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The Spectator

18 April 2015 Aus

Mob rules

Would-be leaders of the left are harnessing the mood of angry populism

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Spill Bill?

The major problem facing the Labor party today is one of logistics: how do you get rid of a floundering…

Australian Columnists

Consider This

Consider this…

Saving scientists, bureaucrats & the Great Barrier Reef Did you know that Christine Milne was Vice President of the International…

Australian Notes

Australian notes

I have over the years passed up many an opportunity to hear Keysar Trad in the flesh. Publicist, poet, media…

Diary Australia

Australian diary

My bladder is still fighting the NSW State Election. It is 5am and for the past six weeks this has…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Total recall

In cases like that of Billy Gordon, give the voters the final say

Features Australia

The spirit of cricket

Richie Benaud was master of all trades, jack of none

Features Australia

GSTea Party

The current system of financing the states should be thrown overboard

Bottom Drawer

Bottom drawer

Professor Anne Twomey (‘Royal activism in the spider web of secrecy’, 4 April) argues that Prince Charles’s use of his…

Bottom Drawer

Bottom drawer

Professor Anne Twomey (‘Royal activism in the spider web of secrecy’, 4 April) argues that Prince Charles’s use of his…

Features

Features

Mob rules

Would-be leaders of the left are harnessing a mood of angry populism. It’s better as a way of getting elected than as an approach to government

Features

Hillary’s left turn

The Democratic party has moved left under Obama. It’s not a look that suits the former first lady

Features

Scotland’s new national faith

That’s why its arguments are so impervious to evidence and reason

Features

Easy virtue

Want to be virtuous? Saying the right things violently on Twitter is much easier than real kindness

Features

Fat chance

As Kingsley Amis said, no pleasure is worth giving up for the sake of two more years in a geriatric home

Forces of nature: Maggi Hambling with ‘Amy Winehouse’, a painting exhibited at her Walls of Water show last year

Features

‘Paint goes on living’

The artist, at 69, on Rembrandt, Twombly and talking to God

Features

Jews against Miliband

He’d be the first Jewish prime minister since Disraeli. So why is a swing-voting community overwhelmingly backing the Tories?

Møns Klint as painted by Claudia Massie

Notes on...

Møn

The things you can do in Møn – all of them

The Week

Leading article

A deadly silence

Cameron’s triumphant intervention in Libya has ended with death in the Mediterranean. This is why we need foreign policy to become an election issue

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home Launching the Conservative party manifesto, David Cameron, the party leader, told voters he wanted to ‘turn the good news…

Diary

Diary

Plus: Ed Miliband’s dangerous virtue, and a more enjoyable alternative to Adam Smith

Barometer

Barometer

Plus: What Viv Nicholson’s spending spree would cost today, and where the right to buy is used most

Ancient and modern

Demosthenes vs Michael Fallon

The Defence Secretary could — and should — have taken a lesson in rhetoric from ancient Athens

From The Archives

Am I still an Englishman?

From ‘Some reflections of an alien enemy: the contradiction between being and feeling an Englishman, by a Czech’, The Spectator, 17…

Letters

Letters

Plus: Suits on the beach, hiring vicars and airline accidents

Columnists

World Politics

Cameron must show he’s not too posh to push

David Cameron may look ‘too posh to push’. In fact, friends say, he’s simply too worried about losing

Rod Liddle

Call me insane, but I’m voting Labour

I can’t stand the party’s mindset, leadership and many of its policies, but on one key issue I trust it more than the rest

Matthew Parris

The power of collective grievance

In Scotland as in Catalonia, it is a shared sense of victimhood that is the strongest source of patriotism

Hugo Rifkind

Warning: you may be about to vote for more than one government

The Fixed Term Parliaments Act has changed everything. No, wait, don’t go away…

Any other business

Did the £20 million Norwegian’s pay row make BG cheaper for Shell?

Plus: Canvassing for election predictions on a delayed Ryanair flight

Books

An Armenian orphan in 1915. Hundreds of thousands of Christian women and children who survived the genocide suffered forced conversion to Islam

Lead book review

Too little, too late

On the centenary of the Armenian genocide, Justin Marozzi is appalled by how this great catastrophe has been almost entirely buried, through neglect or denial, until now

Books

Trailing clouds of glory

In a review of Skyfaring, a memoir by Mark Vanhoenacker, Stephen Bayley overcomes his nervousness on the subject of flying and is entranced by a pilot’s poetic vision

Superstar curators like Hans Ulrich Obrist tour the world making items desirable through their selection alone, while paranoically insisting that what they do is ‘work’. Study for Tate Modern Sign (Bill Burns, 2012)

Books

In a niche of their own

Curating embraces everything these days — including sandwiches — says Jack Castle, and the superstar curators of exhibitions have become far more important than the artists themselves

Books

A mingling of blood and ink

M.J Carter’s The Infidel Stain, set in the dark alleys of Dickensian London, combines pornography and the Chartist movement in high Victorian melodrama

Books

The nature of belonging

The perpetual dilemma of where to live is explored in Melissa Harrison’s vibrant novel of roots and belonging

Gyalo Thondup (right) pictured with the Dalai Lama on their arrival in India in 1959

Books

Little brother’s helper

Gyalo Thondup, brother of the Dalai Lama, recalls in detail his many years directing Tibet’s foreign policy. But can we believe him?, asks Jonathan Mirsky

Latrines dating from the second century at Ostia Antica, outside Rome

Books

A neglected corner of Roman history

We know a lot about Roman baths, says Peter Stothard, but not so much about their lavatories. Ann Olga Koloski-Ostrow in The Archeology of Sanitation in Roman Italy has the subject comprehensively covered

Books

Pessimism keeps breaking in

James Wood, Michael Hoffmann and the state of modern literary criticism

Books

Sink or swim

In a review of Caryl Phillips’s The Lost Child, Alex Clark finds shades of Emily Brontë in this novel about the erasure of female experience

Plotinus and Michel de Montaigne are included in George Steiner’s broad survey. His argument that we should elevate the pursuit of disinterested knowledge over the making of money is a familar one since classical times

Books

The same old song

George Steiner is a deeply erudite, elegant writer, with a profound knowledge of European culture. It’s a pity his latest essay, full of lovely disquisitions, lacks a single original argument

Books

Pure word music

Magnus Mills’s novel The Field of the Cloth of Gold is certainly not about is Henry VIII. And what it is about doesn’t really matter. Just enjoy its pure word music

From Russia with love

Books

Made in Chelski

Vesna Goldsworthy’s novel about Moscow-on-Thames is a tense, witty page-turner, says Viv Groskop

Books

Dangerously close to home

Attica Locke’s smart legal thriller, Pleasantville, is set in an elegant suburb of Houston, specifically designed for middle-class blacks. But it’s still a ghetto — with very few exit points

Tippi Hedren helps save schoolchildren in The Birds. Hitchcock confided to François Truffaut that he’d had ‘some emotional problems’ with Hedren during the shoot. For the final scene, live birds were attached to Hedren’s clothes. The actress became increasingly hysterical over the course of the week it took to film it, and when a bird finally went for her eyes, she collapsed

Books

Fighting fear with fear

The Master of Suspense was full of fear and paranoia himself, reveals Christopher Bray in a review of two lives of Alfred Hitchcock

Australian Books

Ends of the earth

This story, second in a projected series (the first was The Thief Fleet, reviewed in these pages 8 December 2012),…

Arts

Arts feature

Cathedrals on wheels

Stephen Bayley hails the automobile - a miracle of technical and artistic collaboration - and mourns its demise

‘Propeller (Air Pavilion)’, 1937

Exhibitions

Sonia alone

The Russian-born French artist emerges from her husband's shadows - and triumphs

Music

The legend returns

Irrespective of his 'peace-making', the Israeli-Argentine is the greatest all-round musician in the world

Opera

Falling down

Tansy Davies's score marks a real arrival for the British composer but ultimately the opera loses its way

Find the voice, find the character: Steve Nallon as Margaret Thatcher

Theatre

Death by politics

Plus: split in half like the atom, Tom Morton-Smith's Oppenheimer  would have twice the force

Gardeners’ world: Alan Rickman (Louis XIV) and Kate Winslet (Sabine De Barra) at Versailles

Cinema

Cold frames

But the pacing is dreary and the characters do not connect in this period drama about a gardening showdown at the court of Louis XIV

Television

Deadly, not dull

Also there's only one throat-slitting and one burning-at-the-stake, moans James Delingpole

Radio

I, Bette Davis

Plus: two award-winning plays on the World Service that crackle with energy

Arts feature

Boris’s London legacy

The Mayor would like his cultural development of the Olympic site to emulate the mighty legacy of the Great Exhibition. But will it?

Culture Buff

Culture buff

A baroque music festival in Hobart sounded right with particularly appropriate settings such as the Theatre Royal and the pretty…

Life

High life

High life

Red brick tenements, gangsters and genuine working-class accents are a thing of the past in Manhattan

Low life

Low life

Oscar’s Easter day (eggs included)

Real life

Real life

Why do people turn perfectly adequate titles into meaningless jargon?

Long life

Long life

So much for all that expert advice on hibernation

Poems

Turtle

As if a turtle you have laid your eggs in a bowl of sand. Unlike the turtle you sit next…

The turf

No fairy tale ending

The Grand National wasn’t his grand finale - on to Sandown!

Bridge

Bridge

When I was growing up, the loudest, most explosive arguments erupted when my parents played bridge together. Not surprisingly, when…

Chess

Hit for six

The Hamilton Russell trophy for London clubs has been dominated in the past by the RAC. This year, though, they were…

Chess puzzle

No. 358

White to play. This is from Lee-Zakharov, Vrnjacka Banja 1963. Black has just captured on c3 and now 1 Qxc3…

Competition

On the record

In Competition No. 2893 you were invited to suggest suitable Desert Island Discs for a historical figure, living or dead.…

Crossword

2207: An unusual angle

In six answers the wordplay ignores an item. These items (two of them identical) are not listed as specific 27…

Crossword solution

To 2204: Security

Five perimeter entries, and 29 and 30, are types of BODYGUARD. First prize Amanda Spielman, London SW4 Runners-up Dr S.M.…

Status anxiety

The extraordinary Green manifesto

My favourite bit is the chapter called ‘It does all add up’

Spectator sport

Cricket’s glorious dead

This year: Richard Attenborough, Clarissa Dickson Wright, and a late appearance for opening batsman Bobby Moore

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Plus: What to do when waiters call you ‘you guys’, and how to keep fellow students out of your beautiful room

Food

Sharing Caring

I suspect this was not his primary motivation

Mind your language

Passion

And do they mean it in the Dear Deidre sense?