What the local picture teaches us about the national story
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Oliver Laughland engages with a protestor at the Georgia State Capitol.
05/10/2024

What the local picture teaches us about the national story

Katharine Viner, editor-in-chief Katharine Viner, editor-in-chief
 

We’re a month away from the US presidential election, and the stakes for America and the world could not be higher.

A staple of our global political coverage is our Anywhere but … series, in which our journalists put the focus on local communities in order to find out what politicians in Westminster, Washington DC, Canberra or Paris may miss. Over the past decade the Anywhere but Westminster video series, featuring John Harris and John Domokos, has proved an extremely accurate barometer of public sentiment in Britain, while in 2022, ahead of Labor’s victory in the Australian federal election, our reporters took the series around towns and cities to gauge the strength of feeling after nine years of Coalition rule.

Anywhere but Washington has also been a clear insight into how divided the United States has become; it was from watching this incredible video in 2016 that I first started to think Donald Trump might win. On Thursday we launched the latest video episode, with reporter Oliver Laughland and film-maker Tom Silverstone. As Oliver put it in an accompanying piece: the aim is to focus on “the communities with the most at stake and the policy failures and other forces guiding the doom spiral of polarisation in American politics. And to ask if there is hope for progress, regardless of the outcome”.

Oliver and Tom report from Georgia’s state capitol building as the Trump-aligned election board passed a controversial change to vote-counting rules. In the outskirts of Atlanta they found conspiracy theorists selling merchandise plastered with Trump’s image, including a flick knife and a taser. But the film also contains signs of hope in the city’s rapidly diversifying suburbs, where Democratic candidate Ashwin Ramaswami, 25, is running for the state senate. The warm welcome afforded the gen Z candidate by young voters and wealthy suburbanites hints that the shift heralded by Biden’s surprise win in Georgia in 2020 may not have been a one-off.

There will be new episodes of Anywhere but Washington every Thursday until the election, as well as a special election night episode. We hope to uncover what the smaller picture can tell us about the bigger one.

My picks

Smoke billows after an Israeli air force airstrike on a village in southern Lebanon.

The assassination of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in an Israeli airstrike in southern Beirut represents a significant escalation in the Middle East. Reporting on the ground as Beirut came under attack, William Christou spoke to medics and some of the many displaced by destruction on a scale they have never seen. Days later, Peter Beaumont and Andrew Roth were reporting from Jerusalem when Iran fired 180 missiles at Israel, in part in retaliation, it said, for Nasrallah’s death. Julian Borger’s analysis described it as the “clearest sign imaginable that the regional conflict so widely feared over the past year may finally have ignited”.

In our special series Israel-Gaza: One Year On, marking the anniversary of the 7 October attacks, Peter Beaumont evaluated how Benjamin Netanyahu has used war and political division to weather the political storm facing him. Jason Burke and Malak A Tantesh looked at how families in Gaza mourn their dead and ask what the future may hold, and Harriet Sherwood wrote about the “cruel and painful year” that has split the UK’s Jewish communities, families and friends.

Historically, vice-presidential debates don’t have much impact on elections but there was lots to unpick after JD Vance and Tim Walz went head to head this week. Ed Pilkington was struck by the debate’s rare tone of civility and agreeableness but cautioned over its artifice, calling Vance a “Maga lion in sheep’s clothing”.

Zeinab Mohammed Salih reported from western Sudan on the refugees who have fled from the city of El Fasher as rebel forces close in.

Today in Focus reported from a Conservative party conference that was curiously upbeat given its recent electoral drubbing. Our political team and Politics Weekly UK covered the four-way party leadership campaign in depth, including Kemi Badenoch’s claim that maternity pay in the UK is “excessive”.

Denise Coates is Britain’s richest woman and the mastermind behind gambling firm Bet365. Rob Davies, who has reported extensively on the betting industry, profiled her to try to grasp the extent of her impact on her home city of Stoke-on-Trent and beyond.

After three decades as the Guardian’s economics editor, Larry Elliott is stepping down from that role. But not before his interview with the governor of the Bank of England moved markets and sent the pound falling, after Andrew Bailey revealed the bank could be “more activist” on rate cuts while inflation continues to ease.

Top Australian novelist Tim Winton wrote about the causes of communal dread many people are feeling about life today, driven by the climate crisis; predominantly, he believes, due to the fact we are living in “a state of global subjugation to fossil capitalism”. Sian Cain’s interview with Winton is fascinating too.

Britons are extremely well used to American words becoming part of their language, but I was intrigued by Ben Yagoda’s long read which suggested that, although it’s early days, cheeky Britishisms have been a bit clever and have crossed the other way across the Atlantic in the last couple of decades. Not gutted about this!

I also loved Amelia Gentleman’s interview with the wonderful artist Barbara Walker about how one of her exhibitions, shortlisted for a Turner prize, was inspired by the Windrush scandal that Amelia helped to uncover; this spectacular collection of music photos that defined an era, from Bowie as Ziggy Stardust to Beyoncé at Coachella; and Yotam Ottolenghi’s recipes for crunchy curries. Try making them with our ace Feast app.

One more thing … I’m definitely not the first to recommend it, and many are calling it the book of the year, but James by Percival Everett certainly lives up to the hype: the African American novelist’s reimagining of the life of Jim, the escaped slave in Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn, is exciting, horrifying and extremely funny.

Your Saturday starts here

Jollof spaghetti by the Flygerians.

Cook this | Jollof spaghetti by the Flygerians

As well as Yotam’s curries, this week we also published some great looking recipes from sisters Jess and Jo Edun, AKA the Flygerians, who cook classic Nigerian meals with a street food twist. This jollof spaghetti was Jess and Jo’s mother’s take on spaghetti bolognese.

Orange Order marchers in a ‘loud, proud’ pro-union parade in Edinburgh in 2014

Listen to this | 10 years of the long read: Is this the end of Britishness?

Our audio long read is 10 and to mark it we’ve been digging through the archives to bring you our favourite pieces from each year since 2014, with new introductions from the authors. This week’s revisits the first ever long read, by the late, great Ian Jack about what Scottish independence would have meant for the idea of Britishness.

Jay Rayner.

Come to this | Jay Rayner: Recipes and stories from 25 years as a restaurant critic

Join Observer restaurant critic Jay Rayner, for a special event with the Guardian restaurant critic and Comfort Eating host, Grace Dent, live in London. Click here for tickets and more information.

Monday 16 December 7.30pm-9pm (GMT)

And finally …

The Guardian’s crosswords and Wordiply are here to keep you entertained throughout the weekend.

 
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