The Guardian

The World

After ‘body-slamming’ incident, calls for GOP congressional candidate Greg Gianforte to resign

Media

The altercation between Greg Gianforte — who is running for the state’s only congressional seat in Thursday’s special election — and journalist Ben Jacobs took place at a campaign event at Gianforte’s headquarters in the city of Bozeman, Montana, The Guardian said.

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.

The Guardian turns to climate advocacy to force change

Media
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.

The British editor who published the Snowden files defends his newspaper before Parliament

Global Politics
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

Why the British shrug at government surveillance… It’s Bond. James Bond

Global Politics
Portrait of Benjamin Franklin.

The 6 highly effective habits of the creative genius

Lifestyle & Belief

What we know from Bradley Manning’s leaks

Global Politics

Bradley Manning, 25, was sentenced to 35 years in a military prison for leaking classified documents to the website WikiLeaks. Depending on whom you ask, however, the contents of those documents could amount to remarkable disclosures or well-written gossip.

What did Bradley Manning Disclose?

Conflict & Justice

Three years since the Wikileaks saga began, there will still be plenty to talk about beyond the fate of convicted U.S. soldier Bradley Manning. So, what exactly did Manning reveal? The World’s Matthew Bell reports.

Julian Assange, Wikileaks founder, discusses philosophy of censorship

Global Politics

He’s been called a terrorist for his Wikileaks site, but Julian Assange has deep-rooted philosophical beliefs that have driven him to do what he does.

Brits irritated by Americanisms invading their country

Words like ‘faze’, ‘elevator’, ‘apartments’ and ‘rookies’ are just some of the Americanisms that seem to irritate the Brits.

Why Foreign Media Cover the Bradley Manning Trial

Conflict & Justice

American media seem to have dwindling interest in the trial of Bradley Manning, the US Army private who leaked masses of US government documents to Wikileaks. But foreign media outlets continue to send reporters to the hearings.