This newspaper will continue its special investigation into TV presenter Dan Wootton and expose wrongdoing in the established media – without fear or favour
John Mitchinson explores why we need to spend a third of our life asleep
With politicians moving into TV talk shows and entertainment, can celebrities, sports stars and social media influencers move the other way, and make a difference in politics?
EXCLUSIVE INVESTIGATION: Some of the same people that noted surgical masks were useless for airborne viruses also made decisions to limit the use of effective respirator masks: a decision that had devastating ramifications when the pandemic struck.
It is no coincidence that the Government’s backtracking reflects the anti-green rhetoric often involving those who pushed for Brexit
One of the key elements of the Georgia false statement criminal statute is ‘knowing’ misrepresentations are false
This deception seems to be becoming part of a deliberate strategy by Conservative Party HQ.
If a new ‘Hijab and Chastity Bill’ succeeds with no condemnation from voices abroad, the international community will be culpable, writes Parisa Hashempour
Student housing has never been known for its quality but, in recent years, the system has been pushed to breaking point
There have been growing concerns among regulators about the potential misuse of sustainability-linked loans
The inside look at how a Times columnist with ties to coal mining, distorted climate data in The Times – while the press regulator turned a blind eye
Cultural vandalism takes many forms, writes Josiah Mortimer
Calls for the UK to leave the European Convention on Human Rights shouldn’t be viewed as mere sabre-rattling – as many did with Conservative promises to leave the EU, writes Nicholas Reed Langen
This could be just the tip of the iceberg of MPs’ promotion of industries and firms that donate to their campaign coffers.
he NHBC is the country’s largest building control inspector says it is ” independent of Government and the construction industry”. But its corporate affairs team has strong links to the Conservative Party
The economic legacy of the now imprisoned former prime minister Imran Khan is prompting many Pakistanis to think of leaving
The Fulton Country District Attorney is looking at the same facts as the federal indictment, but under different laws and with the potential for new uninvestigated evidence
The focus on ‘language’ policing by the arbiters of educational standards exacerbates class and racial inequalities argues a new report
Penny Pepper explores how she encourages disabled people to reclaim labels – to twist and refute them
How is a shopping site operating in the UK able to market knives seemingly at school kids without sanction? Katherine Denkinson investigates.
As the hedge fund-backed news channel continues to platform star presenter Dan Wootton, Byline Times reveals the ‘racism, sexism and misogyny’ risking the future of the broadcaster
Dr Chris Day’s legal campaign exposed a ‘gap in the law’, which deprived 54,000 junior doctors of statutory whistleblowing protections
President Lukashenka has colluded with Putin in the forced transfer of children, and should face the same sanctions
Just one in nine local council audits are now conducted on time – which researchers blame on a privatised system
In the eighth part of its three-year special investigation into the private and professional conduct of GB News star Dan Wootton, Byline Times uncovers how the powerful journalist used the pretext of ‘underwear modelling’ to target young reality TV personalities. Here, for the first time, these people in the public eye speak out
Bypassing the indecision of their Western allies, Ukrainians continue to show the world how they improvise, adapt, and overcome obstacles
The Armenian Prime Minister has described the situation as an ‘ongoing process of genocide’
A prominent women’s rights activist complained about a “defender” of an alleged abuser sitting on the board of a whistleblowing charity. The reply she got blew her away.
If there’s any risk future climate change may be worse than we’re anticipating, we must double-down on decarbonisation even more urgently, writes Charlie Gardner
A quarter of staff have been slashed in a year at National World, which owns a raft of city ‘World’ titles and renowned local papers.
Sinead O’Connor’s passing has seen tabloid tributes about her talent and fearlessness – ignoring how the singer was demonised by the same newspapers when she was alive
How the right-wing elites of politics and media want you to give up on the climate crisis
London’s Metropolitan Police has been rocked by racism and sexism scandals over the past few years. Progress at making the force more diverse is painfully slow.
The pressure is on to decide how best to use – if at all – the unexplored deep that humans have decided is the common property for the good of all mankind
Even the key showdown over the Illegal Migration Bill in the chamber had just 6,000 views