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What sign is Australia’s government giving on Gaza?

latest 5

The Guardian

And Could They Go Even Further?

The biggest voices need to admit Australia is a low-taxing nation before joining the economic reform conversation

The biggest voices need to admit Australia is a low-taxing nation before joining the economic reform conversation

Jim Chalmers has reinvigorated the economic policy debate with all the talk now about his economic reform roundtable. Unfortunately, the biggest...

latest 7

The Guardian

Greg Jericho

For a Brummie like me, Ozzy Osbourne’s voice mattered

For a Brummie like me, Ozzy Osbourne’s voice mattered

In the olden days, you could listen over and over again to your musical heroes doing their thing, yet go for years without hearing them speak. The...

latest 7

The Guardian

Adrian Chiles

British ministers are betting they won’t face justice for complicity over Gaza. It’s a big risk to take

British ministers are betting they won’t face justice for complicity over Gaza. It’s a big risk to take

A terrible tipping point in Gaza has been reached. The number of people admitted to hospital or dying from starvation has surged. The journalists’...

latest 7

The Guardian

Owen Jones

Nicola Jennings on Donald Trump and the Epstein files – cartoon

latest 7

The Guardian

Emma Brockes

So Ellen has fled Trump’s US for a ‘simpler’ life in the Cotswolds. Nice if you have the money, don’t you think?

So Ellen has fled Trump’s US for a ‘simpler’ life in the Cotswolds. Nice if you have the money, don’t you think?

You may remember the first half of 2020, when, as light relief during the early stages of the pandemic, we could look towards the banks of...

latest 8

The Guardian

Emma Brockes

Why are we so fascinated by the Coldplay cam couple? It’s about us, not them

Why are we so fascinated by the Coldplay cam couple? It’s about us, not them

It wasn’t just that a man got caught cheating on his wife. It was that he did it in public. With the whole stadium watching. With Chris Martin,...

latest 8

The Guardian

Jessica Ciencin Henriquez

Well done the Lionesses on reaching the final, but not taking the knee was a gift to the racists

Well done the Lionesses on reaching the final, but not taking the knee was a gift to the racists

Love or hate: that seems to be the lot of Black England footballers. Score and the nation adores you – you represent the best of British. Have a...

latest 9

The Guardian

Joseph Harker

Want to import toxic chemicals into Britain with scant scrutiny? Labour says: go right ahead

Want to import toxic chemicals into Britain with scant scrutiny? Labour says: go right ahead

It’s what the extreme right of the Tory party wanted from Brexit: to tear down crucial public protections, including those that defend us from the...

yesterday 100

The Guardian

George Monbiot

Look at the rise of measles in England and ask yourself: have we learned a single thing from Covid?

Look at the rise of measles in England and ask yourself: have we learned a single thing from Covid?

Across parts of the country this week, nursery workers will don plastic aprons and gloves. With more than 500 confirmed cases of a life-threatening...

yesterday 30

The Guardian

Frances Ryan

Britain is lowering the voting age to 16! Meanwhile in our colonial outpost

yesterday 60

The Guardian

Frances Ryan

New rules will radically change the way we use the internet in Australia – and not just social media

New rules will radically change the way we use the internet in Australia – and not just social media

The way we use the internet in Australia is changing. Soon, it won’t just be social media platforms asking to verify your age. Come December, age...

yesterday 40

The Guardian

Samantha Floreani

I was a late-night writer. Colbert’s cancellation hurts American comedy – and sanity

I was a late-night writer. Colbert’s cancellation hurts American comedy – and sanity

Last week – just a few days after Stephen Colbert called out his parent company for paying Donald Trump millions of dollars – CBS canceled the Late...

yesterday 30

The Guardian

Jill Twiss

As Joyce and McCormack attack net zero and rejoice in not being ‘gelded’, Ley’s big challenge is now crystal clear

As Joyce and McCormack attack net zero and rejoice in not being ‘gelded’, Ley’s big challenge is now crystal clear

If there was any doubt Sussan Ley faced an impossible challenge keeping the Coalition together, proof arrived before breakfast on Wednesday. Ley...

yesterday 30

The Guardian

Tom Mcilroy

Nick Cannon, father of 12 children by six women, is launching a relationship advice podcast. Who better?

Nick Cannon, father of 12 children by six women, is launching a relationship advice podcast. Who better?

If you Google “What does Nick Cannon actually do?”, 17 professions, ranging from rapper to businessperson, pop up. Which is just a few more gigs...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Arwa Mahdawi

Should Democrats pursue progressivism or moderation? That’s a false choice

Should Democrats pursue progressivism or moderation? That’s a false choice

“How the Democrats lost the working-class vote”, ran the headline on the New York Times’s front page on 6 January. According to the Times, the...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Michael Massing

From grifter to guru: Hannah Ingram-Moore’s TikTok reinvention is an inspiration to us all

From grifter to guru: Hannah Ingram-Moore’s TikTok reinvention is an inspiration to us all

You have to feel for Hannah Ingram-Moore. One or two teensy little mistakes, like using the charity set up in your dad’s name – of which you were...

yesterday 1

The Guardian

Claire Cohen

Losing Stephen Colbert and The Late Show is a crushing blow, whatever the reason

Losing Stephen Colbert and The Late Show is a crushing blow, whatever the reason

Last Thursday, when Stephen Colbert announced on air that CBS had decided to cancel The Late Show, its flagship late-night comedy program, after 33...

yesterday 7

The Guardian

Adrian Horton

Pete Songi on Kemi Badenoch’s shadow cabinet reshuffle – cartoon

yesterday 9

The Guardian

Andy Beckett

The super-rich have done what protesters never could: taken over the US embassy in London

The super-rich have done what protesters never could: taken over the US embassy in London

Until seven years ago, one of the key centres of American power in Europe was a few minutes’ walk from the consumer frenzy of Oxford Street in...

yesterday 8

The Guardian

Andy Beckett

The supreme court is giving a lawless president the green light

The supreme court is giving a lawless president the green light

Just when we thought the US supreme court couldn’t sink any lower in bowing and scraping to Donald Trump, it issued a shocking order last week that...

yesterday 7

The Guardian

Steven Greenhouse

Is ‘office air’ to blame for your limp workday hair and spotty, flaky skin?

Is ‘office air’ to blame for your limp workday hair and spotty, flaky skin?

Still-life paintings known as vanitas, popular in the 17th century, served as reminders of the transient nature of everything on earth, doomed to...

yesterday 8

The Guardian

Natasha May

I’m witnessing the deliberate starvation of Gaza’s children – why is the world letting it happen?

I’m witnessing the deliberate starvation of Gaza’s children – why is the world letting it happen?

I’m writing this from Nasser hospital in southern Gaza, where I’ve just finished operating on another severely malnourished young teenager. A...

previous day 200

The Guardian

Nick Maynard

Even the Tories now admit that our electoral system is toxic. When will Labour have the guts to fix it?

Even the Tories now admit that our electoral system is toxic. When will Labour have the guts to fix it?

“Gerrymandering!” cry those on the right. But the government’s plan for voting reform, which will allow 16- and 17-year-olds to vote in the next...

previous day 100

The Guardian

Polly Toynbee

Lowering Australia’s voting age to 16 without fortifying civic foundations would be misguided

Lowering Australia’s voting age to 16 without fortifying civic foundations would be misguided

Every few years, Australia resurrects the idea of lowering the voting age to 16 – usually prompted by a campaign or because some other country (with...

previous day 8

The Guardian

Intifar Chowdhury

I’m a writer from the Balkans. Why do people assume I only know about war and tragedy?

I’m a writer from the Balkans. Why do people assume I only know about war and tragedy?

I attended an American writers’ conference in Texas, just before the world plunged into Covid-19 lockdowns. Between panels and networking, I spent...

previous day 20

The Guardian

Ana Schnabl

Can the Coalition start parliament on a positive note?

previous day 7

The Guardian

Ana Schnabl

The story of the Coldplay couple unfolded like a soap opera. But was the pile-on that followed a proportional response?

The story of the Coldplay couple unfolded like a soap opera. But was the pile-on that followed a proportional response?

By now we’ve all seen the video: a couple locked in an intimate embrace at a Coldplay concert. Within milliseconds, the woman turns her face and...

previous day 30

The Guardian

Miski Omar

Why do I still see my siblings as the people they were in childhood?

Why do I still see my siblings as the people they were in childhood?

I am spending a lot of time at my late mother’s house, sorting things out, wondering why she had so much asafoetida and thinking about the past....

previous day 10

The Guardian

Zoe Williams

According to our research, 11% of Trump voters can be won back. Here’s how

According to our research, 11% of Trump voters can be won back. Here’s how

To win in 2028, Democrats need to win back a lot of working-class voters, including a lot of blue-collar Donald Trump voters. Doing so requires...

previous day 70

The Guardian

Dustin Guastella

Trump’s shift on Ukraine has been dramatic – but will it change the war?

Trump’s shift on Ukraine has been dramatic – but will it change the war?

Donald Trump presents himself as a peerless president, an unrivaled negotiator, even a “genius”. So it’s a unique moment when he comes close – I...

previous day 3

The Guardian

Rajan Menon

Obsessed with the Coldplay kiss cam story? I was too, until I realised the sinister truth at the heart of it

Obsessed with the Coldplay kiss cam story? I was too, until I realised the sinister truth at the heart of it

I’m not a curtain-twitcher, OK? I’m just a little bit nosy and happen to procrastinate by staring out of the window. Inspiration rarely strikes...

previous day 40

The Guardian

Arwa Mahdawi

Abolishing Ofwat is fine but not enough: teach water bosses that failure has consequences

Abolishing Ofwat is fine but not enough: teach water bosses that failure has consequences

In a bone dry summer, every drop of water counts. So, even though the rain is finally falling again now, it’s still hard to take it for granted, or...

previous day 9

The Guardian

Gaby Hinsliff

As the culture wars hit England’s schools, we teachers are being thrown into a minefield

As the culture wars hit England’s schools, we teachers are being thrown into a minefield

Parents’ evening. Two words that many parents assume are a source of dread for teachers. But most will tell you this is a misconception. Why?...

previous day 20

The Guardian

Anonymous

What did the people of the Cotswolds do to deserve a visit from JD Vance?

What did the people of the Cotswolds do to deserve a visit from JD Vance?

You have to let politicians go on holiday, I guess. You have to accept the existence of world leaders with whose views you disagree, especially now...

previous day 50

The Guardian

Zoe Williams

What has it taken to unite France’s divided voters? A hated, toxic chemical

What has it taken to unite France’s divided voters? A hated, toxic chemical

A million petition signatures in 10 days? That should tell a government something: that a huge number of citizens aren’t happy with what it has...

previous day 20

The Guardian

Alexander Hurst

Human-level AI is not inevitable. We have the power to change course

Human-level AI is not inevitable. We have the power to change course

“Technology happens because it is possible,” OpenAI CEO, Sam Altman, told the New York Times in 2019, consciously paraphrasing Robert Oppenheimer,...

previous day 30

The Guardian

Garrison Lovely

Legal ruling can’t obscure the brutal reality of climate change for Torres Strait Islanders

Legal ruling can’t obscure the brutal reality of climate change for Torres Strait Islanders

As parliament returns for the first time since the May election, talk is focused on productivity, disastrous childcare failures and how Australia...

previous day 1

The Guardian

Adam Morton

Parliament is back! Hooray! What goodies loom in the giddy maelstrom of our state capture flavoured democracy?

monday 10

The Guardian

Will Hayward

The Tories are on the brink of annihilation in Wales – and it holds a lesson for Westminster politicians

The Tories are on the brink of annihilation in Wales – and it holds a lesson for Westminster politicians

By any measure, Kemi Badenoch’s leadership of the Conservative party is not in a good place. In the last few months alone, she has been told “her...

monday 20

The Guardian

Will Hayward

Why the antagonism over the rise in autism diagnoses? It’s actually good news

Why the antagonism over the rise in autism diagnoses? It’s actually good news

Soaring rates of diagnoses in various illnesses such as cancer and diabetes have stimulated a debate about whether medicine has an “overdiagnosis”...

monday 20

The Guardian

Gina Rippon

Two days less holiday? France is up in arms but my sympathy is limited

Two days less holiday? France is up in arms but my sympathy is limited

France is skint, but the French are in denial. To judge by the howls of outrage from the left and the hard right of the French political spectrum,...

monday 10

The Guardian

Paul Taylor

Fragrant smoke on a wintry Melbourne night rekindles friendships and evokes memories of home in far-off Kabul

Fragrant smoke on a wintry Melbourne night rekindles friendships and evokes memories of home in far-off Kabul

It was one of the rare sunny winter weekends in Melbourne when the air feels nice and warm. I had been avoiding my volleyball group’s calls for...

monday 2

The Guardian

Shadi Khan Saif

Decoding a voter’s poor handwriting is subjective – let’s enlist AI to help with the Bradfield recount

Decoding a voter’s poor handwriting is subjective – let’s enlist AI to help with the Bradfield recount

Liberal candidate Gisele Kapterian has appealed her narrow loss to Nicolette Boele in Bradfield to the court of disputed returns. According to...

monday 20

The Guardian

Simon Jackman

The very worst thing about And Just Like That? The contents of Carrie Bradshaw’s bathroom cabinet

The very worst thing about And Just Like That? The contents of Carrie Bradshaw’s bathroom cabinet

There are so many things to despise about the new season of And Just Like That, the Sex and the City spin-off, that criticising it is like shooting...

monday 5

The Guardian

Emma Beddington

Are non-voters the key to Democrats winning in 2028?

Are non-voters the key to Democrats winning in 2028?

Since Bernie Sanders’s first presidential campaign, the electoral theory of the American left has rested upon the idea that a sizable bloc of...

monday 2

The Guardian

Alex Bronzini-Vender

What the culture war over Superman gets wrong

What the culture war over Superman gets wrong

We’ve entered the era of the superhero movie as sermon. No longer content with saving the world, spandex saviors are now being used to explain,...

monday 50

The Guardian

Noel Ransome

Could you love someone who believed in fairies, wanted an open relationship or even took up golf?

Could you love someone who believed in fairies, wanted an open relationship or even took up golf?

Mercury is in retrograde, if I can believe an unsolicited email trying to sell me psychic services. Maybe that’s why, according to a Dutch gossip...

monday 6

The Guardian

Emma Beddington

Pete Songi on the struggle to clean up Britain’s waterways – cartoon

monday 2

The Guardian

Gaynor Parkin And Dave Winsborough

From corner office to crossroads: navigating purpose and identity after retirement

From corner office to crossroads: navigating purpose and identity after retirement

A few months into an eagerly planned retirement, Martin described the transition as “a seismic shift”. “I thought I had it all figured out,”...

monday 10

The Guardian

Gaynor Parkin And Dave Winsborough