Alaa Abd El-Fattah
How one Egyptian activist accidentally exposed the British establishment
Alaa Abd El-Fattah is a symptom of the problem more than he is the problem
Most Read
Labour’s mercurial kingmaker
The eventful career of Josh Simons, the man who gave up his seat for Andy Burnham
In defence of Lara Bird
There is nothing weird or dishonest about having a dual existence
The hitch with the Hitch
How Christopher Hitchens brought me back to Christ
A shameful Bill
Labour is spectacularly failing the British people on immigration
The ties that bind
A revived society tie has raised thousands for hedgehogs — and reminds us what Britain has lost with the decline of the club tie
Election objections
Andy Burnham doesn’t need a general election mandate
Reset as usual
Labour’s problem is not messaging, presentation or leadership — it is that the party lacks the appetite for the reforms Britain demands
A magnificent navy on land
The state of the British Armed Forces triumphantly vindicates Parkinson’s Law
A.E. Housman
The poet is less read than he once was but his deep love of England still resonates
Indefinite leave, unlimited access
While Westminster fixates on survival, a deeper battle will decide whether mass migration becomes a permanent and costly feature of the state
Kemi always gets it right
Whatever the crisis, the Conservative leader invariably discovers that events have vindicated her.
American strategy in Iran is wiser than it seems
President Trump’s intervention will leave the world safer than it was
The Islamists’ young recruits
Islamist networks are increasingly targeting children, and the British state refuses to acknowledge the problem
The errata of history
Misprints are just one in a catalogue of literary disorders
Operatic satire is a Shaw thing
The old Art has an armoury of skunk-like defence mechanisms to keep the unwashed at bay
