
Leader: The Scottish Question
Though the SNP remains dominant, the prospect of an independence referendum in 2023 has become increasingly implausible.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Though the SNP remains dominant, the prospect of an independence referendum in 2023 has become increasingly implausible.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByMusk’s unique ability to move markets relies on him remaining the world’s most recognisable businessperson.
ByIf women had all this sexual power to influence politics, we might have used our hypnotic knickers to solve…
ByThe Edinburgh professor discusses her new book, Scottish independence and why she “leans towards” the lab leak theory.
ByAfter the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, Europe was lulled into a false belief that the horrors of the…
ByThe cost-of-living crisis is presenting football’s fans and finance chiefs with some difficult choices.
ByAs Nato fortifies to counter the Russian threat, the case against Trident – and for Scottish independence – is…
ByThe president’s second term will show what sort of liberal he really is.
ByThe battle lines between the metropolitan middle classes and those who are excluded from the benefits of his “globalised”…
ByAs Sinn Féin surges with voters, Irish reunification seems closer than ever. But the real debate over what the…
ByNew works by the journalists Tina Brown and Robert Hardman question whether the monarchy can survive without radical reform.
ByThe ghost of a more interesting narrative hovers over Elizabeth Finch, which is a novel not of ideas but…
ByThe New Statesman’s selection of good reads for this spring.
ByThe Premonitions Bureau by Sam Knight is a propulsive but flawed examination of the rationality of chance.
BySimon Kuper’s book Chums tells the story of how one university taught the core of today’s Brexit government how…
ByAuthoritarians and autocrats continue to flourish despite a long parade of inadequacy. Can liberal democracy strike back?
ByThe exhilarating narrative explores the complex boundaries between the natural and man-made world in rural life.
ByA decade on, the author returns to her Booker Prize-nominated novel, and finds conflict and mortal danger among the…
ByThe writer-director's first full-length film takes a close look at bullying in a Belgian primary school.
ByRupert Murdoch’s take on GB News featured Piers Morgan’s best David Brent impression and Donald Trump’s “red button”.
ByOn BBC Radio 4, Tennant brings bitterness, resignation and almost-buried fury to Shakespeare’s most famous lines.
ByThe chef Olia Hercules has shared advice for refugee hosts wanting to cook familiar foods for their Ukrainian guests.
ByThe dynamics of mutation and reinfection do not guarantee progressively weaker variants.
ByMy mother’s nine millionth birthday celebration is at an intimidatingly expensive steak restaurant, but I’m playing it cool.
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByEmail ellys.woodhouse@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be the New Statesman's subscriber of the week.
ByThe Booker Prize-winning author on Derry Girls, finding joy in a new city and the power of art to…
By