
Jacinda Ardern’s unexamined life
In her memoir, the former prime minister seems more concerned with the symbols of politics than the actual politics the prompted…
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Find the New Statesman’s latest politics book reviews and our curated lists featuring the best writing on politics.
In her memoir, the former prime minister seems more concerned with the symbols of politics than the actual politics the prompted…
By Megan GibsonThe Italian prime minister’s autobiography revises her and her country’s history. But Meloni’s success is a template for right populist…
By David BroderAn account of the Labour Party’s rise to power presents the PM as a man with a deep aversion to…
By Andrew MarrRobert D Kaplan argues that in a time of uncertainty, we must resist radical change. But these cautionary tales are…
By Bruno MaçãesIn his book Dawn’s Early Light, the architect of Project 2025 preaches the necessity of burning Washington’s “elite” institutions to…
By Freddie HaywardOver a single night in 2015, terrorists killed 130 people in Paris. In Emmanuel Carrère’s account of the ensuing trial,…
By Andrew HusseyNew books by Anushka Asthana and Michael Ashcroft show that the lessons of 2024 are sobering for both parties.
By Rachel CunliffeNew studies of Winston Churchill and Harold Wilson show the rewards and perils of political biography.
By Simon HefferThe Labour MP’s third book, Let’s Be Honest, is a powerful, blunt and cathartic takedown of everything wrong with our…
By Rachel CunliffeHis memoir Hillbilly Elegy was a bestseller; now he’s a Trumpist with political ambitions. Is James David Vance the future…
By Sarah BaxterThe island is a playground for the imperial ambitions of China and the US – and its future is far…
By David MuirBoris Johnson and his court brought an already corrupt system to new lows. Can ethics be restored to politics?
By Marina WheelerTom Burgis’s Cuckooland shows how the power to shape our politics is available to the highest bidder.
By Will LloydDeliberation and reversals are democracy’s great virtues, writes Jonathan White. But can it keep pace with a world in crisis?
By Oliver EagletonFrom Mussolini to Mao, autocrats have often turned to writers to tighten their grip on power.
By Lucy Hughes-HallettTwo new books show that a century after it formed its first government, the party is once again wrestling with…
By Andrew MarrThirteen years of Tory rule, a season of scandal and Labour on the rise – the hectic Britain of 1963…
By Alan JohnsonShattered by Brexit, the Tory party has been captured by populist disrupters. Can true conservatives win it back?
By William WaldegraveIn his new book, the former New Statesman political editor identifies the defining moments when Britain changed.
By Steve RichardsThe author of Bronze Age Mindset has galvanised US conservatives – but his adolescent philosophy will soon be forgotten.
By John Gray