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Foreword

Political parties can and do die. The Whigs of the 19th-century United States and the Progressive Conservative Party of 20thcentury Canada were once major forces; today they are no more. Once-mighty Pasok in Greece is today on the critically endangered list, and the hollowed-out French Socialists could soon head that way too (see Lucy Wadham on p44).

Such talk might sound fanciful when applied to the Labour Party, especially after a bungled Conservative budget. It still runs the big cities, retains over 200 MPs, and has recently doubled its membership. The unremittingly dreadful polls are not on their own enough to start reading Labour’s last rites, not even after those polls translated into dire totals of real votes at two recent by-elections, one of which—Copeland—was arguably the worst defeat for an official opposition at the hands of the government since the 1870s.

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Prospect Magazine
April 2017
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Prospect
If I ruled the world
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Letters & opinions
Writing on the subject of Brexit (“Posturing behind
The May mirage
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Turkey’s next coup
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Rainbow nation, racist backstory
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Fools rush in
We can no longer assume that London and Washington agree on Moscow
Tolerance at the end of its tether
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The People’s Republic of Prato
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The Duel
Should we regret the Bolshevik Revolution?
One hundred years ago this spring, there were remarkable
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Features
The red sag
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Sobering Dismal Precedent
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Fix the ideas first
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Brief encounter
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Back in the emergency room
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Thirty year march of the Front National
Marine Le Pen is frighteningly close to making the unthinkable happen in France.
A melody of voices
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The slow ruin of Edinburgh
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Arts & books
The tragedy of Yitzhak Rabin
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Events
The Prospect Book Club meets every third Monday of the month (excluding bank holidays) at 6.30pm at 2 Queen Anne’s Gate, London, SW1H 9AA. To book tickets please visit prospectmagazine.co.uk/events
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