Category: Uncategorized

Total Results: 7672


A protester in Hong Kong throws a tear gas canister back at police. (Photo by Ivan Shum - Clicks Images/Getty Images)
1 Oct 2019 - 1:05am

Why the UK can’t walk away from Hong Kong The former colonial power has a legal and moral responsibility to help bring about a solution to the crisis

Evan Fowler

01.10

Drinking in the madness of social media The pompous asses who populate our public discourse could be straight from a 17th-century coffee house

Gareth Roberts

Monday
30.09

30.09

Can Boris win back Brexit Party voters? The Conservative strategy to woo back leavers may have misjudged Nigel Farage's appeal

Matthew Goodwin

30.09

Five ways the Tories could lose the election Boris Johnson needs to understand what went wrong for Theresa May in 2017

Peter Franklin

30.09

How to be a responsible globalist Immigration isn't only about economics — so we need to reframe the debate

Hassan Damluji

30.09

Social mobility won’t bring social justice The assumption that everyone is born with equal abilities makes it harder to help the less advantaged

Mary Harrington

Friday
27.09

27.09

How desperate is Doncaster for Brexit? For the Tory Party to survive, it will need to claim some Labour heartlands at the next election. Our correspondent visits a prime target

Ian Birrell

27.09

Whatever happened to ‘publish and be damned’? The cancelling of James Flynn's book is another sign that much of the industry has stopped being a place for the free exchange of ideas

Douglas Murray

27.09

Imagine David Cameron had won his referendum If Remain had won, would Leavers really have left the political stage?

Peter Franklin

27.09

How Labour could win back its people There were signs in Brighton that some in the Party are beginning to understand what it will take to win

Paul Embery

27.09

Corbyn’s Labour resounds with loathing This year's conference in Brighton revealed a monomaniacal party removed from reality and completely in denial

Tanya Gold

Thursday
26.09

26.09

A vision of Britain’s polarised future A Briton in the US explains why we can expect partisanship to get far, far worse

Daniel Kalder