Articles

Long Read
Ideas

The Responsible Society: What Thatcher can still teach us

It’s only on the basis of truth that power should be won – or indeed can be worth winning. Margaret Thatcher, 1996 It is a hundred years since Margaret Thatcher was born in Grantham. Fifty years since she took over the Conservative Party. Almost 35 years since she was forced from office. Today’s voters are […]

Burnham's prescription will make Britain sicker
Ideas

Burnham’s prescription will make Britain sicker

Andy Burnham has one prescription, and he means to fill it, whatever the patient walks in with. The man with the broken arm, the woman with chest pains, the child with a fever: each leaves the surgery with the same pad of repeat scripts, which call for higher taxes on the rich, more generous benefits […]

Brexit

A decade on from Brexit, and we’re still divided

Ten years ago, the EU referendum created two new political tribes: Leavers and Remainers. As Sara Hobolt and I show in our new book ‘Tribal Politics: How Brexit divided Britain’, both tribes are very much still with us. Even today, about 60% of people in Britain identify as a Remainer or a Leaver, and people’s […]

The bond markets are right to be worried
UK Politics

The bond markets are right to be worried

Whether through pig ignorance or wilful blindness, politicians of all stripes have presided over the slow decay of Britain’s economy for at least the past two decades.  Under the Conservatives, taxation and public spending increased while growth and productivity slumped. It was largely this legacy that saw them ejected from office in 2024 when, after […]

Economics

The King’s Speech confirms that Starmer is our safest bet

This was not the King’s Speech Keir Starmer imagined it would be. The crisis engulfing the Prime Minister has become so terminal that Buckingham Palace even questioned whether it would be appropriate for the King to speak at all. But Starmer hasn’t maneuvered himself to the top job for nothing, and he patently won’t go […]

UK Politics

The Tories can win London – if they’re smart

I was in a field in Kent as the local election results came in. As an unapologetic adherent of the metropolitan elite, it’s not my natural environment. But over the weekend it became increasingly clear that I’m not the only Londoner who’s out of touch with the rest of the country. The capital is now […]

Politics

Keir Starmer is feeling the heat

After a poor set of local election results, the Government has returned to a familiar British political reflex: the ‘reset’. It is a word that sounds decisive, almost therapeutic, signalling that a Prime Minister has learned from their own mistakes and is now freshly aligned with reality. Yet in Westminster, the ‘reset’ is less a […]

Economics

Has the Right given up on economics?

We are living through a Tocquevillian moment: ‘The evils which are endured with patience so long as they seem inevitable become intolerable as soon as a hope can be entertained of escaping from them.’ The two-party system appears to be collapsing. The rightward turn seen in the United States may well be repeated in the […]

Economics

No, Margaret Thatcher did not destroy Britain

Britain is in a funk. Economic sclerosis, populist agitation, social fragmentation – now with extra domestic terrorism – and a political class bewildered by it all. What to do? Enter historian A.G. Hopkins. In his book, ‘The Land Where Nothing Works: How Britain Lost the Plot’, Hopkins’ sweeping analysis explores the last two centuries of […]

UK Politics

The old politics is dead. The old parties aren’t

In leisure centres and town halls across the country, the cheers of the victors can be heard alongside the half-hearted claps of the vanquished. Democracy at its most local – and for the people involved, most personal – is being played out in over 130 English councils, including every borough in London. Few beyond the […]

UK Politics

Britain needs more U-turns

Governments rarely earn applause for changing their minds, but sometimes it is well-deserved. In the past few weeks, ministers have killed two policies that would have made Britain poorer, a one-year freeze on private rents and a statutory power to direct where pension funds invest.  The rent freeze, briefed on a Sunday and definitively buried […]

Policy

The pension power grab must be stopped

The House of Lords is trying to help the Government recognise the dangers of the mandation powers it wishes to include in the wide-ranging Pension Schemes Bill. It has asked the Commons to reconsider three times. How did we reach this impasse? Ministers believe investing in private assets will enhance workers’ long-term returns. Most large auto-enrolment […]

Policy

Britain cannot plan its way to prosperity

The following is an edited transcript of Lord Wolfson’s keynote speech at the 2026 Margaret Thatcher Conference on Prosperity, organised by the Centre for Policy Studies, in which he argues that replacing Britain’s failed planning system would be the first step towards a freer, faster-growing economy. My father actually worked for Mrs Thatcher as her […]

Politics

Labour’s dishonesty has become intolerable

It takes a special kind of political crisis to make a right-winger agree with Diane Abbott.  As Keir Starmer faced MPs on Monday over his appointment of renowned sinophile and friend of Jeffrey Epstein Peter Mandelson as ambassador to the US, Abbott struck at the heart of the Prime Minister’s weakness. Portraying himself as feeling […]

Policy

Your pension is not the Chancellor’s piggybank

This is the transcript of a speech delivered by the Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions during the Commons debate on the Pension Schemes Bill on April 15, 2026. Who knew that the Pension Schemes Bill would become so controversial? It is a Bill on which there was so much consensus; a Bill […]

Policy

Britain is pricing out its young

This week the IMF cut its forecast for UK growth by a hefty 0.5 percentage points to 0.8% for 2026, the sharpest downgrade of any G7 economy. The OECD last week went lower still, to 0.7%, leaving the Office for Budget Responsibility’s forecast of 1.1% looking increasingly optimistic. Britain cannot afford to persist with an […]