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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Vikram Dodd)
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No clear winners after Winsor report on Cressida Dick’s exit
Former Met chief given support by findings, but London mayor Sadiq Khan’s move against her remains popularAmid the claim and counter-claim, the huffing and puffing and the machinations detailed by Tom Winsor’s report on the ousting of Cressida Dick, one thing is clear: there definitely was a political hit job. The mystery is: who was the target?Winsor’s version has Dick, a hard-working Metropolitan police commissioner, taken out by an ambitious local politician, when the London mayor, Sadiq Khan
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Peter Walker Political correspondent)
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Next PM urged to ‘reset’ Westminster culture after new sexual assault claims
Union leaders say whoever enters No 10 next week must take issue seriously as two women make allegationsTrade union leaders have called for Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak to “reset the culture” at Westminster and properly tackle abusive behaviour, after two women alleged they had been assaulted by a minister now in the cabinet, and by a Downing Street aide.Mike Clancy, the general secretary of Prospect, a trade union representing civil servants and parliamentary staff, said whoever took over from Bori
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Editorial)
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The Guardian view on the Tory leadership race: putting party before country | Editorial
A private members’ affair has served the nation badly at a time of crisisAccording to an Ipsos poll published this week, just over half the country now wants an early election to take place this year and only one in five people oppose the idea. That snapshot of public opinion represents the most telling verdict on the Tory leadership race, in which polls closed on Friday. This private affair, appearing at times to take place in a parallel reality, has served the nation badly at a time of acute c
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Hugo Lowell in Washington)
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FBI materials seized from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home included 90 empty folders
Revelation raises possibility that some of government’s most highly sensitive documents may still be unaccounted forAmong the items the FBI retrieved from Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort this month were 90 empty folders marked classified or for return to the White House staff secretary or a military aide, according to a detailed inventory of items made public on Friday.The inventory – unsealed by a federal judge overseeing the former president’s request to get a so-called special master to dete
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Editorial)
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The Guardian view on beavers: a spur to hope for nature’s recovery | Editorial
The successful reintroduction of these charismatic, industrious rodents proves that restoring ecosystems is possible“Merely a trifle! Merely a trifle! And it isn’t really finished!” says CS Lewis’s Mr Beaver when Susan, in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, compliments his dam. In icy Narnia, the Beavers come to the children’s rescue after their friend Mr Tumnus is captured. They are ingenious, energetic, helpful to humans – in other words, not entirely dissimilar from how conservationists mi
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Ben Child)
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The Star Wars sequel trilogy was a galactic mess. Who should take the blame?
Rian Johnson has defended his contribution to the series – and he’s right: it wasn’t his fault they were an incoherent failureWho’s to blame for the ultimate failure of the most recent Star Wars trilogy? Ask some fans and they’ll point to JJ Abrams, who kicked it off to acclaim from most quarters with The Force Awakens, then completely ruined it with the baffling and ill-conceived Rise of Skywalker. Others will point to Rian Johnson, whose controversial second film The Last Jedi upset many fans
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jonathan Freedland)
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Once the world had Gorbachev and Mandela. Now we have Trump, Johnson and Truss | Jonathan Freedland
The Soviet leader’s death is a reminder that the ‘great man theory’ of history is truer than we might like to thinkIt’s a deeply unfashionable idea. The “great man theory” of history seems terminally passé, the intellectual equivalent of a statue of a forgotten general on horseback. These days, we like to think our world is shaped not by individuals, heroic or otherwise, but by deep, underlying forces – that there is a tide of history that this man or that woman might ride for a while, but which
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Nicola Davis Science correspondent)
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Second monkeypox strain found in the UK
Individual hospitalised with the virus had recently travelled to west Africa, say public health officialsA second monkeypox strain has been identified in the UK, linked with travel to west Africa, public health officials have said.According to the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), an individual who had recently travelled to west Africa has been admitted to the high consequence infectious diseases (HCID) unit at the Royal Liverpool University hospital in Merseyside with the strain. Continue read
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jonathan Jones)
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Visions of Egypt review – how can this show be so devoid of ancient wonder?
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, NorwichAncient Egypt has inspired passion and awe in the western world for centuries – yet this confused show wants to chide us for itVisions of Egypt is a blockbuster having a breakdown. It argues that modern racism towards Egypt began with the Battle of Actium in 31BC when Octavian defeated Mark Antony and his lover Cleopatra, the ruler of Egypt, and annexed it. The Romans looted Egypt’s art, “demonised” its queen, and “laid the groundwork for western percepti
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Sep 02, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent)
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Avanti West Coast boss fired after timetable failures
Intercity train operator provoked fury last month after slashing services between London and ManchesterOne of Britain’s major intercity train operators, Avanti West Coast, has parted company with its boss a month after the company admitted it was unable to run its timetabled services.Avanti announced that its managing director, Phil Whittingham, had decided to step down, with effect from 15 September, the date when the next in a series of strikes will further afflict its operations. Continue rea