The president knows most of his executive orders will be challenged in court. He wants the fight.
His studies of Austrian writers, at times more fiction than fact, offer a guide to the artist he would become.
But the Israeli war machine has migrated, not retired. On 21 January, 48 hours after Gaza’s ceasefire, Israel launched ...
In the life and work of Correlli Barnett, we can find all the most dangerous currents of contemporary conservatism.
In the acknowledgements at the end of her new book, Open Socrates, the philosopher Agnes Callard writes: “Socrates compares writing down one’s ideas to planting seeds in barren soil from which nothing ...
In a close-up portrait of an intolerably contemptuous woman, the veteran director returns to his miserabilist comic mode.
The future of the Inflation Reduction Act hangs in the balance following the inauguration of Donald Trump.
What does Trump 2.0 mean for the UK? Freddie Hayward joins the podcast to answer listener questions. Following his inauguration on Monday, January 20, Donald Trump signed a flurry of executive orders ...
Has Rachel Reeves given in to the non-doms? Or is it just another win for the attention economy? By Will Dunn The news from Davos yesterday was that Rachel Reeves had been persuaded to “relax non-dom ...
“Be a selfish bastard” counts among the entrepreneur’s maxims. By Sarah Manavis When watching a 2013 YouTube video titled “GENERIC BEER IS MADE BY PIMPS & THIEVES” posted by James Watt, the founder of ...
A digitally enabled workforce is critical to the UK’s global competitiveness. By Sharon Hague Keir Starmer rightly identifies that AI should be central to the UK’s future economic vision – but the ...