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The Week Unwrapped podcast: Banksy, intervention and refugee art

Is Banksy a hypocrite? Could ‘active bystanders’ stop police violence? And are Syrians well served by a theatrical protest?


Analysis

Friday, October 9, 2020 – 12:56pm

Olly Mann and The Week delve behind the headlines and debate what really matters from the past seven days.

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In this week’s episode, we discuss:

Heroic bystanders

A growing number of American police forces are signing up to the Active Bystander in Law Enforcement programme, in an attempt to prevent police brutality. The idea is that officers will be encouraged to challenge their colleagues if they see bad behaviour – speaking to them directly but non-confrontationally rather than reporting incidents to watchdogs (or staying silent).

Street art

Prints by Banksy have smashed estimates in recent auctions, and an upcoming sale of his 2005 painting Show me the Monet is tipped to top the record £9.9m paid for another of the street artist’s works last year. But is this commercialisation of urban art severing the genre’s anti-establishment roots?

Refugee art

The theatre group behind War Horse is planning to parade a giant puppet of a refugee girl across Europe in an attempt to raise awareness of the plight of asylum seekers. But is a lack of awareness really the problem, and how might their efforts be put to better use?

You can subscribe to The Week Unwrapped on the Global Player, Spotify, Apple podcasts, SoundCloud or wherever you get you get your podcasts

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US election: what exactly are Donald Trump and Joe Biden’s policies?

Trump vs. Biden
Description

The two candidates are pushing radically different agendas amid all the name-calling and campaign chaos

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JIM WATSON and SAUL LOEB / AFP

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Trump vs. Biden

The two candidates are pushing radically different agendas amid all the name-calling and campaign chaos


Analysis

Arion McNicoll

Friday, October 9, 2020 – 2:18pm

The 2020 election cycle has been characterised by personal attacks, record spending and a disorderly opening presidential debate that at times descended into farce.

Donald Trump has dubbed Joe Biden “the destroyer of American greatness”, while the Democratic contender has dismissed the president as a “fool” and a “clown”.

But what political platforms are the 45th US leader and his rival pushing as voters prepare to go to the polls?

Donald Trump’s key 2020 policies

If re-elected, Trump proposes to pursue an agenda that will focus on “jobs, taxes and the economy”, The Telegraph says.

He has also attempted to position himself as a “law and order” president who will put down the violence and protesting that has gripped the US in the wake of George Floyd‘s death at the hands of a white police officer.

But the rest of the pledges in his ten-point agenda “are a little more loosely worded”, says the newspaper, which points to his pledge to continue to “drain the swamp”.

Job creation

Trump is promising to create ten million new jobs in ten months, and to help launch a million new small businesses.

Eradication of Covid

Trump has launched “Operation Warp Speed” in a bid to swiftly find a viable coronavirus vaccine, which he has vowed to deliver by the end of the year. He has also promised that any viable vaccines developed in the US will be distributed with an America-first approach before being made available to other countries.

Health care

Trump last month laid out his “vision” for health care in America, but according to CNN, his plans “fall far short of a comprehensive proposal”.

The president has pledged to sign an executive order to protect Americans with pre-existing conditions, yet Republicans have spent much of his first term trying to tear down the Affordable Care Act that already safeguards these people.

He has also promised to reduce drug prices and reduce overall health costs, but again, his plans have tended to “lack detail”, says the AP news agency.

Joe Biden’s key 2020 policies

Biden has been in politics for almost 50 years and “is using his long experience in Washington to portray himself as a steady hand able to calm a country in chaos”, The Telegraph says.

Barack Obama’s former vice-president has promised to reverse many of the Trump administration’s decisions, including the Republican leader’s signature tax cuts and withdrawal from the Paris Climate Accord.

Trade

Donald Trump’s election in 2016 “led to the biggest shift in US trade policy” since the Second World War, “as he piled on tariffs and eschewed alliance-building”, The Wall Street Journal reports.

But Biden has promised a U-turn in a bid to “woo allies battered by Trump trade sanctions, rethink the use of tariffs and try to create a united front to confront China”, the paper says.

Energy and environment

While Trump has frequently questioned the veracity of climate change data, Biden is a staunch supporter of the need for urgent environmental action.

Whereas Trump has vowed to continue pursuing fossil fuels and a deregulatory agenda, his Democratic challenger has promised “a Clean Energy Revolution” through which he aims to turn “this threat into an opportunity” by “harnessing all of our energy and talents, and unmatchable American innovation”.

Biden has also promised to achieve a 100% clean energy economy and reach net-zero emissions by 2050, but has not backed the Green New Deal advocated for by some in his party.

Economy

Boosting the middle class is “one of the main pillars of Biden’s campaign”, says CNN.

He has spoken of creating an economy that “rewards work, not just wealth”, and is pushing for a $15 minimum hourly wage, along with plans to expand access to affordable education.

Ultimately, however, more than any “ideological or policy particulars”, Biden’s core promise is “to end the perpetual chaos of The Trump Show”, says The New York Times.

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Are emergency NHS Nightingale hospitals about to reopen as Covid cases soar?

Nightingale Hospital
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(Stefan Rousseau – WPA Pool/Getty Images)

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Nightingale Hospital

Nurses sent ‘hint, hint’ reminder that training receiving during first wave remains valid


One-Minute Read

Chas Newkey-Burden

Friday, October 9, 2020 – 1:45pm

A leaked email sent to medics has fuelled speculation that fresh Covid outbreaks will trigger the reopening of emergency hospitals built to increase NHS capacity during the first wave of infections.

According to Politico London Playbook, nurses who worked in the London Nightingale hospital during the early days of the pandemic have been sent a “hint, hint” reminder that their training remains valid. The report comes after the government announced 17,540 confirmed new cases on Thursday – an increase of more than 3,000 from the previous day’s tally.

England’s seven Nightingale hospitals currently remain on standby, “albeit in some cases repurposed or having been considered for alternative use”, says The Guardian.

London’s Nightingale hospital – based at the ExCeL conference centre in the east of the capital – “would be the largest intensive care unit in Europe if fully operational”, but treated a only small number of patients during the initial wave of infections, adds the newspaper.

Discussions are reportedly already under way about using Bristol’s dormant Nightingale hospital, at the University of the West of England’s Frenchay campus, to provide additional capacity for the city’s Eye Hospital. And councillors in Harrogate have called for the Nightingale facility there to be used as a flu vaccination centre in the run-up to winter.

Meanwhile, the Nightingale hospital in Birmingham “is being readied again to take patients at 48 hours’ notice, according to a hospital CEO in the city”, The Guardian reports. And the emergency hospital in Exeter is being used for a Covid-19 vaccine study.

Sunderland’s Nightingale Hospital, which was opened by TV presenters Ant and Dec in May, is also ready to be used in the event of “another surge of coronavirus”, says regional news site ChronicleLive.

The seventh hospital, in Washington, Sunderland, has not been used but will remain available as long as necessary, health authorities have said.

When the emergency medical centres were first set up, the government boasted about the swiftness of their response, with the London Nightingale hospital built in just nine days.

But a leaked document seen by The Telegraph back in April revealed that the London hospital was “turning away more coronavirus patients than it is treating”, owing to a lack of staff.

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Quiz of The Week: 3 – 9 October

Donald Trump on a surprise drive to thank supporters outside Walter Reed hospital.
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Win McNamee/Getty Images

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Donald Trump on a surprise drive to thank supporters outside Walter Reed hospital.

Have you been paying attention to The Week’s news?


One-Minute Read

Friday, October 9, 2020 – 11:57am

This week kicked off with more coronavirus chaos that left Downing Street under fire after a glitch in Britain’s tracking system saw the daily number of new cases appear to double overnight.

Boris Johnson and his ministers blamed “computer issues” for delays in reporting more than 15,000 cases recorded over the previous week, which was caused by data on people who tested positive exceeding the maximum size of files used in the system.

The Conservatives had more luck getting to grips with technology at their first virtual party conference, which wrapped up on Tuesday following a round of remote speeches from cabinet ministers, as well as a promise from Johnson to create a “post-war new Jerusalem” after the pandemic.

Over on the opposition benches, Keir Starmer’s battle with the Labour left continued, as the Unite union, the party’s biggest donor, announced it was cutting its funding by 10% amid frustrations with a perceived shift in the party’s direction.

To find out how closely you’ve been paying attention to the latest developments in both UK and global events, put your knowledge to the test with our Quiz of The Week:

Need a reminder of some of the other headlines over the past seven days?

In the US, Donald Trump returned to the White House after three days in hospital for treatment for Covid-19, despite health experts warning that he was still potentially infectious. The second presidential debate is now in doubt, after Trump said he would not take part in a virtual head-to-head.

If his scheduled stand-off with Joe Biden is cancelled, voters will be left with extra time to mull over the vice-presidential debate, which saw Democratic nominee Kamala Harris lock horns with Mike Pence on issues including the administration’s coronavirus response, racism, health care and climate change.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that face masks may not protect against Covid-19 in wet or damp weather – a verdict that is unlikely to bother the mask-eschewing US president.

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Profile: Allegra Stratton – the face of No. 10’s new televised press briefings

Allegra Stratton appearing at the Policy Exchange think tank
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Policy Exchange/Commons

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Allegra Stratton appearing at the Policy Exchange think tank

Former BBC journalist to front US-style daily updates at Downing Street


One-Minute Read

Chas Newkey-Burden

Friday, October 9, 2020 – 12:49pm

Former BBC journalist Allegra Stratton is in the media spotlight after landing what some commentators are calling “the worst job in politics” – fronting No. 10’s new daily televised press briefings.

Stratton has served as director of strategic communications for Chancellor Rishi Sunak since quitting broadcasting in July, but is now leaving the Treasury to become Boris Johnson’s most high-profile spokesperson.

The No. 10 newcomer has “impeccable Tory connections” and “bucketloads of broadcast experience – a must for what’s likely to be a difficult job”, says The Independent says. She is married to James Forsyth – who is political editor at The Spectator, which the prime minister used to edit – and Sunak was best man at their wedding.

Now aged 39, Stratton kicked off her journalistic career as a producer at the BBC after graduating from Cambridge University. Following a spell as political correspondent for The Guardian, she returned to the BBC as the political editor of Newsnight, and also put in a stint at ITV News.

Stratton is no stranger to being in the media spotlight either. As Newsnight editor, she was at the centre of an outcry over the alleged humiliation of single mother featured in a report about the government’s cuts to benefits. The programme later issued an apology after more than 50,000 people signed a petition.

Stratton was appointed to the Downing Street briefings role, currently being filled by Johnson’s official spokesperson James Slack, after “impressing” the PM with her performance at the Treasury, says HuffPost.

But the task facing her is a tricky one. A Labour adviser told The Guardian that it was an “awful job”, while the newspaper notes that Stratton “arrives at a moment when the government is besieged by restive backbenchers sceptical about Covid restrictions, and facing fierce criticism over the way they are being communicated”.

The high-profile nature of the role has also triggered criticism from the opposition benches, with Keir Starmer arguing that the appointment risks “unbalancing the political discourse”.

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