Leaders
Why Marine Le Pen should be allowed to run for president
Punish the offender without also punishing French democracy
The world in brief
Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, said the European Union has a “strong plan to retaliate” against Donald Trump’s tariffs...
BYD delivered nearly 1m cars in the first quarter of 2025, up 58% from one year earlier...
The judge who barred Marine Le Pen from public office was placed under police protection after receiving threats...
Pam Bondi, America’s attorney-general, instructed federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty in their case against Luigi Mangione, after Mr Trump reversed the Biden administration’s moratorium on federal executions...
As Chinese drills begin, Taiwan expels mainland influencers
The government is drawing new lines around acceptable speech
The Telegram: China debates whether Trump is a revolutionary, or just rude
Its experts cannot decide whether the second Trump presidency is a threat or opportunity
Schooled by Trump, Americans are learning to dislike their allies
Our polling shows that Americans’ and Europeans’ attitudes towards each other are changing quickly
How politics shapes the world’s time zones
National identities and rivalries still drive changes
Discover more
Tracking the presidency
How popular is Donald Trump?
Canadian poll tracker
Ahead of elections later this month, the Liberals are surging
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Guess when these extracts were published in The Economist
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Elon Musk’s efficiency drive
Is Elon Musk remaking government or breaking it?
So far, there is more destruction than creation
DOGE comes for the data wonks
America may soon be unable to measure itself properly
Elon Musk is powersliding through the federal government
But to what end?
Musk Inc is under serious threat
SpaceX has new competition, Tesla is in trouble and the world’s richest man is distracted
Other highlights
How Shonda Rhimes became a billion-dollar asset for streamers
Her career offers lessons for any writer who wants to make it big on the small screen
1843 magazine | The secret life of the first millennial saint
The Vatican wants him to be the next Mother Teresa. But what did Carlo Acutis really believe?
A fight over a cloister in tourist-filled Florence
Augustinian friars are protesting against a redevelopment plan
Oleg Gordievsky worked for both sides in the cold war
The KGB officer who spied for Britain died on March 4th, aged 86
The consequences of Trumponomics
Donald Trump’s plan for American carmaking is full of potholes
Taxing imported motors may not create many new jobs at home
Donald Trump digs deep to revive American mining
Reducing dependency on imports will be hard
Trump’s tariff pain: the growing evidence
As “liberation day” nears, American businesses suffer
The Trump administration is playing a dangerous stockmarket game
American investors are extremely exposed to a sell-off—and so is the economy
Technology Quarterly: March 1st 2025
The age of CRISPR
Ida Emilie Steinmark explores whether it can deliver on its promise
- Can gene editing deliver on its promise?
- CRISPR could yet save millions of lives. Here’s how
- Epigenetic editors are a gentler form of gene editing
- Gene editing is already revolutionising research in the laboratory
- Eat your GE-greens
- Editing pigs, mice and mosquitoes may save lives
- Designing babies
- Gene editing can still change the world
- Acknowledgments
Stories most read by subscribers
Edition: March 29th 2025
Elon Musk’s efficiency drive
The Spring in Reeves’s step
Labour can still rescue Britain’s growth prospects
China’s stockmarket rally
Can foreign investors learn to love China again?
Netanyahu’s hubris
Israel’s expansionism is a danger to others—and itself
Signals intelligence Trumpstyle
The cover-up is worse than the group chat