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Trumpism is sinking democratic values. It’s Starmer’s job to steer the UK back to safety

Trumpism is sinking democratic values. It’s Starmer’s job to steer the UK back to safety

The prime minister may pretend to “like and respect” Donald Trump, but elsewhere in parliament anti-Americanism is running hot. In a Lords debate...

yesterday 50

The Guardian

Polly Toynbee

And the award for zero self-awareness goes to second-home owners raging about higher taxes

And the award for zero self-awareness goes to second-home owners raging about higher taxes

Should you have the world’s tiniest violin to hand, prepare to play it. This week, English councils gain the power to double council tax on second...

yesterday 50

The Guardian

Gaby Hinsliff

A lot of mums are angry at Chappell Roan. I just want her to come over and listen to me whinge

A lot of mums are angry at Chappell Roan. I just want her to come over and listen to me whinge

A few weeks ago I told my friend – a good friend – that I was considering having a third kid. The colour washed from her face, and before her...

yesterday 30

The Guardian

Molly Glassey

Today Labour brings in higher wages, because we know we must put money back in working people’s pockets

Today Labour brings in higher wages, because we know we must put money back in working people’s pockets

A few months ago I visited a school in my constituency and took part in a question-and-answer session with young pupils. One girl raised her hand...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Rachel Reeves

From babysitting to keeping a secret, the PM is preferred. But it is the literal pub test where Albo stands out

From babysitting to keeping a secret, the PM is preferred. But it is the literal pub test where Albo stands out

While Australia may not be holding a presidential election, the leaders of the major parties carry the disproportionate burden of personifying the...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Peter Lewis

Donald Trump is eyeing up a third term – and no one is opposing him

Donald Trump is eyeing up a third term – and no one is opposing him

Hell is empty and all the devils are in Washington DC. And, what with devils being immortal and all, it looks as if they might stay there...

yesterday 7

The Guardian

Arwa Mahdawi

Trump claimed he was pro-worker. His new order shows how absurd that was

Trump claimed he was pro-worker. His new order shows how absurd that was

If any workers are still holding on to the notion that Donald Trump is pro-worker or pro-union, his move last week to terminate union bargaining...

yesterday 7

The Guardian

Steven Greenhouse

Democrats still misunderstand working class voters – to their peril

Democrats still misunderstand working class voters – to their peril

Progressives have plenty of bad ideas that should be axed, but populism without an economic promise is a bloodless bleat. It wasn’t long ago that...

yesterday 7

The Guardian

Dustin Guastella

NAD boosters: Kendall Jenner and Hailey Bieber are into them, but do they actually stop ageing?

NAD boosters: Kendall Jenner and Hailey Bieber are into them, but do they actually stop ageing?

The fountain of youth is an enduring legend. Different iterations of the fabled spring – which is said to give anyone who drinks or bathes in its...

yesterday 7

The Guardian

Natasha May

Poor Prince Harry: what to do when someone close to you publicly trashes an institution you love?

Poor Prince Harry: what to do when someone close to you publicly trashes an institution you love?

Straight faces, please, as we try to look charitably at the toxic row engulfing Prince Harry’s charity. Are you up to speed with this everyday...

yesterday 6

The Guardian

Marina Hyde

Labour’s populist pantomime over sentencing rules plays into the hands of the right

Labour’s populist pantomime over sentencing rules plays into the hands of the right

A progressive sentencing guideline that was due to come into force today has been shot down in the crossfire of the culture wars. This is...

yesterday 6

The Guardian

Janey Starling

Andrew Tate is back in Romania. How we handle him will reveal what kind of country we really are

Andrew Tate is back in Romania. How we handle him will reveal what kind of country we really are

A turquoise Koenigsegg Jesko, the world’s fastest car and worth about £2.3m, zipped through central Bucharest at nearly 100mph on Monday 24 March....

yesterday 5

The Guardian

Andrei Popoviciu

Mother’s Day has restored my hope in 2025 – but my kids had nothing to do with it

Mother’s Day has restored my hope in 2025 – but my kids had nothing to do with it

I like to uphold my children’s privacy and respect their wishes, the foremost of which is: “Please respect our privacy by not writing about us.”...

yesterday 40

The Guardian

Zoe Williams

Who actually runs Columbia University?

Who actually runs Columbia University?

Late on Friday evening, the trustees of Columbia University announced that its interim president, Katrina Armstrong, was leaving her post. Six days...

yesterday 80

The Guardian

Arjun Appadurai And Sheldon Pollock

Is my Scottish accent really the problem – or is it just your English ears?

Is my Scottish accent really the problem – or is it just your English ears?

The worst job I had was in a bank in Sydney, dealing with a life insurance policy called Lite Life Direct. It was tedious, repetitive and oddly...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Catriona Stewart

Trump will not stop until every American relic reflects his imaginary world view

Trump will not stop until every American relic reflects his imaginary world view

Last week, Donald Trump issued another executive order, this one aimed directly at the Smithsonian Institution, and called for “Restoring Truth and...

yesterday 20

The Guardian

Kellie Carter Jackson

Pete Songi on Donald Trump’s ‘liberation day’ – cartoon

yesterday 5

The Guardian

Kellie Carter Jackson

The Guardian view on Donald Trump’s tariffs: a spectacle of struggle and control

The Guardian view on Donald Trump’s tariffs: a spectacle of struggle and control

Donald Trump has probably not read much Michel Foucault. But he appears to embody the French philosopher’s claim that “politics is the...

yesterday 1

The Guardian

Editorial

The Guardian view on South Sudan: the world’s youngest nation is on the brink of a new conflict

The Guardian view on South Sudan: the world’s youngest nation is on the brink of a new conflict

After less than a decade and a half in existence, the world’s newest country, South Sudan, appears to be sliding towards a second civil war. A 2018...

yesterday 1

The Guardian

Editorial

Republicans are quietly trying to disenfranchise millions of voters

Republicans are quietly trying to disenfranchise millions of voters

The first months of the new Trump administration have been dizzying with the breadth of executive actions to slash the social safety net, further...

previous day 100

The Guardian

Alexis Anderson-Reed

The Trump administration’s roundup of student protesters is genuinely shocking

The Trump administration’s roundup of student protesters is genuinely shocking

The defining feature of American democracy, you could be forgiven for having thought, is that you can say what you think without having to fear...

previous day 80

The Guardian

Jameel Jaffer

How has Deliveroo turned a profit? By slashing the pay and dismantling the rights of riders like me

How has Deliveroo turned a profit? By slashing the pay and dismantling the rights of riders like me

It’s taken Deliveroo more than a decade to do it, but this month, the company made an annual profit for the first time. This might come as a...

previous day 20

The Guardian

Shaf Hussain

Men get more disgusted as they age? It’s only a matter of time before my husband sees the real, slovenly me

Men get more disgusted as they age? It’s only a matter of time before my husband sees the real, slovenly me

What disgusts you? I hope it’s not inexpertly summarised research, because I have been intrigued by the recently reported finding that men get more...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Emma Beddington

Logging is quietly ravaging US forests. Trump is taking an axe to protections

Logging is quietly ravaging US forests. Trump is taking an axe to protections

The world is running out of time to halt deforestation and forest degradation. Yet instead of stepping up, the United States is dismantling forest...

previous day 50

The Guardian

Jennifer Skene

Peter Dutton’s gas plan is a superficial solution to a real problem. Australians deserve better

Peter Dutton’s gas plan is a superficial solution to a real problem. Australians deserve better

Peter Dutton says his policies would reduce the wholesale price of gas on Australia’s east coast from $14 a gigajoule to $10 a gigajoule by...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Tony Wood

Social media is awash with ‘heteropessimism’. Do young women really think so poorly of men?

Social media is awash with ‘heteropessimism’. Do young women really think so poorly of men?

How is the ideal heterosexual girlfriend supposed to behave? This played on my mind after I watched Companion, a film about a loutish millennial...

previous day 30

The Guardian

Rachel Connolly

Trump’s US doesn’t just think Europe is obsolete – it wants to see it dead

Trump’s US doesn’t just think Europe is obsolete – it wants to see it dead

The “Signalgate” scandal confirmed what Europeans already knew. The Trump administration’s disdain for Europe is deep and the transatlantic...

previous day 100

The Guardian

Nathalie Tocci

Americans are beginning to fear dissent. That’s exactly what Trump wants

Americans are beginning to fear dissent. That’s exactly what Trump wants

I was talking recently to a friend who’s a professor at Columbia University about what’s been happening there. He had a lot to say. When he needed...

previous day 100

The Guardian

Robert Reich

Love, actually: How intimacy survives marriage and motherhood

Love, actually: How intimacy survives marriage and motherhood

The first thing a friend did when I told her the title of my book was laugh. “The Sex Lives of Married Women?” She asked. “You mean The No Sex...

previous day 30

The Guardian

Saman Shad

Vance’s posturing in Greenland was not just morally wrong. It was strategically disastrous

Vance’s posturing in Greenland was not just morally wrong. It was strategically disastrous

No one would allow that he could not see these much-admired clothes; because, in doing so, he would have declared himself either a simpleton or...

previous day 650

The Guardian

Timothy Snyder

As Trump rewrites even America’s history, institutions have two choices – submit or find ways to resist

As Trump rewrites even America’s history, institutions have two choices – submit or find ways to resist

It has come to this: we are now in Ministry of Truth territory. In Washington DC, the Smithsonian Institution, the US’s ensemble of 21 great...

previous day 40

The Guardian

Charlotte Higgins

The siege of Khartoum has lifted. Left behind are scenes of unimaginable horror

The siege of Khartoum has lifted. Left behind are scenes of unimaginable horror

Ten days ago, in a major turning point in almost two years of war, the Sudanese army reclaimed the capital city from the Rapid Support Forces (RSF)...

previous day 40

The Guardian

Nesrine Malik

Palestinians must have the final say in Gaza’s reconstruction

Palestinians must have the final say in Gaza’s reconstruction

On the 17th night of Ramadan – a time meant for prayer, reflection and mercy – Gaza burned. Once again, our screens fill with images too harrowing...

previous day 4

The Guardian

Ahmad Ibsais

How to fight a fascist state – what I learned from a second world war briefing for secret agents

How to fight a fascist state – what I learned from a second world war briefing for secret agents

The SOE Syllabus was a series of lectures given to prospective secret agents in Britain during the second world war. These “lessons in...

previous day 2

The Guardian

Zoe Williams

With this damning of Le Pen, France can be the ‘anti-Trump’. It’s a bold path others should follow

With this damning of Le Pen, France can be the ‘anti-Trump’. It’s a bold path others should follow

The French justice system chose courage over surrender. The law was clear, and so was the court in its sentencing: no special treatment for Marine...

previous day 3

The Guardian

Alexander Hurst

The Guardian view on the Marine Le Pen verdict: no politician is above the law

The Guardian view on the Marine Le Pen verdict: no politician is above the law

Emmanuel Macron’s troubled second presidential term was already set to go down as one of the most turbulent in the history of France’s Fifth...

previous day 3

The Guardian

Alexander Hurst

The Guardian view on special needs education: inclusion must be about more than saving money

The Guardian view on special needs education: inclusion must be about more than saving money

The financial threat hanging over English councils, as a result of the last government’s decision to mask special needs overspending with an...

previous day 3

The Guardian

Editorial

Rebecca Hendin on the tussle of wills between Trump and Putin – cartoon

previous day 2

The Guardian

Alexander Hurst

The Guardian view on attacks on lawyers: democracies must stand up for justice

The Guardian view on attacks on lawyers: democracies must stand up for justice

What the law says on paper is irrelevant if it cannot be upheld, or even stated clearly. That is why lawyers are targeted – with harassment,...

sunday 20

The Guardian

Editorial

Labour’s historic attack on disabled people is already wrecking lives. Just ask Kevin

Labour’s historic attack on disabled people is already wrecking lives. Just ask Kevin

What has just happened, and where are we now? Three long weeks ago, the government began to announce all those cuts to disability and sickness...

sunday 30

The Guardian

John Harris

Never ask ‘what’s for dinner’ and hide food from teenagers – my essential rules for happy home dining

Never ask ‘what’s for dinner’ and hide food from teenagers – my essential rules for happy home dining

“You’ll never eat a good meal in a restaurant that puts caviar on scrambled eggs”; “Your dining companions should have a say in what you order”; “...

sunday 8

The Guardian

Emma Beddington

Alex felt demoralised by the suggestion he should ‘be more resilient’. He learned that it is an ongoing process

Alex felt demoralised by the suggestion he should ‘be more resilient’. He learned that it is an ongoing process

Alex* was positively seething at his friend’s suggestion to “be a bit more resilient” in the face of a recent setback at work. “I wonder what they...

sunday 10

The Guardian

Bianca Denny

‘Don’t you have friends to go with?’: the stigma and joy of a table for one

‘Don’t you have friends to go with?’: the stigma and joy of a table for one

I once told a colleague that I was going to Amsterdam on a solo trip to wine and dine alone. “Do you not have any friends to go with?” she replied....

sunday 10

The Guardian

Emma Gannon

The Guardian view on new forests: a vision born in the Midlands is worth imitating

The Guardian view on new forests: a vision born in the Midlands is worth imitating

The benefits for bats were presumably not at the top of the government’s list of reasons for announcing the creation of the new western forest. The...

sunday 10

The Guardian

Editorial

Squaring up to death after my cancer diagnosis gave me a deeper appreciation of life

Squaring up to death after my cancer diagnosis gave me a deeper appreciation of life

Lauren Laverne says she loves her life more now that she’s had cancer. I know exactly what she means. Imagine you’re diagnosed with cancer. Do you...

sunday 20

The Guardian

Matt Forde

I’ve got the message: security leaks are no laughing matter

I’ve got the message: security leaks are no laughing matter

During the Brexit era, it became obvious many comments under these columns were being placed by Russian trolls, with slightly strange grasps of...

sunday 10

The Guardian

Stewart Lee

The storm-battered chancellor needs her nextdoor neighbour to be a steadfast friend

The storm-battered chancellor needs her nextdoor neighbour to be a steadfast friend

After her jaunt to the O2, Rachel Reeves may be aware that the musical oeuvre of Sabrina Carpenter includes I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking...

sunday 20

The Guardian

Andrew Rawnsley

Let Britain’s magical, mythical creatures inspire a patriotism untainted by politics

Let Britain’s magical, mythical creatures inspire a patriotism untainted by politics

It is possible to have too much trust in a marriage. The mythic Welsh warrior Lleu Llaw Gyffes, who appears to have been bigger on brawn than...

sunday 30

The Guardian

Kate Maltby

Who could begrudge Rachel Reeves free tickets when she was, er, just trying to be a good parent?

Who could begrudge Rachel Reeves free tickets when she was, er, just trying to be a good parent?

In terms of Reeves’ family values, the chancellor of the exchequer can hardly be faulted, she has been explaining, for snagging box tickets to a...

sunday 40

The Guardian

Catherine Bennett

Yoko Ono is now getting acclaim, but why do rock stars’ female partners get so much abuse?

Yoko Ono is now getting acclaim, but why do rock stars’ female partners get so much abuse?

More than 50 years after John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s 1969 bed-in, protesting against war, Ono finally gets her love-in. David Sheff’s biography...

sunday 40

The Guardian

Barbara Ellen