Theater

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  • “A Private Spy
  • ” a 16-year-old becomes more fascinating in death than she was in life.
  • ” a collection of the British writer’s letters
  • ” a satirical novel exploring lofty ideas about nostalgia.
  • ” the party said.
  • 000 a year
  • 000 workers. The food and farming sectors have been hit particularly hard.
  • 2023.
  • a Brexit provision negotiated with the European Union
  • A certain redheaded maniac returns to the scene for the series’s concluding season. Let the final showdowns begin.
  • A closer look at the state of the war in Ukraine.
  • a Conservative
  • A deal bringing disaffected unionists back into the government in Belfast has left Prime Minister Rishi Sunak with one less thing to worry ab
  • A dispute left over from the Britain-European Union split has chilled relations
  • a divisive symbol of the Conservative government’s immigration stance.
  • A documentary from Ken Loach sees the end of World War II as a brief moment of possibility for socialism in Britain.
  • A family of Syrian refugees connects with a once-thriving mining town in Ken Loach’s moving drama.
  • a folk form with origins in the 15th century
  • A former speaker of the U.S. House and the British prime minister have struggled to corral the extreme right factions of their parties.
  • A generation of young people grew up experiencing increasingly scary and cascading crises set off by their government’s actions. Is it any wo
  • A key figure in the reunification of East and West Germany
  • A little-understood trade agreement now looks like a serious diplomatic blunder.
  • a party with historic ties to the Irish Republican Army — was once unthinkable. On Saturday
  • a persistent issue that is causing Britain’s economy to go “into reverse.”
  • a political insurgent and ally of Donald J. Trump
  • a political victory for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
  • a proud symbol of Britain’s welfare state
  • A psychologist at Tulane University offers insights into just how powerfully sporting events can get into our heads.
  • a right-leaning network that pitches itself as an alternative to mainstream British broadcasters.
  • A rocket launched from a Virgin Orbit jumbo jet is expected to put satellites into orbit
  • A Saturday night bash hosted by Mr. Bannon was the main social event in an otherwise subdued weekend at the conservative convention.
  • A sense of fatalism surrounds Britain’s prime minister.
  • A small acceleration in the second quarter was better than analysts had expected.
  • A small group of migrants were transferred to the Bibby Stockholm
  • a step for Britain into the space launch business.
  • A three-judge court of appeals said the African country was not a safe country for migrants seeking asylum. The government is now expected to
  • a well-known lawmaker.
  • according to a government whose leader was clearly on the campaign trail in announcing them.
  • adding to a shortfall of about 330
  • After 14 years of Conservative government
  • After accusations were published in Britain
  • after being charged with non-recent sexual offenses.
  • After Britain’s next election
  • After embracing several right-wing dividing lines
  • After more than a year as prime minister
  • After the prime minister of Greece called for the British Museum to return the Parthenon marbles
  • Along Ireland’s coast
  • Also
  • ambitiously structured new novel.
  • America’s ambassador to Britain says several top officials have called her to discuss the hit show
  • America’s neighbor to the north will ban most foreigners from buying residential property for two years. Why?
  • Americans support marijuana legalization
  • amid fears that Russia poses an existential threat to Europe.
  • Amid growing anger within his governing Conservative Party
  • Amid political change in Scotland
  • An agreement by the Democratic Unionist Party to return to power-sharing with Sinn Fein after a two year boycott was greeted by widespread re
  • An angry speech by Vladimir Putin.
  • An E.U. summit on aid for Ukraine.
  • An important element of the agreement known as the Windsor Framework
  • An Israeli raid on Al-Shifa Hospital.
  • anachronism is a feature
  • analysts said.
  • And everything else you need to know to hold forth on fashion month at a cocktail party.
  • and for whom.
  • and headlining festivals abroad. Yet Britpop’s swaggering sense of national self-belief feels like a distant memory.
  • and his itinerary
  • and how to share its burdens
  • and is likely to prompt the Bank of England to raise interest rates again.
  • and little expansion is expected in the years ahead.
  • and making friends is part of the experience.
  • and may expand them into America.
  • and not just because of Brexit
  • and starts by putting his ducks in a row.
  • and the leading candidate is a fedora-wearing leftist firebrand.
  • and the quirky moments that defined earlier editions have gone.
  • and threatens the future of its automotive industry.
  • Andrew Bailey
  • another mass shooting in California and New Zealand’s next leader.
  • another stinging blow from the fallout of lockdown-breaking parties during the pandemic.
  • antitrust regulators in Europe and the United States took different approaches. Now
  • Appointing people to the House of Lords can be complicated.
  • are stalled
  • Arts
  • as bad weather in Spain leads to shortages.
  • As Ireland reimagines itself
  • As it commemorates a quarter-century since the Good Friday Agreement
  • As it turns 75
  • As long as there has been a monarchy
  • As Milan gets more glamorous
  • As Spain prepares for elections
  • As the European Union’s first ambassador in London
  • As the government’s chief financial cabinet member
  • As the party climbs
  • at the heart of talks with President Biden.
  • auctions and shows without parallel.
  • Australia loses to France and lockdowns spread across China.
  • autocrats are using lesser-known systems to pursue dissidents.
  • beating the $104.3 million that a Giacometti sculpture brought in 2010.
  • Beginning Jan. 1
  • Being the England manager was never an easy job. And that was before the country started falling apart.
  • Beneath the gilded continuity of the coronation celebrations
  • Benjamin Netanyahu is poised to lead Israel again and the week in culture.
  • Biden administration officials are watching whether the British government’s attempt to salvage its Rwanda asylum policy risks undermining th
  • Blaming supply chains
  • bolstering the future of Britain’s auto industry.
  • Books
  • Books by Maryse Condé and Eva Baltasar are among six nominees for the prestigious award for fiction translated into English.
  • Boris Johnson called the use of imperial measurements “an ancient liberty” and pledged to bring them back after Brexit. The public didn’t wan
  • Boris Johnson told a powerful committee that his statements over parties at his office were “made in good faith.” His political future may be
  • Briefing
  • Britain and the E.U. agree on a Northern Ireland trade deal and winter devastates Afghanistan.
  • Britain’s former prime minister
  • Britain’s former prime minister will face tough questions when he testifies this week before an official inquiry into the pandemic.
  • Britain’s head of state is said to want a more accessible
  • Britain’s historic financial district
  • Britain’s most revered institution plays ball with one of its most revolting institutions
  • Britain’s new monarch and his wife
  • Britain’s new sanctions program against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has proved shaky. Some oligarchs have received generous exemptions. Offi
  • Britain’s Parliament passed contentious legislation to allow the deportation of asylum seekers to the African country
  • Britain’s prime minister unveiled emergency legislation to salvage a highly contested scheme to deport asylum seekers to the African country.
  • Britain’s stubbornly high inflation rate has come to symbolize a deeper economic malaise — a morass of problems
  • Britain’s voters appear hungry for change. And Prime Minister Rishi Sunak seems unable to persuade them otherwise.
  • British seafood is prized in France and Spain far more than at home. Britain’s exit from the European Union hasn’t halted exports
  • Burberry
  • Business Day
  • but a rare show of defiance by the unelected upper house showed the depth of opposition.
  • but backing for Scotland remaining part of the United Kingdom is fragile
  • but he is being harried by Liz Truss and Boris Johnson
  • but his timing
  • but it still faces potential stumbling blocks before becoming law.
  • but it’s hard for C.E.O.s to engage without getting clobbered.
  • but many of their political leaders do not.
  • but more hurdles lie ahead.
  • but none of the contenders has anything like her stature.
  • but some pressing problems
  • but springtime in the Big Apple brings a concentration of fairs
  • but the government can create a place in the House of Lords to satisfy that requirement.
  • but the passage of a contentious bill by Britain’s Parliament puts the country closer to sending asylum seekers to the African nation.
  • but the path from sea to stovetop is fraught with new obstacles.
  • but The Times’s chief diplomatic correspondent recognizes references to many real despots and failed states.
  • but uncertainty remains about the sector’s future in the country.
  • Calls to protect hospitals in Gaza.
  • Camilla
  • Can it do the same for America?
  • can return to France feeling buoyed by a warm reception and unity on Ukraine.
  • Charles and Camilla
  • citing “personal and political reasons.”
  • Cleverly is generally seen as less ideological and more of a team player than his predecessor in the Home Office
  • Climate. Refugees. Crime. With an election looming next year
  • Concerns about U.S. spending on aid to Ukraine.
  • Corrections
  • Corrections that appeared in print on Wednesday
  • Crispin Odey was severed from his own investment firm
  • Crosswords & Games
  • Cupid’s arrow follows a new path.
  • cutlery and other items. Environmental advocates are pushing for a more comprehensive measure.
  • Daniel Lee makes his debut at the ultimate British brand
  • David Cameron called the 2016 referendum that led to Brexit. Since he left Parliament
  • David Lammy is likely to be foreign secretary. He’s setting out a “progressive realist” policy — and forging ties on the U.S. right
  • DealBook lists its favorite podcasts and books for getting smarter about business and the economy.
  • dealing with a difficult start to his second term
  • Dec. 27
  • Default settings on devices allow the tech ind to keep collecting and using data as it wants.
  • Defections in the once solidly Conservative southern “blue wall” drove large losses in recent municipal elections.
  • defy easy solutions.
  • democracy and economy.
  • Despite his populist promises
  • Despite post-Brexit restrictions and government vows to control it
  • Despite tough talk
  • Did the Northern Ireland trade deal end Brexit politics with a whimper?
  • Dilara Findikoglu has dressed Margot Robbie and Cardi B and has been embraced by the fashion industry. Why would she cancel her runway show a
  • Donald Trump faces major new charges.
  • Douglass Mackey tried to trick Black people into thinking they could vote by text in the Clinton-Trump presidential election
  • driven by war
  • echoing the new British leader’s personal style and reflecting the country’s changed global status.
  • Economic growth was unchanged in the fourth quarter
  • Economic zones are fundamental to understanding modern-day capitalism.
  • economists see elevated borrowing costs lasting through 2024.
  • Education and validation aren’t the same.
  • Elections next week will tell us how much trouble the Tories are in.
  • Erdem and Simone Rocha flew the flag for British design talent this season as LFW celebrated a milestone.
  • Europe
  • Europe’s economic giant is making a historic attempt to revitalize its armed forces. It has a long way to go.
  • Europe’s economic recovery.
  • Europeans used to flock to London for restaurant jobs. Now
  • even if family members are hurt.
  • Even with much of Hollywood on strike
  • Ever since Britain voted to leave the European Union
  • experts say.
  • explains why Britain is suffering more than its neighbors.
  • exposed his bank for dropping him over “reputational risks.” Some analysts say he could parlay his situation into a comeback.
  • exuberantly designed places to stay.
  • failing to prevent child labor.
  • Fashion & Style
  • few in the United States will be celebrating the philosopher’s 300th birthday. But Kant’s writing shows that a free
  • fishing has been a way of life for generations. But changes to the industry — including a cut in quotas after Brexit and a government plan to
  • Five major grocery chains are restricting the number of some produce items
  • For all their differences
  • forward-looking and inclusive monarchy. It’s not an easy message to convey through golden relics and ancient rituals.
  • four months after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement.
  • Four years after Britain officially left the E.U.
  • Frank Hester
  • fresh outposts for major galleries and the city’s relative affordability.
  • From the Marais to the Champs-Élysées
  • Georgi Gospodinov won the prestigious International Booker Prize this year for “Time Shelter
  • Georgi Gospodinov’s acclaimed satire
  • Hamas’s campaign of sexual violence.
  • Harry and Meghan focused their ire in their Netflix documentary on the tabloids they say have hounded them out of remorseless greed and scarc
  • has failed to close a yawning gap in the polls. On Monday he did something new.
  • Have demographics and Brexit made unification inevitable?
  • have raised questions about the signal they send to a close ally.
  • Having been proved right about Russian aggression
  • he helped shape German politics for decades and was once seen as a likely chancellor.
  • he helped stave off a broader economic collapse amid the global turmoil set off in 2008
  • he may have to wrap his head around success.
  • he says.
  • he will outline the priorities of the prime minister at the opening of Parliament — including
  • Hear tracks by Tainy and Bad Bunny
  • here it is.
  • Here’s what you need to know at the end of the day.
  • Here’s what you need to know.
  • his British counterpart abruptly called off their meeting.
  • his business dealings have also attracted scrutiny.
  • His clever
  • His promises represented an effort to regain momentum at a time of steep challenges for Britain
  • How fears over the future led to a tech-world coup.
  • How medieval politics explains the social media war.
  • how the war in Ukraine changed Europe and Iranian women are removing their hijabs.
  • IFT
  • immigration to Britain reached an all-time high in 2022
  • implausibilities and all. Now she’s meeting with Keri Russell
  • In 1973
  • In a major policy speech
  • In a setback to Scottish nationalists
  • In addition to removing an obstacle to London-Brussels relations
  • in an effort to override a ruling by Britain’s highest court that Rwanda is not safe for refugees.
  • In Argentina
  • In Eliza Clark’s novel “Penance
  • In keeping with tradition
  • In parliamentary systems like New Zealand’s
  • In seeking to override the U.K.’s highest court
  • In the years since Britain voted to quit the E.U.
  • including Airbnb and Live Nation
  • including in areas that could sway the next national election. Here’s a guide to the ballots and how to interpret them.
  • inflation and changing weather patterns
  • is accused of making the comments about Diane Abbott
  • is aimed at ending a post-Brexit dispute between Britain and the European Union over trade rules for Northern Ireland.
  • is back in favor with his party
  • is expected to offer plans to promote greater work force participation.
  • is in the deepest crisis of its history.
  • is now turning to limiting some pathways for legal migrants.
  • is opening up to younger dancers who approach it as a living tradition.
  • is pushing its ally to stand firm against President Vladimir V. Putin
  • is the first Bulgarian novel to win the prestigious award.
  • is transforming its skyline with “best in class” office towers.
  • Israeli allegations about Hamas’s tactics.
  • it became reality.
  • it is the norm for leaders to step down when doing so may serve their party’s electoral prospects. In other political systems
  • it would be difficult to disentangle the royal family from British identity.
  • It’s a lively time for the art world in the French capital
  • It’s become difficult to build anywhere in the U.K.
  • It’s harder than ever to misuse red notices. With an Interpol election looming
  • It’s in a state of serious decline
  • its rivals
  • Jeffrey Donaldson
  • Jeremy Hunt
  • Jimmy Kimmel joked that President Biden declared the pandemic’s end “about a year after the rest of us did.”
  • João Vale de Almeida had to fight even for official recognition. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and the Windsor Framework are changing things
  • Joe Kennedy III will need to tread carefully in Belfast.
  • just and moral life is possible — and that’s relevant everywhere.
  • just in case.
  • JW Anderson
  • Keir Starmer
  • King Charles is diagnosed with cancer.
  • known as the Windsor Framework
  • Labour
  • leading many to wonder how much the split with the European Union is to blame.
  • leaning into the newly potent issue of meeting climate goals without raising costs for hard-pressed Britons.
  • leaving office early is rare.
  • Leery of Russian aggression
  • Leo Varadkar
  • like the National Health Service
  • like the National Health System
  • Literary influences suffuse this year’s festival of avant-garde performance. Artists from six shows share the stories that inspired them.
  • Magazine
  • many bigwigs are keeping the faith that it couldn’t really happen here.
  • many Eastern Europeans have left the country
  • many establishments are becoming desperate.
  • Many people who want to work can’t because of long-term health problems
  • melancholic mind produced some of the most enduring heroes in spy fiction. Here are his best books.
  • migration to the U.S. and the threat to art from A.I.
  • military tensions in the Arctic.
  • Ministers in Britain have to hold a seat in Parliament
  • more fossil fuel extraction.
  • Morris dancing
  • Movies
  • Mr. Donaldson resigned as party leader on Friday
  • Mr. Galloway is likely to be a thorn in the main opposition party’s side. Labour was forced to disown its candidate in the special election o
  • Municipalities across England will face voters
  • musicians including the singer Lisa O’Neill and the band Lankum are reimagining the island’s music with an ever-growing sense of pride.
  • Natan Last rolls up with a heart-thumping themeless puzzle.
  • Net migration to Britain has exceeded 600
  • Netanyahu’s new government plan to overhaul the judiciary will harm Israel’s security
  • new figures show
  • New rules curtailing protests have alarmed some who fear an erosion of civil rights. They come as environmental protesters have intensified t
  • New York
  • newcomers come to its celebrated design scene.
  • Nicola Sturgeon’s resignation removes one of the most formidable figures from British politics
  • Nigel Farage
  • Niger faces a coup and intrigue surrounds an ousted Chinese official.
  • not a bug.
  • NPR
  • NYT
  • Ofcom said it would investigate a commentator’s remarks on GB News
  • offers glimpses of unguarded moments and ruffled feathers.
  • often a wingman to the United States in defense
  • On one of the most Parisian streets in the city
  • one of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s most loyal political allies
  • one of several Murdoch media properties he’s spoken with as he prepares a possible presidential bid.
  • one who has dedicated her life to the cause of Scottish independence.
  • Opinion
  • Other cities have game
  • others longstanding
  • our columnist says.
  • paralyzed Northern Ireland’s government
  • Parliament is all but certain to approve the government’s plan
  • Peace here is a matchstick tower. And in the last few years there has been a shifting of the ground below.
  • pivotal campaigns in Britain and the United States.
  • Plus
  • Plus Saudi Arabia defeats Argentina
  • Policymakers approved a quarter-point increase
  • politics and economics.
  • possibly handing independence backers a potent weapon.
  • President Biden
  • President Biden and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain share a challenge: operating in the wake of a larger-than-life predecessor. They ha
  • President Biden and the European Commission president are set to discuss how to effectively counter Russia and a potential trade deal for ele
  • President Biden is expected to mark the anniversary of a landmark peace accord
  • President Biden will commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement in Northern Ireland before shifting focus to his ancestry.
  • President Biden will host executives from several companies
  • President Emmanuel Macron
  • president of the European Commission
  • Pressure is building in Britain for the bank’s governor
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appeared to be closing in on an agreement with E.U. negotiators. The backing of some in his own party looked less
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has dropped Boris Johnson’s bombastic approach to foreign policy
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak hopes his governing party’s annual conference can lift his ailing poll numbers. Predecessors and would-be successo
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is 20 percentage points behind in opinion polls. But history suggests the timing of a vote might make a difference
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is now promoting more conciliatory figures.
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain made moves to recharge his government
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak signaled that voters will go to the polls in the fall
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak vowed to eliminate the country’s backlog of asylum claims.
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak went to Belfast to work on a trade agreement with the European Union.
  • Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Conservative Party is trailing the opposition Labour Party in opinion polls.
  • Prime Minister Viktor Orban used E.U. rules on unanimous decisions to sink a $52 billion package strongly backed by larger countries.
  • Proposed legislation may keep them from ever finding out.
  • prosecutors said.
  • rather than risk delays caused by more rigorous passport checks for Britons.
  • Readers discuss the attention on the Sussexes as the prince’s memoir is published. Also: The Virginia school shooting; the Korean War memoria
  • Readers respond to a judge’s guest essay. Also: The Trump inquiry costs; Rudy Giuliani; legacy admissions; Joe Biden’s dog; a Briton’s strugg
  • Real Estate
  • Record numbers of legal immigrants came to Britain from outside the E.U. in recent years. Some on the right call that a “Brexit betrayal.”
  • Rishi Sunak
  • Rishi Sunak’s government is following other nations in a trend that can damage democracy
  • Rishi Sunak’s reshuffle was a bold attempt to win back more moderate Conservatives. But it could backfire
  • risked a trade war and even caused friction between London and Washington.
  • Russia under President Vladimir Putin.
  • Russia’s response to drone strikes on Moscow.
  • said he had been charged with “allegations of an historical nature
  • said he would resign as leader of the country and of his party
  • said she would step down after 27 years in Parliament.
  • Sampha
  • Science
  • Scotland’s popular leader
  • setting up the possibility of parallel
  • Seven killed in another mass shooting in California.
  • Seven women say that a star columnist groped them or made unwanted sexual advances. But Britain’s news media has a complicated relationship w
  • she carved her own leftist identity with a seat in the European Parliament and as a British government minister.
  • She has seen the deep state up close and knows what needs to be done.
  • Shows hosted by former politicians from opposing parties are offering a sense of civility in a polarized country.
  • shows that Britain’s cost-of-living crisis persists
  • so the government settled for pint-size wine.
  • some liberal European politicians fear that the hard-right Vox party could become the first right-wing party since the Franco era to enter Sp
  • some new
  • Some of the biggest ’90s bands are playing major gigs across Britain again
  • Some said the meeting conflicted with the king’s apolitical role because it came at the time Ursula von der Leyen
  • SourceHUB
  • Spain is the latest European country to end its program
  • spending cuts and a recession.
  • Sports
  • Starting in October
  • stirring tensions in a government that has promised both to stem arrivals and to revive a sluggish economy.
  • Stung by inflation and bracing for tax increases
  • Style
  • Suella Braverman.
  • Support for Scottish independence has dipped
  • Syria and Iraq.
  • SYYA
  • T Magazine
  • Technology forged by private markets won’t solve the world’s problems. It’ll only amplify them.
  • that are stymying Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
  • that’s changing.
  • The actions on both sides of the Atlantic
  • The American president wants Britain’s squabble with Europe over Northern Ireland trade issues settled before the 25th anniversary of the pea
  • the archbishop of Canterbury and a member of the House of Lords
  • the Armed and others.
  • The author of the “Slow Horses” series says he relates more with failures. With millions of books sold and the third season of the series air
  • The battle for Bakhmut.
  • The belief that individual rights are “self-evident” is being challenged
  • The biggest challenge to Britain’s prime minister comes from his own divided party
  • The bipartisan debt limit deal still isn’t assured of passing.
  • The books they read this year that have stayed with them.
  • The British government’s plan to send asylum seekers to Africa is back in Parliament this week. Here’s a guide to some of the difficult reali
  • The British prime minister faces a test of his authority as a divided Parliament prepares to vote on his flagship immigration policy.
  • The British prime minister is trying to redefine himself as a conviction politician
  • The British prime minister’s contentious proposal to send asylum seekers to the African country moved forward a step
  • The British prime minister’s plan to send refugees to Rwanda passed a critical vote
  • the chancellor of the Exchequer
  • The changes are the biggest shake-up to Britain’s alcohol levies in 140 years
  • The City of London
  • The city’s art market is shrinking and some major players have left. But young dealerships presenting work by emerging artists are springing
  • The company behind “Pod Save America” is starting a British version of the popular liberal show.
  • The company said it would build three electric models at its plant in northeast England
  • the country is in the midst of its gravest slump in a generation
  • the country will prohibit plastic plates
  • The country’s leading politicians support the war in Gaza. Much of its public does not.
  • The country’s new prime minister must now persuade ordinary Britons that they should support his government through a painful ordeal of tax i
  • The Daily Telegraph and The Spectator
  • The deal
  • The decision is a big victory for the families of the 29 people who died in the attack in August 1998
  • The decision left Scottish politicians angered by what they saw as London’s thwarting the will of their Parliament
  • The Democratic Unionist Party has no legal power to hold up the agreement
  • The Democratic Unionist Party walked out of government in 2022 over post-Brexit trade rules. But on Tuesday
  • the Democratic Unionists
  • The disorder in Ireland’s capital on Nov. 23 may have appeared to come from nowhere. But experts say it reflected long-running social problem
  • The divorce between Britain and the European Union has become the dark thread that
  • The Duchess of Rutland learned the art of running a castle on the job. Then she started interviewing other duchesses on how they make it work
  • The effects of the war in Ukraine on Europe.
  • The event has become unashamedly commercial
  • The F.T.C. argued that noncompetes don’t just harm workers. They also harm society.
  • The failure of Britishvolt is a blow to Britain’s plans to promote the manufacture of electric cars
  • the fair is leaning into its location.
  • The far right is moving into the halls of power.
  • The financier Sir James Goldsmith created two lavish retreats in Mexico that are now hotels. A writer checked in to get a peek inside the wor
  • The Florida governor granted a rare interview to The Times of London
  • the former British prime minister
  • The former prime minister may lose his pass to Parliament
  • The former prime minister quit after getting a confidential report about whether he had lied to lawmakers about lockdown-breaking parties.
  • the French capital is suddenly full of small
  • The French president goes to Washington with differences over how to end the war in Ukraine
  • The governing Conservative Party has long promised to reduce arrivals. It said Brexit would help. But the numbers in 2022 were the highest ev
  • The governing Conservative Party trails badly in national opinion polls. The municipal races offer a clue to its fate in an upcoming general
  • The governing Conservative Party was long seen as entrepreneurs’ natural ally and lobbyists’ most important target. With an election on the h
  • The government
  • The hard-line Brexiteer
  • The HBO show is set in a fictional European country
  • The high-speed train service under the English Channel is leaving many seats unfilled
  • The idea of a first minister who supports closer ties to the Republic of Ireland — let alone one from Sinn Fein
  • The indictment last week of Donald J. Trump has not changed the calculations of many world leaders who view his political resilience as inevi
  • The Italian prime minister helped persuade the Hungarian leader
  • the judges ruled that a second referendum on breaking away from London needed the consent of the British Parliament.
  • The king’s tie-in to a divisive Brexit-related trade issue drew angry recriminations from critics who viewed it as an improper foray into Bri
  • the Labour Party leader
  • The Labour Party scored several significant victories in Conservative strongholds in votes viewed as a test of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s p
  • The larger themes behind the protests in Israel
  • the leader of the Democratic Unionist Party and a backer of strong ties with the U.K.
  • the leading supporter of Britain’s Conservative Party
  • The Most Rev. Justin Welby
  • The move is a boost for Britain’s car industry
  • the N.H.S.
  • The nation is at the center of the current turmoil in the Middle East.
  • The nation’s school system still sees the country’s pupils starkly divided by their religious backgrounds
  • The newest Basel offshoot popped up when it was least expected. Now in its sophomore edition
  • the Northern Ireland trade deal could remove Brexit from the center of British politics after seven divisive years.
  • The offshore wind industry continues to grow as nations look to change Europe’s oil and gas hub into a major source of renewable energy.
  • The outcome of the debt ceiling conflict is genuinely uncertain.
  • the party said it would return to power-sharing after negotiating with the British government.
  • The plan has been in the works for years
  • The playwright thought News International’s phone-hacking scandal could make for a sweeping thriller. Twelve years later
  • The political taboo around Bregret.
  • the President’s new fusion of contemporary culture war with throwback libertarianism is entrancing global elites.
  • The price was the highest for a public sale in Europe
  • the prime minister and his party are turning to populist issues.
  • The prime minister testified at an official inquiry into the Covid pandemic on Monday while also defending a flagship immigration policy from
  • the queen consort
  • the question of Northern Ireland’s border has bedeviled prime ministers. Rishi Sunak’s effort to broker a deal is already under threat.
  • The rapport between Emmanuel Macron of France and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain hints at a mending of their countries’ relationship.
  • The rate
  • The recently opened Bacchanalia serves a feast inspired by ancient Rome in an unabashedly luxurious setting that Nero would have loved.
  • the region is searching for its place and trying to move on from a legacy of bloody divisions.
  • The report offered a damning verdict on Boris Johnson
  • The review
  • The rise of populism is testing corporations’ relationship with government
  • The ruling said that a new British law aiming to foster reconciliation over decades of sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland would be a viol
  • The scandal is another blatant display of royal double standards.
  • The separatist movement needs a new chief after the surprise resignation of Nicola Sturgeon
  • The settled will of the Scottish people is to remain a profoundly unsettled people.
  • The Supreme Court could strike down a program meant to help 40 million borrowers.
  • The Supreme Court will announce on Wednesday whether the government’s contentious plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda can go ahead. It has
  • The traction gained by ultranationalist parties over the past decade may be a sign that an important consensus is breaking down.
  • The U.K.
  • The U.K. government hopes to pass a bill this week
  • the U.K. government on Wednesday published the details of a deal to restore the power-sharing government in Belfast.
  • The U.K. prime minister is under pressure to establish post-Brexit Britain as a reliable global player and is looking to strengthen economic
  • the U.K.’s tough new immigration plan and a fight over U.S. labor unions.
  • The U.S. continues to play a crucial role in the Good Friday Agreement.
  • The U.S. Energy Department’s report identifying the Wuhan Institute of Virology as the likely source of the coronavirus has already generated
  • The veteran Conservative Party lawmaker
  • The veteran TV executive is poised to take control of two prominent British news outlets
  • the Wellington boot brand stumbled toward the brink of extinction this week. Can it be saved by a new (American) owner?
  • The wife of the Labour leader Neil Kinnock
  • Theater
  • there have been questions about its legitimacy. But for many people
  • there were signs that both Britain and its royal family are preparing for a new era.
  • there will be plenty of notable new and returning shows arriving in the next few months.
  • There’s an alternative to suffering.
  • There’s more than blarney in Caoilinn Hughes’s riotous
  • they’re on the same page — which some experts say makes closing deals harder.
  • this year
  • to 4.25 percent
  • to announce new efforts to end so-called junk fees as inflation remains high.
  • to go along with a landmark fund for Ukraine. It was a big moment for Europe. And for her.
  • to many
  • to show that policymakers have a handle on the inflation problem.
  • told Parliament that the government’s plan to deal with immigration is “morally unacceptable.”
  • too.
  • too. Nicola Sturgeon’s arrest leaves the fate of the movement in flux.
  • translated by Angela Rodel
  • Travel
  • Travelers to the British capital can take part in the supper club scene
  • Treasuries have been threatened by a possible U.S. debt default
  • two interior designers create a new kind of French fantasy.
  • two years after the plan was first unveiled
  • U.S.
  • Ukraine begins the “big test” of its counteroffensive
  • underscored the escalation of cyberconflict between Western allies and Beijing.
  • Unlike in Europe
  • Until recently
  • Uri Geller claimed to bend metal with his mind on live television. Skeptics couldn’t beat him. Now they’ve joined him.
  • Viktor Orban
  • Vincent Bevins’s “If We Burn” and Robert D. Kaplan’s “The Loom of Time” consider protest movements of the past and the drive for democracy in
  • visited the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin to start their three-day trip to Germany.
  • visited the French President just days after a high-profile gathering in Montreal. But efforts to improve European ties in the wake of Brexit
  • Volodymyr Zelensky’s return to Ukraine.
  • Voters are going to the polls in a district near Manchester to choose a new member of Parliament
  • Voters choose local officials in England and Wales this week. Their verdicts could be an important clue to the shape of Britain’s looming gen
  • Warsaw is savoring its newfound influence in NATO and on Ukraine policy.
  • was finalizing the new Brexit deal.
  • was found by an independent inquiry to have mistreated subordinates.
  • was roundly endorsed in the British Parliament.
  • What’s changed for formerly welcoming cities are the sheer numbers involved.
  • When he was prime minister
  • When it comes to some national spectacles
  • where home cooks and would-be restaurateurs create meals in their homes or other locales
  • which brought in billions of euros from real estate investors seeking residency status but worsened a housing crisis for locals.
  • which had been expected to edge lower in May
  • which has been mostly focused on asylum seekers crossing the English Channel
  • which hopes his political skills can be an advantage as an election nears.
  • which included sanctions
  • which is now dissolving itself.
  • which is triggering resignations and a mutiny over immigration.
  • which means any compromise that could revive its power-sharing national government may remain elusive.
  • which was led by Ben S. Bernanke
  • which would simplify post-Brexit trade rules. But a rejection could sabotage efforts to restart Northern Ireland’s government.
  • while affirming that British banks were “resilient.”
  • who are not fading away.
  • who has ancestral ties to Ireland
  • who left Downing Street widely unpopular
  • who plays her role.
  • who quit as a lawmaker in the face of a possible suspension for misleading statements about pandemic gatherings
  • who quit Parliament last week.
  • whose Fine Gael party has struggled in the polls
  • whose time as leader was plagued by Brexit turmoil
  • Why educational attainment is increasingly the best predictor of how Americans will vote
  • Why is British inflation so high?
  • will attend state banquets in Paris and Berlin later this month.
  • will have a voice in The Daily Mail.
  • will mark the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement in Northern Ireland before heading south.
  • Will this be the end of middle-class privilege?
  • With a mandate to drum up American investment but avoid the many political pitfalls
  • with doors to migrants largely closed after Britain left the European Union
  • with large parts of the world instead prioritizing collective benefits.
  • with new art foundations
  • With the central bank set update its interest rate forecast
  • Wokeness is an American ideology. Why does it seem so powerful in Britain and Canada?
  • World
  • years after the Good Friday Agreement brought an end to sectarian strife.
  • yet they remain more attractive than just about everything else

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