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The Spectator

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Australia

Leading article Australia

New Year’s election?

What a mess; and, for once, it didn’t start with Malcolm Turnbull. The citizenship fiasco is a consequence of the…

Australian Columnists

Consider This

Consider this…

Western Civilisation Of late, Western Civilisation has been copping a lot of flack. It seems that the West is to…

Diary Australia

Author’s diary

Author tours are funny things, especially when unexpected. 12 months ago, I’d given up on getting Kingdom of the Wicked…

Australian Features

Features Australia

A teacher tweets

A high-tech revolution is taking place in the world of teaching, but it’s not about AI or virtual reality or…

Features Australia

Climate games

Who do you suppose wrote this? ‘The changing climate is causing great damage to people and planet right now, and…

Features Australia

Even worse in WA

We all know that the Liberal party MPs are in a world of pain. The polls are diabolical. Political death…

Features Australia

Fellow citizens

The High Court’s decision last month to disqualify five federal parliamentarians for being dual citizens represents the worst excesses of…

Features Australia

The deep swamp

Bill and Hillary Clinton are not unlike Lord and Lady Macbeth. For the better part of twenty-five years these two…

Features Australia

Sacrificial notes

To the Sun Goddess Wong Visiting Canada, I could not fail but note the absence of any significant campaign to…

Features

Features

Saudi Arabia has united with Israel against Iran – and a desert storm is brewing

Until last weekend, the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh’s exclusive Diplomatic Quarter was colloquially known as the Princes’ Hotel. It was a…

Features

How Britain fell for Saudi Arabia’s reforming Crown Prince

There are two ways of seeing the extraordinary rise of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince: the blood-stained debut of a new…

Notebook

If China backs Trump on North Korea he won’t like the quid pro quo

The first election day since Donald Trump was elected president a year ago brought a funereal mood to Washington that…

Features

Sorry for touching your knee Michael Fallon – I exploited you to get ahead

This one goes out to all the male MPs I’ve taken to lunch. I want to apologise to each and…

Features

The EU must be reformed through sovereignty and democracy. Here’s how I plan to do it

The European Union has languished and become enfeebled — and we are all to blame. There is a noticeable paucity…

Features

Who decided that keeping money in ‘paradise’ is a crime? We should all thank havens

Maybe we should blame John Grisham. In his breakthrough best-seller The Firm, the young lawyer Mitch, played by Tom Cruise…

Features

Forget open-plan kitchens – the traditional dining room is back

Dining rooms have been in the doldrums for decades. Even Mary Berry has given up on hers. ‘Most of us,…

Features

Police thought I was the Putney Pusher and I had to find an alibi – fast

I’m sitting at home working, minding my business, and the mobile rings. It’s DC Lyle from Wandsworth police station. He…

Irish chic: the Duchess of Cornwall with Dubarrys

Notes on...

Why does the Duchess of Cambridge wear French wellies when British is best?

‘Foot – foot – foot – foot – sloggin’ over Africa — / (Boots – boots – boots – boots…

The Week

Leading article

Does Theresa May’s zombie government even want to survive?

Dealing with a hung parliament was never going to be easy, but no one quite foresaw the decay which now…

Portrait of the week

Sexual misconduct claims leave government in crisis

Home An air of crisis hung over the government. Priti Patel, the International Development Secretary, was told to fly back…

Diary

Between Trump and Harvey Weinstein, America is fast approaching outrage overload

It’s remarkable how fast the unthinkable becomes the expected. It felt almost routine to pick up the New York Post…

Ancient and modern

The wily courtesans who won more respect than modern-day feminists

Some MPs have been exploiting their power by their sexual fumblings with the lower ranks. The result is that when…

Barometer

Where was the very first tax haven?

Pennies from haven Last week’s huge leak of the ‘Paradise Papers’ has put the Channel Islands and the Isle of…

Letters

Letters: Looking for love? Just follow these three simple rules

Rules for romance Sir: Lara Prendergast describes a floundering generation desperate for reliable love but with no real idea how…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

If the Duchy of Lancaster has been so bad, why didn’t Labour notice before?

Let us assume — which we shouldn’t — that it is automatically wrong for the Queen to benefit financially from…

World Politics

Why can’t Theresa May get a grip on Westminster scandals?

How much longer can things go on like this? That is the question on the lips of Tory ministers and…

Matthew Parris

The Westminster sex scandal is what psychologists call ‘displacement activity’

There are three reasons why Britain’s political and media world finds itself in the present ludicrous uproar over sexual misbehaviour…

Rod Liddle

When the liberal media omit a crucial fact, it’s always worth dwelling on

News programmes are as interesting, these days, for what they don’t tell you as for what they do. So, the…

Mary Wakefield

The iciness behind the heart of the #metoo movement

On rolls the Harvey Weinstein horror show with no finale in sight. The next episode looks likely to star Uma…

Any other business

Yes, Jay Powell is the compromise candidate for the Federal Reserve – but not a bad one at that

Perhaps we should be relieved that Donald Trump has made a dull appointment to succeed Janet Yellen as chairman of…

Books

Lead book review

Books of the year

A.N. Wilson Elmet by Fiona Mozley (John Murray, £10.99). It is difficult to convey the full horror of this spellbinding…

An anti-Stalinist painting of the 1940s shows the tyrant’s face composed of starving Russians, against a backdrop of the Gulag

Books

A decade of famine and purges: the murderous 1930s under Stalin

He stood five feet seven in his boots — the same height as Napoleon and an inch shorter than Hitler.…

Books

Reaping the whirlwind of climate change

I spent part of the summer sailing around Ithaca and the Ionian Sea. It was a good reminder of how…

Books

Brilliant essayists, dark and fair

Read cover to cover, a book of essays gives you the person behind it: their voice, the trend of their…

Books

What does ‘Guernica’ really symbolise?

It takes a bold author to open his book about ‘Guernica’ with a quotation from the Spanish artist Antonio Saura…

Adachi Museum Garden, Yasugi, Japan (From The Japanese Garden)

Books

Nothing’s coming up roses in the garden these days

Emotional geography is now a recognised academic subject. Is emotional botany heading the same way? This is a year for…

Books

Mussolini’s fall from grace

These days it is fashionable to claim Mussolini as a fundamentally decent fellow led astray by an opportunist alliance with…

Red panel (1936) by Alexander Caldwell

Books

High wire act

‘Mid-century modern’ is the useful term popularised by Cara Greenberg’s 1984 book of that title. The United States, the civilisation…

Books

The enigma of Enric Marco

Enric Marco has had a remarkable life. A prominent Catalan union activist, a brave resistance fighter in the Spanish Civil…

Arts

François Cluzet as paraplegic billionaire Philippe and Omar Sy as his carer Driss in Untouchable (2011)

Arts feature

Does disability make a difference to art – or does art transcend disability?

The moment you invite friends to some new ‘cutting-edge’ disability theatre or film, most swallow paroxysms of social anxiety. What…

Radio

I never understood the appeal of Ken Dodd

It’s always odd to hear a familiar voice on a different programme, playing an alternative role. They never sound quite…

Music

Hearts and minds

Debussy’s Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune begins with a sigh: a long, languorous exhalation played on the lower notes of…

‘Self-Portrait’, 1880–1, by Paul Cézanne

Exhibitions

The most impressive array of work to be seen in London in years: Cézanne’s Portraits reviewed

The critic and painter Adrian Stokes once remarked on how fortunate Cézanne had been to be bald, ‘considering the wonderful…

Television

The left-wing bias on Celebrity Gogglebox was excruciating

This week I want to put the boot in to Gogglebox (Channel 4, Fridays). Not the mostly likeable, everyday version,…

Stitches in time: detail of ‘Embroidery Design’ by May Morris, worked by May Morris and Theodosia Middlemore, c.1900

Arts

Is May Morris a feminist cause – a woman of genius unfairly overlooked?

You may think you don’t know May Morris, daughter of William, but you’ll probably have come across her wallpaper. Her…

Theatre

Rarely has the West End seen such a draining and nasty experience: The Exorcist reviewed

The Exorcist opened in 1973 accompanied by much hoo-ha in the press. Scenes of panic, nausea and fainting were recorded…

Making musical history: Lin-Manuel Miranda and the cast of Hamilton

Musical Theatre

Why has there never been a hit musical about the history of Britain?

Americans may be able to draw on only 250 years of history, but they’re not shy of making a song…

Cinema

The Florida Project never sanctifies or demonises and is absorbing throughout

The Florida Project is a drama set in one of those cheap American motels occupied by poor people who would…

Culture Buff

Jan de Bray “The governors of the Guild of St Luke, Haarlem” 1675

The Dutch Republic in the 17th century was surprisingly exciting and is now known as the Dutch Golden Age. Newly…

Life

High life

Why Harvey, Dustin and Brett did it

A dinner in honour of Arki Busson hosted by Michael Mailer in his brilliant Brooklyn flat on the banks of…

Low life

A lament for the best pub in Devon

We had a hyperbole competition, the taxi driver and I, over the climbing full moon, clearer and brighter than either…

Real life

Are my horses conspiring against me?

When it comes to horses, troubles come in multitudes. Multitudes of lame legs. Gracie, the hunter pony, kicked things off…

The turf

The founding father of bookmaking

Imagine Ryan Moore getting caught on the line by a rival’s late spurt at the end of a Newmarket race…

Bridge

Bridge

The third and final weekend of England’s Premier League took place in Solihull and was a very jolly affair. All…

Chess

Master class

While researching some early games in the Bf4 version of the Queen’s Pawn openings favoured by world champion Magnus Carlsen,…

Chess puzzle

no. 482

White to play. This position is from Rasmussen-Nyback, Crete 2017. How can White win at once? Answers to me at…

Competition

Mixing it

In Competition No. 3023 you were invited to submit cringeworthy portmanteau words. The word portmanteau was first used in this…

Crossword

2235: Chippy

The unclued lights (one of two words — ignore its accent) are of a kind.   Across 1    I’m the…

Crossword solution

to 2332: glad all over

The unclued lights are preceded by HAPPY to yield phrases listed in Brewer.  First prize Tony Hankey, London W4Runners-up C.…

Status anxiety

Another year, another tax leak – and the usual annual festival of hypocrisy

Stories about members of the establishment using offshore tax shelters — ooh er missus! — come along about once a…

Spectator sport

As West Ham go for dull David Moyes, football badly needs more Pep talks

So West Ham took the least surprising option and sent for David Moyes. Same old same old. I have a…

Dear Mary

Mary solves your problems: A family friend stays over all the time – but never actually asks us out

Q. We have a family friend we don’t see nearly as much as we’d like. This is because he’s so…

Food

This new Bake Off diner is just half-baked Hollywood

Knead is the first of Paul Hollywood’s new strain of bakeries that sell coffee, and which will encircle capitalism. This…

Mind your language

Is your conduct unacceptably inappropriate – or inappropriately unacceptable?

‘When is physical contact “unacceptable”?’ asked Charles Moore in the Daily Telegraph. He may well ask. Sir Michael Fallon said…