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The Spectator

14 September 2013 Aus

The end of the party

The decline of tribal loyalties spells the end of the big traditional political organisations

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Calling Jon Faine

With Tony Abbott’s stunning election victory, it is time that the Australian media had a comprehensive purging of those within…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Australian notes

Mr Putin suggests that Syria submit its chemical weapons to international control. Syria’s foreign minister thinks this is a good…

Brown Study

Brown study

After we had lobbed a few atom bombs on Japan in 1945, the Emperor delivered himself of the understatement of…

Diary Australia

Diary

My home city of London is famous for producing two of the world’s longest-standing and best-written political magazines. You are…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Where to now for Labor?

Tony Abbott’s unusual agenda threatens its future

Features Australia

The politics of Hatebook

The left are still drunk on the poisonous propaganda they have long consumed

Features Australia

If only Tories had a Tony

The new PM is a role model for British conservatives

Features Australia

No way to treat an expat

British pensioners here are being discriminated against — it’s time to unfreeze their state pensions annually

Features

Features

The end of the party

The decline of tribal loyalties spells the end of the big traditional political organisations

Features

Braveheart banking

The RBS disaster has a distinctly Scottish flavour

Features

An Anglican atheist

The world’s most famous atheist shows off his human side

Features

Name of shame

Take it from me, Mr Farage: you need to change your name

Features

Missile morality

Honesty may be the best and only realistic policy

Features

Lebanon’s dilemma

  Beirut News that the Syrian regime has agreed to hand in its arsenal of chemical weapons is a great…

Features

The ideal death show

I am in a yurt, talking about death. Everyone is seated in a circle, and I am the next-to-last person…

Features

Notes on…Classic cruising

We arrive at the tiny Greek island of Sikinos on a blustery day, making landing rather difficult. Is there transport…

The Week

Leading article

Saving the BBC

Three years ago, our columnist and former editor Charles Moore was summoned to Hastings Magistrates’ Court to pay £807 for…

Diary

Diary

‘Wider still and wider, may thy bounds be set,’ the ecstatic throng sang at the Last Night of the Proms.…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home George Osborne, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, said that the British economy was ‘turning a corner’, with ‘tentative signs…

Barometer

Barometer

Trust us The National Trust opened the Big Brother House at Elstree Studios at the weekend. Some other less grand…

Ancient and modern

Herodotus in Sochi

As a result of Russian laws against propagating homosexuality, there are calls to boycott the 2013 Winter Olympics in Sochi…

Letters

Letters

Tories and Italians Sir: Roger Scruton must be laughing, or more likely crying, to hear his Meaning of Conservatism described…

Columnists

World Politics

The centre can be held

His party may be struggling to reach double digits in the polls, but Nick Clegg is entitled to feel smug…

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

‘Corruption’ is a subtle word, because it describes a process rather than an event. It does not merely mean bad…

Rod Liddle

The reassuring stupidity of John Kerry

The Syrian rebels who liberated the mountain village of Maaloula apparently immediately set about converting the predominantly Christian population to…

James Delingpole

The RSPB is fighting for wind turbines. The birds can fend for themselves

The RSPB has come out against fracking and urged the government to ‘rethink its shale gas policies’. And of course…

Hugo Rifkind

Boring politicians are a threat to democracy. That means you, Rachel Reeves

I’ve never met the woman that the Newsnight editor Ian Katz this week accidentally described as ‘boring, snoring Rachel Reeves’,…

Any other business

Welcome back, TSB: your founder’s spirit is alive and well and living in Airdrie

A big hello to the revived Trustee Savings Bank — the spin-off of 631 Lloyds branches that were going to…

Books

Lead book review

Donkeys led by donkeys

David Crane is taken aback by the particular contempt Max Hastings appears to reserve for the British at the outbreak of the first world war

Books

Doctor in a toga

In the first draft of the screenplay for the film Gladiator, the character to be played by Russell Crowe (‘father…

Books

A world without Wallis

In both his novels and non-fiction, D. J. Taylor has long been fascinated by the period between the wars. Now…

Books

Friends before foes

Like Miranda Seymour, the author of this considerable work on Anglo-German relations, I was raised in a Germanophile home. I…

Books

Get Shorty

It is by now surely beyond doubt that those governments committed to fighting the war on drugs — and on…

Books

The leader who followed

The historian of China Frank Dikötter has taken a sledgehammer to demolish perhaps the last remaining shibboleth of modern Chinese…

Books

Multilingual Chinese whispers

There is a hoary Cold War joke about a newly invented translating machine. On a test run, the CIA scientists…

Books

Not just a pretty dress

Every fashion era has its monster and in ours it’s Karl Lagerfeld, a man who has so emptied himself on…

Books

The hero of Burma

Given the outcome of recent military campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, it is pertinent to look for one particular quality…

Books

Taking the rap

Since his suicide, David Foster Wallace has made the transition from major writer to major industry. Hence this UK issue…

Books

It’s never too late

In 1998, the Jamaican singer Bounty Killer released a single, ‘Can’t Believe Mi Eyes’, which expressed incredulity that men should…

Bookends

Helpful hints for Holloway

For some reason you don’t expect people to be fans of the Mitford sisters, as others are fans of Doctor…

Arts

Incurable Shakespeare nut: Greg Doran

Arts feature

Man with a plan

Robert Gore-Langton meets Gregory Doran, new artistic director at the RSC

Music

Love rekindled

How and when do you become ‘a fan’, exactly? You can usually spot pop stars who are losing touch with…

Gender bender: Sophie Crawford as Pope Joan

Theatre

Porn and pontiffs

Suddenly they’re all at it. Actors, that is, writing plays. David Haig, Rory Kinnear and Simon Paisley Day are all…

‘The Fallen Tree’, 1951, by John Nash

Exhibitions

Root and branch

A mixed exhibition of paintings, drawings and prints devoted to the subject of the tree might sound an unexciting event,…

Opera

Reincarnations of Wagner

The many opera performances at the Proms this year have all been so successful, especially the Wagner series, that I…

Trigger happy: Channing Tatum as John Cale

Cinema

Explosive fun

Just do it, quoth the Nike advert — and these men just did it. Grass, asphalt, fear, pain, doubt and…

Mesmerising: Cillian Murphy as Thomas Shelby in Peaky Blinders

Television

Comic relief

Funny what rises from the rubble. In 1916 British army officer Captain Fred Roberts was searching the bombed-out remains of…

Radio

Take five

Five women, five very different stories of arriving in the UK, often unwillingly and always alone. How did they cope…

Culture notes

Yet another side of Bob Dylan

So, there’s this guy called Bob Dylan and, across just seven years in the 1960s, he’d released nine albums that…

Life

High life

High life

To London for a brief visit to meet Spectator readers, as nice a reason as I can think of for…

Low life

Low life

One evening last week, I trotted over to the caravan site’s clubhouse to use the wifi and pick up emails.…

Real life

Real life

‘Congratulations! You’ve qualified for The Sunshine Tour!’ beamed the lady judge, as she pinned a rosette to my horse’s bridle.…

Long life

Long life

It is exactly 40 years since my elder brother John gave up a successful career as a publisher to set…

The turf

Hot Candy

Cape Peron was my easiest choice for our Twelve to Follow. When Henry Candy smiles his gentle smile, as he…

Bridge

Bridge

In any sport, a sense of elation is a dangerous thing. When a player does something good, he can’t afford…

Chess

Lord of the flies

It is often said that the great chessboard artist, Polish Grandmaster Akiba Rubinstein, was afflicted during tournament play by an…

Chess puzzle

No. 283

Black to play. This position is from Rotlewi-Rubinstein, Lodz 1907. This is the conclusion of one of Rubinstein’s most famous…

Competition

Genesis

In Competition 2814 you were invited to describe how a great writer stumbled upon an idea that he or she…

Crossword

2130: Elusive

Each of 23 clues comprises a definition part and a hidden consecutive jumble of the answer including one extra letter.…

Crossword solution

Solution to 2127: Dire straits

Twelve unclued lights are names of ARTISTS which are ANAGRAMS (9) of superfluous words in clues.   First prize E.…

Status anxiety

To the Slaughter

I was at a surprise birthday party for a member of the cabinet last week when a Conservative minister spotted…

The Wiki Man

A mansion tax that monkeys would understand

I am surprised no more attention has been given to Martin Vander Weyer’s suggestion in The Spectator two weeks ago…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. What to do when you are an unwilling eavesdropper in a train carriage in which people you know assume…

Drink

The patriarch of wines

Marcher country, the Jura lies to the east of Burgundy and the contrast is marked. Burgundy: the very name is…

Mind your language

Squee

Oxford Dictionaries have been adding some rather silly words to their online resources, such as phablet (‘a smartphone with a…