More than 5,000 council seats are up for grabs on Thursday. Just four years ago, the Labour Party secured commanding ...
Zack Polanski’s party is hoping to build a new empire in north London By George Monaghan If it really does come to pass this May and afterwards that the Green Party breaks Labour’s century-long hold ...
We do not produce enough of what we want – or enough of what the rest of the world wants – to pay for the things we cannot ...
There’s not much discipline in my life, so I have to discipline myself instead.” I’m on a terraced street on the outskirts of ...
His alarming cognitive decline deserves the scrutiny that Joe Biden received. By Lee Siegel The process of removing Biden as the Democratic presidential candidate can’t exactly be said to have worked ...
The results of the May elections look set to be record-breaking By Ben Walker To understand the scale of Labour’s problem in 2026, you only need to look at 2025. Polling in the mid-20s, the party went ...
The Prime Minister’s claim in a Sunday Times interview last week that he would lead Labour into the next general election ...
Rage aimed at the eminent international relations scholar reflects liberal frustration over the West’s limited power to prevent Russia’s war in Ukraine. By Adam Tooze “Why is Ukraine the West’s fault?
The protagonist of The Things We Never Say, Elizabeth Strout’s 11th novel, is a 57-year-old high-school history teacher named ...
The Prime Minister wants to fight, but who believes he can win? By Ailbhe Rea Describing Keir Starmer’s state of mind to me in recent days, a No 10 insider draws a comparison with another Labour prime ...
Long-form interviews with names you’ve heard of – and names you’ll be glad you have. Anthony Seldon, historian, educator and one of Britain’s leading political biographers, has been for a long walk.