Islamic extremism
The Islamists’ young recruits
Islamist networks are increasingly targeting children, and the British state refuses to acknowledge the problem
It’s time to ban the Brotherhood
Britain can no longer afford to ignore the Muslim Brotherhood’s quiet but far-reaching influence
Most Read
How religion shapes football fandom
The meaning of football is intertwined with the meaning of faith
Why has Keir Starmer been so unpopular?
He was the perfect embodiment of a failing system
Babies need women
Leaving children with only men who are not their parents is foolish and dangerous
Can Russell T Davies write “terfs”?
In Tip Toe, Russell T Davies is more nuanced than one might expect — much to the dismay of gender ideologues
Chopping The Onion
It is neither brave nor clever to portray dissenting women as insane
Killing the bill
Parliament has not approved assisted suicide — but the fight to revive it has already begun.
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
Class war in the upper house
The end of the Lords’ ancient
right to resolve peerage disputes
is the latest casualty of Labour’s
constitutional vandalism
Where are all the ambitious Scots?
Whole sectors were once dominated by Caledonian migrants
Reform’s man in Makerfield
An interview with Rob Kenyon about online controversies and national priorities
What the reparations debate says about Britain
Social and ideological shifts mean that we face an increasingly divided future
The problem with prohibiting political dishonesty
It will be used to stifle freedom and not just to curb mistruths
We must get serious about anti-Jewish terror
Britain faces a dangerous rise in anti-Jewish violence and must get real about its implications
Today Havering, tomorrow Westminster
The local elections exposed a political class united mainly by its inability to feel embarrassment
