The Guardian

Media
After ‘body-slamming’ incident, calls for GOP congressional candidate Greg Gianforte to resign
Alan Rusbridger, editor-in-chief of The Guardian newspaper, pictured at the International Journalism Festival in 2014. Rusbridger will step down in the summer of 2015.
Media
The Guardian turns to climate advocacy to force change
Guardian Editor Alan Rusbridger carries a copy of the book Spy Catcher as he arrives at Parliament to face questions over his publication of intelligence files from Edward Snowden.
Global Politics
The British editor who published the Snowden files defends his newspaper before Parliament
Satellite dishes at Britain's spy agency GCHQ, close to where trans-Atlantic fibre-optic cables come ashore in Cornwall. GCHQ has tapped fibre-optic cables that carry international phone and internet traffic and is sharing vast quantities of personal info
Global Politics
Why the British shrug at government surveillance… It’s Bond. James Bond
Portrait of Benjamin Franklin.
Lifestyle & Belief
The 6 highly effective habits of the creative genius
Global Politics
What we know from Bradley Manning’s leaks
Conflict & Justice
What did Bradley Manning Disclose?
Global Politics
Julian Assange, Wikileaks founder, discusses philosophy of censorship
Brits irritated by Americanisms invading their country
Conflict & Justice
Why Foreign Media Cover the Bradley Manning Trial
Stand Your Ground Laws Lead to Rise in Justifiable Homicides, Report Says
Global Politics
Public Inquiry into Phone Hacking Scandal Continues in London
Conflict & Justice
Murdoch’s Reversal of Fortune
Conflict & Justice
Top official in Mexican drug war resigns
Conflict & Justice
More WikiLeaks Cables: Somali Pirates, Saddam Video and China vs. Internet
Global Politics
Wikileaks documents shed light on US-Pakistani relations
Global Politics
WikiLeaks cables reveal Iran’s nuclear capacity
Global Politics
Britain’s foreign secretary calls ‘war on terror’ a mistake
Global Politics
Wikileaks reveals Pakistan’s support for Taliban
Global Politics
Another baby for 10 Downing Street?
Global Politics
Twitter campaign