A new era for the New Statesman
We were founded in 1913 as a weekly review of politics and literature, and remain so. Only now we…
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
We were founded in 1913 as a weekly review of politics and literature, and remain so. Only now we…
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What was the Tory leader doing on stage with the comedian Matt Forde? It was a deep mystery.
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The writer on family, class and life lessons from a decade in America.
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Also this week: The secrets of the president’s success, and a reliable diplomatic asset: my loyal Ambassa-Dog.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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Write to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
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The civil wars within Maga and Reform UK only show how dangerous they are.
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The famous ice cream store, Bakdash, was packed, as it was when I visited in 2008.
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With Elon Musk exiled from government, the president is free to enact the wildest fever dreams of the American…
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The publication’s ideology prevents it from adequately covering Trump’s failures.
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There is more dissent in the country – where assisted dying is legal – than MPs in the UK…
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Public spaces are for making contact – and making contact is how we survive this world together.
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The Prime Minister believes he will heal Britain – but can he find the words?
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Tracey Emin, Jeremy Corbyn, Piers Morgan and others on what the Prime Minister should do next.
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One family’s experience of life and death in the war zone.
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In her work and life the writer was obsessed with biography – but when she authorised her own she…
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Stefan Collini’s new book explores why such a prestigious academic discipline finds itself on the margins of modern society.
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Yevgeny Prigozhin’s coup was the beginning, not the end of a new age of mercenary conflict.
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Donald Trump stole the Boss’s fans. Can the veteran rock star still reach them?
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Jane Austen Wrecked My Life is too saccharine to reverse the slow death of the romcom.
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The second series dramatising the aftermath of the 1983 Brink’s-Mat heist is solid but tends towards the grandiose.
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The popstar’s country-music transformation is complete.
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Many of the poems I write are primarily for al fresco locations.
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When my stepdaughters want to know where the songs I’m humming come from, the history lessons begin.
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And use words like egad.
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Dalston’s identikit wine bars were the chosen destination in 2018. Now it’s W10’s turn.
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Billy Boston shows that excellence can come from Tiger Bay, Cardiff, as much as it can from the Home…
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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 featured.
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April 1977: The New Statesman’s former editor Paul Johnson froths at James Callaghan’s pact with the Liberal Party.
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