The Guardian - 31.08.2019

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Sat urday 31 Aug ust 2019 The Guardian


In brief^59


There was a backlash against Boris
Johnson after he obtained the
Queen’s agreement to suspend
parliament, giving MPs less of a
chance to avert a no-deal Brexit.
Parliament will still resume next
Tuesday – but only to sit for little
more than a week before breaking
until 14 October.

Issue of
the week

Boris Johnson prorogues
parliament

Owen Jones, in
the Guardian

Polly Toynbee,
in the Guardian

Iain Martin, in
the Times

“Call the suspension of parliament
what it is: a coup d’état by an
unelected prime minister. Brexit, we
were promised, was about restoring
the sovereignty of the House of
Commons and taking back control
of our laws. That institution is now
to be shut down, its ability to pass
legislation neutered ...
“Let us nail this perverse lie that
forcing through no deal is honouring
the referendum result. The offi cial
leave campaigns made it abundantly
clear that Brexit would mean a deal,
and an easily negotiated one too.”

“This country that self-identifi ed
so smugly as stable, tolerant
and moderate, with a crown
to symbolise traditions honed
down the centuries, is revealed
as fi ssile, fragile and ferociously
divided. A constitution that relied
on gentlemanly governments’
willingness to bow to parliament
has evaporated, blown away now
it’s led by a man who doesn’t give a
damn for parliamentary sovereignty:
taking back control is for him alone.
He is ready to destroy anything that
threatens his ambition.
“MPs will try to stop him
proroguing them. Astonishingly,
this unelected prime minister has
so far only spent one day in the
Commons under their scrutiny, and
now ... he will face them for just one
week before banishing them for an
unprecedented further fi ve weeks.”

“... the prime minister has quite
legitimately stretched the British
constitution on the entirely
reasonable basis that his remainer
opponents have just this week sworn
to do whatever they deem necessary
to stop Brexit. Quite rightly, he’s
fi ghting back to get Brexit done.
“It is a measure of how spoilt
those opposition party leaders and
Tory remain rebels were by the
weakness of the May era ... that they
seemed stunned on Wednesday
when news broke of the prorogation.
Boris is – oh the shock! – prepared
expertly to play politics back.”

Environment
Holiday heat headlines not
focusing on climate crisis

Health
Optimism may hold secret
to longer life, says study

Food and drink
Vegan takeaway orders
rise fi vefold in two years

Football
Bury expelled from league
games after 125 years

Environment

Bolsonaro and Macron in spat as


Amazon fi res continue to rage


Tensions rose between France and Brazil after


President Emmanuel Macron tweeted that


the fi res burning in the Amazon amounted to


an international crisis and should be made a


top priority at the G7 summit. Jair Bolsonaro,


the Brazilian president, reacted by accusing


Macron of having a “colonialist mentality”.


After rejecting a $20m (£16m) G7


contribution to fi ght the fi res Brazil said it was


ready to accept foreign aid, but only if it could


determine how it was spent.


Brazil’s leader said he had been cheered by an


earlier tweet in which the US president, Donald


Trump, said Bolsonaro was “working very hard


on the Amazon fi res and in all respects doing a


great job for the people of Brazil”.


Jaunty stories about record bank
holiday temperatures have glossed
over the reality of the climate crisis,
experts say. The latest record was
the 33.2C (91.8F) at Heathrow this
week – fi ve degrees higher than the
hottest temperature previously
registered in Britain on an August
bank holiday Monday.
The Met Offi ce says the worrying
long-term trend is clear, but not
always easy to balance with the
short-term focus on pleasantly
unusual warmth. Other experts said
the Met Offi ce and the BBC should be
proactive about linking the weather
with the climate.
“At the moment, the Met Offi ce
seems to be afraid to talk about
climate change,” said Bob Ward of
the Grantham Research Institute on
climate change and the environment
at the London School of Economics.

New research suggests that
optimists not only live longer in
general, but also have a better
chance of reaching 85 or older.
It is not the fi rst time optimism
has been linked to health benefi ts.
People of an upbeat disposition
have previously been found to have
a lower risk of heart conditions and
premature death. Researchers now
say it could also play a role in living
a long life.
Analysis of two previous long-
term research projects, one involving
female nurses and the other focused
on a cohort of men show the most
optimistic women had a lifespan
almost 15% longer than the least.
Most of the participants in the
study were white, and few had low
socioeconomic status – meaning
more research is needed to see if the
fi ndings hold in other groups.

Vegan meals are now the UK’s fastest
growing takeaway choice, with orders
rising almost fi vefold in two years.
With 600,000 people believed to
be vegan in the UK in 2018, and an
increase in “fl exitarians” choosing to
reduce their consumption of animal
products, orders of vegan takeaways
grew 388% between 2016 and 2018,
while vegetarian orders rose 137%,
according to research by the British
Takeaway Campaign.
Deliveroo said that in the past
12 months the number of vegan
restaurants on its app had increased
by 168%. Pakistani, Greek, Persian
and Turkish takeaways have grown
in popularity more rapidly than the
nation’s favourites – Chinese and
Indian – over the past two years.

Bury have been expelled from the
English Football League after 125
years of continued membership
after the EFL board fi nally ran out of
patience with its fi nancial collapse
and owner, Steve Dale. He had been
given a deadline of 5pm on Tuesday,
after a series of previous deadlines
were not met, either to provide
proof he ha d suffi cient money to
fi nance the club and its debts or to
conclude a sale.
Bury’s name will be removed from
League One and the Football League
for the fi rst time since the club joined
the old Second Division in 1894.
League One will be played between
23 clubs. Three clubs will be relegated
at the end of the season and four
promoted from League Two.

▲ A fi refi ghter in Mato Grosso state, Brazil PHOTOGRAPH: MAYKE TOSCANO/AFP/GETTY

The average number of people the RNLI went to
help each day last year, with 8,964 launches, up
from 8,436 in 2017. But the charity faces an annual
loss of £6m as donations have dropped

The proportion of 14-year-olds who meet the
recommended guidelines for exercise (one
hour a day), screen time (two hours) and sleep
(at least eight hours)

269.7%


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