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UK pledges to send £540m worth of weapons to Ukraine - Europe live

That’s all from me, Tom Ambrose, and earlier my colleague Taz Ali, for today. Thanks for following along. Here is a round-up of the day’s main news lines: Britain said it would send a further £540m worth of weapons to Ukraine, including spending £150m on buying US made interceptors, using a Nato-run funding scheme for the first time. The latest commitment comes ahead of a meeting of the 50 country Ukraine Contact Group, which coordinates international weapons supplies to Kyiv, immediately after the Nato defence ministers summit. The United Nations has called on Russia to stop its attacks on Ukraine’s energy sites, which have plunged entire cities into darkness in the coldest winter of the four-year war. Moscow has stepped up strikes on Ukraine’s power and heating infrastructure, and conducted another nationwide attack on energy facilities overnight that killed two people, AFP reported. Hungary’s prime minister Viktor Orbán, who is at the Belgium summit with other EU leaders this morning, said Europe should stop sending money to Ukraine it is serious about wanting to boosting its economy. Orbán, widely viewed as Vladimir Putin’s closest ally in the EU, made the remarks to reporters as he headed into the informal talks The top adviser to the EU’s highest court has said it should annul a decision by the European Commission to unfreeze billions of euros of payments to Hungary that had been suspended because of serious concerns over corruption and the rule of law. Tamara Ćapeta, the advocate general of the European court of justice, said on Thursday the commission should not have paid out the funds because Hungary had not actually carried out the judicial reforms that were a condition for their release. Belgian police searched European commission buildings on Thursday as part of an investigation into alleged irregularities over a €900bn property deal. The Guardian understands that Belgian police were involved in the raids as part of an inquiry initiated by the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO). Leaders from across the European Union met in a Belgian castle as the 27-nation bloc faced antagonism from US president Donald Trump, strong-arm economic tactics from China and hybrid threats from Russia. “We all know we must change course, and we all know the direction,” said Belgian prime minister Bart De Wever on Wednesday ahead of the meeting. “Yet it sometimes feels like we’re standing on the bridge of the ship staring at the horizon without being able to touch the helm.” The US is “totally invested in Nato”, said Mark Rutte, as he brushed aside concerns that Washington has stepped back from its leadership role of the military alliance. Nato’s secretary general said he has a “very good relationship” with US defence secretary Pete Hegseth (or officially the US Secretary of War) and that they are in direct contact. Elbridge Colby, the US undersecretary for war, said it was time for the US and Europe to “march out together,” sounding a rare conciliatory note as he arrived in Brussels for a meeting of alliance defence ministers earlier today. Norwegian police searched the homes of former prime minister Thorbjørn Jagland on Thursday, his lawyer said, as part of an ongoing investigation into ties between prominent Norwegians and late US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Images circulated by Norwegian dailies VG, Dagbladet, Dagens Naeringsliv and Aftenposten showed investigators carrying cardboard boxes into Jagland’s Oslo residence. Italy’s prime minister says her government will deploy every tool at its disposal to “guarantee the security of our borders” after approving a bill authorising naval blockades to stop boats from arriving in Italy during periods of “exceptional pressure”. The bill is the latest step in the crackdown on irregular immigration by Giorgia Meloni’s far-right government, which has included tough measures against charity rescue ships, harsher jail terms for human smugglers and schemes aimed at swiftly repatriating people. Portugal is under pressure to draw up plans to adapt to the climate emergency as the country continues to be lashed by an unprecedented series of storms that have killed at least 16 people and left tens of thousands without electricity. More than 3,000 people were evacuated from the Coimbra area of central Portugal on Wednesday as the Mondego River reached critical levels, while part of the country’s main motorway, the A1, collapsed after a dyke on the Mondego gave way under the weight of flood water. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said “sport shouldn’t mean amnesia” in response to the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) decision to ban Ukraine’s skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych over the use of a helmet honouring Ukrainian athletes killed in the war with Russia. Heraskevych, a skeleton racer, was informed only minutes before he was due to compete in his Winter Olympics event that his accreditation had been rescinded. Bulgarian president Iliana Yotova, in an attempt to quell the country’s ongoing political instability, has appointed a senior central bank official as interim prime minister until national elections in April. Andrey Gyurov, deputy governor of the Bulgarian National Bank, will lead a caretaker government whose main task will be to organize a free and fair vote in a country that is holding its eighth election in five years.

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Billions in funding wrongly released to Hungary, says EU court’s top adviser

The top adviser to the EU’s highest court has said it should annul a decision by the European Commission to unfreeze billions of euros of payments to Hungary that had been suspended because of serious concerns over corruption and the rule of law. Tamara Ćapeta, the advocate general of the European court of justice, said on Thursday the commission should not have paid out the funds because Hungary had not actually carried out the judicial reforms that were a condition for their release. The commission suspended payment of funds to the populist, illiberal government of the prime minister, Viktor Orbán, in 2022 over concerns about democratic backsliding, arguing it was failing to tackle corruption and ensure judicial independence. A year later, it concluded Hungary had made sufficient changes to meet the requirements for the money to be released and lifted the suspension, making the country eligible to receive about €10bn from various EU funds. The European parliament filed a complaint in 2024, claiming the EU’s executive had made “manifest errors”. Some MEPs said the commission’s decision, just before a key EU summit that needed Orbán’s support for aid to Ukraine, was politically motivated. The advocate general’s opinions are not legally binding but are often followed by the court’s judges, who are expected to deliver their final decision in the parliament’s case against the commission in the coming months. Ćapeta said the commission had failed to properly assess the reforms to Hungary’s judicial system and had “incorrectly applied the requirements on Hungary when it permitted, without any explanation, the disbursement of the budget”. The executive had not been transparent in its decision-making, she added, concluding: “The commission may not disburse EU funds to a member state until the required legislative reforms are in force and are effectively being applied.” Billions in additional EU funding remain suspended for Hungary, prompting Orbán, the bloc’s disruptor-in-chief, to regularly accuse the commission of interfering in his country’s internal affairs and using payments as a means of coercion. EU law experts have said that if the court does side with parliament, the commission may have to recoup the money by reducing future funding. The ruling will in any event set an important precedent on the commission’s role in rule-of-law cases. Orbán faces the biggest challenge of his 16 years in power in April from the centre-right challenger Péter Magyar and his Tisza party, who has promised to restore the rule of law and repair relations with the EU. Magyar is well ahead in most polls.

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Italian PM vows to secure borders and approves bill allowing naval blockades

Italy’s prime minister says her government will deploy every tool at its disposal to “guarantee the security of our borders” after approving a bill authorising naval blockades to stop boats from arriving in Italy during periods of “exceptional pressure”. The bill is the latest step in the crackdown on irregular immigration by Giorgia Meloni’s far-right government, which has included tough measures against charity rescue ships, harsher jail terms for human smugglers and schemes aimed at swiftly repatriating people. Under the legislation, which needs to be approved by both houses of parliament, Italian authorities would have the power to ban boats from entering the country’s territorial waters for up to 30 days, extendable by up to six months, in situations of “serious threats to public order or national security”, such as terrorism. The measure, which comes after hundreds of people are feared to have died while crossing the Mediterranean from north Africa during a recent powerful storm, also empowers authorities to impose the blockade during periods of dramatic increases in boat arrivals. Those breaching the rules face fines of up to €50,000 (£43,500) and could have their boats confiscated in case of repeated violations – a measure targeted at the rescue ships. In such cases, the passengers on board could be transported to countries other than their country of origin that Italy has specific repatriation agreements with. The European parliament this week approved changes to EU asylum rules in response to pressure from member states, including Italy, for a harsher approach. In a video message on social media, Meloni said the legislation included measures to speed up the deportation of people convicted of crimes and expanded the cases that could result in expulsion, for example if a foreigner assaulted a police officer or was accused of slavery or domestic violence. “If you want to live here, you need to respect the Italian laws,” Meloni said. According to figures from Italy’s interior ministry, 66,296 people arrived by boat on Italian coastlines in 2025, a slight dip on the previous year but about half the number of arrivals in 2023, when Italy’s far-right government reinforced and enacted deals with Libya and Tunisia to stem the number of people. Meloni said: “For all those who said it was impossible, I want to remind you that nothing is truly impossible for those who are determined to do something. And we are determined to guarantee the security of our borders and our citizens, and we will use every tool at our disposal to ensure it.”

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EU leaders to clash over ‘Buy European’ push at Belgium summit

EU leaders were expected to diverge over the extent to which “Buy European” is an answer to Europe’s waning economic fortunes, at a summit on how to secure the continent’s future in a more volatile global economy. At a moated castle in the east Belgian countryside, the EU’s 27 leaders gathered on Thursday for a brainstorming session on how Europe could regain its economic competitiveness relative to the US and China at a time of economic threats and political turbulence. Before the summit, Belgium’s prime minister, Bart De Wever, said Belgium, France, Germany and the Netherlands were facing “an existential crisis” because of factory closures and declining investment, a result of high energy costs, regulation and “Chinese dumping” – unfairly subsidised goods flooding European markets. “We all know we must change course,” he said. “Yet, it sometimes feels as if we are still standing on the bridge of the ship, staring at the horizon, without touching the helm.” The European Council president, António Costa, said on Thursday: “We have a clear priority to strengthen economic growth in Europe. That is essential to our prosperity, to create quality jobs, and to sustain our economic social model.” The question of Europe’s declining competitiveness has long troubled the EU but gained new urgency when painful vulnerabilities were revealed by the sudden loss of Russian gas in 2022, Donald Trump’s trade wars and China’s pursuit of economic dominance through huge state subsidies. Against this backdrop, the EU is considering the once-taboo policy of European preference, namely favouring European companies in strategic sectors such as clean tech. Long promoted by France, “Buy European” could mean imposing requirements on governments to prioritise locally manufactured goods in public contracts. Later this month, the EU executive will publish an Industrial Accelerator Act, which is expected to set targets for European content in a range of strategic products, such as solar panels and electric vehicles. In a show of unity, France’s Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s Friedrich Merz arrived together at the 16th-century Belgian castle. “We share this sense of urgency that Europe must take action,” Macron said. Merz said: “We want to make this European Union faster, we want to make it better, and above all we want to ensure that we have competitive industry in Europe.” But the two leaders differ on key points of the economic agenda. Macron told European newspapers this week that European preference should be focused on certain strategic sectors, such as clean technologies, chemicals, steel, automotive and defence, “otherwise Europeans will be swept aside”. He described European preference as “a defensive measure” and essential because “we are facing unfair competitors who no longer respect the rules of the World Trade Organization”. Merz, however, said “Made in Europe” rules may be too narrow and he favoured “Made with Europe” rules that favoured trading partners. He is championing a more aggressive deregulation agenda and trade deals. Ireland’s prime minister, Michéal Martin, said: “We must protect the open free trade ethos of the European Union in my view. And so there will be debates around that.” Merz and the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, skirted the issue in a recent joint paper but found common ground on “legislative self-restraint”, or less EU regulation. Both would like the EU’s deregulation agenda to go further. In another sign of the vitality of the Berlin-Rome partnership, Italy, Germany and Belgium co-hosted a pre-summit gathering of 19 member states. The Italian prime minister’s office, the Palazzo Chigi, said the group discussed initiatives needed to “relaunch Europe’s industry”, including a review of the emissions trading system, the EU’s carbon pricing system. The flourishing German-Italian partnership has raised questions about the health of the Franco-German relationship, the traditional motor of the European project. Despite a rapprochement in Franco-German relations since Merz’s election, Paris and Berlin diverge on key economic questions. Merz and Macron also disagree on the EU’s long-sought trade deal with Mercosur. While the German leader has called for speedy entry into force of the agreement with South American countries, Macron dismissed it as “a bad deal”. The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, sounded a cautious note about “Buy European”. Speaking in the European parliament on Wednesday, she said European preference was “a necessary instrument” in strategic sectors. “But I want to be clear – it is a fine line to walk,” she said, adding that every proposal must be “underpinned by robust economic analysis and be in line with our international obligations”. The Buy European question is only one part of a sprawling summit agenda at Alden Biesen in Limburg, an estate founded in the 13th century by Teutonic knights. Leaders will also discuss deregulation, fragmented capital markets that constrain green and digital investment, and barriers in the European single market that hamper trade. Von der Leyen told MEPs there was “too much gold-plating” – extra layers of national regulation that made life harder for business. As an example, she said a truck in Belgium was allowed to weigh 44 tonnes but could carry only 40 tonnes if it crossed into France. The leaders will hear from Mario Draghi and Enrico Letta, two former Italian prime ministers who produced agenda-setting reports on the economy. Draghi said last week that the current economic world order was “dead” and Europe risked becoming “subordinated, divided and deindustrialised at once”. He said Europe needed to move from “confederation to federation”, adding that veto power for individual member states in key policies made countries “vulnerable to being picked off one by one”. Acknowledging the EU’s difficulties in taking decisions, von der Leyen said she was open to moving ahead with passing laws on integrating the EU’s capital markets in a smaller formation, if there was no agreement at 27. “We have to make progress and tear down the barriers that prevent us from being a true global giant,” she said, referencing plans for integrating the European financial system.

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Portugal urged to adapt to climate emergency after series of deadly storms

Portugal is under pressure to draw up plans to adapt to the climate emergency as the country continues to be lashed by an unprecedented series of storms that have killed at least 16 people and left tens of thousands without electricity. More than 3,000 people were evacuated from the Coimbra area of central Portugal on Wednesday as the Mondego River reached critical levels, while part of the country’s main motorway, the A1, collapsed after a dyke on the Mondego gave way under the weight of flood water. Hundreds more people have been displaced across the country since what scientists have called the “longest train of storms within living memory” began at the end of January. The extreme weather, which has affected central and southern parts of the country, has cut off power to 33,000 people and caused an estimated €775m (£675m) of damage. Portugal’s interior minister, Maria Lúcia Amaral, resigned on Tuesday in the face of mounting anger over her handling of the emergency, saying she felt she did not have “the personal and political conditions necessary to carry out her duties”. As the storms rage on, scientists and experts have criticised the country’s unwillingness to adapt to the bouts of extreme weather that have been plaguing the Iberian peninsula in recent years. “We are not prepared for the present climate, much less for the future,” said Pedro Matos Soares, an atmospheric physicist, during a video conference on climate held by the University of Lisbon’s faculty of sciences this week. “Portugal still handles land-use planning thinking about the 19th century or the first half of the 20th century climate. We have to understand what the climate is like now and what it will be like in the future. Otherwise, we’re going to have a problem.” Nuno Martins, a professor of architecture and climate adaptation, said that several of the storms’ victims had died while trying to repair their roofs with donated tarpaulins in central Portugal, while hundreds more had been injured in falls. Martins’s NGO, Building 4Humanity – a team of architects, engineers, and designers – has been volunteering in central Portugal and put together a manual to teach people how to repair their roofs safely. “I was in the area and saw how desperate people are to save their houses,” he said. “I was also outside a hospital full of people who were injured after falling from the roofs. I asked some municipalities to distribute the manual together with the tarpaulins they were handing out to people, so that they could have some guidance and a greater awareness of the risks.” The civil protection agency has taken up the suggestion and has begun distributing the manual alongside tarpaulins. One woman in the Coimbra region said she understood why people would risk their lives to try to protect their houses. The woman, who did not wish to be named, said she believed part of her late mother’s house would eventually collapse. “I try not to go inside because I can’t stop crying when I’m there,” she said. “I understand why people fell from their roofs. They’re desperate. If my legs allowed, I [would have] done so myself, out of my own desperation. But it’s very dangerous.” Portugal’s centre-right government, which is led by the prime minister, Luís Montenegro, has faced sustained criticism over its handling of the storms. “The resignation of the interior minister is proof the government has failed in its response to this emergency,” José Luís Carneiro, the general secretary of the opposition socialist party, told the press after Amaral stepped down. The far-right leader André Ventura, who finished second in last weekend’s presidential election, accused Montenegro of an inability to deal with the crises that have buffeted Portugal over recent months. “The minister’s departure highlights the government’s inability to manage all the adversities the country has faced, from the fires to the recent storms,” he said. Neighbouring Spain is also suffering from the continuing extreme weather, propmting the state meteorological office to issue orange and red warnings for the north coast of the country and warn of waves up to nine metres (30 feet) tall. Thirty-four people were taken to hospital in the northeastern region of Catalonia as high winds forced schools in some areas to close and led to the cancellation of dozens of flights. One person was critically injured by a tree while two others were said to be in a serious condition. An emergency alert was also sent to people’s phones, warning them to stay indoors and avoid unnecessary travel. The alert was lifted on Thursday afternoon, but the regional government urged people to take care in the aftermath of what it called “an exceptional storm”.

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Five plots to kill Syrian president or ministers were foiled last year, says UN

Five separate plots to assassinate Syria’s president or his senior ministers were foiled last year, the UN has said in a report on Islamic State. According to the report, the Syrian president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, was targeted twice, once in northern Aleppo and another time in southern Daraa, by Saraya Ansar al-Sunnah, an IS front group that carried out a bombing of a church in Damascus last summer. A separate regional intelligence official also confirmed last autumn that Sharaa had faced assassination attemptsthat were foiled after Syria’s security establishment was provided with intelligence from a neighbouring country on the plots. IS has stepped up its recruitment of members since the fall of Assad in December of 2024, styling Sharaa, who used to head an Islamist rebel group, as an apostate. The group published photos of Sharaa meeting the US president, Donald Trump, as proof that he had turned towards the west and abandoned his Islamist roots. According to the UN report, IS is focused on destabilising the new government in Damascus and is “actively exploiting security vacuums and uncertainty” in the country. It added that Sharaa was the “primary target” of IS in Syria, and that the group was operating through various front groups throughout the country for more flexibility. IS continues to pose a challenge in Iraq and Syria, with analysts saying it has regrouped in recent months, benefiting from a security vacuum and a glut of weaponry that flooded Syria after Assad’s army abandoned its posts. The UN estimates the group has 3,000 fighters across the two countries, the majority of whom are in Syria. Damascus joined the international coalition to defeat IS in November, and recently took over a number of prisons and camps holding suspected IS fighters and their relatives in north-east Syria. Damascus now controls al-Hawl camp, where almost 25,000 relatives of suspected IS fighters reside, which analysts warn is a “ticking timebomb” for the radical group. IS has carried out several attacks in Syria since the fall of Assad, including an attack on US and Syrian soldiers in mid-December, in which three Americans were killed and three Syrians were wounded.

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Chile impunity fears as riot officer who blinded protester walks free

On the evening of 8 November 2019, Chile’s capital was gripped by protests amid a wave of nationwide unrest. While thousands demonstrated peacefully in Santiago’s Plaza Italia, violence broke out down a side street on the fringes of the square, where riot police with rifles battled protesters. Among them was Gustavo Gatica, a 21-year-old psychology student at the University of Chile, who threw a stone towards the police and stooped to pick up another. The last thing he saw was a line of advancing officers in the shadow of a tower block. As he straightened up, he was hit in the face by two rubber-coated bullets fired by Lt Col Claudio Crespo. After nearly two weeks of surgeries, doctors could not save Gatica’s eyesight. After a 14-month trial, a Santiago court delivered its unanimous verdict last month that Crespo shot and blinded Gatica – but absolved him of any wrongdoing, invoking the principle of legitimate defence. “I am not happy with the outcome,” Gatica told the media outside the courthouse. “I think that it is relevant for the good of democracy that these cases do not result in impunity.” Gatica said he planned to appeal the decision to international courts if necessary, saying that he would raise the issue in congress, to which he has recently been elected. Crespo, by contrast, appeared grinning behind dark sunglasses outside the courtroom, fists raised in triumph. He quickly used his social media accounts to mock Gatica, provoking ire and revulsion. But the verdict has already raised fears that a precedent has been set for heavy-handed policing, as Chile preparing to inaugurate its most conservative president since Gen Augusto Pinochet – the far-right leader José Antonio Kast, who takes power in March. “This doesn’t just affect Gatica, his family and those close to him; it sends the signal that when these acts are perpetrated, nothing will happen – and that this will be legitimised by the justice system,” said Rodrigo Bustos, the director of Amnesty International in Chile. “When there is impunity, it allows more human rights violations to occur in the future.” That evening alone, Crespo fired more than 2,000 rubber-coated bullets into the crowds of protesters. He was stood down from the force on 25 June 2020 for breaking protocols, and arrested two months later. The audio from various body cameras worn by the former carabinero’s colleagues reveals him taunting protesters. “We’ll take your eyes out … you hear me?” he can be heard snarling at a young man being led away. “Let him burn,” is his retort when a colleague informs him that a protester is on fire. “Only in about 10% of the cases did we even have an identified aggressor,” said Judith Schönsteiner, a researcher at the Universidad Diego Portales’s human rights centre. “Yet we still don’t have anyone found guilty [in this case] … It seems curious that legitimate defence has been applied here in favour of the officer.” In the intervening years, the protests of 2019, during which millions took to the streets decrying a host of inequalities and injustices, have been dramatically revised in the public imagination. In July 2020, polling suggested that two-thirds of Chileans thought that the protests were positive for the country. Six years on, in October last year, 63% of respondents to the same question said that they had been negative. And on 11 March, Chile will inaugurate a far-right president, compounding an about-turn in the country’s political trajectory. Kast has maintained a vitriolic line on 2019’s protests, and his narrative – which largely ignores the demands raised peacefully, which 72% of Chileans still believe are yet to be addressed – has caught on. Six weeks after the protests took hold, Kast dismissed them as “an outburst of violence against the poorest in Chile” and a “great economic disaster”. Meanwhile, Crespo has been embraced by Chile’s far right as a martyr for public order. Just three months ago, when the far-right former YouTuber Johannes Kaiser closed his presidential campaign in Santiago, he held a minute’s silence for police officers killed in the line of duty before bringing Crespo on stage to rapturous applause. The victims of police brutality, meanwhile, face a very different outlook. Of the more than 11,500 cases brought for human rights violations during the protests, there have been just 219 prosecutions. According to Chile’s public prosecutor, 464 Chileans were victims of eye injuries during the protests, while there were cases of homicides, beatings, torture and sexual violence committed by the security forces. Nine victims have taken their own lives as reparations and psychological support have been slow in coming – if they have come at all. And experts feel that should more protests come, legislation governing them has been eroded significantly. When the leftwing Gabriel Boric took office as president in March 2022, his manifesto committed to addressing a series of laws that hinder rights to assembly and demonstration and define terrorism. Not only was he unable to do this, but a bill was passed in 2023 that weights the law in favour of security officers in cases of legitimate use of force. This was applied retrospectively to absolve Crespo. “If people decide to protest peacefully in Chile for any legitimate reason, there could be violations of their human rights as the legal framework is in a worse state than in 2019,” said Bustos. “The outlook is not good.”

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Thursday briefing: Britain ​is ​flooding, ​so ​why ​is ​support for ​net ​zero ​drying ​up?

Good morning. It has rained for 40 days and 40 nights. No, I’m not reciting the story of Noah’s Ark, but a tale from the Met Office. In some parts of the UK, the forecaster said it really has rained for 40 days in a row. Devon, Cornwall and Worcestershire have barely had a break. January 2026 was marked by exceptionally high rainfall, particularly in Northern Ireland, which saw its wettest January in 149 years. Southern England recorded its sixth wettest January since records began in 1836. The culprit behind Britain’s endless drizzle is no mystery. At current levels of global heating, the Met Office estimates that very wet winters have shifted from once-in-80-year events to once in every 20 years. And yet, at the very moment the climate crisis feels impossible to ignore, the UK’s sense of urgency on net zero targets and its support for climate policies is falling sharply, according to a major new study. To understand why, and what it means for climate action in Britain, I spoke to Guardian environment editor Damian Carrington. That’s after the headlines. Five big stories Politics | Female Labour MPs have told Keir Starmer to appoint a woman as his de facto deputy to oversee a “complete culture change” in Downing Street after a series of scandals. Canada | Canadian police have identified the suspect who carried out a school massacre in remote British Columbia as an 18-year-old woman with a history of mental health problems. UK news | An undercover officer who deceived three women into sexual relationships said his superiors did nothing to prevent him from doing so, the spycops public inquiry has heard. US news | A Cheshire woman who was shot dead by her “reckless” father while visiting him in the US after a row about Donald Trump was unlawfully killed, a coroner has ruled. Television | James Van Der Beek, the actor best known for playing the lead in hit 90s teen drama Dawson’s Creek, has died. With flood warnings flashing across the country and extreme rainfall becoming the new normal, it might seem baffling that public support for tackling the climate crisis is slipping. But Damian Carrington says the contradiction makes sense when placed within the current economic and political context. “I saw a good quote from someone who was being asked about this, who said ‘how can you expect me to worry about the end of the world when I’m worried about the end of the week?’” Damian says. The UK’s cost of living crisis has been compounded by the successive shocks of the Covid-19 pandemic and the Ukraine war, the latter of which has resulted in a sharp rise in energy prices. “People are having a really difficult time in making ends meet so things that seem like they’re potentially in the future, like climate change, tend to fall to the back seat,” he says. There is historical precedence for this, Damian adds. In 2007, there was a peak in interest in climate change after scientists conclusively blamed humanity for the crisis for the first time. But then the 2008 financial crash came and the salience of climate change in people’s lives dropped off. *** A growing tide Before we properly dig into why support for reaching net zero is going down, let’s spell out exactly what the study (pdf) says. The study found that just 29% of the public now say the UK should reach net zero before the government’s 2050 target. That’s down from 54% in 2021. At the same time, the proportion who say the UK shouldn’t have a net zero target at all, has jumped from 9% to 26%. The research was carried out by the Policy Institute at King’s College London, Ipsos, and the Centre for Climate Change and Social Transformations, and is based on a large, nationally representative survey. Support has also fallen across a range of specific policies. Backing for low-traffic neighbourhoods, taxes on frequent flyers, subsidies for electric vehicles and taxes on environmentally damaging foods have all declined. In several cases, opposition now outweighs support, a sharp reversal from just a few years ago. The drop has been steepest among people aged over 55. *** A weapon in the culture war The falling support for net zero targets cannot be separated from a broader political shift taking place in the UK. “Up until very recently, there was a consensus among the British political parties about the damage the climate crisis is already causing and the urgent need to act,” Damian explains. “But that has been broken in recent years, most notably by Reform in Nigel Farage, but also the Conservative party, which has reversed its position.” Last October, Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative party leader, vowed to repeal the Climate Change Act if the Conservatives win the next election, dismantling what has been the cornerstone of green and energy policy for successive Conservative governments. Climate policy has increasingly been pulled into the culture wars. Measures designed to cut emissions, from low-traffic neighbourhoods to heat pumps, have become symbols in wider arguments about the role of the state and personal freedom. Bluntly put, some people don’t like to be told where they can drive in their local neighbourhoods, even if such rules mean the air is clearer for them to breathe. Misinformation is also a huge issue. “When you look at some of the policies that this polling considers, like low-traffic neighbourhoods or electric cars or heat pumps, there’s a great deal of rubbish published about these things, which is having an effect,” Damian says. “People are repeatedly told these things are useless, which they are not. It’s not surprising some people come to believe that.” One of the most powerful and misleading narratives is the idea that the push towards net zero, and especially the development of renewable energy, is to blame for rising energy bills. In reality, the main driver of higher prices has been the soaring cost of gas, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. “It’s a complete red herring,” Damian says. “If we didn’t have the renewable energy that is being increasingly built out, Britain would have spent a lot more.” There is also a deeper ideological tension at play. Tackling climate change requires collective action, long-term planning and regulation, all of which sit uneasily with parts of the political right. As climate action becomes framed as an attack on individual freedom, support erodes. *** Fair and green If public support for climate action is to be rebuilt, fairness has to be at the centre of policy design, Damian says. “Britain, like many countries around the world, is very unequal. The rich are incredibly rich and the poor are really poor,” he argues. “The problem with climate action sometimes is that it requires upfront investment to save money.” He points to heat pumps as a good example. While they can be cheaper to run in the long term, the initial cost can be daunting. Air-source heat pumps cost just over £12,500 to buy and install on average, according to a report published last year. This is about four to five times more than a gas boiler. Without proper support, policies that encourage uptake risk feeling as if they are designed for the well-off. “One of the failings of the last government and the current one is that climate policies have to be affordable and fair for everybody, including people on lower incomes. When that’s not happening, people will react against it,” he says. And while people are experiencing more extreme weather, “there has always been bad weather,” Damian says. “The climate crisis means it’s getting worse. If you’ve never had floods, and suddenly you get floods that you can pin to the climate crisis, that would be different.” The other important factor is that the UK, alongside the US and Australia, hosts powerful fossil fuel companies, and has a strong strain of neoliberal economics, as well as a highly influential rightwing press. Together, those forces make it especially difficult to sustain a broad public consensus on climate action, even as the physical impacts become harder to ignore. But all is not lost. Despite the falling sense of urgency, the study shows a clear majority of the public (64%) still believe the government’s target for net zero should be at least 2050, if not earlier. The challenge now is not just holding on to that consent, but building on it. What else we’ve been reading Last October, police in Rio carried out a raid against criminal gang, the Red Command, which left 122 people dead. This in-depth investigation brilliantly unpacks the many lingering questions, while Nesrine Malik’s interview with Tiago Rogero for The Long Wave newsletter explores how the event revealed Brazil’s race and class fissures. Lucinda Everett, newsletters team Simon Hattenstone is a generational talent. His interview with Lisa Nandy has it all: a great news line, funny, and engrossing from start to finish. Aamna Jonathan Liew is searing and incisive on how Reform’s plan to save the great British pub actually means maintaining “a refuge where old white lads can say whatever they like without ever being challenged”. Lucinda We are entering a new age of discovery in the field of ancient history, Marcus Haraldsson writes in this fascinating long read on how new technologies are transforming what we know about Maya civilisation. Aamna “The impossible contradictions around motherhood are a way of making femaleness impossible,” is one of many spot-on insights from Zoe Williams’ interview with Rose Byrne, the star of If I Had Legs I’d Kick You. Lucinda Sport Winter Olympics | Lewis Gibson did his best to smile, but the pained pinch on the face of his partner, Lilah Fear, as they twirled around the Milan Ice Skating Arena gave the game away. The Team GB pair had dreamed of becoming the first British Olympic skating medallists since Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean in 1992. Instead, they endured a nightmare on ice. Football | Premier League | Manchester City closed the gap on Arsenal to three points with a 3-0 win against Fulham. Liverpool ended Sunderland’s unbeaten home record, while Sean Dyche has been sacked by Nottingham Forest after a draw with rock‑bottom Wolves. Olympics | Qatar’s bid to host the 2036 Olympic Games has received a boost with the state-owned broadcaster beIN Sports concluding a media rights deal for the 2028 Games in Los Angeles. The front pages “Select female deputy to end ‘boys club’ in No 10, PM told,” is the splash on the Guardian on Thursday, while the Mail has “Labour women’s fury over second paedophile crisis,” and the Telegraph: “Labour ‘up for’ closer ties with Europe.” “PM knew his peerage pick had backed sex offender,” says the Times. “Andrews faces growing police inquiry into Epstein links,” has the i. “Credit cad,” says the Sun. “UK ‘colonised by migrants’ claims United chief,” is the lead story over at the Express. “Man U Jim ‘racism ‘ storm’”, writes the Star. The Mirror covers the same, running the headline: “Shameful.” Today in Focus The untold story of Brazil’s deadliest police raid Guardian journalists Tom Phillips and Tiago Rogero investigate the bloodiest day in Rio de Janeiro’s modern history, when police last October attempted to capture a drug kingpin in the favelas. Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad Being plunged suddenly into darkness as streetlights switch off around you may, very reasonably, not sound like good news. However, there is a growing trend in Europe of deliberately darkening our evenings – for the sake of our wildlife. In this report on one national park in Belgium (curiously, one of the most light-polluted countries on the planet), Phoebe Weston explains how, across the continent “unnecessary lighting is being extinguished, and a key motivation is to protect nature “Over the past decade an increasing amount of research has shown that illuminating night skies is bad for a wide range of species, including insects, birds and amphibians – disrupting their feeding, reproduction and navigation.” Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Martin Belam’s Thursday news quiz Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply