
The fall of the Conservatives
If the Tories are to recover, they must resist the temptation to blame the electorate.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
If the Tories are to recover, they must resist the temptation to blame the electorate.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from the campaign trail.
ByAs her party surges in one of the UK’s most climate-conscious constituencies, Carla Denyer threatens to unseat Labour’s shadow…
ByAlso this week: The far right’s rabid dogs, and Labour vs my garden trowel.
ByThe Labour rising star on growing up with a father in Blair’s cabinet and his years as chief negotiator…
ByThe success of Marine Le Pen’s National Rally in France’s parliamentary elections has annihilated the president’s power base.
ByThe party will need to repudiate the failed policies and personalities of the past.
ByIn Taipei, at the new president’s inauguration, the huge forces remaking the world were impossible to ignore.
ByBy sticking with Joe Biden, the party has shown how arrogant and out of touch it is.
ByNigel Farage’s company-cum-political party is not the answer to any of the UK’s ills.
ByLabour’s project to rebuild Britain is serious – but the odds are stacked against them.
ByThe most successful political party in history has always reinvented itself after defeat. Can it do so again?
ByAs a journalist in authoritarian China, I learned the value of community. As a parliamentary candidate in the UK,…
ByThe American strategist, tipped to be Trump’s national security adviser, on the balance of power in Asia.
ByIn politics and business, faceless systems have taken over decision-making and infantilised socity.
ByA new poem by Mark Granier.
ByDenied an audience with frontman Kevin Rowland, the author Nige Tassell asks the band’s army of musicians to tell…
ByAlso featuring The Singularity by Dino Buzzati and The Road to the Country by Chigozie Obioma.
ByThe fusion of violence and pleasure defined the painter’s life and work.
ByPaul Collier’s new book reveals how worship of the market made the UK one of the most unequal countries…
ByThe director of Poor Things and The Favourite presents three nasty tales of domination and submission.
ByThis BBC series is delightful, knowing, involving, non-challenging, a touch silly. Suspend your disbelief, lie back and enjoy.
ByJoe Penhall’s new play The Constituent, starring Corden and Anna Maxwell Martin, is a funny, disturbing vision of public…
ByLittle Simz and SZA made Coldplay look bland in a festival full of politics, nostalgia and peeing in cups.
ByThey are the perfect summer fruit – and the kitchen can’t improve on perfection.
ByIt would be dramatic and counter-intuitive – but rebuilding healthcare around the doctor-patient relationship is a vital reform.
ByI have called every election wrong since 1974 and suffered many disappointments, but these are different times.
ByImmersion in the tragic, personal art of the photographer Nan Goldin provides some counter-intuitive comfort.
ByModern supporters often expect the impossible of their teams.
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 human rights lawyer on Eleanor Roosevelt, Northern Exposure and Manx history and folklore.
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