Home guardianPosts

The Guardian

@guardian

The whole picture | Global, independent reporting 🌍
Posts
10.0k
Followers
6.3m
Following
300
Account Insight
Score
80.03%
Index
Health Rate
80%
Users Ratio
21074:1
Weeks posts
12.27
And the greatest novel of all time is … This week, the Guardian rolled out our list of the 100 greatest novels of all time, published in English, as voted for by authors, academics and critics around the world. Finally, we can reveal which novels made our top 10. Do you agree with our rankings? What would be at the top of your list? Let us know which novels you’ll be picking up – and which novels never left you. 📖 For each book, we’ve included their iconic opening lines. For full book descriptions and our interactive guide, where you can tally up how many you’ve read so far, head to the link in bio.
8,909 240
3 hours ago
AI was supposed to ensure healthcare for all in Kenya, especially the poorest. But in reality, a new system is failing them. An investigation by reporters at Africa Uncensored, in collaboration with Lighthouse Reports and the Guardian, reveals how a flawed system is overcharging the poorest and undercharging the richest. Swipe to read how that forces many to choose between going to hospital or paying their rent.
725 4
6 hours ago
What do you think is the greatest story ever told?  We wanted to find out if book lovers agreed with the Guardian’s list of 100 Best Novels of all time … watch the video to find out if we’re on the same page.  And if you’re curious to see the complete list, which was created by authors, academics, and literary critics from around the world then click the link in bio. For more, join the Guardian’s Lisa Allardice on Tuesday 19th May as she hosts literary giants to explore the results of this project and discuss the novels that helped shape their work. Tickets at the link in the bio. Video by @scarletpestell   Presented by @neelamtailor
4,045 142
9 hours ago
Donald Trump landed in Beijing this week in the first visit to China by a US president in nearly a decade. Alongside him was potentially the most powerful business delegation ever to accompany a US president to China, says the Guardian’s Washington bureau chief, David Smith. The entourage included Elon Musk and Tim Cook, Apple’s chief executive, and while each person had some business interest drawing them there, says Smith, their presence came against the backdrop of what’s being called an AI arms race, or cold war. Both countries are facing calls to cooperate on global AI standards and safeguards. Bernie Sanders, an independent US senator, urged Trump and Xi Jinping to agree on allowing top scientists to share technical information and develop “AI red lines” on dangerous behaviour. Sanders said: “At the height of the cold war, Reagan and Gorbachev found a way to negotiate nuclear arms control. The existential risk posed by AI demands nothing less from Trump and Xi.” Watch to find out more about this AI “cold war”, and whether this week’s summit achieved anything, and to read Smith’s full dispatch with senior China correspondent, Amy Hawkins, head to the link in bio.
842 35
1 day ago
It has not been a good week for Keir Starmer. The British prime minister hasn’t been able to escape the pressure since last week’s local election losses, stalked wherever he turns by the expectation that someone else in his party is lining up to take his position. Starmer at first insisted he deserved longer as prime minister, but his promise of “radical reforms” during the king’s speech on Wednesday did not have the desired impact. Instead, members of his government resigned, including the health secretary Wes Streeting, who seeks to replace Starmer. Then on Thursday, a window opened up for his other rival, Andy Burnham, to fight for the Labour leadership. Burnham is not currently an MP but could soon become one after Josh Simons stepped down, setting up a parliamentary byelection that Burnham is expected to compete in. Swipe to recap Starmer’s nightmare week, as told by Guardian cartoonists, and head to the link in bio for our explainer on what could happen next.
1,056 20
1 day ago
ICE turned its violent arrest of a US citizen into social media content. In June 2025, Christian Cerna went to a protest in his neighborhood against ICE raids and allegedly punched a border patrol agent. He later pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault, but denies that he ever hit the officer. Days after the protest, Christian was arrested in front of his family by ICE officers. They filmed the whole operation and posted it to social media where it racked up hundreds of thousands of views. Stateside host Carter Sherman speaks with Christian and Guardian reporter Sam Levin about what really went down. Full episode coming soon at link in bio. #ICE #LosAngeles #USPolitics #News
4,351 199
1 day ago
“A Russia like this can never be normalised – a Russia that deliberately destroys lives and hopes to remain unpunished,” the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said after a deadly night of strikes in Kyiv that killed 24, including three children. “The Russians practically demolished an entire section of the building with their missile,” Zelenskyy said after visiting the site. The Ukrainian ministry of foreign affairs said it was “one of the deadliest attacks on Kyiv since the start of Russia’s full-scale war”. Zelenskyy added: “Pressure is needed. It is Ukraine that is defending Europe and the world so that such strikes, in which children are killed, do not spread further.” To get up to speed on the latest, read our latest briefing on the war at the link in bio.
2,315 243
1 day ago
This World Cup is going to be a hot one – and experts are concerned.⁠ ⁠ One outlook suggests that every part of the US will experience temperatures above the historical average in June and July. ⁠ ⁠ It's into this environment that 48 men's national teams will arrive, all competing to win the World Cup in the US, Canada and Mexico.⁠ ⁠ Each of the matches staged in Miami is likely to exceed key temperature thresholds, while every venue other than the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City has had heat levels rise over the past 30 years. ⁠ ⁠ Researchers warn that many games will be unsafe for players and fans. When compared with the World Cup of 1994, the numbers are stark: the total number of matches expected to exceed 79F has risen by 52%, while at 82F the number has grown by 75%.⁠ ⁠ "Around half of human-caused climate change has occurred since the World Cup was last hosted in North America in 1994. As a result, the climate that the tournament is being played in today has fundamentally shifted in just 32 years," says Joyce Kimutai, an expert in extreme weather and climate change.⁠ ⁠ "There's a very real risk that we'll be faced with games taking place in conditions that are unsafe for players and fans."⁠ ⁠ Follow the link in our bio for the full article
931 23
1 day ago
Order a Diet Coke or invade Iran? Visitors to the National Mall can now play an old-school arcade game with a modern, satirical twist. Operation Epic Furious: Strait to Hell is a subversive war game with a message: war isn’t a video game, despite the ways in which the Trump administration has conveyed it on social media with its bombastic, Call of Duty style posts. Featuring a range of different barbs and direct quotes from Donald Trump’s Truth Social posts, the three arcade game units have been set up in protest of the president’s handling of the Iran war, and the fighting around the Strait of Hormuz. The installation is the latest piece from Secret Handshake, a resistance art group that has previously installed several pieces of artwork on the Mall to protest the Trump administration, including a Golden statue depicting Trump and late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein holding hands, as well as a Golden toilet.
4,742 48
1 day ago
A plan to create one of the world’s largest datacentres in the US state of Utah has provoked a furious public backlash amid concerns over its vast energy use and impact upon the state’s stressed water supplies.⁠ ⁠ The Stratos artificial intelligence datacentre footprint would cover more than 40,000 acres (160 sq km) over three sites in Box Elder county in north-western Utah. The facility will suck up a significant amount of water in an area that has been hit by severe drought in recent years, and is expected to raise the state’s planet-heating pollution by about 50% by consuming a huge amount of energy and water to power and cool itself, according to one impact analysis. ⁠ Last week, the project was approved by the county’s commissioners, despite thousands of objections lodged by Utah residents. Environmentalists have warned that Stratos could imperil the Great Salt Lake ecosystem, including a critical migratory bird habitat, which is already under severe stress.⁠ ⁠ The proposed project is backed by the venture capitalist Kevin O’Leary, who has claimed Stratos will deliver thousands of jobs. But these jobs will not outweigh the longer-term impacts to Utah and beyond, critics argue.⁠ ⁠ “This has all the hallmarks of an out-of-state megaproject with little to no concern for the local community,” said Ben Abbott, an ecologist at Brigham Young University and executive director of Grow the Flow, a group that aims to protect the Great Salt Lake. ⁠ Follow the link in bio to read more.
7,174 230
1 day ago
“It felt designed to intimidate and harass,” says Mandira Moitra Sarkar, owner of the popular Mandira’s Kitchen – a restaurant in the south of England that was one of the latest targets of the Home Office’s immigration enforcement officers, otherwise known as ICE. This raid is one of more than 17,400 carried out since July 2024 – a 77% increase on the year before and nearly as many as in the entire previous parliament, according to the Home Office. While ICE officers are not armed with firearms, their tactics are under fire. We spoke to employees at Mandira’s Kitchen who described a midday raid – conducted with no warrant, off the back of an anonymous tipoff – as “terrifying”. They found nothing. “People take this as something to be ashamed of,” says Moitra Sarkar, who holds a sponsor licence. “So they keep quiet. I thought: “not on my patch are you going to treat my people like this.”’ A Home Office spokesperson said: “All enforcement operations are intelligence-led. Race and ethnicity play no role in operational decisions. Illegal working undermines honest employers, undercuts local wages and fuels organised immigration crime. “We hold our officers to the highest standards of professionalism and categorically refute any suggestion they acted improperly [or] were heavy‑handed.” These type of raids are now being used as content for the Home Office’s new TikTok account, Secure Borders UK. Sile Reynolds of Freedom From Torture has called the account “performative cruelty”, calling for a “more hopeful story” about the UK’s capacity to welcome those seeking sanctuary. The Home Office has said the account is aimed at tackling online misinformation and to deter people from making the dangerous crossing over the Channel. Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, said: “We have surged enforcement activity to the highest level in British history so illegal migrants in the black economy have nowhere to hide.” With Reform UK and the Conservatives now pushing for even tougher ICE-style powers, the future of enforcement looks set to get even more intense. Read the full investigation into the raid via the link in bio. Video by @lozzhurrell + @windel.er
9,707 660
2 days ago
“Millionaires like us know how lucky we are to live in the UK and, as this polling shows, we are more than happy to invest in our country’s future,” said Phil White, a former business consultant, engineer and founding member of Patriotic Millionaires UK. A survey of 501 British millionaires carried out on behalf of Patriotic Millionaires UK, a nonpartisan network that campaigns for higher taxes on the ultra-wealthy, found that nine in 10 UK millionaires are proud to live in Britain and three-quarters would be willing to pay more tax to ensure public assets get the funding they need. Despite widely reported concerns that the wealthy are choosing to leave the country owing to higher taxes, 64% of those surveyed also said the government should increase taxes on the capital and assets of the wealthiest individuals to reduce the tax burden on everyone else. Patriotic Millionaires UK said the sample size reflected the smaller section of society that millionaires take up in the UK. The survey comes as financial markets watch closely to see if Keir Starmer will be replaced by a more leftwing candidate as prime minister, as the Labour party considers how to react to their disastrous local election results. Some of the economic ideas connected to candidates such as Andy Burnham and Wes Streeting have included a rise in capital gains tax to pay for a 2p cut in national insurance. Head to the link in bio to read the full story.
7,387 176
2 days ago