Didcot power station
Coalhenge: Britain’s colossal wonders
The awe-inspiring cooling towers of our pensioned-off power stations should be preserved as monuments
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 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
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 strange birth of woo-woo
The glitzy LA supermarket chain and the Buddhist food cult behind your wellness smoothie
The EU is changing on immigration
A firmer stance is being taken — but will it be enough?
Britain will be worse without hereditary peers
The expulsion of the hereditaries is neither fair nor pragmatic
IPSO has to go
A regulator built to uphold standards has become a partisan censor — the right must walk away before it is too late
Leading us a not- so-merry dance
Virtually every moment of physical theatre has to include some sort of balletic lunge
Shining a light on the culture wars
Without the reintroduction of liberal ethical standards, the sacred purpose of academia cannot survive
Kemi Badenoch was right about the chaos in Clapham
Rioting as entertainment is a First World phenomenon
The American chaos machine
The United States’s current aggressive expansionism and domestic strife are an intrinsic part of its national character
