Top Stories

The night the ground wouldn’t stop shaking in Venezuela

Two powerful earthquakes marked the start of a terrifying night of aftershocks, testing the country’s U.S.-backed government, write Juan Forero, Ryan Dubé and Jenny Carolina González, The Wall Street Journal.

Faith, politics and betrayal: Wallace Thompson on Jeffrey Donaldson

Following Jeffrey Donaldson's convictions, Wallace Thompson, a founding member of the DUP, speaks about his shock at the revelations, the suffering of the complainants, and what the case means for a party long shaped by evangelical Christianity.

Piers Morgan’s Uncensored funding round cements value of Brophy’s stake

Months after he sold his majority stake in Red Flag, Karl Brophy was first to invest in Morgan’s standalone production company. Big names are now joining him.

The options trader who emerged as a surprise front-runner to succeed Jamie Dimon

Troy Rohrbaugh is seen as the leading contender in a race with Doug Petno to run JPMorgan, writes Alexander Saeedy, The Wall Street Journal.

“There are businesses in this room that have lots of jobs they cannot fill; I have waiting lists”

Ireland has the lowest rate of disabled employment in the EU – businesses in the country are missing a trick if they ignore inclusive hiring.

The Irish architecture firm behind the Grand Egyptian Museum and the two decades it took to finish

Egypt’s newest cultural landmark was the project that launched Heneghan Peng on the world stage, its co-founder Róisín Heneghan explains.

The inflation tax: Quilter Cheviot’s Paul Callan on why cash is riskier than you might think

For Paul Callan of Quilter Cheviot, the biggest risk facing many savers isn't market volatility. It's the continuous erosion of purchasing power by stealth that occurs when inflation outpaces the return on cash savings.

Meta tried to silence her. Now she’s suing

Sarah Wynn-Williams, a former Facebook policy executive, is suing Meta over its attempts to stop her from talking about her book, ‘Careless People’, write Keach Hagey and Meghan Bobrowsky, The Wall Street Journal.

Top Voices

Succession and shadows: Brett Igoe on how Leinster should plan for life after Leo Cullen

The trophies are already secured. The lasting verdict on Cullen's reign may depend on whether Leinster can emerge from his shadow without suffering the effects of authority decay.

Dermot Desmond

Ian Kehoe: The case that outlasted the controversy

Dermot Desmond's action against The Irish Times was settled before trial this week, bringing to a close a 10-year legal battle that raises fresh questions about the length of time it takes for a defamation action to reach trial.

Full throttle: From Aer Lingus to Ryanair, airlines’ busy season spreads to the boardroom

Questions over Aer Lingus’s profitability and a hostile takeover bid for EasyJet are signs of a hot summer for an aviation industry exposed to successive geopolitical shocks.

Peter Kinsella: Goodbye Keir, hello Andy, but the UK’s challenges remain the same

As he prepares to replace Keir Starmer as British prime minister, Andy Burnham has many of the right ideas – and a very narrow economic and political path to implement them.

Intel’s stock has soared, but it needs an engineering comeback

The chip maker can get its mojo back, but it must overcome technical challenges that have dogged it in the past, writes Asa Fitch, The Wall Street Journal.

The greatest show on Earth: AI is now an asset class of its own

The series of IPOs inaugurated by SpaceX sits at the top of a mountain of capital expenditure. What happens when the laws of economics catch up with the rhetoric?

Candidate sentiment survey: Part two – roles and the job market

More than 1,300 candidates, from junior management to C-suite level, completed The Panel's Candidate Sentiment Survey. In part two of the findings, we delve into what candidates feel about their roles and the job market today.

Is the Irish food industry “eating its seed potatoes”? – Rewinding the week that was

The industry that spawned Kerrygold and Kerry Group projects a cutting-edge image, from R&D to marketing. Yet it has fallen one-third short of a modest innovation spending target.