The Spectator

Full list of ministerial resignations

From our UK edition

Barring a huge upset, it seems inevitable that Boris Johnson will be walking through the black door of Number 10 in two day's time. Once there, he is expected to conduct a sweeping reshuffle of government ministers – appointing his allies and removing members of May's Cabinet who are opposed to his Brexit strategy. So for the various Cabinet members who will not countenance a no-deal Brexit (or are opposed to Boris more generally) these next two days present a golden opportunity: the chance to resign from government, before you're forced out. Coffee House will be keeping track of the ministerial resignations this week, before Boris Johnson is expected to enter 10 Downing Street.

One academic’s fight for the rights of Uighurs

'After I testified in front of the Canadian House of Commons, the Chinese government might have put me in a different "category" on their blacklist,' Darren Byler said with a smile on his face. 'I possibly became an enemy of the state.' Byler is a lecturer in the department of anthropology at the University of Washington. He's an avid mountain climber, a Uighur poetry and literature enthusiast, and an advocate for Uighur rights in China. Since 2017, the People's Republic has interned as many as one million Uighurs, Kazahks, Kyrgyz, and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang, the Uighur 'autonomous region' in northwestern China. Byler’s testimony, and the testimony of others, resulted in a Canadian government report condemning Chinese government’s treatment of Uighurs.

darren byler uighurs

Full list: Boris Johnson’s ministerial and official appointments

From our UK edition

On Wednesday afternoon Boris Johnson will meet with the Queen in Buckingham Palace, will be invited to form a government, and then will stroll through the black door of Number 10 as the next Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. There, he will officially begin the process of appointing his Cabinet, the ministers who will serve in his government, and the advisers who will be crucial in ensuring his term as prime minister is a success. As the official announcements are made public, Coffee House will be keeping track of Prime Minister Johnson's new administration.

Full text: Boris Johnson’s victory speech

From our UK edition

Thank you, Cheryl. Thank you, Charles. Thank you very much, Brandon, for a fantastic, well-organised campaign. I think it did a lot of credit, as Brandon has just said, to our party, to our values and to our ideals. But I want to begin by thanking my opponent, Jeremy. By common consent, an absolutely formidable campaigner and a great leader and a great politician. Jeremy, in the course of 20 hustings... or hustings-style events – it was more than 3000 miles by the way, it's about 7000 miles that we did criss-crossing the country. You've been friendly. You've been good natured. You've been a font of excellent ideas, all of which I propose to steal forthwith.

Letters | 18 July 2019

From our UK edition

Leave we must Sir: It is interesting that as the Brexit process drags, people become more distanced from what was a simple decision made at the referendum. The question was stay or leave, and the decision was leave. In last week’s letters, Mark Pender writes that it is a mystery to him why MPs continue to support the decision to leave despite knowing it is against the country’s interests. I would venture to say that it is most certainly not ‘known’ to be against the country’s best interests. Pender goes on to say that this decision flies in the face of advice ‘from the civil service and others who have a strong understanding of the subject’, which smacks of the same deference to so-called ‘experts’ that many have had enough of.

Wasted lives

From our UK edition

Twenty years ago, the Scottish parliament was reconvened after a lapse of almost three centuries. The logic for devolution was clear enough: that Scotland has discrete issues, and ones that were not always solved by London government. Devolution would allow ‘Scottish solutions for Scottish problems’. There was, in Westminster, a feeling that MPs could worry less about these problems. Public health in Glasgow, previously one of the biggest problems in the UK, would be someone else’s problem. Let the MSPs see if they could do any better. The news this week should shock people on both sides of the border. Scotland has the worst rate of deaths from drugs in Europe, with numbers up by a shocking 27 per cent since 2017.

Portrait of the Week – 18 July 2019

From our UK edition

Home In a televised debate between the rivals for election by members of the Conservative party as their new leader (and hence prime minister), Boris Johnson said of the Irish backstop, ‘It needs to come out,’ and Jeremy Hunt said that it was ‘dead’. This was described as ‘significant’ by Dominic Grieve, who said he was ready to bring the government down rather than see a Brexit without any agreement. Theresa May, the Prime Minister, said that she would continue to sit as an MP after her resignation on 24 July. Ffordd Pen Llech in Harlech was recognised as the steepest street in the world, at 37.45 per cent beating Baldwin Street in Dunedin, New Zealand, at only 35 per cent.

to 2414: Matchplay

From our UK edition

Conrad HILTON (2), Michael WILDING (37), Mike TODD (24), Eddie FISHER (3), Richard BURTON (30), John WARNER (31) and Larry FORTENSKY (40) were all married to ELIZABETH TAYLOR (4A/17).   First prize Frank Whiteman, Eastbourne, East Sussex Runners-up Isaac Thompson, Urmston, Manchester; Mrs E.

2019 finalists – The North East

From our UK edition

  Conductive Transfers has created a new way for printing stretchable electronics on to textiles, making wearable technology cheaper and more efficient. Its uses are everything from saving lives through ECG-monitored garments, to cutting emissions through Elastatherm heater technology.   Ilke Homes is a modular housing manufacturer using precision-engineering in the same way that cars or aerospace parts are made. Each module is assembled on-site to create high-quality, modern and beautiful homes that are fully guaranteed by mortgage lenders.   Kinrise, which translates as community rising, is focused on creating spaces that inspire and enable.

2019 finalists – The North West and Wales

From our UK edition

  Howz is a smart home system designed to help older people stay independent for longer. Howz charts a person’s routine by machine learning and uses this to detect short-term anomalies and long-term changes, letting them and their family know via mobile and voice apps.   Sky Medical Technology is a medical devices company looking to help clinicians solve some of healthcare’s most pressing challenges. It has developed geko: a device that uses innovative platform technology to help prevent and treat a range of acute medical conditions.   tickr was born out of the urge to help solve the world’s biggest problems while helping millennial and first-time investors plan for their future.

2019 finalists – Scotland and Northern Ireland

From our UK edition

  Delta DNA is a data platform for video-game makers, allowing them to utilise user experience. It provides the tools needed to manage the game economy effectively, in one place, with vast industry experience embedded directly in its tech.    TVSquared gives advertisers proof of performance across linear, OTT and VOD channels. Whether campaigns are local, national or global, it provides business-ready insights for advertisers and marketers to shape their work to best effect.   WFS Technologies uses wireless automation, Internet of Things and cloud computing networks to improve subsea operations. Its technology improves management of offshore energy assets, increase production, reduce cost and reduce risk.

2019 finalists – London and The South

From our UK edition

  AdviseInc provides data analytics and insight to healthcare markets to help NHS Trusts deliver the best value for money for patients.    Beyond Life wants to digitise and democratise the business of bereavement. By launching innovative products, such as online wills and memorials, and bringing thousands of funeral directors online, Beyond Life is facilitating a fairer last journey for families across the UK.    Boxpark creates pop-up malls with an emphasis on sustainability and making the best use of space. In Shoreditch, Wembley and Croydon it has created immersive food, drink and leisure experiences which embody the company’s ‘eat, drink and play’ philosophy.

Full transcript: Jeremy Hunt’s Andrew Neil interview

From our UK edition

AN: Jeremy Hunt - like Theresa May you voted to Remain. Like Theresa May you’re a Tory technocrat. Like Theresa May you voted for her Brexit deal, three times. Why would the Tories want more of the same when it’s hardly been a golden age for them? JH: Because, Andrew, I am a totally different person and I have a totally different plan. And I did vote three times for Theresa May’s deal and I’ll tell you exactly why: because I wanted to leave the European Union as quickly as possible. And had we voted to do that, as indeed did Boris Johnson and Jacob Rees-Mogg and many other people, we would have left the EU by now and I think we would have been in a better position as a country. AN: But a lot of Tories look at you and they say, “We tried you.

Full transcript: Boris Johnson grilled by Andrew Neil

From our UK edition

AN: Boris Johnson, we’re going to talk a lot about policy, but I first want to talk about you, because for many people – including many Tories – your character, your reputation, trust in you is as big an issue as the policies you stand for. Do you accept that that’s a problem for you? BJ: No, I don’t at all. I think what people want to see is what my plans are to come out of the EU on October 31st, to get that deal done, take us beyond Brexit and unite the country. And I’ve got a lot of things that I think will be fantastic Conservative policies.

Letters | 11 July 2019

From our UK edition

Crisis in Hong Kong Sir: It was inspiring to see Hong Kong protesters raising the British flag as a symbol of freedom and liberation — a vivid image of the fondness in which it is held, even more than two decades after our surrender of the territory (‘A question of liberty’, 6 July). However, raising the colonial flag in the legislative chamber was no mere nostalgia but also a challenge to our government. Are we going to stand by today and betray that trust? The British government might be wary of criticising Beijing’s overreach in Hong Kong in case China tightens the screws further against ‘foreign interference in internal affairs’. But that horse has long since bolted.

Barometer | 11 July 2019

From our UK edition

Ode to all sorts Brexit party MPs were likened to Nazis for turning their backs on a recital of ‘Ode to Joy’, the EU’s anthem. Yet Beethoven’s melody itself has one association which liberal-minded folk might find unsavoury — between 1965 and 1979 it served as the national anthem of Ian Smith’s Rhodesia, using the words: ‘Rise, oh voices of Rhodesia,/ God may we Thy bounty share./ Give us strength to face all danger,/ And where challenge is, to dare.’ It was during this period, in 1972, that the Council of Europe adopted the tune as its own anthem. It then became the European Community’s anthem in 1985. Police numbers Boris Johnson promised to spend £1 billion on an extra 20,000 police officers.

For the few

From our UK edition

In some alternative universe the Labour party, as under Tony Blair in the mid 1990s, is busily preparing for government, its confidence boosted by a massive lead in the polls over a shambolic Tory administration. Back in this one, however, Labour is crumbling even faster than the divided and unpopular Conservatives. Remarkably, while the Tories have seen a collapse in their share of the vote to just 22 per cent, according to one poll this week, Labour has sunk to just 20 per cent. Just how it succeeded in throwing away such a remarkable opportunity to seize power is going to trouble its remaining members for decades to come.