Your Tuesday Briefing: Liz Truss to lead Britain

Also, a typhoon bears down on South Korea, and more Covid lockdowns rip through China.
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By Amelia Nierenberg

Writer, Briefings

Good morning. We’re covering Britain’s new prime minister and a typhoon bearing down on South Korea.

Liz Truss will be Britain’s next prime minister. Her opponent, Rishi Sunak, center, said: “The Conservatives are one family.” Pool photo by Stefan Rousseau

Liz Truss is chosen to lead Britain

Liz Truss will formally assume the prime minister’s title in a meeting today with Queen Elizabeth II at Balmoral Castle in Scotland.

The hawkish foreign secretary will assume power as Britain faces its gravest economic crisis in a generation. Household energy bills are set to spike by 80 percent, and some economists predict that inflation will top 20 percent by early next year. In a speech, she promised a “bold plan to cut taxes,” but many believe Truss will have to announce sweeping measures to shield vulnerable families.

And she must also repair a Conservative Party deeply divided after Boris Johnson’s turbulent three-year tenure, which peaked in 2019 with a landslide general election victory but descended into unrelenting scandals. He agreed to step down this summer.

Profile: Truss, 47, is a party stalwart and free-market champion. She will be Britain’s fourth prime minister in six years and third female leader, after Margaret Thatcher — upon whom she has modeled herself — and Theresa May.

Election: Truss defeated Rishi Sunak, the former chancellor of the Exchequer, 57.4 percent to 42.6 percent. In the most diverse leadership race in British history, Truss’s low-tax, small-government message appealed to the 160,000 or so mostly white and mostly aging members of the Conservative Party, who chose it over the hard truths offered by Sunak.

Waves in Busan, South Korea, signaled the approach of Typhoon Hinnamnor.Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

South Korea braces for a typhoon

Typhoon Hinnamnor is expected to make landfall this morning in South Korea. Forecasts indicated it could be the strongest storm in the country’s recorded history, with winds as strong as 134 miles per hour (216 kilometers per hour).

Preparations were also underway in China, where heavy rain fell in Shanghai yesterday morning. In Japan, the typhoon was expected to lash the western island of Kyushu. The authorities recommended that 57,000 households evacuate.

The storm comes just weeks after record-setting rainfall brought deadly floods to South Korea’s capital. The flooding killed at least nine people in Seoul and came as nearly 17 inches of rain (about 43 centimeters) fell in about a day. The typhoon was expected to bring as much as 12 inches of rain (about 31 centimeters) to the area today.

Jeju: Parts of the island off the southern coast of South Korea were expected to receive more than two feet of rain, about two-thirds of a meter. Yesterday, local news showed flooding there.

The hashtag “Chengdu lockdown” has been censored on the social media site Weibo.EPA, via Shutterstock

More Covid lockdowns in China

Some 60 million people in China are facing more Covid lockdowns, from Chengdu to Shenzhen to Daqing. Weariness is growing.

China is becoming increasingly isolated as the rest of the world largely abandons restrictions. It’s also suffering economically — nearly three years of scattered lockdowns have disrupted exports and sent unemployment soaring, especially among young people.

Chengdu, which is facing an indefinite lockdown, experienced panic buying and anger on social media. Its Covid testing system, tasked with swabbing all 21 million residents every day, recently collapsed, leaving residents waiting in line for hours.

The restrictions also come after a recent drought crippled hydroelectric dams, led to factory closures and forced blackouts in Sichuan Province, where Chengdu is the capital, straining its economy.

Politics: On Oct. 16, President Xi Jinping is expected to glide to a third term in power. He’s staked his claim on “zero Covid,” framing it as proof of the Communist Party’s strength. Any official seen as weakening that claim could face consequences.

Reaction: “Everyone is scared, scared that the situation will become like Shanghai,” one office worker in Chengdu said. Officials in Chengdu have tried to reassure residents that food supplies are ample, but Shanghai had offered similar assurances, only to see widespread shortages of food and medicine.

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THE LATEST NEWS

Asia
A road in Sichuan Province after an earthquake yesterday.Xinhua, via Associated Press
World News
A crime scene after a deadly stabbing rampage in Canada.David Stobbe/Reuters
The War in Ukraine

Here are live updates.

  • The Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant disconnected from Ukraine’s power grid after renewed shelling nearby yesterday, officials said. It is now using one of its own reactors to power critical cooling systems.
A Morning Read
A child at Autism Partnership Korea, a center for young children with autism in Seoul.Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

South Korea is transfixed by a new show, “Extraordinary Attorney Woo,” which brings autism into the spotlight.

Some Koreans with autism have reservations about the show, which spent several weeks this summer as Netflix’s most-watched non-English-language program. But they applaud it for raising awareness in a country where developmental disabilities can be taboo.

Lives lived: Archie Roach, an Aboriginal folk singer in Australia, spent a lifetime trying to find his roots. He died in July at 66.

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ARTS AND IDEAS

Period cramps, no uterus required

A man grimaces in pain as he tries a period cramps simulator at a mall in Kochi, India.Cup of Life

A campaign in India is trying to end the shame and silence around menstruation, and introducing better hygiene products to protect women’s health.

The campaign is encouraging women to use menstrual cups instead of sanitary napkins or, worse, cloth, which could expose them to infections. The small devices, made of latex rubber or silicone, are cost-effective and reusable.

But the organizers are also trying to start a conversation about menstruation in a country where women are sometimes barred from the kitchen, or even banished to huts, while menstruating — and they are trying to involve men. One strategy: Simulated period cramps. With wires clamped below their navels, men can experience a version of the pain their wives, sisters and mothers may feel each month.

“I could not concentrate on anything around me for as long as the cramps lasted,” one 26-year-old in the southern state of Kerala said. “I have so much more respect for my mother, for my sisters,” he added. “It’s hard for them, that much I know.”

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Rebecca Jurkevich.

Missing New York City? Start your day with a bacon, egg and cheese.

What to Read

Javier Zamora traveled from El Salvador to the U.S. without his parents when he was 9. He describes the journey in a new memoir: “Solito.”

The World Through a Lens

Tending to grass, and to grief, on an Iowa tennis court.

Now Time to Play

Play today’s Mini Crossword, and here’s a clue: “Most widely eaten meat in the world” (four letters).

That’s it for today’s briefing. See you next time. — Amelia

P.S. The U.S. celebrated Labor Day yesterday. Here’s a history of the holiday. Workers organized the first Labor Day parade 140 years ago in New York City.

There is no new episode of “The Daily.”

You can reach Amelia and the team at briefing@nytimes.com.

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