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Latest

A BYD model is displayed at the Auto China 2024 in Beijing.

US set to impose 100pc tariffs on Chinese EVs

The move expected this week marks the latest effort by the Biden administration to protect America’s domestic industry from cheap competition.

  • Updated
  • Alan Rappeport and Jim Tankersley

The history of the two-state solution (in six maps)

The world is still searching for a path to peaceful co-existence by Israelis and Palestinians.

  • Updated
  • Emma Connors and Hans van Leeuwen

Russia ‘captures key villages’ as Ukraine races reinforcements

Military bloggers say the assault in the north-east could mark the start of an attempt to carve out the “buffer zone” sought by President Vladimir Putin.

  • Updated
  • Olena Harmash and Tom Balmforth

Halting the bombs: Biden’s gamble to rein in Netanyahu

The US president paused a weapons shipment to Israel, piling pressure on Israel’s leader to change course. Will it work?

  • James Politi, Felicia Schwartz and Mehul Srivastava

Defiant Israel orders more Palestinians to flee Rafah

Benjamin Netanyahu insists that he must maintain military pressure in Gaza to eradicate Hamas despite warnings from the US and others.

  • Updated
  • Wafaa Shurafa and Sam Mednick

Ken Griffin urges Harvard University to embrace ‘Western values’

The hedge fund founder who has given his alma mater more than $US500 million has slammed the pro-Palestinian protests sweeping colleges as “almost like performative art”.

  • Harriet Agnew

Opinion & Analysis

Why the campus protests are so troubling

Hamas is against the existence of a Jewish state and believes there should be an Islamic state between the river and the sea. When protests on college campuses ignore that, they are part of the problem.

Thomas Friedman

Contributor

Thomas Friedman

Trump’s long week in court as election looms

Stormy Daniels’ allegations of a sexual encounter with Trump set the courtroom alight this week. How they play into his election chances is unclear.

Matthew Cranston

United States correspondent

Matthew Cranston

Why Australia’s long-suffering renters are not alone

Rents are soaring not only in Australia but also in the US, UK and Canada, preventing inflation from declining closer to central banks’ targeted levels.

Swati Pandey, Irina Anghel and Enda Curran

Contributor

Campus protests may help Donald Trump win

History suggests the intellectual conformism sweeping university life could trigger a popular backlash that ends in conservative rule.

David Brooks

Contributor

From the Financial Times

Israeli soldiers drive a tank at a staging ground near the border with the Gaza Strip.

Halting the bombs: Biden’s gamble to rein in Netanyahu

The US president paused a weapons shipment to Israel, piling pressure on Israel’s leader to change course. Will it work?

  • James Politi, Felicia Schwartz and Mehul Srivastava

Ken Griffin urges Harvard University to embrace ‘Western values’

The hedge fund founder who has given his alma mater more than $US500 million has slammed the pro-Palestinian protests sweeping colleges as “almost like performative art”.

  • Harriet Agnew

Stormy Daniels accused of profiting off Trump sex claims

The former president’s lawyers are trying to undermine the porn actor’s credibility as the trial resumes in Manhattan.

  • Joe Miller
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Yesterday

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators at an encampment at Columbia University on April 22.

Why the campus protests are so troubling

Hamas is against the existence of a Jewish state and believes there should be an Islamic state between the river and the sea. When protests on college campuses ignore that, they are part of the problem.

  • Thomas Friedman

This Month

People visit St Mary’s lighthouse in Whitley Bay to see the aurora borealis, commonly known as the northern lights, on May 10, 2024, in the UK.

Extreme solar storm hits Earth, could bring auroras but disrupt power

An unusually strong solar storm hitting Earth could produce southern lights across Australia, including as far north as Queensland.

  • Marcia Dunn
The resolution “determines” that a state of Palestine is qualified for membership.

Australia’s ‘yes’ vote on Palestine at UN slammed by Labor MP

Penny Wong said Australia’s support for Palestinian statehood will help to broker peace, but a Labor MP has argued it will further isolate Jewish Australians.

  • Updated
  • Matthew Cranston
Lex Greensill.

Lex Greensill alleges his UK pursuers were protecting David Cameron

The fallen Aussie financier alleges a media leak by Britain’s Insolvency Service, which is seeking to ban him as a company director, was politically motivated.

  • Hans van Leeuwen
Interest rates have been on hold in the US>

Fed’s Logan says still too early to think about rate cuts

Lorie Logan, the president of the Dallas Fed, flagged uncertainties over how restrictive monetary policy is.

  • Catarina Saraiva
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The Bank of England is hoping for a rosier economic picture.

Bank of England boss ‘optimistic’ interest rate cuts are coming

The BoE left its benchmark unchanged at 5.25 per cent, but the UK economy is looking ripe for a rate cut.

  • Updated
  • Hans van Leeuwen
Foreign Minister Penny Wong.

Australia considers voting yes on Palestine’s UN bid

Penny Wong says abstaining is a common diplomatic practice, amid pressure to admit Palestine as a United Nations member.

  • Andrew Tillett
A tanker arrives in Darwin Harbour to deliver an LNG cargo to Inpex’s Ichthys LNG export project.

Japan’s energy giants applaud Australia’s ‘clear’ gas plan

Japanese energy giant Inpex said the Albanese government’s new gas strategy shows Australia’s role as a “reliable and trusted” partner.

  • Jessica Sier
Former President Donald Trump walks to the courtroom following a break in his trial at Manhattan criminal court on Thursday.

Trump’s long week in court as election looms

Stormy Daniels’ allegations of a sexual encounter with Trump set the courtroom alight this week. How they play into his election chances is unclear.

  • Matthew Cranston

Lowy’s lament: ‘I know how insidious antisemitism can be’

Sir Frank Lowy experienced hatred against Jews first hand in Hitler’s Europe, and is shaken by what he now sees “leaking out of decent people” in Australia.

  • Jill Margo
Apartments for rent in the West Village neighbourhood of New York.

Why Australia’s long-suffering renters are not alone

Rents are soaring not only in Australia but also in the US, UK and Canada, preventing inflation from declining closer to central banks’ targeted levels.

  • Swati Pandey, Irina Anghel and Enda Curran
Biden told Netanyahu last month, following the killing of World Central Kitchen aid workers in an Israeli strike, that ongoing US support for the war would depend on new steps to protect civilians.

‘We’ll fight with our fingernails’: Netanyahu hits back at Biden

The Israeli prime minister defiantly says the country is prepared to stand alone if necessary if it attacks Rafah to further its destruction of Hamas.

  • Updated
  • Shira Rubin, Michael Birnbaum and Karen DeYoung
Stormy Daniels testifies as a promotional image for one of her shows is displayed ona  monitor.

Stormy Daniels accused of profiting off Trump sex claims

The former president’s lawyers are trying to undermine the porn actor’s credibility as the trial resumes in Manhattan.

  • Joe Miller
Trump’s ownership of nearly 60 per cent of the company has made the listing a symbol of the presumptive Republican nominee’s ability to capture the attention of individual traders.

Trump asked oil CEOs for $1.5b donations in exchange for favours

The former president demanded $US1 billion in donations to get re-elected and offered to overturn environmental rules and policies to help the oil industry.

  • Updated
  • Josh Dawsey and Maxine Joselow
  • Analysis
  • EU
Europe’s far right is becoming mainstream.

Europe’s far right is becoming mainstream

Anti-immigration parties with fascist roots, and an unclear commitment to democracy, are emerging as Europe’s new leaders, the New York Times reports.

  • Roger Cohen
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Former US president Donald Trump enters the Manhattan Criminal Court this week.

Campus protests may help Donald Trump win

History suggests the intellectual conformism sweeping university life could trigger a popular backlash that ends in conservative rule.

  • David Brooks
Russian soldiers march during the Victory Day military parade dress rehearsal in Red Square.

Russia not looking for global power clash: Putin

Vladimir Putin now casts the war as part of a holy struggle with the West, which he says has forgotten the role played by the Soviet Union in defeating Nazi Germany.

  • Updated
  • Guy Faulconbridge
The elevation of Nir Bar Dea, 42, to CEO marked the end of a 12-year transition away from Ray Dalio.

New Bridgewater chief ‘rewires’ world’s largest hedge fund

Nir Bar Dea says he had overhauled the firm after just a year in charge, in a bid to restore investment performance and mark a break from founder Ray Dalio.

  • Ortenca Aliaj
Bundles of steel tubes at a trading market in Jinan. China’s steel exports have swelled.

China’s exports return to growth in boost to shaky economy

China’s exports edged higher in dollar terms last month as Beijing pinned its hopes on a manufacturing-led revival to boost flagging growth.

  • Updated
  • Joe Cash
A worker counts money at a grocery store in Buenos Aires.

Argentina launches 10,000-peso notes, worth $17, as inflation bites

The new note, worth five times more than the previous largest note, was introduced as Argentina’s annual inflation rate reached 287 per cent in March.

  • Ciara Nugent