The Great Moving Left Show
How the pandemic could transform British politics.
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How the pandemic could transform British politics.
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The national saga of 1940 was remarkable and truly historic. Eighty years on, the UK is again in the…
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For writers from Daniel Defoe to Susan Sontag, plagues offer a window on to a rapidly changing world.
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In Should Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot, Lloyd exposes what the SNP knows, but will not admit: the dire economic consequences of…
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Apropos of Nothing is both the best thing Allen has produced in 20 years, and a showcase for dismaying lapses of tact, taste…
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The questions that keep you reading are hypotheticals: will they wind up together? Will they make it to the…
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With no evidence that the 17th-century Dutchman ever visited Italy, it seems rather that he invented Italy in his mind…
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Amid many laughs and poetically mild insults, Brooker exposes the government’s farcical inaction with startling clarity.
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In interviews, he is unstoppably amusing, and clips of him in original recording sessions defy aural logic.
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The early Noughties film, starring Renée Zellweger and Ewan McGregor, left me so giddy I watched it twice.
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As a double act, Monkman and Seagull bring to mind Morecambe and Wise, though somewhat less funny.
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The philosopher’s distinction between work and labour should guide our attempts to build a better society.
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The data-mining company Palantir is one of several businesses that has been enlisted to build the Covid-19 “data store”…
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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On the daily briefings, ministers recite dubious figures and answer questions that are too random to put them under scrutiny.
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The Dutch historian discusses the political consequences of Covid-19 and his new book Humankind: A Hopeful History.
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A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
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The crisis has accelerated the Conservatives’ retreat from austerity economics.
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Over a four-week period, 17 residents of the Essex home and one member of staff died.
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Having craved Mike Ashley’s departure for years, fans are not too squeamish about who might replace him.
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My time-wasting is so severe that I’ve been known to procrastinate leisure.
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Football is a game that in its highest professional form has become bereft of any moral compass.
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For the first time in more than a decade, Labour has a leader with a higher net approval rating…
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Insofar as anything can be said to be safe, sending children back to school will be safe for them.
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I have been able to take a walk with some of my girlfriends, which has been a precious relief.
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This meal has had to feed my imagination for the past three months, and may need to for many…
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When William Hartnell took on the role, he was two years younger than I am now. I had to…
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Our outboxes have become Dickensian chronicles of the dullest facets of our lives.
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Could The Viking Bible be the next Game of Thrones? Perhaps Moe could make this family millions.
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The comedian talks The Young Ones, John Smith, and The Biology of Desire: Why Addiction is Not a Disease.
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For the first time in more than a decade, Labour has a leader with a higher net approval rating…
By
I have been able to take a walk with some of my girlfriends, which has been a precious relief.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
A selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced…
By
On the daily briefings, ministers recite dubious figures and answer questions that are too random to put them under scrutiny.
By
Insofar as anything can be said to be safe, sending children back to school will be safe for them.
By
The data-mining company Palantir is one of several businesses that has been enlisted to build the Covid-19 “data store”…
By
Football is a game that in its highest professional form has become bereft of any moral compass.
By
Over a four-week period, 17 residents of the Essex home and one member of staff died.
By
The crisis has accelerated the Conservatives’ retreat from austerity economics.
By
My time-wasting is so severe that I’ve been known to procrastinate leisure.
By
Having craved Mike Ashley’s departure for years, fans are not too squeamish about who might replace him.
By
Amid many laughs and poetically mild insults, Brooker exposes the government’s farcical inaction with startling clarity.
By
The questions that keep you reading are hypotheticals: will they wind up together? Will they make it to the…
By
In interviews, he is unstoppably amusing, and clips of him in original recording sessions defy aural logic.
By
As a double act, Monkman and Seagull bring to mind Morecambe and Wise, though somewhat less funny.
By
The early Noughties film, starring Renée Zellweger and Ewan McGregor, left me so giddy I watched it twice.
By
This meal has had to feed my imagination for the past three months, and may need to for many…
By
When William Hartnell took on the role, he was two years younger than I am now. I had to…
By
Our outboxes have become Dickensian chronicles of the dullest facets of our lives.
By
Could The Viking Bible be the next Game of Thrones? Perhaps Moe could make this family millions.
By
The comedian talks The Young Ones, John Smith, and The Biology of Desire: Why Addiction is Not a Disease.
By
The philosopher’s distinction between work and labour should guide our attempts to build a better society.
By
The Dutch historian discusses the political consequences of Covid-19 and his new book Humankind: A Hopeful History.
By