![]() Keir Starmer Has Failed Britain’s Jews. Plus. . . Caitlin Flanagan joins The Free Press! How to make a movie in 30 minutes. The Supreme Court knocks down racial gerrymandering. And more.
British police investigate the scene after two people were injured in a stabbing attack in the Golders Green area of north London, on April 29, 2026. (Rasid Necati Aslim/Anadolu via Getty Images)
It’s Thursday, April 30. This is The Front Page, your daily window into the world of The Free Press—and our take on the world at large. Today: Caitlin Flanagan’s inaugural piece for The Free Press. A Supreme Court ruling that could flip 30 House seats. Eli Lake on the star professor of the Iran war. And much more. But first: Yet another attack on Jews in the UK. Yesterday, we woke up to the news of yet another attack on Jews in the UK. On Wednesday morning in London, an alleged Islamist terrorist with a knife went hunting for Jews on a street in broad daylight. He stabbed two Jewish men before being tased and arrested by police. It’s the latest in a disturbing string of attacks on British Jews. The growing threat to Jewish life in Britain is something I’ve experienced firsthand and have written about in these pages. It keeps getting worse. And Britain’s political leaders have offered little more than platitudes. —Josh Kaplan Our Newest Columnist: Caitlin FlanaganThe Free Press has a new columnist: Caitlin Flanagan! We couldn’t be more excited that Caitlin is now officially part of our band. She is, as Nellie Bowles put it in her introduction to Caitlin’s first column for us, “sharp, smart, lyrical, honest, poignant, and funny, surprising and contrarian in her thinking but not just to be contrarian for its own sake, and she’s equal parts kind and ruthless. Deeply Californian and deeply American (two different things), she’s everything you want in a writer.” Her first column is on rising political violence—and the parallels between today and the era of political assassination in which Caitlin grew up. Caitlin will usually be behind a paywall, but her inaugural piece is free for everyone to read—as a special treat. Don’t miss it: |