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The US in brief

Stormy Daniels testifies in Trump trial

Dateline

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Britain's general election

Explore The Economist's forecast for Britain's looming election

Middle East & Africa

Israel and Hamas are not that far from a ceasefire agreement

But does Israel’s prime minister actually want to reach a deal?

Finance & economics

How Ukrainians are using the cover of war to escape taxes

“Black grain” infuriates exporters playing by the rules


Special report

The movement of capital globally is in decline

Geopolitics is altering its trajectory




The world in brief

Israel’s army said it had taken control of the Rafah crossing on the border between Gaza and Egypt...

Stormy Daniels took the stand in Donald Trump’s criminal trial in Manhattan...

TikTok and ByteDance, its Chinese parent company, sued America’s government over a law that gives the app up to 12 months to be sold to a non-Chinese buyer or face a ban...

Ukraine’s security service arrested two members of the government protection unit—which provides security for high-ranking officials—in connection with a plot to assassinate the country’s president, Volodymyr Zelenksy, and other members of the government...


Now it’s Prince William’s turn to shape British town planning

What the Duchy of Cornwall builds today, others will build tomorrow

How countries rank by military spending

Our analysis shows how NATO allies match up against their rivals

Why Beethoven’s ninth appeals to democrats and despots alike

Since its first performance 200 years ago, few pieces of music have won such varied devotees

The US in brief

Stormy Daniels testifies in Trump trial

Dateline

Try The Economist's history quiz

Britain's general election

Explore The Economist's forecast for Britain's looming election

World news

Why China’s companies are recruiting their own militias

Officials want to keep things calm in an era of slowing growth

Donald Tusk mulls which of the previous government’s plans to axe

The Polish populists’ projects were often preposterous, but not always


Meet the maharajas of the world’s biggest democracy

Indian officialdom still treats citizens like subjects


Emmanuel Macron’s urgent message for Europe

The French president issues a dark and prophetic warning


Strife in the Middle East

Why are Arab armed forces so ineffective?

Governments are splashing the cash, but that may do little to burnish their armies’ reputations

University protests about Gaza spread to the Middle East

But Arab students are looking to America for inspiration


Israel’s prime minister does not know where to go

Binyamin Netanyahu may be losing the plot


The Middle East has a militia problem

More than a quarter of the region’s 400m people live in states dominated by armed groups


Business, finance and economics

Big tech’s great AI power grab

Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft are on the hunt for new energy sources

America’s fiscal outlook is disastrous, but forgotten

On the campaign trail, both main candidates largely ignore the problem


Bartleby: How not to work on a plane

Hours without interruption and work to do. What could go wrong?



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Featured read

Who is Angela Rayner?

The deputy leader of the Labour Party alarms businesses in Britain. Should she?

The war in Ukraine

A fresh Russian push will test Ukraine severely, says a senior general

An interview with Vadym Skibitsky, deputy head of Ukraine’s military intelligence

Russia’s gas business will never recover from the war in Ukraine

Hopes of a Chinese rescue look increasingly vain


Who is supplying Russia’s arms industry?

New research traces the origin of crucial imports


Ukraine’s draft dodgers are living in fear

Ever more conscripts are needed against Russia’s offensive


Disinformation

How to counter disinformation

More co-ordination is needed, and better access to data


Disinformation is on the rise. How does it work?

Understanding it will lead to better ways to fight it


The vocabulary of disinformation

From AI-generated news to verification


India’s election

1843 magazine | Rahul Gandhi is on the march. But where is he heading?

He wants to be the champion of Indian liberalism. First he needs to save his party from irrelevance

Even disillusioned young Indian voters favour Narendra Modi

They worry about their future, but do not blame the BJP


How strong is India’s economy?

It isn’t the next China, but it could still transform itself and the world


Radio Modi: How India’s prime minister sweet-talks the nation

We analysed hundreds of Narendra Modi’s broadcasts. They reveal a meticulously cultivated image


America’s election year

Joe Biden is practising some Clintonian politics

But he needs to do more than crack down on “junk fees” to woo swing voters

In brief

Stormy Daniels testifies in Trump trial; Greene and Johnson meet

Our daily political update, featuring stories that matter


Interactive US election 2024

Can you build a Trump voter?

Try our tool—and see which attributes make voters more likely to pick one candidate over the other


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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Other highlights

These books reveal why the brain is the biggest mystery of all

Eight of the best books on brains and consciousness—human, octopus and other

1843 magazine | “It’s been a very long two weeks”: how the Gaza protests changed Columbia

The camp has been cleared. But the faculty of the Ivy League university remains deeply divided


Jeremy Clarkson, patron saint of the Great British bore

He who speaks for the bore speaks for Britain


Eleanor Coppola recorded how a cinematic triumph almost came unstuck

The documentary-maker and wife of Francis Ford Coppola died on April 12th, aged 87


Europe in mortal danger: An interview with Emmanuel Macron