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Updated 2026-05-13 17:45
'Josh Hawley, president 2024': school yearbook indicates long-held ambition
Missouri senator, an early supporter of Donald Trump’s attempts to overturn his election defeat, is expected to run next time
Protest breaks out in Tacoma after police car drives through crowd
Covid-19 has cost global workers $3.7tn in lost earnings, says ILO
Women and young workers bear brunt of job losses and reductions in hours, says UN labour body
NFL franchise San Francisco 49ers increase stake in Leeds United
Hank Aaron obituary
Baseball player who eclipsed the great Babe Ruth and for many years held the record for the highest number of career home runsFor three decades the baseball player Hank Aaron, who has died aged 86, held the record for hitting more home runs – 755 – than anyone in major league history, and will be remembered in particular for No 715, which broke Babe Ruth’s career record.America had invested the number 714 with mythic significance, and Aaron discovered that many people resented a less charismatic figure relegating a legend to second place – especially when that man was black. When he ended the 1973 season one short of Ruth’s record, Aaron was receiving as many as 3,000 letters a day, many of them spewing racist hatred, including death threats. “This changed me,” he said. “The letters remind me not to be surprised or hurt. They remind me what people are really like.” Continue reading...
Republicans will try to create an 'ethics' trap for Democrats. Don't fall for it | David Litt
When it comes to double-standards, Republican bad faith is hardly ever in short supply
American theater may not survive the coronavirus. We need help now | Jeremy O'Harris
During the Great Depression, FDR set up the Federal Theater Program to save our industry. We need similar help today
What will Trump do next? | First Thing
Trump reportedly wants to start his own political party, but with his second impeachment ongoing, will he re-enter politics, or polite society, at all? Plus Fauci was a ‘skunk at the picnic’ in the coronavirus taskforce
Mitch McConnell 'plays the long game' to retain some power as it slips away
Out of power in the chamber, the Republican now faces unruly politicians and pressure over how to handle Trump impeachmentFor Mitch McConnell, the top Republican in the Senate, the first few days of Joe Biden’s presidency has not been about fighting the new Democratic majority in government, it’s been about gaming out how much power he now has.McConnell, the leader of Senate Republicans for over a decade, now finds himself in the position every caucus leader dreads: out of power in the chamber, in charge of a somewhat unruly bunch of politicians, and under pressure over how to handle the impeachment of the last Republican president. Continue reading...
Schumer promises quick but fair trial as Trump impeachment heads to Senate
Aaron Rodgers' brilliance is clear but history may judge him unfairly
The Green Bay Packers quarterback fell short in a championship game once again. There is a risk his extraordinary talent will be obscuredThe ball was in Aaron Rodgers’s hands – until it wasn’t. It was fourth down, with a little over two minutes left in the NFC Championship game and the Green Bay Packers needed a touchdown and a successful two-point conversion to tie the game. Still, Rodgers will almost certainly be named the 2020 NFL MVP in the coming weeks. If anyone had earned this opportunity, it was Rodgers. Yet, Packers head coach Matt LaFleur decided instead to bring out Mason Crosby for a field goal that cut the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ lead from eight points to five. This gave the ball back to Tom Brady with two minutes left to go. To practically nobody’s surprise, Rodgers did not get the ball back. He instead was relegated to a mere spectator as he watched another Super Bowl dream die. The Buccaneers defeated the Packers 31-26.Rodgers is an all-time great quarterback. He’s a two-time league MVP – and almost certainly will be named MVP again this year – and has been elected to the Pro Bowl nine times. A list of his statistical accomplishments takes up two whole paragraphs of the three-paragraph introduction to his extremely long Wikipedia page. There you can learn, among many other things, that Rodgers is the fastest player to get to 400 passing touchdowns and has the highest single-season passer rating (122.5 back in 2011). It’s ridiculous to think that his career could be considered a disappointment. Continue reading...
In this seemingly endless lockdown, will we finally run out of TV? | Rebecca Nicholson
We’ve watched the best shows, we’re bored of binge-watching and productions have been put on hold. But there is still hopeIt is no great surprise that during the first lockdown people spent more time stuck to their screens. Last year, Ofcom reported that in April we were watching around a third more television and online video than we had been a year before that, and that was when the weather was good. Netflix and Amazon Prime have both recently reported record numbers of subscribers signing up over the past 12 months, with newcomers such as Disney+ attracting big audiences, too.During that first lockdown, I was lucky enough to be able to work from home, and I set myself some TV goals. I would rewatch The Sopranos, because I had not seen it for at least 10 years, and I wanted to know if it still stood up as the best show in TV history. It does, and plenty of people had the same idea: it was one of the breakout hits of 2020. I would catch up with Schitt’s Creek. I would use documentaries to educate myself, probably starting with Ken Burns, and I would make sure at least some of what I watched was not in English, because it’s easier not to be on your phone when you’re watching something Icelandic. (One Instagram scroll equals several crucial plot-points missed.) I thought there would be a new season of Succession soon enough. I had it covered. Continue reading...
Biden wants unity and democracy. But in the US these have always been in conflict | David Runciman
Its institutions were designed to keep the people out. The new president could have blamed the founding fathers
How a cannabis farm cured my fear of nature | Zoe Williams
A factory with more than 800 plants has been discovered in a building beside the Bank of England – and the news had an unexpected effect on me
'Mass murder': Indianapolis shooting kills five including pregnant woman
Police chief describes killings at home as targeted and a ‘different kind of evil’Five people, including a pregnant woman, have been found shot dead inside at a home in Indianapolis in an apparent targeted attack, the city’s police chief said, describing the killings as “mass murder” and a “different kind of evil”.The fatal shootings were discovered on Sunday by police who found a juvenile male with gunshot wounds before being called about 4am to investigate reports of a person shot on the city’s north-east side, said Sergeant Shane Foley from the Indianapolis metropolitan police. Continue reading...
Chiefs' Mahomes sets up Super Bowl showdown with Brady after win over Bills
AFC championship game: Buffalo Bills 24-38 Kansas City Chiefs – as it happened!
Nia Dennis wins plaudits for stunning 'black excellence' gymnastics routine
Tom Brady into his 10th Super Bowl as Buccaneers beat Packers
NFC championship game: Tampa Bay Buccaneers 31-26 Green Bay Packers – as it happened
Trump plots revenge on Republicans who betrayed him as Senate trial looms
'I like Ivanka': Marco Rubio sweats over rumoured Trump Senate challenge
Florida senator finds familiar discomfort in unfamiliar surrounds of Fox News Sunday as former first daughter circles
Chicago teachers defy order to return to classrooms under shadow of Covid
Two hurt as police officer plows car through crowd at Tacoma street race
Joe Biden's talk of 'healing' is pointless, and will be seen as weakness by the right | Nesrine Malik
The new president needs to be fearlessly radical – it’s the only way to rebalance the economy and tackle the causes of division
Sanders hopes nation smitten by his mittens will back food charity push
Can Trump do a Nixon and re-enter polite society? Elizabeth Drew doubts it
Defense secretary Lloyd Austin demands US military sexual assault reports
Arizona Republicans censure McCain, Flake and Ducey over Trump split
'Immense sense of pride': Caribbean diaspora celebrates Kamala Harris
Some hopeful vice-president could forward the fight for voting rights of the more than 4 million American citizens living in US territories who can’t voteAs she watched America’s inauguration ceremony last week, Aziza Jones switched back and forth between her social media and her television, hoping the extra energy use didn’t generate a power outage – a setback she said can be common in St Croix, US Virgin Islands.Related: Kamala Harris's Indian uncle plans US visit amid global celebrations for VP Continue reading...
Undoing Trump's legacy: Biden wastes no time in first 100 hours as president
The Democrat has kicked off his presidency with a blitz of executive orders and measures – here are the key themes
Joe Biden urged to commute sentences of all 49 federal death row prisoners
US news giants put more women in the White House
Women of colour included in press corps that seeks to rebalance the traditionally male preserveUS media organisations are taking steps to mirror Joe Biden’s gender-balanced cabinet appointments, with at least six major news networks assigning women to lead White House coverage.Since Biden’s inauguration last week, CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, the public television station PBS and the Washington Post have assigned chief reporting duties to women. Continue reading...
Ethiopia’s leader must answer for the high cost of hidden war in Tigray
Abiy Ahmed should hand back his Nobel peace prize over his actions in the breakaway region that have raised the spectre of famine againSeyoum Mesfin, Ethiopia’s long-serving former foreign minister, was one of the foremost African diplomats of his generation. He was gunned down this month in Tigray by the armed forces of a lesser man – Abiy Ahmed, Ethiopia’s prime minister and Nobel peace prize winner. Some suggest it was the Eritrean military, Abiy’s allies, who killed Seyoum, although their presence in Tigray is officially denied. The circumstances of his death remain murky.As with much of the unreported, unchallenged murder and mayhem currently occurring in northern Ethiopia, murky is what Abiy prefers. When he ordered the army’s assault on the breakaway Tigray region in November, he blocked the internet, shut out aid agencies and banned journalists. It’s a conflict he claims to have won – but the emerging reality is very different. It’s a war fought in the shadows, with the outside world kept in the dark. Continue reading...
Alexei Navalny’s home makeover show exposes Vladimir Putin on every front | Rowan Moore
The video of the Russian leader’s $1bn secret palace reveals his terrible taste as well as his corruptionHero of the week, at the front of an exceptionally competitive field – the 22-year-old inauguration poet Amanda Gorman, the health workers who have been heroes for almost a year – has to be the Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny. Not only did he voluntarily return to the country where he was almost killed by poisoning, but he marked his immediate arrest by getting his team to release the most politically devastating home makeover show of all time.The unwilling recipient of his Kevin McCloud treatment was President Vladimir Putin, the man who conceivably had something to do with Navalny’s poisoning and imprisonment, who will be riled beyond measure by the film. It states that money skimmed from the purchase of medical equipment (among other sources) paid for a $1bn, 18,000 sq metre Italianate secret palace on a clifftop Black Sea estate several times the size of Monaco. Through the detailed use of satellite and drone footage, snaps by building workers and architectural drawings, the film brings to your screen the complex’s tsarist eagles, its underground ice-hockey rink, its purple pole-dancing venue, its private theatre, its room for toy car racing, its £40,000 side table with a built-in bar. As Lanfranco Cirillo, the palace’s hitherto obscure architect, has rightly said: “There is a big difference between an expensive home and a classy, elegant home.” Continue reading...
Donald Trump is gone but his big lie is still corrupting America's body politic
The myth of the ‘stolen election’ – simple and endlessly repeated – is likely to be a rallying call for far-right terroristsWhen the back wheels of Air Force One finally lifted off the tarmac at Joint Base Andrews on Wednesday bound for Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s White House-in-exile in West Palm Beach, cheers erupted in millions of households across America and around the globe. Continue reading...
UFC 257: Dustin Poirier stops Conor McGregor by second-round TKO – as it happened
Dustin Poirier blasts Conor McGregor in Abu Dhabi to plot new UFC title shot
Don't believe the anti-Trump hype – corporate sedition still endangers America | Robert Reich
CEOs only acted after the Capitol attack because Democrats took power. Their political dominance must be reducedThe sudden lurch from Trump to Biden is generating vertigo all over Washington, including the so-called fourth branch of government – chief executives and their army of lobbyists.Related: Chaos of Trump's last days in office reverberates with fresh 'plot' report Continue reading...
Listen to NHS trust leaders. We know it is too soon to loosen Covid restrictions | Chris Hopson
Politicians’ decisions must be based on evidence that infection rates are low enough, vaccines work and hospitals can copeThroughout the pandemic, NHS trust leaders have argued for appropriate restrictions on social contact to bring Covid-19 under control. It is they and their teams who have to deal, in a distressing and direct way, with the daily death and harm that this dreadful virus brings. They know that, until we can vaccinate our population, restrictions on social contact are the only way to prevent unnecessary deaths, reduce patient harm and give the NHS the best chance to treat all the patients it needs to.So it should be no surprise that, as discussions start on loosening the current round of restrictions, trust leaders remain deeply cautious. There can be no simple, blanket approach to decision-making here. Each phase of the pandemic has its own characteristics and dynamics. Any relaxation will need to be evidence-based and take account of significant local variations in infection rates. And trust leaders have always been clear that these must be decisions for elected politicians as only they can balance the complex and difficult trade-offs required using the evidence and advice they receive. But trust leaders believe there are a number of reasons to be very cautious at this point. Continue reading...
Hank Aaron’s death prompts call to change name: Braves to Hammers
Senate Republican threatens impeachments of past Democratic presidents
President Biden and Boris Johnson share hopes for end to Covid in first phone call
The 46th US president and the UK prime minister also discussed Nato, climate change and human rightsBoris Johnson has had his first call with Joe Biden since the new US president entered the White House on Wednesday. Downing Street said Johnson congratulated Biden on his inauguration and that the two leaders looked forward to “deepening the close alliance” between their nations.After the call, the prime minister tweeted: “Great to speak to President Joe Biden this evening. I look forward to deepening the longstanding alliance between our two countries as we drive a green and sustainable recovery from Covid-19.” Continue reading...
One winning ticket sold for $1.05bn Mega Millions lottery jackpot
US man charged with threatening to 'assassinate' Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Chaos of Trump's last days in office reverberates with fresh 'plot' report
Ex-president, whose Senate trial will start in two weeks, reportedly planned to oust acting attorney general in bid to overturn election
Biden spoke to Mexican president about reversing Trump's immigration policies
Republican lawmaker apologizes after mocking Biden's trans health nominee
Pennsylvania representative Jeff Pyle says he ‘had no idea’ post mocking Rachel Levine would be ‘received as poorly as it was’A Pennsylvania legislator has apologised for sharing an image mocking the appearance of the recently departed state health secretary, Dr Rachel Levine, a transgender woman nominated to serve in the Biden administration.State representative Jeff Pyle, a Republican from Armstrong and Indiana counties in western Pennsylvania, said on Facebook he “had no idea” the post mocking Levine “would be … received as poorly as it was”, and said “tens of thousands of heated emails assured me it was”. Continue reading...
Melania Trump and Theresa May show some real fight. Better late than never | Barbara Ellen
When they had power they failed to use it. But their revenge is still sweet to watchTread carefully, gentlemen, some women are at their most dangerous when they feel they have nothing to lose. In the US, that’s Melania Trump, freshly released from her role as First Grifter, who sashayed off a plane in Florida wearing a flowing patterned maxi-dress and comfy flats. It doesn’t matter that the dress was Gucci, retailing at thousands of dollars, you just know Donald would have hated it. Maybe they even squabbled about it on the plane (“That dress is a loser!”), but Melania wore it anyway. During Trump’s presidency, Melania got a reputation for “speaking her truth” via her clothing and that dress screamed “I’m outta here!”, as did the nuclear-strength stink eye she shot at her husband and the assembled media as she swanned past, refusing to engage.Over here, Theresa May took another of her now-characteristic swings at Boris Johnson, with an article berating his government for “abandoning global moral leadership”. Here was May Unleashed, a different creature altogether from when she was stumbling through her own premiership on grey-faced “Brexit means Brexit” autopilot. May also criticised Trump’s role in the attack on the Capitol. That’s Trump, whose little paw she once so tenderly held when she was the first world leader to meet him in the White House in 2017. May terms this the “hand of friendship”, but, back then, it looked less like a meeting of equals and more like a video reconstruction of when Tinder goes horribly wrong for silver surfers (“Be safe out there!”). Continue reading...
Deborah Birx 'always' considered quitting Trump coronavirus taskforce
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