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Correspondents
Correspondents
Trudeau’s teachable moment
Jonathan Malloy
1 October 2019
Although the electoral impact is unclear, Canadians can learn much from this month’s revelations
Correspondents
We, the establishment
David Hayes
25 September 2019
Britain’s Supreme Court overrules Queen, prime minister — and people
Correspondents
Moving fast and breaking things
Peter Browne
2 September 2019
How much damage will Boris Johnson and his circle inflict on Britain?
Correspondents
The significance of 1 September
Klaus Neumann
2 September 2019
A closely watched election campaign unfolds in an East German state
Correspondents
Brexitannia on edge
David Hayes
21 August 2019
Boris Johnson’s team, clutching European exit visa and election plan, flies towards the sun
Correspondents
America’s blue Muslim wave
Thomas Kean
14 August 2019
Donald Trump’s highly charged rhetoric can’t change the fact that Congress is more diverse than ever
Correspondents
Does Canada still love a Trudeau?
Jonathan Malloy
31 July 2019
The polls might not favour the Liberals to win this year’s election, but don’t count them out
Correspondents
A good day for democracy
David Hayes
24 July 2019
Boris Johnson the showman needs to become a statesman. Can he?
Correspondents
The remarkable deeds of Captain Rackete
Klaus Neumann
12 July 2019
Has Italy’s far-right interior minister met his match in this young woman with an astonishing impact?
Correspondents
Britain’s trapped transition
David Hayes
28 June 2019
One thing is needed before Brexit: a coherent government
Correspondents
Triple trouble
Antonio Castillo
11 June 2019
Murky waters flow where the frontiers of Paraguay, Brazil and Argentina come together
Correspondents
“Our house is burning”
David Hayes
24 May 2019
A young prophet of apocalypse invigorates Europe’s climate debate
Correspondents
In Angeles City, all politics is local
Margaret Simons
15 May 2019
On the ground, the Philippines midterm results look less like an endorsement of Rodrigo Duterte’s policies than an illustration of the power of money.
Photos by Dave Tacon
Correspondents
Thirty years on, a spirit of reconciliation in New Caledonia
Nic Maclellan
10 May 2019
The legacy of assassinated Kanak independence leader Jean-Marie Tjibaou still drives the movement for independence in the French Pacific dependency
Correspondents
The fall and rise of German angst
Klaus Neumann
16 April 2019
A decade ago, that distinctive national mood seemed to have died out. And then came the rise of far-right populism
Correspondents
If… A Brexit fable
David Hayes
2 April 2019
Suppose the Remainers had narrowly won the 2016 Brexit referendum. What happened next?
Correspondents
The limits of charisma
Jonathan Malloy
20 March 2019
The Trudeau government’s progressive image has taken a battering in recent weeks, but the opposition parties seem incapable of capitalising on its shortcomings
Correspondents
All at sea in Brexitannia
David Hayes
11 March 2019
The mutinies continue, but the endgame of Britain’s European drama could also be an opening
Correspondents
Going low or going high?
Lesley Russell
7 March 2019
The race to be in the 2020 presidential race is gathering pace
Correspondents
The London spring
David Hayes
19 February 2019
A split from Labour is a shaft of light amid the Brexit gloom
Correspondents
Trump at the crossroads
Lesley Russell
7 February 2019
Where does the president’s State of the Union speech lead?
Correspondents
Japan between eras
David Hayes
29 January 2019
A Tokyo trip is another lesson in looking afresh
Correspondents
Capitalism in the dock
David Hayes
11 December 2018
Britain’s economic model has to change, and that may take another crisis
Correspondents
B-Day, and beyond
Peter Mares
10 December 2018
At Westminster, parliament will almost certainly vote down the British prime minister’s Brexit plan. No one knows what will happen next
Correspondents
Britain goes bung
David Hayes
21 November 2018
Brexit’s failure of governance is sending democracy haywire
Correspondents
Past meets present in a Berlin refugee camp
Tom Bamforth
14 November 2018
A visit to a refugee camp in a conservative district of Berlin reveals successful efforts to understand and accommodate
Correspondents
Ouvea looks forward, and back
Nic Maclellan
26 October 2018
With New Caledonia’s self-determination vote looming, our correspondent visits the scene of a turning point in the independence struggle
Correspondents
Anna Burns, a Booker with soul
David Hayes
17 October 2018
The Belfast novelist’s prize underlines the BBC’s cultural drift
Correspondents
Corbyn and responsibility
David Hayes
8 October 2018
This party leader can’t own or disown his past, nor Labour’s
Correspondents
The year the gloves came off
Duncan Hewitt
25 September 2018
Updated
| Despite opting for a less confrontational chief executive, Beijing has tightened its grip in Hong Kong
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