Labour’s winter fuel revolt
Keir Starmer must forge a politics of generational solidarity. The crises the UK faces require collaboration, not conflict.
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Keir Starmer must forge a politics of generational solidarity. The crises the UK faces require collaboration, not conflict.
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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 Westminster.
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The president’s betrayal of his conscript army is creating a generation ready to sow chaos in Russia.
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Also this week: Yodelling for Kafka and how water connects us all.
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The under-regulated platform lacks transparency. The Southport riots remind us why this matters.
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The Prime Minister needs to offer hope as well as gloom.
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Like the former communist bloc, Western liberalism is slowly disintegrating.
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Jermaine Jenas must be surprised the Beeb dealt with a case so swiftly and soundly. Plus: has Labour killed…
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The problem with EU tariffs is not their legitimacy, it’s their effectiveness.
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How the former president’s campaign abandoned its populist roots.
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A revolt over patient safety and declining expertise is tearing the medical establishment apart.
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The writer on Keir Starmer, Labour’s “grim” inheritance and his desire to reinvent the past.
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New technologies cannot replace the pleasure and self-expression of living.
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A poem by John Kinsella.
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Also featuring Sing Like Fish by Amorina Kingdon and Tracks on the Ocean by Sara Caputo.
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Is child-rearing political or deeply personal? Helen Charman’s new history reckons with the tension between mother and state.
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Jeremy Clarke’s final Spectator columns, written after his cancer diagnosis, are witty, well balanced and devoid of self-pity.
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The film stars former inmates playing themselves as they stage a performance on the inside.
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The second series of James Graham’s Nottinghamshire-set BBC drama is event television at its best.
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Tristram Hunt’s Radio 4 documentary The Grand House: Boom or Blight? charts the English manor’s contested legacy.
The joy of the simple pelargonium.
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How the American ethicist Judith Jarvis Thomson’s defence of bodily autonomy can be transposed on to the right to…
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A question about whether I was old enough to buy alcohol haunts me with brutal irony.
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Since first spotting the wild visitors last December, my parents’ garden has become something of a red squirrel hotspot.
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Welcome to a wonderful new season.
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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 writer on living in words and backpacking in Iceland.
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