
2025: a year in political cartoons - from a Bond-villain Trump to a toppled prince | Martin Rowson, Ella Baron, Nicola Jennings and Ben Jennings
Ella Baron In a year in which I’ve drawn too many cartoons about powerful people acting with impunity, the fall of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor stood out to me as a rare win for justice and accountability. Dark humour feels vital to make light of everything that’s going wrong, but I’ve also been trying to draw cartoons that highlight reasons for hope, such as the fragile ceasefire in Gaza or Zohran Mamdani’s win in New York. Donald Trump and the American bond market (12 April 2025).Illustration: Martin Rowson/The Guardian Virginia Giuffre (3 November 2025).Illustration: Ella Baron/The Guardian The march of nationalism in mainstream politics (6 September 2025).Illustration: Martin Rowson/The Guardian What’s on the table for Trump and Putin (17 February 2025).Illustration: Nicola Jennings/The Guardian Starvation in Gaza (25 July 2025).Illustration: Ben Jennings/The Guardian Keir Starmer’s new stance on immigration (13 May 2025).Illustration: Ben Jennings/The Guardian Martin Rowson 2025 has been remarkable not for what I’ve drawn but for what I haven’t. In 40 years of cartooning I’ve never known such an anonymous government, where nobody recognises 95% of the cabinet (apart from Wes “face like a full Brazilian” Streeting). Whether this is down to Morgan McSweeney’s shenanigans or them keeping their heads down until the day the nightmare ends doesn’t matter: it’s a tragedy. The wasted comic potential to be milked from Pat McFadden - dead spit for Death from a Brueghel painting - is a national disgrace. Nicola Jennings This year I have drawn Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin more than anyone else. They are not people I want to spend my time thinking about, or looking at - however nobody is beyond satire and they are both sufficiently unpleasant to make a good caricature. I loathe them, but I approach drawing them with curiosity and the eye of analysis. A caricature is as much about the person’s expressions as it is about their features, and while Trump’s face is very active, Putin’s is still: only his mouth seems to move, so I go for his glare. My aim is to ridicule, to decipher the grins and glares, in order to expose the motivation of those in positions of power. And although I don’t believe cartoonists have the power to bring down governments, I do think we can change the public’s perception of those in authority, and these perceptions can stick. Even so, I am sure it is damaging for the soul to draw Trump so many times - and I am planning to sue for $10bn . Ben Jennings The year has felt a bit like watching repeats of old news broadcasts while being strapped to a dentist’s chair having all of one’s teeth removed. Everything felt painfully familiar, from the unimaginable horrors in Gaza to the continued bloodshed in Ukraine, the ascent of Nigel Farage and “Donald Trump 2.OH-NO”. There were more revelations about (former Prince) Andrew and we even had a Labour government trying to bring back austerity. Illustration: Ben Jennings/The Guardian The tricky thing for cartoonists was...
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