Election Watch: The New Statesman podcast | daily throughout the UK general election

The New Statesman

Daily election analysis

  • 30 minutes 49 seconds
    Alice Vincent: rediscovering music after trauma

    In our teenage years, music can be everything.


    But as we age, our relationship with music changes.


    Alice Vincent was a music journalist for many years, and in this frank conversation tells Kate Mossman how childbirth, PTSD and depression turned her love of music into something darker.


    In her new book, Hark: How women listen, Alice recounts her quest to rediscover the power of music as an adult, a mother and after mental health battles.


    In this conversation, Alice and Kate discuss how her quest took her from an anechoic chamber in south London to the Mojave desert - and how music is finally returning to her life.


    Hark: How women listen is available to buy here: https://uk.bookshop.org/a/11114/9781805302063


    Read Kate Mossman's review here: https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/books/book-of-the-day/2025/04/sounds-that-shape-us

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    19 May 2025, 5:00 am
  • 17 minutes 10 seconds
    Should we abolish the Treasury?

    “Having moved on from Blue Labour, which other policies will Turquoise Labour adopt from the far right?"; “Given that they are a break on everything, should the Treasury department be abolished?”; “What would happen if Labour and the Conservatives got completely wiped out at the general election and the Lib Dems and Greens also had bad polling results and the Reform party suddenly lost its mojo? Could a government function or would King Charles have to step in?”


    Anoosh Chakelian is joined by Andrew Marr and Rachel Cunliffe to answer listener questions.


    Sign up to the New Statesman's daily politics newsletter: Morning Call

     

    Submit a question for a future episode: You Ask Us

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    16 May 2025, 3:30 pm
  • 31 minutes 46 seconds
    Starmer moves right on immigration

    This week saw potentially the boldest moment of Keir Starmer’s leadership, as the Government announced its white paper - Restoring Control over the Immigration System. According to the Prime Minister, it marks a a significant overhaul of UK immigration policy.


    The headlines, however, have been less kind - focussing on the wording of his speech announcing the plans, specifically on the phrase ‘island of strangers’... 


    Some were quick to compare this to Enoch Powell’s infamous ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech in which Powell talks of white British people becoming ‘strangers in their own country’.


    Hannah Barnes is joined by Andrew Marr and Rachel Cunliffe.


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    15 May 2025, 4:27 pm
  • 32 minutes 27 seconds
    An American in the Vatican

    For the first time, the Conclave of cardinals at the Vatican have elected an American pope.


    Pope Leo XIV has ascended to the papacy following the death of his modernising predecessor, Pope Francis.


    Katie Stallard is joined by writer Madoc Cairns and the New Statesman’s Finn McRedmond to discuss Francis’s legacy and Leo’s future.


    Read: Pope Francis's illusions

    Read: Pope Leo XIV's centrist papacy

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    14 May 2025, 7:01 am
  • 37 minutes 54 seconds
    Turner at 250: why Britain's most influential artist still matters

    2025 marks the 250th anniversary of the birth of Joseph Mallord William Turner, widely celebrated as Britain's greatest landscape painter. 


    --


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    Yet, beyond the familiar image of the "painter of light", Turner was a complex figure whose radical art often baffled his contemporaries.


    Tom Gatti meets the New Statesman’s art critic, Michael Prodger, to explore why Turner still matters – and how themes in his work like the power of nature, the impact of technology, and national identity resonate profoundly today. 


    READ: The second birth of JMW Turner, by Michael Prodger

    https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/art-design/2025/04/the-second-birth-of-jmw-turner


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    12 May 2025, 5:00 am
  • 23 minutes 5 seconds
    Do the Greens need a more charismatic leader?

    The team answer questions on the Green party's charisma issue, how Reform's power in local council could hurt their overall polling, and whether too many Lib Dems are vegan.


    Rachel Cunliffe is joined by Ben Walker, Megan Kenyon, and George Eaton.


    Listen to our episode on constitutional issues


    Submit a question for a future episode: You Ask Us


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    9 May 2025, 3:30 pm
  • 32 minutes 44 seconds
    The Labour party is turning in on itself

    Tom McTague, the incoming editor of the New Statesman, joins Andrew Marr to discuss Labour's rocky week following Reform's dramatic wins, the India and US trade deals, and also his vision for the future of the publication.


    Read more: New Statesman International

     

    Submit a question for a future episode: You Ask Us


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    8 May 2025, 12:57 pm
  • 28 minutes 42 seconds
    A year undercover on the far right

    The far right now makes up a third of terrorism convictions and a majority of referrals to the governments Prevent counter-radicalisation scheme


    But what fuels the far-right and how influential are they becoming?


    Harry Shukman, journalist and researcher at HOPE not hate, an anti-fascist organisation, went undercover with the British far right to find out how these groups operate, their plans for changing Britain, and the conversations that go on behind closed doors, far away from voters’ doorsteps.



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    7 May 2025, 5:00 am
  • 49 minutes 44 seconds
    100 years of The Great Gatsby

    Tom Gatti meets authors Sarah Churchwell and Erica Wagner to discuss why The Great Gatsby is still relevant a century after it was published.


    Considered by many to be the great American novel, F. Scott Fitzgerald's iconic tale of ambition, class and the American dream continues to resonate today.


    Sarah Churchwell and Erica Wagner joined Tom Gatti at the Cambridge Literary Festival to offer fresh perspectives on a timeless classic.


    Watch more from the Cambridge Literary Festival at https://www.cambridgeliteraryfestival.com/clf-player-watch-listen/

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    5 May 2025, 5:00 am
  • 24 minutes 23 seconds
    Reform wins: dire for Labour, existential for Tories

    Yesterday elections took place up and down the country, for councils, six mayoral contests, and a by-election. What we’re looking at today is a big win for Nigel Farage’s Reform - and a seismic shift in British politics.


    Hannah Barnes is joined by senior data journalist Ben Walker and senior editor George Eaton.



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    2 May 2025, 11:56 am
  • 23 minutes 17 seconds
    Trump finally invests in Ukraine

    Overnight, Ukraine and the United States have signed a long-awaited minerals deal.


    Hannah Barnes is joined by political editor Andrew Marr and international editor Megan Gibson to discuss what this means for Ukraine's security and the future of the conflict with Russia, and later in the episode the team look at Mark Carney's anti-Trump win in Canada and what this means for democracies around the world.


    Read more: New Statesman International

     

    Submit a question for a future episode: You Ask Us



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    1 May 2025, 1:38 pm
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