
Look inside The Economist's summer issue for 2025
W e have published our fourth summer issue. As well as the usual news and analysis, you'll find a special 48-page supplement from 1843, The Economist's home for narrative journalism. We won't produce a print edition of the newspaper on August 2nd but a digital version will be available as usual on The Economist's app and website.
Its ruling that burning fossil fuels can be 'internationally wrongful' risks provoking a backlash
American funding cuts are a catalyst for fresh thinking
America is sick of policing the world. More nuclear-armed states will not help
Shashank Joshi, our defence editor, examines the blind spots of the intelligence services
Why female athletes need to leave the men behind
India has done brilliantly by balancing America, China and Russia. Can that last?

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Daily Mail
13 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
New poll shows astonishing outcome in fantasy 2028 match-up between Obama and Trump
A new poll reveals who would win in a fantasy match-up between President Donald Trump and former President Barack Obama for president if they both ran for a third term. A new exclusive Daily Mail/J.L. Partners poll shows that Obama would win in a theoretical matchup. Of the respondents, 52 percent chose the former Democratic president and 41 percent chose Trump. Obama's 11-point majority over Trump stems from an enthusiastic Hispanic base, of which 73 percent selected Obama, and also 68 percent of black voters. Independent voters also preferred Obama over Trump in the hypothetical match, 50 percent for the former Democrat to just 39 percent for Trump. Past American presidents sometimes benefit from nostalgia over a president currently serving in office. Obama currently enjoys a 59 percent favorability rating while just 35 percent viewed him unfavorably. That's compared to Trump's 44 percent favorability mark. According to the exclusive poll, Trump has a 49 percent overall approval rating for his job performance as president, while 51 percent have an unfavorable view. The poll also shows that Trump would still beat Hillary Clinton if she ran for president again with 44 percent support over Clinton's 43 percent. Trump would also beat former President Joe Biden with 44 percent versus just 40 percent support for Biden. American presidents are prevented from running for a third term, after the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution was passed and ratified in 1951. Trump has teased the idea in interviews, although he has conceded he is not yet planning on running for a third term. 'I'm not joking,' Trump told NBC in March, when asked to clarify his comments on the idea. 'But I'm not — it is far too early to think about it.' When asked about how he would do so, Trump said cryptically, 'There are methods which you could do it.' He also said he would 'love' to run against Obama. 'I'd love that …. That would be a good one,' he said to Fox News reporter Peter Doocy in March. 'I'd like that. And no, people are asking me to run, and there's a whole story about running for a third term. I don't know, I never looked into it. They do say there's a way you can do it, but I don't know about that.' Trump supporters have mused on a possible loophole in the law, if Vice President JD Vance won a presidential race in 2028 with Trump as his running mate. Theoretically, a President Vance could swear in as president and then resign, allowing a vice president Trump to ascend back into power. Obama also joked about the idea of a third term as his second term was coming to a close. 'I actually think I'm a pretty good president. I think if I ran, I could win,' Obama joked during a 2015 speech in Ethiopia. 'There's a lot that I'd like to do to keep America moving. But the law is the law, and no person is above the law, not even the president.' In 2020, Obama also joked that he would be fine with a 'stand-in' president where 'they had an earpiece' and he could control them. "You know what? If I could make an arrangement where I had a stand-in, a front man or front woman, and they had an earpiece in and I was just in my basement in my sweats looking through the stuff, and then I could sort of deliver the lines, but somebody else was doing all the talking and ceremony, I'd be fine with that,' he joked in an interview with Stephen Colbert. The poll was conducted July 9 - July 10 among 1,013 registered voters. It has a 3.1 percent margin of error.


BBC News
16 minutes ago
- BBC News
Everton sell women's team to parent company
Everton have sold their women's team to the parent company which owns the club - a move that will improve their compliance with the Premier League's profitability and sustainability rules (PSR).The team has been purchased by Roundhouse Capital Holdings, which is owned and controlled by American businessman Dan Friedkin Group completed its takeover of Everton in December move allows the women's team to act as a standalone entity and attract minority investment. The men's team, meanwhile, benefits from the sale being recorded as revenue in the club's accounts, which positively impacts their PSR position. Under PSR, clubs cannot exceed £105m losses over a three-year period. Everton were deducted points in 2021-22 and again in 2022-23 for breaching the rules. No figures have been released regarding the value of the sale. Everton are the third Premier League club to sell their women's team to navigate the Premier League's financial sold their women's team to parent company BlueCo for nearly £200m in June 2024. Subsequently, the team attracted the attention of Reddit founder Alexis Ohanian, who purchased an 8-10% minority stake in Villa sold its women's team to holding company V Sports in 2024-25, Everton finished eighth in the Women's Super League, reached the fifth round of the Women's FA Cup, and exited in the group stage of the Women's League Cup. 'An opportunity for more money to come into the women's team' Everton have transferred ownership of the women's team to a separate part of the Friedkin Group empire, which is still under the broad control of Everton. It's a sideways an investment opportunity. We've seen the fantastic success of the Lionesses. We're seeing, especially in the United States, a huge interest in the women's game. Therefore, you can now sell part of the women's team and keep control of the men's. It's setting up the business to perhaps be more profitable going within the rules. We saw similar take place with Chelsea and Aston Villa. The women's team at Everton has control of Goodison Park, so that would make it an attractive all-in is positive news because it means there is the opportunity for more money to come into the women's team from a minority investor. There wasn't enough attention given to the women's team under the old ownership you get the surroundings right, if you get the pricing right, you can attract a new type of fanbase and a different demographic. You can go to sponsors and partners and say, "we are the women's team, we are different from the men's team, and you can benefit from that."There are huge opportunities here and there's a feel-good factor following the Euros final on Sunday and I think it's the right time to capitalise on that.


BBC News
16 minutes ago
- BBC News
Scotland gives Trump three things he likes - and one thing he doesn't
A list of Donald Trump's favourite things would be very unlikely to include raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens (as Julie Andrews famously sang in The Sound of Music).Instead, the president's list would surely have on it playing golf, a way to brazenly promote his commercial interests and, thirdly, trade deals that generate billions of dollars for the United wonder he looks so pleased with himself - his working holiday in Scotland has delivered on all three of these passions. On what was billed as a "private visit" he got a lot of work is taking home with him a trade deal with the EU which is not only the largest in history, it is also extremely favourable to the EU will spend hundreds of billions of dollars buying American energy and military equipment as well as investing billions more in the US return European goods will be subject to a 15% tariff when they are exported to the US rather than the 30% Mr Trump had threatened. The deal is an important achievement for Trump to be able to boast about, even if he has failed to conclude the "90 deals in 90 days" he had also seemed to relish hosting Sir Keir and Lady Starmer at his Turnberry golf resort on pictures - Trump's trip to ScotlandWinners and losers in US-EU deal It was a peculiar spectacle, the British prime minister being welcomed as guest in his own the PM was prepared to overlook the protocol when he was being treated to an unusual and valuable amount of face time with the US is, after all, a man whose foreign policy is abnormally influenced by his personal relations with other world talks were dominated by the crisis in Gaza. Starmer appeared to make some headway as he pressed Trump to use his influence to get more food into the Palestinian territory. Trump said afterwards that the US would work with the UK and other European partners to set up food centres, adding that he will tell Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu to ensure that food gets to people who need it. "I want to make sure they get the food, every ounce of food".He also seemed to give the green light to Starmer to officially recognise the state of Palestine even though that is not something the US will do. "I'm not going to take a position, I don't mind him taking a position," he also made a significant change to his position on the conflict in revealed that he is now giving Russian President Vladimir Putin only 10-12 days to agree to a ceasefire, not the 50 days he had previously given him. "There's is no reason in waiting… I want to be generous but we just don't see any progress being made."How Trump uses golf for political advantage All of these major announcements were made during an exceptionally long, wide-ranging and free-wheeling press conference, during which the US president appeared extremely was prepared to talk at length about anything from wind power to immigration, including his views on King Charles and the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan. There was one issue he could not escape, much as he perhaps wanted was inevitably asked about Jeffrey Epstein, as the long running controversy about why he is refusing to release all the files held by the US government on the deceased sex offender followed him across the Atlantic.A van displaying an old photograph of Trump at a party with Epstein was driving around Aberdeenshire to make sure the president could not escape the told us for the first time why he fell out with the disgraced financier many years ago, saying that Epstein had poached staff from Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida and he refused to talk to him after he denied ever having sent a lewd drawing to Epstein (as reported by the Wall St Journal), claiming that he only ever draws very basic pictures of intrusion of the Epstein scandal into Trump's Scottish trip was a reminder of what inevitably awaits him on his return to Washington but it did not seem to dent his buoyant Epstein case is tearing apart MAGAWhat do we know about the Epstein files? A few anti-Trump protests were staged. But they were largely kept away from the president himself and were remarkably muted compared with previous most determined demonstrators were Trump fans who turned out to greet him as he landed in Prestwick and at both golf resorts, holding large signs welcoming him to president also took every opportunity to use this trip to proudly promote his two Scottish golf hosted the press conferences with Starmer and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen in the newly renovated ballroom at Turnberry, boasting of the opulent new ceiling and brand new windows at the same time as discussing famine in Gaza. Arriving in Aberdeenshire with Starmer on board his Marine One helicopter, he took a couple of laps to show off the new golf course before talks with John Swinney on Tuesday morning, he had the Scottish first minister attend the official opening of the Trump International Golf Links in the village of Balmedie, along with several VIPs and a phalanx of TV is exceptionally unusual for a US president to so nakedly use his office to promote his own commercial interests but it is something Donald Trump clearly revels in as much as he enjoys playing golf. Which he managed to do on almost every day of this trip.