headlines
Monday
7
November
2016
-
James Comey says batch of emails ‘have not changed conclusion’ but Trump doubts review, saying: ‘You can’t review 650,000 emails in eight days’
-
Justice secretary Liz Truss belatedly spoke in defence of high court judges who were branded ‘enemies of the people’ by one newspaper
-
Tens of thousands more UK households will see their benefits capped on Monday despite little proof it grows employment
-
spotlight
-
At a home town launch for her new album, Here, the New York singer-songwriter talks about the US election, Black Lives Matter, and modern family life
-
Organisers say academy is more gender-balanced and diverse after last year’s failure to nominate black artists
-
US presidents have variously embraced the national capital or rarely been seen outside the White House. So how would Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton fit in?
-
End this misogynistic horror show. Put Hillary Clinton in the White House
Barbara KingsolverWhile Clinton holds her head high, why are we not exploding with anger at Donald Trump’s bullying?
-
Sadio Mané scored the first and fifth in Liverpool’s 6-1 Anfield rout of Watford, which took Jürgen Klopp’s side a point above Chelsea at the top of the Premier League
-
-
Jeremy Hunt says giving MPs a vote on Theresa May’s negotiating plans would harm the economy, but parliament is ‘highly likely’ to get a vote on the final deal
-
It’s not enough to point to looming catastrophes. We must also consider what could be improved when we leave the EU
-
from the uk
-
Prime minister says current system is ‘generous enough’ in a move which could hamper Delhi trade talks
-
Policy Exchange says policies boost growth in dirty diesel, arguing a smarter power grid could cut costs and curb emissions
-
around the world
-
Republican presidential candidate holds rally in deeply Democratic state and promises to ‘pause admissions from terror-prone regions’
-
PEN America report says future of free expression on the island and its status as the regional publishing hub is in question
-
explore
-
Strangeness on the Downs meets the horrors of two world wars in the biggest show of Nash’s work in a generation
-
A most excellent send-off! From an electric Demelza to Ross and George’s showdown, there were just enough final thrills to keep us sated until 2017
-
'No-one’s ever questioned our status' Which one of England’s ‘oldest hotels’ is actually the oldest?
The Royal Clarence hotel in Exeter was given the venerable title after it burned down recently – but a number of other places make the same claim. So who has bragging rights? -
Björk’s performance was a standout – but the day showcased a score of artists worthy of collaborating with her
-
Ten years after the original Planet Earth series, it’s back. This week, the theme is islands – starring a lonesome sloth, warring komodos and killer snakes
-
I’m a moderately successful author, writing about foraging and booze. But I’m constantly confused for a darts player, a radio presenter, and a jazzman
life
-
The success of Nordic fashion, architecture and design means we’re all Scandinavians now
-
Gathered from the Venetian lagoon, moeche, or soft-shell crabs, go down a treat with a squeeze of lemon and a glass of prosecco
-
A man says his mum and siblings did nothing while his wife had a masectomy and chemotherapy. Mariella Frostrup says he must demand answers
take part
people
-
Hungarian Kocsis, a household name among music fans from the United States to Japan, performed extensively with the Berlin Philharmonic
-
The actor has always been a trailblazer, but Close to the Enemy, Stephen Poliakoff’s latest drama about war-ravaged Britain, presented a new type of challenge
-
Versatile US jazz and pop singer best known for her 1950s hit Wheel of Fortune
-
He suffers for his art, whether it’s curling his spine into Stephen Hawking’s wheelchair or acting opposite imaginary animals in Fantastic Beasts. But in life, finds Tim Lewis, he’s the easiest, wittiest company
-
The Guardian’s picture editors bring you a selection of photo highlights from around the world including Donald Trump’s campaign and a storm in Haiti
-
A look at Trump’s rise from real estate mogul, billionaire and TV personality to Republican presidential nominee
-
Milan-based photographer Eleonora Costi spent the past three years travelling across Italy to find unoccupied buildings
-
-
Photographer Loes Heerink spent hours waiting on bridges in Hanoi to capture the street vendors who walked underneath
-
After its sold-out run in New York, the David Bowie show Lazarus, a sequel to The Man Who Fell to Earth, opens at King’s Cross theatre in London
popular
Missed cancer care targets leave 130,000 waiting too long
Comment Failure to meet targets shows NHS can no longer cope