Of course young professionals are voting for the Scottish Greens. The economy has been geared against them, and in favour of baby boomers, for decades now. The Greens are the first party in years to give them a thought.
My latest election analysis over on Substack.
Posts by Stephen Daisley
As Nicola Sturgeon delivers her final speech in the Scottish Parliament, I reflect on an overhyped political celebrity who, despite eight years as first minister, achieved nothing transformative and very little of note.
One in four gay and bisexual men plan to vote for Reform. I break down the key categories of Reform Gays that you need to know about.
‘Great, another nepo baby. Mojtaba Khamenei has succeeded his father as Supreme Leader of Iran, because of course he has. Meet the new boss, son of the old boss.’
A quick blog on Khamenei Jr, the latest ayatollah who will soon be the late ayatollah.
Following the death of James van der Beek in February, I finally got round to writing a thing about Dawson’s Creek.
Why we shouldn’t celebrate the death of Ian Huntley.
The Soham murderer’s killing wasn’t ‘jailhouse justice’ for Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman. It was an example of a prisons system spiralling out of control.
My latest for the @thespectator1828.bsky.social.
(This one will be popular, I’m sure.)
SNP leader John Swinney knew a month in advance that former SNP chief executive Peter Murrell (estranged husband of Nicola Sturgeon) would go on trial for alleged embezzlement.
How did he find out?
Scotland’s chief prosecutor emailed to tell him.
“John Swinney told Anas Sarwar he was ‘unfit to lead the Labour Party’, which suggests he’s missed rather a lot of news about the Labour Party lately. Sarwar is Ned Flanders compared to some of his colleagues.”
My sketch of #FMQs.
I’ve written about the Japanese ambassador’s successful visit to Glasgow, his uncommon gift for diplomacy, and how Hiroshi Suzuki became a national treasure in Britain.
My latest for @thespectator1828.bsky.social.
‘Roses are red, violets are blue, Valentine’s sucks, and so do you.’
Four Valentine’s Day-set horror movies for those appropriately cynical about the season of romance.
(This was fun.)
Imagine a country where there are 300 antisemitic incidents a month. Where Jews are attacked en route to synagogue, where kosher food aisles are vandalised, where Jewish cemeteries are desecrated.
You don’t have to imagine that country. You live in it.
This might be the first thing I’ve posted on Bluesky that is Bluesky-friendly, politically speaking.
Nigel Farage’s rant against working from home highlights a big problem for Reform: it knows how to pander to retirees but hasn’t the faintest idea how to speak to workers.
I discuss Farage’s faux pas over at @thespectator1828.bsky.social.
‘If I could give one piece of advice, it would be this: never go drinking with a politician. The tight gits seldom put their hand in their pocket. When it comes time for their round, there’s always an urgent call from their business manager.’
My latest @dailymail.co.uk sketch of #FMQs.
‘At risk of being controversial, I must take issue with Jeffrey Epstein.’
Newly released emails show the sex offender decrying the idea that every human life is equal as ‘Catholicism at its worst’.
I argue in First Things that the defence of life is actually Catholicism at its best.
Going to say something controversial here lads: that Noam Chomsky fella? Not so keen on him.
My latest for @telegraph.co.uk.
Why dumping Keir Starmer at this time would be a bad idea.
My latest for @thespectator1828.bsky.social.
Transgender prisoners must be housed in safety and with dignity, but so too must women prisoners. That’s why prisons need to be single sex and why the state should invest in new custodial arrangements to meet trans prisoners’ distinct needs.
Me in @thespectator1828.bsky.social.
‘No one is illegal on stolen land’ isn’t just the airhead cant of Billie Eilish, it’s fast becoming the formal position of the Democrat Party.
If Democrats want to avert a JD Vance presidency, they cannot be the party of open borders and America Sucks.
My latest for @thespectator1828.bsky.social.
Thanks Barbara. Not least because this might be the first non-passive/aggressive reply I’ve ever received on Bluesky. On the issue, though, it’s frustrating that women with a reasonable claim, and in real material need, were shoved aside by the maximalists.
Did all #Waspi women deserve a payout? No.
Did some? Yes.
Unfortunately for them, they had no one to speak for them and no one willing to listen.
My latest Politics Notebook. Subscribe to get articles like this directly in your inbox.
There was ‘political pressure’ to open a Glasgow hospital before it was ready. Its faulty water system has been linked to several deaths, including children.
The SNP government says it didn’t apply the pressure.
So who did?
My @dailymail.co.uk column.
‘Would he rather answer in the presence of his lawyer?’
Anas Sarwar puts John Swinney under the spotlight over the Glasgow hospital deaths scandal. Here’s my @dailymail.co.uk sketch of a dramatic revelation at Holyrood.
Unable to defend their miserable record in government, the SNP is trying to trick voters into thinking the Holyrood elections are actually Westminster elections.
I explain their madcap scheme over at @thespectator1828.bsky.social.
To mark Holocaust Memorial Day I review three forgotten films that were among the first to acknowledge or depict the Shoah, including a chilling propaganda film made by the Nazis themselves.
My latest column is on the Glasgow hospital deaths scandal — and the rotten Scottish state that tried to cover it up.
The Scottish Government refuses to comply with the Freedom of Information Act.
Can it do that? Over to you, Court of Session.
My latest @thespectator1828.bsky.social dispatch from a totally normal, functioning democracy that in no way resembles a failed state.
Contaminated hospital water. Dead children. Freedom of information disregarded. Secret files hidden from the public.
My @dailymail.co.uk sketch of #FMQs from Holyrood, the cover-up parliament.