The Prime Minister’s claim in a Sunday Times interview last week that he would lead Labour into the next general election ...
There’s not much discipline in my life, so I have to discipline myself instead.” I’m on a terraced street on the outskirts of ...
We do not produce enough of what we want – or enough of what the rest of the world wants – to pay for the things we cannot ...
Twenty years since the original film, Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway are back, facing off in a changed fashion world ...
Britain’s young women are sad, alienated and increasingly left-wing By Scarlett Maguire Over the past decade we have had countless opinion pieces, documentaries and dramas about dangerously ...
The US and Israel’s illegal attack on Iran will provoke a global economic catastrophe By Isabella Weber and Gregor Semieniuk Do you remember the days when the world already knew that there was a Covid ...
Use precise geolocation data. Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Store and/or access information on a ...
The results of the May elections look set to be record-breaking By Ben Walker To understand the scale of Labour’s problem in 2026, you only need to look at 2025. Polling in the mid-20s, the party went ...
Louise Perry is a New Statesman contributing writer. The babying of dogs by broody owners is usually subconscious – except when a pet is put in a papoose. Men don’t swipe for marriage. Getting back to ...
Michael Prodger is associate editor at the New Statesman. Konrad Mägi mined various early-20th-century styles to create a restless national vision for Estonia A large contingent of female artists – ...
Is this it? Have they finally come up with a way out? For the last few months it’s felt like the Labour party has been growing increasingly confirmed in two, antithetical beliefs: that, after this ...
Is our relentless quest for economic growth killing the planet? Climate scientists have seen the data – and they are coming to some incendiary conclusions. By Naomi Klein In December 2012, a ...