To enjoy all the benefits of our website
This website uses cookies to help us give you the best experience when you visit our website. By continuing to use this website, you consent to our use of these cookies.
Owen Jones is a left-wing columnist, author and commentator. He is a contributing writer to the New Statesman and writes a weekly column for the Guardian. He has published two books, Chavs: the Demonisation of the Working Class and The Establishment and How They Get Away With It.
I’m no Magna Carta fanboy, but many revolutionaries appropriated the document to legitimise their causes.
Don't let the right tell you that if Labour come second on seats, their government would be "illegitimate".
Young people are characterised as apathetic and wasteful; but the young drink less and commit less crime. Wasted: How Misunderstanding Young Britain Threatens Our Future reveals the truth.
James Meek’s superb new book exposes the perversities, hypocrisies and failures of privatisation.
The authors of IPPR’s The Condition of Britain offer a coherent plan and one that will be influential if the Labour Party triumphs in May.
The author of Chavs discusses Selina Todd’s “impassioned, much-needed” new book The People, noting how most Brits still stubbornly self-identify as working class.
The shadow chancellor's capitulation on cuts and public sector pay offers vindication for the Tories, says Owen Jones.