- “Michael Gove to be Editor of the Spectator following takeover” – Michael Gove has been appointed Editor of the Spectator following the purchase of the magazine by Sir Paul Marshall, reports Press Gazette.
- “Michael Gove is the new Editor of the Spectator” – In the Spectator, Fraser Nelson bids farewell to his role as editor after 15 years as Michael Gove takes over the position.
- “IDF chief tells his forces to prepare for ground invasion of Lebanon” – Israel’s army chief has told his forces to prepare for a ground invasion of Lebanon as the Middle East spirals towards a seemingly inevitable wider war, reports the Mail.
- “Is this the end for Hezbollah?” – The recent outbreak of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah is a war that could prove terminal for Hezbollah, writes Michael Karam in the Spectator.
- “The BBC’s shameful moral cowardice over Hamas” – The Beeb is showing a film about Hamas’s pogrom but the film won’t feature the word ‘terrorist’. This is insane, says Brendan O’Neill in Spiked.
- “Reeves prepares to rewrite debt rules to unlock up to £50 billion in spending” – The Chancellor is understood to be considering changing how debt is calculated to take into account investment spending, reports the Telegraph.
- “Starmer wants to give investigators power to spy on personal bank information” – Starmer has just announced a law giving investigators access to personal bank accounts, writes Michael Curzon in the European Conservative.
- “I had to take freebies for my son, says Starmer” – Keir Starmer has defended taking free accommodation by claiming it was important for his teenage son to have somewhere peaceful to revise for his GCSEs, reports LBC.
- “Keir Starmer Covid broadcast urging work from home came from donor’s flat” – Keir Starmer was accused of “hoodwinking” the public after telling Britain to work from home during Covid from the comfort of Lord Alli’s luxury penthouse, says the Mail.
- “The ‘freebies’ scandal exposes the entitlement of the woke” – Labour bigwigs are so convinced of their own virtue that they really think they can do no wrong, writes Joanna Williams in Spiked.
- “Transphobic ‘hate speech’ will not be illegal in Ireland after U-turn” – Ireland will not introduce hate speech laws following criticism from Government lawmakers, opponents and billionaire Elon Musk, according to Reuters.
- “Top barristers revolt over ‘dangerous’ diversity plans” – The Bar Standards Board could penalise those who fail to promote equal opportunities in the profession, reports the Telegraph.
- “The intolerant age” – Hannah Barnes in the New Statesman writes about the creeping intolerance in the commanding heights of Britain‘s cultural institutions.
- “Regulators under fire” – On Substack, Joshua Rozenberg KC takes aim at the Bar Standards Board’s “illiberal” diversity mandate, as two top barristers label it social engineering wrapped in red tape.
- “The ‘lammy’” – In the New Conservative, Peter Harrison suggests a new word for the Oxford English Dictionary: lammy, n. /ˈlæmi/ A politician who attempts to appear important and clever through grandiose statements but ultimately makes a fool of himself due to the erroneous nature of his remarks.
- “HS2: billions wasted on an outdated dream” – By 2023, HS2 had drained £27 billion from taxpayers for a grand project built on a scandalously shaky business case, writes Dia Chakravarty in the Telegraph.
- “Labour’s winter fuel raid has now become sadistic” – It’s time for Sir Keir and Ms. Reeves to finally consider that they might actually be wrong about cutting winter fuel payments, says Ben Wilkinson in the Telegraph.
- “Climate scientists call on Labour to pause £1 billion plans for carbon capture” – Leading climate scientists are urging the Government to pause plans for a billion pound investment in “green technologies” that are unproven and would make it harder for the U.K. to reach its Net Zero targets, reports the Guardian.
- “Ed Miliband sends armed police to guard gas terminals” – Ed Miliband has directed the nuclear police to boost staffing to safeguard key energy projects from rising protests by environmental groups like Just Stop Oil and Greenpeace, according to the Mail.
- “‘West Antarctic ice sheet may disappear by 2300’” – From the “we’ve heard it all before” department and the Dartmouth College Division of Modelled Unverifiable Predictions, comes another ho-hum scare story, says Anthony Watts in WUWT?
- “The NHS and prevention” – Wes Streeting is repeating the mantra of all Health Secretaries, write Prof. Carl Heneghan and Dr. Tom Jefferson on the TTE Substack.
- “Our crumbling NHS would make assisted dying a disaster for Britain” – The U.K.’s broken welfare state will turn personal tragedy into a Canada-style national catastrophe, warns Allister Heath in the Telegraph.
- “Letby hospital baby delivery ‘like something out of horror film’” – The Thirlwall Inquiry has heard that the operating theatre where some babies were delivered at Lucy Letby’s hospital was like “something out of a horror film”, reports the Telegraph.
- “Journal pressured to retract study on COVID-19 vaccine harms” – A manufacturer has launched proceedings against researchers who published a study that reported adverse events following COVID-19 vaccination, writes Maryanne Demasi on her Substack.
- “After lockdown, the pandemic of ‘just can’t be bothered’” – In a world reshaped by the pandemic, we’ve traded vibrant social lives for lazy conveniences, says Liz Hodgkinson in TCW.
- “The UN admits it: global government is what it wants to meet all ‘challenges’” – The UN’s newly endorsed Pact for the Future promises sweeping reforms and global governance under the guise of progress, warns Javier Villamor in Brussels Signal.
- “Big Tech deboosted millions of posts during EU elections” – Newly released documents have confirmed that Big Tech platforms ‘deboosted’ millions of posts throughout the period of the European Elections this year, reports Brussels Signal.
- “Male rapists cannot formally be recorded as female, Scottish police say in ‘major U-turn’” – Police Scotland chiefs have been accused of “gaslighting” after U-turning on their policy in dealing with male rapists who self-ID as women, says the Scottish Sun.
- “University fired professor who spoke out against trans surgery for children” – The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that University of Louisville officials can be sued for their roles in firing a psychiatrist who criticised transgender drugs and surgeries for minors, reports the College Fix.
- “Trans activists set off explosion in attempt to sabotage conference critical of gender ideology ” – A private school in Lyon, France, had its electricity sabotaged as trans activists attempted to have a conference critical of gender ideology cancelled, says Reduxx.
- “‘I’m Britain’s ‘welfare Queen’ – here is what I spend the cash on’” – A jobless mother-of-eight has boasted about the “luxuries” she has bought with taxpayers’ cash – claiming that being on benefits has never held her back, reports the Mail.
- “Misjudging the debate?” – Polling suggests that voters viewed the September 10th Trump–Harris contest differently from the commentariat, notes Jeffrey H. Anderson in City Journal.
- “Elon Musk denies having an affair with ‘beautiful’ Giorgia Meloni” – Elon Musk denied any romance between him and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni after he called her “beautiful” at an awards ceremony in New York, reports Politico.
- “Free Gear Kier tries to justify having his nose in the trough and fails” – Sir Keir Starmer is hauled over the coals by Sky News’s Beth Rigby for his apparent addiction to freebies, calling him “continuity Johnson”.
If you have any tips for inclusion in the round-up, email us here.
To join in with the discussion please make a donation to The Daily Sceptic.
Profanity and abuse will be removed and may lead to a permanent ban.