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The main stories...
It wasn’t all bad
To take Britain out of the EU withoutadeal “would be the
most wilfully dangerous policy action that any government of
this country has taken in modern times”, said
The Guardian. Yet, “almost unbelievably”, it
now appears to be one of No. 10’s central
goals. Johnson’s chief strategist, Dominic
Cummings, let it be known at the weekend that
MPs had run out of time to preventano-deal
Brexit because even if the Government lost a
vote of no confidence, it could still delay an
election until after 31 October. Johnson lacks
“both the democratic and moral authority”
to attempt any such thing. Parliament must use
every weapon to stop this “arrogant gamble”.
Remainer MPs have already deployedafair
few of these in their efforts to frustrate the
result of the 2016 EU referendum, said The
Daily Telegraph. The sensible move now would
be for them to “change tactics”. Rather than resorting to more
“parliamentary skulduggery”, they should accept that Theresa
May’s deal is defunct and put pressure on the EU to offer the
UKabetter one. The “increasingly ill-tempered stand-off”
between Downing Street and Brussels is helping nobody,
said the Daily Mail. “Good faith and common sense must be
allowed to prevail–for all our sakes.”
The prospect ofano-deal Brexit loomed larger
this week as London and Brussels rejected each
other’s positions and No. 10 signalled that it
was prepared to push through such an outcome
even in the teeth ofafull-scale Remainer revolt.
On Monday, EU negotiators briefed European
officials that there was currently no basis for
“meaningful discussions” owing to Boris
Johnson’s insistence that the Irish backstop be
removed from the withdrawal deal (see page
22 ). Asenior EU diplomat reportedly said that
ano-deal Brexit now appeared to be London’s
“central scenario”.AUKGovernment source
denied that this was the case, but insisted the
EU had to understand that Johnson couldn’t
resubmit to the Commonsadeal that MPs have
already rejected three times.
Johnson’s fledgling administration faced further tests over the
course of the week, includingaslump in the pound, warnings
of apossible recession, and defeat in the Brecon by-election
(see page 6). Inamove widely interpreted asabid to boost
the Tories’ prospects inapossible general election, the Prime
Minister set out details ofa£1.8bn boost to the health service.
What happened What the editorials said
Cummings: tough message
The Brexit standoff
“Mr Trump has stigmatised Mexicans since the day he
announced his candidacy for president,” said The Washington
Post. He denounced Latino immigration as an
“invasion of our country”, and demonised
undocumented immigrants as “thugs and
animals”. The president’s words “have wide
and deep consequences”. Trump cannot be held
responsible for every irresponsible act, “but he
can be held to account for propagating ugly and
bigoted notions”. He should never again “spew
his loathing” from the White House.
Blaming these shootings on political opponents
is too easy, said The Wall Street Journal. After
all, there were mass killings under Obama, Bush
and Clinton. The real problem is more complex:
anew breed of angry loners who are “marin-
ated”in dangerous notions they absorb online.
It’s clear now that America hasaserious problem with white
nationalist terrorism, said The New York Times. Since 9/11, it
has claimed more American lives than the Islamist kind. True
enough, said the Chicago Sun-Times. But in the end, “it’s
about the guns. Every other explanation can get in line.”
Two mass shootings in the US in the space
of asingle day left 31 people dead and 53
injured. In the deadliest attack, 22 people
were killed on Saturday whenasuspected
white supremacist opened fire with an assault
rifle ataWalmart store in the city of El Paso,
on the Mexican border. Patrick Crusius, 21,
was later arrested and charged with capital
murder. It emerged that Crusius had posted
a“manifesto” onafar-right online message
board denouncing the “Hispanic invasion of
Texas”. Most of the dead were Hispanic. In
asecond attack,agunman killed nine people
outsideabar in Dayton, Ohio–even though
police shot him dead within 30 seconds.
Democrats bluntly blamed Donald Trump over the El Paso
attack, arguing that his rhetoric had stoked racial hatred.
For his part, Trump blamed mental illness and video games;
he also condemned racism and white supremacy. “Mental
illness and hate pull the trigger, not the gun,” he said.
What happened What the editorials said
Mourners in El Paso
American carnage
Sea eagles have been brought
back to the Isle of Wight, 239
years after they were last seen
there, as part ofaprogramme
to reintroduce the birds to
England’s south coast. Last
month, six chicks were brought
to the island from Scotland
(where they were reintroduced
in the 1970s), and 60 will now
be released over five years.
The birds, which vanished from
the UK due to persecution by
humans, can haveawingspan
of 2.4 metres, making them
Britain’s largest bird of prey.
Britain’s “worst football team”
has finally wonamatch, after
an 840-day, 73-game wait. Fort
William FC, who play in the
Scottish Highland League,
defeated Nairn County 5-2 at
Claggan Park last week. The
team, which featured inarecent
BBC Scotland documentary,
received congratulations from
clubs around the country.
Footage of the dressing room
showed champagne popping
and players chanting the name
of Russell MacMorran, the
former policeman who took
over as manager in January
followinga14-1 defeat.
AFrench inventor successfully flew
across the Channel last weekend
on his jet-powered hoverboard.
Franky Zapata, who lost two
fingers while developing his board,
completed the 22-minute journey
from Sangatte near Calais to St
Margaret’s Bay in Kent on his
second attempt, having fallen into
the sea onatrip two weeks ago.
Powered by five turbojets, the
device hasabackpack that carries
enough kerosene to stay airborne
for ten minutes, so Zapata had to
makearefuelling stop onamid-
Channel platform. Escorted by
three helicopters, he hitatop
speed of 105mph.
COVER CARTOON: HOWARD MCWILLIAM