- “The BBC has serious questions to answer over Huw Edwards” – Danny Sharp in the Spectator says the BBC has mishandled the Huw Edwards affair
- “Mick Lynch calls UK press ‘a disgrace’ after Huw Edwards scandal” – Hard Left RMT boss says we need tighter regulation of the press “to protect vulnerable people” in the wake of the Huw Edwards affair. Not tighter regulation of BBC personalities?
- “How the long-term sickness epidemic wrecked Britain’s public finances” – Forgone tax receipts and increased welfare spending weigh heavily on the state’s coffers, says the Telegraph.
- “Britain’s China policy has been completely demolished” – China is engaged in a “whole of state“ assault on the U.K. and the Government’s approach has been “completely inadequate”, concludes a new report by parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee
- “Trans guidance will urge schools to help parents protect children” – The Department for Education is about to publish its long-awaited advice for schools about how to deal with trans-identifying students. According to the Telegraph, the latest version will recommend a period of ‘watchful waiting’ before schools affirm the self-diagnosis of trans students.
- “Transgender riders banned from all women’s cycling events” – The UCI has followed other athletic bodies in preventing biological men competing against women in cycling races, reports the Telegraph.
- “Transgender runner, 49, wins bronze at Para World Championships” – The Italian is the first transgender athlete to win a track and field medal on the global stage, reports the Telegraph.
- “How the word ‘woman’ has gradually been erased from the English language” – A charity’s recent use of the term ‘bonus hole’ to refer to a vagina is the latest example of how gender identity ideology has captured the charitable sector, writes Hannah Betts in the Telegraph.
- “Civil servants ‘must be free to question transgender identity’” – Women must have the right to question or criticise transgender identity without being bullied, harassed or discriminated against in the workplace, new guidance for civil servants states, according to the Times.
- “It’s time to scrap our ridiculous privacy laws” – Article 8 of the ECHR has become a means to censor public interest journalism – it was never meant for that purpose, writes Geoffrey Robertson in the Telegraph.
- “Harvard claims it found elixir of youth – but experts call it ‘hype’” – Biologists are slamming a Harvard Medical School study that claims to have found a way to reverse ageing, reports the Mail.
- “The West must get Ukraine into NATO as fast as we can” – Boris Johnson thumps the tub in favour of Ukraine’s membership of NATO in his latest column for the Mail.
- “How will EU react to Right-wing populist shift in Europe?” – Across the continent, millions of citizens are shifting their allegiance towards populist Right-wing parties, writes Sue Reid in the Mail. How will the EU cope?
- “Shell considers selling green energy stake in shift back to oil and gas” – Activist investors are increasingly vocal about the wasted billions poured into ‘sustainable’ energy, reports the Telegraph.
- “Just Stop Oil run onto the stage during BBC Proms opening night” – Just Stop Oil stormed the stage during the first night of the Proms, throwing confetti and blasting air horns, says the Mail.
- “Watch Republican Congressman Scott Perry Crush John Kerry on climate change” – Scott Perry points out that very few other nations have followed America’s lead in reducing carbon emissions and questions whether global warming is linked to increased carbon dioxide.
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