But if one of them, the New Statesman, can offer anything, it must start with perspective, and a sense of Labour history. Two conferences that followed Labour’s return to power, 1964 and 1997, both in ...
The New Statesman’s Will Dunn meets Led By Donkeys in this extended interview. Not yet a New Statesman podcast listener? Find all the ways you can listen in our comprehensive guide: how to listen to ...
“The judge's decision to grant a new trial to Erik Maund is unquestionably the right one," his attorneys Sam Bassett and Perry Minton said in a statement to the American-Statesman. "We look ...
Inside the fake news crisis at the community paper. By Josh Glancy At the end of July, the prolific Anglo-Israeli journalist Anshel Pfeffer ended his long association with the Jewish Chronicle (JC) to ...
Despite moments of frustrating caution, her memoir Something Lost, Something Gained is revealing about Bill and exhilarating on her feminist mission. By Nicola Sturgeon Hillary Clinton is one of my ...
A summer of student protests unseated an autocratic regime and potentially transformed the country. By Rupa Huq It was the youff that did it in the end. Bangladesh, a nation that’s only existed since ...
The Prime Minister’s past attacks on the Tories and winter fuel payment cuts have exposed his government to greater scrutiny. By George Eaton In politics, there are few deadlier charges than that of ...
His vainglorious $44bn takeover backfired on investors, employees, users – and the world’s richest man himself. By Will Dunn “He has no clothes on!” shouted the little boy, pointing to the emperor, ...
A new poem by Kim Moore. By Kim Moore She seems to me to be a woman I should hate because she’s sitting close to you. I tell myself sternly that hating another woman is not a feminist thing to do but ...
In Scoop vs Scandal, this is the clear winner. But is that the sound of TV eating itself? By Rachel Cooke Crunch, crunch. Listen carefully, and you can hear it: the sound of TV eating itself. First, ...
The Health Secretary on Labour’s killjoy image and why the NHS will “go bust” without reform. By George Eaton At the entrance to the Department of Health and Social Care is a ten-foot timeline of all ...