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August 30, 2022updated 07 Oct 2022 7:14am

News diary 29 August -4 September: 25 years since Diana death, Kuenssberg and Boulton & McCann debut new shows

By Foresight News

A look ahead at the key events leading the news agenda next week, from the team at Foresight News.

Leading the week

The indefinite shutdown of crown courts across England and Wales begins on Tuesday (30 August) as criminal barristers continue their fight with the government over legal aid funding reforms. Members of the Criminal Bar Association have held periodic walkouts since June, and voted overwhelmingly this week to down tools until further notice from September 5.

A week of action at the end of August had already been scheduled, meaning all criminal cases will effectively grind to a halt from Tuesday. The strike comes as the government struggles to tackle substantial and increasing crown court backlogs, which the legal profession has put down to years of underfunding by consecutive administrations. The Law Society claims only a “radical shift” in the Ministry of Justice’s stance will address the problem, a seemingly unlikely prospect in the wake of Dominic Raab’s comments that barristers are “holding justice to ransom”.  

Monday (29 August) also sees the start of the US Open, with all eyes on Serena Williams following her Vogue interview heavily hinting at an imminent retirement from the sport.

Williams, widely viewed as the greatest female player of all time, has had a tough season, most recently losing in straight sets to last year’s surprise champion Emma Raducanu in Cincinnati earlier this month. Regardless of her performance in Flushing Meadows, the 23-time Grand Slam champion is certain to receive a triumphant reception from the home crowd.

The British audience will also be watching Raducanu in hopes of a repeat of last year’s victory. Though she’s had a difficult follow up season, the 19-year-old, who was this week named as one of the top ten highest-paid players last year, has been backed by the likes of Andy Murray and Kim Clijsters to go the distance defending her title. 

Looking abroad

EU foreign ministers will gather in the Czech capital on Tuesday (30 August) for the first time since the summer break for a two-day meeting once again set to be dominated by the conflict in Ukraine.

The informal gathering, known as a Gymnich, comes amid calls from some nations – notably Estonia, Finland and the Czech presidency – for a total ban on tourist visas for Russians wishing to visit the bloc. Speaking last week, however, EU High Representative Josep Borrell poured cold water on the proposal, which is also opposed by the powerful German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, urging a more “selective” approach. Scholz will be able to elaborate on his position on Sunday (4 September), when he hosts Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Schmyhal in Berlin. 

Pennsylvania is shaping up to be a key battleground in November’s US midterm elections, and next week will see both President Joe Biden and his predecessor Donald Trump visit the Keystone State.

First up is Biden, who on Tuesday (30 August) makes a rescheduled visit to Wilkes-Barre after being forced to postpone a planned trip last month when he tested positive for COVID-19. Biden, who was famously once described by Barack Obama as a “scrappy kid from Scranton”, is due to deliver a speech at Wilkes University, where his remarks are expected to focus on his administration’s efforts to reduce gun violence. 

Many, though, will view Biden’s trip as an amuse-bouche ahead of Donald Trump’s rally, also in Wilkes-Barre, on Saturday (3 September), his first since the FBI raid on his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

Allies of the former president have leapt to his defence, decrying the raid as an abuse of power, and it’s easy to imagine Trump leaning into this narrative at the rally, which will also be attended by the controversial Republican candidates Doug Mastriano and Dr. Mehmet Oz. 

Meanwhile in Chile, a referendum takes place on Sunday (4 September) on a proposed new constitution drawn up in the wake of mass protests in 2019. But while voters overwhelmingly backed a body charged with drawing up a new constitution to replace the existing charter, which dates back to the days of the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, enthusiasm for the project has since dwindled, and polls suggest a “no” vote is the more likely outcome. This could in turn spell trouble for the country’s youthful leader Gabriel Boric, a 36-year-old leftist former student leader, who was elected on a platform of hope and whose fate many view as tied to that of the proposed new charter. 

Also look out for 

August 29 


  • Voldoymyr Zelensky at Bled Strategic Forum and MEDEF Conference 
  • Summer Bank Holiday 

August 30 

  • Andy Burnham and Mick Lynch address Enough is Enough rally 
  • Court hearing for six people found guilty of harassing Nick Watt 
  • Early access to at-home abortions becomes permanent in England and Wales 
  • Russian military exercise Rostok 2022 begins 

August 31 

  • Final membership hustings in Conservative leadership election 
  • Nord Stream 1 pipeline temporarily shuts down 
  • Asymptomatic Covid testing at English hospital and care homes pauses 
  • 25 years ago: Princess Diana died 

September 1 

  • Premier League transfer window closes 
  • Met Office publishes summer climate statistics 
  • Pre-inquest review into Shoreham Airshow disaster 
  • Rachel de Souza at Policy Exchange event on The Family Review 

September 2 

  • Members’ ballot closes in Conservative leadership election 
  • Nadhim Zahawi in conversation with Andy Haldane on the next Prime Minister 
  • Wayne Couzens in court to face indecent exposure charges 
  • Alleged ISIS ‘Beatle’ facing terror charges in UK court 

September 3 

  • Nord Stream 1 gas delivery resumes 
  • FT Weekend festival begins 
  • The Hundred finals 

September 4 

  • Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg premieres on BBC One 
  • Kate McCann & Adam Boulton host new Times Radio show 
  • Tour of London begins 
  • F1 Netherlands Grand Prix 

Statistics, reports & results 

August 29 

  • OECD GDP growth statistics 

August 30 

  • Weekly statistics on deaths in England and Wales 
  • BRC economic briefing report 
  • CBI quarterly service sector survey 
  • Results from: HP, Bunzl 

August 31 

  • Working and workless households statistics 
  • BRC shop price index 
  • Scottish population statistics, 2021 
  • DfT annual reports on walking, cycling, and travel 
  • Q2 GDP for Canada, India and Turkey 

September 1 

  • HMRC figures on movement of goods into Northern Ireland from Great Britian 
  • NHS vacancies statistics 
  • Fire prevention and protection statistics 
  • Q2 GDP for Brazil and Italy 

September 2 

  • FAO Food Price Index 
  • BRC footfall monitor 

Anniversaries & awareness days 

August 30 

  • Turkey Victory Day 
  • International Day of Victims of Enforced Disappearances  
  • One year ago: final US troops left Afghanistan 

August 31 

  • Malaysian Independence Day 
  • 600 years ago: Henry V died 

September 1 

  • Scroll Free September begins 
  • World Alzheimer’s Month begins 
  • London Dog Week begins 

September 2 

  • VJ Day (United States) 
  • Artsakh Independence Day (formerly Nagorno-Karabakh) 
  • Vietnam National Day 

September 3 

  • Merchant Navy Day 
  • World Beard Day 
  • Visit My Mosque Day 

The news diary is provided in association with Foresight News.

Picture: Jasper Juinen via Reuters

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