Online Safety Act
The tyranny of brain rot
Obsessive screen use is sending young minds down the Skibidi Toilet
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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
Ethnic minorities are abandoning Labour
It is not just Muslim voters who have been abandoning the Labour Party
Symphonies have life
John McCabe: 2 symphonies and cello concerto (Signum Classics)
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.
Restore the King James Bible
Those who are opposed, please consider, in the bowels of Christ, whether you may be mistaken
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
It’s time to see Brexit through
The next government must finally drag Britain out of the European Union’s tractor beam
A moment of profound national unseriousness
Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch know that the world faces crises — but are they part of the crises?
What is wrong now was wrong before
Julia Gillard should not pretend that the “unintended consequences” of the gender debate were unknowable
Itamar Ben-Gvir, heel
The Israeli demagogue is a bleak but interesting model of a modern politician
A country at war with itself
Washington politics can
best be understood through the history
of bitter factional in-fi ghting within both
the Democratic and Republican parties
Is football hooliganism fashionable?
As violence returns to Edgware Road, official insistence that two-tier policing is a myth looks increasingly difficult to sustain
Out with the old?
Reform seems to be thriving, and Labour seems to be losing, but what can actually change?
