Opinion

After Boris Johnson's latest loss in the Commons, it's hard not to regard the prime minister as a headless chicken, journalist Tim Walker writes.
It is time the 1.8 billion followers of Islam in the world stood shoulder to shoulder with climate activists to rally the call for action, Afzal Khan MP writes.
This isn’t a vote along party lines, it’s a vote about delivering on the promise of Brexit and in doing so maintaining the integrity of our democracy and its institutions, writes Chair of Change Britain Gisela Stuart.
Our PM has delivered a deal that is demonstrably more destructive than the one Theresa May saw defeated three times, Labour activist Mark Mcvitie writes.
Climate change protests won’t be taken seriously if they continue to cause clashes within communities, argues writer Sharan Dhaliwal.
Restoring order in our communities is going to take more than an injection of police officers. It will require sustained and relentless focus, Harvey Redgrave from the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change writes.
The media have to bear some responsibility for directing such hate towards environmentalists that people think it’s acceptable to assault them, writer Adam McGibbon writes.
Our prime minister has spent the last few months just trying to build the boat, but now he has to actually see if it will float, journalist Abby Tomlinson writes.
For ten years I was swept up in a world of hate. But we should all be conscious of how our words and actions can perpetuate violence, writes Ivan Humble
Uefa’s three-step protocol acknowledges that racism is a problem on the pitch, but still puts the onus on the players to deal with it, writes Dr Peter Olusoga