Opinion

The Tory politicians who voted for brutal cuts are now claiming they’d like to reverse the damage they caused, shadow policing minister Louise Haigh MP writes.
British thirst for representation is so strong that we don’t care what it is – just what it looks like, Sharan Dhaliwal writes.
The new PM will fail. He will fail to lead, fail to gain respect, and he will fail to deliver any kind of acceptable Brexit, Emma Dent Coad writes.
The climate crisis is upon us and we can quite literally feel it, Green MEP Alexandra Phillips writes.
May leaves a country on its knees, staring down the barrel of a uniquely ruinous no-deal Brexit while the rest of the world looks on in either sympathetic horror or cathartic mockery, Jonathan Lis writes.
The battle line is now drawn: Johnson is the embodiment of the establishment fighting to preserve itself and defeating him is a matter of urgency, Magid Magid writes.
Don’t despair or let politics be something that is done to you, writes Sian Berry, co-leader of the Green Party.
As a woman who took a long time to admit that I masturbated, I am deeply concerned with the show's ludicrous hands-off policy, Laura Holliday writes.
Integrating assets into the public sector will see an end to the stranglehold that a minority in society hold over our national institutions, Robert Poole writes.
Johnson is a peculiarly malignant and aggressive tumour that will leave post-Brexit England a rump with the other parts of the old union clumsily amputated, Tim Walker writes.