Rob Key said Ollie Pope is “the man in possession” of England’s number three spot but stopped short of confirming who will play in the first Ashes Test.
Pope has been under pressure from Jacob Bethell for much of the past year and was replaced as vice-captain by Harry Brook when England named their squad for the tour of Australia.
“There is not like an elaborate scheme where if we take the vice-captaincy off Ollie Pope, it makes him easier to drop,” said England managing director Key.
“All the tours we’ve done, you never make your decisions too early because things happen. We tend to leave the decisions as late as possible. We’ll find out what that XI will be probably two days before the first Test.”
England named their 16-man squad for the Ashes tour on Tuesday. Speaking on Wednesday, Key explained the decision to promote Brook to vice-captain and the reasoning for selecting Will Jacks as the second spinner.
Key also gave fitness updates on captain Ben Stokes and pace bowler Mark Wood. He also effectively ended the international career of Chris Woakes, who was not considered for the Ashes tour because of the dislocated shoulder he suffered in the final Test against India in July.
Woakes has struggled on his two previous tours of Australia, so may not have made the squad anyway. He opted against surgery on his left shoulder in a bid to be fit and now, at 36, is likely to have played his last for England.
It is cruel on Woakes, whose final act as an international cricketer was bravely coming out to bat with his dislocated shoulder in a bid to get England over the line in the thrilling fifth Test.
“It’s been as tough a time for someone, in cricket terms, the timing of it as much as anything else,” said Key.
“He was running out of time to be ready for the start for the Ashes. And then once you get out of an Ashes series, you’re often looking at the next cycle, so Chris Woakes isn’t in our plans at the minute.”
On Brook, who was appointed England’s white-ball captain at the beginning of the summer, Key said he is a “better leader” than Pope.
Though Key was adamant the decision has no bearing on Pope’s place in the team, it once again ignites the debate over England’s number three position.
In May, when Stokes backed Pope following the one-off Test against Zimbabwe, the captain said there was an “agenda” against his then deputy.
Pope made a century in the first innings of the first Test against India in June, but passed 50 only once more in the five-match series.
Bethell, 21, played only one first-class match in the run-up to coming into the England team for the final Test at The Oval and struggled as a result, but the left-hander then made his first professional century in a one-day international against South Africa earlier this month.
“We’ll see a bit more of Jacob Bethell playing in white-ball cricket before the Ashes,” said former Kent and England batter Key. “We know a fair amount about Ollie Pope, but Jacob Bethell will continue to get experience.”
Talismanic captain Stokes missed the final Test against India with a shoulder injury, meaning the all-rounder has not completed any of England’s past four Test series.
However, the 34-year-old stepped up his return by bowling during intervals of his county Durham’s County Championship match against Yorkshire at Headingley on Wednesday.
“He won’t have a lot of cricket before the Ashes series, but that didn’t stop him against India,” said Key. “With the ball, it’s certainly the best I’ve seen him bowl for a long time, if not ever, and that was without playing a lot of cricket going into the summer.
“I have no issues with Ben Stokes at all. He’s generally the type of player that builds and everything he does gets himself ready for these big moments.”
Stokes’ Durham team-mate Wood has not played a Test since August 2024 because of elbow and knee injuries, but Key is “confident” the world’s fastest bowler will be fit for the first Ashes Test on 21 November.
“His recovery is probably a little bit slower than we thought but we’re always erring on the side of caution,” said Key.
“The thing Woody always has going for him is he’s never been someone that needs to play lots and lots of games to get into form. He’s someone that can bowl in nets, bowl in middle practice, then all of a sudden he runs up and bowls 95mph.”
Surrey all-rounder Jacks was chosen as the back-up spinner to Shoaib Bashir, ahead of Rehan Ahmed, Jack Leach and Liam Dawson.
Off-spinner Jacks has taken only five first-class wickets this year but, like Bashir, offers England height, as well as the option to boost their batting.
“In what we have coming up, we think Jacks offers a lot of different options,” said Key.
Key also confirmed leg-spinner Ahmed will be named in the England Lions squad that will be in Australia the same time as the senior group, so could be called into the Test party if required.
Rescuers say 20 people have been injured in southern Israel after the Israeli military said a drone was launched from Yemen.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said the drone struck the town of Eilat on the Red Sea coast, with attempts made to intercept it.
The Magen David Adom emergency medical service said 20 people were taken to Yoseftal Hospital – two with serious limb injuries.
Israeli media has described it as a Houthi strike but the Yemeni group has not officially claimed responsibility.
Israeli TV stations broadcast live footage said to be of the drone strike and the area it hit, which showed billowing smoke rising from the site.
“IDF troops, alongside the Israel Police, were dispatched to the area of Eilat after receiving a report of a UAV attack,” the IDF said in a statement.
It added that troops and the police were assisting in evacuating the area and a helicopter had been deployed to evacuate the wounded from the scene.
The military urged people to stay in protected areas for 10 minutes should they receive an alert.
The attack, if claimed by the Houthis, would be one of the most serious launched by the group in terms of casualties.
In July 2024, one person was killed and 10 injured in a Houthi drone attack on Tel Aviv when a drone struck an apartment building near the US embassy branch office.
Earlier in September, one person was wounded when a Houthi drone hit Ramon Airport, just north of Eilat.
It was the wedding of the daughter of a Nepalese politician that first angered Aditya. The 23-year-old activist was scrolling through his social media feed in May, when he read about how the high-profile marriage ceremony sparked huge traffic jams in the city of Bhaktapur.
What riled him most were claims that a major road was blocked for hours for VIP guests, who reportedly included the Nepalese prime minister.
Though the claims were never verified and the politician later denied that his family had misused state resources, Aditya’s mind was made up.
It was, he decided, “really unacceptable”.
Over the next few months he noticed more posts on social media by politicians and their children – pictures showing exotic holidays, mansions, supercars and designer handbags.
One photograph of Saugat Thapa, a provincial minister’s son, went viral. It showed an enormous pile of gift boxes from Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Cartier and Christian Louboutin, decorated with fairy lights and Christmas baubles and topped with a Santa hat.
Instagram / sgtthb
On 8 September, angered by what he had seen and read online, Aditya and his friends joined thousands of young protesters on the streets of the capital Kathmandu.
As the anti-corruption protests gathered pace, there were clashes between demonstrators and police, leaving some protesters dead.
The following day, crowds stormed parliament and burned down government offices. The prime minister KP Sharma Oli resigned.
In all some 70 people were killed.
Sunil Pradhan/Anadolu via Getty Images
This was part of a fervour for change that has swept across Asia in recent months.
Indonesians have staged demonstrations, as have Filipinos, with tens of thousands protesting in the capital Manila on Sunday. They all have one thing in common: they are driven by Generation Z, many of whom are furious at what they see as endemic corruption in their countries.
Governments in the region say there is a risk of the protests spiralling into unacceptable violence. But Aditya, like many of his peers, believes it is the start of an era of newfound protester power.
He was inspired by the protests in Indonesia, as well as last year’s student-led revolution in Bangladesh and the Aragalaya protest movement that toppled Sri Lanka’s president in 2022, and he argues that all stand for the same thing: the “wellbeing and development of our nations”.
“We learnt that there is nothing that we – this generation of students and youths – cannot do.”
Backlash against ‘nepo kids’
Much of the anger has focused on so-called “nepo kids” – young people perceived as benefitting from the fame and influence of their well-connected parents, many of whom are establishment figures.
To many demonstrators, “nepo kids” symbolise deeper corruption.
Some of those targeted have denied these allegations. Saugat Thapa said it was “an unfair misinterpretation” that his family was corrupt. Others have gone quiet.
But behind it all is a discontent over social inequality and a lack of opportunities.
PRAKASH MATHEMA/AFP via Getty Images
Poverty remains a persistent issue in these countries, which also suffer from low social mobility.
Multiple studies have shown that corruption reduces economic growth and deepens inequality. In Indonesia, corruption has been a serious impediment to the country’s development, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
Since the start of the year, demonstrations have been held there over government budget cuts and, among other things, worries over economic prospects amid stagnating wages. In August, protests erupted over lawmakers’ housing perks.
Online hashtags circulated – #IndonesiaGelap (Dark Indonesia) and #KaburAjaDulu (Just Run Away First) – urging people to find opportunities elsewhere.
Photo by ARUN SANKAR/AFP via Getty Images
Zikri Afdinel Siregar, a 22-year-old university student living in North Sumatra in Indonesia, protested earlier this month, angered at local lawmakers receiving large housing allowances of 60 million rupiah (£2,670) per month, roughly 20 times the average income.
Back at home in the Riau province, Zikri’s parents have a small rubber plantation and do farm work on other people’s land, earning them four million rupiah (£178) a month.
He has been working as a motorcycle taxi driver to help cover his tuition fees and living costs.
“There are still many people who have difficulty buying basic necessities, especially food, which is still expensive now,” he says.
“But on the other hand, officials are getting richer, and their allowances are getting higher.”
Ezra Acayan/Getty Images
In Nepal, one of the poorest countries in Asia, young people have expressed similar disillusionment at what they see as an unfair system.
Two years ago, in a case that shocked the nation, a young entrepreneur died after setting himself on fire outside parliament.
In his suicide note, he blamed the lack of opportunities.
Harnessing TikTok and AI
Days before the protests began in Nepal, the government announced a ban on most social media platforms for not complying with a registration deadline.
The government claimed it wanted to tackle fake news and hate speech. But many young Nepalese viewed it as an attempt to silence them.
Aditya was one of them.
He and four friends hunkered down in a library in Kathmandu with mobile phones and computers, and used AI platforms ChatGPT, Grok, DeepSeek and Veed to make 50 social media clips about “nepo kids” and corruption.
Over the next few days they posted them, mostly TikTok which had not been banned – using multiple accounts and virtual private networks to evade detection. They called their group ‘Gen Z Rebels’.
The first video, set to the Abba song, The Winner Takes It All, was a 25-second clip from the wedding that had enraged Aditya weeks ago, featuring pictures of the politician’s family along with headlines about the wedding.
It ended with a call to action: “I will join. I will fight against corruption and against political elitism. Will you?”
Within a day it had 135,000 views, its reach boosted by online influencers who recirculated it along with other posts, according to Aditya.
Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters
Other groups based in Nepal and abroad also created clips, and shared them using Discord.
The gaming chat platform has been used by thousands of protesters in Nepal, where they discuss next moves and suggest who to nominate an interim leader for the country.
In the Philippines too, more than 30,000 people have contributed to a Reddit thread known as a “lifestyle check” campaign, in which many post details about the rich and powerful.
Sunil Pradhan/Anadolu via Getty Images
Young people harnessing technology for mass movements is nothing new – in the early 2000s text messaging propelled the second People’s Power Revolution in the Philippines, while the Arab Spring and Occupy Wall Street in the 2010s relied heavily on Twitter.
What’s different now is the sheer sophistication of the technology, with the widespread use of mobile phones, social media, messaging apps and now AI making it easier for people to mobilise.
“This is what [Gen Zs] grew up with, this is how they communicate… How this generation organises itself is a natural manifestation of that,” says Steven Feldstein, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Political solidarity across nations
Technology has also brokered a sense of solidarity among protesters in different countries.
A cartoon skull logo popularised by Indonesian demonstrators has been adopted by Philippine and Nepalese protesters too, appearing on protest flags, video clips and social media profile pictures.
The hashtag #SEAblings (a play on siblings in South East Asia or near the sea) has also trended online, as Filipinos, Indonesians and other nations express support for one another’s anti-corruption movements.
Getty Images
It is true that Asia has previously seen similar waves of political solidarity across the region, from the Myanmar and Philippine uprisings in the late 1980s to the Milk Tea Alliance that began in 2019 with the Hong Kong demonstrations, according to Jeff Wasserstrom, a historian at the University of California Irvine. But he says this time it is different.
“[These days] the images [of protests] go further and faster than before, so you have a much bigger saturation of images of what’s happening in other places.”
Technology has also stoked emotions. “When you actually see it on your phone – the mansion, the fast cars – it just makes [the corruption] seem more real,” says Ash Presto, a Philippine sociologist with the Australian National University.
The impact is especially pronounced among Filipinos, who are among the world’s most active social media users, she adds.
Deaths, destruction – now what?
These protests have all led to serious consequences offline. Buildings have burnt down, homes have been looted and ransacked, and politicians have been dragged from their houses and beaten.
The damage to buildings and businesses alone is worth hundreds of millions of US dollars.
More than 70 people were killed in Nepal, and 10 people have died in Indonesia.
PRABIN RANABHAT/AFP via Getty Images
Governments have condemned the violence. Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto criticised what he called behaviour “leaning towards treason and terrorism … [and] destruction of public facilities, looting at homes”.
In the Philippines, President Ferdinand Marcos said protesters were right to be concerned about corruption, but urged them to be peaceful.
Meanwhile Philippine minister Claire Castro warned that people with “ill intentions [who] want to destabilise the government” were exploiting the public’s outrage.
Protesters, however, have blamed “infiltrators” for the violence and in Nepal’s case many claim that the high death toll was due to a heavy-handed crackdown by the police (which the government has said they will investigate).
BAY ISMOYO/AFP via Getty Images
Among it all, governments have also acknowledged the protesters’ concerns and in some cases agreed to certain demands.
Indonesia has scrapped some of the financial incentives for lawmakers, like the controversial housing allowance, as well as overseas trips. And in the Philippines, an independent commission has been set up to investigate the possible misuse of flood prevention funds, with President Marcos promising there would be “no sacred cows” in the hunt.
The question now is, what follows the fury?
Navesh Chitrakar / Reuters
Few digital-driven protests have translated to fundamental social change, observers point out – especially in places where problems like corruption remain deeply entrenched.
This is partly due to the leaderless nature of these demonstrations, which on the one hand helps protesters evade clampdowns – but also impedes long-term decision-making.
“[Social media] inherently is not designed for long-term change… you are relying on algorithms and outrage and hashtags to sustain it,” Dr Feldstein points out.
“[Change requires people to] find a way to change from a disparate online movement to a group that has a longer-term vision, with bonds that are physical as well as online.
“You need people to come up with viable political strategies, not just going with a zero-sum, burn-it-all-down strategy.”
Paula Bronstein/Getty Images
This was evident in previous conflicts, including in 2006 when Nepal’s millennials took part in a revolution that ousted the monarchy, following a Maoist insurgency and a decade-long civil war. But the country then cycled through 17 governments, while its economy stagnated.
The previous generation of Nepalese protesters “ended up becoming part of the system and lost their moral ground,” argues Narayan Adhikari, co-founder of Accountability Lab, an anti-corruption group.
“They didn’t follow democratic values and backtracked from their own commitment.”
But Aditya vows that this time will be different.
“We are continuously learning from the mistakes of our previous generation,” he says firmly. “They were worshipping their leaders like a god.
“Now in this generation, we do not follow anyone like a god.”
Additional reporting by Astudestra Ajengrastri and Ayomi Amindoni of BBC Indonesian, and Phanindra Dahal of BBC Nepali
Lead image credit: Ezra Acayan/Getty Images
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Sales of newly built homes rose a much larger-than-expected 20.5% in August compared with July, according to the U.S. Census.
That’s despite mortgage rates that are higher than they are today.
The median price of a new home sold in August was $413,500, in increase of 1.9% year over year.
Sales of newly built homes rose a much larger-than-expected 20.5% in August compared with July to the highest level since January 2022, according to the U.S. Census. It is also the largest one-month gain since August 2022. Sales were 15.4% higher than August 2024.
This count is based on people out shopping in August and signing deals, when the average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage was higher than it is today. That rate started August at 6.63%, according to Mortgage News Daily, and didn’t really move much during the month.
Given that rates hadn’t fallen yet, it’s curious that August sales jumped so high. Part of the answer may be in the survey itself.
“We were expecting a gain but not that large,” said Robert Dietz, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders. “Always important to remember the margin of error for new home sales is large. We’ll need to wait for revisions next month and the September data point to see if this is smoothed out.”
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Homebuilder analyst Ivy Zelman of Zelman & Associates said the number was “directionally right, but the magnitude was way too high.” She also noted that the Census report has a very small sample size and the big public builders, who together have 60% market share, don’t participate.
Zelman conducts her own survey, which has a higher sample size spanning 15% of homebuilders, and it showed a sales increase of 6% year over year, she said.
While builders have talked a lot about cutting prices and incentives, the median price of a new home sold in August was $413,500, in increase of 1.9% year over year. In a separate survey on builder sentiment from the National Association of Home Builders, 39% of builders reported cutting prices in September, up from 37% in August and the highest percentage in the post-Covid period.
New home sales were strongest in the Northeast, where overall new construction is low, so swings can be large. It was also strong in the South, where homebuilding is busiest. Sales, while higher, were weakest in the West, where prices are highest.
“While a volatile figure each month and always best to smooth out, I have to believe that the elevated level of home builder incentives was the main catalyst for the large upside surprise to new home sales,” wrote Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer of One Point BFG Wealth Partner. “And we’ll, of course, see the impact of lower mortgage rates when the September figure comes out, but keep in mind, if mortgage rates continue down … builders will then reduce the pace at which they are implementing incentives and thus possibly offsetting the benefit of lower mortgage rates for new homes.”
Strong sales took inventory down to a 7.4-month supply in August from a 9-month supply in July, a nearly 18% drop. Single-family housing starts and permits slowed in August both from July and from August of last year. This would seem to indicate that builders expected slower sales.
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