Editorial
Editorials from the Guardian. All Guardian and Observer editorials can be found here
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Editorial: In his big speech this week the chancellor made a general case for soft Brexit. The Airbus disinvestment threat shows that he must sharpen his game
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Editorial: The call to ban phones from the playground is rightly popular. But schools will need resources to do it properly
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Editorial: The prime minister has once again seen off the Tory rebels. She now has to do the same to ‘hard Brexit’ cabinet colleagues.
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Editorial: The establishment closed ranks, but the relatives of those who died after they were given dangerous doses of opioids still fought for answers. Their persistence should be saluted
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Editorial: To get a good deal in Brussels, Theresa May must persuade EU moderates that she is a serious ally against the populist wreckers on both sides of the Atlantic
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Editorial: Dividing migrant families is despicable. But the US president doesn’t care. Republicans up for election ought to
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Editorial: The Glasgow School of Art was a masterpiece, but promises to build a reproduction are premature
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Editorial: Theresa May is pandering to her pro-Brexit supporters. The important public finance issue, which is unresolved, is whether to raise taxes or abandon austerity – or both
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Editorial: The migration crisis in Europe is increasingly being understood in religious terms. This can make the incomers seem impossibly alien and makes it harder to understand, and deal with, their problems
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Editorial: Even if the UK warned against attacking the vital port of Hodeidah, we bear responsibility for the horrors of this war
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Editorial: Opening facilities for longer but without librarians is a mixed blessing, though still better than closing them, as we do in Britain
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Editorial: It is essential that reasonable, moderate Tory MPs support Dominic Grieve’s insurance policy against the calamity of ‘no deal’
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Editorial: The public knows that the health service needs more money. Theresa May’s offer is a start – but unlikely to be enough
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Editorial: Ministers promised it would save money and cut fraud. But welfare reform has failed to deliver – and brought misery to many
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Editorial: Scotland’s governing party has been in power for 11 years. Independence is stalled and Nicola Sturgeon has low ratings, but the party still shapes the agenda
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Editorial: Radical changes to housing, including improved safety, would be a fitting legacy
The Guardian view on hyper-populism: it’s infecting politicians and technocrats