View from Berlin: Bluffing Britain losing friends
The presumption in Germany is that David Cameron will back down. If this is wrong, Britain could end up leaving the EU.
339 items found
European Union leaders work through the night to agree a new long-term spending plan which will see a cut in the budget for the first time in the EU’s history.
We know traces of horsemeat were found in some frozen food. But how did it get there, what is safe to eat – and who had the best “horse-burger” jokes? Channel 4 News has the answers.
Police officers storm an underground bunker in Alabama where a five-year-old boy had been held hostage for nearly a week, rescuing the child and shooting the boy’s captor dead.
Another Irish meat processing plant has tested positive for traces of horse meat, Ireland’s Department of Agriculture confirms.
The Food Standards Agency orders major food retailers and suppliers to an urgent meeting after the latest food foul-up – pork being found in halal prison food.
As anxious MPs consider bad-mouthing Britain to put off low-skilled Romanian and Bulgarian workers from moving to the UK, FactCheck examines the truth behind the scaremongering.
From the drizzle to daytime TV, your suggestions for a negative ad campaign (apparently) being planned by the UK government to deter potential immigrants coming here from Romania and Bulgaria.
The presumption in Germany is that David Cameron will back down. If this is wrong, Britain could end up leaving the EU.
Airlines based in the Middle East and Poland become the latest to ground Boeing 787 Dreamliner planes amid safety concerns.
The Communities Secretary Eric Pickles says he’s seen an estimate for how many arrivals the government expects from Bulgaria. But where is it?
The beleaguered English Defence League takes to the streets of Solihull on Saturday. But with its figurehead Tommy Robinson in prison, is Britains far right a spent force?
We take a look back at the lowlights of 2012 with damned lies and statistics coming thick and fast from across the political spectrum.
Wlodzimierz Umaniec is jailed for two years for vandalising a Mark Rothko painting worth over £5m at the Tate Modern, in what the judge called an “utterly unacceptable” attack.
Cheese was enjoyed by stone age man in Europe thousands of years ago, which has helped shape our eating habits today by making us lactose tolerant.
The latest census reveals crucial changes in how we live today, including a rise in immigration to the UK, population and education level, and a drop in religion, marriage and mortgage owners.