The Guardian view on a UK-US trade deal: MPs must get a vote on any agreement with Trump | Editorial

Looked at objectively, a bilateral trade agreement between Britain and the United States is of relatively small economic significance to this country. Back in 2020, Boris Johnson’s government estimated that a US deal “could increase UK GDP in the long run by around 0.07%” – a figure that is not exactly transformative. The view touted … Read more

Viktor Orbán’s latest clampdown bans Budapest Pride – but he won’t stop us marching | Katalin Cseh

Hungary’s parliament has given Viktor Orbán the tools to do what he has long threatened: ban Pride, silence dissent and strip political critics of their citizenship. A constitutional amendment passed on 14 April allows the government to label LGBTQ+ gatherings a threat to children and to revoke the citizenship of dual nationals deemed a risk … Read more

Putin’s play for an Indonesian airbase was always likely to fail – but Russia has wider ambitions | Australia news

A defence industry report claiming that Russia requested a permanent base for its warplanes in Indonesia’s remote Papua region, right on Australia’s northern doorstep, sent Canberra into a tailspin. But in Indonesia, it was the frenzy whipped up in Australia’s tight election campaign that came as the real surprise. Foreign policy and defence experts are … Read more

Trump’s ‘chosen one’ Giorgia Meloni heads to Washington to play delicate balancing act | Giorgia Meloni

Sitting alone at the end of a dinner party, under chandeliers, next to a table with white roses and leftover wine, Giorgia Meloni and Donald Trump are locked in conversation. It is early December and they are pictured in an opulent dining room of the Élysée Palace, where the French president, Emmanuel Macron, hosted guests … Read more

A train from the UK to Italy? We’ve heard that one before, but I’m on board | Jonn Elledge

Between environmental breakdown, economic crisis and Donald Trump, it often feels like there’s precious little reason to feel hopeful these days. So how’s this for a reason to cheer up: Italian state railway company, Trenitalia, is planning to run trains through the Channel tunnel before the decade is out. It’s studying the option of direct … Read more

EU will struggle to fill gap left by USAID as European countries cut their budgets | Aid

The dismantling of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) has captured headlines, but “very regrettable” reductions in European aid budgets are also contributing to a void in support for some of the poorest people in the world’s most fragile states, according to MEPs and NGOs. Isabella Lövin, a deputy chair of the European parliament’s … Read more

Europe’s race to rearm is pointless if its adversaries are waging war online | Johnny Ryan

Europe is scrambling to remilitarise. The European Commission is raising a €150bn (£129bn) defence fund and is calling on EU countries to invest €650bn (£561bn) more. Germany has cast aside its government debt limit to invest hundreds of billions of euros in defence. Poland will train every male of fighting age for battle, and envisages … Read more

The Guardian view on Friedrich Merz’s grand coalition: gambling on a new centre ground | Editorial

Some years ago, hundreds of German finance ministry staff dressed in black and formed a giant zero to salute their boss, Wolfgang Schäuble, as he left office. It was a tribute to Mr Schäuble’s extreme fiscal conservatism, which had delivered Germany’s first balanced budget in the postwar period. Amid resurgent prosperity in the Angela Merkel … Read more