Editorial
Editorials from the Guardian. All Guardian and Observer editorials can be found here
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Editorial: There are no good options for tackling Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons programme. But the military ones are by far the most alarming
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Editorial: Theresa May sacked George Osborne and promised to do everything differently. It doesn’t look like it from here
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Editorial: The OECD thinks schools should teach how to evaluate news on the internet. Good idea, but it’s not the whole answer
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Editorial: A century ago, the right of women to vote was controversial. One day the importance of upholding their right to safety will seem as self-evident as suffrage does now
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Editorial: Locally based, joined-up health and social care is the right thing to do, but it can’t be done without money
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Editorial: David Davis’s proposals involve necessary legal changes to make Brexit work but they will need intense parliamentary scrutiny
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Editorial: The prime minister revealed that she understands her domestic audience but not her European one. The result was a row founded on a peculiar British trait: a feeling that we had traded an empire we ran – for one that ran us
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Editorial: Joanna Cannon gave up psychiatry after signing a £300,000 publishing contract. Her desire to return to hospitals shows that other work can sometimes benefit authors
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Editorial: Alexander Blackman’s mental state contributed to him shooting dead an injured Taliban fighter – but we must still uphold international law
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Editorial: It is morally and politically repugnant to try to bargain over the future of people who have enriched our lives
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Editorial: There are many things the web giants could do to help combat terrorism, but weakening privacy protection is not one of them
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Editorial: It has taken only tentative steps towards reforming the land market and improving tenants’ rights. Young people without family wealth will pay the price
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Editorial: In spite of controlling the White House and both wings of Congress, the Republicans allowed ideological obsessions to derail a plan they have been trumpeting for years
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Editorial: There are no religions that are entirely pacifist because there are no societies entirely free of conflict. What matters is how the holy books are read
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Editorial: There is a streak of sabotage in Brexit that must not be allowed to contaminate the coming negotiations
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Editorial: Applause for Arlene Foster at the republican leader’s requiem sent an important message to Northern Ireland and a wider lesson to Britain
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Editorial: Countering attempts to exploit the Westminster attack for an anti-immigrant, divisive agenda will take political and public will, not just hard facts
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Editorial: It is the moment everyone feared would come. But it must be kept in proportion
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Editorial: The ideological clique around Trump is running foreign policy, while the top US diplomat is being circumvented and his department undermined
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Editorial: As Britain heads for the EU exit door under a government that botched the budget, Jeremy Corbyn’s party is failing to offer a credible vision
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Editorial: The French start voting in one month – and Marine Le Pen is set to reach the presidential run-off. Whether she can then be defeated is the next big test for Europe and liberal democracy
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Editorial: Article 50 will be triggered next week, and there will be no election to interfere
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Why days before the presidential election did the FBI announce it was reopening an investigation into Hillary Clinton – when it was silent about its probe into Mr Trump’s Russia ties?
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Editorial: Cultural forms built with words were once all indistinguishable, but in popular culture they are again coalescing. Figures such as Chuck Berry and Derek Walcott were part of bringing them together
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Editorial: Britain’s row with the White House over allegations that GCHQ bugged Trump Tower ought to teach Theresa May that she is dealing with a new abnormal
The Guardian view on Theresa May’s world: trading on fantasy