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Doug Ford wins Ontario election on back of tariff rallying cry
Progressive Conservative premier of Canada’s most populous province retains office and vows to work with all sides of politics in ‘fighting back against Donald Trump’
Doug Ford, the incumbent premier of Canada’s Ontario province, has declared victory in an election returning his Progressive Conservative party to office for a rarely won third term.
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) projected a sweeping victory for the Progressive Conservatives, with 43% of the vote.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Carlos Osorio/Reuters
© Photograph: Carlos Osorio/Reuters
Clay Holmes making transition to Mets starting role look seamless
‘Our people were so innovative’: Māori art celebrated in landmark book
Toi Te Mana: An Indigenous history of Māori art showcases creative work across a diverse range of mediums
A new landmark book celebrating Māori art has clocked up a couple of impressive firsts: not only is it the most comprehensive account of creative work by Indigenous New Zealanders ever published, it is also the first wide-ranging art history written entirely by Māori scholars.
Spanning 600 pages and including more than 500 images, Toi Te Mana: An Indigenous history of Māori art was written over 12 years by University of Auckland scholars Ngarino Ellis, Deidre Brown and the late Jonathan Mane-Wheoki.
Continue reading...© Illustration: Toi Te Mana – An Indigenous history of Māori Art
© Illustration: Toi Te Mana – An Indigenous history of Māori Art
Peter Laviolette changing Rangers’ power play units after Adam Fox injury
Noah Dobson has up and down moments in return to Islanders’ lineup
Chiefs to franchise tag elite offensive guard Trey Smith
Surprise inspiration Stephen Curry gave to Jimmy Butler, Warriors on ‘incredible’ 56-point night
Trump dismantles Biden-era rules on military strikes, raids on terrorist targets: report
Full text: Read Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s third election victory speech
Israel and the delusions of Germany’s ‘memory culture’ – podcast
Germany embraced Israel to atone for its wartime guilt. But was this in part a way to avoid truly confronting its past? By Pankaj Mishra. Read by Mikhail Sen
Continue reading...© Photograph: Anadolu/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
© Photograph: Anadolu/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
‘This moment is medieval’: Jackson Katz on misogyny, the manosphere – and why men must oppose Trumpism
The result of the US election unleashed a ferocious feminist backlash, he says, and makes his 40-year struggle to end violence against women more urgent than ever
‘If it takes a village to raise a child, it also takes a village to raise a rapist,” Jackson Katz says. “Perpetrators aren’t individual monsters; they are people reflecting a system. We need to address that system.”
For the past 40 years, the researcher and activist has been advocating that violence against women be treated as a men’s issue. He works across the US in universities, schools and the military to encourage men to speak up when they encounter misogynistic behaviour in their peer groups. Katz believes that it is only through boys and men holding themselves accountable for their behaviour that violence against women can end. Since the re-election of Donald Trump, he believes his work has become more urgent than ever.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Chris McIntosh/The Guardian
© Photograph: Chris McIntosh/The Guardian
Gracie Abrams, the year’s biggest pop star: ‘Trump has only been in office a month, and everybody is more at risk’
After dodging toxic fans, ‘nepo baby’ jibes and her own projectile vomit, the 25-year-old has just spent eight weeks at UK No 1. She explains why she’s now writing about our dark, uncertain future
On a video call from a hotel room in Hamburg, Gracie Abrams is expounding on the virtues of decoupling yourself from social media and living a life offline. “You can literally do so much when you’re not scrolling!” she enthuses. “You can retain more information; everything gets lighter. You have a greater capacity to be more present, to be there for the people in your life, to read a book that’s going to inspire your next album, or go on a hike and breathe air instead of sitting in a dark room on fucking Instagram. I’m doing lots of, like, tactile stuff, staying off social media,” she adds. “Needlepoint and shit like that. I’m just trying to make things … to have some tangible evidence of having lived this year.”
Of course, this is nothing the world hasn’t heard before: we’re well used to being told about the benefits of a digital detox. Still, it feels like an intriguing statement coming from Gracie Abrams. For one thing, her single That’s So True spent most of January at No 1 in the UK: it spent most of November and December there as well, took a brief Christmas holiday, then reappeared to beat Bruno Mars, Lady Gaga et al once more. Her album The Secret of Us also reached No 1, and is now enjoying its 18th consecutive week in the Top 20, the kind of longevity only afforded to those artists who have broken through into the upper echelons of pop stardom.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Gabriella Hughes
© Photograph: Gabriella Hughes
‘Green roofs deliver for biodiversity’: how Basel put nature on top
For decades, the Swiss city has been transforming its skyline, and now boasts some of the greenest rooftops in Europe
Susanne Hablützel breaks up her work day by staring out the window at a rooftop garden. The view is not spectacular: a pile of dead wood sits atop an untidy plot that houses chicory, toadflax, thistle and moss.
But Hablützel, a biologist in charge of nature projects in Basel, is enthralled by the plants and creatures the roof has brought in. “Tree fungi have settled in the trunks, and they are great to see – I love mushrooms. You can also see birds now – that wasn’t the case before.”
Continue reading...© Photograph: Ekaterina Pokrovsky/Shutterstock
© Photograph: Ekaterina Pokrovsky/Shutterstock
Saudi border forces accused of killing ‘hundreds of Ethiopian migrants’
Witnesses making the crossing from Yemen report coming under machine-gun fire and seeing rotting bodies
Saudi Arabia’s forces are accused of using indiscriminate force against migrants on their borders, with reports of deaths and injuries and multiple accounts of women being raped.t.
Ethiopian migrants attempting to cross from neighbouring Yemen between 2019 and 2024 have given accounts to the Guardian of coming under machine gun fire and of seeing bodies rotting in the border area.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Reuters Tv/Reuters
© Photograph: Reuters Tv/Reuters
Healthy Eric Reyzelman dreaming big and opening eyes after surprise Yankees breakout
Rangers’ playoff pursuit gets even more challenging after Adam Fox’s injury
Nets’ Cam Thomas expected to make long-awaited return vs. Trail Blazers
Lessons from Oct. 7: IDF releases results of its internal investigations
DEA’s most wanted drug lord Rafael Caro Quintero arrives in NYC to face charges after Mexico hands him over to US
Judge Says Trump Administration Memos Directing Mass Firings Were Illegal
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Ronny Mauricio hasn’t lost his confidence in key tool after ‘difficult’ year
Gregg Popovich holds ‘emotional’ in-person meeting with Spurs players for first time since stroke
NYC teaching assistant, 47, charged with sexually abusing middle school students
Fans blast Justin Timberlake after he cancels final concert of US tour minutes before showtime
The 2025 ESSENCE Black Women In Hollywood Awards: Keke Palmer, Cynthia Erivo and more
Myles Garrett’s Browns drama takes another twist following trade request
Theater Ceiling Collapses During ‘Captain America’ Screening in Washington State
Where the NFL sees Daniel Jones going from here with career at crossroads
Biodiversity Talks in Rome End
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Bonnie Crombie loses bid for seat, but vows to stay as Liberal leader
‘The Pitt’ Episode 9 Recap: “3:00 – 4:00 P.M.”
Drax climate protester says judge ‘bullied’ jury to find her guilty
Jurors had difficulty reaching a verdict in case of Diana Warner, who obstructed train in protest over power plant
A retired doctor has been found guilty of obstructing the railway during a climate protest, after jurors told the judge they were struggling to come to a verdict “as a matter of conscience”.
Dr Diana Warner, 65, told the Guardian she believed the jury had been unfairly “bullied” into the verdict by the judge, who responded that jurors should try the case “on the evidence, not your conscience”.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Axe Drax/PA
© Photograph: Axe Drax/PA
Democratic lawmaker demands Musk, OPM stop sending mass emails to staffers: ‘Chaotic’
Kristin Crowley appeals Los Angeles mayor's decision to terminate her as LAFD chief
‘Mummified’ bodies and scattered pills: What we know about Gene Hackman and wife’s ‘suspicious’ deaths
Hollywood star died at the same time as wife of 34 years and one of their pet dogs
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Andrew and Tristan Tate ‘not welcome’ in Florida says governor Ron DeSantis as brothers arrive in US: Live
Romanian prosecutors confirmed they had approved the travel request
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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Putin would keep his word on peace says Trump as he heaps praise on Zelensky
Trump says he does not think Putin would invade Ukraine again
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Friday briefing: Pressure increases on Ruud van Nistelrooy
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Drake confirms fan fears over future tour dates
Rapper was scheduled to continue touring Australia and New Zealand through March
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