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19 MIN READ TIME

Sport vs sport

In play

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Prospect Magazine
May 2019
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The chat in Westminster is all about crisis, yet the
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Like Mark Damazer, I am a fervent supporter of public
Opinions
The Tories are split and morale is low. But don’t write them off just yet
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Forget feel-good diversity—women MPs have made a practical difference
Forget feel-good diversity—women MPs have made a practical
Send them back—it’s high time we started to decolonise our museums
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Cosiness and its malcontent—meet the Socrates of Copenhagen
Denmark’s most successful recent export, hygge, is
Justin Trudeau is mired in scandal— can he survive?
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Power to some people
A century has passed since the first universal suff
Features
CRISIS. WHY IT’S TIME TO REWIRE BRITISH POLITICS
FOR ALL ITS QUIRKINESS, OUR CONSTITUTION ALWAYS USED TO MUDDLE THROUGH. BUT THE BREXIT CRISIS IS STRAINING IT LIKE NEVER BEFORE
Ye Olde Curiosity Constitution
Dusty parchments, ancient offices and precedents that outline “the way things are done” define the British constitution. Its anachronisms are often a hoot, but can also give rise to some very strange wrinkles in the way we are governed
Beg, borrow and steal
Bright ideas for fixing Westminster from around the world
Does Britain need a proper constitution?
YES Yes, if by “proper” we mean codified, with some
Ghosts of Brexits past
In the past 2,000 years, Britain has detached from Europe eight times. And every time we eventually returned
Labour’s other leader
Tom Watson has built a power base. What does he want to do with it, asks Kevin Maguire
Forging the Führer
The sinister trade in fake Hitler paintings is thriving. But who is buying them—and why?
How Jacinda Ardern is transforming New Zealand
She made headlines for her compassionate response to March’s terror attack. Less noticed is the way this young PM’s radical plans are shaking up her country
The donor detective
Thousands of children conceived by anonymous sperm donation still have no right at all to know their biological fathers. But they are turning to DNA sites to track them down— and one woman has made it her very personal mission to help
Arts & books
The shadow of mankind
Other animals can laugh, feel, think and mourn—so why do we still treat them so badly, asks Ray Monk
Generation games
A slowing birthrate is a sign a society is advancing, says David Willetts, but has it slowed too far in Europe?
Sweet civility
A pugnacious attack on liberalism misses the point, argues Deirdre McCloskey
A room for two
Virginia Woolf is inspiring a new generation of women writers, says Francesca Wade
Late reading with Clive James
After an operation, Clive recovers with George Herbert’s help—and ponders the absurdity of Bodyguard
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