
Far-right memes are poisoning British politics
Westminster ignores the ugly side of social media at its peril.
ByReviewing politics
and culture since 1913
Find here all of the New Statesman’s comment and analysis about social media and the digital age.
Westminster ignores the ugly side of social media at its peril.
By Andrew MarrA Tory MP, a Brexiteer historian, a Reform clown and a reality-TV star walk into an auditorium…
By Nicholas HarrisAs it should be.
By Finn McRedmondThe Baller League has updated the beautiful game for the attention-deficit era.
By Clive MartinAlso this week: Another pricey BBC settlement, and muzzling the Voice of America.
By Alison PhillipsThe American right has more in common with the misogynistic influencer than it pretends.
By Jill FilipovicIn her powerful memoir Under A Pink Sky, Esther Ghey writes her daughter was being killed by social media long…
By Pippa BaileyEven before the election, the young US cohort was already shifting right.
By Sarah ManavisThe left is losing its grip on the literary realm.
By Ella DornLove Island knows to appear more progressive than Big Brother or There’s Something About Miriam – but it’s got the…
By Amelia TaitThe 28-year-old socialist MP on her viral fame, social media abuse and Keir Starmer’s leadership.
By George Eaton