In defence of the Freedom of Information Act
We should not let our access to information held by public authorities be diminished
I don’t trust the British state
British institutions simply are not functioning in the interests of the people they are meant to serve
How the “Burnham bind” will rewrite British politics
If Andy Burnham wins in Makerfield, Labour has a bigger opportunity than people think
What makes an American?
What characterises a US citizen in the 21st century, beyond abiding by the country’s laws and supporting its constitution?
Most Read
American strategy in Iran is wiser than it seems
President Trump’s intervention will leave the world safer than it was
Saint Nicola
Nicola Sturgeon wants sympathy for her husband’s crimes—but after years spent avoiding awkward questions, her latest reinvention may be the hardest sell yet.
The lonely death of Henry Nowak
We must draw lessons from a horrendous and disgraceful case
Rewatching the English
English identity has become too surreal and discomfiting to define
The establishment is still living in an immigration fantasy land
It is influential left-wingers, not the broader public, who have deluded themselves on mass migration
Time for change?
A new book might overstate the durability of Trumpian politics
The testing of Giorgia Meloni
Italy’s first woman PM has proved a pragmatic conservative who has brought stability to her country
Irish anti-Israel agitation is out of control
Anti-Israel sentiments among Irish nationalists are irrational and opportunistic
AI, religion and AI religion
Pope Leo is right to push back against the prophets of AI supremacy and AI doom
Parade of defeats
Armenia is a democracy tearing itself apart over who gets to define the soul of a nation
“You can’t preach here!”
A hostile attitude towards preaching threatens freedom of religion and freedom of speech
Thank God for Brexit
The EU is a bureaucratic monster and Britain is better off out
A failed war on fags
The black market has taken over the tobacco trade Down Under
Censors create martyrs
Starmer has stumbled onto the fastest way to increase Hasan Piker’s audience
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Save our green and pleasant land
It’s time to stop ruining Britain’s countryside with drab, identikit houses and instead build real places with focus, heart and purpose
Failing to face the facts
The Tories’ rosy view of their recent election drubbing reveals a reluctance to have the tough intellectual debate needed to secure the party’s future
New model Auntie
David Elstein spells out the big decisions that Matt Brittin, the BBC’s new director-general, needs to make very quickly in order to save the Corporation
Our new five-party system
First-past-the-post no longer means
an electoral carve-up between the
Tories and Labour, allowing “fringe”
parties real political influence
The dog that failed to bark
Jeremy Corbyn hoped the local
elections would be a launch pad for
his new party. Instead, Your Party
has mostly been arguing with itself
Why we should explore space
Space exploration lifts the human spirit: rather than asking “Why?”, we should ask “Why not?”
The old age elephant in the room
Does Andy Burnham seriously think that he can fix social care?
Regulating the rogue degree factories
Do universities have the resources and the will to monitor what is happening in their name?
Empire State Madrid
Can a stagnant Spain rediscover the future? Hope lies with its capital
Offence archaeology and the future of elections
We have to ignore the cheap and disingenuous politics of offence archaeology
Murders for June
Bodies in Brighton and spies in Scotland are features of our first crop of summer murder mysteries
To defeat populism, don’t start here
Views that would be charming in their naivety, were they not so contradictory or facile
The Muslim modernisers
Muslim reformers do not innovate; they renew by seeking to mend what is broken
Knowingly crass and conflicted
This American culture is hegemonic because even to steal from it is to propel it
Fond portrait of an odd couple
Two irascible, elderly artists and two beautiful younger women in unusual relationships
Farewell to a gentle jazz-lover
Scholarship trumps zealotry, particularly when it is veiled by modesty
Amazing Grace? Meh, it was OK
If there is a reason to see this play, it is Ralph Fiennes
