Rassegna Stampa Quotidiani
The Guardian
Family visitation partly restored at New Jersey ICE facility after week of protests
44 minuti fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 19:24

Visits were canceled after detainees began hunger strike, which prompted heated protests outside detention center Family visitation at the Delaney Hall immigration detention center is being restored to at least part of the facility, New Jersey’s governor and US homeland security officials confirmed on Sunday morning, after a week during which heated demonstrations at the site were met with aggressive policing tactics. Meanwhile, families of detained immigrants grappled with conflicting information about exactly whom among them would get visitation after the announcement from governor Mikie Sherrill and the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS). And local officials by Sunday had also indefinitely imposed an overnight curfew beginning at 9pm for a blocked-off area including Delaney Hall. Continue reading...

PSG provide perfect illusion with a model of beauty in soft-power project | Barney Ronay
56 minuti fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 19:12

Re-enthroned Champions League-winning club should have always been this good but Qatar’s propaganda project is finally listening to an elite manager Paris est mythique. There was nothing understated, no obvious shades of faux humilité about the headline in L’Équipe after Paris Saint-Germain had been re-enthroned as Champions League winners on Saturday night. Mythical. Storied. Ultimate. Yeah. But are they, though? In fairness it would be disappointingly un-Parisian not to consider your champion team the champions of all champions in the moment of victory. Give the people what they want. Play the hits. Nobody needs a polite Parisian waiter. Nobody wants to see an unstylish Parisian estate agent who has taken absolutely no care of his hair, or a Parisian bistro that doesn’t think it’s the VIP boarding lounge for the last arc leaving planet Earth. Hmm. Maybe there’s somewhere else more dismissive around the corner. Continue reading...

Virat Kohli hits winning runs as Royal Challengers Bengaluru retain IPL title
1 ora fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 19:01

Final: Royal Challengers Bengaluru, 161-5, beat Gujarat Titans, 155-8, by 5 wkts Former India captain scores 75no off 42 balls The India veteran Virat Kohli produced an explosive knock as Royal Challengers Bengaluru secured a five-wicket win over Gujarat Titans to retain their Indian Premier League title on Sunday. Bengaluru, who ended a 17-season drought by winning their maiden IPL title last year, carried that momentum into this season and chased down 156 with ease in 18 overs. Continue reading...

Declan Rice vows Arsenal will ‘go even stronger’ and ‘are coming back for more’
1 ora fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 18:19

Premier League-winning midfielder defiant after PSG loss Arteta ‘told us he loves us all, to keep our heads up’ Declan Rice has promised that Arsenal “are coming back for more” next season after putting aside their disappointment at losing on penalties in the Champions League final by parading the Premier League trophy in north London. Paris Saint-Germain retained their European crown after a nail-biting shootout in Budapest, which ended with Gabriel Magalhães missing the decisive spot kick. Arsenal – who have played more games in the competition without winning it than any other club – reached the Champions League final for the first time since 2006 having made steady progress under Mikel Arteta in recent seasons. Continue reading...

Cory Booker has ‘concerns’ with Graham Platner’s Senate bid after leaked texts
1 ora fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 18:17

US senator says Platner, whose wife says he sent sexually explicit messages to other women, has ‘questions to answer’ A high-profile Democrat has expressed concerns with party candidate Graham Platner’s Maine US Senate campaign amid revelations that Platner reportedly sent a number of sexually explicit messages to other women while married. “Yes, I have concerns,” Cory Booker, the US senator from New Jersey, said Sunday on ABC’s This Week when host Jonathan Karl when asked about the Platner revelations. “That guy has questions to answer – and that’s what campaigns are for.” Continue reading...

Mandelson files show no mitigation of security concerns over US appointment
1 ora fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 18:12

Exclusive: Papers to be published on Monday cast doubt on assurances provided by senior Whitehall officials Embarrassing WhatsApps, but no vetting report: what will be in the new release of Mandelson files? A trove of government documents about Peter Mandelson contains no record of any measures taken to mitigate serious security concerns over his appointment as Washington ambassador, the Guardian has learned. Multiple sources who have seen or been briefed on the files, which will be published on Monday, say there is no detail about any steps put in place to deal with flags raised about his associations with senior figures in foreign states. Continue reading...

Jonas Vingegaard completes Grand Tour set with Giro d’Italia triumph
2 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 18:04

Vingegaard secures first part of coveted Grand Tour double Dane finishes Rome finale to end Tour with five stage wins Jonas Vingegaard completed his Giro d’Italia triumph on Sunday, securing the first part of a coveted Grand Tour double in a procession finale around Rome won by home hero Jonathan Milan. Dane Vingegaard rolled into the Italian capital needing just to complete the flat final stage to claim overall victory and the triple crown of road cycling’s three-week showpieces. Continue reading...

Meta legal action forces Facebook whistleblower to stay silent at Hay festival
2 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 17:18

Sarah Wynn-Williams did not speak on stage on her lawyer’s advice amid tech firm’s sanction Facebook whistleblower Sarah Wynn-Williams was forced to sit in silence on stage at an event at Hay festival, after lawyers advised her not to speak because of ongoing legal action brought by Meta. Wynn-Williams, whose bestselling memoir, Careless People, details her years working at Facebook, was due to appear in conversation with the investigative journalist Carole Cadwalladr and academic Tim Wu. Continue reading...

Ella Baron on the UK’s youth unemployment crisis – cartoon
2 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 17:17

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Olly Woodburn double stuns Leicester as Exeter end Tigers’ unbeaten run at home
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 17:05

Leicester 26-35 Exeter Fourth-placed Chiefs face Saracens to decide playoff spot Exeter became the first away side to win in the league at Welford Road in 14 months as two tries from the veteran full-back Olly Woodburn delivered a terrific win for the Chiefs. In material terms the win made little difference to Exeter – they still need to beat Saracens at home in their final game of the regular season to reach the playoffs next weekend. But they will go into the Sandy Park shootout with belief coursing through them after storming the Tigers’ lair. Continue reading...

Teenager Rafael Jódar comes from two sets down to set up Zverev quarter-final
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 17:02

19-year-old beats Pablo Carreño Busta 4-6, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6-2 Jódar enjoying spectacular clay-court season This year’s French Open has been defined in many ways by the weather, an unprecedented week of searing heat wreaking havoc on and off the court. That trend came to an end in an instant on Sunday morning as the cool, damp conditions took over in Paris. Rain or shine, the rise of Rafael Jódar endures. The 19-year-old took another major step forward in his young career as he put together a monumental comeback, recovering from two sets down for the first time in his career to defeat his veteran Spanish compatriot Pablo Carreño Busta 4-6, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6-2 and reach the quarter-finals at Roland Garros. Jódar’s breakthrough season remains one of the most significant tennis stories of the year so far. He now has an outlandish 19 wins and three defeats in his first full clay-court season, reaching the quarter-finals at every event with his Marrakech title, Barcelona semi-final and quarter-finals at Madrid and Rome making way for his first grand slam quarter-final. Having been ranked No 707 a year ago, he will rise to around No 22 in the ATP rankings. There are times when winning four matches at the majors requires players to tackle one or two truly elite players. This tournament is not one of them. With so many of the top contenders losing early this year in Paris, and so much opportunity left in the draw, one of the greater challenges for the remaining players is keeping their head in the game. This was true on Saturday, as no fewer than five of the eight men’s matches went to five sets and tension ruled both sides of the court as so many players struggled to either perform at the beginning or close out matches. Jódar, the 27th seed, was clearly so tense early on against his unseeded opponent that at one point he lost nine consecutive games from 4-1 up in the first set to 0-4 down in the second. From two sets down, however, he recovered brilliantly, completely bulldozing Carreño Busta in the final three sets. Continue reading...

Man, 27, arrested after PSNI officer hit by stolen police vehicle
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:49

Attempted murder investigation launched after police officer struck by vehicle in Downpatrick Police have launched an attempted murder investigation after an officer was hit by a stolen police vehicle in Northern Ireland. The officer, who fired his gun during the incident at 4.45am on Sunday, had been chasing a suspect on foot after another vehicle had earlier failed to stop for police in the Fountain Street area in Downpatrick, County Down. Continue reading...

A generation of young people has been let down by a lack of political will | Letters
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:36

Readers respond to the release of Alan Milburn’s report into the rise of young people not in education, employment or training In considering the release of Alan Milburn’s report, we need to take into account the support structures in the home nations of the UK (Number of young people out of work or training in UK could hit 1.25m by early 2030s, 27 May). In the 1970s, 80s and 90s, UK governments had a effective tool to support young people to avoid unemployment: careers services run by local authorities. In the early 2000s, the New Labour government that Milburn was a part of replaced this with Connexions, a more generic advice service for youth in England, not exclusively focused on supporting work and learning. Continue reading...

Miles Davis’s superior musical intelligence | Letters
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:36

Dr Richard Carter and Meirion Bowen respond to an editorial which argues that the musician still shapes modern music 100 years after his birth Your editorial marking the centenary of Miles Davis’s birth rather understates his musical intelligence (The Guardian view on 100 years after Miles Davis’s birth: why he still shapes modern music, 24 May). Unable to play with the facility of dazzling trumpeters like Dizzy Gillespie and Fats Navarro, it was less a case of his preferring “restraint and precision” in his playing than accepting that he was technically not up to their level, and having the ability to adapt. Listen, for example, to his earlier recordings with Charlie Parker where, following Parker’s blazing solos, Davis stumbles through the chord changes, to appreciate that instead he decided to concentrate on a gentler approach. This emerged in the collaborations with the arranger Gil Evans, foreshadowed in the Birth of the Cool recordings and later with the recordings of Miles Ahead, Porgy and Bess and Sketches of Spain, and subsequently his quintets with John Coltrane and Wayne Shorter, where his lack of technique became irrelevant when set beside his great lyricism. Continue reading...

Born in 1949, my wildlife-filled childhood is now lost | Letters
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:36

I watched hedgehogs, foxes, rabbits, hares, butterflies and weasels, writes Anne Geraghty. I feel privileged but unutterably sad Amy-Jane Beer describes witnessing “a devastating demonstration of what we’ve lost” in Britain during her visit to Biebrza marshes, Poland, (Country diary, 26 May). I was born in 1949 and remember a childhood full of moths flying around every streetlight, the dawn chorus waking us even in cities, sitting in fields full of wildflowers, watching hedgehogs, foxes, rabbits, hares, butterflies and weasels, walking through woods with beetles, ants and red squirrels all around us, listening to thrushes, blackbirds, blackcaps, woodpeckers and even nightingales singing in all directions. Continue reading...

Local government could also do more to help with the cost of living | Letter
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:36

Cllr Lucy Shaw says councils could take up many policies to help, including more support for rooftop solar installations Your editorial is right that the government could be doing more to help with the cost of living (The Guardian view on Britain’s coming energy shock: mini-measures won’t suffice, 22 May). That extends to local government, too. Renewable energy projects, from the industrial scale right down to rooftops, can be scuppered locally even if there is national support. The wealthiest borough in the entire country, Kensington and Chelsea, has the nation’s lowest rooftop solar installation rate, at just 0.6% of households according to the MCS installer database. This is despite touting groundbreaking policies to make it easier to build solar in conservation areas. There are so many local policies that would help. Coordinating solar installations by street could lead to material cost savings, as would simpler permitting rules, and installations on council-owned rooftops. When 80% of cars in the borough are parked on the street, cost-effective public charging is essential to ensure that drivers can make the switch, like offering discounted charging when grid power is cheapest. Partnering with housing associations, charities, and energy suppliers to help people access energy efficiency services and government capital grants, or negotiate payment plans for their bills could go a long way to making people feel more secure. Continue reading...

The Guardian view on the Aberdeen South byelection: the politics of energy take centre stage | Editorial
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:30

While Westminster’s attention is focused on Andy Burnham and Makerfield, another pivotal byelection is taking place in Scotland’s north-east The coming byelection in Makerfield, from where Andy Burnham aspires to make rapid progress towards Downing Street, is perhaps the most consequential in British political history. But the decision by the Scottish National party’s former Westminster leader, Stephen Flynn, to relocate to Holyrood means that another pivotal contest is taking place more than 350 miles to the north. If Makerfield is a test case for Mr Burnham and Labour’s ability to see off Reform UK, Mr Flynn’s old constituency of Aberdeen South is on the frontline of the increasingly fraught politics of North Sea oil. Labour, despite finishing second in the 2024 general election thanks largely to anti-Tory tactical voting, will not be expecting much this time round. The ramifications of Donald Trump’s reckless war in Iran have exposed Britain’s ongoing vulnerability to fossil-fuel-related energy shocks, highlighting the practical benefits of moving to a green economy. But the knock-on effects of the closure of the strait of Hormuz have also been a gift for the Scottish Conservatives and Reform, who are framing the byelection as a local referendum on reviving oil and gas production beyond Westminster-imposed limits. Continue reading...

The Guardian view on the splinternet: where China led, Iran and others are eagerly following | Editorial
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:29

Authoritarian states are increasingly shutting off or throttling access to the internet, creating separate spheres in a realm built on connection China boasts of having the world’s largest population of internet users: 1.125 billion by the end of 2025, according to official figures. But as one joke has it, the Great Firewall – blocking not only politically sensitive material but also global tech firms such as Google and Meta – has produced what looks more like the world’s largest intranet. Beijing is not an anomaly, but a pioneer. Its extraordinary investment in the apparatus of “cyber sovereignty” – others would call it censorship and repression – is guiding other authoritarian countries. A realm defined by connection is fragmenting not just from commercial greed and filter bubbles but due to state fiat, birthing the splinternet. Continue reading...

Nicola’s only crime was to love too much. And to not notice the Jaguar on the drive
3 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:27

Rather than being one of the shrewdest operators in British politics for a decade, it turns out Sturgeon was just too trusting You know how it is. You wake up and look out the bedroom window. You see a brand new Jaguar worth £81,000 parked in the driveway. You smile to yourself. That’s what you love about your husband. Always nipping out to the shops to buy himself treats. And where’s the harm in that? No one can say he isn’t worth it. And a new car is only a trifle compared with a motor home. That’s just Pete being Pete. You get dressed and go downstairs. Your husband is already in the kitchen making you breakfast. “Fancy a coffee?” he asks. You nod. You’re busy not reading the SNP accounts. “Which machine would you like me to make it from?” he asks. “The basic Jura? The Jura Z8? Or the Miele? I always think the Z8 makes the best flat white. And what milk would you like?” Continue reading...

Manchester City thrash Brighton to seal Women’s FA Cup and historic Double
4 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:05

Ruthless Manchester City won the Women’s FA Cup for a fourth time and completed a domestic double as they eventually coasted to a 4-0 win over Brighton and Hove Albion, as Khadija Shaw celebrated signing her new contract with a Wembley goal. Shaw and her City teammates provided Brighton with a harsh lesson on the importance of taking your chances in a final, with Brighton having looked the stronger side for large parts of the game but having lacked the clinical edge in the final third that the league champions demonstrated after riding out some Brighton pressure. Continue reading...

Trump’s interior secretary dismisses calls to identify donors for ‘nonpartisan’ concert series
4 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:04

Doug Burgum complains some musicians ‘segmented their audiences’ after artists back out of 250th anniversary event The Trump administration’s interior secretary, Doug Burgum, complained on Sunday that some musicians “seem to have segmented their audiences” after artists bailed on participating in a concert series planned for the 250th anniversary of the US’s independence. In the interview on CNN’s State of the Union, Burgum also dismissed calls to publicly identified who had made donations for the concert series – and maintained it was a “nonpartisan” event despite Donald Trump referring to it as a rally. Continue reading...

Collection of rave-era memorabilia goes on sale, expected to fetch up to £80,000
4 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 16:01

Producer Rob Ford’s trove of 17,000 items includes membership cards, flyers and the Prodigy’s first business card Rob Ford often met his contacts in car parks, under the cover of darkness. Cash quickly passed between hands before the author and music producer gathered his quarry – bags full of memorabilia from the rave and acid house era. Among the flyers and assorted paraphernalia were some of the rarest surviving items from the scene: membership cards. Continue reading...

WHO calls for community cooperation to contain DRC Ebola outbreak
4 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 15:49

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus makes appeal after protests against protocols for handling bodies in Ituri province Containing the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo requires community cooperation and is “everybody’s business”, the World Health Organization has said. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the organisation’s director general, made the plea on Sunday during a visit to eastern Congo where some residents have protested against stringent medical protocols for handling victims’ bodies. Continue reading...

Arsenal put Champions League anguish to one side with open-top bus parade
4 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 15:47

Hundreds of thousands of fans line streets in London Gabriel pays tribute to supporters after final agony The Arsenal defender Gabriel Magalhães admitted their Champions League penalty shootout defeat was “painful”, but the Gunners quickly put the disappointment to one side as fans descended on north London to attend an open-top bus parade. Gabriel missed the crucial spot-kick against Paris Saint-Germain as the French champions retained their crown following a 1-1 draw in Budapest. Yet Arsenal still had plenty to celebrate as they embarked on a parade through their local streets to celebrate the Premier League title success they secured earlier this month. Continue reading...

US strike on alleged drug boat kills three in eastern Pacific
4 ore fa | Dom 31 Mag 2026 15:29

Attack comes after Friday’s strike that killed three men as well, pushing death toll to more than 200 since last year The US military said on Saturday it had carried out a strike on a vessel in the eastern Pacific killing three men, the second strike in as many days. Officials with the US Southern Command said in a post on X that intelligence had confirmed that the vessel was transiting along “narco-trafficking” routes in the eastern Pacific and engaged in “narco-trafficking” operations. Continue reading...