The Fragile Crown (original) (raw)

The Magazine

After neoliberalism

After neoliberalism

Across the West, faith in liberal democracy is waning. We need a clear response to the new politics of…

Letter of the week: Articles of faith

Letter of the week: Articles of faith

Write to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.

By New Statesman

George Galloway makes the top three flightiest MPs of all time

George Galloway makes the top three flightiest MPs of all time

Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.

By Kevin Maguire

The deadly return of Islamic State

The deadly return of Islamic State

The attack at Moscow’s Crocus City concert hall shows that we ignore the jihadi group at our peril.

By Shiraz Maher

Daniel Defoe in the Potteries

Daniel Defoe in the Potteries

Also this week: my experience of homelessness, and why I’m running the London Marathon.

By Steve Platt

John Healey: “Britain has a lot to learn from Ukraine’s resilience”

John Healey: “Britain has a lot to learn from Ukraine’s resilience”

Labour’s shadow defence minister on how to bolster national security, dealing with Trump, and selling arms to Israel.

By Anoosh Chakelian

Rishi Sunak’s reverse Midas touch

Rishi Sunak’s reverse Midas touch

Gripped by poll fever, the Prime Minister has cast about for a golden vote-winning policy – damaging his prospects…

By Rachel Cunliffe

Monarchy is a state-sponsored tragedy

Monarchy is a state-sponsored tragedy

The House of Windsor will survive, but at what cost to the nation?

By Lewis Goodall

The Civil War never ended

The Civil War never ended

The questions that sent Americans to war with each other in the late 19th century still shape the country.

By Jill Filipovic

The German SPD’s foolish attachment to Putin’s Russia

The German SPD’s foolish attachment to Putin’s Russia

Olaf Scholz’s centre-left party refuses to abandon its nostalgic ties to Moscow – and is paying a heavy political…

By Wolfgang Münchau

Benjamin Netanyahu’s war test

Benjamin Netanyahu’s war test

It took a devastating attack to expose the full extent of the prime minister’s failures. What happens next?

By Dahlia Scheindlin

JK Rowling is right to scorn Scotland’s new Hate Crime Act

JK Rowling is right to scorn Scotland’s new Hate Crime Act

The SNP sees itself as a vanguard of progressive values. But this priggish law is at odds with the…

By Finn McRedmond

The fragile crown

The fragile crown

In an age of social media and conspiracy, the royal family is trapped between what it wants and what…

By Tanya Gold

Kyiv’s recurring grief

Kyiv’s recurring grief

Travelling through Ukraine, it’s clear that the country cannot escape its past.

By Maurice Glasman

![Thomas Piketty: "The Labour Party is too conservative"](https://dl6pgk4f88hky.cloudfront.net/2024/03/15/GettyImages-1203704839-735x551.jpg "Thomas Piketty: "The Labour Party is too conservative"")

Thomas Piketty: “The Labour Party is too conservative”

The French economist reflects on a decade since the publication of Capital in the Twenty-First Century.

By Gavin Jacobson

Shaking hands with Islamic State

Shaking hands with Islamic State

When James Foley was murdered in Syria in 2014, his mother’s search for redemption began.

By Anthony Loyd

Escape from the oldest hatred

Escape from the oldest hatred

In Rachel Cockerell’s Melting Point, the forgotten story of America’s Jewish homeland sheds light on the tragedies of the…

By Erica Wagner

Hitler, Putin and the information wars

Hitler, Putin and the information wars

Peter Pomerantsev’s new book shows how Second World War propaganda tactics are being used by the Kremlin today.

By Sonia Purnell

From Alpa Shah to Michael Taylor: new books reviewed in short

From Alpa Shah to Michael Taylor: new books reviewed in short

Also featuring Language City by Ross Perlin and The Observable Universe by Heather McCalden.

By Megan Gibson, Zuzanna Lachendro, Ellen Peirson-Hagger and Michael Prodger

How the Liverbirds disrupted the rock ’n’ roll boys’ club

How the Liverbirds disrupted the rock ’n’ roll boys’ club

The all-female band shone briefly in Sixties Hamburg, but were prevented from flourishing in a male-dominated scene.

By Kate Mossman

Natalia Ponomarchuk: “War has its sounds. I recognise them wherever they appear”

Natalia Ponomarchuk: “War has its sounds. I recognise them wherever they appear”

The Ukrainian conductor on fleeing Kyiv, Mendelssohn and why “war shows the true faces of people”.

By Edward Docx

Dev Patel’s Monkey Man: political commentary meets bone-crunching action

Dev Patel’s Monkey Man: political commentary meets bone-crunching action

The British actor-director lets his ambition run wild in this thriller set in a fictional Indian city.

By Simran Hans

Steven Knight’s This Town is a mess

Steven Knight’s This Town is a mess

The IRA, Thatcherism, riots, ska, skinheads, alcoholism, racism, the Catholic Church… Is there anything he hasn’t included in this…

By Rachel Cooke

Julia Louis-Dreyfus wants older women to be heard in Wiser Than Me

Julia Louis-Dreyfus wants older women to be heard in Wiser Than Me

The second season of the podcast has a stellar guest list, including Billie Jean King, Patti Smith and Julie…

By Anna Leszkiewicz

We must nourish children’s sense of wonder

We must nourish children’s sense of wonder

Nothing is more character-forming than enthusiasm for the natural world, and the openness and attentiveness it fosters.

By John Burnside

What happened to the housing crash?

What happened to the housing crash?

The real value of homes in the UK has dropped significantly and a long-term decay in value appears to…

By Will Dunn

Never meet your heroes – unless your hero is Jah Wobble

Never meet your heroes – unless your hero is Jah Wobble

A close encounter with the legendary bassist leaves me giddy and unsteady on my feet.

By Nicholas Lezard

I had an epiphany. I had fallen in love with a café

I had an epiphany. I had fallen in love with a café

It’s not trendy, but you can always get a table and there’s a soothing background hum of coffee brewing…

By Tracey Thorn

This England: Should’ve gone to Spikesavers

This England: Should’ve gone to Spikesavers

This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…

By New Statesman

Subscriber of the week: Mark Baldwin

Subscriber of the week: Mark Baldwin

Please email zuzanna.lachendro@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be featured.

By New Statesman

Camilla Nord Q&A: “I do at least one handstand every day”

Camilla Nord Q&A: “I do at least one handstand every day”

The neuroscientist on the predictive brain, Rory Stewart and Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

By New Statesman