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    May

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    No coal, but $31m energy and other aid package for Ukraine

    Foreign Minister Penny Wong says giving Ukraine flexibility about how to spend an energy aid package is better than sending a shipload of coal.

    • Tess Ikonomou
    A Ukrainian soldier carries a US Stinger air defence missile launcher in a trench on the front line in the Zaporizhzhia region.

    Ukraine gets go ahead to strike inside Russia with US missiles

    The move marks a shift by Washington after weeks of pressure from Kyiv and its allies and could mark a new chapter in the Ukraine war.

    • David E. Sanger and Edward Wong
    Isaac Levido, the Conservative Party’s 2024 election campaign co-ordinator.

    The Aussie political guru on a UK mission impossible

    Tory campaign chief Isaac Levido will need every ounce of his battlefield wiles if he is to lift Rishi Sunak’s party out of the doldrums by July 4. Luckily, he has a plan.

    • Hans van Leeuwen
    German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and French President Emmanuel Macron.

    Macron, Scholz plan joint push to boost European air defence

    The initiative is one of several policy areas, including capital markets reform, that the two European leaders were scheduled to discuss.

    • Ania Nussbaum and Michael Nienaber
    Firefighters put out a fire after two guided bombs hit a large construction supplies store in Kharkiv.

    ‘Hours of attacks’: Russia’s glide bombs target Ukraine city

    It was the latest attack in a sustained bombing campaign that has made life increasingly dangerous for civilians in the northeastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv.

    • Constant Méheut
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    London mayoral candidate Count Binface, who wears a rubbish bin on his head.

    Five things about the UK election that would baffle Aussies

    Voting isn’t compulsory, it’s first past the post, there are no TV ads, no sausage sizzles. This all means that parties campaign differently than Down Under.

    • Hans van Leeuwen
    Britain’s Prime Minister and Conservative Party leader Rishi Sunak.

    Sunak pledges mandatory national service in UK election ploy

    Compulsory work for 18-year-olds would provide “opportunities” and “experience”, the prime minister says, as the Tories try to differentiate themselves from Labour.

    • Camilla Turner
    Soldiers fire a heavy mortar at Russian forces on the front line near the city of Bakhmut in Ukraine’s Donetsk region.

    G7 finance chiefs back Russian assets plan for Ukraine

    The G7 ministers also warned against China’s dumping of cheap exports into their markets, although no concrete actions were decided against China.

    • Alan Rappeport
    Germany’s export-driven economy would have much to lose from an escalation of trade tensions and its Finance Minister Christian Lindner told reporters that “trade wars are all about losing, you can’t win them”.

    European G7 ministers warn over China trade war risks

    Finance ministers from Germany, France and host Italy called for a common front against China’s growing export strength.

    • Giuseppe Fonte and Christian Kraemer

    UK Conservatives on course for the worst result in 100 years

    Calling the election is more about saving Tory furniture than victory. And Rishi Sunak wants to call it quits before he breaks records he doesn’t want to hold.

    • Michael Turner
    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, outside 10 Downing St, announces the July 4 date for the UK general election.

    ‘Pick me, I’m duller’: the election pitch to win over UK voters

    What Rishi Sunak and his opposite number, Labour’s Keir Starmer, will be selling over the next six weeks is the promise of sobriety and stability.

    • Hans van Leeuwen
    Rishi Sunak at a campaign event in Port of Nigg in Inverness, Scotland.

    Sunak stumbles on Rwanda migrant plan as campaign kicks off

    The prime minister conceded he cannot introduce promised signature policies on deporting asylum seekers before the July 4 election, as campaigning got under way.

    • Michael Holden and Andrew MacAskill
    Britain’s July 4 election could trigger a Labour landslide.

    What will fill the Tory-shaped hole in British politics?

    Just as in Anthony Albanese’s blue-collar rhetoric, Brexit has pushed Keir Starmer’s Labour away from Tony Blair’s post-class modernisation and globalism.

    • The AFR View
    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, outside 10 Downing Street, announces the July 4 date for the UK general election.

    There is no Blair-mania about UK Labour leader Keir Starmer

    The Conservative government – now on its fifth prime minister since 2010 – has been a pointless charade for months now. What exactly a Labour government will mean is much less clear.

    • Adrian Wooldridge

    Drenched Sunak’s gamble to avoid electoral drowning

    On the steps of Downing Street, a rain-soaked Sunak was drowned out by Tony Blair’s victory anthem. It was hard to see past these harbingers of imminent defeat.

    • Updated
    • Hans van Leeuwen
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    Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi calls an election as heavy rain falls.

    British PM Sunak sets July 4 election date

    The election has come much sooner than expected, even though the ruling Conservative Party faces a potential landslide loss.

    • Hans van Leeuwen
    Shoppers on Oxford Street in London.

    UK inflation falls to 2.3pc, but rate cut hopes dented

    While inflation is now at its lowest since 2021, evidence of lingering price pressures is likely to make the Bank of England reluctant to ease rates in June.

    • Updated
    • Tom Rees and Philip Aldrick

    France grapples with cold, hard truths of its place in the world

    Macron’s government continues to read from a free trade hymnal. But in foreign policy, as the bloodshed in New Caledonia shows, the stubborn edifice of its colonial past refuses to budge.

    • James Curran
    Julian Assange’s supporters outside court.

    Assange wins right to appeal extradition to US

    It could be many months until the appeal is heard, and then that decision could be taken to the UK Supreme Court.

    • Updated
    • Michael Holden and Sam Tobin
    Forcing workers back into the office is still a struggle for many UK companies.

    ‘Coffee badging’ workers’ last stand in war on working from home

    Like “showing face” in the House of Lords, “coffee badging” refers to the practice of conspicuously clocking in before sneakily leaving shortly after.

    • Lucy Burton