8320, 8324, 8415, 8416, 8418 2020 election: who’s in the running to face Trump? A rundown of the candidates who have officially declared their campaigns for the Democratic nomination for president in 2020. By Nicky Woolf
8268, 8320, 8415 The world is falling apart. And so is my mental health Brexit, Trump, Windrush, fascist leaders and lying politicians, the news is so bleak I, like many of us, am struggling. By Hannah Jane Parkinson
8320, 8324, 8415, 8422 “I’m not worried about the moral issue”: what the college scam says about US meritocracy A $25 million college admissions bribery scheme exposed by the FBI reveals the rot in America’s education system. By Sophie McBain
8320, 8324, 8415, 8416, 8417 The White House press corps is finally learning how to deal with the Trump era Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders found herself under pressure when a question she dodged was chased up by three further reporters. It’s about time. By Nicky Woolf
8320, 8326 The second crash of a Boeing 737 Max 8 will only increase our irrational fear of flying Is there any experience that better encapsulates modern anxieties than hurtling through space thousands of feet above solid ground? By Sophie McBain
8268, 8275, 8320, 8324 Why is “millennial socialism” on the rise? Because liberalism is failing Millennials who care about freedom aren’t just looking for an alternative system of political and economic relations, but of moral ideals. By Lea Ypi
8268, 8275, 8274 Independent Group MP Sarah Wollaston: “Do I think that we cut too much? Yes, I do” The former Conservative MP on why austerity went too far and why she's proud to be a “Brexit mutineer". By Eleni Courea
8268, 8366, 8275 Women in power: the unfinished revolution for female MPs Even after two female prime ministers, the model of politics we offer ourselves remains resolutely male. By Mary Beard
8320, 8327 Can’t-do country: how Australia is on the brink of environmental disaster Rather than tackle the impending catastrophe, Australia seems intent on becoming the most nannyish nation on earth. By Matthew Engel
8300, 8303 Why we are in danger of entering a digital dark age, losing huge amounts of information There are things I’ve written that no longer exist, the sites that published them now defunct, and the original documents trapped on some ancient hard drive. By Sarah Ditum
8330, 8320, 8324 How Silicon Valley is being reshaped by trade unions Workers are challenging the tech utopianism of right-wing libertarians. By Hettie O'Brien
8268, 8275, 8320, 8324 Why is “millennial socialism” on the rise? Because liberalism is failing Millennials who care about freedom aren’t just looking for an alternative system of political and economic relations, but of moral ideals. By Lea Ypi
8320, 8324, 8415, 8416 Chelsea Manning is in jail. Our silence is shameful The DoJ’s persecution of Manning is simply judicial cruelty. It deserves our full attention. By James Ball
8268, 8328, 8274, 8320, 8324 The case for funding a Green New Deal through government debt Humanity will not come to an end if we double debt to GDP ratios, but it could come to an end if we fail to combat climate change. By Simon Wren-Lewis
8320, 8324, 8415, 8416, 8417 Trump announces a deal to open the US government for 3 weeks The longest government shutdown in US history is now over. It may begin again in three weeks. By Sophie McBain
8320, 8324, 8415, 8416, 8418 2020 election: who’s in the running to face Trump? A rundown of the candidates who have officially declared their campaigns for the Democratic nomination for president in 2020. By Nicky Woolf
8268, 8329, 8415, 8416 It’s OK to joke about the cold, but really not if you’re the president The president’s recent tweet is a damning evasion of climate responsibility. By India Bourke
8277, 8282 Michael Jackson’s hollow crown In the decade since his death, the singer’s afterlife has been contested territory. But the revelations of a new film may dethrone the king of pop forever. By Yo Zushi
8300, 8362 Social media gets a bad press – but for many of us, it’s a coping mechanism It isn’t Twitter or Instagram that make me able to cope with mental health problems. It’s people, and the technology just brings them closer. By Penny Andrews
8303 The story of Eugenia Cooney, the emaciated YouTuber the internet thought was dead For as long as Cooney has been popular online, fans have speculated that she suffers from an eating disorder. By Amelia Tait
8320, 8324, 8415, 8422, 8423 Life after Parkland Athletic director Chris Hixon died in the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school. As a nation watched, his wife Debbi had to find a way to grieve. By Devon Heinen
8300, 8362, 8303, 8302 The one fur cent: inside the lives of the world’s richest furries Hidden behind the animal masks are surgeons, traders and some of society’s highest earners. By Sarah Manavis
8268, 8332 As the world around it changes, football still has a problem with toxic masculinity The game is suspended in a hormonal state similar to that of a fifteen year old boy. By Kelly Welles
8300, 8303, 8302 Tim Berners-Lee wants to help us fix the internet. Is that even possible? The short answer is: probably not. By Sarah Manavis
8268, 8328, 8277 The digital age could spell a workplace revolution – for better or worse The printing press made democracy inevitable. Will digital tools do the same for work? By Lisa Herzog
8268, 8366, 8274, 8300, 8302 Why we need to talk about the sexism of online profiling You are a 29-year-old male? Buy these trainers! You are a 29-year-old woman? Download this dating app for “older women”! By Eva Blum-Dumontet
8268, 8296 Why vitamin D won’t stop people getting ill – no matter what doctors say In 2016, Public Health England recommended everyone take vitamin D supplements, yet increasing evidence suggests the actual health benefits are limited. By Phil Whitaker
8268, 8272, 8300 Climate breakdown enters its ice cream in February stage The media is doing little to report the true implications of February’s winter heat. By Laurie Laybourn-Langton
8303 The story of Eugenia Cooney, the emaciated YouTuber the internet thought was dead For as long as Cooney has been popular online, fans have speculated that she suffers from an eating disorder. By Amelia Tait
8268, 8274, 8387 MPs know what they don't want from Brexit - but are no closer to knowing what they do There is a large majority to deplore a no deal Brexit. It isn't clear there is a majority for anything that would actually stop it. By Stephen Bush
8268, 8395 For Bloody Sunday victims, justice should have been done long ago 47 years after Bloody Sunday, the single prosecution of a former British soldier vindicated families’ long campaign. By Caelainn Hogan
8268, 8275, 8387 Brexit has left the British political class trapped by its own history The ruling elite failed to grasp that the 2016 referendum changed politics irrevocably. By John Gray
8268, 8274, 8387 Four things we learnt from tonight's Brexit vote There's no majority for a second referendum, but the Independent Group got what it needed from this vote. By Stephen Bush
8320, 8323 The EU is torn over whether to punish or forgive the UK European divisions over the length and purpose of any Article 50 extension bode ill for Britain as it confronts the Brexit crisis. By Pauline Bock
8268, 8328, 8274, 8387 Even if MPs pass Theresa May’s deal, the UK’s Brexit nightmare won’t end Britain will have avoided one cliff-edge only for another to appear as it seeks a new trade deal. By Simon Wren-Lewis