Troubles
Keir Starmer is causing trouble over the Troubles
The government should stop caving in over Northern Ireland legacy issues
Labour’s other capitulation to terrorism
Starmer has allowed the Irish to dictate Britain’s policy on Troubles-related offences
Leave our veterans alone
One-sided investigations of killings in the Troubles
Why compensate the families of terrorists?
It would be immoral as well as irresponsible
Most Read
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
Leaving it all in the ring
The great British bullfighting hopeful, Alexander Paul
What if the AI bubble bursts?
Arguing that an AI bubble is a good thing reeks of techno-optimist complacency
Beware the British ICE
Mass deportation of Muslims will not solve antisemitism, but feed feelings of alienation
Labour’s Gagging Acts
Labour is taking inspiration from Pitt the Younger when it comes to curbing speech
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
I’m worried about Andy Burnham
If Burnham does to Britain what he has done to Manchester, we are in big trouble
Soft competition
There are participation prizes to everyone at the Venice Biennale
Why do we still have social housing?
A decade working in Social Housing taught me that the sector’s perverse incentives guarantee the perpetuation of the very poverty it exists to eradicate
Conservatives should learn from Labour
We might disagree with the ideas of Labour politicians, but we can learn from their methods
French lessons for Farage
Following the Makerfield defeat, Reform should look across the channel to Rassemblement National for strategies
The hidden bureaucracy shaping Britain’s university curriculum
Putting an end to ideological capture must start with the Quality Assurance Agency
