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The New Statesman | UK politics and culture

The New Statesmanwww.newstatesman.com

Reporting and analysis to help you understand the forces shaping the world - with Andrew Marr, Hannah Barnes, Kate Lamble and Tom Gatti, plus New Statesman writers and expert contributors.


WEEKLY SCHEDULE


Monday: Culture

Tom Gatti & Kate Mossman explore what cultural moments reveal about society and the world.


Wednesday: Insight

One story, zoomed out to help you understand the forces shaping the world.


Thursday: Politics

Andrew Marr and Hannah Barnes are joined by regulars Rachel Cunliffe and George Eaton, plus New Statesman writers and guests, to provide expert analysis of the latest in UK politics.


Friday: You Ask Us

Our weekly listener questions show, with Andrew Marr, Hannah Barnes and New Statesman writers.

Submit your questions at https://www.newstatesman.com/youaskus


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Episodes

Labour's first three months: the voters' verdict

Andrew Marr, Hannah Barnes and Rachel Cunliffe hear from a focus group of voters in a marginal Kent constituency, to get their views on Labour's first three months in government. They reveal why they're struggling to trust "posh" Keir Starmer, whether they regret their vote, and which public figure they would love to see in parliament. This focus group was arranged by Public First. 📚 READ The 100 days that shook Labour https://www.newstatesman.com/cover-story/2024/10/andrew-marr-100-days-that-s...

Oct 25, 202422 min

This is how Labour can fill the 'black hole'

Ben Zaranko, senior research economist from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, takes us through the numbers ahead of next week's budget, and the New Statesman's political editor Andrew Marr takes us through the politics. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Oct 24, 202421 min

Can we ever trust the US polls?

We’re just two weeks from the 2024 US Presidential election. Donald Trump is up against Kamala Harris. Polls are vanishingly close. They suggest Harris has a 53% chance of moving into the Oval office. But after years of incorrect predictions, can they be trusted? In this episode of Insight, Kate Lamble speaks with Scott Keeter from Pew Research centre as well as the New Statesman's data journalist Ben Walker about what can be gleaned from the polls, and if they are more trustworthy tha...

Oct 23, 202425 min

Who made Donald Trump?

Donald Trump has reshaped American politics. But who shaped him? A new film has some answers. The Apprentice , written by Gabriel Sherman and directed by Ali Abasi, charts the rise of a young Trump (Sebastian Stan) under the caustic tutelage of bulldog lawyer Roy Cohn (Jeremy Strong).  Megan Gibson interviews writer Gabriel Sherman to discuss the creative challenges of putting Trump on screen, and Tom Gatti speaks to New Statesman film critic David Sexton to explore whether star Sebastian S...

Oct 21, 202428 min

Will Kemi Badenoch split the Tories?

With "normal" James Cleverly out of the Tory leadership race, a listener asks if a Badenoch or Jenrick leadership would split the Conservative party in two. Andrew Marr, Hannah Barnes and Rachel Cunliffe answer listener questions in our weekly episode, You Ask Us - published every Friday. Also in this episode: do journalists talk about Westminster gossip too much? Our own gossipy journalists give their answer! 📚 READ Would Kemi Badenoch be worth the risk for the Conservatives? https://www.newst...

Oct 18, 202418 min

Should the government prescribe Ozempic?

The health secretary Wes Streeting has suggested this week that weight loss injections should be used to get Britain back to work. Is this a good idea? And what does it miss from the root of the problem? Hannah Barnes is joined by political editor Andrew Marr and business editor Will Dunn. Read: Wes Streeting can’t solve unemployment with weight-loss drugs Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Oct 17, 202424 min

Are we actually ready for assisted dying?

This is a deeply personal, deeply divisive issue; and today a private members bill to permit assisted dying in the UK is being presented to the House of Commons.  Politicians will have a free vote on the issue later this year. The New Statesman this week asks whether the UK and its care system is ready for such a law.  In this episode we speak to those who've lost loved ones and are left with questions about whether an assisted death would have been better, as well as palliative care e...

Oct 16, 202430 min

How do we solve the NHS productivity puzzle? | Sponsored

The NHS is facing the most difficult period in its history. Just days into office, the new government declared the official position of the Department for Health and Social Care is that the NHS is “broken”.   While there’s evidence NHS productivity has been growing at a faster rate than other public sectors over the last decade, major barriers still remain. The latest Office for National Statistics figures show NHS productivity in 2021/2022 was still 6.6% below pre-pandemic levels.   E...

Oct 12, 202427 min

Rachel Reeves on who will foot the budget bill

Andrew Marr sits down for an exclusive interview with the Chancellor of the Exchequer. And later on in the episode the team discuss what we might have missed from Labour's first 100 days in power. Sign up to the New Statesman's daily politics newsletter:  Morning Call   Submit a question for a future episode:  You Ask Us Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Oct 11, 202423 min

Nicola Sturgeon on Boris Johnson the “playground bully”

Power shifts inside Number 10, a Tory leadership shock twist, and Sturgeon reviews Johnson’s book. **follow in your podcast app so you never miss an episode** Keir Starmer has made changes at the top of his Number 10 team. Sue Gray has been ousted as chief of staff and replaced by the Labour campaign supremo Morgan McSweeney.  George Eaton and Rachel Cunliffe join Hannah Barnes to explore what this means - including what exactly a chief of staff does, and who Morgan McSweeney is. A shock tw...

Oct 10, 202437 min

The US election result is already being legally challenged

Right now the Republic National Committee is involved in around 120 legal cases across the US connected to the upcoming 2024 elections. It's predicted that we won't know the results of the election for days after the vote. And when we do it might very well be challenged. This is set to be the most litigious election in US history. So what does this mean practically? And is the scene being set for more political violence? Read more from Jill Filipovic Read more from Katie Stallard Hosted on Acast...

Oct 09, 202437 min

Is our political funding system broken?

"If we don't like it, we should demand it changes," one listener writes in. Rachel Cunliffe is joined by Andrew Marr and George Eaton to answer listener questions, including if Andrew stands by his comments from February that Starmer would be radical, and whether Lebanon has a right to self-defence. Sign up to the New Statesman's daily politics newsletter:  Morning Call   Submit a question for a future episode:  You Ask Us Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more informatio...

Oct 04, 202417 min

What really happened at the Conservative Party party?

And why is democracy a low priority for American voters? Rachel Cunliffe is joined by Andrew Marr, George Eaton, and Katie Stallard. Sign up to the New Statesman's daily politics newsletter:  Morning Call   Submit a question for a future episode:  You Ask Us Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Oct 03, 202428 min

One year of devastation in the Middle East

On the 7th October Sharone Lifschitz's parents were taken as hostages by Hamas. One year later her father, along with almost 100 other hostages, have not returned and the entire region stands at a crossroads. Tens of thousands have been killed and millions displaced by the ensuing conflict as Israel have conducted air strikes, first on Gaza, currently on Lebanon and Yemen. How did this conflict escalate so drastically? On this episode of the podcast Sharone Lifschitz and Lawrence Freedman, Emeri...

Oct 02, 202434 min

Could conspiracy trump democracy in America?

In a 2022 poll, a majority of Americans said they believe their government was corrupt and rigged, and more than a quarter believed it might soon be necessary to take up arms against it. Conspiracy theories have ripped across America’s political landscape for decades, but in the last 10 years the divide between fact and fiction has become almost indistinguishable at times. So how did we get here? Hannah Barnes, associate editor, is joined by journalist and broadcaster Gabriel Gatehouse.  Ho...

Sep 26, 202440 min

"Intensity, fury, passion": Starmer's conference speech

"A very dark speech, very serious, very closely argued, but there was passion there, but the passion was anger" - Andrew Marr reacts after Keir Starmer's speech at Labour party conference, the first Labour prime minister to do so in 15 years. We also hear from David Blunkett, Wes Streeting MP, Baroness Taylor, and Henry Tufnell MP, on the key takeaways from the party's time in Liverpool. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Sep 24, 202422 min

Can Rachel Reeves turn the page on Labour's pessimism?

We're coming to you from Liverpool where Rachel Reeves has just delivered her keynote speech at this year's Labour Party Conference. There were lots of smiles in the Chancellor's speech as well as the commitment to the tough economic decisions that she has to make, but has she managed to turn the page on Labour's rough beginning in government? Hannah Barnes hears from Andrew Marr, Rachel Cunliffe, and Andy Burnham, and after the break she speaks to the New Statesman's Nicholas Harris about his t...

Sep 23, 202430 min

Giveaways and Sue Gray's pay, do they matter?

Labour Party Conference is just around the corner and the party needs to tell a story about the bigger picture for their time in government, but could this get lost amongst the smaller stories cropping up around free clothes and the chief of staff's pay? Hannah Barnes, associate editor, is joined in the studio by Andrew Marr, political editor, and George Eaton, senior editor. Sign up to the New Statesman's daily politics newsletter:  Morning Call   Submit a question for a future episod...

Sep 20, 202418 min

Ed Davey thinks he could be leader of the opposition

Conference season is underway and Ed Davey sat down with the New Statesman's Rachel Cunliffe to set out his party's ambitions to become the party of opposition. We also hear from Wes Streeting and the political battle for NHS reform. Hannah Barnes is joined in the studio by Andrew Marr, political editor, and Rachel Cunliffe, associate political editor. Ed Davey: “The Conservatives are in our sights” Wes Streeting: “I don’t want to be the fun police” Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for mor...

Sep 19, 202425 min

Led By Donkeys: "Liz Truss was fair game"

Will Dunn meets the political pranksters who sent Liz Truss fleeing in rage. **Follow on your podcast app to get new episodes as soon as they're released** From films detailing Conservative hypocrisy projected on Parliament buildings, to remote-controlled lettuce banners unfurling over the head of the former Prime Minister, Led By Donkeys have been a regular fixture of political activism over the past decade. Now with a Labour government in place after 14 years of Tory rule, will the group - wit...

Sep 16, 202439 min

Why is US politics "so mad"?

Freddie Hayward rejoins the podcast in his new role as US correspondent to answer listener questions on the weird world of US politics.  **Hit 'follow' on your podcast app to get new episodes first** He speaks to Hannah Barnes and Rachel Cunliffe to discuss how Keir Starmer’s commitment to “tough choices” compares with the Kamala Harris campaign, and how US election campaigns use the vast amounts of money they receive in donations. – Read more:  Robert F Kennedy Jr and the end of the p...

Sep 13, 202425 min

Has Rachel Reeves made a “huge mistake”?

“She’s done an awful lot of damage to morale,” says Andrew Marr. Hit “Follow” in your podcast app to get new episodes as soon as they publish Chancellor Rachel Reeves secured a victory in Parliament for her proposed changes to the Winter Fuel allowance.  But the move has divided the Labour party, angered voters, and possibly tarnished Keir Starmer’s authority. Is this a sign Rachel Reeves “is not very good at politics”?  Andrew Marr and George Eaton join Hannah Barnes on this episode o...

Sep 12, 202432 min

Losing Gaza

“We cannot know what sort of human beings will emerge from this.” Following Hamas’s deadly attack on 7 October 2023, Israel’s military response has been described as “inevitable”. Eleven months on, the scope and ferocity of that military response has stunned the world.  In this episode of the podcast we speak to four of the writers who contributed to the New Statesman essay collection Losing Gaza . Raja Shehadeh: “Palestinians are not treated as human beings deserving of human rights” Ghada...

Sep 09, 202441 min

Is Jeremy Corbyn trolling Keir Starmer?

The former Labour leader’s new coalition could be “a real force” in Parliament, says Andrew Marr. **Hit ‘Follow’ in your podcast app to get every episode as soon as it drops** Jeremy Corbyn has formed a new “Independent Alliance” of MPs, united around opposition to the Gaza war. Answering a listener question on this “You Ask Us” episode, Andrew Marr says Corbyn could well attract more Labour MPs to his cause. This would make the Independent Alliance bigger than Reform UK, and could influence pol...

Sep 06, 202419 min

Grenfell prosecutions are now “essential” - Andrew Marr

The Grenfell report is damning. Will there finally be justice for Grenfell? -- After seven long years the Grenfell Inquiry has published its damning verdict: the 72 deaths caused by the Grenfell Tower fire were completely avoidable. The 1500-page report names and shames companies and government bodies who’s choices and actions led to the deaths. In this episode, Andrew Marr and Rachel Cunliffe join Hannah Barnes to discuss the findings of the inquiry and why justice must finally come for Grenfel...

Sep 05, 202426 min

Can Oasis bring back Cool Britannia?

Noel and Liam Gallagher have managed the impossible. They've apparently buried the hatchet and announced that Oasis is coming back in 2025. Is this the return of Cool Britannia? Rachel Cunliffe, associate editor, is joined by George Eaton, senior editor, to answer listener questions about ex-MP's jobs, SPADs, and the politics of Britpop. Sign up to the New Statesman's daily politics newsletter:  Morning Call   Submit a question for a future episode:  You Ask Us Hosted on Acast. Se...

Aug 29, 202422 min

"Things will get worse": is austerity back?

On Tuesday morning Keir Starmer addressed the nation and warned that Labour’s first Budget “is going to be painful”, suggesting that tax rises are on the way.  While the prime minister stressed that those with the “broadest shoulders should bear the heavier burden”, he warned that he won’t “shy away from making unpopular decisions”, raising the question of whether Labour is bringing back austerity. Rachel Cunliffe, associate political editor, is joined by George Eaton, senior editor. Hosted...

Aug 28, 202425 min

Should Labour push harder on immigration?

A listener asks: will Keir Starmer and the Labour government attempt to change the conversation around immigration, or continue with a more hawkish stance in an attempt to win over reform voters? Hannah Barnes and George Eaton discuss in our latest listener questions episode. They also answer questions on how the electorate might change by the next election and whether voting reform will have an impact in future. Send us a question: www.newstatesman.com/youaskus Read more: George’s interview wit...

Aug 23, 202415 min

Tories "scent blood" over Labour union deals

Labour have agreed pay deals with NHS staff, public service workers and now train drivers - but they've handed the conservatives an effective attack line. Are Labour really beholden to "union paymasters"? And can they sustain pay rises while cutting the winter fuel allowance? Hannah Barnes and George Eaton discuss on the New Statesman podcast. Also in this episode, Hannah and George look at the crisis in prisons, and Labour's plan to house inmates in police cells. Can Keir Starmer and new prison...

Aug 21, 202416 min

Elon Musk is The Joker of politics

And should Starmer be trying to befriend Elon Musk? Hannah Barnes, associate editor, is joined by senior editor George Eaton to answer this week's listener questions. Sign up to the New Statesman's daily politics newsletter:  Morning Call Submit a question for a future episode:  You Ask Us Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Aug 16, 202412 min
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