Sanders time: why is America feeling the Bern?
Bernie Sanders, America’s answer to Jeremy Corbyn, is giving Hillary Clinton a scare in the campaign to get the Democratic nomination for next years US presidential election.
605 items found
VW could be forced to pay billions in fines for cheating emissions tests – and campaigners are warning that other car manufacturers could be involved.
Bernie Sanders, America’s answer to Jeremy Corbyn, is giving Hillary Clinton a scare in the campaign to get the Democratic nomination for next years US presidential election.
More Eritreans filed for asylum in the UK in the year to June than any other nation. They face “systematic, widespread and gross human rights violations” at home, says the UN.
Football clubs across the UK are banning reporters from their stadiums because they don’t like what’s being reported. Nowhere else in British public life is this tolerated.
As David Cameron pledges to act on the “shocking” issue of children being trafficked from Vietnam to the UK to work in servitude for organised crime gangs, charities warn there is much more to do.
The levels of economic pain and dysfunctional borrowing set to be inflicted on Greece mean that at some point public opinion will flip.
The Greeks arrived with a set of proposals widely scorned as “more austere than the ones they rejected”. The internet burst forth with catcalls – “they’ve caved in”.
Ten years on, the head of MI5 says 7/7 delivered a step change “in the nation’s counter terrorism defences”.
Relatives of British holidaymakers still await news of their loved ones 24 hours after the shootings, as David Cameron warns the public must prepare for news that many of the victims were from the UK
Relatives of British holidaymakers still await news of their loved ones 24 hours after the shootings, as David Cameron warns the public must prepare for news that many of the victims were from the UK
Those mighty struggles that the EU is wrestling with today – Greece and migration – go to the heart of the “out” campaigners best hopes of winning.
While the proposal has caused outrage among the Greek conservatives and outrage among Syriza’s left-wing voters, the real problem is bigger.
If today’s Brussels talks fail, the Greek debt crisis could stop being a story about economics and become one of civil society, politics and the rule of law.
Ahead of a crucial meeting on the Greece debt crisis on Monday, Paul Mason presents a special long-read, offering five pictures of the country.
The country will divide: right versus left – as it has been divided since British tanks rolled into Syntagma Square in 1944 to install former Nazi collaborators into office.