News

Though Reform now comfortably leads among every pollster, this is some way short of a truly popular revolt. Back in 1981, the ...
Voters regarded the prospect of too much change as a threat rather than a source of heady excitement. If it was ever the case ...
You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.
To Britain’s Remain voters, it’s not Rejoin or nothing. At best, a pledge would rouse some shifting to the Lib Dems, or lead to indifference. It would be a gain of a few hundred thousand votes – a few ...
Over the weekend, Israel was roiled by a renewed wave of anti-war strikes and protests. Activists blocked main roads and surrounded the houses of right-wing politicians, dozens of ...
Sorry, Baby, starring debut director Eva Victor, concerns the pain of being alive and knowing it. We are trapped in the way others treat us and, as Victor’s character Agnes Ward explains, people can ...
Her politics are a mirror for millennial anxieties.
European leaders addressed him as “dear Donald” in the hope that obsequiousness would sweeten their demands. The two key ...
MPs blame a “vacuum of leadership” for handing Nigel Farage a political victory over asylum hotels.
It is all the more disappointing, then, to see the Labour Party so firmly tied to that same economic dogma. I was never sold ...
In her new memoir, Scotland’s former first minister reckons with the failures and pain of a career in politics – and reveals ...
e adored Terence Stamp, the best looking of all the East End boys, the new celebrities of the Sixties. He was so glamorous ...