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Politics from the New Statesman
Bonus episode: Michael Sheen on class, culture and Britishness
Ahead of his guest-edited issue of the New Statesman, the actor and campaigner Michael Sheen speaks to Anoosh Chakelian for a special episode of the New Statesman podcast. Titled "A Dream of Britain", the magazine explores what British identity means in 2022.
They discuss why he wanted to tackle the idea of our national story, how widening inequality and the British obsession with class limits diversity in the arts, why he thinks Tony Blair and Jeremy Corbyn have more in common than either might like, and what it means to be a "not-for-profit" actor.
The special edition of the New Statesman will be on newsstands on Thursday 24 March and podcast listeners can subscribe now for just £12 for 12 weeks at newstatesman.com/podcastoffer
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Keir Starmer is all alone
34:09|The Mandelson affair has become less about Peter Mandelson’s alleged wrongdoing, and all about Keir Starmer’s ability to run the country.This week Olly Robbins, former chief civil servant at the Foreign Office, insisted the Prime Minister pressured him into clearing Peter Mandelson for the US ambassador post.Yesterday, Starmer was forced to admit his former spin doctor Matthew Doyle, who was suspended from the Labour Party over campaigning for a convicted child sex offender, was also considered for a diplomatic role. Labour MPs and even cabinet ministers no longer seem able to defend the Prime Minister.But the frontrunners to replace Starmer are also, according to reporting by our editor Tom McTague, biding their time.How long can they wait? How long can the country wait?Anoosh Chakelian is joined by Tom McTague in the studio.READ: Keir Starmer is all alonehttps://www.newstatesman.com/politics/labour/2026/04/keir-starmer-is-all-alone
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Ex defence secretary slams Starmer's strategy
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AI is embedded in the British state
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Thames Water's careless vandalism
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