Labour’s Farage problem
The Reform leader has showed how easily Labour’s majority could be demolished.
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The Reform leader has showed how easily Labour’s majority could be demolished.
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Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
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As the local elections approach, Reform is after Labour’s voters.
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The writer’s posthumous therapy journal is raw and unvarnished – the most direct book she never wrote.
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The novelist thought his great-grandfather’s memoir would be a story to be proud of. He found something else.
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A new poem by Josephine Balmer.
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The singer-turned-spy is just one of many 20th-century artists who fled American racism and escaped to Europe.
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From Tolstoy to Shostakovich, Russian culture shaped Europe. We must not lose it.
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From urgent new fiction to the inside story of Keir Starmer’s Labour, the New Statesman picks the season’s essential reading.
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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 veteran magazine editor on a golden age for culture, Canadian hockey stars and Sgt Bilko.
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While others dream of Machu Picchu or Mandalay, I dream of Hangleton or Worthing.
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Might we have been less competitive, less obsessed by body image, had our circle been diluted with boys?
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Why do we always buy in to this annual mark-up?
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The cravings to fill the house with tulips and white narcissus are irresistible.
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Ralph Fiennes plays the hero as a warrior shamed by his deeds and suffering from PTSD.
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Jon Hamm’s Apple series could be a kind of cut-price update on John Updike’s Rabbit novels – if only it…
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In The Unnamable, the writer’s prose was stripped to the bone – and the bone itself boiled white.
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From hidden jewels to good eggs, children will be delighted by these funny, moving stories.
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