Review of Black and White : John Tamihere, by John Tamihere with Helen BainA theme in the book is Tamihere's uncanny ability to survive utterances and actions that should have ended the career of almost any other politician. At the time this was true, However, in the now notorious Investigate magazine artcle in April, where he put his blockey boot into a number of powerful Labour Party colleagues, and snapped ties with a few more of his diminishing list of friends, he looks to have shattered an image of seeming invunerability. 
Steve Coulter finds an excellent and readable account of how the Conservatives have turned themselve...
Review of: Politics and the Media, edited by Babak Bahador, Geoff Kemp, Kate McMillan and Chris Rudd...
In Angry White People: Coming Face-to-Face with the British Far Right, the investigative journalist ...
Matthew Whiting reviews Andrew Rawnsley’s much anticipated account of New Labour’s tumultuous time i...
Five Year Mission: The Labour Party Under Ed Miliband provides a detailed, insightful and at times r...
Matthew Partridge reviews the brand new Ed Miliband biography by Mehdi Hasan and James Macintyre, pu...
Review of Memoirs of a Rebel Journalist: The Autobiography of Wilfred Burchett, edited by George Bur...
Suki Ferguson finds Brown at 10 to be a candid gem of political history, in which the former Prime M...
21 years after leaving a career in journalism to work for Labour in opposition, following shock defe...
Review of A Hack's Progress, by Phillip Knightley. London: Vintage. Knightley's book is self critica...
Carl Packman reviews the latest book by Owen Jones, highlighting how several New Labour policies wer...
In Culture, Economy and Politics: The Case of New Labour, David Hesmondhalgh, Kate Oakley, David Lee...
The period which the BNP felt was their own is slipping away from them, finds Carl Packman in his re...
The Labour party comeback at last week’s local elections raised the possibility that the current lea...
This book discusses the relationship between the Labour Party/movement during the early twentieth c...
Steve Coulter finds an excellent and readable account of how the Conservatives have turned themselve...
Review of: Politics and the Media, edited by Babak Bahador, Geoff Kemp, Kate McMillan and Chris Rudd...
In Angry White People: Coming Face-to-Face with the British Far Right, the investigative journalist ...
Matthew Whiting reviews Andrew Rawnsley’s much anticipated account of New Labour’s tumultuous time i...
Five Year Mission: The Labour Party Under Ed Miliband provides a detailed, insightful and at times r...
Matthew Partridge reviews the brand new Ed Miliband biography by Mehdi Hasan and James Macintyre, pu...
Review of Memoirs of a Rebel Journalist: The Autobiography of Wilfred Burchett, edited by George Bur...
Suki Ferguson finds Brown at 10 to be a candid gem of political history, in which the former Prime M...
21 years after leaving a career in journalism to work for Labour in opposition, following shock defe...
Review of A Hack's Progress, by Phillip Knightley. London: Vintage. Knightley's book is self critica...
Carl Packman reviews the latest book by Owen Jones, highlighting how several New Labour policies wer...
In Culture, Economy and Politics: The Case of New Labour, David Hesmondhalgh, Kate Oakley, David Lee...
The period which the BNP felt was their own is slipping away from them, finds Carl Packman in his re...
The Labour party comeback at last week’s local elections raised the possibility that the current lea...
This book discusses the relationship between the Labour Party/movement during the early twentieth c...
Steve Coulter finds an excellent and readable account of how the Conservatives have turned themselve...
Review of: Politics and the Media, edited by Babak Bahador, Geoff Kemp, Kate McMillan and Chris Rudd...
In Angry White People: Coming Face-to-Face with the British Far Right, the investigative journalist ...