
A train line to nowhere
Rishi Sunak’s announcement that the northern leg of HS2 is to be cancelled combines farce with tragedy.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Rishi Sunak’s announcement that the northern leg of HS2 is to be cancelled combines farce with tragedy.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByYour dose of gossip from the Manchester Central Convention Complex.
ByA commitment to the car is a commitment to economic precarity.
ByAlso this week: party conference dress codes and a troubled peace in the Balkans.
ByThe general secretary of Unite reflects on a new era for workers.
ByThe Prime Minister has signalled that technocratic pragmatism has had its day. This is the return of politics.
ByPredictions that the invasion of Ukraine will breathe new life into enlargement are based on wishful thinking.
ByHis utilitarianism reflects the culture of Silicon Valley, which wields great power over how we relate to one another.
ByLabour gathers in Liverpool as a government-in-waiting. But can Keir Starmer negotiate the traps being set for him?
ByKeir Starmer has said little about his approach to foreign policy. But if he wins the next election, his…
ByA patriotic and outward-looking Starmer government could rebuild Britain’s alliances and international standing.
ByThe Tories decry his interventions; others say he's too conservative. Can the Archbishop of Canterbury unite a fraying Church?
ByThe country is in economic and political crisis and parties of the extreme left and right are rising again.
ByA new history shows how the clever, ambitious queen was no match for the post-truth politics of Henry VIII’s…
ByNicholas Shakespeare’s biography reveals a boy more reminiscent of Peter Rabbit than James Bond.
ByMustafa Suleyman and his fellow artificial intelligence cheerleaders now say their inventions could destroy us. Should we believe them?
ByAn oral history of the bitter Eighties dispute reveals a conflict that went far deeper than just government vs…
ByThe overnight success of Bonnie Garmus’s debut novel is almost as improbable as its contrived plot.
ByAlso featuring Family Meal by Bryan Washington and Pure Wit by Francesca Peacock.
ByIn his new book, the former New Statesman political editor identifies the defining moments when Britain changed.
ByThe short-story writer on why the tech giant’s profit-seeking is corrupting culture.
ByIn Matt Johnson’s film about the vanished electronic device, we all know what’s to come: the iPhone.
ByThis sequel to the Stephen Graham movie, a cooking ur-text, is tense and highly theatrical.
ByIn How to Win a Campaign, the former Boris Johnson aide gathers wisdom from Dominic Cummings and other political…
ByWhen a season changes I feel something halfway between yearning for memory and a premonition of oncoming.
ByDespite the animal treating me with disdain I decided to suck up the contempt and commit myself to the…
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByPlease email zuzanna.lachendro@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be the New Statesman’s subscriber of the week.
ByThe AI entrepreneur on Jim Carrey, Game of Thrones and his disdain for self-congratulatory LinkedIn posts.
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