

The Tories are dead
A toxic and debased brand may be still in denial, but the only vital signs on the right are now with Reform

The complete unknown who could wreck Labour
Morgan McSweeney is the most influential invisible man in British politics. Is he to blame for Labour’s rightward turn and tanking opinion poll numbers?

Starmer’s realism won’t go far in fantasyland politics
Starmer is doing deals as old certainties vanish. But frustrated voters will be hard to convince

Laura Loomer, the real first lady
Loomer, rumoured to be Donald Trump’s girlfriend, is a hardcore right wing extremist. It’s a shame she’s also one of the most influential people in America

Da Pope’s new sandwich
A Chicago restaurant has begun selling ‘The Leo’, a limited-edition sandwich dipped in gravy and topped with peppers, in honour of the new pope

Why we love whodunnits
The story of the detective who gives a neat solution to the mess of human affairs is deeply satisfying – and reassuring
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The prime minister appears to know less about Brexit than Simon Cowell


Nigel Farage’s economic plans make Liz Truss look prudent

Letters: Labour needs to stop apeing Reform and start being positive


The complete unknown who could wreck Labour


Alastair Campbell’s Diary: The Pope vs JD Vance


Bertrand Russell: lessons from a pacifist prophet


Germansplaining: The battle over free speech

Lie of the Week: Farage on the UK-India trade deal


A bit of pocket money for Rishi Sunak
The former prime minister picked up £160,175 for a single speaking engagement in the US


Leaked recording reveals Tories’ Dublin disorientation
Shadow home secretary Chris Philp was caught out revealing how Boris Johnson’s government hadn’t understood the EU’s asylum rules


Jonathan Gullis finally gets a job
The former Conservative MP is returning to the world of work after struggling to land an interview as a teacher
Writers

Alastair Campbell

Marie Le Conte

Matthew d’Ancona

Patience Wheatcroft

Tanit Koch

Paul Mason
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The prime minister appears to know less about Brexit than Simon Cowell


A bit of pocket money for Rishi Sunak


Leaked recording reveals Tories’ Dublin disorientation

Wherever you stand on Gaza, starving children to death is indefensible


Jonathan Gullis finally gets a job


Nigel Farage’s economic plans make Liz Truss look prudent
Podcasts

The Two Matts
Blessed are the jet-givers: St Donald goes to Qatar

The Two Matts
Mr Starmer’s strange island of strangers

The Two Matts
Q&A: Rip-off train fares, vile Andrea Jenkyns and bye bye Weightwatchers

The Two Matts
The problem with this Labour government is…

The Two Matts
Zbig: the man who shaped the world

The Two Matts
Disaster prepping, taxing sugar and enough of Tony Blair already


The prime minister appears to know less about Brexit than Simon Cowell
While Keir Starmer no longer resembles the man many people voted for, the former X Factor judge is calling for a new referendum on Europe


Leaked recording reveals Tories’ Dublin disorientation
Shadow home secretary Chris Philp was caught out revealing how Boris Johnson’s government hadn’t understood the EU’s asylum rules


Alastair Campbell’s Diary: The Pope vs JD Vance
Robert Prevost may have been born American, but his experience, views and values are as far from Trumpian as were his predecessor’s


Spies, lies and Britain’s prize: We still need a Brexit inquiry
A photo of three Bulgarians convicted of espionage for Russia at a Commons committee on EU membership has opened up an old question


The ‘Brexit benefit’ trade deal shows we’re weaker out of the EU
Keir Starmer has done the best he could at a relatively low cost, knowing Britain lacks the backing to fully stand up to Trump

Wobbling Starmer must not turn back on the Brexit reset
Battered Keir Starmer knows the May 19 Brexit summit will bring more criticism from Nigel Farage. But the PM can’t turn back now
The New Europe


Why you should visit Heligoland
Eighty years ago, the island was nearly wiped off the map. Today it relies on wind-farm crews more than tourists

Greenland knows what it wants, and it’s not JD Vance
If the vice-president wishes to return to the country, he may want to be better prepared

The revenge of the Spanish economy
Spain has made a spectacular economic recovery since the last economic crash– but Spaniards are still struggling and fear Trump’s tariffs might trigger another disaster

North Macedonia loses an entire generation
With 59 fatalities and over 200 hospitalisations, the fire at Club Pulse was the stuff of nightmares

Putin’s tortured prisoners of war
Evidence and eyewitness testimony shows how Russia has maimed some Ukrainian PoWs. But other soldiers and civilians have simply disappeared from sight

Ukraine’s defiance is rarer than minerals
The most egregious demands from the US-Ukraine minerals deal’s first draft have gone. But, in Kyiv, there are fears that it still offers no concrete security guarantees

Steve Witkoff, the world’s worst diplomat
He is a life-long property developer. So how the hell did he end up as America’s top international negotiator, on everything from Ukraine to the Iran nuclear deal?


The fall of Saigon, 50 years on
Half a century ago, a humiliated America scrambled out of a losing war. But parallels with Ukraine show little has changed


Alastair Campbell’s Diary: Putin’s dirty tricks campaign
Whether or not they were involved in the Heathrow fire, the Russians revel in the mayhem their hybrid actions cause

The day Putin took power
The foundations of the Kremlin strongman’s ascent to power were forged in the ruins of Grozny a quarter of a century ago

Père-Lachaise: Where Paris goes to die
The cemetery, opened by Napoleon, was unpopular at first. But then the VIPs came – followed by the ghosts

Utagawa Hiroshige, master of fire and water
The elemental works of the Japanese ukiyo-e artist are celebrated in a new book and exhibition at the British Museum


Why did they bother with this mis-shaped monument to Sondheim?


Dilettante: The blind faith of old-school photography

Raoul Lufbery, the Frenchman who became America’s greatest aviator


Heathens and pagans


Why we love whodunnits

A continent of Hans Grubers

Raoul Lufbery, the Frenchman who became America’s greatest aviator

Eddie Barclay, the man who invented showbiz

Jerzy Kosiński, the writer whose last act was to plagiarise himself

Maria Schell, Hollywood’s grounded alien

Totò, the unlucky actor who took it on the chin
