The crisis of conservatism
Our guide to the 50 most influential people in conservative politics features free-marketeers alongside post-liberal thinkers.
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Our guide to the 50 most influential people in conservative politics features free-marketeers alongside post-liberal thinkers.
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Write to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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Temporary neighbourhood gimmicks are turning your next home into a Potemkin village.
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Also this week: Meeting progressive peers in Montreal, and bridging divides in football and politics.
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The historian on eviscerating Boris Johnson, making students cry, and why classics is “not just for posh people”.
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As populist parties’ influence grows, the consensus around Europe’s climate change agenda is crumbling.
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It is too late for the Prime Minister to unite a divided and directionless Conservative Party.
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The 50 most influential people shaping Britain’s conservative politics.
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How the American realist became the world’s most hated thinker.
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Jeremy Eichler’s Time’s Echo shows how four great 20th-century composers captured the horrors of conflict.
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How the shadowy start-up Clearview sold the power of facial recognition to corporations and states across the globe.
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The final part of Jonathan Sumption’s epic history reveals the complacency that led to the end of English power…
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The author of Bronze Age Mindset has galvanised US conservatives – but his adolescent philosophy will soon be forgotten.
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Also featuring The Story of Scandinavia by Stein Ringen and Big Meg by Tim and Emma Flannery.
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In the 87-year-old director’s new film The Old Oak, wishful liberal thinking comes at the cost of plausibility.
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For all its professed sensitivity, this drama turns the most terrible crimes committed against women into mere entertainment. I’m…
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The stock-in-trade of the 76-year-old’s long career is endurance mixed with pain: something she demands of her audience, too.
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Standing between the sofa and the bookcase he looked completely wrong and out of place. He knew it too.
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My computer is my window on the world. I go to ridiculous lengths to protect it.
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This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
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Please email zuzanna.lachendro@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be the New Statesman’s subscriber of the week.
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The chef and television presenter on Alicia Keys, the joy of I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!…
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