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Headlines
Revealed: Microsoft deepened ties with Israeli military to provide tech support during Gaza war
Middle East  
Revealed: Microsoft deepened ties with Israeli military to provide tech support during Gaza war
Reproductive rights  
Trump’s executive order on gender uses language pointing to ‘fetal personhood’
US politics live  
Trump suggests it was a mistake for Biden not to pardon himself
California wildfires  
Firefighters battle to keep upper hand on new wildfire north of Los Angeles
Unions  
‘Fighting Goliath’: Amazon workers to hold union election at North Carolina warehouse
Trump administration
US asylum seekers in despair after Trump cancels CBP One app: ‘start from zero again’
Trump administration  
US asylum seekers in despair after Trump cancels CBP One app: ‘start from zero again’
After 30,000 appointments to apply for asylum were cancelled, the fragile calm at the US-Mexico border is at risk
Explainer  
Trump says China is ‘operating’ the Panama Canal – here are the facts
Technology  
Is TikTok a national security threat – or is the ban a smokescreen for superpower rivalry?
Profile  
Who is Mariann Edgar Budde, the bishop who angered Trump with inaugural sermon?
 

Betsy Reed

Editor, Guardian US

Person Image

I hope you appreciated this newsletter. Before you move on, I wanted to ask whether you could support the Guardian’s journalism as we begin to cover the second Trump administration.

As Trump himself observed: “The first term, everybody was fighting me. In this term, everybody wants to be my friend.”

He’s not entirely wrong. All around us, media organizations have begun to capitulate. First, two news outlets pulled election endorsements at the behest of their billionaire owners. Next, prominent reporters bent the knee at Mar-a-Lago. And then a major network – ABC News – rolled over in response to Trump’s legal challenges and agreed to a $16m million settlement in his favor.

The Guardian is clear: we have no interest in being Donald Trump’s – or any politician’s – friend. Our allegiance as independent journalists is not to those in power but to the public.

How are we able to stand firm in the face of intimidation and threats? As journalists say: follow the money. The Guardian has neither a self-interested billionaire owner nor profit-seeking corporate henchmen pressuring us to appease the rich and powerful. We are funded by our readers and owned by the Scott Trust – whose only financial obligation is to preserve our journalistic mission in perpetuity.

With the new administration boasting about its desire to punish journalists, and Trump and his allies already pursuing lawsuits against newspapers whose stories they don’t like, it has never been more urgent, or more perilous, to pursue fair, accurate reporting. Can you support the Guardian today?

We value whatever you can spare, but a recurring contribution makes the most impact, enabling greater investment in our most crucial, fearless journalism. As our thanks to you, we can offer you some great benefits. We’ve made it very quick to set up, so we hope you’ll consider it.

However you choose to support us: thank you for helping protect the free press. Whatever happens in the coming months and years, you can rely on the Guardian never to bow down to power, nor back down from truth.

 
In focus
The search for ‘disappeared’ US journalist Austin Tice resumes in post-Assad Syria
Syria  
The search for ‘disappeared’ US journalist Austin Tice resumes in post-Assad Syria
The reporter’s mother, Debra Tice, has not entered Syria to search for her son for nearly 10 years, but associations like Hostage Aid Worldwide have helped create renewed hope
Belarus  
‘A ritual for a dictator’: Lukashenko critics decry Belarus election
West Bank  
‘It’s not the damage, it’s the terror’: Israeli settlers run riot after ceasefire deal
Spotlight
I was shot when I was nine years old. My message to survivors: there’s hope
Life  
I was shot when I was nine years old. My message to survivors: there’s hope
The recovery period was grueling and painful but it gave me the unexpected gifts of resilience and empathy
Television  
An oral history of Twin Peaks by its unforgettable stars: ‘I put my waitress uniform on and began bawling’
Life  
‘The best of both worlds’: people reveal why they are childfree by choice
‘Awe-inspiring and harrowing'  
How two orcas with a taste for liver decimated the great white shark capital of the world
Antarctic  
I’m obsessed with icebreaking: I was trained not to hit anything – now I drive my ship into ice 24/7
NFL  
Mahomes’ arm to Philly’s line: why each remaining team can win the Super Bowl
Opinion
What Trump didn’t say in his inauguration speech
What Trump didn’t say in his inauguration speech
Trump 2.0 is already assailed by lawsuits, but it’s small comfort to America’s defeated liberals
Sports
Tennis live  
Australian Open semi-finals – Keys v Swiatek goes to deciding tie-break
Australian Open semi-finals – Keys v Swiatek goes to deciding tie-break
Australian Open  
Shelton finds the shots – and words – to make his mark
Culture
Film  
‘I was careful not to exploit the tears or the drama’: the director of Oscar-tipped Once Upon a Time in Ukraine on her powerful documentary
‘I was careful not to exploit the tears or the drama’: the director of Oscar-tipped Once Upon a Time in Ukraine on her powerful documentary
Books  
My Tender Matador by Pedro Lemebel review – queer love in Pinochet’s Chile
In case you missed it
‘We surpassed human limits to stop this’: LA megafires show our approach to fire needs to change
California wildfires  
‘We surpassed human limits to stop this’: LA megafires show our approach to fire needs to change
As the climate crisis turbocharges wildfires, adding resources alone won’t be enough to stop the destruction – our relationship with the land must be remade
Environment  
‘I felt death in the flames’: how lighting a forest fire inspired one man to transform barren ranches into rainforest
China  
China’s economic need and soft diplomacy spur about-face on visa-free entry
Elon Musk  
Did Elon Musk give a Nazi or Roman salute, and what’s the difference?
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