Trump has gone home but Britain’s problems will remain. Starmer’s invitation was a big mistake | Frances Ryan
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Trump has gone home but Britain’s problems will remain. Starmer’s invitation was a big mistake | Frances Ryan

As Donald Trump met with a grinning Keir Starmer and senior royals on his UK state visit this week, I found myself needing a Daily Mail body language expert. Did Starmer’s hand wave suggest he wanted to ask about the migrants currently being jailed surrounded by alligators in Florida? Did King Charles’s lip shape mean...

How to Set Up Your New iPhone (2025)
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How to Set Up Your New iPhone (2025)

Photograph: Simon Hill A Quick Word on eSIM Apple has supported eSIM technology since the iPhone XS. It’s basically an electronic SIM card instead of the tiny, physical chip you insert into your phone for cellular connectivity. The iPhone 14 series was the first to completely get rid of the physical SIM card slot (in...

Crowds flock to Vatican as teenager made first millennial saint
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Crowds flock to Vatican as teenager made first millennial saint

The first millennial saint has been canonised by Pope Leo on Sunday, with thousands attending the ceremony in Rome. Carlo Acutis, a London-born Italian boy, died of leukaemia in 2006, aged 15. He has been labelled “the patron saint of the internet” for his work recording miracles online, and running websites for Catholic organisations. A...

Lee endorses limited sanctions relief if North Korea halts nuclear program
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Lee endorses limited sanctions relief if North Korea halts nuclear program

South Korean President Lee Jae-myung said he is open to limited sanctions relief for North Korea in return for halting its nuclear and missile programs, calling for “middle ground” engagement with Pyongyang in an interview released Thursday. Seoul’s Presidential Office confirmed Lee’s reported remarks to TIME magazine in a press release, noting the interview took...

The Guardian view on the Lib Dem conference: speaking for parts of England | Editorial
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The Guardian view on the Lib Dem conference: speaking for parts of England | Editorial

The two largest parties in the House of Commons approach the 2025 autumn conference season with trepidation. Both Labour and the Conservatives are spooked by collapses in voter support and by the rise of Reform UK. Party anxiety, internal disagreements and even grassroots revolts seem possible at both of their conferences. The third-largest party, the Liberal...