
Ending the welfare trap
Labour must not only make benefits less attractive, but make work more so.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Labour must not only make benefits less attractive, but make work more so.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByIs a technocratic, career economist really the man to take on Donald Trump?
ByAlso this week: Steve McQueen’s powerful exhibition and Labour’s frustrating curriculum and assessment review.
ByCEO Scott McDonald on an imperilled institution.
ByKeir Starmer is in an economic bind. The fallout could fracture his party.
ByAlso this week: a conspiracy theorist at the FBI, and Meta’s free-speech wobble.
ByCuts have hollowed out the corporation’s decks of talent – to the point where catastrophic errors slip through.
ByNo matter how they spin it, there is no practical alternative to American military power.
ByWhat’s brewing in America isn’t a cultural turn – it’s a political catastrophe.
ByHow the benefits system became a danger to the economy and a battleground for Labour.
ByFrom trade wars to peace deals, Donald Trump’s ruthlessly transactional politics treats global crises as opportunities for American gain.
ByBritain and the US lack the political will and legal means to innovate.
ByA new poem by Claudine Toutoungi.
ByNatasha Brown’s Universality is a wincing satire of journalism, publishing and cancel culture.
ByIn Forgotten, writers Raja Shehadeh and Penny Johnson explore the careless treatment and outright destruction of Palestinians’ most precious…
ByHow a marked rise in the treatment of certain conditions – physical and mental – is harming, not protecting,…
ByAlso featuring The Library of Ancient Wisdom by Selena Wisnom and Holy Places: How Pilgrimage Changed the World by…
ByNewly adapted by Netflix, Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa’s novel is a lesson in the anarchic motions of our times.
ByThe Rule of Jenny Pen doesn’t need the supernatural to scare us – the terrifying prospect of getting old…
ByThis Netflix series is a veritable pageant of sophisticated anxiety and dread.
ByThat Abrams is not quite ready for and a little startled by her early fame is part of her…
ByThe singer’s new album attempts to recapture the intense art-project pop of her early records.
ByThere’s much more to it than wafting around in a kaftan.
ByRegular physical activity has many other benefits.
ByI have become more dependent on the staples of Englishness.
ByThe truth is, there’s pleasure in solitude.
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 essayist and novelist on Spanish history, Aretha Franklin and meeting her heroes
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