
How to raise taxes
Labour has the political freedom to make unpopular decisions.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Labour has the political freedom to make unpopular decisions.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByWe are closer than ever before to consigning the “the colonial disease” to history.
ByPlus: my paean to female friendship and Ian McKellen on marvellous form.
ByFrom Countdown to unlikely revolutionary – the broadcaster and social media star is a political conundrum.
ByWill pressure from business and their own economic priorities force Starmer and Reeves to dilute promised employment reforms?
ByThe UnHerd owner has added The Spectator to his media stable.
ByWhen free speech is treated as the highest good, it gives rise to shock-jock politics.
BySqueezed between the US and China, the bloc is in a life-threatening crisis.
ByI don’t doubt that AI will one day write a “good” novel. But why would anyone want to read…
ByLabour’s “Iron Chancellor” has staked her credibility on spending cuts. But will she regret it?
ByThe great survivor of Israeli politics is fighting for his future.
ByIn Empire of the Sun, published 40 years ago, the great novelist turned his childhood experiences in a Japanese…
ByThe celebrity interviewer on men speaking over her, her most interesting subject, and entering her ninth decade.
ByThe poet as a young man became the “mouthpiece of an epoch” by connecting his private world with the…
ByThe novelist laureate of English football succumbs to hero-worship in his reimagining of the Busby Babes’ tragic demise.
ByAnthony Seldon’s all-access account fails to explain how a pound-shop Thatcher could take the highest office in the land.
ByAlso featuring Stone Circles by Colin Richards and Vicki Cummings and The Mysterious Case of the Victorian Female Detective…
ByTim Burton’s sequel attempts to recapture the spirit of the original. Is he just cashing in on the past?
ByThis antic, immaculate show cuts both ways, sending up the tediously woke and the tediously un-woke alike.
ByThe strengths of these plays – staged on a St George’s Cross – is that they are largely led…
ByHow did the unassuming producer of polite, emotive dance music become social media’s superstar DJ?
ByThe macronutrient has a physiological role as well as a cultural and commercial one.
ByTechnology is invaluable to the future of healthcare – but we must also be realistic.
ByI pled with the universe, God, and any other higher powers I could think of. Finally, M— and I…
ByOne shouldn’t use a fork to scoop ear wax out, but I was getting frantic.
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 poet on Chris Ofili and a fascination with reality TV.
By