Why we should break up the Met
The “bad apples” defence does not explain why toxic people are attracted to the police.
By
The “bad apples” defence does not explain why toxic people are attracted to the police.
By
Write to [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
Both opponents and allies of Kate Forbes are warning of resignations if she becomes leader.
By
There was a hoopla in Colchester for the royal visit, with small children waving flags and a brass band.
By
The feminist economist once saw modesty as a necessity in order to be taken seriously. Now, she protests nude.
By
It’s “squeaky-bum time” for the Labour leader – but we know he has an appetite for concrete change.
By
A slow-burning crisis in which insolvent banks prop up insolvent businesses is a dangerous – and very real –…
By
Research reveals a strong public appetite for progressive ideas. But we cannot flourish in an environment of mutual intolerance.
By
The blistering Casey report identifies failings across nearly all the force’s departments.
By
The industry is preoccupied with money-making, but the potential of shared computing could go far beyond finance.
By
After three US banks collapsed in a week, the global financial system is facing a new set of systemic…
By
Money alone won’t fix the childcare crisis. Rethinking work and motherhood might.
By
The Ukrainian foreign minister on China, Donald Trump and how the war ends.
By
Europe, China and the US have all rejected free trade and globalisation. Protectionism is back.
By
From sex-positivity to abortion, liberal advances have dehumanised women, argues Mary Harrington – but “nature” is not always as kind…
By
Also featuring Eve by Claire Horn and A Stranger in Your Own City by Ghaith Abdul-Ahad.
By
A new biography shows how he began life as a revolutionary and ended it hosting the Queen Mother.
By
In the home of both the Confederacy and the civil rights movement, the past is never dead.
By
Seth Rogen’s protest against bad reviews misunderstands the role of the critic in the fight against mediocrity.
By
The Musée Picasso Paris’s collaboration with Paul Smith attempts to reframe the great artist. Plus: another backlash for the…
By
In the horror films Pearl and Infinity Pool, the 29-year-old actor delivers two pleasingly unhinged performances.
By
I was hysterical with laughter watching this Diane Morgan-starring series from David Earl and Joe Wilkinson.
By
The star of Blackadder and Time Team now has his own history podcast: Cunningcast.
By
We were encouraged to have “accountability partners” to whom we would confess our “darkest” acts and desires.
By
My friend Ben tells me the plot in such a way that I am suddenly inspired to read it,…
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByPlease email [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman’s subscriber of the week.
By
The cosmologist on learning to swim in Cambridge, travelling the Silk Roads, and why the future is bothering him.
By