News

After major concessions to rebels the government won a hollow victory tonight.
Labour MPs will have to decide whether to support the Government in a Second Reading debate. This would not normally be a ...
Once MPs turn against a government, they never turn back. o rebel is to wage war. Specifically, if you go back to the Latin, ...
Instead of recoiling in horror, the crowd loved it, chanting “Daddy’s Home” as Trump took the stage. Days after the Nato ...
The magazine and the woman cannot be untangled; they are symbiotic, an incredibly chic ouroboros.
Her memoir promises an insider’s account of the Cameron years – but instead provides a study in overwhelming self-pity.
Reform deputy leader Richard Tice’s recent claim that “everything is up for debate” on the Bank of England once again shows ...
It’s easy – and lazy – to blame advisers for the failures of politicians. his week’s Westminster main character is Morgan ...
Labour MPs are furious with the government, says Andrew Marr Keir Starmer is facing calls to sack Rachel Reeves over the welfare reform bill. Andrew Marr reports that Rachel Reeves is “hated” by ...
The biggest flaw with More in Common’s survey is simple: the Jeremy Corbyn Party isn’t real; it hasn’t accrued baggage; we ...
George Orwell was the wintry conscience of a generation which in the ‘thirties had heard the call to the rasher assumptions ...
The New Statesman is the leading progressive political and cultural magazine in the United Kingdom and around the world. Covering UK current affairs, international and cultural events.