Latest news with #inequality


The Guardian
21 hours ago
- Politics
- The Guardian
Young nature writers appeal to all ages
I agree with Simon Barley that the Other lives obituaries lift our spirits (Letters, 24 June). So too does the monthly Young country diary. It's so good to know there are such enthusiastic and observant naturalists – and excellent writers – in the generations to SabbaghDefford, Worcestershire In Dining across the divide (22 June), Julian, 57, finds himself moving 'right' as he gets older and pays more taxes. There is no inevitability about this: I am 64 and the more taxes I pay, the more I'm aware of inequality, and move TaylorYork 'The 50 hottest books to read now', ran the web headline on your summer reading roundup (21 June). Wouldn't the 50 coolest books be more appropriate?James NyeEast Cowes, Isle of Wight Having your nose in a book is not always a good idea, Adrian Chiles (25 June). In 2002 in a Barcelona station, my husband left me to look for the left-luggage. When he came back, he asked where his rucksack was. It was a very good EvansRuthin, Denbighshire The welfare bill was opposed by many voters: listening to MPs and making changes isn't a major 'U-turn' (Report, 26 June), it is democracy at KarlsenWhitstable, Kent Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.


The Guardian
2 days ago
- Politics
- The Guardian
Ex-world leaders call for ‘powerful shift' as they warn of extreme inequality
The world is facing a looming crisis of inequality that could see the first trillionaires emerge while nearly half of humanity still languishes in poverty, a group of 40 former presidents and prime ministers warns. In a letter seen by the Guardian, the group – which includes the ex-British prime minister Gordon Brown – issues a joint appeal to current world leaders for a 'new economic coalition of the willing' to address the escalating threats of inequality, poverty and environmental breakdown. The former leaders also condemn 'narrow unilateralism' and the 'outdated' 1944 economic model while urging comprehensive debt relief, international tax cooperation, and reform of institutions such as the International Monetary Fund. The letter was organised by Club de Madrid, the world's biggest forum of democratic former heads of state and government, with support from Oxfam and the People's Medicines Alliance. Its signatories include Brown; Helen Clark of New Zealand; Jose Luis Rodríguez Zapatero of Spain; Carlos Alvarado Quesada of Costa Rica; Aminata Touré of Senegal; Sanna Marin of Finland; and Nobel peace prize winners José Ramos-Horta, the current president of Timor-Leste, and Óscar Arias, former president of Costa Rica. Their rare intervention comes in a moment of profound global uncertainty with democracies backsliding, the rules-based order in retreat and violence on the rise. Policy analyst Fiona Hill has argued that a third world war is in effect already under way. Donald Trump has continued to challenge the post-war consensus, withdrawn the US from the Paris climate accord and, with help from the tech entrepreneur Elon Musk, shuttered the development agency USAID. Musk is poised to become the world's first trillionaire by 2027, according to one report. 'Volatility orders our world today,' the letter states. 'Inequality spirals across nations. Trillionaires could emerge this decade, while near half of humanity lives in poverty. 3.3 billion people live in countries that spend more on interest to pay sovereign debt than on education or health. 'Climate breakdown outpaces green transitions. Across too many places, children are being buried under states' belligerence as any sense of a rules-based order is violently displaced by a power-based one. The multilateralism to solve global problems that grew out of two World Wars is in disarray. Global problems that need global solutions and cannot be solved by nation states on their own remain unaddressed.' The world is falling short in multilateral cooperation and the financing of global development aid, the former leaders warn, leading to more poverty, ill health, illiteracy and environmental problems. In what some observers may interpret as a swipe at Trump, who has attacked organisations such as Nato, the United Nations and World Health Organization, the letter states: 'Alone, any one country – and its people – is left vulnerable when another chooses narrow unilateralism above all else. We need international cooperation, revamped for our era.' Sign up to Headlines US Get the most important US headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morning after newsletter promotion Despite the grim assessment, the former leaders express optimism that 'a powerful shift is possible' and advocate for 'a new economic coalition of the willing of countries to cooperate – to combat extreme inequality, end poverty and meet human rights. One that is founded upon values of solidarity and sovereignty.' They assert: 'Trillions of dollars exist for financing development – but too much public money is captured by private power.' Condemning the 'hemorrhaging cuts by rich nations', they argue for a restoration of development aid and global minimum taxes on the profits of multinationals. The group of 40 former presidents and prime ministers identify the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Seville, Spain, G20 in South Africa and Cop30 in Brazil as major opportunities to advance their agenda.


The Guardian
2 days ago
- Politics
- The Guardian
Ex-world leaders call for ‘powerful shift' as they warn of extreme inequality
The world is facing a looming crisis of inequality that could see the first trillionaires emerge while nearly half of humanity still languishes in poverty, a group of 40 former presidents and prime ministers warns. In a letter seen by the Guardian, the group – which includes ex-British prime minister Gordon Brown – issues a joint appeal to current world leaders for a 'new economic coalition of the willing' to address the escalating threats of inequality, poverty and environmental breakdown. The former leaders also condemn 'narrow unilateralism' and the 'outdated' 1944 economic model while urging comprehensive debt relief, international tax cooperation, and reform of institutions such as the International Monetary Fund. The letter was organised by Club de Madrid, the world's biggest forum of democratic former heads of state and government, with support from Oxfam and the People's Medicines Alliance. Its signatories include Brown; Helen Clark of New Zealand; Jose Luis Rodríguez Zapatero of Spain; Carlos Alvarado Quesada of Costa Rica; Aminata Touré of Senegal; Sanna Marin of Finland; and Nobel peace prize winners José Ramos-Horta, the current president of Timor-Leste, and Óscar Arias, former president of Costa Rica. Their rare intervention comes in a moment of profound global uncertainty with democracies backsliding, the rules-based order in retreat and violence the rise. Policy analyst Fiona Hill has argued that a third world war is in effect already under way. Donald Trump has continued to challenge the post-war consensus, withdrawn the US from the Paris climate accord and, with help from tech entrepreneur Elon Musk, shuttered the development agency USAID. Musk is poised to become the world's first trillionaire by 2027, according to one report. 'Volatility orders our world today,' the letter states. 'Inequality spirals across nations. Trillionaires could emerge this decade, while near half of humanity lives in poverty. 3.3 billion people live in countries that spend more on interest to pay sovereign debt than on education or health. 'Climate breakdown outpaces green transitions. Across too many places, children are being buried under states' belligerence as any sense of a rules-based order is violently displaced by a power-based one. The multilateralism to solve global problems that grew out of two World Wars is in disarray. Global problems that need global solutions and cannot be solved by nation states on their own remain unaddressed.' The world is falling short in multilateral cooperation and the financing of global development aid, the former leaders warn, leading to more poverty, ill health, illiteracy and environmental problems. In what some observers may interpret as a swipe at Trump, who has attacked organisations such as Nato, the United Nations and World Health Organization, the letter states: 'Alone, any one country – and its people – is left vulnerable when another chooses narrow unilateralism above all else. We need international cooperation, revamped for our era.' Sign up to Headlines US Get the most important US headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morning after newsletter promotion Despite the grim assessment, the former leaders express optimism that 'a powerful shift is possible' and advocate for 'a new economic coalition of the willing of countries to cooperate – to combat extreme inequality, end poverty and meet human rights. One that is founded upon values of solidarity and sovereignty.' They assert: 'Trillions of dollars exist for financing development – but too much public money is captured by private power.' Condemning the 'hemorrhaging cuts by rich nations', they argue for a restoration of development aid and global minimum taxes on the profits of multinationals. The group of 40 former presidents and prime ministers identify the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Seville, Spain, G20 in South Africa and Cop30 in Brazil as major opportunities to advance their agenda.


The Guardian
2 days ago
- Politics
- The Guardian
Mamdani says leftwing populist victory can be replicated across US
Zohran Mamdani, in his first major interview since his upset victory in the Democratic party's mayoral primary in New York shook up US politics, said his brand of campaigning and leftist political stances can translate to anywhere in the US. Mamdani, a Democratic socialist, stunned many observers by beating Andrew Cuomo on Tuesday night, delivering a devastating blow to the former New York governor who ran a centrist campaign backed by most of the party establishment. Mamdani told MSNBC's Jen Psaki that his populist campaign – which focused on inequality and promised radical moves on rent, the price of food and free public transport – could be deployed anywhere in the US as Democrats seek to combat Donald Trump and his Maga movement. 'I think ultimately this is a campaign about inequality, and you don't have to live in the most expensive city in the country to have experienced that inequality, because it's a national issue. And what Americans coast to coast are looking for are people who will fight for them, not just believe in the things that resonate with their lives, but actually fight and deliver on those very things,' he said. Mamdani added: 'I think that in focusing on working people and their struggles, we also return back to what makes so many of us proud to be Democrats in the first place.' Mamdani – who was backed by fellow socialists Bernie Sanders, the senator from Vermont, and the New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez – campaigned by combining an intense effort to knock on doors and meet voters with a highly effective social media strategy. That style contrasted sharply with Cuomo, who was backed by millions of dollars of money from rich donors and endorsements from party bigwigs including Bill Clinton and the South Carolina congressman Jim Clyburn, and who ran a campaign focused on more stage-managed events. Throughout he was dogged by the sexual harassment allegations that led to his ouster as state governor four years ago, as well as a sense he was using the mayoral campaign to reignite his own political career rather than any particular or long-standing commitment to the city he sought to lead. 'We have found exactly the way to defeat organized money, which is organized people. We're speaking about a scale of a campaign that we haven't seen in this city in a long time,' Mamdani said. 'And ultimately, we believe in a politics of no translation, one that is both direct to the struggles of working people's lives and also delivered directly. And there is nothing more direct than a New Yorker knocking on another New Yorker's door.' Mamdani's victory means he will be the Democratic party's nominee in the mayoral election, and given the heavy Democratic slant of New York City voters it is often the case that the party nominee also wins the mayoralty. But Cuomo has signalled he may run as an independent, despite his loss this week. And the current mayor, Eric Adams, who won as a Democrat, will also run as an independent, after his popularity within the party plummeted due in part to allegations of corruption and his newfound closeness with Trump. Including the Republican party candidate, Curtis Sliwa, the rightwing podcaster who founded the Guardian Angels charitable organization focused on street safety, it sets up a likely four-way race in November. Mamdani nevertheless remains the favorite to win, which would make him New York's first Muslim mayor and solidify his place at 33 years old as a bright new star of the Democratic party.


The Independent
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- The Independent
Jeff Bezos mannequin floats in Venice canal in wedding protest
A life-size mannequin of Jeff Bezos on a giant Amazon box was floated through Venice's Grand Canal on Thursday, June 26, 2025. The protest stunt was orchestrated by the activist group Borne Media, using a remotely controlled motorized raft. The mannequin, depicted clutching dollar bills, aimed to make a pointed statement about wealth and inequality. The demonstration was a direct protest against Jeff Bezos's upcoming wedding to Lauren Sánchez in Venice. Watch the full video above