02.02

Miriam Cates MP: we’re obsessed with what we can measure The Red Wall MP discusses her concerns over school closures

UnHerd

02.02

The transgender debate is tearing the SNP apart Joanna Cherry's card has probably been marked for some time

Debbie Hayton

02.02

Free money or free school meals? There’s another option Technology may offer a third way

Peter Franklin

Monday
01.02

01.02

The myth of ‘Scouse not English’ Liverpool has long thought itself detached from the rest of England — but is it?

David Jeffery

01.02

Stop explaining away pervy men as ‘structural sexism’ We need to be honest about today's sexual politics

Mary Harrington

01.02

The Proud Boys leader is not a noble savage Academics are turning to an old concept to explain Enrique Tarrio's sins

Alex Perez

Friday
29.01

29.01

Special report: is closing schools immoral? Current and former teachers speak out on the true impact on children

UnHerd

29.01

Why the Government should lobotomise its ‘Treasury Brain’ No other advanced economy has sold off so much vital national infrastructure

Aris Roussinos

29.01

Kate Bingham saved vaccines when Europe couldn’t It's best to avoid criticising someone when they're right

Tom Chivers

29.01

A public health campaign based on a pussy pun — really? MyGP's new campaign has got people talking for all the wrong reasons

Kristina Murkett

Thursday
28.01

28.01

The sliming of William Shawcross The new Independent Reviewer of Prevent faces bad-faith accusations

Emma Webb

28.01

Does calling a man a pig perpetuate human supremacy? Using animals as insults reinforces speciesism, according to PETA

Peter Franklin

28.01

The new reign of the imperious slay queen A reminder of how sycophantic America’s journalists are towards those in power

Ed West

28.01

How the nationalists tweak their records to escape scrutiny Devolved administrations have a habit of making comparisons impossible

Henry Hill

Wednesday
27.01

27.01

Gamestop is a classic Robin Hood tale Social media is empowering the anti-establishment current in American culture

Wessie du Toit

27.01

George Monbiot’s ‘Ministry of Truth’ is a dangerous idea Some of my fellow lockdown hardliners are going off the deep end

Peter Franklin

27.01

Why is a Holocaust museum putting on a George Floyd exhibition? A universal progressive politics is influencing museums around the world

Hannah Gal

Tuesday
26.01

26.01

Football politics is already complicating this year’s Euros Who can — and will — host a Covid-secure tournament?

Jonathan Wilson

26.01

Are we about to witness a cloning boom? It's time we made cloning a major industry in the UK

Peter Franklin

26.01

Digital ghosts: the eerie next step in your customised world Microsoft's new patent could immortalise your personality long after death

Mary Harrington

Monday
25.01

25.01

Not dead yet: Conservatism in Wales is alive and kicking The narrative of decline and infighting is not based in reality

Ioan Phillips

25.01

Xi Jinping addresses Davos — from a parallel universe The Chinese president made no mention of his country's pandemic response


25.01

What the British Left can learn from Denmark The Danish PM's 'zero asylum seekers' goal will neutralise the populist Right

Rakib Ehsan

25.01

40 years on from its creation, the SDP has another chance The Limehouse Declaration offered a different blueprint for governance

William Clouston

Friday
22.01

22.01

Lana Del Rey, Laschian conservative The singer echoes the late academic's distaste for the US's narcissistic culture

Ralph Leonard

22.01

The Fire Brigades Union has nothing to apologise for Throughout the pandemic, firefighters have worked for the national interest

Paul Embery

22.01

Joe Biden’s European conundrum Can a new president stop the EU and the USA drifting apart?

Aris Roussinos

22.01

Brexit was not a ‘Whiggish’ project Will the hare-brained historical analogies ever stop?

Peter Franklin

22.01

Geoffrey Chaucer: a victim of the university diversity drive? My beloved old institution is not doing its students a service

Rory Waterman

22.01

The basic flaw in British Government No.10 is pathetically weak compared to other Western executives

Peter Franklin

Thursday
21.01

21.01

Latest infections data may be less gloomy than the headlines Gaps in the data mean that infections could have declined from the peak

Tom Chivers

21.01

Don’t dismiss Joe Biden on a single issue For all his faults, he will be better on women's rights than Trump was

Julie Bindel

21.01

Sacked Eton teacher: I stand by my patriarchy lecture In his first interview, Will Knowland tells Freddie Sayers about his departure from the school

UnHerd

21.01

Does good taste excuse grand corruption? There's little difference between state malfeasance and national heritage

Peter Franklin

Wednesday
20.01

20.01

Tears everywhere at the departure of Trump The occasion proved all too much for the nation's best and brightest

UnHerd

20.01

The future looks bleak for Welsh Conservatism The party is confused by devolution, and embarrassed by its leader

Theo Davies-Lewis

20.01

Donald Trump’s 1776 Report is a comical own goal I’ve read Ladybird books with more complexity

Dominic Sandbrook

20.01

The two faces of Christianity in Joe Biden’s America The practising Catholic inherits a country divided by faith

Elizabeth Oldfield

Tuesday
19.01

19.01

Get ready for the age of long lockdowns Firmly entrenched as a public policy tool, lockdowns loom long into our futures

UnHerd

19.01

Yelling ‘transphobia’ is not an argument Activists don't want to debate a new book — they want to shut discussion down

Debbie Hayton

19.01

Mark Drakeford has finally dropped the ball Poor vaccine management may spark a nascent anti-devolution movement

Henry Hill

Monday
18.01

18.01

Wayne Rooney: Chaucerian hero Vulgarity played an important part in both men's careers

Tomiwa Owolade

18.01

Stop fighting over street names Robert Jenrick's ideological battle with Birmingham Council is unnecessary

Matthew Sweet

18.01

Why Viktor Orban chooses China over the EU The CCP's imperialism comes with fewer strings attached

Mary Harrington

18.01

Adam Wagner: are lockdowns a threat to human rights? The human rights lawyer gave Freddie Sayers a sobering assessment

Freddie Sayers

18.01

Michael Gove’s three point plan for tackling wokeness Channelling Sir Roger Scruton, the minister offered some sage advice

James Billot

Saturday
16.01

16.01

The election of Armin Laschet is deeply worrying The new CDU chairman has shown a soft-heartedness for autocratic regimes

Rakib Ehsan

Friday
15.01

15.01

Stop stat-shaming the public Telling the public that they're ignorant is not a way to convince them

Peter Franklin

15.01

Don’t let elite universities drop their entry requirements As a disadvantaged student, I wanted to prove I could get the top grades

Sophie Watson

15.01

Weimar analogies miss the point of America’s turbulence The violent rise of QAnon is an anthropological, not historical, phenomenon

Aris Roussinos

Thursday
14.01

14.01

What explains the Germany Covid surge? Infection rates are soaring at a rate far higher than in the first wave

Tom Chivers

14.01

The most important economic trend in the world today The collapse of interest rates isn't a weird anomaly — it's here to stay

UnHerd

14.01

No, elite overproduction does not cause social unrest Jobless graduates are a human tragedy, not a recipe for political strife

Eric Kaufmann

Wednesday
13.01

13.01

Donald Trump was America’s first post-modern President Taking him literally or seriously is beside the point — it's all just narrative

Peter Franklin

13.01

Source: Boris Johnson and Michael Gove at odds over SNP strategy The PM is said to be against devolving more powers

Henry Hill

13.01

Don’t count Josh Hawley out The senator is the object of enormous hatred and fear, but all may not be lost


Tuesday
12.01

12.01

Does the Government still care about levelling up? The social fabric of our nation is fraying — it needs to be urgently addressed

Peter Franklin

12.01

Roger Scruton taught me how to live with my disability I understood the late philosopher's emphasis on limits more than most

Henry George

12.01

Do similar gender roles always constitute “progress”? A new paper looked at farming practices in arid regions — with surprising results

Mary Harrington

Monday
11.01

11.01

There’s a world beyond China and the EU A Chatham House report on Britain's international role is condescending

Peter Franklin

11.01

I volunteer at a vaccine centre, and I’m worried Without better management, these could become superspreader events

Aria Babu

11.01

After Twitter, where will Donald Trump go next? He has a number of options, none of which are perfect

James Billot

Saturday
09.01

09.01

The Twitter purge moves us closer to a civilisational internet Europeans urgently need to decouple from American political chaos

Aris Roussinos

Friday
08.01

08.01

Fox News starts to pivot away from Donald Trump Rupert Murdoch's retreat from Trumpism could unleash an epic conflict


08.01

Why funny men are the most dangerous What starts as comedy often ends in tragedy

Ed West

08.01

Remote learning? 1.8m children don’t have a laptop Digital poverty is bleaker than ever, and the government still has no answer

Kristina Murkett

Thursday
07.01

07.01

No, what happened in the Capitol was not a coup Wednesday's insurrection may even prove beneficial to the United States

Edward Luttwak

07.01

Will the New York Times commission Senator Cotton now? The Republican is sticking to his law and order message

James Billot

07.01

How to make American democracy more democratic I’ve got a better idea than abolishing the electoral college

Daniel Baer

Wednesday
06.01

06.01

Jonathan Haidt: the political chaos isn’t over yet Freddie Sayers asks the author and moral psychologist if the principles of The Righteous Mind still stand

UnHerd

06.01

Is our pace of vaccination slowing down? The latest number announced by the PM was disappointing

Freddie Sayers

06.01

50 million jabs by March — it’s possible, and necessary Fatalism around the vaccine rollout isn't just wrong, it's unwarranted

Jonathon Kitson

Tuesday
05.01

05.01

The SNP is trespassing on Westminster’s turf The Party has found a new way to undermine Britain’s global position

Henry Hill

05.01

The Merchant of Venice deserves to be cancelled It's hardly 'political correctness gone mad' to say the play is anti-Semitic


Monday
04.01

04.01

Boris Johnson fails the marshmallow test Time and again, this government fails to take action when needed

Tom Chivers

04.01

Why did the Chinese Communist Party turn on Jack Ma? A brutal struggle is taking place over where power lies in China's digital economy

Mary Harrington

04.01

Bring back Tony Blair! Only the former PM seems to appreciate that we are in a wartime emergency

Ed West

Friday
01.01

01.01

Careful, Michael Sheen — Wales likes its Prince Welsh nationalists ignore the monarchy's popularity at their peril

Theo Davies-Lewis

01.01

Don’t pity the pornographers When moral arguments are tied to power, careers are ruined — in both directions

Mary Harrington

Thursday
31.12

31.12

With the China deal, the EU falls back to hard realpolitik Europe is not taking sides in the coming great power struggle

Aris Roussinos

Wednesday
30.12

30.12

Ian Blackford’s shoddy history and clumsy myth-making The SNP leader's Commons speech was riddled with inaccuracies

Henry Hill

30.12

What’s the real cost of sending kids back to school? With days to go, the government needs to come clean on their reasoning

Tom Chivers