T he questionnaire, as questionnaires tend to, began simply. What, asked Q1, “is her name”? It was followed by Q2: “When was ...
A mini crossword based on the week’s newsDéjà vu? Play a different edition. Or test your knowledge with one of our other games: See if you followed the headlines with our Friday news quiz. Place ...
Peer into The Economist’s decision-making processes with Edward Carr, our deputy editor, who explains how we select and ...
Gradual access is a chance no earlier candidate has been given: to prove European credentials inside the market before ...
A grand jury indicted John Bolton, Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, for transmitting and storing classified ...
Who wins and loses in a world of infinite content, made by countless creators? The clearest winners are the once-frustrated ...
President Donald Trump is prosecuting a new war on drugs with the deployment of military force and unprecedented violence. He ...
The second reason for managers to eschew dark patterns is that they can hurt their firms’ long-term interests. Consumers ...
The saga began in 2018 when Utahns passed a ballot measure to establish a citizen redistricting commission that would advise ...
According to state media the party chief, Xi Jinping, first mentioned political swindlers publicly in 2023 when he demanded a ...
Weekly edition of The Economist for Oct 18th 2025. You've seen the news, now discover the story.
This, of course, was Charles de Gaulle’s campaign in 1958 for a Fifth Republic. The words were uttered by Paul Reynaud, who ...