In the headlines
British ministers are prepared to hand over ÂŁ8bn of frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine, warning that Vladimir Putin is an active threat to the UKâs citizens, security and prosperity. Itâs part of a deal Britain is trying to broker with the EU and other nations, including Canada, that could see as much as ÂŁ100bn released for Kyivâs war effort. Ireland, Spain, Slovenia and the Netherlands will boycott next yearâs Eurovision after Israel was given the all-clear to compete in the 2026 song contest by the competitionâs organising body. Despite calls by several participating broadcasters to exclude the nation over the war in Gaza, the European Broadcasting Union held no vote on its participation at its general assembly yesterday. Louvre, Mounjaro and Denzel Washington were among the most mispronounced words of the year, according to presumably very scientific research by the language-learning platform Babbel. The Parisian museum should be âLOOV-ruhâ, the weight-loss drug is apparently pronounced âmown-JAHR-OHâ and the Hollywood actorâs name isnât âDEN-zulâ but âDen-ZELLEâ. Click here to see the rest.
Comment

Corbyn delivering his conference speech. Christopher Furlong/Getty
The left ânever miss an opportunity to miss an opportunityâ
When Your Party was first announced at the end of July, says Owen Jones in The Guardian, 800,000 people registered their interest, revealing, it seemed, an unprecedented opportunity for the left. Faced with an economic model no longer delivering rising living standards or functioning public services, and a deeply unpopular foreign policy â support for Israel â the radical left had its âbiggest ever receptive audienceâ. But the partyâs first conference in Liverpool last weekend was a masterclass in how the left âcan never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunityâ. Members gathering to hear a âcredible, inspiring alternativeâ to Keir Starmerâs Labour were instead treated to those timeless left-wing blights: âinfighting, posturing, sectarianism and an obsession with meetingsâ.
Oh how I wish Iâd been there, says Douglas Murray in The Spectator. It looked hilarious. Zarah Sultana boycotting the first day of her own conference was funny enough. Then there were the speakers, including a gangly young chap called Joseph who declared his pronouns were âshe/theyâ, while wearing a knitted bobble hat in the colours of the Pride flag, letting the audience know he was from the trans wing of the party not the Islamic wing. When Sultana finally took the stage, she was heckled by a male Muslim speaker who complained that the hard left party had purged people with âconservativeâ views. He, in turn, was accused of âmisogynyâ, before another member screamed over both of them with the words: âWe should not be screaming over each other.â Outside, a young white woman in a keffiyeh confronted Jeremy Corbyn over whether he was sufficiently âanti-Zionist and anti-imperialistâ. Yes, that Jeremy Corbyn. Visibly furious, he exploded: âWhat do you think Iâve spent my life doing?â Judging by the conference, thatâs an easy one to answer.
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Shopping
Boxes of chocolate can be as decorative as they are delicious, says Clare Coulson in the FT. Top picks include a lobster-printed box from Audreyâs (ÂŁ16.96); Chaponâs âHenri Rousseau-esqueâ boxes covered in tropical scenes (ÂŁ27); Charbonnel et Walkerâs gilt-edged boxes of truffles clad in Liberty prints (ÂŁ62 for three); the ornate Gilded Age tins sold at New Yorkâs Louis Sherry (ÂŁ35); and the navy and white boxes that come with personalised notes from Parisâs Debauve & Gallais, which still serves wafer-thin pistole chocolate medallions invented for Marie-Antoinette (ÂŁ48). Click on the image to see more.
Youâre missing outâŠ
The rest of todayâs issue â including a fascinating column on whether Donald Trump is losing his touch â is for paying subscribers only. If you can afford it, can we persuade you to join them? Today, theyâre reading about all the things Zack Polanski doesnât know about how the country works (and his lamentable excuse), as well as pieces on a record-breaking FabergĂ© egg and the real reason gorgeous waitresses earn more in tips.
Earlier this week, they also enjoyed reading about:
đž The next James Bond
đ Tom Stoppardâs witty war of words with Harold Pinter
đ How Mick Jagger pioneered online streaming
đȘ The war Israel is still waging
đ Donald Trumpâs secret White House âgift shopâ
đ The country having more babies than all of Europe combined
đ€ Why self-driving cars are a âpublic health imperativeâ
đȘŒ What we could learn from an immortal jellyfish
So go on, treat yourself and sign up. Itâs just ÂŁ40 for the whole first year, which works out at only 80p a week â an extraordinarily low price for such a lot of fun.
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