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Sep 2, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
In the UK, the most common living arrangement now among millennials is to live with their parents. As journalist Elle Hunt explains, it is a phenomenon that has grown and grown over the last decade, caused by the housing crisis, the cost of living and the effects of the pandemic. Hannah Moore visits a family in London, whose adult daughter Cissy moved back in with her parents Steve and Linda last year. How do they manage all living together again?
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Aug 12, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
It’s a move that has taken Russia – and the world – by surprise. In recent months, the feeling had been growing that Russia’s war with Ukraine had reached a deadlock. Or worse, that, inch by inch, Ukraine was slowly losing ground to Russia. Then, last week, came the unexpected news that Ukraine had launched a surprise incursion across a lightly defended border into Russia, taking towns and villages along the way.
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Jul 16, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
For King Charles III it will be a moment steeped in tradition and ceremony. He’ll arrive at the Houses of Parliament from his gilded horse-drawn carriage, don his crown and sit on the throne. From there he will read out the speech prepared for him by his new government listing all of the legislation it intends to pass.
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Jul 11, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
England will be playing Spain in the Euro 2024 final on Sunday. Is football coming home? Barney Ronay, chief sports writer for the Guardian, tells Hannah Moore why this is such a momentous moment for the England manager, Gareth Southgate. “He was known before he managed England as the guy who missed a penalty at Euro '96 in the semi-final against Germany.
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Jun 23, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
Labour’s key housing pledge is to build 1.5m homes if it wins the general election. Its plan includes a promise to build new towns but what would it take to pull it off? “I think the new towns idea is very grabbing,” Robert Booth, the Guardian’s social affairs correspondent, tells Hannah Moore.
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Jun 4, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
George Chidi, a politics and democracy reporter for Guardian US, recently came to Europe on holiday. He had been looking forward to eating his way around Paris and London, and was especially looking forward to the cheese. But when he got here, something surprised him. He enjoyed the food but found he wasn’t overeating. For the past few months, he explains to Hannah Moore, he has been taking the weight-loss drug Ozempic.
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May 28, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
It started with more a whimper than a bang. Rishi Sunak’s surprise election announcement was marred by pouring rain and a protester blasting out the Labour 1997 campaign classic Things Can Only Get Better. But since then things have not exactly got any better for Sunak. From Steve Baker going on holiday to Lucy Allan endorsing a Reform candidate, his MPs have not all fallen into line, while Michael Gove surprised many by joining the large number of Tory MPs saying they will not stand.
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May 27, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
George Chidi, a politics and democracy reporter for Guardian US, recently came to Europe on holiday. He had been looking forward to eating his way around Paris and London, and was especially looking forward to the cheese. But when he got here, something surprised him. He enjoyed the food but found he wasn’t overeating. For the past few months, he explains to Hannah Moore, he has been taking the weight-loss drug Ozempic.
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May 20, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
When the Guardian’s environment editor, Damian Carrington, decided to survey the world’s top climate scientists, he had no idea how many of them would want to participate. “I was astonished by the flood of responses that came back,” he tells Hannah Moore. With the help of Julian Ganz, the Guardian’s research manager, they approached every contactable lead author or review editor of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports since 2018. Of the 843 scientists contacted, 380 replied.
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May 15, 2024 |
theguardian.com | Hannah Moore with
When the Guardian’s environment editor, Damian Carrington, decided to survey the world’s top climate scientists, he had no idea how many of them would want to participate. “I was astonished by the flood of responses that came back,” he tells Hannah Moore. With the help of Julian Ganz, the Guardian’s research manager, they approached every contactable lead author or review editor of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports since 2018. Of the 843 scientists contacted, 380 replied.