Monthly Archives: June 2023

The Times view on Brexit and summer holiday jobs: Seasons in the Sun – The Times

Posted: June 16, 2023 at 7:09 pm

There were about 12,000 British holiday reps six years ago now there are only about 3,700

ALAMY

The presence of British reps usually young, always enthusiastic at foreign holiday resorts has been a feature of summer breaks since the advent of mass overseas tourism in the 1960s. Skilled at standing at the front of a swaying coach somewhere in the Mediterranean littoral shouting into a microphone, they are relentlessly optimistic by day and keenly oversexed by night. Repping has offered generations of extroverts a place in the sun. In 2017, almost 12,000 Brits worked abroad as liaison officers, sports instructors, nannies and chalet staff, the perks far outweighing the risible pay. This year that will drop to 3,700.

Holiday companies blame post-Brexit bureaucracy, which has made seconding British staff to the EU more complex. Employing Brits has become so

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The Times view on Brexit and summer holiday jobs: Seasons in the Sun - The Times

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German automakers warn of tough EU talks on post-Brexit EV trade – Automotive News Europe

Posted: at 7:09 pm

Carmakers including Stellantis, which owns the UK Vauxhall brand, Ford and Mercedes-Benz have warned about the detrimental effect of the post-Brexit trading arrangements.

Nissan, the U.K.'s largest automaker by volume, has said building cars in Britain may become too expensive after the rules kick in.

While the U.K. is a significant vehicle exporter, it's also a lucrative market for cars made in the EU.

The British government has asked for a delay of the terms under the post-Brexit Trade and Cooperation Agreement to 2027, by which time battery makers such as Northvolt and Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. with sites in Sweden and Germany are set to be up and running at scale.

ACEA, the European auto industry lobby group, estimates that EU-based companies will pay 4.3 billion euros ($4.7 billion) in tariffs and lose sales between 2024 and 2027, director-general Sigrid de Vries told the Financial Times.

Last month, several EU officials with knowledge of the talks said there has been no major breakthrough so far, following comments by U.K. Business and Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch of an imminent resolution.

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Ian McConnell: Jack, on high horse over Scottish truths, stirs hornet’s nest – HeraldScotland

Posted: at 7:09 pm

This issue has in recent months become a real bone of contention between the Scottish Government and the Conservatives at Westminster. And it formed the basis of a Scottish Affairs Committee hearing at Westminster on Monday, on the topic of promoting Scotland internationally.

Secretary of State for Scotland Mr Jack got the ball rolling just ahead of this meeting, by declaring: Our recent report shows that Scotland benefits hugely from the scale and reach of the UK Governments international engagement and influence.

From international security to trade and culture, the UK Governments international departments and agencies are securing the interest of all parts of the United Kingdom.

The assertion that the UK Governments international departments and agencies are securing the interest of all parts of the UK on the trade front is an interesting claim indeed.

Civil servants and other non-elected individuals working in these departments and agencies might well be doing a diligent job on this front on a day-to-day basis, in terms of effort and professionalism.

However, that is surely not the crux of the matter in the context of Mr Jacks remarks.

Mr Jacks assertion might surely be interpreted by many as a declaration that the Conservative Government is doing a good job in the areas he mentions, on behalf of the devolved nations and England.

However, Brexit has hampered in an extraordinary way Scotlands trade with its most important export market, the European Economic Area.

Scotlands electorate was firmly opposed to leaving the European Union, and we should never lose sight of this when we hear the Tories proclaim most boldly that they are somehow acting in everyones interests.

Leaving the EU has, of course, hampered greatly companies the length and breadth of the UK which export to the EEA and import from this huge and important bloc, by ending the frictionless trade from which they benefited so enormously.

For the avoidance of doubt, Brexit has had entirely the opposite effect of securing the interest of Scotland on international trade. The same applies to its effect on the rest of the UK, whatever Mr Jack might want to portray.

Mr Jacks remarks ahead of the committee meeting were therefore, to say the very least, quite remarkable. Some might view them as disingenuous but who knows on that score?

When we got to Mr Jacks actual testimony on Monday, this very much reinforced the impression that one thing the Tories really do not like at all is Scottish Government ministers, when talking to overseas governments and their representatives, mentioninga desire to rejoin the EU.

READ MORE:Ian McConnell: Hapless Brexit Tories try to fob off Scots with cheap biscuits

You wonder occasionally whether this might be partly because the Conservatives, deep down, actually know how foolish and indefensible a decision their hard Brexit was, though it would be a brave person who would bet on the Tories being embarrassed or apologetic about their dire lack of judgement.

Of course, arch-Brexiters are known for their great intolerance of any suggestion of rejoining the EU, even as their folly wreaks havoc on the UK economy and bears down heavily on living standards in these toughest of times.

The UK Governments recent efforts to control Scotlands engagement with other countries have looked very heavy-handed indeed, and it would be difficult to conclude other than that this interference has worrying implications for the economy north of the Border.

Earlier in the spring, Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs James Cleverly decided to intervene on Scottish Government ministers engagement with other countries. And it is an issue on which there seems to have been more than a little grandstanding by the Conservatives.

Mr Cleverly wrote a letter on March 31 to heads of UK missions abroad, entitled Working with the Scottish Government internationally and covering new Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office guidance on how to manage and support devolved government ministerial visits overseas.

Manage and support constitutes interesting language.

READ MORE:Is Danny Blanchflower or Alister Jack right?

Scottish Cabinet Secretary for Constitution, External Affairs and Culture Angus Robertson wrote to Mr Cleverly on May 1, declaring: I am concerned about the damage the letter and guidance could do to Scottish trade, cultural exchanges and education, and to Scottish interests in general.

READ MORE:Ian McConnell: Amid the detractors mudslinging, some great news for Scotland

Mr Robertson claimed the new guidance is further example of the UK Governments intention to undermine devolution, adding: The UK Governments apparent determination to reduce Scotland to the status of a mere administrative unit and for it to be characterised as such by UK Government diplomats is unacceptable.

Giving the impression of someone on his high horse, Mr Jack declared to the Scottish Affairs Committee on Monday: Consuls of foreign countries have made this point to me directly - that they find it uncomfortable when the Scottish Government ministers raise separation, independence or other foreign affairs issues, constitutional foreign affairs, with themThey understand thatwe are one state, the United Kingdom, and it puts them in an invidious position, and it is not appreciated.

He declared that Mr Robertson had on one occasion described Brexit as a calamity,said it had posed additional challenges for Scotland, not least because Scotland was pro-EU, and that, at a St Andrews Day reception in a European capital had criticised the impact of the EU exit on student exchange programmes to Scotland.

Mr Robertson observed in his May 1 letter: It should be needless to say that Scottish Government ministers would never purport to speak for the UK. The fact that we have very different views on matters such as immigration, asylum and Brexit will be well known to governments overseas, and it would be absurd to think that our such views could be confused with those of the UK Government.

It is surely absolutely the case that the governments of other countries would not confuse the Scottish Governments views on the crucial issues of immigration, asylum and Brexit with the entrenched ideology of the ruling Conservatives on these topics. The Torieshave been very noisy indeed about their views as they have whipped up a populist crescendo in the UK.

The Conservatives'clampdown on immigration from the EEA at a time when the UK is in the grip of an extraordinary skills and labour shortages crisis, their hard Brexit and the attendant destruction of frictionless trade, and their attitudes onasylum could hardly be more different to the Scottish Governments views.

And it is difficult to see what on earth is wrong with Scottish Government ministers stating the reality of Brexit and, for example, the effects on the labour force of the clampdown on immigration, given these matters will often be most pertinent to discussions relating to business and economic affairs.

Why should they have to come across as silent, or worse still somehow lacking in reason, by not stating the reality of the situation, just because it irks the Conservative Government at Westminster?

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Ian McConnell: Jack, on high horse over Scottish truths, stirs hornet's nest - HeraldScotland

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The Vodafone-Three merger could be a Brexit win – The Spectator

Posted: at 7:09 pm

There are plenty of reasons for viewing todays huge merger deal between the UK mobile networks of Vodafone and Three with suspicion. It could reduce choice for consumers. It may lead to job losses. And it is possible that they will downgrade their service even more than they already have, cut back on investment, and squeeze more money out of a captive market.

Yet that is not quite the whole story. In fact, done right, the merger could even turn out to be a rare Brexit win.

Todays tie-up between Vodafone and Three was widely expected. The two companies will combine their British networks, and will have 27 million users between them, taking them ahead of Virgin Media O2, with 24 million and BT Group with 20 million. It will become the leading provider in the industry. Of course it remains to be seen whether our new, slightly batty regulator, the Competition and Markets Authority, allows it to go ahead. One point is certain, however. The EU would have blocked it. It has form, particularly in the UK, when it blocked the 2016 attempt to merge Three and O2.

The mobile telecoms industry is murderously competitive, with wafer thin margins, in which no one makes any real money

In fairness, it is easy to see what the EU was getting at. Mergers are usually bad for customers: indeed the whole purpose of them is typically to insulate companies from anything as bothersome as people being able to go elsewhere. And yet, mobile competition has not worked out very well. In reality, the mobile telecoms industry is murderously competitive, with wafer thin margins, in which no one makes any real money. By preventing it from consolidating, even modestly, all the EU has done is weaken it. The result? All the money is made by Apple and Google, both American companies, and none by anyone else.

With three major networks, British consumers will still have plenty of choice. And the mobile companies might actually be able to make some money, which they can then re-invest in new services and products. The mini-computer we all carry around in our pockets remains the most lucrative piece of technology in the world, and one that still has plenty of potential for growth.

There is lots of faddish talk of industrial strategies, and of more investment in green energy, batteries and electric vehicles. And yet, the UK is never going to be able to match the subsidies on offer in the US, and there is no point in even trying. In truth, allowing a slightly stronger trio of profitable, growing mobile operators to emerge is a far better bet and it has been made much easier by being outside the EU.

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The Vodafone-Three merger could be a Brexit win - The Spectator

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Brexit To ‘Partygate’: The Rise And Fall Of Boris Johnson – NDTV

Posted: at 7:09 pm

Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson had a conventional rise to power.

Boris Johnson was once likened by a member of his party to a "greased piglet" for his ability to bounce back from a succession of setbacks and scandals that would have sunk other less popular politicians.

However, his luck has continued to fade as Covid-era party scandals forced him to quit as a member of parliament less than a year after they helped push him out of office as prime minister.

The 58-year-old populist angrily quit as MP in the midst of an investigation into whether he repeatedly lied to parliament over lockdown-breaking parties when he was in office, which he slammed as a "kangaroo court."

His resignation pre-empted a finding which could force a humiliating fight to retain his MP seat, which he held by a slim majority.

"It is very sad to be leaving Parliament -- at least for now -- but above all I am bewildered and appalled that I can be forced out, anti-democratically... with such egregious bias," he said.

Johnson led the Tories to a thumping 80-seat majority in the December 2019 general election on a promise to "get Brexit done".

That allowed him to railroad through parliament his divorce deal with the European Union, unblocking years of political paralysis.

But he was undone by his handling of the Covid pandemic, "Partygate" and a succession of other scandals that led to a ministerial rebellion in July last year.

Even though he quit as prime minister, rumours have persisted that Johnson -- a thrice-married father of at least eight children -- had not given up hope of another shot at the top job.

'Cavalier'

Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson had a conventional rise to power for a Conservative politician: first the elite Eton College, then Oxford University.

At Eton, his teachers bemoaned his "cavalier attitude" to his studies and the sense he gave that he should be treated as "an exception".

Johnson's apparent attitude that rules were for other people was amply demonstrated in 2006 when he inexplicably rugby tackled a football opponent in a charity game.

His elastic relationship with the truth was forged at Oxford, where he was president of the Oxford Union, a debating society founded on rhetoric and repartee rather than mastery of cold, hard facts.

His privileged cohort in the backstabbing den of student politics provided many leading Brexiteers.

Soon after Oxford, he married his first wife -- fellow student Allegra Mostyn-Owen -- despite her mother's misgivings.

"I didn't like the fact he was on the right," Gaia Servadio, who died in 2021, was quoted as saying by Johnson's biographer Tom Bower.

"But above all, I didn't like his character. For him, the truth doesn't exist."

After university, he was sacked from The Times newspaper after making up a quote, then joined The Telegraph as its Brussels correspondent.

From there, he fed the growing Conservative Euroscepticism of the 1990s with regular "euromyths" about supposed EU plans for a federal mega-state threatening British sovereignty.

Exasperated rivals charged with matching his questionable exclusives described some of his tales as "complete bollocks".

Opportunism

Johnson capitalised on his increasingly high profile with satirical television quiz show appearances and newspaper and magazine columns.

Much of his journalism has since been requoted at length, particularly his unreconstructed views on issues from single mothers and homosexuality to British colonialism.

He became an MP in 2004, with the Tory leader at the time, Michael Howard, sacking him from his shadow cabinet for lying about an extra-marital affair.

From 2008 to 2016 he served two terms as mayor of London, promoting himself as a pro-EU liberal, a stance which he abandoned as soon as the Brexit referendum came about.

He became "leave" campaign's figurehead, capitalising on his popular image as an unconventional but likeable rogue as the quickest route to power.

His former editor at The Telegraph, Max Hastings, described it as cynical -- but not unexpected. Johnson, he said, "cares for no interest save his own fame and gratification".

Hastings wrote in The Times ahead of Johnson's resignation as prime minister that he had "broken every rule of decency, and made no attempt to pursue a coherent policy agenda beyond Brexit".

But he was "the same moral bankrupt as when the Conservative party chose him, as shambolic in his conduct of office as in his management of his life".

After he quit as MP, the Labour party's deputy leader Angela Rayner said the public -- battling a cost-of-living crisis -- have had enough of the "never-ending Tory soap opera".

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Number of Britons working in EU travel sector down more than two-thirds since Brexit – Financial Times

Posted: at 7:09 pm

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Number of Britons working in EU travel sector down more than two-thirds since Brexit - Financial Times

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Barriers to post-Brexit trade likely to ‘deepen’ further, warns EU – Financial Times

Posted: at 7:09 pm

What is included in my trial?

During your trial you will have complete digital access to FT.com with everything in both of our Standard Digital and Premium Digital packages.

Standard Digital includes access to a wealth of global news, analysis and expert opinion. Premium Digital includes access to our premier business column, Lex, as well as 15 curated newsletters covering key business themes with original, in-depth reporting. For a full comparison of Standard and Premium Digital, click here.

Change the plan you will roll onto at any time during your trial by visiting the Settings & Account section.

If you do nothing, you will be auto-enrolled in our premium digital monthly subscription plan and retain complete access for $69 per month.

For cost savings, you can change your plan at any time online in the Settings & Account section. If youd like to retain your premium access and save 20%, you can opt to pay annually at the end of the trial.

You may also opt to downgrade to Standard Digital, a robust journalistic offering that fulfils many users needs. Compare Standard and Premium Digital here.

Any changes made can be done at any time and will become effective at the end of the trial period, allowing you to retain full access for 4 weeks, even if you downgrade or cancel.

You may change or cancel your subscription or trial at any time online. Simply log into Settings & Account and select "Cancel" on the right-hand side.

You can still enjoy your subscription until the end of your current billing period.

We support credit card, debit card and PayPal payments.

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Barriers to post-Brexit trade likely to 'deepen' further, warns EU - Financial Times

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Covid inquiry latest: Brexit hindered pandemic response, counsel says – The Telegraph

Posted: at 7:09 pm

The Covid inquiry has partially blamed Brexit for the countrys failure to preparefor a pandemic.

On the opening day of the inquiry, Hugo Keith KC, counsel to the inquiry, saidthat preparing for Brexit crowded out and prevented the work that was needed to improve pandemic preparedness.

The inquiry has yet to hear evidence from witnesses but Mr Keith said he feared that Brexit had weakened the UKs response to the pandemic rather than strengthened its preparedness.

The pandemic struck the United Kingdom just as it was leaving the European Union, he said.That departure required an enormous amount of planning and preparation, particularly to address what were likely to be the severe consequences of a no-deal exit on food and medicine supplies, travel and transport, business borders and so on.

It is clear that such planning, from 2018 onwards, crowded out and prevented some or perhaps a majority of the improvements that central government itself understood were required to be made to resilience planning and preparedness.

He said that there was a question over whether preparations for a no deal Brexit had harmed contingency plans for a pandemic or had it led to better training or medicalsupplies.

Did the attention therefore paid to the risks of a no-deal exit - Operation Yellowhammer as it was known - drain the resources and capacity that should have been continuing the fight against the next pandemic, that should have been utilised in preparing the United Kingdom for civil emergency?

Or did all that generic and operational planning in fact lead to people being better trained and well-marshalled and, in fact, better prepared to deal with Covid and also to the existence of improved trade, medicine and supply links?

My lady, on the evidence so far - but it will be a matter for you - we very much fear that it was the former.

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Black English Teacher Says He Was Fired For Teaching Dear Martin Book To Students During Black History Month – Yahoo News

Posted: at 7:08 pm

A Black English teacher in Charlotte, North Carolina, has filed a lawsuit against his former charter school, accusing the institution of firing him due to complaints from white parents about his lesson on Dear Martin.

The 2017 book follows 17-year-old Justyce McAllister, an Ivy League-bound high school senior whose life is turned upside down after an incident of police brutality.

According to NC Newsline, the teacher Markayle Gray planned to teach Dear Martin to his 7th-grade honors class for Black History Month. According to the suit, school administrators approved the lesson and it was recommended by Principal Keisha Rock, who is also Black. As are a significant amount of students at Charlotte Secondary School more than 80% of the schools student body is Black, Hispanic or biracial. The school had 23 white students during the 2022-2023 school year. Gray was fired by the school in February.

Gray claims in the lawsuit that his dismissal was racially discriminatory, and that Rock all but admitted that their decision to let him go was due to his Dear Martin lesson.

The suit states that white parents started to complain to school leadership about the lesson in January, saying the novel is divisive and injected what they regarded as unwelcome political views on systemic racial inequality into their childrens classroom. But Gray felt the lesson was important; he claims in the suit that white teachers at the school are not well-versed in teaching lessons that cover politically charged topics like race, gender and sexual orientation.

Charlotte Secondary has filed complaints about multiple white teachers from black parents without taking any disciplinary or corrective steps, much less termination, the lawsuit reads. The schools approach to dealing with such complaints from Black families has consistently been to resign the offended student to another teacher, even when one complaint involved a white arts teacher who made a racially insensitive comment about color complexion of a Black student.

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The lawsuit alleges that, contrary to school policy, Gray was not given a performance improvement plan. It also claims that school leadership neglected theirconflict resolution process to de-escalate the situation.

Grays lead attorney, Artur Davis, attributes Grays firing to a hostile political climate that pushed the Republican-driven North Carolina General Assembly to champion legislation that restricts how teachers approach discussing race in the classroom. According to the North Carolina General Assembly, House Bill 187 stops teachings that the government is inherently racist or was created to oppress people of another race or sex.

Principal Rock and the Charlotte Secondary Board of Directors seem to care more about bowing to political pressure than they do about following their own procedures and policies, Davis said, according to NC Newsline. All Markayle Gray did was teach a novel his supervisors had already approved and they fired him for it.

Dear Martinhas already been banned from other North Carolina schools. In January, Haywood County Schools banned the novel after a parent complained about its explicit language and sexual innuendos.

Rodney Pierce, a social studies teacher in Nash County, has spoken out against House Bill 187 and the government for its stance on how teachers teach certain topics in the classroom. He was shocked to learn about Grays firing. According to NC Newsline, he asked, You mean to tell me, a Black man who graduated from an HBCU [historically Black college and university] cant teach a majority Black student population about issues of racial injustice, from a book written by a Black woman who graduated from an HBCU, during the month designated by our country to recognize and learn about the history of Black Americans, because white families complained?

Grays lawsuit comes amid widespread book bans, as parents try to ban books they find inappropriate from school libraries and classrooms. Last week, Moms for Liberty, a nonprofit organization that aims to stop curriculums that explore LGBTQIA+ rights, race, critical race theory and discrimination, filed close to 200 challenges to remove 20 books they believe are inappropriate for Wake County school libraries, Raleigh News & Observer reported.

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Black English Teacher Says He Was Fired For Teaching Dear Martin Book To Students During Black History Month - Yahoo News

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Sabres Have Great Defensive Options With 13th Overall Pick – The Hockey Writers

Posted: at 7:07 pm

All season long, the Buffalo Sabres struggled defensively, largely due to the injuries and youth of their defensive core. Rasmus Dahlin and Owen Power stepped up to play massive defensive minutes while still contributing to the offense, and Mattias Samuelsson was a defensive rock all year long. The issues came mostly with the likes of Henri Jokiharju, Jacob Bryson, and Ilya Lyubushkin, as each of them had rough patches more often than not.

Since the Sabres have their top three defenders set for the time being, there is a good chance they use the 13th overall pick in this years draft on a defender that could round out that grouping. The 2023 Draft has some very good defensive prospects, and Kevyn Adams will undoubtedly be considering each of them for different reasons. The prospects themselves all provide speed, and a two-way game, which fits perfectly into the teams gameplay structure. The Sabres may still choose to go with a forward to add to their group at 13th overall, but adding a defender makes much more organizational sense.

The first defenseman that needs to be in Adams sights is David Reinbacher. He is a smart two-way right-handed defender that would be a perfect fit on their second pairing with Power. He plays a smooth transitional game and has all the right tools to be a steady NHL defenseman. He has the potential to eventually work his way up the lineup, but his best fit would be alongside a fellow two-way defender like Power.

The issue with Reinbacher is that he is ranked fairly high in the scouting reports, and there is a very good chance he is taken before the 13th overall slot that Buffalo has. If they do want him, they will likely need to move up a few slots to select him. He is the best fit based on play style, handiness, and overall potential, so if he is still available when Buffalo is selecting in the first round, they should pounce on the chance to take him. He is not far off from playing in the NHL, so they would not need to wait to bring him up to the big club in a year or so.

Buffalo already has Dahlin and Power to run the offensive side of their defense, but adding another puck-moving defender would not be a terrible thing to complement either one of them. Axel Sandin Pellikka is also a right-handed shooting defender with a knack for creating offensive chances. He is a bit on the shorter side standing at 5-foot-11, but he has a filled-out frame to handle the NHL fairly soon.

He could make the jump to the NHL next season, but Buffalo is in no hurry to bring in young players right out of their draft year. They have a stable lineup, and they would be a great fit for a young defender like him, who can put up a good amount of points. His future would likely be as a second-pair defender with Power, but he could also run a defensive pair of his own. If he did, it would be great to slot him with the likes of newly signed Ryan Johnson, and then the Sabres would have a very balanced defensive core down to their last pair.

The Sabres lack physicality in every aspect right now, and they could use some grit coming from the back end. Tom Willander would be a great fit for them as he has the speed, defensive awareness, and physical aspects that would fit very well with the Sabres long term. He is a couple of years out from being a fully developed product, but he has the right attitude on him that Don Granato would love to have at his disposal.

As another right-handed shooting defender, he would be a perfect future option to play with Dahlin. Both play a hard-nosed game, but one of them is more offensively inclined, which is perfect to balance the transitional play of both. Dahlin showed that he can do his best work when he has a physical partner that he can rely on to cover for him while he moves the puck up ice, and Willander would be the perfect compliment to him. This would also allow Mattias Samuelsson to move down next to Power, which would have the same effect as it did on Dahlin. If Willander ends up a Sabre, then they will have a very dominant two-way group that can do anything on the ice.

The Sabres have a lot to wrestle with when it comes to using the 13th overall pick this year, but assuming they dont look to the trade or free-agent markets, they could set up their defense long-term by selecting any of these players mentioned. Other honorable mention candidates are first-round worthy selections, but unless they make a trade for an additional first-round pick, they will have to make sure they choose right. With less picks comes less flexibility in how they can select their players, but if they can choose correctly and sign these young prospects early on, they will be set for the future.

Related: Sabres Should Target These 3 Free Agents

In last years 2022 Draft, they had three first-round selections that ended up becoming Matt Savoie, Noah Ostlund, and Jiri Kuluch. All three of these players are forwards, and they are just a few among the other top forward prospects available in the Sabres development system (i.e Prokhor Poltapov, Alex Kisakov, and Tyson Kozak), so they do not need to add more top end offensive talent to their prospect pool. Using this draft to rebuild their defensive depth is something very important for them to address, and with a draft this deep, it is the perfect time to do so.

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Sabres Have Great Defensive Options With 13th Overall Pick - The Hockey Writers

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