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Swamp Notes — How the Middle East conflict is shaping the election

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This is an audio transcript of the FT News Briefing podcast episode: ‘Swamp Notes: How the Middle East conflict is shaping the election

Sonja Hutson
When it comes to conflict in the Middle East, President Joe Biden and vice-president Kamala Harris have repeatedly hit the same message.

Kamala Harris voice clip
Now is the time to get a hostage deal and a ceasefire deal done.

Sonja Hutson
But after nearly a year, the fighting continues and may be closer than ever to an all-out war.

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[MUSIC PLAYING]

This is Swamp Notes, the weekly podcast from the FT News Briefing where we talk about all of the things happening in the 2024 US presidential election. I’m Sonja Hutson. And this week we’re asking: How could fighting in the Middle East shake up the US presidential race? Here with me to discuss is Felicia Schwartz. She’s the FT’s US foreign affairs and defense correspondent. Hi, Felicia.

Felicia Schwartz
Hello.

Sonja Hutson
And we’ve also got Derek Brower, the FT’s US political news editor. Hi, Derek.

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Derek Brower
Hi, Sonja.

Sonja Hutson
So we are days away from October 7th, which will mark a year since the war in Israel, Gaza and the wider Middle East began. The Biden administration has tried to secure a ceasefire in Gaza and prevent a wider regional war. It has failed on both of those counts. Felicia, why has the administration proved so powerless to influence this conflict in the way that it wants to?

Felicia Schwartz
I think there are a few things at play here. I would say one, of course, this is a complicated situation because you’re dealing with a sovereign state, Israel, and a terrorist group in Gaza, Hamas. The US has leverage over its close ally, Israel. It’s working with partners in the Middle East that have leverage, to some extent, over Hamas because they support the group financially or, you know, have historical ties. But all that being said, throughout the process the US has, and President Biden in particular, who’s described himself as, you know, the most, one of the most Zionist, if not the most Zionist president, feels a deep connection to Israel, has not really been willing to use a ton of American leverage with Israel to get them to change its course, namely withholding shipments of American weapons, except in one case. So I think, you know, the US can’t want a deal more than Israel does. And I think at various turns it’s been clear that Israel doesn’t really want a deal.

Derek Brower
Netanyahu as well is a really difficult character for them to deal with. Let’s face it, he’s under pressure domestically himself. He can’t deliver sometimes what the Americans want for his own domestic reasons and for his own ambitions. So it’s really, it’s been a really, really thorny one. And the Biden administration has, at various times, seems failed the test.

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Felicia Schwartz
If I could just add one thing, too. I used to be a reporter based in Israel. I think one of the things that’s come through to especially like talking to old kind of sources and colleagues who are still there is the news environment in Israel and what people are experiencing there is super, super intense and different. And they think that the US and, and others around the world, in Europe, etc., like totally kind of misread Israeli popular opinion on all of this because Netanyahu is very unpopular. There was this whole judicial overhaul thing that was happening before October 7th. He was potentially on his way out, many thought. But what’s happening in Lebanon, for example, right now, it’s polling really well, this feeling that, okay, the Israelis can kind of like finally have some shot at dealing with this like thorn in their side, this major threat, Hezbollah in the north. I just think that, you know, when the US is trying to pressure Israel, how this is playing domestically in Israel also weighs on its leaders. So it’s just a bit more nuanced and complicated in terms of where they can push, how they can push.

Sonja Hutson
So, Felicia, you mentioned one tool that they, that the Biden administration has not really used is withholding weapons, withholding military aid. Why is that? Like, is that the only tool that they have at their disposal to push Israel in the direction of de-escalation?

Felicia Schwartz
I think it’s definitely the most powerful tool. They could be a bit more forceful with Israel at the UN, not come to Israel’s defense there as much as Israel really cares about. But just just going back to this question of military aid. There’s been strong bipartisan support in the US for a strong defense partnership with Israel to the tune of, you know, almost $4bn a year at this point. And that aid is, is like largely devoted to preparing Israel for any sort of conflict with Iran, which is a, you know, considered Israel’s greatest threat in the region. And I think there is a fear whether you’re going to that kind of historical, kind of pro-Israel group of people. But even among those who are, you know, not as sure about the relationship, that while it would be a good idea in theory to use this powerful lever that the US has, the US also has a great interest in preventing conflict between Israel and Iran, which the US would be drawn into. And they fear that any, like serious withholding of weapons, any “daylight” between the US and Israel kind of invites Iran to, you know, seize on this weakness. And that is actually not good for the US.

Derek Brower
We can’t also avoid but talk about the kind of domestic calculations that are in every leading politician in the US when they think about Israel. And that is that there isn’t really a constituency that doesn’t support Israel. Not, not at the heights of the commanding heights of US power. There isn’t really a constituency that would back away from supporting Israel, especially after October 7th. And that’s even before you consider that we’re in an election year when those things are really, really important.

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Sonja Hutson
What about this, you know, for example, the undecided movement in Michigan? Wouldn’t that be a constituency that would not want the US to be closer to Israel?

Derek Brower
I think it is. I think it is. And we should be very, I mean, we need to draw attention to them because it’s, there’s a big Arab-American community in Michigan. They already did vote in the primary, Democratic primary for this undecided vote to register their protest against Biden’s policies. I think the calculation that the Democratic Party is making right now and Harris’s camp is making is that there are more people on the other side of that issue. And so they can somewhat discount that. And they also have this very cynical message to those people, which is, well, really you think Trump is going to be better? And when you boil it down, Trump probably wouldn’t be necessarily better if your, you know, you have family who are living in Gaza. So . . . but that is, to be clear, that’s quite a cynical way to talk to people who are protesting about American foreign policy or who are suffering through their relatives in an area of the world being affected by all this violence. But, not to be too rough on the voters, but I think most voters probably just see chaos in the Middle East and they’re focusing on that stuff, they’re focusing on the cost of groceries. At the moment, they’re focusing on a hurricane that’s demolished parts of North Carolina, inflation, focusing on jobs. You know, there’s (plenty of) domestic, domestic, domestic stuff.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

[TECH TONIC TRAILER PLAYING]

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Sonja Hutson
So, Felicia, I know that Derek said before the break that voters don’t really care as much about foreign policy as they do about domestic issues. But I do want to ask still, how would Trump versus Harris approach the situation in the Middle East?

Felicia Schwartz
Just starting with Trump. He has said things like, you know, this is really bad PR for Israel. It’s got to end. He was asked at a press conference when he was in New York about what’s going on in Lebanon. He said, you know, this has to end. It’s time to wind this down. So I think if Netanyahu is betting that a Trump administration might be super permissive on what they’re doing, I think that Trump has kind of also made clear that he’s got limited patience for what you might describe as Israeli adventurism in the Middle East. And I think that, you know, might help to explain why we’re seeing Israel take its shots now, because I think there’s some perception that Biden is a lame duck, that if Israel really needs defending, he will come to defend them. And, you know, Trump, for better or worse, can be unpredictable, right? And then on the Harris side, she has especially since she’s become the candidate for president and the tone was very different. She emphasized more Palestinian suffering and kind of empathy for what they’re experiencing in a way that President Biden, you know, can’t or hasn’t been able to do. I don’t really anticipate that that would be a big change. But I think at least, like tonally, things would be different.

Derek Brower
I think tonally is really important to stress, because it’s not like one of them is going to establish statehood for the Palestinians or fix the Middle East. They aren’t. (Yeah) I mean, this is not. Both of them would rather just not have to think about it, really. So we have to wait till the election’s gone and then, then the real strategizing will begin. At the moment, this foreign policy is just not something that wins votes.

Sonja Hutson
So, you know, we hear a lot about this idea of an October surprise in US politics, which is, you know, an event or revelation that shakes up the presidential race in the final weeks. Do you think the escalation of the conflict in the Middle East could be this year’s October surprise? Like, how important is this to the election?

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Derek Brower
If it’s oil prices, that pushes up oil prices, then absolutely. Then we could have a series of October surprises. But I think the biggest threat and the one that will be keeping Harris’s team awake at night is if oil prices suddenly start rising, as they are right now, by the way, they, they’re up. And in fact translates to gasoline prices.

Felicia Schwartz
It feels like, you know, I’ve been covering this conflict now, it’s, in all of its twists and turns for a year. And, you know, every week or month, I think to myself, wow, we’re really high up the escalation ladder. This seems really dangerous. And I think right now this is the highest up the escalation ladder the US, Israel, Iran, Hezbollah have been. And I’m not sure how many more rungs there really are to go before this thing, you know, can’t be contained anymore. And one of the kind of things that the US is super nervous about is, you know, there are 40,000 troops in the Middle East right now. If any sort of Iranian proxy group, whether under direction from Iran, or Iran has lost control of these groups, decides to attack American forces and is successful, that could you know, (that would be huge) that would be huge. So far, there have been several, you know, several attacks. There were American service members who died in Jordan earlier this year. But generally speaking, the US has avoided casualties. But, you know, two weeks before the election, that could be a huge problem.

Derek Brower
I think it’s all a gift to Trump. It really is, because he can very successfully send out adverts into the swing states about how the world is in chaos. He’s doing that. That’s his message. World’s in chaos we don’t need. I think one of his adverts (inaudible) said we don’t need a TikTok star, referring to Harris and her kind of success in activating and energizing a bunch of younger people on TikTok. What they need is a powerful leader who other leaders around the world are scared of. So it’s a gift to him. And that’s why the Biden administration, and Harris, is so keen to talk about anything else. Remember the single most important thing for voters in this election is the cost of living in the US. If gasoline prices start to rise again because of some wars of which they had no control or Biden lost control of or whatever, somewhere else, that will be a message that Trump hammers relentlessly in the final weeks.

Sonja Hutson
All right. I want to thank our guests, Felicia Schwartz, the FT’s US foreign affairs and defense correspondent. Thanks, Felicia.

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Felicia Schwartz
Thanks for having me.

Sonja Hutson
And Derek Brower, he’s our US political news editor. Thanks, Derek.

Derek Brower
Pleasure.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

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Sonja Hutson
This was Swamp Notes, the US politics show from the FT News Briefing. If you want to sign up for the Swamp Notes newsletter, we’ve got a link to that in the show notes. Our show is mixed and produced by Ethan Plotkin. It’s also produced by Lauren Fedor and Marc Filippino. Special thanks to Pierre Nicholson. I’m your host, Sonja Hutson. Our executive producer is Topher Forhecz, and Cheryl Brumley is the FT’s global head of audio. Original music by Hannis Brown. Check back next week for more US political analysis from the Financial Times.

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Restrictive EU law could benefit London’s Asian art scene

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Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

“Where there is energy and dynamism, there is a market,” says Henry Howard-Sneyd, longtime chair of Asian art at Sotheby’s and founding member of the Asian Art in London (AAL) event, which takes place at the end of this month. Howard-Sneyd is only too aware of the “constant flux and flow of the Asian art market”, as he puts it. He and his colleagues in London have witnessed waves of new buyers from Japan in the 1980s and ’90s and from China more recently, whose aggressive bidding peaked in 2015.

Tastes have changed and power has shifted to New York, Hong Kong, mainland China and Paris. Yet this autumn season offers a reinvigorated London scene, with world-class, museum-quality pieces again on offer in saleroom and gallery, in part thanks to a forthcoming EU law on artwork origins.

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Iwona Tenzing, whose gallery Tenzing Asian Art is making its debut at the Frieze Masters art fair next week, cited not only the “unparalleled exposure to an international audience” as a reason to show at the fair but also uncertainties arising from a 2019 EU law restricting the importation of “non-European” art into the bloc, which is expected to become operational by June 2025. Briefly, this requires proof that an object more than 200 years old and valued in excess of €18,000 was legally exported from the country of origin (itself not necessarily easy to determine, given changing geographical borders).

For works of art that left those countries centuries or even a few decades ago, this may prove an impossible paperchase. A theoretically laudable law aiming to restrict the illicit trade in cultural property is likely to have a profound effect on collectors, dealers and auction houses, and give London, which has lost ground to Paris, a distinct advantage now that it is outside the EU.

Tenzing, which has galleries in San Francisco and Hong Kong, will unveil a Tibetan thangka (scroll painting in distemper and gold on cloth) of the Buddha Vairocana dating to the late 12th or early 13th centuries, described as one of the rarest and most significant surviving examples of the period and priced at several million dollars.

Detail of a 12th-century painting on cloth of several Buddha-like figures, with variying skin colours, seated next to each other in rows
Detail from ‘Buddha Vairocana and his Entourage’, a 12th- or 13th-century Tibetan painting made on a scroll, being sold at Tenzing Asian Art © Courtesy: Tenzing Asian Art

Asian art has always been shown at Frieze Masters, but the arrival of the veteran Chinese art specialist Gisèle Croës in 2018 proved a game-changer. As a member of the fair’s selection committee, she argued for a more global representation of art and for an expansion of its range of older art, Croës explains from her Brussels gallery. At her suggestion, New York dealer Carlton Rochell joined the fray, contributing outstanding Buddhist and Hindu sculpture — Khmer, Indian and Gandharan. Last year, another New York dealer, Japanese specialists Thomsen Gallery, arrived; Erik Thomsen reported sales of several important works. This year, Thomsen’s folding screens and scroll paintings will be complemented by gold lacquer boxes, medieval stoneware jars and ikebana baskets.

Croës’s own stand also reflects Frieze Masters’ expansion into the realm of the more traditional antiques fair. Lined with late 18th- or early 19th-century Chinese wallpaper panels, she has created the “salon of a collector”, with lacquer furniture, imperial champlevé enamel garden stools — thought to have belonged to Marcel Proust — and bejewelled silver and silver gilt jardinieres (prices €40,000-€350,000).

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Two bejewelled, highly decorated rectangular vases which, instead of containing actual flowers, contain artificial plants with branches made from gold, silver and copper, and flowers made from  precious stones and metals
Two matching jardinieres from China’s Qianlong period (1736-1795), decorated with silver, gilt copper, jade, rock crystal, mother of pearl, rose quartz, ruby and enamel © Courtesy Gisèle Croës

Hong Kong/London-based newcomer Rossi & Rossi is presenting painters from the postwar Bombay Progressive Artists’ Group. Gana Art joins three existing gallerists from Seoul, presenting a solo show of Kim Kulim, a central figure of the Korean avant-garde. Shibunkaku of Kyoto presents postwar Japanese calligraphy, paintings and ceramics.

As Howard-Sneyd points out, this emphasis on Modern and contemporary ceramics, painting and printmaking in the broad London scene marks one of the biggest shifts in taste since the launch of AAL in 1998. The first of such citywide initiatives bringing together specialist galleries, auction houses and museums, the event reflects unusually close collaboration between the art trade this year: the leading auction houses are giving space in their showrooms to visiting commercial galleries and private dealers for the first time.

Three main ground-floor spaces at Sotheby’s will present stock from 12 galleries, including a show by the blue-chip contemporary Asian art specialist Sundaram Tagore, with jewellery, textiles, arms and armour among the mix. Altogether, the seven participating auction houses are adding 21 auctions of Asian and Islamic art to the 25 or so dealer shows. The most spectacular auction lot promises to be an exceptionally rare pair of 16th-century Chinese wucai or “five-enamel” polychrome “fish” jars and covers, with golden carp swimming among swaying lotus and other flora (Sotheby’s, est £600,000-£1mn). Only one other complete pair is known to survive.

Two roundish porcelain jars with lids, lavishly decorated  with paintings of goldfish, carp, lotus and aquatic flora
Two wucai ‘fish’ jars and covers, from the Jiajing period (1521-1567) © Courtesy Sotheby’s

In their own gallery in Clifford Street, leading London dealer Eskenazi focuses on the painterly early blue-and-white porcelains from the Yuan and early Ming dynasties ($500,000 to more than $1mn). Included here is another great rarity, a large guan (jar) from circa 1320-52, its panels ornamented with applied and incised flowering shrubs in underglaze copper red. Daniel Eskenazi is expecting to see Chinese clients and US museum curators returning to London. “When there is a critical mass of high-quality works at auctions, fairs and dealer exhibitions, true collectors do come.”

Frieze Masters, October 9-13, frieze.com. Asian Art in London, October 30-November 8, asianartinlondon.com

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Seaside town dubbed City of Painters has Cornwall-like streets and tiny beaches

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The French seaside town of Collioure attracted a number of artists back in the day

A PRETTY seaside town has compared to Cornwall – with a very arty history.

Collioure, in France, has inspired a number of artists including Picasso and Matisse.

The French seaside town of Collioure attracted a number of artists back in the day

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The French seaside town of Collioure attracted a number of artists back in the dayCredit: Alamy
Collioure is near to the Spanish border

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Collioure is near to the Spanish borderCredit: Alamy
The streets are lined with galleries and art shops

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The streets are lined with galleries and art shopsCredit: Alamy

Now dubbed the City of Painters, the Museum of Modern Art continues on the legacy.

As many as three million tourists visit a year, despite having just 3,000 locals.

It was even named France‘s favourite village, in a local competition that has ben running for more than a decade.

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Expect influences from both France and Catalonia – it is 15 miles from the Spanish border.

Otherwise it is worth just walking through the multicoloured streets, full of cafes, shops and galleries.

Don’t leave without trying some local Collioure’s anchovies and locally-made white and red wines.

A tourist said it was “one of the prettiest towns in France,” while another said it “could be compared to St Ives in Cornwall

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One of the main attractions is the 800-year-old Meiveal castle, Château Royal de Collioure which is easy to walk to and has the best views of the town.

Anna Richards, who lives in France, said of the village to inews: “So many artists have set up studios that every narrow street feels like a gallery.

“There are hundreds of different kaleidoscopic interpretations of the town, the harbour and the Mediterranean Sea.

The beautiful French town with Venice style canals

“Its two beaches include a crescent of custard-coloured, slightly shingly sand between the harbour and bell tower, and Plage de Port d’Avall, the other side of the Château Royal, which is framed by houses as colourful as an artist’s palette.”

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The Château Royal looks like a sandcastle between them, angular and built in blocks, as though it’s made from Lego.

The best way to get there is to fly to Perpignan Airport, with direct UK flights from both London Stansted and Birmingham.

Collioure is just 20 minutes from there by train.

It has shingle beaches along the coastline

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It has shingle beaches along the coastlineCredit: Alamy
The pretty streets are worth a wander too

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The pretty streets are worth a wander tooCredit: Alamy

If you want an affordable stay, there is a Eurocamp just 15 miles away which the Sun’s Joel Davis visited.

Here’s another quaint village in France that is often named the country’s most beautiful.

A tiny French island is a popular place for locals to visit – that Brits may not have heard of.

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And here’s the holiday region dubbed the French Cotswolds.

Everything you need to know about visiting France

  • Brits need to have a passport with at least three months left on it.
  • No visas are needed for anyone staying up to 90 days within an 180-day period but you need to make sure your passport is stamped on entry and exit.
  • You may also need to show proof of accommodation and funds, around €120 a day.
  • The country uses the euro with with around €10 working out to £8.55.
  • France is one hour ahead of the UK
  • Direct flights to France from the UK take between 1-4 hours depending on the destination
  • Or you can travel by train with Eurostar, with destinations including Paris or Lille.
  • Direct ferry services also operate between the UK and France, with some journeys taking 90 minutes.

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Aldi and Lidl bring back popular wooden toy ranges – they’re perfect for Christmas gifts and prices start from £2.99

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Aldi and Lidl bring back popular wooden toy ranges - they're perfect for Christmas gifts and prices start from £2.99

ALDI and Lidl have confirmed the relaunch of their popular wooden toy range with prices starting at just £1.99.

The budget supermarket toys are a perfect gift for this year’s Christmas.

Aldi and Lidl have confirmed the relaunch of their wooden toy range

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Aldi and Lidl have confirmed the relaunch of their wooden toy rangeCredit: Aldi
Aldi's wooden toy range will hit their shelves on October 10

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Aldi’s wooden toy range will hit their shelves on October 10Credit: Aldi
Aldi will bring back its wooden Cuthbert

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Aldi will bring back its wooden CuthbertCredit: Aldi
Shoppers will have to act quickly after their range sold out last year

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Shoppers will have to act quickly after their range sold out last yearCredit: Aldi

Lidl’s wooden range is expected to arrive in stores across the UK from October 17 with Aldi’s range available from October 10.

Aldi has announced that they’re bringing back over 50 products to choose from, but shoppers will have to act quickly after their range sold out last year.

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Parents will be eager to get their hands on the returning favourites including the Wooden Toy Kitchen, scanning at the tills for £34.99.

The discount retailer chain is also bringing back the wooden Cuthbert which previously caused a stir with M&S fans.

In 2021 M&S lodged an infringement claim against Aldi arguing the chocolate cake was too similar to its classic Colin the Caterpillar which has been around for 30 years with an unchanged design.

But Cuthbert returned to shelves in February last year after the two supermarkets called a truce in an agreed settlement

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To complete the kitchen experience, Aldi’s Wooden Kitchen Set (£9.99) includes coffee cups, a teapot and coasters.

This Christmas, Aldi’s range includes travel-friendly toys such as the Toy Roleplay Bag costing just £9.99.

The item features a Paramedic and Dentist Set, which allows your children to roleplay their dream jobs.

Aldi is also introducing the New Wooden Horse Box and Beauty Station, scanning for £24.99 each.

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The newest products in the Middle Aisle of Lidl

Here’s a list of all the wooden toys available this year:

  • Wooden Climbing Slide and Arch (£39.99)
  • Wooden Climbing Triangle and Cube (£54.99)
  • Three Storey Wooden Dolls House (£39.99)
  • Wooden Toy Kitchen (£34.99)
  • Wooden Bike and Rocker (£24.99) 
  • Wooden Aldi Supermarket/Market Stall (£29.99)  
  • Wooden Horsebox/Beauty Station (£24.99) 
  • Wooden Double-Sided Easel (£24.99) 
  • Wooden Hospital/ Airport/ Zoo (£24.99)
  • Wooden Castle/ Construction Sets (£24.99) 
  • Wooden Washing Machine/Fridge (£19.99)
  • Wooden Tabletop Assortment (£19.99 
  • Interactive Dog/Cat (£19.99)
  • Wooden Baby Walker (£19.99) 
  • Wooden Fold Out Playsets (£19.99)
  • Wooden Activity Tree (£16.99)
  • Wooden Railway Sets (£14.99)
  • Wooden Dolls House Furniture (£14.99)
  • Wooden Doll Accessories (£11.99)
  • Wooden Toy Roleplay Bags (£9.99)
  • Wooden Kettle/Coffee/Hot Chocolate/Cleaning Set (£9.99)
  • Wooden Kids Tool Belts (£9.99)
  • Wooden Kitchen Appliances (£9.99)
  • Wooden Play Food/Food Role Play Sets (£9.99) 
  • Wooden Fold Out Vehicles (£9.99)
  • Wooden Animal Train (£9.99) 
  • Play Mat Sets (£9.99)
  • Wooden Large Vehicles (£9.99)
  • Wooden Doll Care Accessory Sets (£9.99)
  • Wooden Kitchen Sets (£9.99)
  • Wooden Building Blocks (£9.99)
  • Wooden Ramp Racer/Hammer Set (£9.99)
  • Wooden Grocery Sets (£8.99)
  • Wooden Activity Boards (£10.99)
  • Wooden Musical Sets (£8.99)
  • Wooden Musical Pull Along Animals (£8.99)
  • Wooden Doughnut and Cake Assortment (£7.99)
  • Wooden Birthday Cake (£7.99)
  • Wooden Family Sets (£7.99)
  • Wooden Biscuit Assort (£7.99)
  • Plush Dolls 2024 (£6.99)
  • Wooden Magnetic Box Assortment (£6.99)
  • Wooden Vehicle Box Set (£6.99) 
  • Wooden Meal Sets (£6.99)
  • Wooden Animal Number Puzzles (£4.99)
  • Wooden Vehicles (£3.99)
  • Wooden Teething Vehicle (£3.99)
  • Wooden 2d Wheeled Animals (£2.99)

Lidl also confirmed the relaunch of its wooden toy range, which parents will be eager to snap up for Christmas.

The popular bargain chain will offer premium toy products for shoppers willing to spend more.

The supermarket’s Wooden Play Kitchen will be scanning at tills for a whopping £49.99 and features a play oven, light-up hobs, a microwave and a sink.

Lidl will also be selling more affordable items in their range such as their Montessori Style Wooden Rainbow Puzzle (£3.99) said to be perfect for households who enjoy hours of family fun.

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Here is the full list of wooden toys available at Lidl this year:

  • Wooden 2-in-1 Baby Clinic and Vets (£39.99)
  • Wooden Toy Tool Assortment (£5.99)
  • Wooden Workbench (£49.99)
  • Wooden Railway Set Farm, Fairy Land, Police, Fire Department (£7.99)
  • Wooden Train Set Construction / Fairground (£29.99)
  • Wooden Railway Set XL City / Dinosaur (£39.99)
  • Wooden Road City / Racetrack (£14.99)
  • Wooden Train Set City / Countryside (£14.99)
  • Wooden Train Set (£4.99)
  • Wooden Kitchen Accessories (£9.99)
  • Wooden Ice Cream Trolley / Tabletop Pizza Oven (£19.99)
  • Wooden Chunky Vehicles (£3.99)
  • Wooden Room Play Set (£9.99)
  • Wooden Kids’ Easel (£19.99)
  • Wooden Food Play Set (£6.99)
  • Wooden Flexible Doll Family or Doll’s House Furniture (£6.99)
  • Wooden Play Kitchen (£49.99)
  • Wooden Supermarket Accessories (£9.99)
  • Wooden Dressing Table (£39.99)
  • Wooden Vehicle Sets (£2.99)
  • Wooden Train Set City / Dinosaur World (£39.99)
  • 3D Wooden Learning Toys (£9.99)
  • Wooden Puzzle (£1.99)
  • Wooden Stacking Toy (£7.99)
  • Wooden Marble Run (£12.99)
  • Wooden Games (£3.99)
  • Wooden Learning Games (£3.99)
  • Wooden Learning Puzzle (£3.99)
  • Wooden Toy Assortment Building Blocks (£7.99)
  • Wooden Flexible Doll Family or Doll’s House Furniture (£6.99)
  • Montessori Style Wooden Rainbow Puzzle (£3.99)
  • Montessori Style Wooden Counting Set (£7.99)
  • Montessori Style Wooden Light up Box (£19.99)
  • Wooden Learning Games (£3.99)
  • Wooden Puzzle / Pull Toy (£3.99)
  • Wooden Learning Board Assortment (£7.99)
  • Wooden Learning Tablet / Wooden Mobile Phone & Camera (£7.99)
  • Wooden Wall Toys (£12.99)

It’s worth checking ahead with your local supermarket if they have what you’re looking for in stock before you go to avoid a wasted trip.

You can check how close you are to your nearest Aldi and Lidl supermarket using this handy store locator.

And remember to scout around other supermarkets for more toy deals – you never know what you can find elsewhere for less.

It comes after Tesco issued an urgent recall urging customers not to buy certain mince pies because they could contain glue.

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And shoppers are racing to their nearest supermarket to stock up on Roses, Quality Street, Celebrations, and Heroes tubs, scanning at tills for just £3.95 each.

Aldi's range includes travel-friendly toys

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Aldi’s range includes travel-friendly toysCredit: Aldi

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Collector Kiran Nadar on Indian art and building museums

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“I never had any formal art training: I just learnt as I went along,” says Indian collector and philanthropist Kiran Nadar. Her vast collection of South Asian art now numbers 15,000 pieces, a small selection of which is being shown in a major exhibition at the Barbican cultural centre in London, The Imaginary Institution of India: Art 1975-1998.

In Nadar’s London home, an elegant apartment in a listed building overlooking Regent’s Park, one wall is dominated by a painting of horses by MF Husain — often known as the “Picasso of India” — while, on another wall, a painting by Manjit Bawa shows a flautist playing to a group of grey cows. Small sculptures by Henry Moore are dotted around on the tables and a beautiful inlaid ivory cabinet stands by the door.

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Nadar, wearing a flowing green, pink and orange robe, is relaxed, friendly and open as we sit down to talk about how she started collecting, her philanthropy and the new museum she is opening in Delhi.

Stylised painting of a man seated on a red background, playing the flute to an audience of around half a dozen cows
‘Bhavna’ (2000) by Manjit Bawa. It was only after buying Bawa’s work that Kiran Nadar became ‘galvanised’ as a collector © Courtesy the artist and Kiran Nadar Museum of Art. Photo By Lydia Goldblatt for the FT

Her collecting began once she was married. After studying English literature at university in India, Nadar met her husband, Shiv Nadar, the billionaire founder of India’s HCL Technologies, when she was working in advertising and he was a client. “My first major art purchase was of two works by MF Husain for our home — in fact he was asked to paint one but he brought us two, so we kept them. And then I bought a graphic male nude, “Runners” (1982), by Rameshwar Broota — my husband was horrified! I was a bit crestfallen and told him we had to go to the studio and apologise [for changing our minds], but when he met the artist he said I was right to have the painting. And it is in his study to this day.”

But it was only after buying work by Manjit Bawa that she became “galvanised”: “I never really thought I was collecting, just acquiring. But then it reached a stage that we had no more wall space and I was just putting them into storage. It wasn’t even formalised storage, it was in the basement. I realised it was a bit futile to leave them like that.

Lady in a colourful striped dress, seated on a white, minimalist chaise longue in front of a large cubist-style painting of moving horses
Kiran Nadar sits in front of an untitled 1960s MF Husain painting at her Regents Park home © Lydia Goldblatt

By 2010 she had acquired 500 works, so she decided to create a space to show them, the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA) — initially on the HCL campus in Noida, Uttar Pradesh, then in South Court Mall in New Delhi, supported by the Shiv Nadar Foundation. A vast new museum, designed by Adjaye Associates, will open on a 100,000-square-metre site directly across from the Indira Gandhi international airport in New Delhi in 2026 or 2027.

I ask her about the choice of the Ghanaian-British architect David Adjaye for her new museum. Since that decision was taken in 2019, Adjaye has been accused of sexual assault, sexual harassment and promoting a toxic work culture according to an investigation in the Financial Times last year, allegations which he has denied.

“The choice [of Adjaye] was made by a jury . . . which whittled applicants to six, out of the initial 60. And Adjaye was the outright winner,” says Nadar. (A 2019 press release said there were five on the shortlist from 47 applicants.) “At that stage, we had absolutely no idea about David’s personal life and we had paid about two-thirds of what our commitment was. So we continue to work with Adjaye Associates and David will not be involved as a person, on any of our projects, until such time that we are comfortable. That’s the way it stands today.”

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Stylised oil-on-canvas painting of a group of people on a Mumbai road, in front of an old-fashioned black-and-yellow Bombay taxi cab, including people sitting on a stationery moped, children playing in the gutter, a man on a bicycle, people seated on the floor in conversation, a naked woman lying in the road, lepers with bandaged limbs, and a beggar holding out a cup. There are also dogs, goats and horses roaming among them.
‘Off Lamington Road’ (1986) by Gieve Patel, a classic scene of Mumbai street life © Courtesy Galerie Mirchandani + Steinruecke and Kiran Nadar Museum of Art

While her collecting focus was on works by the Bombay Progressive Artists’ Group, a Mumbai-based collective of artists synthesising Indian art history and European Modernism from 1947, she also bought contemporary art: “I bought at huge prices. Then the crash came and even today some of the works haven’t reached what I paid for them at that time.” That “crash”, specifically in Indian art, took place in 2006-07 and was fuelled by speculation and the creation of art funds. Prices continued to fall over the next few years, in some cases, as she says, never to recover.

“We’re keen that Indian art gets more international recognition,” she says. KNMA part-funded the Indian pavilion at the Venice Biennale in 2019 (only the second time the country has staged one) and this year organised a retrospective of MF Husain there. “India is such an important country. Every country has a pavilion [at the Biennale] and so should we; if there is no space in the Giardini, there must be another important space [the Biennale organisers] can give us. I think at the next Biennale, India will have its own space.”

A pair of ornaments carved from black wood, depicting mythical roaring lions, each on top of a carved stand, atop a mirrored table.
A pair of ebony lions (1848) on a mirrored table at Nadar’s central London home © Lydia Goldblatt for the FT
Close up of the connecting legs and joints of a modernist-looking table, all of which are painted in bright shades of yellow, green, blue or red.
Detail from ‘Mayz’ (Table), (2018) by Rasheed Araeen, in Kiran Nadar’s London home © Courtesy the artist and Kiran Nadar Museum of Art. Photo By Lydia Goldblatt for the FT

As well as Indian art, Nadar’s collection includes western names: she mentions Antony Gormley, Olafur Eliasson and William Kentridge, as well as South Asian diaspora artists such as Shahzia Sikander, Anish Kapoor and Raqib Shaw.

Art isn’t her only passion. “I’m actually very multi-dimensional!” she exclaims, waving a hand in the air. She is one of India’s foremost bridge players and will represent her country at the World Bridge Games in Buenos Aires this year.

Photomontage of a woman’s head poking out from a lake, with a flock of what looks like black-headed white ibis birds  fluttering around her, one apparently standing on top of her head
‘Mild Terrors II’ (1996) by CK Rajan © Courtesy the artist and Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, New Delhi

I bring the conversation back to the future of her collection. “For the moment it is funded by the foundation, but there will be an endowment. I can’t be here for ever, and I can’t leave it in hands where it’s not going to serve: we will make sure it will be very, very professional.”

The Imaginary Institution of India: Art 1975-1998’ runs to January 5, barbican.org.uk

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Natwest banking app down for thousands of customers

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Natwest banking app down for thousands of customers

NatWest’s online banking app has gone done this morning leaving thousands of customers unable to access their cash.

A report on Downdector has shown over 3,000 savers have been unable to access their money.

Natwest banking app is down for thousands of customers

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Natwest banking app is down for thousands of customersCredit: Alamy

Customers have taken to X, formally known as Twiiter, to complain about the tech issue.

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One user said: “I just can’t log in. I have tried closing and re-opening the app”.

Another said, “How long will it be until it’s resolved? I need to access some money.”

The British bank told customers on social media that the team is “working hard to get things resolved as soon as possible but we have not been provided a time frame”.

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The best lamps for dark autumn days

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Can you recommend some lamps (floor and table) to brighten up autumn evenings? And what do you think about cordless versions?

Oh, I love a lamp. Give me a surface and I’ll pop a lamp on it in no time at all. My biggest bugbear when visiting people (some, not all, obviously, because let’s be honest — I know quite a few interior designers) is that there are never enough lamps for my liking. 

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I’ve mentioned many times in this column my aversion to overhead lighting. But not in all circumstances: a ceiling light above a dining table, naturally, can be useful and look great. Although even in this scenario I’d prefer very dim bulbs or candles — it’s more of an atmosphere thing than actually wanting light to be cast down from above. No, I don’t need that. What I do need is to be surrounded by lamps and a warm, orangey glow diffused through lampshades. After all, everyone looks better in soft lamplight.

So, what lamps to go for? At home I like a heady combination of materials, styles, colours and ages, so we have old porcelain lamps, newly made plaster ones, a bit of glass, a little brass . . . Here are my current favourites on the market, some more traditional in style and others more contemporary:

A table lamp with a curved brass stand which holds two green lampshades
Table lamp 2483, by Svenskt Tenn

Stockholm’s Svenskt Tenn sells some of the most beautiful lamps around. (Full disclosure: I have worked with the company on collaborative collections in the past.) Its Table Lamp 2483 (€768) was designed by Josef Frank in 1936, and, with its swooping brass arms, is a very good example of the elegant, airy design that he gave all of his lamps. I also particularly like its Floor Lamp 1838 (€1,360) in nickel-plated brass with cognac-coloured leather wrapped around the base. I’m very much enjoying Soane’s new Curlew Floor Light too: taking its inspiration from a Swedish design in Soane’s collection dating from the 1930s, it has an elegant, curved arm, reminiscent of the curlew’s slender beak.

Zara Home makes some affordable options: its Table Lamp with Tripod Base has something of 1920s France about it, with its elegant three legs and iron construction. I’ve seen similar antique iron lamps as well as versions made by designers that are perhaps more beautiful and intricate, but at £79.99, this is a steal.

When shopping for my own home, more often than not I buy antique lamps. Hampshire’s Max Rollitt is a great port of call, particularly in reference to my point about hankering after a mix of materials in a room. Rollitt is currently selling a very lovely 19th-century glazed porcelain baluster vase (£980), which has been turned into a lamp and wired. The colour naturally appeals to me: proper, eye-searing acid yellow. 

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A bright yellow lamp base made from a vase, with a white shade
A Qing Dynasty vase, now converted into a lamp by Max Rollitt
A wide bottle with a narrow neck in dark brown glass, with a lamp fitting added where the cork would go
An early 20th century glass bottle, converted into a lamp, also by Max Rollitt

I’m also drawn to an early 20th-century glass bottle lamp (£440). It’s sort of the opposite of the yellow porcelain lamp — a sober, humble number, I like it just as much. Its shape is elegant, as is its treacly greenish-brown colour, which will look wonderful lit from above.

It’s interesting to note that neither of these lamps started their lives as lamps. The bottle got a massive upgrade. So think imaginatively — if you come across an old bottle or piece of pottery at a junk shop that you can’t live without but perhaps don’t quite know what to do with, consider taking it to a specialist to convert.

Let’s talk about portable options. In the past few years many more options for cordless lamps have appeared on the market, and I’m grateful. There are spots in all houses in which it would be difficult or impossible to have cords trailing. At home I have a cordless lamp on my bathroom windowsill, and it’s a godsend on dark evenings because I’d much rather bathe with the glow of a lamp and a couple of candles than switch on the ceiling light.

Zara Home’s Monochrome Touch Table Lamp (£39.99) comes in six colours (I like the red and green options) and is very slick. It switches on and off by touching the top and has three light intensities. I’m also very much into Hay’s Mousqueton Portable Lamp (£165), named after the French word for carabiner. Designed by Inga Sempé for the Danish brand, the lamp is made from spun-steel. A multipurpose carabiner hook enables the lamp to be suspended from a branch or rope — a great option for gardens, or, if you fancy braving it in the winter, camping.

A table lamp with a flat round base and a flattened dome-shaped dark green shade
Zara’s Monochrome Touch Table Lamp, available in six colours

Last but not least: bulbs. I admit that I find bulb-buying rather tricky. It’s all that talk of lumens and kelvins. When I start trying to understand it, I realise I’d rather be doing literally anything else. Luckily there is much advice to be found online. Thermodynamic temperature is measured in kelvin and relates to the colour of light emitted from a lightbulb, ie whether it is warm or cold. Bulbs with 2,700K–3,000K emit a warm white light, my recommendation. A higher number means a colder light. Dowsing & Reynolds makes a range of filament lightbulbs in different shapes and sizes, and has produced a very handy guide to buying bulbs for different rooms in a house (this can be found on their website). A bright idea!

If you have a question for Luke about design and stylish living, email him at lukeedward.hall@ft.com. Follow him on Instagram @lukeedwardhall

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