
Why Labour has embraced class politics
Starmer’s cabinet has broken with the model of the Blair years.
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Starmer’s cabinet has broken with the model of the Blair years.
By George EatonHow should liberals pick between Donald Trump and this bastion of institutional elitism?
By Lee SiegelA deeply reported survey of a much-mythologised slice of Britain reveals a heterogeneous, complex demographic.
By Tanjil RashidRachel Reeves is not just facing an economic crisis – she is suffering from a failure of philosophical imagination.
By Ian WattsLabour must recover its radical tradition and close Britain’s education privilege gap.
By David Kynaston and Francis GreenMy father died long ago. I now understand that he was part of the lost world of the stoical conservative…
By Jonathan RutherfordThe revival of liberalism cannot be conducted on Trumpian terms.
By Lee SiegelWho are “working people” these days anyway?
By Nicholas HarrisHer novels are so absurd they are rarely analysed. Can they tell us anything about Britain and class?
By Tanya GoldAn elite by inheritance still holds sway but it has been joined by an elite of grafters.
By Nicholas HarrisWhy his story of individual aspiration has failed to resonate.
By Jennifer Jasmine WhiteThe debate over the Prime Minister’s background is a reflection of bourgeois neuroses.
By Ethan CroftTen years after publication, Capital in the Twenty-First Century remains a landmark study of inequality. Did it change anything?
By Quinn SlobodianKeir Starmer has pledged to boost social mobility, but the success of previous interventions is mixed.
By Harry Clarke-EzzidioThe tractor convoy has replaced the picket line as the symbol of working-class revolt.
By Michael LindSaltburn isn’t the first British film to scorn the petite bourgeoisie.
By Finn McRedmondThey no longer have a stranglehold on Oxbridge and would lose tax breaks under Labour. Can elite education survive?
By Melissa DenesThe shadow chancellor mixed fiscal discipline with class war. Both went down equally well in a changed Labour Party.
By Anoosh ChakelianMore Brits feel “working class” than 40 years ago, according to a major study seen exclusively by the New Statesman.
By Anoosh ChakelianThe left refuses to grapple with the realities of petty bourgeois life.
By Dan Evans