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    people 438 subscribers • The need for independent journalism has never been greater.

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      The Guardian view on Robert Jenrick's defection: Britain's right is in a crisis of its own making | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 January 2026 • 1 minute

    A former Tory cabinet minister leaps to Reform and turns the issue of Kemi Badenoch’s authority into a test of Conservative survival

    Conservative party leader Kemi Badenoch’s decision to sack her shadow justice minister, Robert Jenrick, due to his impending defection was not so much about damage control as the first shot of civil war on the right. With Mr Jenrick shifting publicly to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, the issue became less about party discipline and more about the Conservatives’ political viability. Mr Jenrick says he left because Britain is broken and the Tories refused to acknowledge their role in breaking it. His claim rests on a self-serving distinction: that the damage was done by a party he served, but not by him.

    Despite her improving polls, Mrs Badenoch is still recovering from the devastating 2024 election loss. With ambitious colleagues coveting her job, she could not afford to tolerate dissent. By acting she exposed a deeper fragility in UK rightwing politics. Mr Jenrick was not merely a restless colleague but a plausible alternative centre of gravity. His embrace of hardline populism could attract Reform voters; he had support among party members; and he was ambitious enough to believe his moment had arrived. Mrs Badenoch calculated that delay, in such circumstances, could be fatal.

    Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here .

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      The Guardian view on Robert Jenrick's defection: Britain's right is in a crisis of its own making | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 January 2026 • 1 minute

    A former Tory cabinet minister leaps to Reform and turns the issue of Kemi Badenoch’s authority into a test of Conservative survival

    Conservative party leader Kemi Badenoch’s decision to sack her shadow justice minister, Robert Jenrick, due to his impending defection was not so much about damage control as the first shot of civil war on the right. With Mr Jenrick shifting publicly to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, the issue became less about party discipline and more about the Conservatives’ political viability. Mr Jenrick says he left because Britain is broken and the Tories refused to acknowledge their role in breaking it. His claim rests on a self-serving distinction: that the damage was done by a party he served, but not by him.

    Despite her improving polls, Mrs Badenoch is still recovering from the devastating 2024 election loss. With ambitious colleagues coveting her job, she could not afford to tolerate dissent. By acting she exposed a deeper fragility in UK rightwing politics. Mr Jenrick was not merely a restless colleague but a plausible alternative centre of gravity. His embrace of hardline populism could attract Reform voters; he had support among party members; and he was ambitious enough to believe his moment had arrived. Mrs Badenoch calculated that delay, in such circumstances, could be fatal.

    Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here .

    Continue reading...
    • tagpolitics tagpolitics tagpolitics tagconservatives tagconservatives tagconservatives tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick taguk news taguk news taguk news tagreform uk tagreform uk tagreform uk tagpolitics tagpolitics tagpolitics tagconservatives tagconservatives tagconservatives tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick taguk news taguk news taguk news tagreform uk tagreform uk tagreform uk tagpolitics tagpolitics tagpolitics tagconservatives tagconservatives tagconservatives tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick taguk news taguk news taguk news tagreform uk tagreform uk tagreform uk

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      The Guardian view on Robert Jenrick's defection: Britain's right is in a crisis of its own making | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 January 2026 • 1 minute

    A former Tory cabinet minister leaps to Reform and turns the issue of Kemi Badenoch’s authority into a test of Conservative survival

    Conservative party leader Kemi Badenoch’s decision to sack her shadow justice minister, Robert Jenrick, due to his impending defection was not so much about damage control as the first shot of civil war on the right. With Mr Jenrick shifting publicly to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, the issue became less about party discipline and more about the Conservatives’ political viability. Mr Jenrick says he left because Britain is broken and the Tories refused to acknowledge their role in breaking it. His claim rests on a self-serving distinction: that the damage was done by a party he served, but not by him.

    Despite her improving polls, Mrs Badenoch is still recovering from the devastating 2024 election loss. With ambitious colleagues coveting her job, she could not afford to tolerate dissent. By acting she exposed a deeper fragility in UK rightwing politics. Mr Jenrick was not merely a restless colleague but a plausible alternative centre of gravity. His embrace of hardline populism could attract Reform voters; he had support among party members; and he was ambitious enough to believe his moment had arrived. Mrs Badenoch calculated that delay, in such circumstances, could be fatal.

    Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here .

    Continue reading...
    • tagpolitics tagpolitics tagpolitics tagconservatives tagconservatives tagconservatives tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick taguk news taguk news taguk news tagreform uk tagreform uk tagreform uk tagpolitics tagpolitics tagpolitics tagconservatives tagconservatives tagconservatives tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick taguk news taguk news taguk news tagreform uk tagreform uk tagreform uk tagpolitics tagpolitics tagpolitics tagconservatives tagconservatives tagconservatives tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagkemi badenoch tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagnigel farage tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick tagrobert jenrick taguk news taguk news taguk news tagreform uk tagreform uk tagreform uk

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      The Guardian view on Trump’s world: from Venezuela to Iran to Greenland, the madness is the method | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 January 2026 • 1 minute

    The US president delights in his inconsistency. But his short-term victories have profound long-term costs for his country and the world

    The Middle East was braced on Wednesday night, but the anxious petitioning of Gulf states and Iran’s attempts to appease the US president appeared to win out – at least for the moment. No bombs fell on Tehran. After all his threats, and with military options under discussion in Washington, Donald Trump stepped back , announcing that “the killing [of protesters] has stopped”.

    Despite the telecommunications blackout, it seems clear that a ruthless regime has shed still more blood than in previous protest crackdowns. Rights groups say that thousands have been killed and vast numbers arrested; one official spoke of 2,000 deaths. Witnesses compared the streets to a war zone. If the large-scale killings have indeed ebbed, that is probably because Iranians have been terrified out of the streets – for now, at least. Iran’s foreign minister chose Fox News to insist no hangings were imminent, in case the identity of the message’s one-man audience was in any doubt. But while retribution may have been postponed , it will not be cancelled as it should be: the calls for the regime’s downfall are seen as an existential threat. The Iranian authorities can wait. Mr Trump will move on.

    Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here .

    Continue reading...
    • tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagus news tagus news tagus news tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagiran tagiran tagiran tagfox news tagfox news tagfox news tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagcuba tagcuba tagcuba tagcolombia tagcolombia tagcolombia tagmexico tagmexico tagmexico tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagfrance tagfrance tagfrance tageurope tageurope tageurope tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagus news tagus news tagus news tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagiran tagiran tagiran tagfox news tagfox news tagfox news tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagcuba tagcuba tagcuba tagcolombia tagcolombia tagcolombia tagmexico tagmexico tagmexico tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagfrance tagfrance tagfrance tageurope tageurope tageurope tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagus news tagus news tagus news tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagiran tagiran tagiran tagfox news tagfox news tagfox news tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagcuba tagcuba tagcuba tagcolombia tagcolombia tagcolombia tagmexico tagmexico tagmexico tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagfrance tagfrance tagfrance tageurope tageurope tageurope tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news

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      The Guardian view on Trump’s world: from Venezuela to Iran to Greenland, the madness is the method | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 January 2026 • 1 minute

    The US president delights in his inconsistency. But his short-term victories have profound long-term costs for his country and the world

    The Middle East was braced on Wednesday night, but the anxious petitioning of Gulf states and Iran’s attempts to appease the US president appeared to win out – at least for the moment. No bombs fell on Tehran. After all his threats, and with military options under discussion in Washington, Donald Trump stepped back , announcing that “the killing [of protesters] has stopped”.

    Despite the telecommunications blackout, it seems clear that a ruthless regime has shed still more blood than in previous protest crackdowns. Rights groups say that thousands have been killed and vast numbers arrested; one official spoke of 2,000 deaths. Witnesses compared the streets to a war zone. If the large-scale killings have indeed ebbed, that is probably because Iranians have been terrified out of the streets – for now, at least. Iran’s foreign minister chose Fox News to insist no hangings were imminent, in case the identity of the message’s one-man audience was in any doubt. But while retribution may have been postponed , it will not be cancelled as it should be: the calls for the regime’s downfall are seen as an existential threat. The Iranian authorities can wait. Mr Trump will move on.

    Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here .

    Continue reading...
    • tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagus news tagus news tagus news tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagiran tagiran tagiran tagfox news tagfox news tagfox news tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagcuba tagcuba tagcuba tagcolombia tagcolombia tagcolombia tagmexico tagmexico tagmexico tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagfrance tagfrance tagfrance tageurope tageurope tageurope tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagus news tagus news tagus news tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagiran tagiran tagiran tagfox news tagfox news tagfox news tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagcuba tagcuba tagcuba tagcolombia tagcolombia tagcolombia tagmexico tagmexico tagmexico tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagfrance tagfrance tagfrance tageurope tageurope tageurope tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagus news tagus news tagus news tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagiran tagiran tagiran tagfox news tagfox news tagfox news tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagcuba tagcuba tagcuba tagcolombia tagcolombia tagcolombia tagmexico tagmexico tagmexico tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagfrance tagfrance tagfrance tageurope tageurope tageurope tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news

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      The Guardian view on Trump’s world: from Venezuela to Iran to Greenland, the madness is the method | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 January 2026 • 1 minute

    The US president delights in his inconsistency. But his short-term victories have profound long-term costs for his country and the world

    The Middle East was braced on Wednesday night, but the anxious petitioning of Gulf states and Iran’s attempts to appease the US president appeared to win out – at least for the moment. No bombs fell on Tehran. After all his threats, and with military options under discussion in Washington, Donald Trump stepped back , announcing that “the killing [of protesters] has stopped”.

    Despite the telecommunications blackout, it seems clear that a ruthless regime has shed still more blood than in previous protest crackdowns. Rights groups say that thousands have been killed and vast numbers arrested; one official spoke of 2,000 deaths. Witnesses compared the streets to a war zone. If the large-scale killings have indeed ebbed, that is probably because Iranians have been terrified out of the streets – for now, at least. Iran’s foreign minister chose Fox News to insist no hangings were imminent, in case the identity of the message’s one-man audience was in any doubt. But while retribution may have been postponed , it will not be cancelled as it should be: the calls for the regime’s downfall are seen as an existential threat. The Iranian authorities can wait. Mr Trump will move on.

    Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here .

    Continue reading...
    • tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagus news tagus news tagus news tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagiran tagiran tagiran tagfox news tagfox news tagfox news tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagcuba tagcuba tagcuba tagcolombia tagcolombia tagcolombia tagmexico tagmexico tagmexico tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagfrance tagfrance tagfrance tageurope tageurope tageurope tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagus news tagus news tagus news tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagiran tagiran tagiran tagfox news tagfox news tagfox news tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagcuba tagcuba tagcuba tagcolombia tagcolombia tagcolombia tagmexico tagmexico tagmexico tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagfrance tagfrance tagfrance tageurope tageurope tageurope tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagus news tagus news tagus news tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagdonald trump tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrepublicans tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagrichard nixon tagiran tagiran tagiran tagfox news tagfox news tagfox news tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagvenezuela tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro tagnicolás maduro taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagcuba tagcuba tagcuba tagcolombia tagcolombia tagcolombia tagmexico tagmexico tagmexico tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagemmanuel macron tagfrance tagfrance tagfrance tageurope tageurope tageurope tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news

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      Anger in Iceland over incoming US ambassador’s ‘52nd state’ joke

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 January 2026

    Thousands sign petition calling on Iceland’s foreign minister to reject Trump ally Billy Long’s nomination

    Thousands of people have signed a petition expressing anger after Donald Trump’s nominee for ambassador to Iceland reportedly joked that the Nordic country should become the 52nd US state.

    On Wednesday, hours before top officials from Greenland and Denmark were to meet with the US in the hope of warding off Trump’s threats to seize the Arctic island, the news outlet Politico said it had heard of musings regarding another Nordic island.

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      Anger in Iceland over incoming US ambassador’s ‘52nd state’ joke

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 January 2026

    Thousands sign petition calling on Iceland’s foreign minister to reject Trump ally Billy Long’s nomination

    Thousands of people have signed a petition expressing anger after Donald Trump’s nominee for ambassador to Iceland reportedly joked that the Nordic country should become the 52nd US state.

    On Wednesday, hours before top officials from Greenland and Denmark were to meet with the US in the hope of warding off Trump’s threats to seize the Arctic island, the news outlet Politico said it had heard of musings regarding another Nordic island.

    Continue reading...
    • tagiceland tagiceland tagiceland tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tageurope tageurope tageurope tagus news tagus news tagus news tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagiceland tagiceland tagiceland tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tageurope tageurope tageurope tagus news tagus news tagus news tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagiceland tagiceland tagiceland tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tageurope tageurope tageurope tagus news tagus news tagus news tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news

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      Anger in Iceland over incoming US ambassador’s ‘52nd state’ joke

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 15 January 2026

    Thousands sign petition calling on Iceland’s foreign minister to reject Trump ally Billy Long’s nomination

    Thousands of people have signed a petition expressing anger after Donald Trump’s nominee for ambassador to Iceland reportedly joked that the Nordic country should become the 52nd US state.

    On Wednesday, hours before top officials from Greenland and Denmark were to meet with the US in the hope of warding off Trump’s threats to seize the Arctic island, the news outlet Politico said it had heard of musings regarding another Nordic island.

    Continue reading...
    • tagiceland tagiceland tagiceland tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tageurope tageurope tageurope tagus news tagus news tagus news tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagiceland tagiceland tagiceland tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tageurope tageurope tageurope tagus news tagus news tagus news tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news tagiceland tagiceland tagiceland tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy tagus foreign policy taggreenland taggreenland taggreenland tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tagtrump administration tageurope tageurope tageurope tagus news tagus news tagus news tagus politics tagus politics tagus politics tagworld news tagworld news tagworld news

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