Leader: Why we need honesty on migration
Successive governments have relied on high migration to disguise the structural weaknesses of the British economy.
By
Successive governments have relied on high migration to disguise the structural weaknesses of the British economy.
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
The demonstrations haven’t yet threatened the president’s power – but that they happened is still remarkable.
By
My new documentary was received well, but friends still called to tell me I was being slagged off on…
By
Would UK foreign policy be any different if Keir Starmer’s party won power?
By
Unlike the right, the left is comfortable using state power – and government intervention is exactly what Britain needs.
By
The First Minister has said the next general election will be a de facto IndyRef2 – a gamble that…
By
How the French president became the most powerful leader in Europe and a hyperactive player on the world stage.
By
The combative presenter reflects on Cristiano Ronaldo, cancel culture and the “infinite patience” of Rupert Murdoch.
By
As the cost-of-living crisis pushes more and more people into poverty, charities have become the last line of defence.
By
The murders of Star Hobson and Arthur Labinjo-Hughes revealed shocking shortcomings in the UK’s social care system. What is…
By
Hasty biographies of Liz Truss and Boris Johnson by Westminster journalists show the perils of rushing to judge the…
By
Siddharta Mukherjee’s new study of how cells work reveals the complexities of the human body – and the science…
By
Also featuring The Story of Architecture by Witold Rybczynski and Chokepoint Capitalism by Rebecca Giblin and Cory Doctorow.
By
The musician on why Morrissey matters, his deepening faith and grieving for his sons.
By
One cartoon shows a shattered centurion being nagged by his wife.
By
The Sussex landscape has proven irresistible to artists for hundreds of years.
By
This film swaps the darkness and brutality of DH Lawrence’s novel for tender scenes of dancing in the rain.
By
The BBC’s latest stab at a reality show, with a murder mystery-style twist, is a convoluted extravaganza of tedium.
By
This peek inside the John Taylor bell foundry is a ringing endorsement for BBC radio storytelling.
By
The keyboard works of The Well-Tempered Clavier sound more novel and luminous 300 years later than in their composer’s…
By
Forcing myself outside, and into a new mindset, has altered my way of encountering the world.
By
The gift is, by some margin, the classiest thing in the Hove-l, and I have been gorging myself on…
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByEmail [email protected] if you would like to be the New Statesman’s subscriber of the week.
By
The CEO of Alzheimer’s Society discusses working in the charity sector, and the appalling state of UK social care.
By