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A Sermon For The Democratic Party
James Talarico calls his healthcare plan “Medicare for Y’all”. Four words that tell you everything about how he just won the Democratic Senate primary in Texas – his party hasn't won statewide here since 1994. Whilst his opponent campaigned against Trump, Talarico, the seminarian state legislator and former public school teacher, ran for something: popular progressive policies rebranded to the voters he will need to win over. Whether he manages that in November is another que
Frederick Graham
4 hours ago5 min read


Keir to stay... but what’s next?
Back from the brink, Keir Starmer clings on as Prime Minister. It was a tumultuous week when it became common knowledge that Starmer and his then chief of staff Morgan McSweeney were aware of ‘The Prince of Darkness’ Peter Mandelson's ongoing relationship with Jeffrey Epstein – this after his conviction, and after reports emerged alleging that Mandelson leaked sensitive information to the convicted paedophile, all of which Mandelson vehemently denies. After the resignation o
Frederick Graham
Feb 134 min read


The Quiet Crisis of Local Finance
From the federal United States to the hyper-centralised UK, and even in the tightly state-directed system of China, local government is increasingly constrained and hollowed out. The slow-building emergency in government debt is not only on a national level but on a local level too. Across advanced and emerging economics, local governments have taken on growing responsibilities without the fiscal tools to fund them, undermining service provision and political trust without tr
Frederick Graham
Feb 24 min read


The SNP and the Stagnation of Scottish Politics
Ahead of the 2026 Scottish Parliamentary elections, Frederick Graham examines eighteen years of Scottish Nationalist rule and the state of Scottish politics. In Westminster and Europe, recent election cycles have revealed an increasingly consistent pattern: governing parties have become exposed to sharp electoral punishment. This trend has cut across ideologies. After four years the centre-left “traffic-light” German coalition was decisively punished at the ballot box. Acros
Frederick Graham
Jan 34 min read


Labour’s Renaissance? Lessons from Macron’s Failings
Macron’s France offers a political mirror which Starmer’s Labour ignores at its peril. After years of cautious positioning, Labour has stumbled through the opening phase of government, seemingly unaware of a public exhausted by decline and impatient for visible change. Macron began his project with similar ambitions – technocratic renewal through post-tribal politics – but it has collapsed under a failure to deliver significant structural reform, fracturing the political land
Frederick Graham
Nov 28, 20253 min read
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