Shaun Walker filed a fascinating report on the audacious incursion by Ukrainian troops into Kursk, as told by some of the soldiers recently returned from Russia. The surprise attack has provided Ukrainian troops with a morale boost. “The elections were like a punch to the country,” Germany’s Central Council of Jews said after the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) won a state election in Germany for the first time since the second world war, an extraordinary outcome. People of colour feel “abandoned and scared” too, one academic told our European community affairs correspondent Ashifa Kassam. Reporting from Berlin, Deborah Cole looked at AfD’s demand to not be excluded from state coalition talks, while Kate Connolly examined the potential for another populist party, the third-placed Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance, to further upend German politics. It appears to be set for a kingmaker role in coalition talks and espouses a complex mix of left-leaning economics, anti-immigration rhetoric and a foreign policy grounded in suspicion of the US and support for Russia. Partially fuelling this rise of nationalism in Germany is a grim economic climate. This week Volkswagen announced it might close down factories in the country for the first time. Larry Elliott explained how Germany, once seen as an economic model to emulate, was unwisely relying on industries past their sell-by date and Jasper Jolly examined how VW has fallen so far behind Chinese rivals in the race to decarbonise. Can 0.03% of votes really swing the US presidential election? Ana Lucía González Paz, Garry Blight and Sam Levine produced a brilliant explainer that visualised the workings of the US electoral college, showing how only a fraction of votes could swing November’s vote. Our US democracy team continued its important reporting on the push by the Trump campaign and its allies to sow doubt on election processes and insert supporters into key electoral positions. This week, Alice Herman revealed a recruitment drive by the Christian group The Lion of Judah to enrol its followers as poll workers in swing states. Meanwhile Nesrine Malik reflected on rightwing figures such as JD Vance’s obsession with childless women, a political tendency that persists and endures even in supposedly progressive societies. Felicity Lawrence continued her exclusive reporting on questions over the safety of Lucy Letby’s convictions for killing babies at a hospital in the north-west of England. Notes scribbled by the neonatal nurse were portrayed by prosecutors as tantamount to a confession, but Felicity discovered they were produced on the advice of counsellors as a way of Letby dealing with extreme stress. Experts are now questioning their admissibility as evidence. Australia has just come out of its hottest August on record (it is usually a noticeably chilly month). In our Full Story podcast, climate and environment reporter Graham Readfearn explored why Australia has been experiencing crazy weather — not just the heat, but also Tasmania being hit by flooding and Victoria battling severe winds. Guardian environment writer Jonathan Watts’s new book on the revolutionary scientist James Lovelock reveals that the famous Gaia theory was in fact devised in collaboration with his secret lover, Dian Hitchcock. Like many women in science, Hitchcock has been written out of history. In South Korea, children have won a landmark ruling on climate change, forcing their government to protect future generations against the negative impact of an overheating planet. Rachel Clarke’s extraordinary piece on a boy and a girl and the precious heart they share is one of the most upsetting things I’ve read for a long time. The Paralympics continues to deliver high sporting drama, embraced by large crowds cheering the likes of the incredible Italian women’s fencing champion Bebe Vio, who, as Tanya Aldred reported, lit up the Grand Palais and delighted fans, even when she lost. The shame is that the Games are only served up once every four years and that’s not enough. As Ade Adepitan argued: “Disability sport is for life, not just for the Paralympics.” I loved Phil Hoad’s compelling story of Alexander Grothendieck, a reclusive French mathematician who descended into mania, but whose theories may hold the answer to the future of AI, and Emine Saner’s interview with Tasha Marks, a self-described “scent designer, historian and artist” who shared the secrets of her trade ahead of an exhibition at the British Library, where she hopes to evoke the smell of heaven and hell. Also delightful was musician Paloma Faith’s thoughtful piece about dating as a single mother. One more thing …I often go on holiday to Croatia – this summer was no exception – and try to read a relevant book on every trip. This year I read Girl at War, a novel by Sara Nović which really took me by surprise. It’s about a girl in Zagreb who is aged 10 as Yugoslavia is collapsing into war, and her reflections as a young adult. It’s beautifully written and deeply satisfying. |