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The Guardian

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It’s been a busy month for Anthony Albanese on the environment

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The Guardian

Talk About Climate Whiplash

The Trump-Kennedy Center is another front in the battle for the soul of America

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The Guardian

Charlotte Higgins

What ICE is doing on US streets looks terrifying, but don’t forget: it could happen anywhere

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The Guardian

Nesrine Malik

Did God fix a football match? Welcome to the great divine intervention debate

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The Guardian

Ravi Holy

The 75 hard challenge has come roaring back - but I have my own self-improvement regime

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The Guardian

Emma Beddington

On embracing the ‘urgency of now’ and unconditional love on MLK Day

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The Guardian

Kellie Carter Jackson

From Trump’s rejected treaties to our daily lives, we’re building walls around ourselves

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The Guardian

Anand Pandian

No amount of defections will change the fact that Reform and the Tories are singing the same tunes

No amount of defections will change the fact that Reform and the Tories are singing the same tunes

The Birmingham reggae band UB40 began as a quintessential product of the troubled era when Margaret Thatcher was the UK’s prime minister, archly...

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The Guardian

John Harris

Nicola Jennings on Greenland, Trump and tariffs – cartoon

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The Guardian

Gaby Hinsliff

If it wasn’t clear before, it is now: Britain needs an escape plan from the Trump world order

If it wasn’t clear before, it is now: Britain needs an escape plan from the Trump world order

One way or the other, President Trump said, he will have Greenland. Well, at least now we know it’s the other; not an invasion that would have sent...

latest 40

The Guardian

Gaby Hinsliff

Why am I a vegan? I do it for my mental health

Why am I a vegan? I do it for my mental health

Let’s get this out of the way, because I’m itching to tell you (again): I’m vegan, and this is our time, Veganuary! Imagine me doing a weak,...

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The Guardian

Emma Beddington

The perils of perfectionism – and why ‘good enough’ should be your goal

The perils of perfectionism – and why ‘good enough’ should be your goal

New year’s resolutions are catnip for perfectionism. Each January we are invited to reinvent ourselves as fitter, more productive, more virtuous,...

latest 40

The Guardian

Gill Straker And Jacqui Winship

Abolishing ICE isn’t enough – it’s time to center people’s humanity

Abolishing ICE isn’t enough – it’s time to center people’s humanity

On 7 January 2026, Renee Good was killed by ICE agent Jonathan Ross; video captures a man’s voice calling her a “fucking bitch” afterwards. Kristi...

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The Guardian

Heba Gowayed And Victor Ray

Iran cannot be bombed into democracy. But it can be helped to find its way there

Iran cannot be bombed into democracy. But it can be helped to find its way there

Soon after becoming president in 2017, Donald Trump ordered an attack on an Islamic State (IS) underground complex in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar...

yesterday 40

The Guardian

Simon Tisdall

For all the talk of Australian values our rights as citizens and humans remain fragile

For all the talk of Australian values our rights as citizens and humans remain fragile

The very idea that all human beings have inalienable rights, and that humanity is distinctive and precious, is under serious assault. This year...

yesterday 30

The Guardian

Julianne Schultz

Does my obsession with old trinkets make me a hoarder or a sentimental maximalist?

Does my obsession with old trinkets make me a hoarder or a sentimental maximalist?

It’s important to state that I am the most insufferably sentimental person I know. There are old birthday cards collecting dust in my jam-packed...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Eleanor Burnard

Weight-loss drugs do nothing to address the troubled relationships we have with our bodies

Weight-loss drugs do nothing to address the troubled relationships we have with our bodies

Fifty years ago, I started thinking about the demand for women to look a certain way and the rebellions against the narrow ways in which we were...

yesterday 20

The Guardian

Susie Orbach

Why the US needs a new antiwar movement – and how it can win

Why the US needs a new antiwar movement – and how it can win

In spring 2004, Gen Anthony Zinni uttered about Iraq the dreaded words in US politics: “I spent two years in Vietnam, and I’ve seen this movie...

yesterday 40

The Guardian

Jeremy Varon

The Republicans’ latest Clinton stunt will not work

The Republicans’ latest Clinton stunt will not work

I’ve got a sneaking suspicion that, somewhere in a makeshift situation room in Mar-a-Lago, there’s a whiteboard with “very high IQ strategies to...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Arwa Mahdawi

Racial quotas for immigration are back

Racial quotas for immigration are back

On 14 January, the Trump administration announced a stop on issuing immigrant visas for applicants from 75 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Heba Gowayed

I went to A&E with a broken wrist and caught a dose of ‘I’ve been lucky’ syndrome

I went to A&E with a broken wrist and caught a dose of ‘I’ve been lucky’ syndrome

It was a bad start to the new year. Slipping on ice, I fell and broke my right wrist, so now I can’t hold a pen with my writing hand. But my...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Polly Toynbee

French farmers wrongly accuse Brussels of betrayal. Macron’s complicity could help the far right to victory

French farmers wrongly accuse Brussels of betrayal. Macron’s complicity could help the far right to victory

Once again, France’s farmers have been blocking motorways with their tractors in protest, this time at an impending EU trade agreement with a group...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Paul Taylor

The life of civil rights hero Claudette Colvin should teach us this: resistance is collective, and it never stops

The life of civil rights hero Claudette Colvin should teach us this: resistance is collective, and it never stops

“In life, there’s the beginning and the end,” John Carlos, the African American sprinter who raised his fist in a black power salute from the...

previous day 60

The Guardian

Gary Younge

The hill I will die on: Stag and hen dos should be fun, not bankrupting endurance tests

The hill I will die on: Stag and hen dos should be fun, not bankrupting endurance tests

A stag or hen do should be a straightforward, fun night celebrating a good friend moving into a new chapter of their life. Instead, thanks to films...

previous day 20

The Guardian

Liam Pape

Americans disapprove of Trump’s foreign policy. His escapades are likely to cost him

Americans disapprove of Trump’s foreign policy. His escapades are likely to cost him

Donald Trump’s blitzkrieg since his 3 January seizure of the Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro has been guided by his triumph of the will, as he...

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The Guardian

Sidney Blumenthal

Samuel Ojo on competitive pressure at the gym – cartoon

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The Guardian

Mara Wilson

My picture was used in child abuse images. AI is putting others through my nightmare

My picture was used in child abuse images. AI is putting others through my nightmare

When I was a little girl, there was nothing scarier than a stranger. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, kids were told, by our parents, by TV...

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The Guardian

Mara Wilson

Don’t look away as the people of Iran cry out for our help

Don’t look away as the people of Iran cry out for our help

Did you notice history being made this week? I am not referring to what may have been the most pathetic moment in recorded time – Donald Trump...

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The Guardian

Jonathan Freedland

Are Trader Joe’s tote bags the last vestige of American soft power?

Are Trader Joe’s tote bags the last vestige of American soft power?

There aren’t many escapes from the grim onslaught of terrible news these days. You can stare at a blank wall, obsessively count the hairs on your...

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The Guardian

Dave Schilling

At the root of all our problems stands one travesty: politicians’ surrender to the super-rich

At the root of all our problems stands one travesty: politicians’ surrender to the super-rich

There is one political problem from which all others follow. It is the major cause of Donald Trump, of Nigel Farage, of the shocking weakness of...

previous day 200

The Guardian

George Monbiot

So much for a ‘final battle’ – once again the Iranian people’s peaceful and democratic demands have been silenced

So much for a ‘final battle’ – once again the Iranian people’s peaceful and democratic demands have been silenced

In late December, Iran experienced the beginnings of an uprising driven primarily by economic pressures, initially emerging among merchant bazaaris...

previous day 20

The Guardian

Behrouz Boochani And Mehdi Jalali Tehrani

Is Greenland showing Trump’s true colours?

previous day 20

The Guardian

Mohamad Bazzi

Trump has pulled back from the brink on Iran – for now

Trump has pulled back from the brink on Iran – for now

Will Donald Trump order a US military attack on Iran? That question captivated the world for the past two weeks, as the US president issued...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Mohamad Bazzi

Panicking over Greenland plays into Trump’s hands – it’s time for cool heads and stalling diplomacy

Panicking over Greenland plays into Trump’s hands – it’s time for cool heads and stalling diplomacy

Is Greenland Donald Trump’s 25th-amendment moment? Last time around, this was when the Washington “grownups” debated his capacity to be president,...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Simon Jenkins

Has a Nazi theorist’s vision of a world divided into ‘great spaces’ found a new advocate in Trump?

Has a Nazi theorist’s vision of a world divided into ‘great spaces’ found a new advocate in Trump?

It is axiomatic to many of his critics that the US president, Donald Trump, is a fascist. Indeed, some have seen echoes of the work of the Nazis’ “...

friday 100

The Guardian

Brendan Simms

Say what you will about Trump, but unlike Starmer he knows his own power – and how to use it

Say what you will about Trump, but unlike Starmer he knows his own power – and how to use it

Last weekend, as the world wondered whether Donald Trump would swipe Greenland, Keir Starmer made his own big geographic intervention: he published...

friday 50

The Guardian

Aditya Chakrabortty

Aside from creepy surveillance, what are ‘consumer-ready’ service robots actually for?

Aside from creepy surveillance, what are ‘consumer-ready’ service robots actually for?

There’s something particularly dystopian about watching the mute headlines of daytime television play at the gym. It feels like a movie montage;...

friday 10

The Guardian

Samantha Floreani

By seeking to defuse domestic tensions over Gaza, West Midlands police ended up making matters worse

By seeking to defuse domestic tensions over Gaza, West Midlands police ended up making matters worse

It was an infamous night in football. More than 5,000 Dutch police officers had to be deployed to contain hundreds of Israeli fans embarking on a...

friday 2

The Guardian

Gaby Hinsliff

I never thought I’d see an asylum hotel on fire, or worry about my staff’s safety. The past five years changed that

I never thought I’d see an asylum hotel on fire, or worry about my staff’s safety. The past five years changed that

It is difficult to think of another area of government policy that has weathered as much legislative hyperactivity as asylum and migration. I have...

friday 30

The Guardian

Enver Solomon

Are our bodies full of microplastics or not? There’s a way to resolve this debate, and scientists must hurry

Are our bodies full of microplastics or not? There’s a way to resolve this debate, and scientists must hurry

Are we being injured and killed by ubiquitous, teeny-tiny shards of toxic plastic? Or aren’t we? For many months, the Guardian has reported a...

friday 8

The Guardian

Debora Mackenzie

Mystic Nigel has seen the future: a country run by his cabinet of taxidermied Tories

Mystic Nigel has seen the future: a country run by his cabinet of taxidermied Tories

Like a 1970s rust-belt serial killer, Nigel Farage is painstakingly assembling around him the political corpses of Boris Johnson’s final, terrible...

friday 40

The Guardian

Marina Hyde

I know the terrible cost of speaking out in Iran – and I beg the world to stand with those speaking out now

I know the terrible cost of speaking out in Iran – and I beg the world to stand with those speaking out now

It has been more than 40 years since I was imprisoned in Iran for speaking out against human rights abuses and state executions, and for defending...

friday 10

The Guardian

Nasrin Parvaz

An expulsion, a smirking leader and now a defection: it’s episode one, series one of the Farage/Jenrick show

An expulsion, a smirking leader and now a defection: it’s episode one, series one of the Farage/Jenrick show

The best thing right now would be to read the turmoil in the Tory party as told by the spy novelist Len Deighton. He would give us more detail on...

friday 10

The Guardian

Zoe Williams

The problem with Australian men? They simply don’t know how to flirt

The problem with Australian men? They simply don’t know how to flirt

A few months ago, I posted a viral video online highlighting the flirting differences between American and Australian men. Prompted by a recent...

friday 1

The Guardian

Louis Hanson

Whether or not Trump invades Greenland, this much is clear: the western order we once knew is history

Whether or not Trump invades Greenland, this much is clear: the western order we once knew is history

Donald Trump is threatening to take over Greenland, the territory of a Nato ally, possibly by military force, as Vladimir Putin is trying to take...

15.01.2026 60

The Guardian

Timothy Garton Ash

The Guardian view on Labour policy U-turns: a dangerous pattern that corrodes confidence

The Guardian view on Labour policy U-turns: a dangerous pattern that corrodes confidence

In practical terms there is not a huge difference between proving your identity online with a passport and using a government-issued digital ID....

15.01.2026 10

The Guardian

Editorial

Elon Musk’s Grok made the world less safe – his humiliating backdown gives me hopium

Elon Musk’s Grok made the world less safe – his humiliating backdown gives me hopium

Billionaire and career Bond-villain cosplayer Elon Musk has been forced by public backlash into a humiliating backdown over use of his AI chatbot,...

15.01.2026 10

The Guardian

Van Badham

The world of today looks bad, but take hope: we’ve been here before and got through it – and we will again

The world of today looks bad, but take hope: we’ve been here before and got through it – and we will again

From Greenland’s icy mountains, from India’s coral strand, as the old hymn has it, we seem to inhabit a world that is more seriously troubled in...

15.01.2026 20

The Guardian

Martin Kettle

My Danish-Indian family has experienced empire first-hand. For all of us, Trump’s imperialism is terrifying

My Danish-Indian family has experienced empire first-hand. For all of us, Trump’s imperialism is terrifying

As an American of mixed Danish and Indian heritage, who is also a citizen of France and, therefore, of the EU, Donald Trump’s contempt for the rule...

15.01.2026 30

The Guardian

Mira Kamdar

My favourite Lebanese restaurant has closed and I am bereft. Abdul’s, I’m sorry I took you for granted

My favourite Lebanese restaurant has closed and I am bereft. Abdul’s, I’m sorry I took you for granted

What is the name for the grief of losing a restaurant? Surely the Germans have a word for it. Many Sydneysiders will be keening and lighting...

15.01.2026 10

The Guardian

Emily Mulligan