|  | GREATBRITAIN | Bulldog can stand for this new trainer with bait (edge of gammon) (5,7) | 
|  | OVATION | One may stand for this new idea, not local | 
|  | MARSEILLAISE | Many a Frenchman will stand for this strain (12) | 
|  | HOSTAGECOACH | Trainer with a captive audience? | 
|  | INTERSTELLAR | Archer invested in new trainers, filling deep space (12) | 
|  | REMAINSEATED | Don't stand for this clue! (6,6) | 
|  | BLM | Initialism that can stand for Black Lives Matter or for Bureau of Land Management, as Tanya learned in the first season of "The White Lotus" | 
|  | GRIND | Make meal of top of gammon and part of it one cuts off (5) | 
|  | WASHINGTON | Nothing was new for this new president (10) | 
|  | STARTREKBEYOND | Principal photography for this new sci-fi movie took place in Vancouver and Squamish: 3 wds. | 
|  | NAMEANDADDRESS | Officer may ask for this new outfit to protect a poor father (4,3,7) | 
|  | INERTIA | I put new trainer right off with my inability to move (7) | 
|  | GLORIFIED | Praised first piece of gammon cooked fried with oil (9) | 
|  | LIE | Don't stand for this form of dishonesty (3) | 
|  | NATIONALANTHEM | Royalists stand for this country boy with the mike (8,6) | 
|  | ANTIDOPING | The letters in the middle of NADA stand for this. (4-6) | 
|  | RIGHTREVEREND | The designation RR for a bishop in the Church of England stands for this (5,8) | 
|  | EVE | New Year's ___ (what NYE can stand for in addition to being a last name, as in our two theme clues) | 
|  | ACL | Initialism that can stand for a body part or a Texas music festival | 
|  | HRH | Regnal abbreviation whose first letter can stand for two different words |