The return of order
After a decade of Tory inertia, Keir Starmer’s Labour Party has the opportunity to remake Britain.
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After a decade of Tory inertia, Keir Starmer’s Labour Party has the opportunity to remake Britain.
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Write to [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from the Commons.
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Political chaos, confusion and incompetence are almost inevitable after no single grouping wins a parliamentary majority.
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Also this week: Nigel Farage to be bogged down by bins and neighbour disputes, and the Euros bringing about…
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The demographer Paul Morland on why we should have more children.
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Yet these are not progressive new times.
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Joe needs to go. But are Americans ready for President Harris?
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The Liberal Democrats showed how the system should be played.
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Making undeliverable promises to a limited pool of right-wing voters is a recipe for failure.
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Scores are being settled inside the party after its electoral humiliation by Scottish Labour.
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The party’s success in office will be determined by how well its “mission-driven” agenda is communicated to the civil…
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We are fortunate in this country that the transfer of power is so calm and dignified.
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Keir Starmer’s people are in charge now – and the mood in the country is changed.
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He could be a great leader, if he breaks through the barrier of his own reserve
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The Conservative Party created Reform by embracing liberal extremism. What comes next may not be what Labour expects.
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At the Nato summit, the threat posed by China, Russia and Trump will be impossible to ignore.
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A Freudian reading of the comedies and tragedies reveals how we can embrace life’s failures and reversals.
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How stars from Little Richard to David Bowie used their sexuality to set popular culture free.
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The island is a playground for the imperial ambitions of China and the US – and its future is…
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Also featuring Anima: A Wild Pastoral by Kapka Kassabova and Sick of It by Sophie Harman.
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Why understanding the wild and fragile world of adolescence helps us better know ourselves.
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Sweetened arrangements of his works ensured the Russian composer’s afterlife – but left him hiding in plain sight.
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How the hectic Minions franchise, optimised for a child’s attention span, became a blockbuster hit.
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This series based on Barbara Nadel’s bestselling novels is really rather good summer viewing.
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“Sounds of Wild Poland”, this week’s instalment of BBC Radio 3’s The Essay, treats listeners to an atmospheric soundscape.
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Though there is something a little unnerving about all those unblinking, yellow cyclopses, peer closely and I can see…
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Gambling on elections, markets, football, or anything makes fools of us all.
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When I was young, my father would take me to the polling station so he could show me democracy…
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Pessimism is easy. But this change in government gives us all reasons for optimism.
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Also: Pep Guardiola at Wimbledon and the fine margins of greatness.
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This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
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The philosopher on tennis history, disruptive social action, and questions of mortality while taking part in Parkrun.
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