64 | What If?

In honour of Hillary Clinton's visit to the UK, we talk about some of the might-have-beens of recent politics.  Where would we be now if Theresa May hadn't called an election, if Clinton had beaten Trump, if Brexit had never happened?  Would things be a whole lot better or might they be even worse?  With Helen Thompson and Chris Brooke.
 

63 | Catalonia

As the face-off between Madrid and Barcelona continues, we explore how this happened and where it might end.  Marc Weller, chair of the independent commission on Catalan independence, explains the legal background and historian Brendan Simms sets out what is at stake for European politics.  Could this be the crisis that brings the whole thing crashing down?  With Helen Thompson and Chris Brooke.

62 | Where is the Centre?

Jeremy Corbyn claims that Labour now represents the political mainstream.  Is that really true?  Where does it leave the Tories?  What can Theresa May do about it?  We trawl the data to try to find the elusive centre ground of British politics.  Plus we ask whether mainstream regional politicians like Ruth Davidson and Sadiq Khan can speak for the whole of the UK.  If they can't, who on earth can?  With Mike Kenny, Professor of Public Policy at Cambridge, and Helen Thompson.
 

61 | Live Special

This week's episode is a recording of a live Talking Politics event as part of the Cambridge Alumni Festival, with questions from the audience.  We talk about normalising Trump, neglecting Turkey and kicking Brexit down the road.  Plus we ask what counts as a coup and whatever happened to cabinet government.  With Gary Gerstle, Ayse Zarakol, Aaron Rapport and Chris Brooke.  Recorded on Saturday 23rd September.

60 | The Mystery of Germany

 We talk with historian Chris Clark and Helen Thompson about whether German politics is as stable as it seems.  With the federal election coming up in a few days, and Angela Merkel seemingly on course for another comfortable victory, we ask what could happen next.  Why would a Jamaican coalition be bad for France?  What's going on in Bavaria?  And is East vs West still the central division in German politics?  Plus we catch up with the other general election taking place this weekend - in New Zealand.

59 | Pax Technica

John Naughton talks to Philip Howard of the Oxford Internet Institute about whether the digital revolution has been good or bad for democracy.  Will the Internet of Things usher in an era of universal peace or universal surveillance?  What happened to the hopes of tech liberation that came with the Arab Spring?  Is there anything we can do about fake news?  A fascinating conversation between two recovering utopians about the past, present and future of the internet age.