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The US in brief

Jury deliberates at Trump trial

Dateline

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Analysing Africa

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Middle East & Africa

Who is responsible for feeding Gaza?

Arguments fly over Israel’s duty to maintain aid

Leaders

Incompetence or opacity: the choice facing British voters

The first week of the election campaign points to a failure of political competition


Business

Can Elon Musk’s xAI take on OpenAI?

It has some advantages. But it is entering a crowded field




The world in brief

Israel’s national security adviser, Tzachi Hanegbi, said he expects his country’s offensive in Gaza to last for at least another seven months...

Jurors were excused for the day without reaching a verdict, after deliberations began in the first criminal trial of an American president...

Polls closed in South Africa’s general election, the country’s most closely contested in three decades...

Samsung Electronics’ largest union, which represents a fifth of its workers, called its first strike since it was founded in 1969...


Is your rent ever going to fall?

Too often politicians tout awful solutions for helping tenants

Bagehot: The British election is becoming an episode of mob justice

A punishment beating is on the cards for the Conservatives

A tech ethicist on how AI worsens ills caused by social media

The only cure is to impose change on AI firms’ incentives, argues Tristan Harris

Bullfighting is under attack

It reveals a lot about politics and attitudes towards Spain

The US in brief

Jury deliberates at Trump trial

Dateline

Try The Economist's history quiz

Analysing Africa

Introducing our latest newsletter

Business, finance and economics

ExxonMobil rediscovers its swagger

The bad boy of big oil goes after its shareholders

Baby-boomers are loaded. Why are they so stingy?

The mystery matters for global economic growth


Japanese businesses are trapped between America and China

Could geopolitics kill off an incipient corporate revival?


What India’s clout in white-collar work means for the world

In time its tech firms could be as formidable as China’s manufacturers


South Africa’s election

How to save South Africa

The rainbow nation needs an alternative to decline under the ANC


How a Russia-linked mine may keep the ANC in power

South Africa’s ruling party was broke a few months ago, but its fortunes are changing


How South Africa has changed 30 years after apartheid

Poverty is rife and inequality still starkly racial


Video

Britain’s election

Interactive UK election 2024

General-election forecast: will Labour destroy the Conservatives?

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

Interactive UK election 2024

Can you build a British voter?

Explore the groups driving Britain’s political shifts using our interactive tool


Bagehot: Rishi Sunak’s snap election is odd and illogical—much like him

Whether an act of political genius or lunacy, Britons should welcome it


Sir Keir Starmer meets the public. Sort of

The Labour leader is better than he was at campaigning but that is not saying a lot


World news

Chaguan: How China uses Russia as a wrecking ball

China stands back, as Russia threatens to paralyse the UN Security Council

Ukraine’s desperate draft-dodgers drown in the river of death

Thousands of military-age Ukrainians are risking their lives by swimming across treacherous waters


Hordes of cicadas are emerging simultaneously in America

The ancestors of these two neighbouring broods last met in 1803


As the Euro-elections loom, Giorgia Meloni guards her right flank

Matteo Salvini looks like being Italy’s big loser


The Israel-Hamas war

How many people have died in Gaza?

The fog of war may be thick, but some figures are solid

The ICJ orders restraint from Israel in Rafah

But the court has no way to enforce its judgment, and there is no chance Israel will heed it


What does it mean to recognise Palestinian statehood?

Ireland, Norway and Spain will be the latest to do so


Powerful states are finding it harder to dodge legal challenges, says Marc Weller

The law professor believes the ICC’s creeping jurisdiction is part of a broader trend


America’s election year

Rural white voters in Wisconsin could decide America’s election

They are less enthusiastic about Donald Trump than their counterparts elsewhere

Why America is vulnerable to a despot

Its democratic system is not as robust as it seems


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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Pro-natalist policies

Why paying women to have more babies won’t work

Economies must adapt to baby busts instead

Can the rich world escape its baby crisis?

Governments are splurging on handouts to avert catastrophe



Some good news about America’s fertility problem

Part of the decline in births should be celebrated


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1843 magazine | Trump’s charm offensive in the Bronx

Can boasts of past glories win over a tough crowd?

The war in Ukraine

There is an explosive flaw in the plan to rearm Ukraine

Europe lacks TNT and other propellants for shells and missiles

Ukraine’s desperate struggle to defend Kharkiv

It is holding off Russia’s attack — for now


A Russia-linked network uses AI to rewrite real news stories

CopyCop churned out 19,000 deceptive posts in a month


Russia is ramping up sabotage across Europe

The Kremlin believes it is in a shadow war with NATO


Other highlights

There is more to breasts than meets the eye

A new book offers a cultural history of mammary glands


Cash for kids: Why policies to boost birth rates don’t work