Britain | Gerontocracy

Britain’s party leaders are the oldest in more than 60 years

Watch out, whips: older MPs tend to be the most rebellious

FOR the first time in a generation a groundswell of youthful enthusiasm is gripping British politics. A high turnout among the under-25s helped to rob the government of its majority in June. But it had another, curious outcome: the young voters ended up electing the oldest crop of MPs and party leaders in decades.

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “The pensioners’ parliament”

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British MPs vote in favour of assisted dying

A monumental social reform is closer to being realised

This illustration depicts Keith Starmer and Rachel Reeves set against a background of UK, US, and Chinese flag elements.

The slow death of a Labour buzzword

And what that says about Britain’s place in the world



Britain’s Supreme Court considers what a woman is

At last. Britons had been wondering what those 34m people who are not men might be

Can potholes fuel populism?

A new paper looks at one explanation for the rise of Reform UK

Are British voters as clueless as Labour’s intelligentsia thinks? 

How the idea of false consciousness conquered the governing party