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The Week’s daily round-up highlights the five best opinion pieces from across the British and international media, with excerpts from each. 1. PETER OBORNE IN THE GUARDIAN _on broadcasting
impartiality_ SUBSCRIBE TO THE WEEK Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives. SUBSCRIBE & SAVE SIGN UP FOR THE WEEK'S FREE
NEWSLETTERS From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News
Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox. IN ITS ELECTION COVERAGE, THE BBC HAS LET DOWN THE PEOPLE WHO BELIEVE IN IT “More bigoted statements emerge from
Johnson’s press clippings – such as his claim in 1995 that the children of single mothers were ‘ill-raised, ignorant, aggressive and illegitimate’. Yet he continues to brush off complaints,
as he did, again on _The Andrew Marr Show_, with his offensive comparison between Muslim women and bank robbers. No previous prime minister or party leader would have survived. But Johnson
doesn’t merely survive. He flourishes. How? Partly it’s because he combines membership of the traditional British establishment with celebrity status among the contemporary media elite:
Eton, Oxford, the Bullingdon Club, the Conservative party, the Spectator, and flashier parts of the City. He knows what to say and who to say it to.” 2. ROSA PRINCE IN THE TELEGRAPH _on a
Trumpian headache for the PM_ HOW CAN BORIS JOHNSON SURVIVE A PRESIDENTIAL VISIT THAT PROMISES CHAOS? “So far, the Prime Minister’s approach to this whirlwind has been to play ostrich and
pray for minimal devastation. There are no press conferences planned, perhaps no one-on-one meeting, an occurrence thought unique in the long history of Anglo-American diplomacy. Mr Johnson
is even rumoured to have requested the President avoid openly endorsing him, aware that if he is the ‘Marmite candidate’ at this election, then Mr Trump is whatever Marmite becomes when it
is distilled over molten lava by monks for a hundred years. What fun to have been a fly on the wall during that conversation - and pity the poor flunky forced to deliver the message.”
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––_For a weekly round-up of the best articles and columns from the UK and abroad, try The Week magazine. __Start your trial subscription
today_––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 3. JILL FILIPOVIC ON CNN _on the maltreatment of women in Washington_ TRUMP’S ATTACK ON LISA PAGE REVEALS HIS MISOGYNY “[Former FBI lawyer] Lisa Page
has had enough. The President of the United States has spent two years smearing her, turning her into an emblem of the supposed ‘Deep State’ that is out to get him and undermine his
presidency. Trump and his band of sycophants, both in elected office and the right-wing media, have painted Page as a homewrecker and a traitor - the former for her private affair (the GOP
critique of this, given the instances of infidelity and scandal in its own ranks, is rich, by the way) and the latter simply because she privately expressed distaste for the President. These
hypocrites have turned a once-anonymous government lawyer into a symbol of everything they hate. The President and his allies ruined her life.” 4. ANDREW MITROVICA IN AL JAZEERA _on
Canada’s next top official_ CHRYSTIA FREELAND: TRUDEAU’S HEIR APPARENT “When Trudeau inevitably departs - voluntarily or involuntary - his successor will already have been anointed, if
Canada's corporate media could cast the deciding vote. The gooey love affair between Chrystia Freeland and her many fawning suitors in the fourth estate has been on cringe-worthy
display since the journalist turned politician. The former foreign minister has exploited that almost unconditional affection to heighten her profile nationally with a determined view to one
day be called prime minister.” 5. PAUL KRUGMAN IN THE NEW YORK TIMES _on the regional differences in life and death_ AMERICA’S RED STATE DEATH TRIP “The past few decades have been marked by
growing divergence among regions along several dimensions, all closely correlated. In particular, the political divide is also, increasingly, an economic divide. As The Times’s Tom Edsall
put it in a recent article, ‘red and blue voters live in different economies’. What Edsall didn’t point out is that red and blue voters don’t just live differently, they also die
differently.”