David Cameron to EU: no rush!
I’m not convinced the PM is truly relaxed about whether he gets an early deal in Brussels or not. He told a Davos gathering he wasn’t in a hurry. Could’ve fooled Europe.
111 items found
I’m not convinced the PM is truly relaxed about whether he gets an early deal in Brussels or not. He told a Davos gathering he wasn’t in a hurry. Could’ve fooled Europe.
Sabeen Mahmud, one of Pakistan’s most outspoken human rights campaigners, has been killed by armed men after giving a talk in Karachi, writes Saira Jaffer.
While Labour is tight lipped and ultra-orthodox at present, it is entirely possible to imagine the common ground of a Labour-SNP-Green coalition, or a “supply and confidence” type arrangement.
Greece’s deep-seated problems are decades old and normal. What’s abnormal is the chance to blow it all away.
Saudi Arabia’s new monarch, 79-year-old King Salman, takes over after the death of his half-brother King Abdullah – but is his future heir the only likely break from a controversial family rule?
The European Central Bank enters the last chance saloon as it prepares to pump over one trillion euros into the Eurozone’s fragile economy – can it possibly work?
Hosting a business reception at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Prince Andrew makes his first public comments since allegations that a seventeen-year-old woman was forced to have sex with him.
Is the Chilcot report into the Iraq war being delayed for political purposes or, more prosaically, just a bit disorganised but doing its best to be fair to witnesses?
The world’s richest 1 per cent will own more than the other 99 per cent by next year, a charity warns.
If it sounds like a multiplayer 3D chess game, then that’s what it really is. The technical term for it is currency war.
A suspected car bomb explodes in Nigeria, killing at least 15 people. The explosion hit the Abuja suburb of Nyanya, close to the site of last month’s deadly bomb attack.
With the “ideas festival” season in full swing, Matthew Moore speaks to TED co-founder Richard Saul Wurman, whose first conference, in 1984, paved the way for all others.
The actor Matt Damon says he “will not be going into politics” because he loves what he does and “I’m able to throw rocks from the sidelines”.
The Conservatives are taking on Labour in the “cost of living crisis” debate, saying that statistics show take-home pay has risen over the last year. But Labour disputes the figures.
David Cameron issues a warning to the European Union that imposing “burdensome” regulations on shale gas exploration would deter investment and job creation.