Irish Social Democrats
Inside the Irish anti-immigration movement
Economic instability could provide an opening for a populist party
Most Read
The Book of JO’B
James O’Brien’s aggressive incuriosity is becoming ever more embattled as his worldview crumbles
The rise and fall of Nicola Sturgeon
The former SNP leader squandered her talents in a classic tale of hubris
Fear and fury in Belfast
Violence spiralled out of control in Northern Ireland in the aftermath of a shocking crime
The screaming spires
Oxford University must clarify where it stands on academic freedom
Losing control of the narrative
The British establishment no longer sets the terms of public debate over migration
The radical feminism—Christianity pipeline
For radical feminists, clarity about the realities of sex often opens onto a search for moral order
QAnon for centrist dads
Peter Chappell’s What If Reform Wins is less a political forecast than a Westminster panic attack in novel form
Will we miss Mahmood?
Shabana Mahmood has been a voice of sanity in the Labour Party
Leaving the ECHR would not make Britain like Russia
The case for opposing withdrawal is currently intellectually fatuous
A crippling consensus
Labour, the Greens and the Lib Dems are singing from the same destructive hymn sheet
The name game
Nominative determinism is a rich seam to be mined in sport
The limits of choice
Sometimes, we do know better than people who are harming themselves
The problem with price freezes
Freezing prices is not half as simple (or cheap) as politicians often think
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 art of statesmanship
An exhibition at the Wallace Collection shows how Britain’s greatest wartime leader found solace and satisfaction in painting
Zack Polanski’s war on carrots
Cheap food is not evidence of exploitation but of competition — something Adam Smith understood long before Zack Polanski
