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.
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Angela Rayner can’t let the unions down now
Legacy tech & the move to sustainable computing | Sponsored
Britain's great tax delusion
The prime minister and the AI that solved the climate crisis
Crumbling Britain, with Andrew Marr
You Ask Us: The big Labour reshuffle, promotions and demotions
The trappings of Western hyper-liberalism | Conversation
Summer of Light: a new short story by Jonathan Coe | Audio Long Read
You Ask Us: if you're a centrist politician, how do you choose one party over another?
Ben Wallace and Nadine Dorries, the long goodbye
Escaping Eden: life after the Plymouth Brethren | Audio Long Reads
You Ask Us: will Labour stop the culture wars, and does the government control what journalists report?
Have Conservatives forgotten education?
Russia’s war on the future | Conversation
In defence of counterfactual history | Audio Long Read
You Ask Us: Should it be easier to recall MPs, and how do Rishi Sunak and John Major compare?
Labour’s caution could turn to radicalism in office
Where do Labour and the Tories differ on growth? With Bridget Phillipson and Bim Afolami | Conversation
What Simone De Beauvoir knew about loss, by Ali Smith | Audio Long Read
You Ask Us: Is Starmer haunted by Blair, and how do you raise voter turnout?
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Page 94: The Private Eye Podcast