Reform is looking beatable
The party is losing rather than gaining popularity – but can Labour benefit?
ByDiscover the latest New Statesman content on Russia, exploring the politics, culture and economy of the nation. Insightful coverage and analysis of the war in Ukraine and Putin’s presidency.
The party is losing rather than gaining popularity – but can Labour benefit?
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The Munich Security Conference revealed how far Repulicans – and Democrats – have moved away from their old allies.
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Also: Peter Mandelson for beginners, and cold comfort in Kharkiv
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Reform MPs were conspicuous by their absence at a debate on malicious “Russian influence campaigns”
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Ukraine may be cold but the mob hotel I’m staying in is not
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The History Bureau, the new BBC Sounds series, seeks to unravel the past 25 years of modern Russian history
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His successors proclaimed a more liberal socialism. But was it ever real?
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In the new TV sensation, hockey is merely a conduit for hot men, hotel rooms and hook-ups
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The country is caught in a war between empires
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The Russian leader will only be emboldened by Donald Trump’s assault on Venezuela
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With the strike on Venezuela, the United States joins Russia and China in carving up the globe into spheres of…
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Ex-Nato official John Lough on how the UK is being “singled out” for Russian aggression
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America’s chaotic negotiations risk prolonging the chaos not ending it
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The group’s founding member on standing up to Putin and life in exile
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But they see no alternative to fighting on
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A new Moscow exhibition argues Poland is the problem
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New sanctions are not the result of political courage – they are an opportunity presented by the price of crude
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The US president is scuppering his own efforts to negotiate peace
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Maxim Gorky’s reminiscences about his literary hero are just as avant-garde today as they were in the 1920s
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Vladimir Putin has warned that any foreign troops in the country would be “legitimate targets”.
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