Worth scratching together an extra few quid?
PA/Owen Humphreys
They signed up in their droves to vote in the last leadership election, but will they back Corbyn again?
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With George Osborne gone, his programme of devolution could be in jeopardy.
Subtlety be damned.
EPA/Shawn Thew
With prospective first lady Melania Trump accused of plagiarising Michelle Obama, the Republicans are off to a predictably rocky start.
The aftermath of the failed coup.
EPA/Sedat Suna
President Erdoğan has described the failed coup as a ‘gift from god’. And we can expect him to make the most of it.
May: clampdown on immigrants on her beat.
Oli Scarff / PA Archive
A crackdown on immigrants without leave to remain is hitting home.
PA/Danny Lawson
MPs have voted to upgrade Trident, despite the enormous price tag and questions over its utility.
President Rodrigo Duterte talks with former president Benigno Aquino III, shown here in 2013.
Ryan Lim/Malacañang Photo Bureau
The Philippines suffers from many internal conflicts. Can the new president bring about a much-needed peace?
Get stuck in.
EPA/Dan Kitwood
As the world picks over the Iraq Inquiry’s final report, three fascinating character portraits have emerged.
EPA/Sedat Suna
Their president is notoriously authoritarian, yet the people of Turkey instantly took to the streets to defend him against the military.
Artyom Anikeev/Shutterstock.com
The War on Terror-era programme of clandestine abductions and detentions wasn’t just an American initiative.
PA/Anthony Devlin
Clive Lewis and Lisa Nandy could appeal to both parliamentarians and party members.
EPA/Tannen Maury
After a year of trying to bring him down, the Republican Party will rally behind Donald Trump this week – sort of.
Living his best life?
EPA/Jose Jacome
Ecuador is known for promoting the ‘Buen Vivir’ development policy agenda. But the state’s response to a recent earthquake brought its commitment into question.
tostphoto/shutterstock
A drop in migration from the EU would ease demand for housing, but also reduce the availability of those legendary Polish house builders, who will be hard to replace with local labour.
EPA/Sedat Suna
Taking over a country by military force is much harder in this age of globalised rights.
Kem Ley’s funeral.
EPA/Mak Remissa
When Kem Ley was shot in broad daylight in Phnom Penh, Cambodia lost a vital voice for freedom. But could his death galvanise a movement against the authoritarian old order?
EPA
Alp Ozerdem reports from Turkey on a violent, thwarted attempt to take over the country by force. It was a bizarre night of botched announcements and presidential Facetime calls.
EPA/Andreas Gebert
It took just one man and a truck to kill dozens of people in Nice. We could still do more to make public spaces safe.
Memorial on the ‘Promenade des Anglais’ in Nice.
Ian Langsdon/EPA
Families and friends bereaved after a sudden trauma may need both formal and informal support to help cope with their grief.
Striking at the heart of the French Republic.
Terror on July 14 is a clear rejection of the values of the French Republic.
The morning after.
EPA/Olivier Anrigo
France has been in a state of emergency since November 2015, and yet a man was still able to plough a truck through a huge Bastille Day crowd.
esfera/www.shutterstock.com
Euroscepticism, referenda and debates about national identity: the similarities betwen Switzerland and the UK are striking.
That’s no Sturgeon .
Andrew Milligan/PA
The two women at the top of UK politics could be heading for a disagreement.
PA/Gareth Fuller
The choices made on day one can reveal a lot about what a new Prime Minister has in store for the country.
The new Face of Britain abroad.
PA/Dominic Lipinski
Theresa May’s decision to make a Foreign Scretary of the notoriously troublesome Brexiter-in-Chief is a huge gamble.