The Economist | Independent journalism

Leaders

America seems immune to the world economy’s problems

Elsewhere, political dysfunction and fiscal frailties are taking a toll

Business

The EU hits China’s carmakers with hefty new tariffs

Duties will only hold them back for a while


United States

Hunter Biden’s criminal conviction is good for nobody politically

The trial showed the ruin of addiction, and the wheels of justice turning




The world in brief

Israel continued its offensive on Rafah, as the leader of the World Health Organisation said that a significant proportion of Gaza's population faced “famine-like conditions”...

America’s Supreme Court unanimously rejected a bid to restrict mifepristone, preserving widespread access to the common abortion drug...

Britain’s Labour Party launched its election manifesto, promising to raise £8.5bn ($10.9bn) in taxes...

Argentina’s Senate approved two economic reform bills in a significant victory for Javier Milei, the president...


Hamas and Israel are still far apart over a ceasefire deal

For all America’s optimism, the two sides look fundamentally irreconcilable

Bagehot: What separates Tony Blair’s Labour from the party today?

The approach to globalisation is the clearest dividing-line of all

The drug-overdose capitals of Europe

Will synthetic opioids take root across the region?

William Anders took the photo that kicked off the environmental movement

The Apollo 8 astronaut and nuclear engineer died on June 7th, aged 90

Video

Our US election model

Donald Trump has a two-in-three chance of winning in November

Our forecast puts the former president ahead of Joe Biden

Five months out, Donald Trump has a clear lead

America’s presidential race is no coin flip, says our forecast


What Donald Trump’s 34 convictions mean for the presidential election

Come election season, it could be Hunter Biden’s trial that hogs the headlines


Interactive US election 2024

Who are the Americans switching from Biden to Trump?

Try our “Build a voter” tool and see which attributes make voters likely to pick one candidate over the other


This week

The most important political stories this week

The hard right makes gains in European Parliament elections, four hostages are rescued in Gaza—and more

The most important business stories this week

The Fed leaves its benchmark interest rate on hold, Europe agrees tariffs on Chinese EVs—and more


KAL’s cartoon

A lighter look at the week’s events


Letters to the editor

On low birth rates, OpenAI, cricket in America, American students, Danish food, the British election


World news

Britain’s NHS reels from a ransomware attack

An assault on a health-care provider prompts an urgent call for blood donations

Benny Gantz and Gadi Eisenkot leave Israel’s war cabinet

Will this force Binyamin Netanyahu at last to decide to push for a ceasefire?


Banyan: How the Philippines is turning the water-cannon on China

Ferdinand Marcos’s flip is a huge gift to America. But dangers lie ahead


South Africa stands on the brink of salvation—or catastrophe

To prevent a coalition of chaos, Cyril Ramaphosa and the Democratic Alliance must do a deal


European elections

Why France’s president called a snap election

The centre wants to weaken Marine Le Pen’s hard right, in or out of power


The three women who will shape Europe

At a crucial moment they encapsulate the dilemma of how to handle populism


Interactive European elections 2024

European Parliament elections tracker: results and guide to the vote

The hard right has made some gains, but the centre-right EPP remains the largest group


Business, finance and economics

Why global GDP might be $7trn bigger than everyone thought

The discovery has perturbed Chinese officials

China is distorting its stockmarket by trying to prop it up

State purchases of shares are bad enough, but other measures are far more destructive


Bartleby: Is it better to be an early bird or a night owl?

The promise and perils of waking before sunrise



America’s election year

Donald Trump’s trade hawk is plotting behind bars

Peter Navarro’s dark vision of the global economy could shape Trump 2

America’s billionaires should resist the urge to support Donald Trump

A Trump victory would reward them. But not enough to justify the risks


In brief

Trump goes to Washington; Republicans chastise Garland

Our daily political update, featuring the stories that matter


Trump v Biden: who’s ahead in the polls?

The Economist is tracking the race to be America’s next president



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Britain’s election

How the Labour Party could end Britain’s stagnation

Even if the economy peps up, taxes will have to rise

Bagehot: Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer fight for a poundshop presidency 

The general election reveals the absurdities of Britain’s presidential turn


The most Tory place in Britain

It isn’t that posh but its population is old


Interactive UK election 2024

General-election forecast: will Labour destroy the Conservatives

Our seat-by-seat prediction for Britain’s next Parliament


The Israel-Hamas war

Talk of war between Israel and Lebanon is growing

Israel and Hizbullah would still prefer to avoid one, but that is getting ever harder to do

Joe Biden leaked Israel’s first plan to end the war in Gaza

But hardliners in Israel and Hamas may yet scupper it


Who is responsible for feeding Gaza?

Arguments fly over Israel’s duty to maintain aid


The war in Ukraine

In Crimea, Ukraine is beating Russia

The peninsula is becoming a death trap for the Kremlin’s forces

Russia’s explosion of a huge Ukrainian dam had surprising effects

A year after the blast and flood, Ukrainians disagree over whether to rebuild Kakhovka


Ukraine has a navy that needs no sailors

It does a surprisingly good job of destroying Russian vessels


Ukraine’s desperate struggle to defend Kharkiv

It is holding off Russia’s attack — for now


Other highlights

1843 magazine | Can fasting help you live to 100?

An Italian doctor thinks it can – and he’s got a diet to sell you

Black baseball players of yore get their due, at last

Major League Baseball recognition puts Josh Gibson ahead of Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth in the record books


It’s a bird, it’s a plane…it’s a Chinese flying car

China is developing the vehicles faster than any other country


New Zealand is changing its place names

But many citizens struggle to pronounce Maori monikers


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