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The Spectator

1 December 2018 Aus

Last Quango in Paris

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Last Quango in Paris

This week, the world’s climate-obsessed leaders meet in Katowice in Poland in a desperate attempt to put teeth into the…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Battle of Britain, MkII

The European Union has never tolerated democracy. It preaches it to its member states and lectures about it to the…

Features Australia

Quit Paris, halve migration

The Victorian election demonstrates a desperate need for powerful leadership based on principle, something last seen in the 2013 Abbott…

Features Australia

The waffly centre won’t hold

I am writing this the morning after the Liberal party’s election fiasco in Victoria. And yet again we have more…

Features Australia

Cursed by their own art

Why do all our favourite, talented (e.g. Jim Carrey, Richard Gere), much acclaimed film stars (e.g. Meryl Streep, Sally Field)…

Features Australia

We don’t need no enculturation

What is the purpose of education?  The question is rarely asked as school funding dominates the debate along with the…

Features Australia

‘Til we build Jerusalem

The two most commonly heard observations by Australians who visit Israel are firstly, that the country does not resemble the…

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc

An act of utter corporate bastardry – but there was no alternative.  When the Commonwealth Bank’s new duo of chairman…

Features

Features

Money is already draining from Britain but because of Corbyn, not Brexit

What’s wrong with UK financial markets? The global economy is recovering, but British stocks and shares are not keeping pace.…

Features

Does Putin intend to go to war with Ukraine?

On Europe’s eastern borderlands, trouble is brewing. Two headstrong leaders — Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart Petro Poroshenko —…

Features

A biographer’s tale: beware of meeting your literary heroes

Germaine Greer described biographers as ‘vultures’. I prefer to think of myself as a version of Philip Marlowe or Sam…

Features

The Italian crisis

For those who believe in the European project, Brexit is a headache. Italy, on the other hand, is a bloody…

Features

Homelessness isn’t a government priority. It should be

King’s Cross station at 10.30 p.m. is not a happy place. Most commuters have long returned to their centrally heated…

Spilling ink: Lee Child [AXEL DUPEUX]

Features

Lee Child: How to write – and get revenge

According to which bit of hype you read, there’s a copy of one of Lee Child’s Jack Reacher thrillers sold…

It is the sky that dominates on the Isle of Grain

Notes on...

The Isle of Grain

Perched on the edge of the Medway about 15 miles from Rochester is the Isle of Grain, a mass of…

The Week

Leading article

Why we must reject May’s deal

While some may doubt Donald Trump’s claim to be a friend of Britain’s, his intervention in the Brexit debate this…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: the Brexit world, the non-Brexit world and Mars

Brexit Theresa May, the Prime Minister, seemed to succeed in uniting the country in opposition to the withdrawal agreement to…

Diary

I’m the latest victim of George Osborne’s austerity

I got the sack the other day from the London Evening Standard, where I’ve been a weekly columnist for about…

Letters

Letters: Brexit’s impact on the Irish border issue has been flagged up all along

The Irish border Sir: Contrary to the assertion that the Irish border ‘only hit the headlines’ after Leo Varadkar became…

Columnists

World Politics

What if the Brexit vote fails?

We are heading into uncharted waters. The great hope of No. 10 and cabinet loyalists was that once Theresa May’s…

The Spectator's Notes

Britain is making the same mistake it always does in negotiations with Europe

Theresa May, William Hague and others say that the EU will not want to trap Britain in the backstop because…

Rod Liddle

Sex in church is fine – just keep the Christians out

Nic Roeg’s art-house thriller from 1973 Don’t Look Now was most famous, or infamous, for its lengthy and explicit sex…

James Delingpole

Will no one ever take on the Green Blob?

Gosh it hurts when your little corner of paradise is destroyed by a few idiots’ ignorance and greed. This is…

Mary Wakefield

I admit it – I’m a smartphone addict

I am often extremely dismissive of people immersed in their smartphones. I tut at the mole-ish pedestrians who step out…

Any other business

How a betting business saved Stoke-on-Trent

I wrote last week of my fear that we’ll never ‘take back control of our fish’, as Brexiteers ardently wish,…

Books

Michelle Obama listens to the National Anthem at the White House Correspondents Association annual dinner in Washington, May 2009

Lead book review

Michelle Obama: ‘I was happy that Barack’s career came first’

‘To me, he was sort of like a unicorn,’ writes Mrs Obama, looking back on her courtship days with Barack.…

Books

Will it be kid pie this Christmas?

A long and messy business is how the chef Rowley Leigh explains his preferred way of eating. Picking at a…

The China-Russia East Route pipeline under construction in 2017. At 3,968 km in length, it is designed to carry 38 billion cubic metres of natural gas from Russia’s Far East to Shanghai. [Getty]

Books

China’s power grab steps up apace

Five years ago President Xi Jinping gave a speech in Kazakhstan, launching the ‘Silk Road Economic Belt’, a wildly ambitious…

Jeeves and Bertie Wooster by Roger Payne. [Bridgeman Images}

Books

Bertie takes on the Black Shorts: Jeeves and the King of Clubs, by Ben Schott, reviewed

In 2016, inspired by reports that Donald Trump’s butler had recommended the assassination of Barack Obama, Ben Schott wrote a…

Val d’Aran in the Catalan Pyrenees [Getty}

Books

The peculiar allure of the Pyrenees

On 26 August 1880 Henry Russell consummated his marriage in an unusual way. He was, to his own mind, married…

‘The Artist’s Wife Reading’ by Albert Bartholomé, 1883. From Books Do Furnish a Painting

Books

Couldn’t artists let one read when sitting for them?

The 20th-century painter Balthus once suggested that the author of a book about him began with the words: ‘Balthus is…

R.O. Kwon, author of The Incendiaries. Photo: Smeeta Mahanti

Books

The I’s have it: the latest debut novels reviewed

The large number of novels written in the first person would suggest it’s an easy voice to pull off: that…

The Earl of Southampton, to whom Shakespeare dedicated ‘The Rape of Lucrece’. [Getty]

Books

Shakespeare as political pamphleteer

Shakespeare’s Rape of Lucrece is a puzzling and often terrible poem. Lucrece, the devout wife of Collatine, is raped by…

Helen Mirren in the title role of Phèdre, in the 2009 production at the National directed by Nicholas Hytner. ‘I was honoured to be involved in the very first NT Live broadcast,’ she writes in her foreword to Dramatic Exchanges. ‘Suddenly we were performing to many thousands of people’

Books

Rows backstage at the National Theatre

It is, proclaimed Charles Wyndham in 1908, ‘an institution alien to the spirit of our nation’. The alien having long…

Marie Colvin, a year before her death. [Rex Features]

Books

For Marie Colvin, mortal danger was what made life worth living

When Britain finally lowered the flag in the Iraqi city of Basra in 2007, the army’s top brass valiantly claimed…

Australian Books

How The West was run

There aren’t many histories or biographies written by Australians that sociologists and anthropologists will turn to in the future in…

Arts

Twiggy photographed by Justin de Villeneuve in the Rainbow Room at Big Biba, early 1970s. [JUSTIN DE VILLENEUVE]

Arts feature

A short history of art deco – from high art to two-tone shoes, garden gates to Twiggy

On 10 September 1973 the 1930s Kensington High Street department store formerly known as Derry & Toms reopened as Big…

The Listener

1975 was a great year for pop – worthy of a better band than The 1975

Grade: C A derided year in pop music, 1975 — and yet a great one. The mainstream was horrible, but…

Gidon Kremer and the Kremerata Baltica performing performing Mieczyslaw Weinberg's Concertino for Violin and Strings in 2014. Photo: Hiroyuki Ito/ Getty Images

Music

As a symphonist, Mieczyslaw Weinberg was a master: Weinberg Weekend reviewed

It’s a strange compliment to pay a composer — that the most profound impression their music makes is of an…

Keeping it in the family: Ruth Wilson playing her grandmother Alison in Mrs Wilson

Television

Refreshingly understated: BBC1’s Mrs Wilson reviewed

Shortly before her husband’s funeral, the undertaker told the eponymous main character in Mrs Wilson (BBC1, Tuesday) that, ‘We’re here…

Ivory plaque of a lioness mauling a man, ivory, gold, cornelian, lapis lazuli, Nimrud, 900 BC–700 BC. [© The Trustees of the British Museum]

Exhibitions

The Assyrians of Ashurbanipal’s time were just as into pillage and destruction as Isis

The Assyrians placed sculptures of winged human-headed bulls (lamassus) at the entrances to their capital at Nineveh, in modern Mosul,…

Matthew Ball as Ted Feltham in the Royal Ballet's The Unknown Soldier. Photo: ROH, Helen Maybanks

Dance

Has the Royal Ballet found its hero?

The Royal Ballet is a company in search of a prince. It has no lack of dancing princesses. You could…

Joanna Murray-Smith as Patricia Highsmith in Switzerland at the Ambassadors Theatre. Photo: Robbie Jack/ Corbis via Getty Images

Theatre

Intelligent, unfussy, literate – the West End needs more plays like this: Switzerland reviewed

I know nothing about Patricia Highsmith. The acclaimed American author wrote the kind of Sunday-night crime thrillers that put me…

Radio

The story of the cook who spent 10 years preparing food for those on death row

You don’t need headphones to appreciate, and catch on to, the unique selling point of radio: its immediacy, its directness,…

Rachel Weisz, Rachel McAdams and Alessandro Nivola in Disobedience

Cinema

A major missed opportunity: Disobedience reviewed

Disobedience is an adaptation of Naomi Alderman’s novel about forbidden, lesbian love in orthodox Jewish north London, starring Rachel Weisz…

Culture Buff

John William Waterhouse.The Lady of Shalott 1888 oil on canvas.

That a poet could enjoy huge popularity in mid-career and still be popularly admired more than a century after his…

Life

High life

Human evolution: a short essay

This makes Brexit take a back seat: hints of ancient life have appeared on Mars. Carbon building blocks and other…

Low life

Only a Leaver would be stupid enough to go to the wrong airport

Three of us on a cold metal bench waiting for the bus. It’s almost dark. Winter arrived yesterday and we…

Real life

I was right; the vet was wrong; and the scary sexy dentist sorted out the horses

The horse dentist is handsome, with blond windswept hair and a weather-beaten face. There is something Heathcliffian about him, something…

Bridge

Bridge

It’s been six months since the legendary Martin Hoffman died, but I’m still not sure if I’ve quite registered the…

Chess

Atticus

The Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot by Alexander Pope contains a memorable excoriation of his fellow wit and former friend Joseph…

Chess puzzle

no. 534

Black to play. This is a variation from Caruana-Carlsen, World Championship (Game 10), London 2018. The black queen is trapped…

Competition

Bad romance

In Competition No. 3076 you were invited to submit seriously misguided love poems. You seemed to embrace this task especially…

Crossword

2387: On the spot

Two unclued lights give the name of a location and another a means of arrival and -departure. Other unclued lights…

Crossword solution

to 2384: bang!

Unclued lights, individually or as a pair (38/9), are FIREWORKS.  First prize F. Whitehead, Harrogate, North YorksRunners-up I. Livingston, Wilmslow, Cheshire;…

No sacred cows

Why we’re lying to ourselves over trans rights

On 21 November, a debate took place in the House of Commons about proposals to reform the Gender Recognition Act…

Spectator sport

Talksport, cricket’s new radio stars

‘And I need a wee,’ said the former England fast–bowling legend Darren Gough, as tension built up during the Sri…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: How can I stop chatty friends from phoning when I’m meant to be working?

Q. May I pass on a tip to anyone facing large family house parties at Christmas? I always used to…

Food

A cruise-ship menu inside a giant Venetian cake: Caffè Concerto reviewed

Caffè Concerto is a chain of Italian cafés sprouting, lividly, across London and the world. There is one on Piccadilly,…

Mind your language

Word of the week: ‘Granular’, a word used to suggest in-depth analysis

‘Just two sugars,’ said my husband as I passed him his tea. He is cutting down. I doubt he would…