia No 2 a 6. The Hunt’s Up — Peascod time; The Second Service — Morning: Te Deum; Fantasia No 4 a 6; The Cryes of London I & II; and Blessed are all they that fear the Lord) 5.00 In Tune Live music and interviews 7.00 Classical Mixtape A sequence of music 7.30 Friday Night Is Music Night Singers Tim Howar and Juliette Crosbie join Stephen Bell and the BBC National Orchestra of Wales in some of the most popular American music from stage shows and films. Recorded at Hoddinott Hall, Cardiff. Presented by Clare Teal. Sherman (Mary Poppins Overture); Menken (Beauty and the Beast); Loewe (Luck Be a Lady); Arlen (Somewhere Over The Rainbow — Wizard of Oz); Styne (Don’t Rain on my Parade — Funny Girl); Berlin (Annie get Your Gun); Brown (Singing in the Rain); Rodgers (Carousel Waltz); Leonard Bernstein (West Side story Overture; Balcony Scene); Menken (Be Our Guest); Lerner (Gigi); Justin Paul (Waving Through a Window — Dear Evan Hansen); Schwartz (Defying Gravity — Wicked); and Dietz and Schwartz (That’s Entertainment — The Bandwagon) 9.45 The Essay: Bohemians in T-Shirts Michael Goldfarb examines the influence of Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, T-shirt wearing Columbia University students, and the events that propelled them towards the writing that would become known as Beat (r) 10.00 Late Junction Verity Sharp presents late-night oud playing from Montreal’s Sam Shelabi. There is wordless opera by Belgian composer Baudouin de Jaer, performed on the Geomungo, the six-string Korean bass zither by virtuosos of the instrument, Lee Junga, Shin Jihee, Sun Chaerin, Kim Joonyoung, and Lee Sunhee. Plus, a previously unheard recording of a Friends of Old Time Music concert from April 1965 11.30 ’Round Midnight Soweto Kinch presents the best in jazz with a particular focus on the British scene 12.30am Through the Night Arte dei Suonatori in an all-CPE Bach programme from Poland’s Actus Humanus Festival, with Marcin Swiatkiewicz on the harpsichord. Penny Gore presents. Radio 4 FM: 92.4-94.6 MHz LW: 198kHz MW: 720 kHz 5.30am News Briefing 5.43 Prayer for the Day 5.45 Farming Today 6.00 Today News and analysis with Nick Robinson and Mishal Husain 9.00 Desert Island Discs Lauren Laverne talks to Shirine Khoury-Haq, CEO of the Co-op group (5/14) (r) 10.00 Woman’s Hour Magazine exploring issues from a female perspective, presented by Anita Rani 11.00 The Food Programme 11.45 Book of the Week: All That Glitters By Orlando Whitfield. When Inigo tries to extricate himself professionally from Jopling, he crosses the Rubicon from which there is no return. Read by Hugh Skinner (5/5) 12.04pm Rare Earth Tom Heap and Helen Czerski discuss the genre of nature-writing (2/10) 1.00 The World at One 1.45 Understand: The UK Election Key elements of the General Election (5/10) 2.00 The Archers (r) 2.15 Drama: The Specialist By Matthew Broughton (3/6) 2.45 Child Examining the significance of a child’s first birthday. Last in the series 3.00 Gardeners’ Question Time Experts answer listeners’ queries 3.45 Short Works Andy Clark reads The Invention of Abandonment by Malachy Tallack 4.00 Last Word A selection of obituaries 4.30 More or Less Tim Harford presents the programme that explains the numbers and statistics used in everyday life (4/7) (r) 5.00 PM 6.00 Six O’Clock News 6.30 The News Quiz Andy Zaltzman hosts the topical comedy panel game (2/7) 7.00 The Archers Fallon throws caution to the wind, while Harrison struggles to let go 7.15 Add to Playlist With organist Anna Lapwood and singer-songwriter Andrew Roachford (4/6) 8.00 Any Questions? Topical discussion, chaired by Alex Forsyth 9.00 Free Thinking Ideas shaping modern life (11/13) Various subplots, such as one involving Francesca Bridgerton trying to find a chap, are quite dull. But others, like one centring on mean posh girl Cressida Cowper (Jessica Madsen) and the Whistledown subterfuge, are more juicy. Her father arranges to marry her off to a crusty old lord who looks about 85 if he’s a day and expects babies from her, “four or five” of them. It’s a predicament that makes you feel sorry for the antagonist. But the main energy of this series comes from the relationship between Colin and Penelope which, I have to admit it, teems with chemistry. I call Bridgerton the “toffs, tits and titles” show, but here another t-word is at play — tenderness. In that sex scene, which is long but also quite sweet, Coughlan is luminously excellent, showing both shy vulnerability and the desire to rip his britches off as she asks him “tell me what to do”. It is an extraordinarily intimate scene, as he explains “it may hurt” but it should “only be this first time”. Bit cringey that bit, to be honest. And Coughlan’s breasts should get some kind of award for all the heaving they do. Good lord, they’re up and down in those frocks like a pair of airbags. As I said last time they really do deserve a mention in the credits. This is a rollicking, uplifting story with great costumes. A fourth series feels nailed on. 10.00 The World Tonight With Shaun Ley 10.45 Book at Bedtime: The Photographer By Max Porter. The story behind a photograph of a dying man. Read by Tim McInnerny (5/5) 11.00 Americast Analysis of the cultural and social stories that define political debate in the US 11.30 The Bottom Line: The Decisions That Made Me a Leader Evan Davis hosts the business conversation show, with insight from the people at the top (6/6) (r) 12.00 News and Weather 12.30am Book of the Week: All That Glitters (r) 12.48 Shipping Forecast 1.00 As BBC World Service Radio 5 Live Radio 4 Extra Talk Digital only 8.00am Says on the Tin 8.30 These Days 8.45 Exile 9.00 The Tim Vine Chat Show: Summer Extra Special 9.30 Soundstage 9.45 Daily Service 10.00 Soul Music 10.30 Shakespeare in South Africa 11.00 Paul Temple and the Gilbert Case 11.30 A Change in the Weather 12.00 The Older Woman 12.30pm The Burkiss Way 1.00 Says on the Tin 1.30 These Days 1.45 Exile 2.00 Foul Play 2.30 Arrested Development 3.00 Melissa Murray — Dead Men’s Shoes 4.00 Soul Music 4.30 Shakespeare in South Africa 5.00 Paul Temple and the Gilbert Case 5.30 A Change in the Weather 6.00 The Older Woman 6.30 The Burkiss Way 7.00 Says on the Tin. Comedy with Michael Brandon 7.30 These Days. By Lucy Caldwell. Last in the series 7.45 Exile. By Adrian Bean 8.00 Foul Play. Whodunit panel game hosted by Simon Brett 8.30 Arrested Development. Penny’s sister helps her try to come to terms with being jilted by Dave 9.00 Melissa Murray — Dead Men’s Shoes. Stars David Bamber and Celia Imrie. from 2000 10.00 Comedy Club: The Tim Vine Chat Show: Summer Extra Special. From the Pavilion Theatre on Cromer Pier 10.30 Laura Solon: Talking and Not Talking. Office life, relationships and “Lossie Come Home” 10.55 The Comedy Club Interview. Jon Holmes speaks to stand-up comedian Chloe Petts 11.00 The Problem with Adam Bloom. Comedy with Brendon Burns 11.30 Creme de la Crime. The unsolved case of a vanishing lord 11.45 Irish Micks and Legends. Humorous contemporary versions of Irish folk tales. Last in the series MW: 693, 909 5.00am Wake Up to Money 6.00 5 Live Breakfast 9.00 Nicky Campbell 11.00 Chiles on Friday 1.00pm Elis James and John Robins 2.00 Colin Murray 4.00 5 Live Drive 6.30 5 Live Sport 8.00 5 Live Sport: Germany v Scotland (Kick-off 8.00) 10.30 Stephen Nolan 1.00am Lisa McCormick talkSPORT MW: 1053, 1089 kHz 5.00am Early Euro Breakfast 6.00 talkSPORT Euro Breakfast with Alan Brazil 10.00 Euro GameDay Warm Up 1.00pm Euro GameDay Live 4.00 Euro Gameday Drive 7.00 Live Euro GameDay: Germany v Scotland (Kick-off 8.00) 10.30 Sports Bar 1.00am Extra Time with Martin Kelner Digital only 5.00am James Max 6.30 Mike Graham 10.00 Morning Show 1.00pm Ian Collins 4.00 Peter Cardwell 7.00 Kevin O’Sullivan 10.00 Andre Walker 1.00am Martin Kelner 6 Music Digital only 5.00am The Remix with Chris Hawkins 5.30 Chris Hawkins 7.30 Lauren Laverne 10.30 Mary Anne Hobbs 1.00pm Craig Charles 4.00 Huw Stephens 7.00 The People’s Party with Afrodeutsche 9.00 6 Music’s Indie Forever 10.00 6 Music’s Indie Forever 11.00 The Ravers Hour 12.00 6 Music’s Rave Forever 1.00am 6 Music’s Emo Forever 2.00 Focus Beats 4.00 Ambient Focus Virgin Radio Digital only 6.30am Chris Evans 10.00 The Ryan Tubridy Show 1.00pm Jayne Middlemiss 4.00 Ricky Wilson 7.00 Ben Jones 10.00 Stu Elmore 1.00am Harpz Kaur 4.00 Rich Williams Classic FM FM: 100-102 MHz 6.30am Dan Walker 9.00 The Classic FM Hall of Fame Hour with Dan Walker 10.00 Alexander Armstrong 1.00pm Anne-Marie Minhall 4.00 Margherita Taylor 7.00 Classic FM at the Movies with Jonathan Ross 9.00 Traditional Tunes with Iona Stephen 10.00 Calm Classics 1.00am Katie Breathwick 4.00 Sam Pittis
12 Friday June 14 2024 | the times television & radio Viewing Guide James Jackson Live Uefa Euro 2024: Germany v Scotland ITV1, 6.30pm Early Sound the Top vuvuzela, pick grab a bratwurst hot dog ... a football takeover across BBC and ITV is upon us, beamed live from Germany. The Euros are here, and over the next four weeks we can surely expect some thrilling top-quality football. The home nation tends to go far, but we’ll know a bit more about that after tonight’s game in Munich (kick-off 8pm), because Germany have only recently been getting it together with some impressive wins, having looked in disarray a few months ago. Meanwhile, come on Scotland! This is unlikely to be an opening game lacking in passion and urgency. ITV’s anchor tonight will be Mark Pougatch, and among the team of commentators in the month ahead will be Clive Tyldesley and Sam Matterface. Its studio pundits will include Gary Neville, Roy Keane and Ian Wright, although we can presume that tonight it will be Graeme Souness. Over on the BBC, the star signing is Wayne Rooney, and its coverage will include England’s first two games, starting with Serbia on Sunday (at 8pm). The Panorama Interviews with Nick Robinson BBC1, 7.30pm After this week’s light evisceration of Rishi Sunak, Nick Robinson now gets the chance to quiz Keir Starmer about his manifesto and, presumably, his thoughts on Sunak’s claims of a £2,000 tax rise under Labour. That will soon be answered, along with other pressing questions such as, will Robinson wear a tie this time? Indeed, will Starmer? Michael Mosley: The Doctor Who Changed Britain BBC1, 8pm It’s only fitting that Michael Mosley, whose death has shocked everyone, gets a primetime tribute. His programmes delivered all sorts of health messages, from intermittent fasting to the benefits of a cold shower. He also went to extremes in the pursuit of science, such as ingesting a tapeworm. With a style that was warmly accessible, he was a great communicator. BBC1 BBC2 ITV1 Channel 4 Channel 5 6.00am Breakfast 9.30 Morning Live. Magazine show 10.45 Scam Interceptors. An elderly man in a remote community is targeted by scammers 11.15 Homes Under the Hammer. Properties in Leicestershire, Somerset and Blackpool are appraised (r) (AD) 12.15pm Bargain Hunt. A pet-themed edition to celebrate the RSPCA’s 200th anniversary (AD) 1.00 BBC News at One; Weather 1.35 BBC Regional News; Weather 1.45 BBC News at One; Weather 2.00 Hope Street. Finn suspects an act of revenge at a new taxi business (AD) 2.45 Escape to the Country. Sonali Shah tours the East Midlands in search of a property to suit buyers who, for the last 23 years, have been living in America 3.45 Garden Rescue. Charlie Dimmock and Chris Hull head to Warrington in Cheshire to design an eco-friendly garden on the relatively small budget of £3,000 (r) 4.30 The Finish Line. Roman Kemp and Sarah Greene host the quiz, as contestants race in moving podiums across the studio to try to win £5,000. Last in the series 5.15 Pointless. Quiz hosted by Alexander Armstrong and Lucy Porter (r) 6.00 BBC News at Six; Weather 6.30 BBC Regional News; Weather 6.55 Party Election Broadcast (r) 6.30am Homes Under the Hammer (r) 7.30 Clive Myrie’s Caribbean Adventure (r) 8.00 Sign Zone: Mammals (r) (AD, SL) 9.00 BBC News 12.15pm Politics Live 1.00 Impossible (r) 1.45 Mastermind. Clive Myrie hosts the grand final of the quiz (r) 2.45 Five Bedrooms. While everyone is frantically preparing the house to be sold, Heather pulls after finding out two of them are moving in with her ex-husband. Last in the series (r) (AD) 3.35 Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy. The American actor sets out to explore how Italian immigration has transformed the food scene in his adopted home town of London (r) (AD) 4.15 Great Bear Stakeout. The concluding edition focuses on the bears catching hundreds of fish during the great salmon run, helping them bulk up for the harsh winter months (r) 5.15 Flog It! Paul Martin presents previously unseen finds from the show’s travels round the country, visiting Muncaster Castle, the Bowes Museum and Norwich Cathedral (r) 6.00 Richard Osman’s House of Games. Kevin Eldon, Sarah Keyworth, Laila Rouass and John Whaite take part (r) 6.30 Clive Myrie’s Caribbean Adventure. The newsreader explores Puerto Plata in the Dominican Republic. Last in the series 6.00am Good Morning Britain 9.00 Lorraine. Entertainment, current affairs and fashion news, as well as showbiz stories and celebrity gossip. Presented by Lorraine Kelly 10.00 This Morning. Daily magazine, featuring a mix of celebrity chat, showbusiness news, lifestyle features, topical discussion, health and beauty advice and more. Including Local Weather 12.30pm Loose Women. Celebrity interviews and topical debate from a female perspective 1.30 ITV News; Weather 1.55 Regional News; Weather 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal. The Dealers set up at Crewe Hall, as James Layte bargains for a page turner, and Simon Schneider browses some celebrity reading material (r) (AD) 3.00 Lingo. A mother and daughter from London, a pair of friends from West Sussex and an auntie and niece from Surrey and Herts take part (r) 4.00 Tipping Point. Ben Shephard hosts the arcade-themed quiz in which contestants drop tokens down a choice of four chutes in the hope of winning a £10,000 jackpot (r) 5.00 The Chase. Contestants from Woking, Greenhithe, Doncaster and Chepstow take part in the quiz show (r) 6.00 Regional News; Weather 6.10 Party Election Broadcast 6.15 ITV News; Weather 6.30am Cheers (r) 7.20 Everybody Loves Raymond (r) (AD) 9.10 Frasier (r) (AD) 11.10 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (r) 12.05pm Channel 4 News Summary 12.10 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA. A failing pizzeria in Los Angeles (r) 1.10 Car SOS. Revisiting vehicles from the first four series (r) (AD) 2.10 Countdown. Sam Quek is in Dictionary Corner 3.00 A Place in the Sun. Ben Hillman helps a couple find their dream holiday home in Mojacar, Spain with a budget of £125,000 (r) 4.00 A Place in the Sun. A fitness instructor who first visited Málaga six years ago and fell in love with the city and its surroundings is looking for a home within a £100,000 budget 5.00 Sun, Sea and Selling Houses. In Calp, Jo and Andrew Alderton assist a pair who with a budget of €350,000, are looking for a retirement home that they can enjoy with their pets 6.00 Four in a Bed. Payment day sees the holiday hosts meet one last time to find out what they’ve been paid and settle some scores (r) 6.30 The Simpsons. Marge walks out on Homer for allowing an adult film to be shot in their house, and begins a new life — protecting endangered marine creatures (r) (AD) 6.00am Milkshake! 9.15 Jeremy Vine. Jeremy Vine and Storm discuss the latest news 11.15 Storm Huntley. Storm Huntley carries on the discussion and takes your calls to discuss the biggest stories of the day 12.45pm Friends. Rachel considers moving out (r) (AD) 1.10 Friends. Rachel tells her father she is pregnant (r) (AD) 1.40 5 News at Lunchtime 1.45 Home and Away. Bree struggles to leave Remi in the past, Stevie puts Remi in charge of entertaining her film crew guests and Roo confronts Alf (r) 2.15 FILM: Dangerous Love (PG, TVM, 2022) When recently divorced Laura meets a stranger online, her daughter grows suspicious and is determined to uncover the truth. Thriller starring Vivica A Fox 4.00 Bargain-Loving Brits in the Sun. Colin Brown prepares to welcome a family of seven to the B&B, and enlists Sebastian to help him erect a gazebo to shade from the unprecedented hot summer (r) (AD) 5.00 5 News at 5 6.00 Party Election Broadcast. By Plaid Cymru 6.05 Argos: How Do They Really Do It? For decades, Argos has been a fixture of the UK’s high streets — seemingly selling everything. This show reveals what really goes on behind the counter (r) 6.55 5 News Update TV Doctor Michael Mosley & 7PM This week we hear the story of TV Doctor Michael Mosley and how he brought infectious enthusiasm and dedication to his work. Plus that of astronaut William Anders, photographer of one of the most famous photos ever taken. 7.00 The One Show Live chat and topical reports, co-hosted by Alex Jones 8PM 7.30 The Panorama Interviews with Nick Robinson The journalist questions Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer. See Viewing Guide 8.00 Michael Mosley: The Doctor Who Changed Britain A tribute to the medic and broadcaster. See Viewing Guide Late 11PM 10PM 9PM 8.30 Outnumbered The arrival of Pete’s goddaughter from Australia has an unfortunate effect (3/7) (r) (AD) 9.00 Death in Paradise The New Year’s Eve celebrations are cut short when a masked man stabs a woman in her own home. Crime drama with guest appearances by Adrian Edmondson and Nina Wadia (1/8) (r) (AD) 7.00 Digging for Britain: The Greatest Discoveries Professor Alice Roberts visits archaeological digs around the country (3/4) (r) (AD) 7.30 Beechgrove Garden Kirsty Wilson discusses what to sow and plant in order to attract birds to a garden 8.00 Gardeners’ World Monty Don, Nick Bailey, Adam Frost, Sue Kent, Carol Klein and Frances Tophill are Birmingham-bound for the Gardeners’ World Live event, and an expert grower shares her passion for orchids 9.00 Hidden Treasures of the National Trust A mysterious portrait of a servant reveals its secrets, and two rare hidden treasures are brought back into the light. Last in the series. See Viewing Guide (AD) 10.00 BBC News at Ten 10.00 QI Sandi Toksvig looks at tubes and tubas in a totally tubular show (r) 10.30 BBC Regional News and Weather 10.40 MOTD: Uefa Euro 2024 Highlights Germany v Scotland. Alex Scott presents action from the Group A match at Munich Football Arena, as the tournament got under way 10.30 Newsnight Headline analysis presented by Faisal Islam 11.25 Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (15, 2011) A former intelligence operative is brought out of retirement to uncover a Soviet mole in MI6. Cold War thriller starring Gary Oldman, Colin Firth and Benedict Cumberbatch (AD) 1.25am Euro 2024 Match Replay Germany v Scotland. A chance to see the Group A match at Munich Football Arena. With commentary by Steve Wilson and James McFadden 3.10-6.00 BBC News. The latest headlines 11.05 Dear Evan Hansen (12, 2021) Film adaptation of the Tony and Grammy Award-winning musical about Evan Hansen, a high-school senior with a social anxiety disorder. Starring Ben Platt and Julianne Moore 1.10am Sign Zone: The Wrong Man — 17 Years Behind Bars Documentary (r) (SL) 2.10 Andi Oliver’s Fabulous Feasts. Andi revisits her past in west London’s Notting Hill. Last in the series (r) (AD, SL) 3.10-3.40 David & Jay’s Touring Toolshed. A model helicopter pilot puts the duo to the test (r) (AD, SL) 6.30 Live Uefa Euro 2024: Germany v Scotland (Kick-off 8.00). Mark Pougatch presents coverage of the Group A match from Munich Football Arena, as hosts Germany kick off the tournament against Steve Clarke’s side. Julian Nagelsmann’s team go into the tournament having qualified automatically, and are one of the favourites to win the competition. They are looking to win their first major trophy since the World Cup in 2014, and their first European Championship victory since 1996. Scotland qualified for their second consecutive Euros after finishing below Spain, but comfortably ahead of the likes of Norway and Georgia. With analysis from Graeme Souness, Roy Keane, Ian Wright and Laura Woods, reports by Connie McLaughlin, and commentary from Sam Matterface and Ally McCoist. See Viewing Guide 10.45 ITV News 11.20 Regional News 11.30 Terminator 2: Judgment Day (15, 1991) Sci-fi adventure sequel starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and Linda Hamilton (AD) 1.40am Shop on TV 3.00 The Larkins. The family do all they can to get Pop out of prison, while Mariette tells him he is going to be grandfather, but swears him to secrecy. Ma is surprised by an about-turn from Norma (r) (AD, SL) 3.50 Unwind with ITV 5.05-6.00 Katie Piper’s Breakfast Show. With guests including Alexandra Burke (r) (SL) 7.00 Channel 4 News The day’s national and international stories, plus sport and weather 7.00 The Motorway Hotel Head Chef James works with new apprentice Kaylan, and the annual national Maize Maze awards is meant to be in town, but snowfall causes chaos (4/4) 7.55 Party Election Broadcast 7.55 5 News Update 8.00 The Dog House Trini from London contends with sassy fluffball Balloo, while Roz and John are desperate to help their cockapoo Marnie following the loss of her sight (2/7) (r) (AD) 8.00 Dalgliesh Adam and Miskin attend the murder scene of Rita O’Keefe, whose nephew Garry Ashe emerges as chief suspect. At his trial, defence barrister Venetia Aldridge smoothly secures an acquittal, but when she is also found dead, Dalgliesh is soon on the hunt for a missing paperknife, and a motive. Drama starring Bertie Carvel and Carlyss Peer (r) 9.00 Celebrity Gogglebox A rolling cast of famous faces — including Rylan, Mel B, Nick Grimshaw, Zoe Ball, Clare Balding and Jane McDonald — critique the week’s biggest television shows (AD) 10.00 The Nevermets Twenty-four-yearold Leah and 38-year-old Matt meet the objects of their affections, having previously communicated with Chad and Maria, respectively, through online means (4/6) (AD) 10.00 Live UK vs Germany Fight Night: Macaulay McGowan v Abass Baraou Coverage of the bout for the European Super Welterweight title at Bolton Whites Hotel 11.05 The Inbetweeners Movie (15, 2011) Awkward teenagers Simon, Will, Jay and Neil head to Greece for a wild holiday — but things do not go to plan. Comedy starring Joe Thomas, Simon Bird, James Buckley and Blake Harrison (AD) 12.55am FILM: Skyscraper (12, 2018) A security expert must infiltrate a burning skyscraper when his family is trapped inside. Action thriller starring Dwayne Johnson (AD) 2.35 Ramsay’s 24 Hours to Hell and Back (r) (AD, SL) 3.25 Come Dine with Me (r) (AD) 5.35 Escape to the Château (r) 5.45-6.10 Frasier (r) 12.05am Ultimate Police Interceptors (r) 1.00 Entertainment News on 5 1.15 PlayOJO Live Casino Show 3.15 Secret Scotland with Susan Calman (r) 4.05 Britain’s Greatest Bridges (r) (AD, SL) 4.50 Wildlife SOS (r) (SL) 5.15 House Doctor (r) (SL) 5.40 Entertainment News on 5 5.45-6.00 Paw Patrol (r) (SL)
13 the times | Friday June 14 2024 television & radio Hidden Treasures of the National Trust BBC2, 9pm Long-past secrets offer an air of mystery to the final part. In Chirk Castle in the Welsh Marches, built in the 13th century to impose English rule under Edward I, hangs an 18th-century portrait of a servant, and after years next to an open fire little can be seen of the man under layers of soot. As he is restored, what stories will he yield? Also tonight, a rats’ nest in Oxburgh Hall in Norfolk contains scraps of centuries-old clothes. In north Wales, the National Trust turns mediator in an old dispute between Penrhyn Castle and the local community. Paranormal: The Village That Saw Aliens BBC3, 9pm/9.30pm Are you a believer or a sceptic? Radio 1’s Sian Eleri is a sceptic, but will she still be after four episodes of close encounters of the Welsh kind? In 1977, 14 schoolboys claimed to see a UFO in the playground. It created a media frenzy, which in turn triggered a wave of uncanny phenomena along the Welsh coastline. Eleri delves deep into the evidence, things taking a chilling turn when she meets a woman who says she saw the UFO and is still haunted by it all. For all your paranormal needs, look no further. Sister Boniface Mysteries Drama, 9pm In the 1980s a killer doll on screen meant the horror film character Chucky. In 2024 it means a plotline in a whimsical 1950s-set whodunnit. In episode two of the latest series of nun-sleuthing, Sister Boniface must face her phobia of dolls when a local toymaker is discovered stabbed to death in, yes, a locked room. A dead-eyed doll called Harmony is found near the body holding the murder weapon, the press has seized on “killer doll” headlines, and mass panic is on the cards. It is absurd, but knowingly so. As usual, all fun Friday night escapism. Film The Great Escaper Sky/Now Michael Caine and Glenda Jackson star in a real-life tale about war guilt and lifelong companionship. He plays a Second World War veteran who fled his care home to attend D-Day 70th anniversary commemorations. (12, 2023) Sky Max Sky Atlantic Sky Documentaries Sky Arts Sky Main Event Variations 6.00am NCIS: Los Angeles (r) 7.00 DC’s Legends of Tomorrow (r) (AD) 8.00 The Flash (r) 9.00 Stargate SG-1 (r) 11.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (r) 12.00 The Flash (r) 1.00pm MacGyver (r) (AD) 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (r) 4.00 S.W.A.T (r) (AD) 5.00 DC’s Legends of Tomorrow. Comic-book fantasy (r) (AD) 6.00 Stargate SG-1. The team is propelled back to a top-secret military base in 1969 (r) 7.00 Stargate SG-1. Part one of two. O’Neill wakes from cryonic suspension (r) 8.00 A League of Their Own: Mexican Road Trip. Jamie Redknapp, Jill Scott, Micah Richards and Mo Gilligan explore the city of La Paz (r) (AD) 9.00 The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live. Post-apocalyptic horror starring Andrew Lincoln 10.00 Never Mind the Buzzcocks (r) (AD) 11.30 The Walking Dead. The Governor restores order in Woodbury (r) 12.30am Brit Cops: Rapid Response (r) (AD) 1.30 Road Wars (r) 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (r) 4.00 S.W.A.T (r) (AD) 5.00 Highway Patrol (r) (AD) 6.00am The Guest Wing (r) (AD) 7.55 Six Feet Under (r) (AD) 10.05 Billions (r) (AD) 12.15pm Game of Thrones (r) (AD) 1.20 The Sopranos (r) 3.30 Six Feet Under (r) (AD) 5.30 Billions. Chuck, Axe and Prince have the ultimate showdown (r) (AD) 6.35 Gomorrah. First episode of the Italian crime drama, starring Marco D’Amore (r) 7.35 Game of Thrones. Jon and his men go beyond the wall to capture a white walker, while Daenerys has to make a decision, and tensions between Arya and Sansa increase (r) (AD) 8.50 House of the Dragon. Rhaenyra tries desperately to hold the realm together (r) (AD) 10.00 House of the Dragon: War Room. Sue Perkins presents a look ahead to season two (r) 11.00 The Time Traveler’s Wife. Adaptation of Audrey Niffenegger’s novel starring Rose Leslie and Theo James (1/6) (r) (AD) 12.00 The Time Traveler’s Wife (r) (AD) 1.55am Euphoria (r) (AD) 3.05 Game of Thrones (r) (AD) 4.20 The Guest Wing (r) (AD) 6.00am The Good Fight Club (r) (AD) 7.00 Discovering: Daniel Day-Lewis (r) 8.00 The Directors (r) 9.00 The Eighties (r) (AD) 10.00 The Two Escobars (r) 12.00 Terry Venables: A Man Can Dream (r) (AD) 2.00pm FILM: Gascoigne (15, 2015) Documentary about Paul Gascoigne 3.45 My Icon: Thierry Henry (r) (AD) 4.00 The Directors (r) 5.00 Discovering: Daniel Day-Lewis. Profile (r) 6.00 The Eighties (r) (AD) 7.00 I Am Johnny Cash. A celebration of the country singer-songwriter (r) (AD) 8.45 My Icon: Ebony Rainford-Brent (r) (AD) 9.00 FILM: Bowling for Columbine (15, 2002) Documentary by Michael Moore 11.15 An American Bombing: The Road to April 19th. Taking a look at the surge in homegrown political violence (r) (AD) 1.15am Brillo Box (3¢ off) (r) 2.00 Stax: Soulsville USA. New series. Documentary about the soul music record label 3.10 The Apollo (r) 5.00 Discovering: Daniel Day-Lewis (r) 6.00am Sky Sports News. Round-up of the sports news 7.00 Good Morning Euros 8.00 Good Morning Euros 9.00 Good Morning Euros. Round-up of the all the news from the 2024 Uefa European Football Championship 10.00 Live Tennis: The Libema Open. Coverage of day five of the WTA and ATP grass court events, held at Autotron Rosmalen in s-Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands, featuring the quarter-finals 12.30pm Live US Open Golf. Coverage of the second day of the Major, held at Pinehurst Resort in North Carolina. Rickie Fowler held the lead at the end of the halfway stage last year with eventual champion Wyndham Clark just one stroke behind him. Meanwhile, Justin Rose, Phil Mickelson, Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth were among the players who missed the cut 1.00am Live ICC Men’s T20 World Cup: New Zealand v Uganda. Coverage of the Group C encounter, which comes from Brian Lara Cricket Academy in Tarouba 5.30 Sky Sports News. Round-up of the latest sports news BBC1 N Ireland As BBC1 except: 6.55pm-7.00 Party Election Broadcast (r) 8.30-9.00 Suzie Lee: Home Cook Hero. Suzie reveals tips for cooking fresh fish 6.00am Charles Hazlewood: Beethoven & Me (AD) 7.00 Classic FM Rising Stars with Julian Lloyd Webber 2022 8.00 The Joy of Painting (AD) 9.00 Tales of the Unexpected (AD) 10.00 Alfred Hitchcock Presents 11.00 Discovering: Peter Ustinov 12.00 The Joy of Painting (AD) 1.00pm Tales of the Unexpected (AD) 1.55 Mae West: Dirty Blonde (AD) 3.00 Camille Pissarro: The Father of Impressionism 4.00 Discovering: Ian McKellen 5.00 The Joy of Painting (AD) 6.00 Tales of the Unexpected (AD) 7.00 Alfred Hitchcock Presents 7.30 Alfred Hitchcock Presents 8.00 How the Beatles Changed the World. Discover how four young men from Liverpool transformed the world for ever 10.15 Discovering: John Lennon 11.15 Stuart Sutcliffe: The Lost Beatle 12.30am Guy Garvey: From the Vaults 1.30 Live from the Artists Den 2.45 Led Zeppelin: In the Light 4.00 Cheltenham Literature Festival 5.00 Auction AUDIO Astronaut Bill Anders BBC1 Scotland As BBC1 except: 11.15am-12.15 Homes Under the Hammer (r) 6.55pm-7.00 Party Election Broadcast 10.40-11.25 Sportscene: Euro Highlights. Germany v Scotland BBC1 Wales As BBC1 except: 6.55pm-7.00 Party Election Broadcast (r) 8.30-9.00 Iolo’s Valleys. Iolo Williams heads up the valleys north of Newport. Last in the series 10.40 Paranormal: The Village That Saw Aliens. The biggest mass UFO sighting in Britain (r) 11.10 Paranormal: The Village That Saw Aliens (r) 11.40 MOTD: Uefa Euro 2024 Highlights. Germany v Scotland 12.25am-1.25 Pitch Invasion: How the Scottish and Irish Changed Football (AD) BBC2 Wales As BBC2 except: 7.00pm The One Show 7.30-8.00 Springwatch in Wales (r) ITV1 Wales As ITV1 except: 6.10pm-6.15 Party Election Broadcast. By the Liberal Democrats STV As ITV1 except: 11.20pm-11.30 STV News 1.40am-3.00 Shop on TV 3.50-5.05 Night Vision. News, sport and weather Listen for free via the QR code or wherever you find your podcasts UTV As ITV1 except: 6.10pm-6.15 Party Election Broadcast. By Traditional Unionist Voice BBC3 BBC4 Talking Pictures Film4 More4 7.00pm Top Gear. Michael Sheen is the Star in a Reasonably Priced Car (AD) 8.00 The Traitors US. A deadly mission sees a player take their last breath in the game 9.00 Paranormal: The Village That Saw Aliens. New series. The biggest mass UFO sighting in Britain. See Viewing Guide (1/4) (AD) 9.30 Paranormal: The Village That Saw Aliens. Sian Eleri heads to Haven Fort Hotel in order to follow up on claims “creatures” were seen there. See Viewing Guide (2/4) (AD) 10.00 A Very British Cult. An investigation into a life coaching company that allegedly ruins lives 11.00 Ladhood. Liam is forced to confront his mental-health problems 11.25 Ladhood. Liam prepares to perform at a spoken-word gig in Leeds 11.50 I Kissed a Boy. There’s a chill in the air as the dinner party concludes with heated words and bruised relationships (AD) 12.40am Confessions of a Teenage Fraudster. Elliot becomes more paranoid than ever (AD) 1.25 Boot Dreams: Now or Never (AD) 2.25 Ladhood 2.50 Paranormal: The Village That Saw Aliens (AD, SL) 3.50-4.00 Press X to Continue 7.00pm TOTP: 1996. Mark Goodier presents the pop chart programme 7.30 TOTP: 1996. Dale Winton presents the pop chart programme 8.00 TOTP: 1987. Performances by John Farnham, Bruce Willis, Beastie Boys, Run DMC, Tom Jones, Whitesnake, ABC, Johnny Logan, Whitney Houston and Jody Watley 8.30 TOTP: 1982. Featuring Roxy Music, Duran Duran, ABC, Queen, Toyah and Adam Ant 9.00 Disco at the BBC: Volume 2. A selection of disco with a celebration of nightclub classics taken from the BBC’s archives, including George McCrae’s Rock Your Baby, Ring My Bell by Anita Ward and Baccara’s Yes Sir, I Can Boogie 10.00 Disco: Soundtrack of a Revolution. A look at how disco conquered the charts (2/3) 11.00 Boogie Fever: A TOTP2 Disco Special. Steve Wright presents performances of disco classics from the BBC archives, featuring George McCrae, Chic, Gloria Gaynor, Sophie Ellis-Bextor, Edwin Starr and the Weather Girls 12.30am Sounds of the 70s 1.00 Disco at the BBC: Volume 2 2.00 TOTP: 1996 3.00 TOTP: 1987 3.30-4.00 TOTP: 1982 6.00am FILM: She’ll Have to Go (U, 1962) (b/w) 7.45 Come a Little Closer 7.50 FILM: The Glass Cage (PG, 1955) (b/w) 9.05 FILM: Passport to Treason (15, 1956) (b/w) 10.40 FILM: The Night Caller (15, 1965) (b/w) 12.20pm What’s On TPTV with Noel 12.30 The Four Just Men (b/w) 1.00 Melvyn’s Talking Pictures 1.10 FILM: Mimi (PG, 1935) Romantic drama starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr (b/w) 3.00 Melvyn’s Talking Pictures 3.10 FILM: Rebecca (PG, 1940) Romantic thriller starring Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine (b/w) 5.45 Look at Life 6.00 Worzel Gummidge 6.30 Fireball XL5 (b/w) 7.05 FILM: Millions Like Us (U, 1943) (b/w) 9.00 Cellar Club with Caroline Munro 9.05 FILM: Without Warning (18, 1980) 10.55 Cellar Club with Caroline Munro 11.00 FILM: Serpent’s Lair (18, 1995) 12.50am Cellar Club with Caroline Munro 12.55 FILM: Unearthly Stranger (PG, 1963) Sci-fi adventure starring John Neville (b/w) 2.30 FILM: Deathsport (18, 1978) 4.10 The Road to D-Day 4.45 Look at Life 5.00 Bonanza 11.00am 13 Rue Madeleine (U, 1946) Second World War spy thriller starring James Cagney (b/w) 12.55pm Anne of the Indies (U, 1951) High-seas adventure starring Jean Peters 2.35 Rio Grande (U, 1950) Western starring John Wayne (b/w) (AD) 4.45 A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (PG, 2019) Drama starring Tom Hanks (AD) 6.55 Sleepless in Seattle (PG, 1993) Romantic comedy starring Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan and Bill Pullman (AD) 9.00 Mission: Impossible — Fallout (12, 2018) Ethan Hunt, the IMF team and a CIA assassin try to prevent a disaster caused by a group of terrorists. 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A 52-year-old woman who suffers from MS is brought in with a case of suspected sepsis (AD) 11.05 24 Hours in A&E. A 20-year-old woman is rushed in after being involved in a high-speed car crash, while a 78-year-old man is transferred from his local hospital with suspected internal bleeding (AD) 12.10am 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown 1.15 The Twelve: Cinderella Murder. The examining magistrate presents the reconstructions of the crimes 2.25 24 Hours in A&E (AD) 3.30-4.00 A Place in the Sun ITV2 ITV3 ITV4 Drama Yesterday 6.00am CITV 9.00 World’s Funniest Videos 9.30 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records 10.00 Love Bites (AD, SL) 12.00 Dress to Impress 1.00pm Deal or No Deal 2.00 Family Fortunes 3.00 Veronica Mars 4.00 Dawson’s Creek 5.00 Dress to Impress 6.00 Celebrity Catchphrase (AD) 7.00 Deal or No Deal. Game show 8.00 Bob’s Burgers. The kids are desperate to get out of the house after being grounded (AD) 8.30 Bob’s Burgers. 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Al tries to raise some quick cash, while Martin accidentally inflicts a minor wound on an elderly patient — who walks out of the surgery, vowing never to return (4/8) (AD) 9.00 Shetland. Perez and the team investigate when body parts belonging to a young man are discovered on the island, Drama starring Douglas Henshall and Alison O’Donnell 10.20 Shetland. A discovery at the Hayes house changes the course of the investigation. Perez establishes the probable cause for Daniel’s murder and his sister Zezi’s disappearance 11.30 Lewis. When a student’s body is hauled from the canal with stab wounds, suspicion falls on her lover — a young astrophysics professor — and his jealous wife (AD) 1.10am Upstairs, Downstairs 2.05 Unwind with ITV 2.30 Teleshopping 6.00am World of Sport 6.10 Minder (AD, SL) 7.10 The Sweeney (SL) 8.10 The Return of Sherlock Holmes (AD) 9.15 Magnum, PI (AD, SL) 10.20 Kojak 11.25 BattleBots 12.25pm The Return of Sherlock Holmes (AD) 1.35 Magnum, PI (AD) 2.40 Kojak 3.40 Minder (AD) 4.50 The Sweeney. Regan gets a tip-off 6.00 Live World Series of Darts. Coverage of the first day of the 2024 Poland Darts Masters tournament, featuring commentary from Dan Dawson and Mark Webster 10.00 All Elite Wrestling: Dynamite. Hard-hitting action from the world of All Elite Wrestling — the roster features world-class talent including Jon Moxley, Chris Jericho, Bryan Danielson and Claudio Castagnoli 12.00 Made in Britain. Discover how one firm makes the wheelbarrows that helped rebuild Britain (AD) 1.00am The Sweeney. The death of a gangland leader sparks bitterness (SL) 1.55 The Protectors. A terrorist group steals an art collection (SL) 2.25 Unwind with ITV. Daily escape designed to calm the mind and encourage relaxation and reflection 3.00 Teleshopping 6.00am Teleshopping 7.10 London’s Burning 8.00 Doctors 9.15 Classic Holby City 10.40 Classic Casualty 11.40 The Bill 12.40pm Classic EastEnders 2.00 London’s Burning 3.00 Lovejoy 4.10 Tenko 5.15 Birds of a Feather 6.00 Waiting for God 6.40 Are You Being Served? 7.20 Last of the Summer Wine. Smiler finds work as a door-to-door salesman 8.00 Father Brown. A convicted killer is given a temporary reprieve and begs Father Brown to help prove her innocence, but he only has three days in which to do it (AD) 9.00 Sister Boniface Mysteries. Sister Boniface is on the hunt for a killer doll when a toymaker is stabbed to death. 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14 Friday June 14 2024 | the times MindGames Backgammon Codeword Chris Bray The Karl Kraus effect The Austrian satirist Karl Kraus used to perform a sketch that involved him looking for a key in a small pool of light. A passer-by offers to help and, finding nothing, asks if that, indeed, is where the key was lost. “Not at all,” says Kraus, “I lost it over there”, and he points to the dark. “So why are you looking here?” asks the passer-by. “Because”, Kraus answers, “this is where the light is.” What has this got to do with backgammon? I used this anecdote in my corporate life to teach students that the easy solution is not necessarily the correct one. I now use the same idea to teach my backgammon students to make sure they think about all possible solutions. During the recent UK v Germany match, in the consulting doubles, Tim Cross and I were guilty of only looking in the light for ways to play this 32 as Black. We spent a long time discussing the merits of 7/5, 6/3, playing safe, or hitting with 7/4, 3/1*. After some considerable time, we chose 7/5, 6/3, which Train Tracks No 5241 turned out to be a double blunder. We should have been looking in the dark. We took the micro view and only looked at the immediate future without ever discussing our overall game plan — a cardinal sin. How is Black going to win this game? Blitzing is certainly an option, but the stronger plan is priming. If Black can make the bar-point, White will be in real trouble, barring a very lucky roll. Once you understand this then the best play becomes clear: 13/11, 13/10. This puts the pressure on White to roll an immediate six, and if they don’t then in many scenarios Black will have a strong but takeable double next turn. A couple of rolls later, our opponents committed their own blunder by dropping a double they should have taken. Eventually Tim and I scraped home, winning 11-7. This salutary tale reminds us that you can never relax when playing backgammon. The game is too difficult for that. Importantly, it reinforces the concept that you must always keep your overall game plan at the forefront of your mind. No 2269 Lay tracks to enable the train to travel from village A to village B. The numbers indicate how many sections of track go in each row and column. There are only straight sections and curved sections. The track cannot cross itself. Quintagram® Solve all five cryptic clues using each Solveunderneath all five cryptic letter onceclues only using each letter underneath once only Every letter in this crossword-style grid is represented by a number from 1 to 26. Each letter of the alphabet appears in the grid at least once. Use the letters already provided to work out the identity of further letters. Enter letters in the main grid and the smaller reference grid until all 26 letters of the alphabet have been accounted for. Proper nouns are excluded. Yesterday’s solution, right Cluelines Stuck on Codeword? To receive 4 random clues call 0901 293 6262 or text TIMECODE to 64343. Calls cost £1 plus your telephone company’s network access charge. Texts cost £1 plus your standard network charge. For the full solution call 0905 757 0142. Calls cost £1 per minute plus your telephone company’s network access charge. SP: Spoke, 0333 202 3390 (Mon-Fri, 9am-5.30pm). Lexica F Winning Move White to play. This position is a variation from Nasuta-Orzech, Katowice 2024. Three pieces of generally sound advice for the early stages of a chess game: develop the pieces, control the centre and get the king safe. A huge number of Winning Move puzzles feature situations where the third of these nuggets of wisdom has been wilfully ignored. Today’s position is a case in point. How can White finish off? KenKen Difficult No 6233 C Easy No 7471 N E D E E O R W A T X A E O T A I T I B E S O E C end (7) -4 Exhausted - - -English - -politician, -------A A A B D D D E E G G I I I L T M N N N O O O O X T O P P R S T T T U O A K R P I M V E C T Slide the letters either horizontally or vertically back into the grid to produce a completed crossword. Letters are allowed to slide over other letters Futoshiki -3 Mean - -goblin - harassed - - pixie in the -5 Gift-from - -state-following - - party (8) H D R -2 Minister’s - - -father’s rocky rise (6) unable to move? (7) Hard No 7472 R 1 Try promotion to create incentive (4) No 4781 Challenge your mind with these fiendish word and number puzzles Kakuro E thetimes.co.uk/ bookshop What are your favourite puzzles in MindGames? Email: puzzles@thetimes.co.uk No 3740 Fill the grid using the numbers 1 to 9 only. The numbers in each horizontal or vertical run of white squares add up to the total in the triangle to its left or above it. The same number may occur more than once in a row or column, but not within the same run of white squares. All the digits 1 to 6 must appear in every row and column. In each thick-line “block”, the target number in the top left-hand corner is calculated from the digits in all the cells in the block, using the operation indicated by the symbol. Fill the blank squares so that every row and column contains each of the numbers 1 to 5 once only. The symbols between the squares indicate whether a number is larger (>) or smaller (<) than the number next to it.
15 the times | Friday June 14 2024 MindGames 1 2 3 4 8 6 7 11 +7 MEDIUM 83 x 2 + 49 ÷ 5 + 181 + 1/4 HARDER 14 SQUARE IT OF IT x4 ÷8 SQUARE IT + 22 x 2 – 7 ÷ 11 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 OF IT + 5/7 OF IT x 7 – 294 80% OF IT – 27 x 2 – 135 Solution to Crossword 9556 ASS O UME M SEU I MB E T EMP O O PA I N R I COSH ERB N O ROU A N P T T Y US R G ERA D L SA X EY Y S P UR O AS P E C NT U ES DRAB H O C I AO Z S NOUT M PECT I P SOM L E I AGO N U I GHT + 2/3 OF IT x4 1/5 OF IT + 423 Divide the grid into square or rectangular blocks, each containing one digit only. Every block must contain the number of cells indicated by the digit inside it. Set Square 18 One advancing to the next stage of a contest (9) Ventilate (3) New Testament letter (7) Artisan’s skill (5) Racing toboggan (4) Those who may pass on a disease unawares (8) Down 1 Curved entrance (7) 2 Young eel (5) 3 Magician (11) 4 Antenna (6) 6 In the open air (7) 7 Gave out (playing cards) (5) 10 Seller of fruit and vegetables (11) 14 Inclination, tendency (7) 16 Fool’s gold (7) 17 Movie venue (6) 18 Subdue, suppress (5) 19 Belittle or humble (oneself) (5) Enter each of the numbers from 1 to 9 in the grid, so that the six sums work. We’ve placed two numbers to get you started. Each sum should be calculated left to right or top to bottom. Please note, BODMAS does not apply Killer Moderate No 9520 Solutions Quick Cryptic 2701 Tetonor 474 18 ♠ Q2 ♥7 5 ♦A K J 7 4 2 ♣K 4 2 ♠ J72 ♥Q ♦Q 8 2 ♣A K 9 6 4 2 ♠ KJ74 ♥J 4 ♦A K 6 4 3 2 ♣9 175 14 + 4 5 187 40 80 x 35 5 + 35 4 25 150 x 20 32 11 x 17 10 + 15 15 x 10 27 + 5 28 Naturally, this is somewhat tongue-in-cheek, as it depends on how often you play. The point, though, is that you should play most of your minor-suit-fit game hands in 3NT. After all, you can afford to lose twice as many tricks in 3NT than in 5♣/♦. Partner opens 1NT. What would you respond with these? Kakuro 3739 Codeword 5240 Train Tracks 2268 Sudoku 14,988 100 20 135 17 + 11 10 x 10 10 + 10 5 Andrew Robson Twenty Bidding Maxims 11. Minor-suit games, only once a month No 3743 Yesterday’s answers amok, atom, korma, mako, mark, mart, mask, mast, moat, mort, most, postmark, pram, prom, ramp, roam, romp, samp, smart, soma, spam, stamp, stoma, stomp, storm, stroma, tamp, tram, tramp, tromp 19 20 21 22 23 Need help with today’s puzzle? Call 0905 757 0143 to check the answers. Calls cost £1 per minute plus your telephone company’s network access charge. SP: Spoke, 0333 202 3390 (Mon-Fri 9am-5.30pm). Bridge No 5124 From these letters, make words of four or more letters, always including the central letter. Answers must be in the Concise Oxford Dictionary, excluding capitalised words, plurals, conjugated verbs (past tense etc), adverbs ending in LY, comparatives and superlatives. How you rate 12 words, average; 17, good; 23, very good; 29, excellent 23 Across 1 Stateside citizen (8) 5 Ian Fleming’s secret agent (4) 8 Courteous, considerate (5) 9 Rowing or sailing event (7) 11 Armed conflict (3) 12 Unfairly blamed person (9) 13 Lemon or sulphur, eg (6) 15 Remove a covering of paper from (a gift) (6) 50% OF IT Polygon 21 22 P E N G U I N EASY 1/3 12 13 Cell Blocks Just follow the instructions from left to right, starting with the number given to reach an answer at the end. 5 9 11 Brain Trainer No 9557 ANSWER ANSWER ANSWER times2 Crossword 56 the suits and note that there’s no point in introducing spades on the second because partner would normally prefer to respond a fourcard major than support a minor. The third is different. A 3NT bid would gamble too much on the spades. However, don’t bypass 3NT, instead bid your cheapest stopper: 3♦. If partner has both majors covered, she’ll bid 3NT. With one major covered, she’ll bid her stopper; if she bids 3♠ , you’ll bid 3NT (as you have a heart cover); if she bids 3♥ , though, you’ll have to try 5♣ — but don’t try it again for another month! Dealer S Sudoku 14,989 14 x 31 108 4 27 + 4 27 x x 27 24 4 20 + 4 Set17Square 3742 4 4 Cell 4 5Blocks 5 10 5123 10 10 11 14 15 20 27 27 35 D Killer Deadly No 9521 R O A N D D E A D S O D R M A L I L L Y Sudoku 14,990 Futoshiki 4780 KenKen 6232 Lexica 7470 O L I I L ♠ KQ 5 ♥6 5 With both the first and second, ♦Q 8 5 2 jump to 3NT. It is quite hard to ♣K 9 8 3 construct a hand for partner ♠ A 10 2 ♠ J98643 N where 5♣/♦ is making and 3NT ♥ K973 ♥ A 10 8 2 W E isn’t. Don’t even bother to jump to ♦K 9 6 3 ♦10 7 S 3♣/♦ — there’s little to gain. ♣10 5 ♠ 7 ♣7 The third is different — but ♥ QJ4 mainly because you have to inves♦A J 4 tigate a 4-4 major-fit (you’d prefer ♣AQ J 6 4 2 4♥ /♠ to 3NT if you had an eightS W N E card fit). You should bid 2♣ 1♣ Pass 3♣ Pass Stayman, asking for four-card ♦ (1) Pass 3 ♠ (2) Pass 3 majors. You’ll naturally raise 2♠ to 3NT(3) End 4♠ ; if partner replies 2♦ or 2♥ , bid 3♦ — natural, forcing and (1) Cheapest stopper, looking for 3NT. implying four spades. If partner (2) Spades stopped, not hearts. now bids 3NT, pass — partner (3) Hearts stopped. 5♣ is hopeless (two down on ♥ 3 should have good clubs. In our second exercise, you lead to ♥ A and ♦10 switch). West open 1♣ and partner jumps to 3♣. led ♥ 3 v 3NT, East winning ♥ A, returning ♥ 2 to (♥ Q and) ♥ K, What now with these? declarer winning ♥ 9 return with ♠ Q32 ♠ J972 ♠ 74 ♥K 5 ♥A J ♥Q J 4 ♥ J. Reading hearts to be 4-4 (West ♦A 10 ♦K 8 ♦KQ led her lowest), declarer led up ♠ 7 ♣AQ 9 6 3 2 ♣A K 7 6 3 ♣A KQ 10 6 2 to ♠ K for her ninth trick then With the first and second, bid cashed six clubs and ♦A. Game 3NT — you’re stopped (ish) in all made. andrew.robson@thetimes.co.uk Lexica 7469 V A U I M A C M E R P L O Z R A Y Y Today’s solutions Killer 9518 As with standard Sudoku, fill the grid so that every column, every row and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9. Each set of cells joined by dotted lines must add up to the target number in its top-left corner. Within each set of cells joined by dotted lines, a digit cannot be repeated. Cluelines Stuck on Sudoku, Killer or KenKen? Call 0901 293 6263 before midnight to receive four clues for any of today’s puzzles. Calls cost £1 plus your telephone company’s network access charge. SP: Spoke, 0333 202 3390 (Mon-Fri 9am-5.30pm). Killer 9519 Concise Quintagram 1 House 2 Field 3 Harvest 4 Optical 5 Wireless Cryptic Quintagram 1 Goad 2 Pastor 3 Ignoble 4 Emptied 5 Donation Suko 4142 Brain Trainer Easy 5 Medium 259 Harder 1,795 Word watch Quiz Ascian (a) One living between the tropics (Collins) Olecranon (c) The point of the elbow (Chambers) Dudeen (a) A short clay tobacco pipe (OED) 1 Chernobyl disaster 2 Nineteen Eighty-Four 3 Scarecrow 4 Penicillin, by Alexander Fleming 5 William Wallace 6 Sally Bowles 7 Shane MacGowan 8 The Woolpack, in Emmerdale 9 Tennis 10 The Hardy Boys or Frank and Joe Hardy 11 Alpha Centauri 12 Washington DC 13 Magnus III or Magnus Barefoot 14 Ash 15 Phoebe Philo Chess — Winning Move 1 Qf8+! leads to a lovely bishop and knight mate: 1 ... Rxf8 2 Ng7+ Kd8 3 Bxf6 mate
14.06.24 Word watch Sudoku Mild No 14,991 Difficult No 14,992 Fiendish No 14,993 David Parfitt Ascian a One living between the tropics b A computer programmer c A person born at a propitious moment Olecranon a A dish of mashed potatoes and cabbage b A recently discovered inert element c The point of the elbow Dudeen a A short clay tobacco pipe b A fashionable adolescent c A cheap fabric for clothing Answers on page 15 Fill the grid so that every column, every row and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9. The Times Daily Quiz Suko Olav Bjortomt 11 What is the nearest star system to our solar system? 2 Which dystopian classic by George Orwell introduced the concept of the Thought Police? 4 Which discovery of 1928 started the antibiotic revolution? 5 The sculptor Richard Price’s Spirit of Scotland monument shows an outline of which Scottish hero (d 1305)? 6 The British journalist Jean Ross was the 12 Featured in the classic horror film, the Exorcist Steps is an official landmark in which US city? original inspiration for which singer in the musical Cabaret? 2 Dingle and her son Ryan Stocks? 9 Starring Zendaya and Josh O’Connor, the 2024 film Challengers centres on which sport? 7 Richard Balls’s 2021 book A Furious Devotion is about the life of which Pogues frontman? 10 Which teenage brothers were introduced in the Franklin W Dixon 8 Which fictional pub is owned by Charity 3 4 7 5 6 10 11 12 13 16 14 17 15 18 19 20 23 21 24 14 Most snooker cues are predominantly made from which type of wood? 15 Who is this Parisborn British fashion designer? Answers on page 15 Place the numbers 1 to 9 in the spaces so that the number in each circle is equal to the sum of the four surrounding spaces, and each colour total is correct For interactive puzzles visit thetimes.com Join hosts Georgie Frost and Martyn James, plus special guests, as they delve into the thornier money issues for the brand new video series from Times Money Mentor – where nothing is off the table. No 2702 by Teazel 8 9 How much money would you need to make you happy? Are couples always better off financially? Why don’t we all just escape to the country? And is the second wine on the menu really the worst? 13 Which King of Norway reigned as King of Man and the Isles between 1099 and 1103? 15 The Times Quick Cryptic 1 Let’s talk about money with Bread & Honey book The Tower Treasure (1927)? 1 Which nuclear disaster took place 60 miles north of Kyiv in 1986? 3 Which character in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz sings If I Only Had a Brain? No 4142 22 Across 7 Nervous, I change holiday purchase (8) 8 Japanese drama about a boatman (4) 9 Leave, and need regularly to have escaped (6) 10 Beat poet? (5) 11 Antelope hung back to avoid horse (3) 12 Born rascal that goes on foot (6) 14 Place is in perfect shade (6) 16 Ulster’s remarkable outcome (6) 18 Flag officer once? (6) 19 Memory rocky at first in the morning (3) 20 Female competent to produce old wives’ tale (5) 21 Change into suit (6) 23 Only a small body of water (4) 24 Shedding outside layer, initially making a defensive move (8) Down 1 Study poetry and talk (8) 2 Old poet in pandemic losing head (4) 3 Nervous, and liable to fall? (2,4) 4 Support for one in litter (4,2) 5 Asks how paper may be folded (8) 6 Put down, face up (4) 13 Complained malingering finally has been found out (8) 15 Connective tissue: mangle it when injured (8) 17 Fish around river channel (6) 18 Raise me up above manager (6) 20 Handle fine fish (4) 22 With which to shoot horse? (4) To watch our Bread & Honey series go to the Times Money Mentor YouTube channel or scan the QR code IN ASSOCIATION WITH Yesterday’s solution on page 15
FRIDAY JUNE 14 2024 Life’s a beach (house) CALIFORNIA? NO, CAMBER SANDS pages 6-7
2 Bricks & Mortar 2 Bricks & Mortar Friday June 14 2024 | the times Friday June 14 2024 the times £1.85 million Buy into a rambling Jacobean mansion with an artistic side. By Hugh Graham A grade I listed Jacobean “There were lots of opportunities for house with 17thhide and seek. There’s a secret back century murals staircase. On the second floor, between painted on the the maids’ rooms, there is a secret ceilings, panelled cupboard, nobody knows what it was walls decorated with used for, and it’s full of Jacobean crowns in the style of drawings on its walls. The garden has a Charles I, original Georgian coach house with the remains 1830s wallpaper and trompe l’oeil of an 18th-century carriage.” cornices: this sounds more like an Borno filled the house with his English Heritage property than a family paintings and hosted clubs there for his home. But this nine-bedroom house in artist friends. He died in 2022, so the Royston, Hertfordshire, was a wonderful family are selling up but will be sad to place to grow up, according to Zahra leave. “When you’re younger you don’t Akkerhuys. appreciate it as much,” Akkerhuys says. She experienced quite a culture shock “Looking back it was really special. You when the family bought the house in can’t help but love Jacobean architecture 1985, however. She was 12, and had spent — it’s so ornate and extravagant.” her childhood in a three-bedroom 1960s The family were hoping to sell it to house in Essex. Her father, Emad Borno, English Heritage, so that the whole was a company director country could enjoy its and pharmacist, and a Jacobean splendour. There Sign up to our passionate artist in his spare is even a concealed mural property newsletter waiting to be uncovered on time. He spent two years for the latest analysis, lovingly restoring the house, one white painted ceiling. gossip, tips and tricks Alas, the heritage body which was built by a every Monday at Jacobean merchant to try didn’t have the funds to thetimes.com/ to impress James I, whose buy it. newsletters hunting lodge was nearby. Akkerhuys is hoping it “We were horrified when he bought it,” Akkerhuys, 51, says. “For two years it was a building site, with no heating and no hot water. But he had real vision and drive to restore it to its former glory.” And the rambling mansion with three floors and a coach house, set in two thirds of an acre of grounds, was a fun place for children to grow up. “My sister and I shared a bedroom that had a painted ceiling with figures of the elements — earth, air, fire and water. At night we would leave the shutters open and the moonlight would come in through the window and we would lie in bed while looking up at the 17th-century murals in the shadows. goes to a buyer with a passion for history, and hopefully a family whose children can enjoy roaming about the place. It’s a twominute walk from Royston Heath, where sheep graze and wildflowers bloom. Cambridge, where Akkerhuys went to school, is 15 minutes away by train. What does she love most about the house? “I like the sense of many people having lived here over the years. The feeling that we were just passing through and it will go on. “Taking on a grade I listed building is not for the faint-hearted. But we are hoping that someone with my father’s vision will love it as much as he did.” £1.85 million; savills.com What £825,000 buys you in . . . West Yorkshire This 1862 property in the village of Haworth — which has plenty of Brontë history — has recently been a B&B, but now has planning permission to be sold as a single residential dwelling. From an impressive entrance hall with mosaic floors, the first-floor landing beckons with stained-glass windows. On the ground floor there are three reception rooms, bedrooms and bathrooms as well as six rooms, a kitchen and conservatory. The first floor has five en suite bedrooms and on the second floor there are two more bedrooms, a kitchen, bathroom and lounge. The gardens have stunning views, a paved seating area and a Victorian folly. EPC D (potential C) — on a scale of A (best) to G (worst) Upside No chain. Downside In need of renovation. Contact dacres.co.uk £800,000 Staffordshire Originally part of Lord Lichfield’s Ranton Estate — which sold in 2008 for £34.55 million — Bumble Cottage, six miles from Stafford, is a thatched cottage dating from the late 16th century. Set in the village of Ellenhall, the threebedroom home was extended during the 1960s. The living spaces include a large drawing room, dining room and a boot room. A hallway, conservatory, study, shower room, WC and breakfast kitchen (with a separate utility room) complete the ground floor. In 1.17 acres of mature gardens there are paddocks, an orchard, a productive vegetable patch and pond. A range of outbuildings includes kennels, stabling and a workshop. EPC E (potential B) Upside Beamed ceilings aplenty. Downside The conservatory looks a little tired. Contact knightfrank.co.uk £825,000
Bricks & Mortar 3 the times | Friday June 14 2024 3 Brief encounter Ask the expert Party canvassers have been coming to my front door during this general election campaign. Do they have legal rights to come on to my property, and what happens if they are injured on my land? SG8 The postcode in numbers In this part of Hertfordshire 53% of properties for sale are under offer, falling to 28% of those costing £1 million or more Increase in buyer demand in the past year 8% Wiltshire Wayside is a five-bedroom 2,844 sq ft house in the hamlet of Mile End near the market town of Calne. Chippenham station is 15 minutes’ drive away, and from there it’s a 70-minute train journey to London Paddington — perfectly commutable if you’re not required in the office every day. The ground floor has a large open-plan kitchen/dining room, sitting room, snug, garden room and office. Upstairs are four bedrooms and two bathrooms, with the second floor given over to the master bedroom with a walk-in wardrobe and treetop views. Outside are beautifully landscaped gardens, as well as a double garage and triple carport. EPC E (potential B) Upside Beautiful butcher block island in the kitchen. Downside The exterior is rather plain. Contact fineandcountry.co.uk £825,000 T KE 53° SE LL RKET MA S’ ER The hotter the market, the quicker and easier it should be to sell a home BUYE RS’ MA R TAKING THE TEMPERATURE SELLERS' MARKET Source: Propcast and Rightmove £466,093 is the average house price Anyone who goes on to private land without permission commits a trespass. But there obviously have to be exceptions for some visitors and callers to a property. A letterbox in a door means there is an implied licence for people to come up to the door to put letters through it. There is a similar implied licence for people to walk up the path to knock on the door — as long as they don’t cause a nuisance. The implied licence is usually asserted by Royal Mail when postal workers are injured. For example, in the 2021 criminal case of Royal Mail v Watson, a postman’s fingers were bitten by a dog as he pushed post through a letterbox. The Court of Appeal said “the letter box is an open invitation to visitors to post mail through it, and can involve the insertion of fingers for a short time” and that Amazon and other companies that make home deliveries have a similar implied licence. The implied permission can be revoked by putting up appropriate signs. Notices saying “no free newspapers” therefore have some (limited) legal effect, because they change the deliverer from a licensee into a trespasser. The difference between licensees and trespassers is important if a visitor is injured. France In the rural heart of the Dordogne, two minutes’ drive from Bergerac town, is an imposing three-storey stone house dating from the 18th century. The property, which lies in more than three acres of wooded grounds, has seven bedrooms — several en suite — a hall, fitted kitchen, large study, two lounges, a dining room, two fireplaces and a summer lounge. The attic could be converted into a further bedroom or another study. Outside there are two barns, a heated saltwater swimming pool and summer kitchen/barbecue. Bergerac Dordogne Périgord airport is a fiveminute drive away, and Bordeaux and its international airport an hour and a half. Upside Seven bedrooms in wine country for the price of a two-bedroom flat in London, anyone? Downside Feels rather isolated. Contact hamptons-international.com £818,601 The Occupiers Liability Act 1984 imposes a general duty of care on householders to protect lawful visitors from harm. The statutory obligation to protect trespassers from danger is much less onerous. Political party workers therefore have an implied licence to use your path and post leaflets and literature through your letterbox. You can revoke this licence by putting up signs, but you cannot entirely exclude liability if canvassers come to harm. Mark Loveday is a barrister with Tanfield Chambers. Email questions to brief.encounter@thetimes. co.uk
4 Bricks & Mortar 4 Bricks & Mortar Friday June 14 2024 | the times Friday June 14 2024 the times Moving stories Your tales from up and down the property ladder How we turned our camper van into a property empire T hree and a half years ago my partner, Nicole, and I were renting a house in Penrhyn Bay, north Wales, when we decided to buy a Crafter van, with a long wheelbase, with the intention of turning it into a motorhome and taking it travelling (writes Ryan Green, 28). We spent about £10,000 on it, paid for it on finance and all of our spare money and time was spent on doing it up. We didn’t go travelling in the end — but it still changed our lives because, improbably, that humble van helped us to get on to the property ladder. We decided to sell the van for £35,000 and with the profit we made we bought our first house at auction in nearby Llanddulas for £102,000 — and we moved into it while renovating it. When we got it refinanced it was worth about £215,000 despite us spending only about £35,000. At that moment we realised we had a bit of a knack for property investments — something we never knew before. I quit my job in construction to adopt this as my full-time career, while Nicole (27) managed the administrative side of our property work at the same time as continuing to work long shifts in cardiology as a carer. We then bought another house, for £125,000, and spent £60,000 on the renovation, which increased its value to £250,000. After that we bought a derelict old NatWest bank, which had been empty for seven years, in Penmaenmawr at auction. We paid £31,000 and converted it into two units with a shop in the front. After doing up another commercial property our most recent project has been taking on a block of four apartments in Rhos-on-Sea we got at auction for £250,000. They were recently valued at £800,000. Ryan Green and Nicole, his partner; their van Have your say Would you like to share your moving story? Email carol.lewis@ thetimes.co.uk We have always lived on site and every time we have bought a new property to renovate, we have moved into it, as it allowed me to work late into the evenings. It has been difficult, and to be honest, living in the properties has been horrendous right up to the end. Dust gets everywhere and no matter how many sheets and covers you use and how often you clean it — and yourselves — you can’t stop it. We will usually live out of one room, which can be hard with our three dogs — Bentley, Lottie and Ruby, two shar peis and a labrador — as we have to make sure they don’t trip on something. There have been challenges over the years. For example, there was someone living above the old bank and as soon as we finished renovating the space a pipe burst from the upstairs property and flooded the entire thing. We had to redo it and the same thing happened three times, which was so disheartening. We’ve had ups and downs but we have just had to push through them. I have a couple of lads who work with me on the renovations, and my dad works with me too. As we’ve started to build our property portfolio we were able to take him on full-time. I’ve become quite handy throughout the process and do all the plumbing myself now. So between us we can do everything. We still own all of our properties — some we turned into holiday lets and others we rent out. It has been a lot of hard work. Nicole works 12-hour shifts in healthcare and manages the Airbnb lets that we turned some of the properties into. We’re pretty much working all the time. Over the past three years we have been working towards making enough money to buy a place for us to settle down with the dogs. We’ve just had an offer accepted on a 12-acre farm and our next plan is to build a glamping site with about 30 luxury pods. We want to get animals and set up a dog sanctuary there, and we are hoping that it will be our forever home. It is hard to say if we’ll stop there, because the farm project is going to be so big we will definitely be working on it for a few years. After that, I don’t know — it has been such a stressful time. We might stop at that point as we’ll have enough to live off then. But you never know ... we will probably get bored without a project. Interview by Ella Kipling Your Very Own Holiday Escape Owning your own holiday lodge means you’re in control when it comes to your holidays; no need to book, no need to worry about availability. Located in some of the most scenic locations in the South West, our lodges are a true home-from-home with beautiful landscapes, beaches and walks, right on your doorstep – escape from it all with your very own bolthole at South West Holiday Parks. Choose from one of our three lovely parks South Devon | North Cornwall South Cornwall FIND OUT MORE TODAY SCAN HERE FOR MORE INFO CALL US ON 01626 650 238 *Available on selected new lodges HALF PRICE PITCH FEES FOR THE LIFE OF YOUR OWNERSHIP!*
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6 Bricks & Mortar 6 Bricks & Mortar Friday June 14 2024 | the times Friday June 14 2024 the times Abi Campbell in her refurbished beach bungalow, which has interiors inspired by “cabin and desert chic” ‘Camberfornia’ dreaming C O V E R S T O RY How the photographer Abi Campbell built a California-style beach house — her Joshua Tree ‘wannabe’ — in Camber Sands, East Sussex S crolling through Instagram, I stopped on a photograph of a desert landscape with a tarmac road narrowing to a vanishing point on the horizon. In bold font across the centre was a quote by JRR Tolkien: “Not all those who wander are lost.” On a California road trip in my early twenties, I encountered Big Sur and Joshua Tree National Park, both located on energy vortices and with esoteric forces beyond my understanding of metaphysics. I can’t explain the gravitational pull to return at pivotal times in my life, but placebo or not, I’ve always found clarity on pilgrimages to these heart homes of mine. Most of the people I met there were city folk, seduced by nature’s silent vibrations while passing through. These deep thinkers relocated to relative isolation to be more present, inadvertently creating a community of like-minded people. I have been making plans to join this enlightened tribe for three decades but the lack of a US passport was a significant obstacle. Then like so many others trying to stay sane during the pandemic, I booked a holiday on British shores between lockdowns. I rented a clapboard house in Camber Sands, East Sussex, and was captivated by its unspoilt beauty. Although this version of England was unfamiliar to me, I felt a peculiar sense of connection. I explored the village. Behind the dunes, 100 barefoot metres from the beach, was a sand track with 12 properties. Like a true coronavirus cliché, back at the rental, I poured myself a glass of wine and opened up Rightmove. For sale was a timberframed bungalow on the sandy road. I rang the agent, who told me it was a holiday let, unavailable to view, but he could send me a video. I hurried back to the house and made an offer of £460,000 while standing outside. It was accepted, and three months later I was the owner — sight unseen. This was a significant detour from my I was captivated by Camber’s unspoilt beauty — I felt a peculiar sense of connection master plan to emigrate to America, but with four years to go before reaching “empty nester” status, skipping off into the sunset alone wasn’t realistic. Still, buying a house I hadn’t been inside, two hours from where we lived, in a rural community where I knew nobody was impulsive and random to say the least. I understood the raised eyebrows from friends and family. The Pontins holiday camp at Camber was famous for complaints about “blood-stained walls” and one review that read: “I’d rather eat my own eyes than stay here.” Personally, I liked the authenticity of Camber’s British bucket-and-spade history and how this holiday park now doubled up as a metaphorical sieve for snobs. I quickly learnt that Camber was a magnet for eccentric creatives. I was the third photographer who had bought a house in my road that year, one of the world’s biggest YouTubers lived at the end and, opposite, a writer and magazine publisher. In this tiny place, so off-grid, there was an eclectic concentration of professionals in immersive film, cosmic healing, microbrewing, tech, crypto, art, AI and more. My Pinterest boards had been heaving with California homestead inspiration for years, a result of the cabin and desert chic interiors I’d absorbed on my visits. Aesthetically confident, I embarked on building a prototype of the dream house I would eventually build in America, which I nicknamed my Joshua Tree wannabe. Post-Covid was a shocking time to renovate; some building materials had gone up 500 per cent, and trades were charging heady premiums. Raising adolescents, sourcing, ordering, designing and budgeting, while travelling two hours each way to project manage, left me stressed out and vulnerable. In the first two months a window company went into administration with my £18,000. Not long after, my builder absconded with £25,000, and then my landscaper folded up his business with £15,000. As if the fates thought I wasn’t humiliated or
Bricks & Mortar 7 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Bricks & Mortar A three-bedroom townhouse in Hay’s Mews, Mayfair, is being marketed in the US for £6.75 million by Wetherell Why Americans are falling for British homes broken enough, I slipped on the site and snapped my ankle in two places. Ignoring bad omens, I soldiered on, sanding and painting from dawn till dusk; collapsing on to an inflatable mattress at the end of each day in a shell of a house with no electricity, running water or fittings. I used the loos in the beach car park, a garden tap to wash, and I ate out. Locals knew me as the knackered-looking woman with matted hair, splattered with paint, who was vocal at parish council meetings. But in the three traumatic years it took me to renovate, I made more meaningful human connections than I had in 25 years of living in Surrey and London. In October last year I moved in, I sanded and painted from dawn till dusk, used the loos in the beach car park and a tap to wash having spent six figures on the renovation. I walk on the beach most days and weave my way to the highest point in the dunes to watch sunsets. In the evenings, I climb into bed to stargaze through doors that open on to my desert garden and I fall asleep to the sound of the ocean. Life is quite silent, except for the tinkle of the wind chimes tied to my pine tree. I’m bewitched by this place, in the same way that California cast its spell on me. My gorgeous friend Julie, known to all as the Queen of Camber, arrived here for a long weekend and has stayed for 30 years. She told me that Camber got under her skin and that the village is made up of people who share this story. There is a local motto, based on the Eagles song: “Welcome to the hotel Camberfornia. You can check in any time you like, but you can never leave.” California is my spiritual placeholder, it is where I evolved and continue to do so. I don’t need to chase the dream of relocating there. I’ve been wandering, lost, searching for a place to be still. Camberfornia is 16 hours closer to loved ones, there’s free healthcare, no rattlesnakes, guns, or Donald Trump. What’s not to love? Wealthy US buyers ‘love it here’ — no wonder they are investing in prime properties, says Emanuele Midolo A few days ago the British comedian Simon Brodkin asked New Yorkers what they thought of Rishi Sunak. “Who?” A few thought he was a DJ. “Techno DJ. Doof doof doof.” The video went viral on social media. Although they may not know much about British politics, Americans seem to love Britain’s homes. The pop star Taylor Swift is reportedly renting a £3 million cottage in Chipping Norton in the Cotswolds. Tom Cruise is also rumoured to be on the hunt for a house there. Since the pandemic US buyers have snapped up trophy mansions, penthouses and huge apartments in some of England’s best addresses — particularly in London. Last year four in ten London homes valued at £15 million and above were sold to an American buyer, according to an analysis by the agency Beauchamp Estates. This accounts for more than half a billion pounds’ worth of properties. The data, from the property portal LonRes (plus Beauchamp’s own insights), also shows that 70 per cent of purchases were made in cash. When the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, announced in the spring budget that he was scrapping the non-dom tax regime, there were worries that the change, which will take place in April 2025, might dampen foreign investments. When it comes to American buyers, at least, that doesn’t seem to be the case — yet. In the past two weeks alone American buyers have snapped up properties in London worth £150 million. Not even the prospect of a Labour government pledging to introduce higher taxes on foreign ownership of UK homes, seems to be denting their enthusiasm. “None of [our American clients] are really talking to us about a This three-bedroom Mayfair home was sold to a US buyer in January, via Beauchamp Estates Labour government or the general election and how that may impact them,” Camilla Dell, managing partner of the buying agency Black Brick, says. Many of Dell’s American clients are tech and finance professionals living on the Pacific west coast who want to buy a pied-à-terre or a holiday home in Kensington and Chelsea. Their budgets range from £1.5 million to £8 million, she says. “Many of them have business links here,” Dell says. “They like being in London and everything the city has to offer: theatres, shopping, parks. But they also love to use the capital as a springboard into Europe.” London’s top agents agree that, historically, US buyers have been interested in period houses. “Some of our houses are older than the cities they come from,” says Jessica Bishop from DDRE Global, the super-prime boutique agency that is the subject of the hit Netflix show Buying London. About half of DDRE’s clients are American, and it uses a US brokerage model. Bishop says US buyers dream about the charm and character of traditional British homes. “I’m 7 looking on behalf of a very influential American at the moment. Their focus is particularly on the exterior of the house, the stucco façades that you see in Belgravia and on [the Netflix period drama] Bridgerton.” Another drive is the quality of schools in England. Bishop has just sold a multimillion-pound townhouse in Notting Hill, west London, to an American family — they want their children to be educated here. Peter Wetherell, head of the estate agency Wetherell, which specialises in properties in Mayfair, is selling a house in Hay’s Mews, priced at £6.75 million, for the third time in his career. “I sold the house to an American lady back in 1987, then in 2000 it was purchased by another American buyer, a Chicago financier, Ralph I Goldenberg,” Wetherell says. “Now his daughter, Jane, who is based in Chicago, has asked us to sell the house again. Our main focus is marketing it in the United States.” Wetherell says that for London’s super-prime developers, marketing to an American audience has become “essential” and “mission critical”, so roadshows for London trophy homes regularly take place in Manhattan, Miami and Chicago. More recently American buyers have started to hunt for newbuilds too, partly due to a lack of available stock in addresses such as Mayfair, Chelsea or Belgravia. “Americans have never been as prevalent in the London market as they are now, and as more have come in, they’ve diversified the types of properties they buy,” Claire Reynolds, managing partner at UK Sotheby’s International Realty, says. She has just sold a two-bedroom flat on Grosvenor Square in Mayfair to an American businessman for £23.5 million. “This was a guy who was opening an office in London and just wanted an apartment that could double up as a wardrobe,” she adds. “He said that even if he flies by private jet he doesn’t want to bring anything beyond his phone, wallet and passport.” This trend is not exclusive to prime London. Trevor Kearney, who for 20 years sold prime properties for Savills and has just set up his own firm, the Private Office, says that the private estates in Surrey — including the Wentworth Estate and St George’s Hill — are also extremely popular among Americans. “They might have been aware of them in the past but they’re now looking to buy there and make a home there,” Kearney says, adding that there are two big ACS international schools (formerly known as American Community Schools) in Surrey, one of them in Cobham, close to St George’s Hill, and the other in Egham, close to Wentworth. Kearney says he is advising two American families looking for large family homes in Surrey. “Both originally came saying they wanted traditional British homes,” he explains. “They had a typical Cotswolds cottage in mind. They don’t any more. Both want sleek design, security, high-tech facilities and amenities.” Neither prospective buyer, it seems, could care less who the next UK’s prime minister will be.
8 Bricks & Mortar 8 Bricks & Mortar Friday June 14 2024 | the times Friday June 14 2024 the times T his week the UK’s main political parties revealed their plans to fix the housing crisis, before the general election on July 4. From building more houses to banning “no fault” evictions, to reviving Help to Buy to cutting capital gains tax and stamp duty, we explain the manifesto housing pledges and ask the experts to assess them. Conservatives Housebuilding The Tories have delivered the one million homes they promised in government, and they are pledging to build 1.6 million more in the next five years if re-elected. The latest data shows that the Conservatives built 234,000 homes last year —it would have to build 320,000 a year to meet its new pledge. They hope to do this by developing on brownfield land — while protecting the green belt — in the UK’s 20 largest cities and revamping Euston, Old Oak Common and Thamesmead in London, as well as creating new quarters in Leeds, Liverpool and York. Melanie Leech, the chief executive of the British Property Federation, which represents small and medium-sized housebuilders, says: “We need a clear plan on how supply will be increased across all tenures and the whole country over and above building in the inner cities. That needs reconciling with the ‘cast iron’ protection for green belt land.” The £11.5 billion Affordable Homes Programme will be renewed to improve existing housing estates and build more social homes. Justin Young, the chief executive of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, says: “While it’s encouraging to see the Conservatives committing themselves to supporting small builders, this will not address the quagmire of laws that make up Britain’s restrictive planning system.” Tax cuts for buyers and landlords First-time buyers will not have to pay stamp duty land tax (SDLT) on a home worth up to £425,000. The threshold at which first-time buyers pay SDLT has been raised temporarily from £300,000 to £425,000 from September 23, 2022, until March 31, 2025; the Conservatives have said this change will be made permanent if they are re-elected. The tax cut would cost the Treasury £2.34 billion by 2030, according to manifesto costings. Only 22 per cent of buyers would pay tax on their first home, according to the property portal Zoopla, whereas 30 per cent will if the tax threshold returns to £300,000. Richard Donnell, the executive director of Zoopla, explains: “The greatest beneficiaries are those looking to buy across southern England where up to half of first-time buyers are looking to buy homes priced between £250,000 and £425,000.” Landlords would not have to pay capital gains tax (CGT) for the first two years of a newly elected Conservative government if they sold their rental property to their existing tenants. This is projected to cost the Treasury £40 million by 2027, but it could be “ripe for abuse”, according to Graham Boar, a partner at the accountancy firm UHY Hacker Young. He says: “There’s a risk that landlords selling properties will structure them as tenancies leading to sales, avoiding huge amounts of CGT. A landlord could also sell a property ‘on credit’ to a tenant, who could then sell it on with no gain and pay back their debt to the landlord.” The average landlord will save £21,000 and the costings in the manifesto suggest that a “whopping” 952 homes are Which door gets your vote? How would the main political parties tackle the housing crisis? We ask the experts to evaluate each manifesto. By Melissa York expected to be sold under the policy, according to Rowan Morrow-McDade, a tax adviser at Alexander & Co. He says: “Either this has been terribly forecast or the scheme will be so restrictive almost no one can use it.” Landlords would Studies, says: “While the government may end up making a profit on the scheme if house prices rise, experience from past schemes suggests that some of the subsidy will be captured by developers in the form of higher prices and profits.” Revival of Help to Buy not have to pay CGT for Reform rental evictions The biggest rabbit out of the Conservatives’ hat is the The Renters (Reform) Bill will the first two years of a proposed revival of its Help to Buy finally be passed; the present new Conservative scheme for three years. Like the last parliament ran out of time before the version of the scheme, it would allow general election was called. The party government first-time buyers to put down a 5 per has promised to finally fulfil its 2019 cent deposit on a new-build home and manifesto get an equity loan of up to 20 per cent of pledge to ban Section 21 “no fault” the property’s value interest-free for five evictions while strengthening existing years. grounds so landlords can evict disruptive Since 2013, there have been 328,346 tenants. It would also give local councils properties bought using Help to Buy by new powers to control the number of first-time buyers, but the scheme came holiday lets. to an end in May 2023. Ben Beadle, the chief executive of The Conservatives have put aside the National Residential Landlords £1 billion of annual funding for the Association (NRLA), says: “Reform of revived scheme (the last version had a the rental market should have taken For analysis of Green budget of £4 billion a year). place in the last parliament. As we said and Reform UK pledges David Sturrock, a senior research then, a balance between security for go to thetimes.com economist at the Institute for Fiscal tenants and policies which retain the confidence of responsible landlords is crucial.” Finish leasehold reform The leasehold reform bill passed before the dissolution of parliament, but a newly elected Conservative government has pledged to go further and cap ground rents at £250 a year, reducing them to a peppercorn “over time”. This would allow leaseholders with onerous ground rents to sell and move on. It was left out of the final bill following Treasury concerns about its potential impact on pensions and threats of legal action from freeholders. The manifesto promises to abolish forfeiture, where freeholders can seize leasehold properties over unpaid bills, continue to force developers to pay to remediate unsafe buildings, and “make it easier to take up commonhold”, but the manifesto does not provide further details on how ministers would do this. Labour Housebuilding Labour has pledged to build 1.5 million
Bricks & Mortar 9 the times | Friday June 14 2024 Friday June 14 2024 the times rights or limits to rent increases will be introduced. Dan Wilson Craw, the deputy chief executive of the campaign group Generation Rent, says: “It is good that the manifesto recognises the various ways renting isn’t working, including discrimination, exploitation, poor standards and rent increases, but we have little detail of what action the party would take.” homes over the next five years. This is 300,000 homes a year, which was the target set in the 2019 Conservative manifesto before it was abolished by Liz Truss’s government in 2022. To help process more planning applications, the stamp duty surcharge levied on overseas buyers of UK property will be increased from 2 per cent to 3 per cent to fund 300 more planning officers. Labour is taking a brownfield-first approach to building, with fast-track planning approval for housing on previously developed land in cities. “Lower quality” green belt land may be downgraded to “grey belt” to be released for development, although planning approval will be subject to stricter “golden rules” than applications for brownfield land. At the centre of Labour’s plans are a series of large-scale new towns across England, although the locations are yet to be confirmed. They will also make it cheaper for councils and developers to buy land to build homes. Planning rules will require a bigger proportion of affordable housing in developments, but there will be no increase in funding for the £11.5 billion affordable homes programme, simply a promise to make it more efficient. Anthony Codling, an analyst at the investment bank RBC Capital Markets, says: “Of all the manifestos we have reviewed, we believe Labour’s policies do the most to boost housing supply. A Labour victory is likely in our view to lead to a significant increase in housing supply over the coming five years, a rising tide that we think will also lift the share prices of the UK housebuilders.” Affordability First-time buyers will be given first refusal to buy new-build homes, to stop them being sold to international investors. The manifesto doesn’t specify whether sales to UK-based buy to let investors would also be restricted. Labour will introduce its own mortgage guarantee scheme, similar to the one introduced by the Conservatives in 2021 that has helped more than 40,000 people buy their first home. Matt Smith, a mortgage expert at the property portal Rightmove, says: “We think there is a greater opportunity for the next government to review the mortgage affordability criteria in a responsible way. Longer-term solutions need to be prioritised over short-term fixes to help more first-time buyers to get on to the ladder.” Renting Labour will require all private rented properties to meet a minimum energy performance certificate (EPC) rating by 2030 — two years after the Conservatives scrapped their 2028 deadline. However, the manifesto also promises that “nobody will be forced to rip out their boiler as a result of our plans”. Section 21 “no fault” evictions will be abolished “immediately”. Beadle says: “All of the main parties are committed to ending Section 21. What matters is ensuring the replacement system works, and is fair, to both renters and responsible landlords.” Awaab’s Law, named after Awaab Ishak, the two-year-old who died in 2020 due to damp and mould in his council home, will be extended to private rentals so that landlords will have to act on hazards in their properties within 14 days. The manifesto also says it will end unfair tenant discrimination and “empower” tenants to challenge unreasonable rent, which suggests new Leasehold Labour has pledged to end leasehold by enacting proposals by the Law Commission to make it easier for leaseholders to buy their freehold and collectively manage their building. The manifesto promises to ban new-build flats from being sold as leasehold and make commonhold the default tenure. It promises to tackle “unaffordable” ground a rents although it does not outline whether this would mean abolishing the annual charge or capping it. “Fleecehold” estates — private housing schemes where residents pay a service charge — will also be banned. Harry Scoffin, the founder of the campaign group Free Leaseholders, says: “After 14 years of broken Tory promises, leasehold voters are most interested in timescales. That is why we are demanding that existing rights under the 2024 act, which Labour back, are brought into force without further delay and that a new commonhold bill comes forward in the first King’s Speech, to end leasehold for good.” Labour ministers have promised regulation to improve building safety in the light of the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire, and to consider better protection for leaseholders from costs of fixing unsafe buildings. Labour has committed to increasing the speed at which these are fixed and to chase “those responsible” for putting it right. Greener homes There will be stricter planning rules on new homes to make sure they are climate-resilient. If elected, Labour pledges £6.6 billion for a Warm Homes Plan — funded by a windfall tax on the biggest oil and gas companies — to make five million properties more energy efficient, which is double the current funding available. Local authorities will use it to offer grants and loans to pay for better insulation and other energy upgrades. Simon McWhirter, the deputy chief executive officer at the UK Green Building Council, says: “The Labour manifesto has no big surprises. And while several of the policies point in the right direction to address our climate and cost of living emergencies, they don’t go far enough, fast enough to really tackle the problems head-on.” Liberal Democrats Housebuilding The Lib Dems have the most ambitious house-building target out of the main parties. The party has pledged to build 380,000 homes a year — 80,000 more than the Conservatives’ target — with 150,000 of those to be social housing. They intend to do this by building ten garden cities, although the party’s manifesto does not specify where these would be. To keep locals on side, the planning process would have to take into account whether local services and infrastructure can take the strain of more housing. Two existing programmes would be expanded: neighbourhood planning, which allows residents to decide where homes are built and what they look like, and rural exception sites, which allow Bricks & Mortar 9 land on the edge of villages to be bought at a discount if it is used to build affordable homes for local people. Developers who sit on land without building anything will have their planning permission revoked, and they face higher costs to get planning approval as the Lib Dems will allow council planning departments to set their own fees. However, the Lib Dems’ housebuilding targets could clash with their green ambitions. The party has pledged to build on brownfield land while introducing a “wild belt” where building would be banned. New homes would have to be zero-carbon with solar panels. Anthony Codling says: “The 380,000 new homes a year target is certainly aspirational, but it is unlikely to be delivered. The sector struggles to deliver about half of that.” A Labour win is likely to lead to significant increase More security for tenants Section 21 “no fault” evictions in housing supply would be banned and three-year in the next fixed tenancies would be the default contract. A national register would be five years created to weed out rogue landlords. The party also propose overhauling CGT to raise £5 billion for the NHS. The proposal would create three bands to be applied to taxable gains at different rates: gains between £5,000 and £50,000 taxed 20 per cent, those between £50,000 and £100,000 taxed at 40 per cent and those over £100,000 at 45 per cent. Councils would be given the ability to end right-to-buy to keep social housing from being sold. For social renters the Lib Dems would impose stricter time limits for repairs and establish tenant panels. Perhaps the most eye-catching policy is the rent-to-own scheme where rent payments would give social tenants an increasing equity share over a 30-year period until they owned the property outright. i Key pledges at a glance Conservatives 6 Revive the Help to Buy scheme for three years 6 No CGT for two years for landlords selling to tenants 6 Keep stamp duty cut for first-time buyers Labour 6 Mortgage guarantee and first refusal on new-build homes for first-time buyers 6 Lower quality green belt land to be downgraded to grey belt 6 End leasehold and introduce commonhold for flats Lib Dems 6 Build 380,000 homes a year, including 150,000 social homes 6 New 30-year Rent to Own Scheme for social housing 6 Overhaul CGT Support for eco upgrades A home-energy upgrade programme will offer free insulation and heat pumps to low-income households, and grants or loans for homeowners to install heat pumps and solar panels “that cover the real costs”, including a guaranteed fair price for electricity sold back to the grid. All new homes will be required to be zero-carbon and landlords will have to upgrade the energy efficiency of their properties to EPC C or above by 2028. The head of policy at the UK Green Building Council, Louise Hutchins, says: “Ensuring new homes have public services, green spaces and are protected from climate risks such as flooding are sensible proposals. What we haven’t seen is a commitment to fight for the scale of public investment needed to make this happen. Anything less than £64 billion over ten years for home upgrades alone is unrealistic.” Abolishing leasehold The Lib Dems have promised to abolish residential leasehold properties and cap ground rents to a “nominal fee” to allow leaseholders to sell and move on. It is not clear whether this would apply to new homes as well as existing leaseholds. Taxing and limiting holiday homes A planning class would be created for second homes and short lets so councils could control the number of these in their area. Local authorities would also be able to increase council tax by up to 500 per cent where homes were bought as second homes, with a stamp duty surcharge on overseas residents who buy such properties. It is unclear whether this would be in addition to the existing 2 per cent surcharge on overseas buyers of UK property.
10 Bricks & Mortar 10 Bricks & Mortar T Friday June 14 2024 | the times Friday June 14 2024 the times How to retrofit a period property he spotlight fell on the Duke of Westminster’s wedding last week, with Prince William among the guests at the Grosvenors’ country seat, Eaton Hall in Cheshire. However, it is a less glamorous event on the same 11,000-acre estate that could make a far bigger difference to six million families with period homes. In the village of Aldford, close enough to Eaton Hall to enjoy the live music as Hugh Grosvenor celebrated his union with Olivia Henson, a Victorian semi has just been retrofitted by the Grosvenor estate. With three bedrooms (the duke’s manor has 150) and a handsome brick exterior, it is a typical pre-1900 home. In fact this house was chosen as a blueprint for retrofitting historic homes precisely because it is so typical. Its performance is now anything but. Whole-life carbon emissions have been cut by 83 per cent, annual energy usage halved and emissions to heat the home lowered by 94 per cent, according to Grosvenor, the duke’s property group. While tests confirm the semi is more airtight than a new-build, it has lost none of its Victorian charm. “We absolutely love it,” says Mike Devoy, 38, who rents the house with his partner, Holly Ashbrook, 36, and their children, Emelda, ten, and Milo, seven. The family moved in a few weeks ago, at a rent of £1,450 a month. “It’s got all the charm of a period property, but it feels very much like a modern home. It’s noticeably warmer and the air quality is fantastic,” Devoy adds. The 33-year-old Duke of Westminster was personally involved in the semi’s retrofit, even signing off on window types. His experiment did not aim for the highest Passivhaus standards, but a more attainable ambition that could inform retrofit across Grosvenor’s buildings, including It has the charm 1,750 listed properties of a period home, in prime central London and four but it feels modern. rural estates. The modern equivalents. If The air quality group has pledged to cut you do that, condensation, emissions from running its damp and mould will ruin is fantastic buildings to net zero by 2030. the building — and the health Its prototype has lessons for of residents. Yet Britain cannot hit period homeowners across Britain. net zero emissions by 2050 without Such homes are hard to treat. Built to retrofitting these homes. breathe, historic buildings cannot be “We’ve got about six million pre-1900 sealed and insulated in the same way as homes in the UK, and we need to make them warmer and more comfortable to live in and cheaper to heat. That’s what this project is all about,” says Diane Hubbard, the founder of Green Footsteps, which advised on the retrofit. Despite the impressive results, the semi’s energy performance certificate (EPC) rating has improved only from E to C. “This has underlined that the EPC process isn’t fit for purpose for historic buildings,” says Joby Howard, the director of building services at Grosvenor’s rural estates. EPCs rate the energy efficiency of a home on a scale of 0 to 100, banded from A (best) to G (worst). The current system used to calculate most EPC ratings, except those for new homes, does not count improved airtightness — even though such upgrades significantly reduce heat loss, Hubbard says. It also punishes you for fitting a mechanical ventilation and heat recovery (MVHR) system, which pumps out stale air while extracting heat from it to warm incoming fresh air. MVHR, which is crucial in highly airtight homes, “typically reduces the EPC rating by ten or more points”, Hubbard says, because The Duke of Westminster’s update of a Victorian semi on his estate — the tenants love it — has lessons for the UK’s six million historic homes. By Martina Lees stone surrounds with “very effective” secondary glazing, while the semi’s solid-brick walls were 25 per cent more thermally efficient than the EPC system assumes for pre-1900 walls. Embodied carbon It usually takes far more energy to build a home than to run it. That is why Grosvenor calculated the whole-life embodied carbon of the retrofitted semi, including emissions that produce and transport building products, heat and cool the home and demolish it at the end of its life. They used natural, local materials. They chose Gutex woodfibre board insulation instead of panels made from petrochemicals; lime plaster instead of gypsum plaster; and limecrete instead of concrete for the ground floor. The timber frame of a two-storey extension came from trees grown on the estate. Likewise, bricks and roof slate are reclaimed from estate property. Decarbonised heating A Bosch air source heat pump supplies heating and hot water without burning fossil fuels. A heat pump can produce three to five units of heat for every unit of electricity it uses. But the design and installation of a heat pump system is “critical” to its efficiency, Howard says. “Partnering with knowledgeable advisers and contractors is vital.” The team also fitted waste water heat recovery, which uses the warmth from waste shower water to preheat cold water for showers. An A+ wood-burner has a direct supply of external air, rather than using indoor air, and is fuelled with logs from the estate forest. Although the semi has an electric car charger, it has no solar panels. “It is in a conservation area, so we were concerned about the aesthetic impact. We are looking at a central solar scheme,” Howard says. Above: Mike Devoy and his family rent the retrofitted home on the Grosvenor family’s estate, right. Below: Hugh Grosvenor and Olivia Henson on their wedding day the EPC calculations prioritise low energy costs, not low-carbon emissions, and assumes (usually wrongly) that an MVHR system will push up your electricity bill. A new version of the EPC system, due this summer, will factor in airtightness. Howard is “pretty confident” that redoing the retrofit’s rating under this regime will increase it from C to B. This isn’t a project done on a budget. The duke — Britain’s richest man under 40 — gave Howard’s team permission to “play” with the Victorian property. Sensors for temperature, humidity and air quality will monitor how the house performs over the next year. Here is what they have learnt. A retrofit plan Draw up a thorough retrofit plan, Howard says. “There is an overwhelming number of emerging products and technologies relating to energy efficiency and lowcarbon retrofit. Homeowners need professional advice on which specifications are appropriate for their property.” To start with, Green Footsteps, which specialises in historic retrofit, did an airtightness test and a thermal imaging survey to pinpoint where the house leaked heat. Tests showed the semi’s original airtightness was “really good”, Hubbard says. The original metal windows had Airtightness “Heat leaks out through air gaps. Even a 1mm gap around a window can lead to a significant heat loss,” Howard says. An unbroken layer of airtight chipboard (Finsa SuperPan Vapourstop) and airtightness membrane invisibly seals the house. It has increased the airtightness by a third from 6.3 to 4.2 air changes an hour. That makes it twice as airtight as a new home, Hubbard claims. If you reduce airtightness below 5 air changes an hour, the home also needs an MVHR system to breathe. Without it, you will get condensation and mould, Howard warns. The benefits of MVHR systems increase if airtightness is below 3 air changes an hour, Hubbard adds. The more intricate the shape of the building, the harder it is to avoid air gaps. The insulation layer must also be continuous with no gaps, to prevent thermal bridges that allow the cold to travel through the shell. This is simpler to do with external wall insulation. But because the semi is in a conservation area, external wall insulation covered in render was out of the question. Grosvenor had to insulate internally. Howard’s team had to redo work where the complex roof of the Victorian semi joins its walls. Many contractors do not yet have the skills to get it right, Howard adds. “Find trusted suppliers to advise on your retrofit project and be open to working with good contractors who are honest about their limitations and prepared to learn on the job.”
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Carefully-crafted guided holidays For more than 60 years, Travelsphere have been taking people on trips of a lifetime and as a result, we can offer unrivalled local knowledge to help you get the best out of a destination. You could sit at home pulling together your own itinerary, deciding which flight to take, where to stay and what to see when you get there, why not let us take care of the details instead. Amalfi Coast, Pompeii & Capri Departures | October 2024 to October 2025 S tretching for around 30 miles, the Amalfi Coast overlooks the shimmering waters of the Tyrrhenian Sea and is known for its spectacular scenery. Here, dramatic, forest-clad cliffs plunge into the deep blue sea and narrow winding roads connect pastel-coloured villages with exclusive towns and resorts. The region is small enough to discover in a series of day trips, so on this holiday you’ll be based in an elegant, four-star hotel perfectly positioned in the village of Minori and discover all the must-see sights including Amalfi, Capri and the ruins of Pompeii. • Seven nights in a four-star hotel • Seven breakfasts, one lunch, seven dinners and welcome drink • Discover Amalfi, the hilltop town of Ravello and the island of Capri EIGHT DAYS FROM £1,699* per person • Visit a winery in the Amalfi Hills with lunch in a mountain hut • Explore the ruins of Pompeii CALL TODAY ON 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ ts-amalfi Price includes QUOTE TIMES • Return flights from London and overseas transportation Sardinia’s Emerald Coast Departures | September 2024 to September 2025 Save up to £350 per couple* The Best of Sicily Departures | June 2024 to September 2025 Save up to £350 per couple* S ardinia is a sophisticated Mediterranean island and a unique Italian destination. From glamorous resorts and marinas filled with luxurious yachts to medieval towns perched on rugged cliffs, on this relaxing tour, you will uncover everything that makes Sardinia special. You’ll see dramatic scenery and explore an atmospheric sea cave, visit an artist’s village and sample delicious Sardinian cuisine. There is a chance to admire ancient churches and an old, fortified castle, and time to browse upmarket boutiques. The itinerary also includes three full days at leisure, giving you the flexibility to do your own thing. S icily has so much to offer, and on this tour, you’ll experience it all!. Take a cable car ride up Mount Etna, one of the most active volcanoes in Europe, and visit the island’s vibrant capital, Palermo. You’ll learn about Sicily’s Greek and Roman history at well-preserved archaeological sites and see the beautiful Monreale Cathedral, a masterpiece of medieval architecture. With its unique style of Italian cuisine, Sicily is also known for its food, and you’ll have a chance to sample some delicious local specialities including Price includes • Return flights from London and overseas transportation • Seven nights in a four-star hotel • Seven breakfasts, seven dinners and welcome drink • Tour the Emerald coast • Visit to Alghero including a boat trip to Neptune’ Grotto • Guided walking tour of Olbia £1,599* per person CALL TODAY ON 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ ts-sardinia QUOTE TIMES Palermo’s famous street food, and granita, a refreshing semi-frozen dessert in Taormina. Price includes EIGHT DAYS FROM £1,649* per person • Return flights from London and overseas transportation • Seven nights half-board in four-star hotels • Explore Taormina and Palermo • Ascend Mount Etna by cable car • Discover the Valley of the Temples • Visit the Roman Villa del Casale *Discount on selected departures only. Prices correct at time of print. Prices shown are based on twin occupancy of a double or twin bedded room and economy flights. All holidays are subject to availability. Images used in conjunction with Travelsphere. Operated by and subject to the booking conditions of Travelsphere, ABTA Y6412, ATOL 11266 a company wholly independent of News UK. Our trusted partner EIGHT DAYS FROM CALL TODAY ON 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ts-sicily QUOTE TIMES
EIGHT DAYS FROM Treasures of Tuscany & Florence £1,399* per person Departures | September 2024 to October 2025 Save up to £300 per couple* This relaxing tour takes in the iconic monuments of Pisa and Florence, beautiful medieval towns, and the stunning vineyards of Chianti. J oin this magical trip to Tuscany and you’ll stay in a comfortable four-star hotel in the delightful spa town of Montecatini Terme. Situated between Pisa and Florence and renowned for its thermal waters, it’s the perfect place to relax and unwind and to explore the delights of Tuscany. You’ll head out to explore all that Tuscany has to offer on a series of day trips. We’ve included a guided tour of the incredible ‘art city’ of Florence where you can admire the city’s stunning architecture and galleries packed with masterpieces from the Renaissance period, shop for unique souvenirs in the covered market of Mercato Nuovo and walk across the medieval Ponte Vecchio lined with fine jewellery shops. There’s a visit to Pisa where you’ll see the world-famous Leaning Tower of Pisa within the equally impressive Field of Miracles. You will also discover stunning medieval towns surrounded by beautiful countryside, such as Vinci, famous for being the birthplace of legendary Italian artist and sculptor Leonardo da Vinci. As well as enjoy a tasting of wine and local specialities in Chianti – delicious! In between the sightseeing you can make your own plans, relax at the hotel, explore independently, or join one of our optional excursions, it’s your holiday so pick whatever’s right for you. On our optional trips, step back to medieval times with visits to the charming hilltop town of San Gimignano, Monteriggione, Montalcino and the setting of the dramatic Palio horse race – Siena. Price includes Return flights from London, overseas transportation & porterage Seven nights in a four-star hotel Seven breakfasts, one light lunch, five dinners and welcome drink Services of a Travelsphere Holiday Director See the Leaning Tower of Pisa and visit the Leonardo da Vinci Museum Trip to the ‘art city’ of Florence Tour of medieval Lucca Night at the Montecatini Opera Festival (subject to timetable and weather) Local food and wine-tasting at Castello di Vicchiomaggio in Chianti CALL TODAY ON A thoroughly enjoyable tour, with Mario our Holiday Director. Nothing too much trouble. A brilliant insight to Tuscany. A great fun bunch of fellow travellers, super hotel, with friendly helpful staff. Our first Travelsphere tour and it won’t be our last. J Limbert Our trusted partner Scan the QR code with your camera app to view more details. 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ts-tuscany QUOTE TIMES *Discount on selected departures only. Prices correct at time of print. Prices shown are based on twin occupancy of a double or twin bedded room and economy flights. All holidays are subject to availability. Images used in conjunction with Travelsphere. Operated by and subject to the booking conditions of Travelsphere, ABTA Y6412, ATOL 11266 a company wholly independent of News UK.
EIGHT DAYS FROM £2,999 * per person Price includes Return flights from London and overseas transportation Seven nights in four-star hotels Seven breakfasts, one lunch, five dinners and welcome drink Travel on the Bernina Express to Tirano Lake Thun cruise and Spiez Castle Visit Trümmelbach Falls and Mürren The Best of Switzerland Save up to £600 per couple* D Travelling in comfort and style on worldfamous railways, you’ll soon discover that Switzerland is a country with more than its fair share of natural beauty. It’s a place where dramatic snow-capped peaks meet far-reaching skies and the air is as pure and fresh as can be. Enjoy journeys on the Bernina Express, the Golden Pass Train and the world’s slowest express train, the Glacier Express. You will visit Europe’s largest underground waterfalls, admire Take the Golden Pass train Lausanne free public transport card Departures | September 2024 to September 2025 iscover the magnificence of the great outdoors on this incredible alpine journey. Enjoy a journey on the Glacier Express panoramic views from the summit of Schilthorn, also known as the ‘007 Mountain’, and enjoy a tranquil cruise on a sparkling lake. Along the way, there’s free time to explore elegant towns and pretty resorts, and ample opportunity to treat yourself to some traditional Swiss specialities – think chocolate or cheese fondue! CALL TODAY ON 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ts-switzerland Scan the QR code with your camera app to view more details. FIVE DAYS FROM £1,999* per person QUOTE TIMES Price includes Return flights from London and overseas transportation Four nights in a four-star hotel Four breakfasts, one lunch, two dinners and welcome drink Tromsø tour including the Polar Museum & Arctic Cathedral Cable car ride to the top of Mount Storsteinen Norway - Huskies and the Northern Lights Husky sledding experience Reindeer sledding and Sami culture evening Departures | January to February 2025 I n winter, Norway transforms into a magical wonderland where the ethereal Northern Lights dance across the skies and landscapes are blanketed in crisp white snow. On this carefully-crafted five-day holiday, you’ll stay in Tromsø, famous for its role as the ‘Gateway to the Arctic’ and your hotel is perfectly located in the heart of the city for you to discover more of the area. See the modern architecture of the Arctic Cathedral and take a cable car ride for the most spectacular view in the city. Our trusted partner Explore the outdoors on a husky sledding ride, learn about Sami culture and enjoy a traditional Sami dinner, and of course (weather permitting) keep your eyes peeled for a spectacular display of the Aurora Borealis. CALL TODAY ON Scan the QR code with your camera app to view more details. *Discount on selected departures only. Prices correct at time of print. Prices shown are based on twin occupancy of a double or twin bedded room and economy flights. All holidays are subject to availability. Images used in conjunction with Travelsphere. Operated by and subject to the booking conditions of Travelsphere, ABTA Y6412, ATOL 11266 a company wholly independent of News UK. 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ ts-northernlights QUOTE TIMES
EIGHT DAYS FROM £1,649 * per person Price includes Return flights from London and overseas transportation Seven nights in a four-star hotel Seven breakfasts and welcome drink Discover the highlights of Cannes Visit the city of Nice and enjoy candied fruit and crystallised flowers at a Confiserie Explore Monaco and Monte Carlo Tours of St Raphael and St Tropez Save up to £350 per couple* French Riviera Departures | September 2024 to September 2025 S oak up the special atmosphere of the south of France. Experience the glitz and the glamour of the Cote d’Azur’s most chic resorts from your base in Cannes, known for its long sandy beaches, designer boutiques and yachtlined harbour. Discover the highlights of the city before heading to Nice for sweeping views from Mont Boron. Your glamorous getaway continues with a visit to Monaco where you’ll explore the district of Monte Carlo, renowned for its casino and grand harbour filled with expensive yachts. As your tour draws to a close, visit delightful St Raphael and St Tropez - one of the most beautiful resorts in France. Scan the QR code with your camera app to view more details. 11 DAYS FROM £2,649* Save up to £600 per couple* per person CALL TODAY ON 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ ts-frenchriviera QUOTE TIMES Price includes Return flights from London and overseas transportation Three nights in four-star hotels Seven-night exclusive cruise on board the Deluxe MV Adriatic Pearl Ten breakfasts, five lunches, six dinners and welcome drink Discover the islands of Korcula, Hvar and Solta Croatia Uncovered Explore Dubrovnik, Zadar, Trogir and Split Visit Krka and Mljet National Parks Departures | September 2024 to September 2025 T his is a tour of two incredible parts as you explore Croatia by land and sea. On land, you’ll travel north from Split to explore the medieval cobbled streets of Trogir and Zadar, lined with historic buildings that lead to charming squares. Discover delicious local cuisine at a rural estate and walk along the picturesque trails of Krka National Park. Step aboard the MV Adriatic Pearl for the second part of this tour. This deluxe ship is small enough to visit unspoilt islands and drop anchor in secluded bays as you sail along the Dalmatian Our trusted partner Enjoy a Croatian lunch with a local family Coast. Visit Korcula with its striking city walls, stop at Mljet with its beautiful combination of saltwater lakes, dense forest and Franciscan Monastery, take in a quiet fishing village on Solta, and enjoy the photogenic beaches and medieval architecture of Hvar. CALL TODAY ON Scan the QR code with your camera app to view more details. *Discount on selected departures only. Prices correct at time of print. Prices shown are based on twin occupancy of a double or twin bedded room and economy flights. All holidays are subject to availability. Images used in conjunction with Travelsphere. Operated by and subject to the booking conditions of Travelsphere, ABTA Y6412, ATOL 11266 a company wholly independent of News UK. 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ts-croatia QUOTE TIMES
17 DAYS FROM £4,199* per person Save up to £450 per couple* Epic Wonders of the National Parks Departures | September 2024 to October 2025 Cameras at the ready! On this incredible holiday across seven different states, you are going to encounter some of the most spectacular sights and scenery the USA has to offer. Y our road trip starts in Denver, Colorado and takes you to the bright lights of Las Vegas. Along the way, you will discover historic sites and landmarks dedicated to those who helped define the country’s history and step into the cowboy world of the ‘Wild West’. This meticulously planned journey travels through no less than nine of America’s national parks. Keep your eyes peeled for wildlife, see spouting geysers, steaming hot springs, boiling pools and bubbling mud pots in Yellowstone - the world’s first national park. Then prepare yourself for the beauty of the Rocky Mountains in Grand Teton, where snow-capped peaks, lakes and glaciers await. Over 17 days you’ll discover vast, rugged landscapes shaped by the power of nature, visit ancient cave dwellings and marvel at geological wonders galore. From dramatic red-rock arches to hoodoos, towering cliffs and the iconic Grand Canyon. We’ll also stop at ‘Native Grill’, run by a local Navajo family, to enjoy a traditional frybread taco. Your journey ends in the neon-lit city of Las Vegas, marvel at the epic buildings lining the famous Strip, watch the incredible dancing fountains outside the Bellagio, try your luck in one of the elegant casinos or shop till you drop; the opportunities are endless! This trip is packed full of once-in-a-lifetime experiences. Price includes Return flights from London, overseas transportation & porterage 15 nights in great quality hotel plus one night in flight 15 breakfasts, one lunch, one dinner and welcome drink Services of a Travelsphere Holiday Director Visit Mount Rushmore, the Crazy Horse Memorial and Monument Valley Enjoy time at nine national parks including Yellowstone, Arches, Grand Canyon and Zion. Stay at the heart of the action on the Las Vegas Strip The scenery just got better every day, the scale of each National Park was unbelievable. It was certainly an epic experience and a holiday of a lifetime. If you love natural features and scenery to blow your mind this is the holiday for you. I Morgan CALL TODAY ON Scan the QR code with your camera app to view more details. 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ ts-nationalparks QUOTE TIMES Our trusted partner *Discount on selected departures only. Prices correct at time of print. Prices shown are based on twin occupancy of a double or twin bedded room and economy flights. All holidays are subject to availability. Images used in conjunction with Travelsphere. Operated by and subject to the booking conditions of Travelsphere, ABTA Y6412, ATOL 11266 a company wholly independent of News UK.
12 DAYS FROM £3,699 * per person Save up to £400 per couple* Price includes Return flights from London and overseas transportation Ten nights accommodation plus one night in flight with three meals Discover Banff National Park and Lake Louise Drive along the Icefields Parkway, stopping at the Columbia Icefield Visit Maligne Lake and Maligne Canyon in Jasper National Park Rockies river safari on the Blue River Spectacular Rockies & Vancouver Tour of Victoria, Vancouver Island Vancouver city tour and Stanley Park Departures | September 2024 to September 2025 A road trip from Calgary to Vancouver in western Canada is a holiday high on many a traveller’s wish list and this is our version of that incredible journey. You’ll see the snowcapped peaks of Banff National Park and breathtaking jade-green waters of Lake Louise before heading north into Jasper National Park. Here, you’ll visit the mighty Columbia Icefield and spectacular Maligne Canyon and then there’s a treat in store for wildlife enthusiasts with a safari through Grizzly Bear Valley. Ending Ultimate South Africa Departures | September 2024 to November 2026 with visits to the vibrant coastal cities of Victoria and Vancouver, this wonderful holiday has something for everyone. To explore even more, you can add on a host of exciting experiences with our range of optional excursions. Scan the QR code with your camera app to view more details. 17 DAYS FROM £4,299* per person CALL TODAY ON 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ ts-spectacularrockies QUOTE TIMES Price includes Return flights from London and overseas transportation 14 nights in three & four-star hotels plus two nights in flight 14 breakfasts, two lunches, seven dinners and welcome drink Save up to £450 per couple* Cape Town Tour and Table Mountain Cape Peninsula, Cape Point and Boulders Beach Winelands tour and tasting Game drive in Kruger National Park Drive along the Garden Route and the Panorama Route The Zulu battlefields S outh Africa is a land of breathtaking beauty and poignant history, magnificent wildlife and wines. This all-encompassing tour begins with an overnight flight to the incredible city of Cape Town. From here, you’ll explore the wonders of the Cape Peninsula, travel to the Western Cape Winelands and journey along the famous Garden Route. Then, we change gear and head to the Zulu Kingdom for an evocative tour of the battlefields before rounding off our adventure on safari in Kruger National Park. Our trusted partner Joining a carefully planned, fully escorted tour is one of the best ways to discover South Africa. You can relax, safe in the knowledge that everything has been arranged with your comfort in mind. CALL TODAY ON Scan the QR code with your camera app to view more details. *Discount on selected departures only. Prices correct at time of print. Prices shown are based on twin occupancy of a double or twin bedded room and economy flights. All holidays are subject to availability. Images used in conjunction with Travelsphere. Operated by and subject to the booking conditions of Travelsphere, ABTA Y6412, ATOL 11266 a company wholly independent of News UK. 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ts-southafrica QUOTE TIMES
15 DAYS FROM £2,999* per person Save up to £300 per couple* Taj, Tigers, Temples and Rajasthan’s Palaces Departures | February to October 2025 Experience the very best of the Golden Triangle on this 15-day adventure that includes a world wonder, exotic wildlife and golden temples. Y our journey begins in the bustling city of Delhi. Uncover all the highlights on a sightseeing tour, which includes a rickshaw ride through the fabled street bazaar of Chandni Chowk. Amritsar is your next destination, famed for its Golden Temple, also known as Harmandir Sahib Gurudwara. You’ll visit the temple and also have the chance to experience a Palki Ceremony there on an optional excursion. provide the perfect habitat for more than 300 species of birds, as well as crocodile, hyena, jackal and more. You’ll head out on a morning and afternoon safari in search of these local residents and if you’re lucky, you may spot the elusive tiger or the even rarer leopard. You’ll delve into the cultural highlights of India’s Rajasthan with stays in Udaipur and Jodhpur exploring incredible sights such as the Mehran Garh Fort. And if that wasn’t enough, an evening cruise on Pichola Lake will take you to Jagmandir Island where sandstone palaces appear to rise from the water. Extend your stay in India and complete your adventure with 3 nights in Goa - India’s answer to paradise. A colourful blend of Indian and Portuguese cultures partnered with sun, sea and susegad - the relaxed, laid-back attitude that Goans have towards life. Return flights from London, overseas transportation & porterage 13 nights in four and five-star hotels, plus one night in flight 13 breakfasts, five lunches, 13 dinners and welcome drink Services of a Travelsphere Holiday Director Discover Amritsar town and the Golden Temple You’ll journey to the Indo-Pakistan ‘Wagah Border’ village to watch the daily changing of the guard – a ceremony full of patriotic fervour and representing the rivalry and respect between the two countries. In Agra, an early start for a dawn visit to the Taj Mahal is worth the early alarm - seeing the sun’s light dance on the white marble is a truly breath-taking experience. You’ll also visit the Agra Fort and Itmad-ud-Duala known as ‘baby Taj’. Your time in Agra comes to an end as you make your way to Ranthambore National Park. Thick forest interspersed with pretty waterfalls, Extend your stay Price includes Explore the cities of Delhi, Agra & Jaipur See the Taj Mahal at sunrise Morning and afternoon safaris in Ranthambore Visit Agra Fort and Amber Fort CALL TODAY ON Scan the QR code with your camera app to view more details. 0808 304 8617 thetimes.com/ ts-goldentriangle QUOTE TIMES Our trusted partner *Discount on selected departures only. Prices correct at time of print. Prices shown are based on twin occupancy of a double or twin bedded room and economy flights. All holidays are subject to availability. Images used in conjunction with Travelsphere. Operated by and subject to the booking conditions of Travelsphere, ABTA Y6412, ATOL 11266 a company wholly independent of News UK.