Inquiry slug-fest drags on
Gary Gibbon blogs on who the Treasury select committee may want to call to explain themselves.
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Gary Gibbon blogs on who the Treasury select committee may want to call to explain themselves.
In the week of the US Open, Ben Monro-Davies examines the very special mystique of winning a major title in golf – no guarantee of class, yet somehow beyond some of the game’s classiest players.
As Wales aim to secure the grand slam, the climax of the Six Nations promises deep significance and emotion writes Ben Monro-Davies.
Wales must beat Italy to maintain their rugby union grand slam bid, while Ireland face Scotland in the Hogwarts-sounding Centenary Quaich. Ben Monro-Davies previews this weekend’s Six Nations clashes.
Hackers groups target Justice Department website, after US officials arrest the heads of content sharing website Megaupload and shut it down.
A battle of wills started today as the cabinet discussed plans to rein in Alex Salmond, try to reassert and amend London powers to call a referendum, and start calling the shots, writes Gary Gibbon.
At the centre of an intense personality cult, the North Korean leader inspired a myriad of legends and parodies. Channel 4 News looks at the more bizarre side of the Kim Jong-il legacy.
Gary Gibbon observes David Cameron cast as delusional in Brussels.
Nicolas Sarkozy says Bill Gates’ proposal of a ‘Robin Hood’ tax on financial transactions is “technically possible”, during the meeting of G20 leaders in Cannes.
Several people die as the unseasonal snow blitzes the north eastern corner of the US and causes major transport disruption.
As the world’s population nears 7bn, Channel 4 News asks: what are the benefits to the UK’s 62m inhabitants of living on a densely populated group of islands off the European mainland?
There has been universal execration of Carlos Tevez, who is alleged to have refused to play for Manchester City in Munich. But football writer Simon Kuper tells Channel 4 News: what’s the big deal?
Demonstrators taking part in the “Occupy Wall Street” campaign against corporate greed accuse New York police of heavy-handed tactics, including the use of mace spray.
Perhaps that was the problem though, a show that featured startlingly individualistic performers, out for themselves (and inevitably, their hard-pressed families) in a ruthless, elimination-style format.
An exasperated White House press secretary asked reporters this week if they expected “a President Bartlet moment” — say, a march up Capitol Hill to whip Congress in line, à la fictional president in “The West Wing” television series. “Yes,” one reporter replied.