8277, 8279, 8320, 8415, 8457, 8462, 8422, 8475 What we can learn from Giuseppe Garibaldi In the 19th century Garibaldi united a divided country. Today’s polarised politics could benefit from his pragmatic idealism. By Jeremy Cliffe
8320, 8324, 8415, 8457, 8459 Why making Juneteenth a US national holiday matters Marking the day that slavery ended in the US reminds us how the country failed to live up to its ideals – and of the battles still to be won. By Emily Tamkin
8277, 8279, 8415, 8422, 8475 The ruthless, self-questioning brilliance of Janet Malcolm The New Yorker journalist, who has died aged 86, was one of the greatest practitioners of her trade, as well as its most penetrating interrogator. By Leo Robson
8320, 8323, 8415, 8457, 8462, 8416, 8470 How French conservatives are turning toward Marine Le Pen Defections by mainstream politicians suggest that backing France’s hard-right National Rally in regional elections is no longer a dramatic leap. By David Broder
8320, 8530, 8324, 8322, 8415, 8416, 8468 Trapped in the Cold Web How the US and Russia became entangled. By Emily Tamkin
8268, 8275, 8300, 8455 Martin Rees and Steven Pinker: Wagering on catastrophe Four years ago these two eminent scientists bet on the likelihood of a man-made global biological disaster. Is it time to decide a winner? By Martin Rees and Steven Pinker
8320, 8530, 8415, 8457, 8458, 8459, 8462, 8416, 8468 The G7 showed the West endures, but is not rising to the scale of its challenges A new age of "Westishness" was on display in Cornwall. By Jeremy Cliffe
8320, 8324, 8415, 8457, 8459, 8416, 8468 Joe Biden’s big week: the US perspective on the G7, NATO and Vladimir Putin Were the results of the US president’s first international tour as grand as the settings of the summits? By Emily Tamkin
8320, 8321, 8415, 8457, 8464, 8416 Naftali Bennett’s first aim as leader of Israel’s new government will be to wreck it By Dimi Reider
8528, 8320, 8322, 8415, 8457, 8463 Why are progressives still defending China’s brutal dictatorship? By James Bloodworth
8320, 8530, 8324, 8323, 8415, 8457, 8459, 8462, 8416, 8468 Why tensions remain between Joe Biden and Emmanuel Macron What recent comments by the French president reveal about the future of the transatlantic relationship. By Ido Vock
8519, 8300, 8302, 8415, 8493, 8495, 8457, 8459, 8472 Why Lina Khan could be Big Tech’s new worst enemy Newly appointed as chair of the FTC, the 32-year-old competition lawyer has become the face of America's “hipster antitrust” movement.
8519, 8520, 8522 Did Cristiano Ronaldo give Coca-Cola a kicking? The footballer's preference for water has been credited with a plunge in the company's stock price.
8268, 8328, 8415, 8416, 8472 The US and the EU’s stimulus policies show they have learned from the mistakes of the past We have entered a new economic era of higher public spending and greater government intervention.
8519, 8520, 8303, 8496 How social media companies help authoritarian governments censor the internet Increasingly, the price of access to a global digital market is assisting the policing of online speech.
8519, 8268, 8328, 8415, 8493, 8494 Andy Haldane is right to warn that the UK’s recovery might not be sustainable – or fair If inflation is not controlled early, it will be those on lower incomes who are less able to cope.
8519, 8521 In digital trade, the UK is becoming more like the US than the EU The UK is looking to move away from the EU's vision of digital trade and align itself more closely with America's. Is it a risk worth taking?
8268, 8270, 8274 The Chesham and Amersham by-election doesn’t tell us much at all The Lib Dems’ victory wasn’t that shocking and it shouldn’t change how we view politics. By Stephen Bush
8268, 8275 Boris Johnson’s failure to lift restrictions on 21 June has agitated his Tory critics There is appetite in the cabinet for having difficult conversations with the country on Covid – but some MPs fear this hunger runs out at the top. By Stephen Bush
8527, 8320, 8324, 8323, 8415, 8416, 8468 How the UK and others are embracing nuclear proliferation Britain, China, India and Pakistan have all increased their nuclear weapon stockpiles or limits. By Ben Walker
8528, 8268, 8270 The threat of Labour defeat in Batley and Spen shows the party is facing a perfect storm By Paul Mason
8268, 8274 Keir Starmer should keep silent on Dominic Cummings Whether by accident or design, the Labour leader took the right approach to Cummings at PMQs today. By Stephen Bush
8268, 8277, 8279, 8300, 8362 “Choking on sanctimony”: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie on the cult of righteousness The Nigerian author’s blistering polemic reveals some uncomfortable truths about young progressives on social media. By Freddie Hayward
8277, 8279, 8415, 8422, 8475 The Bench by Meghan Markle: It is mind-boggling how bad this book is Many parents wonder how hard it is to write a children's book. But this collection of platitudes about paternal love is barely readable. By Sophie McBain
8277, 8282, 8515 Return of the long player How we rediscovered the pleasures of the album in the digital age. By Tom Gatti
8277, 8279 The paradoxes and platitudes of Salman Rushdie In a new collection of essays, the author reveals the difficulty of reconciling his belief in multiplicity and ambiguity with a kind of rational absolutism. By Leo Robson
8277, 8279, 8320, 8323, 8415, 8457, 8462 Dante in the dock: Why Florence wants to clear the poet’s name Seven hundred years after the poet’s death, many believe he should be exonerated of the crimes for which he was exiled from Florence. Was he the victim of a conspiracy? By Alexander Lee
8277, 8415, 8422, 8423 Can Covid free us from the saccharine charade of wedding culture? Lockdown has caused misery for those whose events have been planned for years – but why do we still hanker after the big white wedding anyway? By Emily Bootle
8519, 8300, 8303, 8302, 8415, 8422, 8485 Anthony Weiner shows the downsides to the NFT meme boom The ex-Congressman and convicted sex offender raises the question: can the commodification of shame really bring about ethical redemption? By Sarah Manavis
8300, 8303, 8302, 8415, 8493, 8496 Internet outage: what caused gov.uk, Amazon and many other websites to go offline? The cloud service provider Fastly suffered a technical problem that took down the websites of the UK government, the BBC and Reddit. By Oscar Williams
8268, 8445, 8277, 8415, 8493, 8497 Are e-scooters the future of city travel? A long-awaited rental e-scooter trial starts in London today. Will the controversial vehicles change travel for the better? By Ellen Peirson-Hagger
8300, 8362 The trouble with Instagram infographics as political discourse Infographics are often shallow explorations of issues that need careful critical attention. By Sarah Manavis
8300, 8362 How this humble British petrol station became a hotspot for TikTok influencers Garages are becoming unlikely destinations of choice for influencers who want to perform ordinariness. By Chris Stokel-Walker
8300, 8362, 8303, 8415, 8493, 8457, 8459 Why won’t Facebook just ban Donald Trump for good? The decision by Facebook’s Oversight Board to ban the former president for another six months is a half-hearted and cowardly compromise. By Sarah Manavis