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The Spectator

10 October 2020 Aus

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Speccie vs Stasiland

This week’s budget is a tale of Covid-induced devastation. Instead of being Back in the Black, there is a deficit…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

I suppose two fundamental departures from traditional Liberal party positions in a week or so is about par for the…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Voting systems matter – ours is a problem

Our politicians are secure in the knowledge they can ignore the base

Features Australia

The case for Trump

Only Donald Trump can pull off a US post-Covid recovery

Features Australia

Pell plot thickens

Was the Cardinal’s accuser being paid with Vatican funds?

Features Australia

Appeasement of Iran endangers us all

Europe’s intransigence threatens regional and global peace

Features Australia

Behind the mask

The authoritarian health lobby has murky roots in fascism

Features Australia

Dangerous elites planning ‘the Great Reset’

Davos 2021 will launch its own Green New Deal. Be afraid.

Features Australia

Poll predicts a Trumpslide

The debate format was flawed but the answers revealing

Features

Features

Breaking the bank

How to stop trawlers from trashing the North Sea

Features

Dog pounds

The hidden costs of the lockdown puppy boom

Features

Disunited Kingdom

The Covid divide is triggering political tensions

Features

Bad books

Spare me the ‘chic lit’ cult

Features

Portrait of The Lady

It’s as ignorant to demonise Aung San Suu Kyi as it was to idolise her

Notes on...

Punch and Judy

They’re one of the country’s most famous married couples. You just need to spot his colourful jester outfit and the…

Notebook

Election notebook

Americans are, in my experience, the warmest, most kind-hearted and open-minded people in the world. I have found this to…

Features

‘Cabin crew can make good nurses’

Thérèse Coffey on stemming the unemployment tide

Features

Local lockdowns have failed the north

The announcement of the ‘Rule of Six’ policy last month was met with much furore – in the south of…

The Week

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home Coronavirus was on the increase. At the beginning of the week, Sunday 4 October, total deaths (within 28 days…

Diary

Diary

I first visited Orford in 1970, at peak Cold War when this stretch of the East Anglian coast was one…

Leading article

Boris’s second wind

The centrepiece of Boris Johnson’s speech to Tory party conference this year was his Damascene conversion to the merits of…

Barometer

Barometer

Vice squad Donald Trump catching Covid-19 has concentrated minds on what happens if a US president dies in office. Normally,…

Ancient and modern

How to be content

The Covid-19 pandemic is apparently causing a large number of mental health problems. On that subject, one could do a…

Letters

Letters

Misplaced Trust Sir: Charles Moore is as ever bang on target (The Spectator’s Notes, 26 September). National Trust members have…

Columnists

Columns

Veeps shall inherit the earth

In Pence and Harris, we are looking at the future of the Republican Party

Columns

The transatlantic mask divide

Should we wear our masks? The question has been on my mind as I have been battered that way and…

Any other business

The Blackburn brothers who are bringing Asda home

What a triumph of entrepreneurial empire-building — if that’s still an acceptable phrase — is the £6.8 billion acquisition of…

Columns

My pick for BBC chairman

There are two striking things about the new book, 100 Great Black Britons, which was compiled to celebrate the achievements…

Columns

Will the Abbey ring for Remembrance Day?

It took me several weeks, after returning to the Spectator office, to work out what was missing. It wasn’t the…

Books

More from Books

Words take wing

When Helen Macdonald was a child, she had a way of calming herself during moments of stress: closing her eyes,…

Lead book review

A walk on the Wilde side

Philip Hensher admires a witty account of the horrors of modern film-making

More from Books

Secrets of the double cross

Für dich, Tommy, ist der Krieg vorbei. However, many British servicemen, officers especially, didn’t want their war to be over.…

More from Books

The mask of deception

Talbot Kydd, film producer; Anny Viklund, American actress; Elfrida Wing, novelist; these make the trio of the title. Private lives…

More from Books

Breakdown in Berlin

‘I was what they call an “independent scholar”’, confides the narrator of Hari Kunzru’s Red Pill, a middle-aged writer from…

More from Books

Blood and lust

In June 793, a raiding force arrived by boat at the island monastery of Lindisfarne, on the Northumbrian coast. The…

More from Books

Between heaven and Charing Cross

After Stalingrad, Hitler desperately needed an encouraging novelty. Wernher von Braun, Germany’s leading rocketeer in the second world war, expertly…

Arts

Australian Arts

Lockdown

What a strange phase the world of theatre – the world of artistic activity – is going through at the…

Culture Buff

Richard Tognetti

They led the way back into the spotlight. Richard Tognetti and members of the Australian Chamber Orchestra were the first…

Arts feature

Rare and precious

Martin Gayford explains why the Royal Academy would be wrong to sell Michelangelo’s ‘Taddei Tondo’

Theatre

Sins of the fathers, music of the sons

When Kwame Kwei-Armah took over the Young Vic he strapped a ‘Black Lives Matter’ sign over the front of the…

Music

Whistling past the graveyard

Dr John called James Booker ‘the best black, gay, one-eyed junkie piano genius New Orleans has ever produced’. Booker died…

Television

Porn again

A woman is eating a pie in her car as it gets an automatic wash. Careful to keep the pie…

Radio

Partridge on the menu

In the week Jenni Murray left Woman’s Hour, I was listening to Alan Partridge on his new podcast, From the…

Cinema

Saints and sinners

Saint Maud is a first feature from writer-director Rose Glass and it’s being billed as a horror film. But it’s…

More from Arts

Are you reading this, Rishi?

Curious thing, writer’s block. If you believe it exists. Terry Pratchett didn’t. ‘There’s no such thing,’ he said. ‘It was…

Classical

Fish and fire

Anyone who invited the Russian composer Mily Balakirev to dinner had to be jolly careful about the fish they served.…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie Life & Language

Brendan Ward A re-run of Cathy Freeman’s heart-stopping 400 metre race at the Sydney Olympics in September 2000 recently animated…

Kiwi Life, New Zealand

Kiwi Life

Once upon a time here in New Zealand, when political dinosaurs still roamed the earth, Prime Minister Keith Holyoake startled…

Bridge

Bridge

One of the things that makes bridge so endlessly fascinating is that it is forever changing and growing. At high…

High life

High life

Gstaad Juliette Gréco’s recent death in her nineties brought back some melodramatic memories. In 1957 Gréco was one of France’s…

Low life

Low life

My French friend André speaks perfect English and is the kindest of men. After reading last week about my futile…

Real life

Real life

‘Please be aware there is now a Covid surcharge,’ I told the builder boyfriend one morning, as we discussed the…

Chess puzzle

Puzzle no. 625

Black to play. Khodashneli — Willow, European Online Youth Championship U18, September 2020. White has just advanced 40 g3-g4, and…

Crossword

2478: Namesakes

Clockwise round the grid from 3 run three song titles (totalling 13 words) with 3D/16 (five words in all) giving…

Competition

In my end is my beginning

In Competition No. 3169 you were invited to submit a poem about autumn in which the last letter of each…

Crossword solution

Solution to 2475: Poem VI

The poem was The Brook by Alfred Tennyson. The words were HERN (8A), LINGER (20), BRIMMING (32A), FLOW (40), TROUT…

Chess

A trout in the milk?

I can’t tell you why the Armenian grandmaster Tigran Petrosian was found guilty of cheating last month, because I don’t…

No sacred cows

Boris Johnson’s human shield

At a Conservative party conference fringe event last Sunday, Lord Bethell, a health minister, was asked where he thought Britain…

Food

Rich pickings

Pity the gilded restaurants of Mayfair, if you can: they are dying. Some have reopened; they ache on like men…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. I am running out of suitable responses to a friend who now has the slightest possible connection to one…

Mind your language

Bonk

I take it personally that a word I practically saw being born is now unrecognised by people almost old enough…

Spectator sport

Football without the crowds is a winner

The Liverpool defence might have decided in a rare show of togetherness to demonstrate what the word ‘appalling’ means, and…