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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Alexis Soloski)
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Audra McDonald: ‘I go all the way deep down into my truth and sing it’
The Broadway legend, who has won more Tony awards than any other performer, on what ‘the American songbook’ means to her“I’m trying to get to the truth of why I’m singing this song,” says Audra McDonald, the stage and television star who has won more Tony awards than any other performer. Speaking on a video call from her home near New York City, McDonald is dressed down – with horn-rimmed glasses and a polka-dot head scarf – but later this month she will dress up to front a 40-person orchestra a
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Editorial)
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The Guardian view on the NHS: the health system is on its knees | Editorial
A shocking rise in the number of NHS vacancies is a symptom of the government’s dangerous neglect“I will deliver on the National Health Service” was as much detail as the new prime minister offered on health policy in her victory speech on Monday. One idea floated during her campaign, that £13bn of new funding earmarked for the NHS should be diverted to social care, might once have won plaudits. But such is the crisis now engulfing hospitals that the moment has passed. Next week, a ballot opens
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Maheen Sadiq)
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30 hours to power: Liz Truss's journey to becoming PM – video timeline
Liz Truss became Britain’s prime minister on Tuesday, after Boris Johnson tendered his resignation to the Queen at Balmoral, and Truss visited the monarch at her Scottish residence shortly afterwards for confirmation of her appointment. The new prime minister then returned to London, where she addressed the nation in a speech outside 10 Downing Street before putting the finishing touches to her first cabinet. The Guardian recaps the 30 hours that marked the beginning of the Truss eraUK politics
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Nils Pratley)
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Liz Truss’s energy bill freeze has virtue of simplicity – but the drawbacks are clear
Policy beats no policy but it will funnel cash to richer households and won’t help cut consumptionNo handouts, said Liz Truss – except, it turns out, for the one that will cost £70bn, £100bn, £130bn or virtually any large number you care to think of. That’s the point about freezing average bills for 28m households at £2,500, with yet-to-be-defined support for 5.6m businesses on top: the bill can quickly become enormous. You don’t know how high wholesale prices could go – and the other variable i
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Martin Rowson)
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Martin Rowson on Liz Truss meeting the Queen at Balmoral – cartoon
Continue reading...
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Gloria Oladipo)
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Toxic arsenic levels make tap water unsafe for thousands in New York City
Residents of one of the largest public housing complexes in Manhattan have not had safe drinking water for more than a week Dangerous levels of arsenic were found in a New York City Public Housing Authority (NYCHA) complex, leaving thousands of affected residents without safe tap water.The crisis plays out as people in the predominantly Black city of Jackson, Mississippi, have gone without clean drinking water for more than a month, with residents using bottled water for everyday needs like cook
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Ewan Murray at Wentworth)
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Billy Horschel hits out at LIV Golf ‘hypocrites’ playing PGA Championship
Jon Rahm also critical of those just seeking ranking pointsLIV players Lee Westwood and Ian Poulter in Wentworth fieldIn the latest instalment of golf’s war of words Billy Horschel and Jon Rahm have made clear their belief that LIV rebels should not be competing in this week’s PGA Championship.Members of the LIV series – including 15 who played in Boston last week – are in the field at Wentworth, as is permitted until a legal case relating to eligibility is heard. While Rahm sought to distinguis
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Peter Walker and Pippa Crerar)
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What Carrie did next: what does the future hold for ex-PM’s wife?
Carrie Johnson’s next move will be closely watched after her perceived role in Boris Johnson’s No 10 operationsWhen a prime minister leaves office, the future for their spouse is usually quite straightforward: carry on doing whatever they did before, whether Philip May as a financier or Samantha Cameron in the fashion and retail world. With Carrie Johnson, who left Downing Street with her husband on Tuesday, things are more complicated.As well as being just 34, which is 24 years younger than her
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Richard Adams Education editor)
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Covid drives biggest Sats results gap since 2012 for poorest pupils in England
Deprived children fall further behind better-off peers as they lose most learning due to coronavirusChildren from deprived backgrounds in England lost the most learning due to Covid, according to tests that revealed the widest gap between them and non-disadvantaged primary school pupils for a decade.The results of standardised literacy and maths tests taken by year 6 pupils this year showed a national decline, but detailed figures published by the Department for Education found disadvantaged chi
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Sep 06, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Joanna Partridge and Richard Partington)
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Liz Truss’s energy price freeze could soften UK recession, say economists
UK retailers and pubs rise on FTSE after outline emerges of new prime minister’s plan to tackle rising billsLiz Truss’s expected energy price freeze could stop inflation in Britain from rising further and reduce the severity of the recession that is forecast to hit the country this winter, economists have said.As details of the new prime minister’s plan to tackle soaring household bills emerged on Tuesday, some of the UK’s largest pub groups, food chains and retailers were among the biggest rise