A tumultuous year of renewal and revolt
Restless electorates have voted out incumbent parties worldwide.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
Restless electorates have voted out incumbent parties worldwide.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByYour daily dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByI have spent more time looking at the hard, cracked face of my iPhone than those of my children.
ByAlso this week: Good King Wenceslas’s winter fuel allowance and grumpy monks.
ByThe geophysicist and archaeologist on uncovering Petra’s secrets.
ByA key challenge for any NS editor: what to do about the Labour Party?
ByPlus: Jason Cowley’s New Statesman legacy, and how crypto bought the US election.
ByWhile liberalism is in decline, Nigel Farage’s party is only growing in strength.
ByThere have been high-profile sales, far-right hate and a smattering of BBC scandals.
ByDonald Trump’s return to office ought to be a deafening wake-up call for EU leaders. But will it?
ByDuring its membership, the UK exerted a disproportionately strong influence on EU legislation, often in subtle ways.
ByFor disruptors like Elon Musk, the statement of intent is all. What happens next – such as running a…
ByThis Christmas is not an easy one for the Church – but fundamentally, its mission has not changed.
ByHow Banquet became the UK’s most influential record store.
ByAs with a good coach in sports, a measure of benign ambiguity will always be in the mix.
ByIn this era of raw power, Labour must find a new statecraft.
ByAs the seasons have been disrupted by climate change, many species have been left mercilessly exposed.
ByThe energy in politics is with the populist right – and the left doesn’t know how to respond.
ByExclusive interview: Gary Lineker on leaving the BBC, the war in Gaza and his new career as a “media…
ByHaving rejected the Democrats’ progressivist dogma, the American electorate is undergoing a social and demographic revolution.
ByThe great Beatle and the shadow of John Lennon.
ByOnline, intimacy is imagined and mystery non-existent. It’s time to lose our smartphones and find ourselves again.
ByThe violent summer of 1929 reveals the deep and tangled roots of the Israel-Palestine conflict.
ByHow the psychologist and philosopher William James defined “mystical” experience.
ByA year ago, our writer stood for local election – and won by a landslide. But there was a…
ByGreat Britain’s largest constituent is a nation lost within a multinational state.
ByAt 80, the broadcaster reflects on his favourite dictators, being tortured, why Trump is “so distasteful”, and the damage…
ByMy father died long ago. I now understand that he was part of the lost world of the stoical…
BySimon Critchley’s On Mysticism shows how the language of religious rapture can help us teach us how to live.
ByLili Anolik’s dual biography reveals the writers’ vicious battle to be the true voice of 1970s California.
ByThe football manager’s posthumous memoir A Beautiful Game reveals his battle to make England’s golden generation shine.
ByAs with DH Lawrence, Orwell’s private life has imperilled his reputation. Is there a way back?
ByFind thrilling adventures and unlikely characters in the best books for young readers.
ByWe read and write fiction because it asks impossible questions, and leads us boldly into the unknown.
ByIn Napoleon Symphony, the life of the French statesman was transformed into a virtuoso romp that still dazzles 50…
ByA new poem by Moniza Alvi.
ByHow Paddington Bear became one of Britain’s most distinctive international brands.
ByA recent London show proved Brat is the album of the year, and she is the artist of the…
ByThe documentary Bogart: Life Comes in Flashes searches for new insights into the actor’s life in his five closest…
ByThe artist’s worlds are full of humour – but something else moves beneath.
ByThe composer was not religious but saw his L’enfance du Christ as a deeply human story – and audiences…
ByDaniel Craig is cast against type in this stylish adaptation of William Burroughs’ novel. Plus: Nightbitch and We Live…
ByThis festive spy thriller is farcical and freewheeling –and like a decent cracker it packs a certain bang.
ByThe songs don’t stick, and the fashion is more The Only Way Is Essex than made in Milan.
ByA biased guide.
ByThe story of Stephen Christmas – for whom the clotting condition was named – highlights both medical advances and…
ByAn establishment where my heart and my lighter were stolen.
ByLike tides, we go out and come back again. But our annual gathering has become part of the rhythm…
ByHighlights include: Jude’s flair, long hair and the end of an earpiece for Gary Lineker.
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByPlease email zuzanna.lachendro@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be featured.
ByThe comedian on HMS Erebus and life as an octogenarian.
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