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The Guardian

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At Zohran Mamdani’s block party, I observed a simple truth: people want more politics, not less

latest 40

The Guardian

Samuel Earle

The hill I will die on: Fan fiction is real literature, whatever the snobs say

latest 10

The Guardian

Urooj Ashfaq 

I’m not sure a bakery needs a branded condom – can any business resist selling merch now?

latest 60

The Guardian

Elle Hunt

Migrants are at the heart of our art, our music, our whole history. That’s what the right won’t admit to you

latest 20

The Guardian

Rowan Williams

Here’s a pick-me-up for the January blues: this could well be Nigel Farage’s last year on top

I fear for Nigel Farage. This should be his big year, the make-or-break 2026. Last year his Reform party finally began to top the polls and he was...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Simon Jenkins

From bon appetit to Uber Eats: why France’s beloved restaurants are in crisis

Spare a thought for the poor French restaurateur. Once the iconic image of a sybaritic nation that loved nothing more than a boozy meal out with...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Paul Taylor

The hill I will die on: PDAs on the morning commute are never acceptable

First and foremost, let me say: I love love. I’m in love – I’m happily married with two boys. I’m surrounded by love, because most of my...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Michael Akadiri

Ignore the sceptics: with this new vaccine, chickenpox could become a thing of the past

As any parent knows, there are few things more disruptive to family life than a child covered from head to toe in itchy chickenpox spots. The...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Wes Streeting

Australia’s stance on Afghan cricket is flawed – and deeply painful for people like me. There is another path

The scenes at Brisbane airport that summer a few years ago did not feel real. The terminal was almost empty, but security was intense. Medics in...

yesterday 9

The Guardian

Shadi Khan Saif

Bondi is where I have felt safe all my life. How could anyone want to destroy this monument to humanity and joy?

I keep taking the bus through Bondi with my children. Approaching the stop on Campbell Parade, I want to get off the bus, walk across the road past...

yesterday 9

The Guardian

Alice Fraser

The world’s gone barking mad. In this era of canine exceptionalism, can humanity stage a comeback?

I’m becoming concerned that we as a species have gone to the dogs – quite literally. Somewhere between the rise of boutique pet grooming and...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Farhana Dawood

The Guardian view on Gaza’s winter: the world must take heed as Palestinian suffering deepens again

As Gaza enters the bleakest period of winter, children are dying of hypothermia, drowning in flooded camps and burning to death as their families...

yesterday 20

The Guardian

Editorial

What if floods left your home unsellable? That’s the reality facing more and more people in Britain

When I visited Christine’s bungalow in Trowell, Nottinghamshire, and asked if I should take my shoes off, she joked: “I wouldn’t worry, I’ll be...

yesterday 40

The Guardian

Kirsty Major

Islamophobia has surged since the Bondi attack. Australia’s Muslim community should not have to endure this abuse

While many Australians remain in a state of anger, grief and reflection due to the devastating Bondi terror attack, Muslim community leaders are in...

yesterday 30

The Guardian

Aftab Malik

From Donald Trump to Benjamin Netanyahu, let 2026 be a year of reckoning

It’s not quite a new year resolution, and it’s certainly not a prediction. Think of it instead as a hope or even a plea for the next 12 months. May...

yesterday 3

The Guardian

Jonathan Freedland

The Guardian view on care leavers: responsibility for looked-after children does not end at 18

The outcomes for children who grow up in care are shocking. A vital part of the welfare state, which exists to promote the safety and wellbeing of...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Editorial

They tried to smear him as an antisemite – but Mayor Zohran Mamdani walks in a rich Jewish tradition

Billionaires raised fortunes against him. The president threatened to strip his citizenship. Mainstream synagogues slandered him as the spawn of...

previous day 100

The Guardian

Molly Crabapple

At the turn of the year, I’m facing a pivot point. Midlife crisis? No thanks

According to research undertaken by Stanford Medicine in 2024, adult human beings are subject to two “massive biomolecular shifts” – spikes in...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Emma Brockes

Cecilia Giménez’s botched Monkey Christ became a global meme. The real marvel was the woman behind it

Very few of us find fame quite as late, or quite as brutally, as Cecilia Giménez did in the summer of 2012. The Spanish amateur artist was already...

previous day 50

The Guardian

Sam Jones

The hill I will die on: enough of the ‘Hey you!’ faux friend nonsense. You’re a business, not my mate

How do you feel when big corporations address you directly? (In other words, when they use the second-person pronoun “you” in their...

previous day 50

The Guardian

Max Fletcher

I’ve been a New Yorker for 23 years. Today Zohran Mamdani’s swearing-in makes this city a real home

On a cold Saturday morning, a little over a week before the New York City mayoral election in November, I was at a park in Queens to speak at a...

previous day 50

The Guardian

Mona Eltahawy

At 51, I’m about to start work as a junior doctor. It’s been a wild ride to get here

For the past four years I’ve been breaking every rule of appropriate, normal behaviour. I’ve poked, probed, inserted, stabbed and cut people in...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Ben Collins

When racists shout ‘Go home’, and you come from 15 places, what to do?

While accepting that David Lammy, the deputy prime minister and justice secretary is, for many, the human embodiment of Marmite – loved or hated,...

previous day 60

The Guardian

Hugh Muir

The Guardian view on mRNA vaccines: they are the future – with or without Donald Trump

The late scientist and thinker Donald Braben argued that 20th-century breakthroughs arose from scientists being free to pursue bold ideas without...

previous day 50

The Guardian

Editorial

The best way to get round a difficult problem? Do nothing about it

If you really want to solve a problem, try doing nothing about it. Fold some laundry. Stir a risotto. Go for a run, watch a film, try to entertain...

previous day 7

The Guardian

Gaby Hinsliff

Pete Songi on the UK government’s new year’s resolutions – cartoon

previous day 10

The Guardian

Gaby Hinsliff

What is Keir Starmer doing to push back the populists? Not nearly enough. We have a plan to take them on

The next general election will be no ordinary democratic contest. Not the usual swing of the pendulum this way or that. It will be a key moment in...

previous day 7

The Guardian

Chris Powell

The Guardian view on hard times for Britain’s charities: struggling to do more with less

Speaking in a parliamentary debate on the voluntary sector, not long after Labour’s huge election victory, the party’s former MP Jeff Rooker evoked...

wednesday 10

The Guardian

Editorial

Yes, women’s rights are under threat around the world. But we’ve found hope in unlikely places

In 2025, the world that had been opened up by women has often seemed to be closing in. The forces behind the rollback of abortion rights in Donald...

wednesday 40

The Guardian

Rahila Gupta

A polycrisis has shattered our world this year. But with care, we can put it back together

I once saw a young glassblower in Istanbul, still new to his craft, shatter a beautiful vase while taking it out of the furnace. The artisan master...

wednesday 30

The Guardian

Elif Shafak

The one trick to nailing parenting this summer? Delete Instagram

One afternoon, on a quiet coastal holiday with my family, I lay down for a nap. The day up until then had been full of the simplest pleasures I...

wednesday 30

The Guardian

Léa Antigny

Labubus, Taylor Swift and Sydney Sweeney: here’s the deluge that was 2025

It’s the end of another year, which means a deluge of dire looks back on the various atrocities of the last go around the sun. As is my duty, I...

wednesday 10

The Guardian

Dave Schilling

The WHO learned to love ‘anti-obesity’ jabs in 2025. I don’t fully agree, but I get it

If there has been a hot topic in health in 2025, it’s definitely been GLP-1s, colloquially referred to as “anti-obesity” jabs. These medications,...

wednesday 8

The Guardian

Devi Sridhar

The hill I will die on: That stone-cold classic you love isn’t a party starter – it’s a party destroyer

It’s that moment at a Black party you either love or hate. Cameo’s Candy, one of the all-time great funk records, comes on and everyone lines up...

wednesday 20

The Guardian

Nels Abbey

Alaa Abd el-Fattah’s tweets were wrong, but he is no ‘anti-white Islamist’. Why does the British right want you to believe he is?

What is the proper punishment for hateful social media posts? Should you lose your account? Your job? Your citizenship? Go to jail? Die? For the...

wednesday 90

The Guardian

Naomi Klein

We’ve had a skinful: drinks to toast the end of the political year

wednesday 3

The Guardian

For Most Of These Tipples

Bad cops prey on the public – and their fellow officers. To stop them, we must break the culture of silence

Last year, part one of Elish Angiolini’s government-commissioned inquiry into the abduction, rape and murder of Sarah Everard by Wayne Couzens, an...

wednesday 30

The Guardian

Mukund Krishna

I could not forgive the father who left me. Until a chance encounter changed my outlook

Forgiveness isn’t a destination. It’s a journey. Mine began on an escalator at Berlin Brandenburg airport. It was a Sunday afternoon. I was...

wednesday 20

The Guardian

Carolin Würfel

The Guardian view on the new Monroe doctrine: Trump’s forceful approach to the western hemisphere comes at a cost

The Guardian view on the new Monroe doctrine: Trump’s forceful approach to the western hemisphere comes at a cost

Donald Trump is not generally noted as a student of history. Yet over the past year, his decisive reorientation of US foreign policy towards the...

30.12.2025 40

The Guardian

Editorial

As we prepare for 2026, remember we have the power to make our future

As we prepare for 2026, remember we have the power to make our future

When we talk about opposition in politics, sometimes it’s just a policy disagreement – but in the current political crisis in the US, the...

30.12.2025 70

The Guardian

Rebecca Solnit

Psst: wanna buy a new year’s honour? Once it was simple. And now? Well, don’t rule it out

Psst: wanna buy a new year’s honour? Once it was simple. And now? Well, don’t rule it out

And so the new year honours list is out. The people – some of them at least – have spoken: here comes a fresh tranche of the great and good. Many...

30.12.2025 20

The Guardian

Stephen Bates

Why is the Democratic party hiding its 2024 autopsy report?

Why is the Democratic party hiding its 2024 autopsy report?

The Democratic National Committee’s decision to block the release of its own autopsy report on the 2024 election is stunning but not surprising....

30.12.2025 30

The Guardian

Norman Solomon

The hill I will die on: Never decline an invitation on the day of the event. Ghosting is the humane option

The hill I will die on: Never decline an invitation on the day of the event. Ghosting is the humane option

As New Year’s Eve looms, I implore you to heed this party etiquette advice. There are only two correct times to decline a party invitation: well in...

30.12.2025 20

The Guardian

Phineas Harper

You’ll never defeat us in Iran, President Trump: but with real talks, we can both win

You’ll never defeat us in Iran, President Trump: but with real talks, we can both win

While Benjamin Netanyahu earlier this year achieved his dream of dragging the US into a military confrontation with Iran, it came at a steep and...

30.12.2025 20

The Guardian

Abbas Araghchi

Snap decisions: why crowding into a photo booth with friends is still a magical experience

Snap decisions: why crowding into a photo booth with friends is still a magical experience

Last New Year’s Eve, I was out with a friend. We had no plans, so we met at a local cinema and then wandered the long street between our houses,...

30.12.2025 2

The Guardian

Nova Weetman

The royal family is edging toward modernity – but in 2026, the public will expect yet more transparency

The royal family is edging toward modernity – but in 2026, the public will expect yet more transparency

This year, as King Charles gathered with the royal family for their traditional Christmas at Sandringham, he had much to reflect on. Certainly, the...

30.12.2025 10

The Guardian

Anna Whitelock

Officers armed with assault rifles will patrol Sydney’s streets. But do more imposing police make us feel any safer?

Chris Minns wants more visible weapons on Sydney’s streets to keep us safe. The New South Wales premier authorised some police to carry assault...

30.12.2025 10

The Guardian

Anne Davies

Do your new year’s resolutions fit the temper of the times?

30.12.2025 9

The Guardian

Glen Berman

2025 was the year we grew tired of celebrity for celebrity’s sake

2025 was the year we grew tired of celebrity for celebrity’s sake

When Katy Perry and five other women were launched into space in Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin rocket, no doubt they expected to be celebrated as...

30.12.2025 30

The Guardian

Nadia Khomami

Labour could oust Starmer, he could elegantly step aside – but without a plan, it will all be for nothing

Labour could oust Starmer, he could elegantly step aside – but without a plan, it will all be for nothing

Will he still be there to see in the next new year? Noise about Keir Starmer’s durability quietens with MPs being away from Westminster’s tearooms...

30.12.2025 20

The Guardian

Polly Toynbee