Lady Hale
There is no human right to assisted suicide
Lady Hale is wrong about the existing laws
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
Losing control of the narrative
The British establishment no longer sets the terms of public debate over migration
Fear and fury in Belfast
Violence spiralled out of control in Northern Ireland in the aftermath of a shocking crime
How the Southport riots broke Starmer’s government
A combination of authoritarianism and hypocrisy proved fatal
The party of retailers
Labour’s drift from its union roots reveals the party no longer knows what — or who — it is for
Sport’s regime changes
Canadian snooker has gone the way of Hungarian table tennis
The price is right
Stories about outrageously profligate eating have the appeal of scandal
The joys of village cricket
Cricket embodies much of what is valuable about our culture
Entebbe and the Israeli way of war
Fifty years after Israel’s most audacious hostage rescue, its legacy still shapes how the country understands security, citizenship and war
The case for vapes
Arguments for prohibitionism disappear in a cloud of vapour
The man who ended overreach
Lord Reed’s tenure as president of the Supreme Court has been admired by those who value the stability of the law
Just a Prime Minister
Keir Starmer only seems to have one answer to his critics
Farewell to a gentle jazz-lover
Scholarship trumps zealotry, particularly when it is veiled by modesty
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
The problem with Palantir
The software company is attempting to redefine politics for the worse
