The Labour Problem
A small archive of political explainers
This staging page gathers the mini-sites into one browsable front door. The pieces look at Labour’s internal story-making, Andy Burnham’s appeal, the limits of state command, and the wider systems that decide what can be said, believed or changed.
The sites have been kept as separate publications. This page does not merge or rewrite them; it simply provides a clear menu into each one, with short notes on what to expect before opening it.
Why Labour Is Rewriting Its Story Around Andy Burnham
A publication-style essay on Labour’s professional machine, its shifting electoral coalition and the use of Burnham as a new narrative of connection after Starmer’s competence pitch.
Read site Place-based growth and political limitsAndy Burnham’s Canute Problem
A concise FT-style explainer on Burnham’s devolution-and-growth agenda, asking whether political authority can redirect the economic tides of markets, land, planning and Treasury discipline.
Read site The Overton window as control systemThe Window Reopens
A sharp essay reframing the Overton window not as a static opinion range but as a social control mechanism that decides which arguments can be aired without penalty.
Read site Persuasion, politics and attentionThe Fear Gate
An explainer on why messages only change people when attention and threat perception open the mind to instruction, linking behavioural politics, nudging, social media and hypnosis.
Read site Intelligence as non-collisionThe Case for a Collisionless Society
A Financial Times-style piece that turns a physical idea into a broader theory of institutions, cooperation and civilisation as systems for preventing destructive overlap.
Read site A modern faith of passageThe Collisionless Way
A more stylised, believer’s-eye version of the same collisionless idea, written as a creed about alignment, ritual and avoiding destructive contact with the future.
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