The rise of Britain’s radical right
Robert Jenrick is now widely expected to lead the Tories into the next election. He is a harbinger of…
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Robert Jenrick is now widely expected to lead the Tories into the next election. He is a harbinger of…
By
The president’s ambitions were Jupiterian. Now they lie in ashes.
By
In her centenary year, Maggie’s political and intellectual heirs still yearn for the smack of firm leadership.
By
Also this week: Fighting for disability rights and Labour at a crossroads.
By
Your weekly dose of news and gossip from journalism, broadcasting and beyond.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
Write to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
By
There is an upside to making so many mistakes – No 10 can learn from them.
By
The idea that British nationals are passed over for social housing is a myth that refuses to die.
By
Under Maga rule, the Fourth of July means a party to which only a few Americans are invited.
By
The quality of school meals has been falling dramatically in the cost-of-living crisis – and the proof is in…
By
“Justice delayed is justice denied” – and our courts are clogged to the point where they barely function.
By
The shadow justice secretary’s gonzo stunts are dragging British politics into uncharted territory
By
Why populists keep winning and what progressives should do about it.
By
Helen Taylor’s memoir Childless by Choice – a reflection on her child-free life – offers the perspective that’s often…
By
The 20th century, for better and for worse, was the communist century.
By
Alexander Starritt’s new novel, Drayton and Mackenzie, attempts to cast Big Tech’s leaders as Olympians shaping our age –…
By
The Gallagher brothers are lionised as Britpop heroes – but the “Ireland forever” flag was a clue to their…
By
Fifty years after it flopped at the box office, Stanley Kubrick’s 18th-century epic is now recognised as an outright…
By
In Too Much, her first major TV project since Girls, the American screenwriter proves she knows London like a…
By
At her sold out Wembley show, the American star blended old hits with her new Southern belle persona.
By
Ash trees are firmly rooted in Britain’s history – and they are making a remarkable comeback.
By
The time I spend editing my computerised medical notes outweighs any productivity gains I get from not writing them.
By
A family celebration calls for a giant rib of beef. Clear the kitchen and hand me my oven gloves…
By
Is this the last place in Britain that still thinks Lord Salisbury is prime minister?
By
Keir Starmer could learn a thing or two from the ruthless corporate machine that is the All England Club.
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
By
April 1968: The aftermath of Enoch Powell’s “Rivers of Blood” speech.
By