Leading article
The case for restraint
One of the many ironies of the past few months is that young people, while least affected by the virus,…
A question of competence
This week was built up by the Prime Minister to be the moment that would mark the return of economic…
The economy of tanks
That an abundance of tanks is no guarantee of a happy and secure nation was evident from the Soviet Union’s…
Biden’s complacency
There is a great mystery lying behind the 2020 US presidential election: how come a country of 350 million, which…
Exam failures
It was obvious that closing schools would hit the poorest hardest, inflicting permanent damage and deepening inequality. While many private…
Mood shift
Throughout the past few months the government has appeared to face an unenviable choice between saving lives and saving livelihoods.…
Peer pressure
It is no credit to British democracy that we have the second largest legislative chamber in the world. The only…
The EU’s new fault lines
Anyone who imagined that the departure of Britain would make for more harmonious EU summits in future will have been…
The mask slips
When Michael Gove delivered the Ditchley Annual Lecture last month he spoke about why citizens feel that the political system…
Home improvements
It is hardly a profound observation to say that the government has not functioned as well as it might have…
The chilling effect
The printed press is not a natural ally of Facebook. Silicon Valley publishers have hoovered up so much advertising that…
Britain emerges, blinking
The Prime Minister’s announcement that pubs, restaurants and many other facilities will be able to re-open on 4 July amounts…
Time to recover
The discovery in Britain that a £5 steroid, dexamethasone, can be effective in treating Covid marks a potential breakthrough in…
Take back control
There is a grim inevitability to the trickle of round-robin letters from scientists who feel aggrieved at the government’s handling…
Law and disorder
In Minneapolis, where George Floyd was killed, a black entrepreneur had his bar destroyed before he even had a chance…
Has lockdown worked?
Who occupies the post of chief adviser to the prime minister is not generally an issue of great interest to…
Sage advice
From the outset of the Covid-19 crisis, the government was determined that scientists would play a central and highly visible…
Class divide
It would be a tragedy if one of the legacies of Covid-19 — a disease which hardly affects children physically…
On track and trace
The concept of the state tracking our every movement is anathema to this magazine and, we assume, to its liberal…
Call that care?
As the NHS was preparing for the Covid onslaught, thousands of hospital patients were discharged to care homes in an…
The case for trust
Our Plan is entirely new, comprising – 1. The whole News of the Week: selected, sifted, condensed and arranged as…
World Health Shambles
The United States has long regarded itself as better prepared for a pandemic than any other country in the world,…
The Boris Factor
Ending the lockdown will require a leap of faith – one that can really only be made by the PM
Testing times
The failures of Britain’s pandemic planning have been brutally exposed in the past few weeks. The scandalous lack of protective…
On liberty
For days, the Prime Minister had been resisting the kind of measures which have placed many other countries into lockdown,…