Front page summary The Guardian – Watchdog condemns NHS culture of cover-up The Guardian says hospitals are cynically burying evidence about…
Browsing: The Guardian
The Guardian is a British daily newspaper founded in 1821. The paper is politically aligned centre-left and along with its Sunday Paper – The Observer – target an educated, middle-class, left-leaning, 18+ audience.
In 2020, data showed The Guardian was the most trusted newspaper in the UK.
Front page summary The Guardian – Tories urged to give back further £5m from Hester The Guardian says The Conservative Party…
Diane Abbott has accused the Conservatives of aiming to “play the race card” in the upcoming general election.
The Guardian says Downing Street has described alleged remarks made about former Labour MP Diane Abbott by a prominent Conservative Party donor as “racist and wrong”.
Front page summary The Guardian – Biggest Tory donor: looking at Diane Abbott makes you want to hate all black…
Front page summary The Guardian – Tory ex-home secretaries warn against politicising extremism The Guardian says three former Conservative home secretaries…
The Guardian also leads with this story. It says the port is due to be built “in the next few weeks” by engineers who “will not need to step ashore in Gaza”.
The chancellor’s budget announcement is “a last desperate act” ahead of the general election, with tax at its highest level since 1948 despite a 2p national insurance cut, according to The Guardian. It adds that the cuts bring the “threat of a fresh squeeze on public spending to come after polling day”.
The Guardian reports the chancellor will press on with tax cuts in the budget, despite warnings his plans could impact public services. The paper quotes a Conservative Party insider saying the cuts are “going to require even more unrealistic public service cuts” after the election.
With the budget taking place on Wednesday, The Guardian reports the NHS faces its biggest funding cuts in real terms since the 1970s.
The chancellor has been warned his plans for the budget this week could risk worsening living standards across the country, according to The Guardian’s lead story.
The paper reports assertions from Gaza health officials, who say more than 100 Palestinians died after Israeli troops opened fire on crowds who gathered around aid trucks.
The Guardian reports a diet comprising ultra-processed food is directly linked to 32 harmful effects on health, including a higher risk of heart disease, cancer, and early death, in the largest review of its kind.
The Guardian reports a woman allegedly sexually assaulted by a Conservative MP says the party is more concerned with protecting its own reputation than her welfare after it failed to investigate her complaint formally
Experts have cautioned the chancellor over what they call a “dubious” case for unfunded tax cuts in the upcoming budget, reports The Guardian.
Rishi Sunak has been urged to speak out on alleged Islamophobia in his party following comments by former deputy chair Lee Anderson, The Guardian reports.
The front page of the Guardian reports on a study which suggests that visiting the same doctor every time you go to your GP improves patients’ health and also reduces doctors’ workloads.
Lindsay Hoyle has come out fighting in the face of Tory and Scottish National party attempts to oust him.
The Guardian leads on the row over the chaotic parliamentary debate on Gaza, saying the Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle issued an “unprecedented” apology.
The Guardian says Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer faces the threat of a revolt over the conflict in Gaza – despite bowing to pressure and calling for a ceasefire in the region. The paper says Labour is trying to ward off another party split in Wednesday’s Commons vote.
Britain is showing signs of recovery from its mild recession and will receive a boost when interest rates start coming down later this year, the Bank of England governor, Andrew Bailey, has said.
Authorities could not confirm if the leg belonged to a man or woman, or how much of the limb was found.
Scott Benton, the MP for Blackpool South, formerly a Conservative, had asked for a reconsideration of the standards committee verdict that he had committed an “extremely serious breach of the rules”.
The Guardian reports that Yulia Navalnaya has called on Russians to “stand with me… and share the rage” in a nine-minute video published on social media. She urges the international community to support her and her husband’s work following his death.
The Guardian reports that Alexei Navalny’s allies have accused Kremlin officials of “covering their tracks” after the activist’s death on Friday.