↩ Accueil

Vue normale

Reçu aujourd’hui — 5 juillet 20256.9 📰 Infos English

Mamdani Once Claimed to Be Asian and African American. Should It Matter?

5 juillet 2025 à 02:41
Zohran Mamdani’s responses on a 2009 college application were criticized by his mayoral rivals. The blowback was dismissed by his supporters as a politically motivated attack.

© Shuran Huang for The New York Times

Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee for mayor of New York City, said that he had identified his race as Asian and Black in college applications.

States Brace for Added Burdens of Trump’s Tax and Spending Law

5 juillet 2025 à 00:15
With the president’s domestic policy law signed, states will have to administer many of the cuts and decide how much they can spend to keep their citizens insured and fed.

© Rob Schumacher/Imagn Images

The Arizona House of Representatives in Phoenix during budget negotiations last month. Gov. Katie Hobbs of Arizona called the federal budget bill “devastating” for her state.

Canadian Buyers Are Dropping Out of the U.S. Housing Market

4 juillet 2025 à 11:02
Search activity for American listings has plummeted in the wake of President Trump’s unpredictable trade war, according to new data.

© Marco Bello/Reuters

Canadian home buyers have long been a reliable presence in the Miami housing market. Not anymore, according to data from Redfin.

Palmeiras v Chelsea: Club World Cup quarter-final – live updates

5 juillet 2025 à 03:24

3 min: A surging run in the penalty area for Pedro Neto, perhaps reassuring anyone that he will indeed be able to play despite grieving for his close friend Diogo Jota.

1 min: Palmeiras win a corner quickly. (Ignore my previous comment that Chelsea won it. I am not yet in Da Zone.)

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Susana Vera/Reuters

© Photograph: Susana Vera/Reuters

Scrutiny of Sam Konstas ramps up as West Indies keep second Test alive | Geoff Lemon

Australia’s top order has more question marks than the Riddler’s pants after Konstas and Usman Khawaja again failed to deliver

As so often in Test cricket, drama saved itself for the dying overs of the day. With 90 remaining minutes ticking down towards 60 on the second day of the second Test in Grenada, tactically minded onlookers started to think about West Indies’ last-wicket partnership. Anderson Phillip and Jayden Seales were defending with heart, on their way to facing 65 balls and adding 16 runs. With Australia having made 286 the previous day, their stand took West Indies from 49 runs behind to 33. But each over that they chose to keep batting rather than swing for runs, they reduced the time available to bowl at an Australian top order under pressure.

In the end, there were 30 minutes left when Australia began the third innings. And in the end, that was enough to account for both openers, raising the tension another notch with only two more opportunities for them to bat in a Test before the Ashes. So much attention has been on young Sam Konstas, after struggles in Barbados and a briefly improved showing in the first innings here. He has only once before faced the pressure of a brief late Tests innings, in Sydney when he foolishly provoked Jasprit Bumrah and brought about Usman Khawaja’s wicket next ball.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Ricardo Mazalán/AP

© Photograph: Ricardo Mazalán/AP

Wild kangaroo harvests are labelled ‘needlessly cruel’ by US lawmakers – but backed by Australian conservationists

The campaign to ban kangaroo products is ‘muddled’ and not based on knowledge, wildlife experts say
Warning: Graphic content

The bill, introduced into the US Senate last month, came with plenty of emotive and uncompromising language.

“The mass killing of millions of kangaroos to make commercial products is needless and inhumane,” said the Democratic senator Tammy Duckworth, as she introduced the Kangaroo Protection Act to ban the sale and manufacture of kangaroo products in the US.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: shellgrit/Getty Images/iStockphoto

© Photograph: shellgrit/Getty Images/iStockphoto

‘The friendship of the good’: how a community garden gave me a sense of something bigger than myself

5 juillet 2025 à 02:00

By volunteering at her school garden, Magdalena McGuire found something radical: the good in other people

If you came across our school garden, you might walk past without giving it much thought. On the surface, we don’t have anything that would warrant a visit from Gardening Australia: no kitchen garden or water feature or “reflection space”. But we do have something else you might not see at first glance – something I wasn’t expecting to find when I first came to this suburb.

I moved to Fawkner, Melbourne with my partner and kids about five years ago, in search of affordable housing. The suburb was nice enough but I felt unmoored. I didn’t know anyone here and much of community life seemed to revolve around structures such as the extended family, the church and the mosque. I could see how vital these were for people in our suburb; for my part, however, I’m not religious and my extended family live far away. I tried to find other ways to make connections: my kids and I went to Lego time at the library; we hung out at the local playground and chatted to people at the skate park. But none of it added up to a sense of belonging.

Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning

Continue reading...

© Composite: Victoria Hart/Guardian design

© Composite: Victoria Hart/Guardian design

Julian McMahon, Fantastic Four, Nip/Tuck and Charmed actor, dies aged 56

5 juillet 2025 à 01:24

The Australian actor died in Florida on Wednesday after being diagnosed with cancer

Julian McMahon, the Australian actor best known for his television roles in Charmed, Nip/Tuck and FBI: Most Wanted as well as Fantastic Four supervillain Doctor Doom, has died aged 56.

The actor died in Clearwater, Florida on Wednesday. He had been diagnosed with cancer, which had not been publicly announced.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Danny Moloshok/Reuters

© Photograph: Danny Moloshok/Reuters

Oasis review – a shameless trip back to the 90s for Britpop’s loudest, greatest songs

5 juillet 2025 à 01:05

Principality Stadium, Cardiff
This is playlist Oasis, with their later fallow years ignored almost completely – and that makes for a ferociously powerful set to an utterly adoring crowd

The noise from the audience when Oasis arrive on stage for their first reunion gig is deafening. You might have expected a loud response. This is, after all, a crowd so partisan that, in between the support acts, they cheer the promotional videos – the tour’s accompanying brand deals seem to involve not just the obviously Oasis-adjacent sportswear brand Adidas, but the more imponderable Land Rover Defender.

Even so, the noise the fans make as the reconstituted Oasis launch into Hello takes you aback slightly, and not just because Hello is a fairly bold choice of opener: this is, after all, a song that borrows heavily from Hello, Hello, I’m Back Again by Gary Glitter. But no one in Cardiff’s Principality Stadium seems to care about the song’s genesis: the noise is such that you struggle to think of another artist that’s received such a vociferous reception.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

© Photograph: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

Home Office announces ‘nationwide blitz’ on asylum seekers taking jobs

Government under pressure on issue after stories of asylum seekers working illegally as takeaway delivery riders

The Home Office has announced what it is calling a “nationwide blitz” on asylum seekers who take jobs, after recent political controversy about people in asylum hotels working as food takeaway delivery riders.

In a statement, which gave few specifics, the Home Office pledged to begin “a major operation to disrupt this type of criminality” based around enforcement teams focusing on the gig economy, particularly on delivery riders.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer

© Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer

Oasis kick off reunion tour in Cardiff with triumphant, nostalgic gig

4 juillet 2025 à 23:21

Focusing heavily on their 1990s output with only one song from their last four albums, Liam and Noel Gallagher performed together for the first time since 2009

Swaggering, cocksure and incredibly loud, Oasis burst back on to the live music scene on Friday night with an accomplished – if ever so slightly distanced – debut gig on their reunion world tour.

Playing Cardiff’s Principality Stadium, the six-piece impressed at the start of what is arguably the most anticipated tour of the century, focusing overwhelmingly on songs from their 1990s heyday – only one song, Little By Little, was taken from their final four albums.

Continue reading...

© Photograph: Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP

© Photograph: Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP

❌