Trump in turmoil (original) (raw)
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Labour’s winter fuel revolt
Keir Starmer must forge a politics of generational solidarity. The crises the UK faces require collaboration, not conflict.
Letter of the week: A step in the wrong direction
Write to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
From MP to pigs’ pee: how ejected Tories are faring on the jobs market
Your weekly dose of gossip from Westminster.
Vladimir Putin’s enemy within
The president’s betrayal of his conscript army is creating a generation ready to sow chaos in Russia.
By Ian Garner
On the kindness of book people
Also this week: Yodelling for Kafka and how water connects us all.
By Elif Shafak
How Telegram fosters online extremism
The under-regulated platform lacks transparency. The Southport riots remind us why this matters.
By Jacob Davey and Julia Ebner
Keir Starmer must tell a better story
The Prime Minister needs to offer hope as well as gloom to prove he really runs Britain.
By George Eaton
How America resembles the dying Soviet Union
Like the former communist bloc, Western liberalism is slowly disintegrating.
By John Gray
The BBC has finally grasped how to manage a scandal
Jermaine Jenas must be surprised the Beeb dealt with a case so swiftly and soundly. Plus: has Labour killed…
A trade war between the EU and China would be a disaster for Europe
The problem with EU tariffs is not their legitimacy, it’s their effectiveness.
Donald Trump’s identity crisis
How the former president’s campaign abandoned its populist roots.
Medicine wars
A revolt over patient safety and declining expertise is tearing the medical establishment apart.
Robert Harris: “Great politicians are like novelists”
The writer on Keir Starmer, Labour’s “grim” inheritance and his desire to reinvent the past.
By Pippa Bailey
How to be human in an age of AI
New technologies cannot replace the pleasure and self-expression of living.
By Ed Smith
The NS Poem: Jackdaw Beach – Low-Key
A poem by John Kinsella.
From Robert Bartlett to Donal Ryan: new books reviewed in short
Also featuring Sing Like Fish by Amorina Kingdon and Tracks on the Ocean by Sara Caputo.
By Michael Prodger, Pippa Bailey and George Monaghan
How motherhood was weaponised
Is child-rearing political or deeply personal? Helen Charman’s new history reckons with the tension between mother and state.
By Megan Gibson
Long live the low life
Jeremy Clarke’s final Spectator columns, written after his cancer diagnosis, are witty, well balanced and devoid of self-pity.
By David Sexton
Sing Sing is a tender portrait of creativity behind bars
The film stars former inmates playing themselves as they stage a performance on the inside.
By Pippa Bailey
Why Sherwood matters
The second series of James Graham’s Nottinghamshire-set BBC drama is event television at its best.
By Rachel Cooke
Can the country house survive?
Tristram Hunt’s Radio 4 documentary The Grand House: Boom or Blight? charts the English manor’s contested legacy.
Even garage-bought flowers can provide delight
The joy of the simple pelargonium.
Thought experiment 2: the Unconscious Violinist
How the American ethicist Judith Jarvis Thomson’s defence of bodily autonomy can be transposed on to the right to…
A jokey exchange in Waitrose veers into darkly existential territory
A question about whether I was old enough to buy alcohol haunts me with brutal irony.
A brush with a bushy tail has turned my family into red squirrel fanatics
Since first spotting the wild visitors last December, my parents’ garden has become something of a red squirrel hotspot.
By Megan Kenyon
Unfamiliar managers and radical new hair – but it’s the same old Prem
Welcome to a wonderful new season.
This England: what the flock?
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
Subscriber of the week: Simon Tyler-Murphy
Contact zuzanna.lachendro@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be featured.
Sarah Moss Q&A: “I’ve outgrown heroes – we’re all flawed and fallen”
The writer on living in words and backpacking in Iceland.