The British royal family was in crisis even before Queen Elizabeth II died, and the new King and princess of wales both became ill with cancer.
In this modern age where access increasingly equates to relevance, and truth and conspiracy so often intertwine, how is Britain’s relationship with monarchy changing?
Chris Stone is joined on the New Statesman podcast by author Tanya Gold who has written this week's cover story: The Fragile Crown.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hilary Cass: "Do I regret doing it? Absolutely not"
Who would want Rishi Sunak's job now?
Defeat and defection: Tories are down bad
How can life sciences investment make the UK healthier? | Sponsored
What do we really know about ‘Starmerism’?
Election Special: "by and large, the country has moved against the government"
John Swinney - the next leader of Scotland?
The Rwanda bill will create a legacy of suffering - an interview with a former asylum seeker
What are the chances of a Conservative-Reform UK coalition?
Can Labour get Britain's trains back on track?
Can Britain quit smoking for good? | Sponsored
Boarding school boys rule Britain, at what cost?
How Iran and Israel are dividing British politics
Does Liz Truss believe what she's saying?
Decaying Britain: how severe is the NHS dental crisis?
The Angela Rayner investigation: scandal or smear campaign?
How will the gender care report affect politics?
Why do politicians push culture wars? And should landlord MPs vote on renting laws?
Sh*tstorm: who's to blame for England's water crisis?
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
SRSLY
Hidden Histories: The New Statesman History Podcast
Deep Dive
Political Football
New Statesman’s New Times