The Spectator
14 January 2017 Aus
Finishing off Marx
Australia
The barnacles just keep growing
The latest travel expenses affair is no more than another recurring symptom of the serious malaise in the Australian political…
Australian Columnists
Brown study
The Sussan Ley scandal highlights the monumental problem facing the Turnbull government in restoring its public standing to anything remotely…
Australian notes
I’ve just returned from my fifth trip to Israel in the last decade. It prompted me to recall a conversation…
Diary
My two sons, aged 16 and 14, are at the wonderful stage where, in the sharp-humoured traditions of Australian larrikinism,…
Australian Features
Stealing beauty (and everything else)
A new front in the war against racism has opened up and the fight is being taken to a new…
Turnbull, turn to Key
Once upon a time, a multi-millionaire, former merchant banker Prime Minister, highly successful in business who came to politics later…
Dangerous queen
In a move that has delighted his fans and appalled his enemies, Breitbart editor and provocateur extraordinaire Milo Yiannopoulos is…
Finishing off Marx
With the onset of the so-called festive season, I fear that two of the more significant newspaper articles of recent…
John Key’s score card
Just how good a Prime Minister was New Zealand’s recently retired John Key? I ask the question as a right-of-centre,…
Business/Robbery etc
The cost effect on the real world of the ideological fairyland of anti-coal campaigners is now becoming worryingly evident. Not…
What on earth!
I grew up believing in a fundamental truth that the North Pole was the magnetic pole. So, of all the…
Features
Trump’s family favourites
Donald Trump will not find satisfaction as the 45th President of the United States of America. He really wants to…
Healthy ridicule
Something I have long noticed is how, the moment they leave office, many politicians suddenly undergo a strange transformation where,…
The trouble with Francis
On 2 January, the Vatican published a letter from Pope Francis to the world’s bishops in which he reminded them…
Hack of the century
To all those computer hackers exulting in pizza-encrusted bedrooms across central Europe — the US presidential election was influenced! The…
A priest at the door
It was October 2010 the night the priest came to our door. The knock startled Tim’s dullard beagle into a…
A stroke of genius
The picture had been chosen for its utterly gratuitous depiction of female beauty. It showed Justine Henin, the Belgian tennis…
Not owning a car
On two occasions, sainted members of my family have offered me a car for nothing. Both times, I turned them…
Don’t ask the experts
Michael Gove never intended to make his most famous remark. In an interview during the EU referen-dum campaign, the then…
The Week
Bonds of friendship
From ‘The Rome conference and bonds of alliance’, The Spectator, 13 January 1917: There may be the greatest possible good,…
Portrait of the week
Home Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of the Labour party, proposed a limit on incomes: ‘I would like to see some kind…
No, he didn’t
The irony of Barack Obama’s presidency is that while it began at a time when it seemed America’s fortunes could……
Columnists
The Spectator’s Notes
At the Golden Globes ceremony, Meryl Streep attacked Donald Trump because he ‘imitated a disabled reporter’. ‘When the powerful use……
Inflation creeps back like the forgotten whiff of cigarette smoke
From supermarkets to superyacht builders, sales figures are remarkably buoyant: consumer debt may be rising too, but no one can…
How the Donald will beat the Green Blob
Just before Christmas I popped over to Washington DC to test the waters of the Trump administration. I spoke to…
As the cab doors locked, I wanted to get out
I meant to get the bus, but by the time I arrived at the stop at 5 p.m. last Tuesday, I…
Theresa May, left-wing Tory
Curbs on executive pay, restrictions on foreign takeovers and workers on boards. Not Jeremy Corbyn’s plan for Britain, but ideas…
The lies we tell ourselves about the NHS
The language of the left is a truly transformative grammar, so I suppose Noam Chomsky would heartily approve. There are…
Books
The puppet queen
It is easy to see why the bare century of the Tudor dynasty’s rule has drawn so much attention from…
Body language
Others goes straight to the head. Things start like this: with an article on a website called ‘Women and Film’,…
Restoration man
Given that he wrote and published some of the most stunningly handsome books of the 17th century, John Ogilby has…
The best Brontë
Fans of the novels and poems written by the sibling inhabitants of Haworth Parsonage always have a Top Brontë. Fame-seeking…
Only obeying orders
Spare a thought for the poor Gulag guard: the rifleman standing in the freezing wind on the outside of the…
A shameful whitewash
I have been researching and writing about black British history for over 30 years but never before have I been…
Licence to kill
As I read the last chapter of this book, news broke that the Russian ambassador to Ankara, Andrey Karlov, had…
Perfect Sunday evening schmaltz
Set in rural England in 1911, Tim Pears’s latest novel tells of a friendship between 12-year-old Leo, a precocious carter,…
Sweat-drenching, muscle-aching stuff
‘John, we need your autobiography.’ ‘I thought I’d express my life experience in song.’ ‘That’ll be fine.’ This would be…
An astronomical feat
Think of a computer and your mind might conjure the brushed steel contours of the latest must-have laptop or, for…
Arts
Haus of ill repute
Here in Munich, in the gallery that Hitler built, this year’s big hit show is a spectacular display of modern…
Caveats be damned
You will have registered the buzz surrounding La La Land and clocked its seven Golden Globe wins and 11 Bafta…
The Bourne identity
From a film about ballet to a ballet about film. In reworking the 1948 Powell and Pressburger classic The Red…
Shape shifter
Victor Pasmore once told me how he greeted Pablo Picasso at Victoria station. The great man had come to Britain…
Word perfect
All that’s needed for Radio 4’s One to One series (Tuesdays) to succeed is a sharp-eyed interviewer, ready with the…
Shall we dance?
‘Blimey! How on earth did they think of that?’ is unlikely to be anyone’s response to Our Dancing Town (BBC2,…
Drama queen
God, what a dusty old chatterbox Schiller is. Like Bernard Shaw, he can’t put a character on stage without churning…
Julia Baird
In 2015, Queen Elizabeth II became the longest reigning sovereign in British history surpassing Queen Victoria who is the subject…
Life
Making work for ourselves
In 1929 John Maynard Keynes predicted that by 2029 people in the developed nations could enjoy a perfectly civilised standard…
no. 439
Black to play. This position is from Topalov-Anand, London Classic 2016. How did Black conclude? Answers to me at The…
Festive features
THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER (99) and IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE (20) – whose DIRECTORS (37) were ERNST LUBITSCH (61)…
Comic effect
In Competition No. 2980 you were invited to submit an extract from a politician’s speech ghostwritten by a well-known comedian.…
Sherry to start
Someone came up with a century-old quotation plangent with irony and sadness: ‘The year 1916 was cursed: 1917 will surely…
Nativism
The title of America’s first woman bishop was claimed in 1918 by Bishop Alma White, leader of the Pillar of…







































































