
Britain and Covid-19: a chronicle of incompetence
The six months that shook the UK.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
The six months that shook the UK.
ByThe UK was well prepared for a pandemic, but the data reveals its flawed response.
ByCuts to local and national services over the past decade appear almost perfectly tailored to damage resilience in the…
ByBoris Johnson believes that post-Brexit Britain is an exceptional, “world-beating” power. Yet it has proved itself incapable of fulfilling…
ByLeading figures from science, medicine and politics deliver their verdict on the government’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic.
ByOur leaders must learn from the Covid-19 crisis to prepare for the next virus.
ByA new poem by Kathryn Simmonds.
ByThis semi-autobiographical debut follows a young black man in London just after the millennium.
ByThe artist who extolled the talent of his impressionist friends at the expense of his own.
ByThis is a monologue interspersed with flashes of archive recordings – most fascinating of which are clips of Duke…
ByI’ve heard of three of this show’s “celebrities” – but judge Gregg Wallace is ever-resplendent, with his Snooker Loopy…
ByAlmost every Dylan fan has their own version of Bob, and his new record is a reflection of his…
ByFirst shown in May and early June, it recounts the history of a single house, 10 Guinea Street in…
ByDrew Dixon's experiences with Russell Simmons show how racism has helped to silence black rape victims.
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByIt is imperative to learn the lessons of the UK's calamitous handling of the Covid-19 crisis.
ByThe health emergency we face may well pass. But the economic, political and social crises that it has set…
ByWith Times Radio, Rupert Murdoch hopes to entice listeners to subscribe to the Times. And he can pursue his vendetta…
ByThe New Yorker columnist and author of Surviving Autocracy believes there can be no return to the pre-Trump normal.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByThis heightened awareness, this sensitivity, this flinching at the world’s cruelties – has it always been here inside me,…
ByWhat a team, what a manager, what an achievement.
ByThe broadcaster talks Sri Lanka, Kate Raworth’s Doughnut Economics, and driverless cars.
ByNaturally, in such surroundings, one thinks of death a lot, even as one soaks up the sun. We’re all…
ByI was careful, when handling Dieffenbachia, not to get any of its juice on my hands. Had I done…
ByIt is impossible to see how the Scottish Parliament could function again as it did before. At least, not…
ByIf you did not know the US was in the midst of a health crisis, you would not learn…
ByFor many of the workers we all depend on, life carried on – until it didn’t.
ByOver the course of the pandemic, the UK’s overconfidence in theoretical modelling has several times been rudely exposed.
ByBoris Johnson now leads a cabinet and parliamentary party that understands that his political strengths come with incongruous liabilities.
ByGermany’s population of 83 million has suffered 9,000 deaths, while in Britain, with its population of 67 million, there…
ByLeadership requires you to choose between concrete futures and not merely to sketch out grand visions.
ByFor many of the workers we all depend on, life carried on – until it didn’t.
ByBoris Johnson now leads a cabinet and parliamentary party that understands that his political strengths come with incongruous liabilities.
ByIf you did not know the US was in the midst of a health crisis, you would not learn…
ByGermany’s population of 83 million has suffered 9,000 deaths, while in Britain, with its population of 67 million, there…
ByIt is impossible to see how the Scottish Parliament could function again as it did before. At least, not…
ByWith Times Radio, Rupert Murdoch hopes to entice listeners to subscribe to the Times. And he can pursue his vendetta…
ByA new poem by Kathryn Simmonds.
ByThe New Yorker columnist and author of Surviving Autocracy believes there can be no return to the pre-Trump normal.
ByThis semi-autobiographical debut follows a young black man in London just after the millennium.
ByFirst shown in May and early June, it recounts the history of a single house, 10 Guinea Street in…
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByThe health emergency we face may well pass. But the economic, political and social crises that it has set…
ByI’ve heard of three of this show’s “celebrities” – but judge Gregg Wallace is ever-resplendent, with his Snooker Loopy…
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByThis is a monologue interspersed with flashes of archive recordings – most fascinating of which are clips of Duke…
ByAlmost every Dylan fan has their own version of Bob, and his new record is a reflection of his…
ByI was careful, when handling Dieffenbachia, not to get any of its juice on my hands. Had I done…
ByOver the course of the pandemic, the UK’s overconfidence in theoretical modelling has several times been rudely exposed.
ByNaturally, in such surroundings, one thinks of death a lot, even as one soaks up the sun. We’re all…
ByLeadership requires you to choose between concrete futures and not merely to sketch out grand visions.
ByThis heightened awareness, this sensitivity, this flinching at the world’s cruelties – has it always been here inside me,…
ByWhat a team, what a manager, what an achievement.
ByIt is imperative to learn the lessons of the UK's calamitous handling of the Covid-19 crisis.
ByThe broadcaster talks Sri Lanka, Kate Raworth’s Doughnut Economics, and driverless cars.
ByDrew Dixon's experiences with Russell Simmons show how racism has helped to silence black rape victims.
By