Cryptocurrency
The party of retailers
Labour’s drift from its union roots reveals the party no longer knows what — or who — it is for
Upside of the blockchain bust
As crypto madness fades, its prophets will be forced to do more productive work
The not-so-beautiful game
Paul Lay and Nick Timothy discuss the morality — and immorality — of football
Wild ride for the Bitcoin billionaires
Cryptocurrencies have gone from geek heaven to serious business
Most Read
Gary Stevenson is wrong about wealth taxes
The popular economist is irritating, but more importantly he is mistaken
Why they hated Ann Widdecombe
Fair-minded people could agree or disagree with her opinions. Left-wing bigots hated her for not abandoning them
What is wrong now was wrong before
Julia Gillard should not pretend that the “unintended consequences” of the gender debate were unknowable
Ethnic minorities are abandoning Labour
It is not just Muslim voters who have been abandoning the Labour Party
Trump will not discredit Europe’s populist right
European populism is a lot deeper than mere Trumpism
Zack Polanski’s war on carrots
Cheap food is not evidence of exploitation but of competition — something Adam Smith understood long before Zack Polanski
Dismantle the infrastructure of censoriousness
Digital technology and private intelligence are bolstering cultural censoriousness in universities
French lessons for Farage
Following the Makerfield defeat, Reform should look across the channel to Rassemblement National for strategies
The last thing Labour needs
The revival of the Terminally Ill Adults Bill threatens to consume a party already struggling to hold itself together
AI podcasts give me the creeps
The more we outsource to AI, the more forgettable our cultural output is going to be
The tyranny of memes
Modern would-be assassins are products of the internet
Towards an allied civil society network in Europe
The Trump Administration is turning its attention to Europe’s civic institutions
The torment and the tourists
Holiday-makers must stop enabling the abuse of horses in Egypt
The trains have to run
Populists have had success in persuading people that they can govern — but can they actually govern?
