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  • Three people stand on a street holding a banner saying: 'No more climate betrayals'. Other people hold a variety of banners saying: 'Scrap fossil fuels not targets', 'No future in fossil fuels', and 'Scottish Borders for climate justice'

    SNP
    Power-sharing deal ends with Scottish Greens

    First minister terminates Bute House agreement ‘with immediate effect’ after government abandons emissions target
  • Harvey Weinstein

    Harvey Weinstein
    New York court overturns 2020 rape conviction

  • Laurence Fox libel case<br>Laurence Fox makes a statement outside the the Royal Courts Of Justice, central London, after a High Court judge has ruled that he libelled two men when he referred to them as "paedophiles" on social media. The actor turned political activist was sued by former Stonewall trustee Simon Blake and drag artist Crystal, also known as Colin Seymour over comments on social media. Mr Fox is countersuing the pair, along with actress Nicola Thorp. Picture date: Monday January 29, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story COURTS Fox. Photo credit should read: Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire

    Laurence Fox
    Actor turned politician ordered to pay £180,000 to two people he called ‘paedophiles’

  • Donald Trump appears in court on 25 April.

    Live
    Pecker testifies Cohen said ‘the boss will take care of it’ on Trump buying Karen McDougal story

    • Live
      Ex-Post Office executive says she does not recall email telling her Horizon terminals could be remotely accessed

    • Wales
      Teacher in stabbing incident does not consider himself a hero, brother says

    • Emmanuel Macron
      French president attacks sending migrants to Africa, days after UK passes Rwanda bill

    • ‘Recipe for disaster’
      Confusion and protests on first day of Venice tourist charge

    • Israel
      Hostage families renew pressure on Netanyahu for ceasefire talks

    • Captain Tom Moore
      War veteran's Bedfordshire house on sale for £2.25m

News in focus

  • Commuters line a platform as a metro train arrives

    ‘Confined to this little island’
    Britons criticise rejection of EU youth mobility deal

  • A former domestic worker in Beirut. About 250,000 African and Asian migrant women work in Lebanon. An average of two domestic workers a week die there.

    ‘Every day I cry’
    50 women talk about life as a domestic worker under the Gulf’s kafala system

    Denounced as giving a ‘veneer of legality to slaveholding’, the kafala labour code persists, allowing employers to abuse women, who vanish from society
  • Spain’s socialist prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, with his wife, Begoña Gómez, voting at the general snap election in Madrid

    Explained
    Why is Spain’s prime minister considering resigning from office?

    Pedro Sánchez accuses opponents of ‘bullying operation’ conducted against him and his wife, Begoña Gómez

Spotlight

  • Natalie and Beccy in 2023.

    How we met
    ‘She accosted me and told me she’d looked me up on Facebook’

    Beccy, 49, and Natalie, 60, became best friends after she visited Natalie’s rescue farm in Ontario, Canada. They now run events together on the farm and love travelling together
  • ‘I learn a lot every single time I work’ … actor and director Bryce Dallas Howard

    Bryce Dallas Howard
    I can’t be trusted around famous people

  • Sian  (left) and Pam

    Dining across the divide
    ‘She felt our generation shouldn’t be held responsible for the massive imbalance between us and young people’

    Could they agree on immigration and housing? And why did the conversation turn to pigeon racing?
  • Nas<br>American rapper and actor Nas, London, circa 2000. (Photo by David Tonge/Getty Images)

    Furious, funny and potentially fatal
    Hip-hop’s 20 greatest diss tracks – ranked!

    As Drake, Kendrick Lamar and more continue their high-profile beef, we run down the most inspired – and vicious – attacks in rap’s history
    • ‘Long before my son was born, I dreamed of him’ … Suzanne Scanlon and her son

      The forever wound
      How could I become a mother when my own mother died so young?

    • DEA05249-873A-43BD-B33D-6432E975EC5E

      ‘Must love dogs and rude roommates’
      The scramble to get around New York’s Airbnb crackdown

    • An illustration of a female stretched across in her living room holding an iPad-like device watching a show

      'Refreshingly familiar'
      How brilliant female British TV detectives helped me understand myself

    • collage illustration with Diane Abbott at the centre, surrounded by (clockwise from left): Tony Blair, a Stoke Newington sign, Diane Abbott, Ken Livingston, Hackney Town hall, Child Q protestors, Jeremy Corbyn

      ‘I’ll stay an MP for as long as I can’
      Diane Abbott’s tumultuous political journey

  • Heritage Foundation: Former Prime Minister Liz Truss on Fighting the Global Left

    Fair to say America isn’t gripped by Liz Trussmania. Here’s what she can learn from Mr Bean

    Emma Brockes
    Our former PM has a dire warning and a book to sell, but it isn’t really cutting through. A bit more Brit-style bumbling might help, says Guardian columnist Emma Brockes
  • Illustration: Ben Jennings

    Lies, confections, distortions: how the right made London the most vilified place in Britain

    Aditya Chakrabortty
  • Old military vehicles arrive for a ceremony marking the 50th anniversary of the Carnation Revolution in Lisbon, Portugal, 25 April 2024

    In Portugal, we’re celebrating 50 years of freedom. So why is the far right creeping back?

    Vicente Valentim
    Today, we remember the 1974 Carnation Revolution. But as memories of dictatorship fade, anti-democratic forces are on the rise, says political scientist Vicente Valentim
  • "Eid in the Square" celebrations in London<br>London Mayor Sadiq Khan poses for a selfie as he greets audience members during 'Eid in the Square' celebrations in Trafalgar Square, London, Britain, April 20, 2024. REUTERS/Hollie Adams

    Elected mayors have made their mark, but still Westminster hogs power. That’s a national embarrassment

    Tony Travers
    Devolution has been too cautious, and England has less say about community affairs than almost any other democracy, says academic Tony Travers
    • legislation to ban smacking of children<br>A rally was held outside the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh in support of the Children (Equal Protection from Assault) (Scotland) Bill which is facing its final parliamentary debate and vote today. If passed the legislation means a ban on smacking of children. PA Photo. Picture date: Thursday October 3, 2019. See PA story POLITICS Smacking. Photo credit should read: Jane Barlow/PA Wire

      Smacking a child is just an act of violence. Why do England and Northern Ireland still allow it?

      Frances Ryan
    • Abortion rights supporters staging a ‘die-in’ protest

      The US supreme court heard one of the most sadistic, extreme anti-abortion cases yet

      Moira Donegan
    • On a lawn surrounded on three sides by buildings, dozens of tents with handmade protest signs in red and green.

      Why we need to stop using ‘pro-Palestine’ and ‘pro-Israel’

      Judith Levine
    • UK's Liberal Democrats Leader Ed Davey Unveils New Campaign In Guildford<br>GUILDFORD, ENGLAND - JANUARY 03: Liberal democrat supporters wait in the rain for the arrival of the Party Leader Ed Davey on January 03, 2024 in Guildford, England. Ed Davey revealed a new campaign poster as he launched a tour of Surrey seats and held a rally with activists in Guildford. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

      Frank Field saw benefit in the Lib Dems. In this election year, Labour would be wise to do the same

      Martin Kettle

Editorials & Letters

  • Rishi Sunak and the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, visit an engineering firm in Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria, on 25 March 2024.

    The Guardian view
    Sunak’s spending pledges: a Potemkin village of pretend policy

  • The Brics summit in Johannesburg on 23 August 2023, L to R: Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, China’s president Xi Jinping, South African president Cyril Ramaphosa, Indian PM Narendra Modi and Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov.

    The Guardian view
    Globalisation’s discontent: it’s not right for poor countries to fund the rich

  • Families being helped ashore on Dungeness beach after being rescued in the English Channel by the RNLI in 2023.

    Letters
    A grownup debate, not game-playing, is the only way to address the refugee crisis

  • Mother and child are sitting on windowsill.

    Letters
    Children in care – there’s one in every classroom

  • Xavi is embraced by Barcelona’s president, Joan Laporta

    Football
    Xavi’s Barça U-turn shows breaking up is hard to do despite tough times

    Announcement was no shock but reflects environment shift at club and an appetite to find stability after a dismal week
  • (Left to right) North Carolina quarterback Drake Maye, Caleb Williams of the USC Trojans, LSU Tigers quarterback Jayden Daniels.

    NFL draft predictions
    The stars, the needs and the lower-round gems this year

  • Arsenal's Gabriel Jesus rises for a header during the Premier League match between Arsenal and Tottenham last September

    Why north London derby mentality may be more key than form

    Karen Carney
  • Virgil van Dijk and Jürgen Klopp head in opposite directions after Liverpool’s defeat at Everton.

    Football
    Van Dijk criticises form and admits Liverpool do not merit title

    • Corinthians’ players cover their ears and mouths in protest before their game against Santos

      Moving the Goalposts
      Santos under fire after Lima’s brief return sparks volley of protest

    • Fleetwood United players and staff celebrate on 6 April 2024 after winning the United Arab Emirates second division

      Football’s unlikeliest global brand
      How Fleetwood made it big in the UAE

    • Ronnie O'Sullivan acknowledges the crowd after winning his first round match against Jackson Page at the Crucible .

      Snooker
      O’Sullivan cruises into last 16 of world championship

    • A group of people walking

      Health and fitness
      Grey wave spearhead record activity levels among England’s over-55s

  • people wear shirts that say "end fossil fuels" and hold signs that say "Manchin is killing us"

    Climate crisis
    ‘Outrageous’ activists get in the faces of politicians and oil bosses – will it work?

  • The Aedes albopictus mosquito on human skin

    Climate crisis
    Mosquito-borne diseases spreading in Europe, says expert

  • A male gold miner holding a spade in the background observes a female gold miner in an open-pit gold mine

    'Green industrialisation'
    Process raw materials in Africa, urges top environmentalist

  • driftwood, lots of plastic bottles and other pollution on beach, with two figures on bikes in background

    Plastics
    Survey finds that 60 firms are responsible for half of world’s pollution

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  • Louise Haigh stands at a podium at the Trainline headquarters. Behind her is a Labour sign reading 'Let's get Britain's future back'.

    Railways
    British network under Tories is symbol of national decline, Labour says

    Party plans to nationalise network and ‘unlock the trapped potential’ of rail to drive economic growth across the country
  • Pile of plastic drinks bottles

    ‘Huge disappointment’
    UK delays bottle deposit plan and excludes glass

  • Donald Burgess pictured wearing a short-sleeved shirt and straw sun hat

    Sussex
    Police officers deny assaulting man, 93, with Taser and pepper spray

  • tennis club staff at Wimbledon pose for a picture beneath the royal box on Centre Court

    Wimbledon
    Guaranteed Centre Court seats? That’ll be £116,000 … each

    • David Schwimmer
      Shareholders back £7m pay rise for London Stock Exchange boss

    • Brexit
      MPs call for clarity over border checks on EU plant and food products

    • Rwanda
      Flights will deport asylum seekers ‘indefinitely’, says Cleverly

    • London
      Runaway horses in ‘serious condition’ after bolting through centre of city

    • Public health
      Great Britain has worst rate of child alcohol consumption in world, report finds

    • Sainsbury's
      Supermarket says sales revival in big-ticket items depends on base rate cut

  • A doctor holds a patient's hand at a desk

    Exclusive
    Cost of developing new drugs may be far lower than industry claims, trial reveals

    Exclusive: MSF calls for transparency after its bill for a trial of TB treatment came to a fraction of the billions claimed by pharmaceutical companies
  • A person's hand holds a phone showing the Meta logo

    Meta
    Tech giant's value falls $190bn as investors react to plan to increase spending on AI

  • Sculpture of a giant tap, apparently hovering in mid-air without support, pouring out a stream of discarded plastic items onto the ground

    Environment
    Fears grow over rising number of oil lobbyists at UN plastic pollution talks

  • Emmanuel Macron gestures as he stands behind a plinth during his speech

    Live
    Russia-Ukraine war: risk of military incidents along Ukraine border quite high, says Belarus

    • Paris
      Moulin Rouge windmill sails collapse

    • ‘We want to work freely’
      Slovakian journalists protest against media overhaul

    • Live
      US economic growth slows; Anglo American shares surge after BHP proposes £31.1bn takeover

    • Spain
      PM considers resigning, blaming political ‘harassment’ of wife

    • France
      National library quarantines books believed to be laced with arsenic

    • Georgia
      Suspects arrested over cross-Europe thefts of rare library books

  • How much am I bid? … Hugh Grant and Martine McCutcheon in Love Actually.

    Film
    Love Actually, Barbie and Saltburn memorabilia auctioned for War Child

    Among 70 lots donated by film and music stars are up for grabs, including Neil Tennant’s coat and Stanley Tucci’s hotpot
  • Andrée Bernard in What (Is) a Woman

    What (Is) a Woman review
    Like #MeToo never happened

  • ‘Running tens of thousands in debt from the tour and I’m being told that it’s normal’ … Arooj Aftab performing in Brooklyn in June 2023.

    ‘The working class can’t afford it’
    The shocking truth about the money bands make on tour

  • Back to black … St Vincent

    Alexis Petridis's album of the week
    St Vincent: All Born Screaming review – the unmasking of a great American songwriter

  • Glicéria Tupinambá (right, with her niece Jessica) in the Brazilian pavilion at Venice, which features the Tupinambá cloak, along with letters asking for its return.

    Part protest, part rave
    The Indigenous artists stunning the Venice Biennale

  • Theatricality and chemistry … Ute Lemper.

    Ute Lemper review
    Intimate and mesmerising show celebrates an inimitable performer

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    From saving money to being more environmentally friendly
    Five reasons to buy a refurbished smartphone

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    How three inspiring community projects were supported by giffgaff and its customers

  • Multiethnic young females in modern clothes looking at smartphone on street against cloudy sky

    The right call
    How to choose a smartphone that’s better for you – and less harmful to the planet

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    Certified goodness
    What does B Corp status actually mean?

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  • Illustration of a librarian holding out a book

    The experts
    Librarians on 20 easy, enjoyable ways to read more brilliant books

    Do you love reading – but all too often find yourself just scrolling through your phone or watching TV? Here is how to get lost in literature again
  • A man dressed as Sherlock Holmes in profile

    Thursday quiz
    Strange distances, surprise candidates and Sherlock Holmes

  • 42-Acres Meditation by the lake15

    Restorative in every way
    A rewilding retreat in Somerset

  • Saga home insurance website promising a good deal on insurance.

    Consumer champions
    Caring for the elderly? Not with Saga’s 220% price hike

  • Silvia Rothlisberger sitting on her van on the roadside in New Zealand

    A moment that changed me
    Joyriders destroyed my van in New Zealand – which led to a lovely life in London

  • Harry Daniels and Dua Lipa.

    ‘I may be a troll but I’m not stupid’
    Super-stan Harry Daniels on singing loudly at Biden, Dua Lipa and Anna Wintour for clout

Take part

  • Exploratory laparoscopy and surgical hysteroscopy (Uterine fibroids, endometriosis). Limoges hospital.<br>H1M7TE Exploratory laparoscopy and surgical hysteroscopy (Uterine fibroids, endometriosis). Limoges hospital.

    Health
    Share your experience of accessing private medical care in the UK

  • Former Labour whip Frank Field during an interview at Portcullis House in London.

    Frank Field
    Share your memories of the former Labour minister

  • We’re after things that are small, genuinely useful, and inexpensive to buy (nothing over £20).

    Life and style
    What’s your favourite everyday gadget?

  • A badly designed system and what one MP called “shocking ineptitude” at the DWP has created hardship for thousands of carers in Britain.

    Carers in the UK
    Have you been threatened with prosecution for benefit fraud?

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  • a child looks out from the doorway of a destroyed home

    Explained
    What would Trump’s Israel-Gaza policy be if he were re-elected?

    The former US president often describes himself as the ‘best friend that Israel has ever had’, but he may not be so reliable
  • A water tower reads "Flint strong"

    ‘If we had the energy left, we’d cry’
    Flint residents grapple with water crisis a decade later

  • Lisboans march in the city’s streets in the aftermath of the 25 April 1974 coup d'etat which overthrew Portugal’s Estado Novo regime.

    ‘Everyone was in the streets. I just felt happiness’
    Portugal recalls the Carnation Revolution

  • Huddersfield train station

    Analysis
    Labour’s plans for Great British Railways all but set up by Tory government

  • Detail from the cover of the book And They Lived … Ever After with a picture of Rapunzel and the subtitle 'Disabled Women Retell Fairy Tales'.

    Rapunzel reimagined
    The women retelling fairytales to challenge notions of perfection

  • the remains of hundreds of pairs of shoes

    ‘People would never forget these shoes’
    The fight to preserve soles of Stutthof Nazi camp

Documentary link

Pressure and Release

In Western Australia, an inspiring approach to equine therapy is helping young Indigenous Australians overcome trauma

Watch now27.51
A young Indigenous Australian

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  • Illustrated portrait of Tommy Nicol.

    ‘99-year’ sentence
    Tommy Nicol was kind and friendly – a beloved brother. Why did he die in prison?

  • London Marathon runner wine challenge goes viral<br>Undated handout photo of Tom Gilbey, 52, a wine connoisseur who blind tasted a different glass of wine after completing each mile of the London Marathon, said he was "honoured" his challenge went viral on social media, prompting an influx of donations. Issue date: Tuesday April 23, 2024. PA Photo. Tom stopped 25 times during the race to sample a glass of wine and guess the beverage's vintage, grape variety and country of origin before continuing on towards the finish line. See PA story SOCIAL Wine. Photo credit should read: Tom Gilbey/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.

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    Vintner Tom Gilbey on how he sampled 25 wines during London Marathon

  • Premier League - Everton v Liverpool<br>Soccer Football - Premier League - Everton v Liverpool - Goodison Park, Liverpool, Britain - April 24, 2024
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BREDA - Victoria Pelova of Holland and Merel van Dongen of Holland after the European Championship qualifying match for women in group A1 between the Netherlands and Norway at the Rat Verlegh stadium on April 9, 2024 in Breda, the Netherlands.
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    An episode from Women’s Football Weekly – Fifpro exclusive interview

  • Barcelona v Chelsea in the Women's Champions League.

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