
Labour’s route to recovery
Public confidence is falling quickly. The party must do far more to win it back.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Public confidence is falling quickly. The party must do far more to win it back.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByRussia’s invasion of Ukraine has created a particular niche that the left-wing politician is filling with apparent ease.
ByAlso this week: my mother’s malapropisms and the Pig Man of Pinner.
ByThe new member for Queen’s Park and Maida Vale brings years of local-government experience to Westminster.
ByThe Prime Minister’s grim speech was short on sunlit uplands, but its promise was serious.
ByThe obsessions of the extremely online right do not correspond with the concerns of most voters.
ByPlus: Britain’s guilty libel laws and Boris Johnson at the Telegraph.
ByThe Prime Minister’s image as a pragmatist belies the ideological reality of his administration.
ByThe novel becoming a cultural accessory means to look like a reader, not be one.
ByHow Israel’s assault on Lebanon could plunge the region into a wider war.
ByHow creeping censorship captured Britain’s institutions.
ByLegacy titles are being snapped up by private capital, in Britain and the US.
ByDiarmaid MacCulloch shows how for centuries the Church has tried to resolve the tension between sacred and profane.
BySunil Amrith’s panoptic history shows how our pursuit of freedom has brought ruin to the Earth.
ByBritain’s beloved childhood books are realms of conflict and pain as much as nostalgia and delight.
ByAlso featuring Red Threads by Henry Bell and The Story of Nature by Jeremy Mynott.
ByThe author of Intermezzo talks to Fintan O’Toole about living with patriarchy, writing good sex, and the post-religious world.
ByThe script of Megalopolis is unspeakable, its tone baffling and its world makes no sense.
ByAnnette Bening and Sam Neill star in an American tennis soap that misses every shot.
ByLike her peer Charli XCX, the pop star of the moment wants to free artists from a “creepy” culture…
ByIt’s taboo to say, but I’ve felt a disconnect from the thing I pour hours of labour into.
ByThe news that Vivianne Miedema was let go on a free transfer to Man City was met with incredulity…
ByA reader’s letter about me reviewing Waitrose wine is amusing, but I wonder if he is being a little…
ByCycling without headphones has made it clear how not under-my-breath my under-my-breath commentary really is.
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByContact zuzanna.lachendro@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be featured.
ByThe marine archaeologist on Second World War naval battles and his dreams of square-riggers.
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