
The rebirth of Liberal England
Ed Davey and the Lib Dems can “replace the Conservatives” in their Blue Wall heartlands.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Ed Davey and the Lib Dems can “replace the Conservatives” in their Blue Wall heartlands.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByIf the former archbishop of Canterbury hoped his self-abnegation on the BBC might salvage what was left of his…
ByAlso this week: my deep dive into the underground worlds of boardgames and vegetarianism.
ByThe Labour MP and scrutiny committee member on why she fears the consequences if end-of-life proposals become law.
ByLabour is hemmed in by military and economic enemies – but not every scenario is entirely grim.
ByThe new Canadian prime minister has something his Liberal predecessors didn’t: good luck.
ByWhen the US president promises something, we should believe him.
ByAlso this week: no laughs in Trump’s White House, and Ofcom fines OnlyFans’ parent company.
ByMorgan McSweeney’s relationship with Britain’s most important tabloid is as ideological as it is strategic.
ByThe struggle for control of the national curriculum is a fight for the soul of English education.
ByDonald Trump and Elon Musk are just the latest populists to weaponise fears of a sinister “deep state”.
ByIt was women who drove his art to its heights – and women who bore the brunt of his…
ByA poet’s journey through the north-east reveals our universal desire to belong to a place we call home.
ByIn architecture, art, publishing and philosophy, continental émigrés fleeing fascism transformed our culture.
ByThe case of Dr Crippen contains a story of multiple on-the-make lives as well as gruesome death.
ByAlso featuring Operation Bowler by Jonathan Glancey and Lesbians: Where Are We Now? by Julie Bindel.
ByThe bond between me and my dad is too deep for words – but music comes close to expressing…
ByThis film by Mikko Mäkelä makes the likes of Good Luck to You, Leo Grande and Anora seem artificial.
ByThis new BBC sitcom is no Colin from Accounts.
ByThe Californian Governor Gavin Newsom wants to talk about the liberal left. Does he have anything to say?
ByThinkers of all kinds have been drawn to it over the decades, and poets are no exception.
ByIn our basement studio, we’re surrounded by our own history, our own inspirations.
ByDespite their continuing levels of severe distress, funding has now been withdrawn from mental health hubs.
ByAfter 35 years, it turns out freelancing can pay off.
ByTurns out I’ve been at quite a few major societal events.
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 featured.
ByThe theoretical physicist on meeting Nelson Mandela and living in China for six months.
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