The premier first called in communications coach Leonie Mellinger in 2017 as he set his sights on becoming Labour's next ...
Alan B'Stard, Rik Mayall's infamous character from The New Statesman is back. He's here to lend his support to the Alternative Vote. Sort of. Featuring: Rik Mayall (Alan B'Stard MP).
At a New Statesman event bringing together policymakers and industry, experts analysed the origins of health inequality and talked about solutions. By Spotlight GB-NON-10820 Date of preparation: ...
Subscribers to the New Statesman can listen ad-free in our app. Download it on iOS or Android. Not a regular podcast listener? Read our guide on how to listen to New Statesman ...
What was Dylan’s lasting effect on the protest song? Tom Gatti is joined by Kate Mossman, senior writer at the New Statesman, and Dorian Lynskey, writer and author of 33 Revolutions Per Minute: A ...
The case for ending the effective state subsidy of private schools is overwhelming. By New Statesman On 5 July 2024, Keir Starmer’s cabinet took office as the most state-educated in history. Amid the ...
By New Statesman A bidder paid £2,728 for an empty cardboard box, because it featured in the 1992 Christmas special of Only Fools and Horses. The “Peckham Spring Water” box sparked a global bidding ...
This kind of stuff might excite odd corners of think tank land or the New Statesman office, but clearly not enough Americans thought they’d seen enough, or indeed any, benefits of the climate spending ...
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain – has run in the New Statesman since 1934. By New Statesman A prosthetic leg, an ironing ...
Write to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine. By New Statesman Hannah Barnes makes a brave attempt to achieve a balanced view of grooming gangs and ...
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain – has run in the New Statesman since 1934. By New Statesman A Labrador called River has ...