Donald Trump, American Caesar
The president and his acolytes are creating a whole new way of running a country – and this is only the beginning
How Rachel Reeves could get growth – now
The plans she has suggested so far will only yield economic benefits years into the future. But what can she do straight away?
Three steps to help Starmer beat Reform
The prime minister needs to crack down on crime, set and meet a fair migration target and bring in a UK ID card
The fisherman who faced down GB News
A Leave-voting fisheries owner from the red wall was invited to praise Brexit – but told the channel it had been a disaster for his business
How to destroy your life in a single tweet
One Sheffield man brought his world crashing down with an unwise post on X. But should he have ended up in court?
The decline and fall of Damien Hirst
Damien Hirst’s work is stale, insular, highly lucrative. Why were we ever taken in by him?
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Sudoku Hard
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Number Fit
Jigsaw
Cryptic Crossword
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Codeword
The fisherman who faced down GB News
Three years of war outside my window
Letters: What is the point of the Tories these days?
Why does mobile theft feel so personal?
Cartoon: If WW2 was fought now, whose side would Trump be on?
How to destroy your life in a single tweet
The Rest is Politics heads to Damascus
Why are Germans fed up of politics?
Brutally policed, heading for dictatorship… but at least Georgia has cheap wine, says Independent
As the country heads towards a Russian-style autocracy, the website is pushing it as an ‘undiscovered gastronomic haven of £2 wine’
Viner seeks splendid isolation at the Guardian
The paper’s editor is set for a global role – taking her further away from dealing with the newsroom and its fractious union
The very inquisitive Rupert Lowe
The Reform MP has tabled a staggering 816 written questions to ministers since being elected an MP. How much is it costing the taxpayer?
Writers
Alastair Campbell
Marie Le Conte
Matthew d’Ancona
Patience Wheatcroft
Tanit Koch
Paul Mason
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Will Trump kill the dollar?
Dreams of independence in Europe’s far north
A delicious and kinky cake: The risque origins of tiramisú
Who can afford to live in Barcelona now?
Celebrating Oktoberfest in Brazil
The scientific reality of Trump 2.0
Podcasts
The Two Matts
Everything humans need to know about Artificial Intelligence – with Parmy Olson
The Two Matts
Q&A: Customs union vs the single market: what’s the difference?
The Two Matts
Donald Trump: Clueless in Gaza
The Two Matts
Damian Collins on the future of British Conservatives and social media
The Two Matts
Q&A: The Wisdom Of Chiles
The Two Matts
Is Labour’s vision for Britain taking off at last?
The fisherman who faced down GB News
A Leave-voting fisheries owner from the red wall was invited to praise Brexit – but told the channel it had been a disaster for his business
When it comes to Brexit, politics still trumps economics
A new report from Best for Britain overlooks a crucial problem that will frustrate Britain’s attempts to build closer ties with the EU
Anti-Brexit Clarkson embarrasses the Sun
The columnist has launched another attack on those who still back Brexit – which includes his own employer
Fixing Brexit can help Labour defeat Reform
If coupled with actual delivery of better arrangements with the EU, Reform’s weakness on Brexit is fertile ground
Letters: The Holocaust is a warning from history
We should never forget what happened and be aware that it could all too easily happen again, here and now
Starmer ducks the inevitable on the EU.. again
At some point soon, the PM is going to have to choose Europe over Trump’s USA
The New Europe
Why are Germans fed up of politics?
A recent psychological study revealed how the country picks its politicians. The results were nothing short of depressing
What Kosovo has that Britain doesn’t
The country goes to the polls on Sunday – and the people of Kosovo know exactly what they want
The shooting in Sweden: “an event which shakes our entire society”
Eleven people are dead in the latest outbreak of horrifying violence in Sweden. Can the nation hold together?
The dark shadow of the AfD hangs over German politics
The leader of one of Germany’s main political parties relied on the extreme right wing AfD party to get his immigration bill through parliament. Big mistake
What Musk and Putin have in common
The Ukraine invasion and Musk’s Twitter buyout of Twitter show how weak accountability is in authoritarian regimes and among ultra-rich tech titans
Ukraine’s painful beauty
A Kyiv gallery has defied Russian missile attacks to stage a visceral but tender art competition for artists under 35
How Labour can prove it stands by Ukraine
The strategically important city of Pokrovsk is in Putin’s sights. The government should do everything it can to stop him – starting with donating surplus MoD equipment to Volodymyr Zelensky
We were always going to betray Ukraine
Zelensky has done all he can. But as the final sell-out approaches, the west has not done nearly enough
Ukraine is the new Berlin
As the second coming of Donald Trump threatens a sell-out of Kyiv, Europe finds itself pondering events of 75 years ago
UK soft power failed with Putin – it’s time for the hard option
Britain and Europe are up against an alliance of evil. Now is the time to resist Russia, and for the UK to lead by example
Sergio Leone’s big dreams
A sumptuously illustrated book of interviews with the director reveals his extraordinary love of the monumental
Brutalism: a dream of form and function
In the 1990s, Britain fell out of love with its concrete masterpieces – but then it all changed