Top Stories

“Entirely without foundation”: UK philanthropy site takes on Easygroup trademark challenge

Easygroup has been accused of filing an EU trademark last year in "bad faith" by a UK fundraising website being sued over an alleged IP infringement.

U.S. and Europe, no longer kindred souls, enter a marriage of convenience

Secretary of State Marco Rubio offered a warmer tone at this year’s Munich Security Conference, but European officials say the trans-Atlantic fissure remains, writes Yaroslav Trofimov, The Wall Street Journal.

“We would love to get to €300m”: How a public-private scholarship could reshape Irish research

Simon Boucher was brought in to attract the private sector to Ireland's new flagship scholarship. Global Innovators Ireland has big ambitions to grow.

EU close to taking Ireland to court for failure to tackle illegal peat extraction

Irish officials fear “significant fines and reputational damage” as the European Commission edges closer to legal action. The Government has now set up a steering group to crackdown on unauthorised extraction – too late to stave off a court date?

The greening of Brentford: How an Irish trio have defied the doubters

Keith Andrews was tipped to be the first Premier League manager to get the sack this season, but instead his Brentford team are riding high, driven on by captain Nathan Collins and goalkeeper Caoimhín Kelleher.

“We were really surprised they went to Saipan, it was completely daft to take them four hours further into the Pacific”

In a long and distinguished diplomatic career, Declan O’Donovan served as Ireland’s ambassador to Japan from 1995 to 2001. The film Saipan raised a question in his mind which he is still searching to answer. He tells Dion Fanning what it was.

The calm before the storm: Why Eve McMahon isn’t afraid of what comes next

Irish Olympian Eve McMahon made history in 2025 as Ireland’s first World number 1 in sailing. With Los Angeles 2028 in her sights, can she maintain momentum?

Seville leads race to secure one of Ryanair’s two multi-hundred-million engine repair shops

Michael O'Leary announced in Paris this week that Ryanair would bring its engine repair and maintenance "in-house" and open two massive new facilities to do so. It appears one of them will be based in Spain.

Top Voices

Peter Kinsella: The strong dollar era is over

For decades, Washington defended the greenback in word if not always in deed. Now, with Trump abandoning the script and investors scrambling to hedge, the USD’s overvaluation is being exposed – and Asia looks set to drive the next wave lower.

Stripe and the $140bn question: Rewinding the week that was

The country has produced industrial titans and dealmakers. The Collisons have taken a different route, embedding Stripe at the heart of global commerce and thinking in decades, not quarters.

Brett Igoe: Ireland used to kill teams at turbo speed. Now we can’t execute it

Remember when Ireland were the side that thrived in chaos? When the pace lifted, we got sharper. Now, when it speeds up, we’re the ones making the mistakes.

Dan O’Brien: Ireland ranks surprisingly high in EU housing league

Housing trends in Ireland compare more favourably with peer countries than one might believe, including for younger people – but this does not mean current policy is adequate.

Inflation surge: Patrick Honohan on Ireland, Europe and the Atlantic divide

After years of price stability, the pandemic and the war in Ukraine sent inflation soaring. Ireland performed better than many peers – but no country escaped unscathed.

Constantin Gurdgiev: Economic growth amidst state and markets fragility

US policies and AI valuations mean economic seas are getting rougher, technological shocks are getting harsher and geopolitics are smashing economic policies’ doors. Welcome to the second year of the new era.

John Looby: The dollar is losing more than ground

Exchange rates fluctuate. Reserve currency status does not. As allies question American stewardship and rivals seek alternatives, the greenback’s role as the world’s trusted anchor faces its sternest test in half a century.

Ronan Glynn on anti-obesity medicines, AI and the future of food

We’ve never had more food, more data or more advice about how to be healthy — and yet diet-related illness keeps rising. A new wave of anti-obesity drugs and smart technology may finally be changing the balance.