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Honestly held opinions and provocative argument based on current events or our recent reports.
Ahead of this week’s presidential debate, which raised serious concerns about Joe Biden, Bonnie Greer shared her thoughts on why his Vice President may not be seen as an option to succeed him
From lies, incompetence, porn, and golfing bravo in the US – to dull and boring, with a side of rude and shouty in the UK
The normalisation of racism and dog-whistles will only get worse if the press continues to treat Farage as an entertaining figure representing the ‘real views’ of the British people – it must stop, writes Byline Times’ Editor
The latest episode of the hit Media Storm podcast focuses on the shortcomings of Pride Month when it comes to journalism and the corporate world
“We’ve heard a lot in the campaign about D-Day. If ever there was a time to fight them on the beaches, then this is it.”
Mercer has said it is the ‘long-standing policy of successive governments not to comment on the activities of our Special Forces’ – but expects his political rival, Fred Thomas, to deviate from it
Columnist Gerard Baker glossed over the Murdoch press’ criminality in a recent comment piece – and the accusations against his own Editor. Why?
The influence of wildlife charities has been insignificant in the face of the financial and lobbying might of the vested interests profiting from nature destruction, writes Charlie Gardner
There are three legal cases against Tate pending – involving accusations of abusive behaviour towards women, human trafficking, and sexual assault
The latest episode of the hit Media Storm podcast focuses on the more positive narratives around refugees that journalists could disseminate – and why they selectively choose not to
In the US, reporters on The Washington Post are investigating their own bosses – and their stories get published. It is hard to even contemplate such fearless reporting happening in the UK, writes Brian Cathcart
Tactical sites should acknowledge the limitations of MRP projections for their advice, and look hard at how – and whether – they should publish the MRP data, and be more willing to press their manual override buttons
The politicisation of literary events and artistic institutions began when corporate sponsors bought their way into these spaces, writes Russell Warfield
A lawyer with 25 years of experience in the criminal justice system critiques the “underwhelming” pledges made in party manifestos
The Labour leader’s refusal to commit to scrapping George Osborne’s austerity-era policy risks committing hundreds of thousands more children into poverty
Why is the West holding back from the opportunity to seize the $300 billion of frozen Russian money sitting in its banks?
Restrictions on how Ukraine uses weapons supplied by the West should be ditched so it can “achieve a faster victory”
He wants juries to stop finding defendants not guilty and to prevent judges from applying laws “differently” when they involve issues like climate change and anti-racism
Migrant communities could be the hidden kingmakers in a border poll, but to engage they must feel safe
Labour ditched its plans in February but has announced a new net zero transition policy – it isn’t enough
The Conservative manifesto might make a line in an exam paper in 30 years. But voters desperate for change are unlikely to take notice
The Prime Minister, who wants to force young people to spend an entire year of their lives serving their country, wouldn’t even devote one afternoon to it himself
There are 14 million disabled people in the UK – are politicians even considering them in this election campaign?
Brexit has barely been mentioned during the election campaign – but the impact on businesses and the economy is so much worse than the public might think
Both party leaders are promising to slash immigration numbers without being honest about the big costs it will inevitably bring to our economy and public services
With conflicts simmering across the globe, NATO should help Ukraine more and introduce special operations forces and intelligence assets in preparation for future wars
Farage would be cancelled if he said the same things about Jews as he does Muslims – yet he gets endless airtime
Why is a party with so few elected representatives and even fewer ideas being given such an easy ride?
Climate leadership is not the vote loser its opponents like to portray it as – but the danger for the climate movement is assuming public support will endure forever, argues Russell Warfield
Labour figures from across Keir Starmer’s party are furious about her treatment by the leadership
The Conservative “machine” will target voters with messages that speak to them, which appear to come from sources they trust. Here’s what to watch out for
Having a figure such as Kuenssberg in such a prominent position during the upheavals of the past 14 years helped the BBC appease its implacable Conservative enemies, writes former BBC producer and journalist Patrick Howse
Alton School is closing due to a “continued decline in pupil numbers” and years of financial challenges, yet the closure is being reported in connection with Labour plans to introduce a 20% VAT levy on private school fees
The CPT-4o update was removed just a week after going live and led to the A-lister releasing a statement
The latest episode of the hit Media Storm podcast focuses on how the press frames our damaging and discriminatory policing culture
Ofcom’s attempt at addressing concerns has resulted in ‘no substantive changes’ – but it now says it is considering sanctions against GB News for breaking impartiality rules
Matt Gallagher watched Guardian columnist George Monbiot make the case for a ‘politics of belonging’ – but how to get there?
With news that senior Murdoch executives now face a civil trial, Peter Jukes looks back on a decade of deceit