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The Spectator

18 October 2025 Aus

Book of Trump

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Book of Trump

And so it came to pass that a prophet arose from the banks of the Hudson River, a baby born…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Business/Robbery, etc

China is on track to rule the world’s energy

Features Australia

The Therapy Wars

Consensus is not the answer

Features Australia

Albo’s Believe it or not

On Wong and Albanese trying to take credit for peace in the Middle East

Features Australia

Some like it hot

All they are saying is give war a chance

Features Australia

Only Donald Trump could have done this

Albanese should be nailed for shirking on defence

Features

Features

The parents gaming special educational needs

As a foster carer and adopter, I’ve spent more mornings than I care to count coaxing my 13-year-old daughter into…

Features

Ukraine must stand as a fortress of European freedom

It is 35 years since I was last in Warsaw and the city is unrecognisable. Back then it was grimy…

Features

Why Sheridan Westlake is the Tories’ best weapon

Who is responsible for Labour’s recent woes? For some Conservatives, the answer is obvious – Sheridan Westlake. He is that…

Features

Here be dragons: the truth about Chinese espionage

On 3 July a Chinese man, Xu Zewei, was arrested in Milan to face extradition on nine charges relating to…

Features

Britain’s glassmaking tradition is fracturing

We live in a strange era in which much of our day-to-day experience is constructed for us digitally on a…

Features

French parents do it better

I arrived in Paris as an au pair in 2022. I was in my early twenties and armed only with…

Features

Labour’s class war on moorland

This year has been a bad one for wildfires in Britain. In June, nearly 30,000 acres burned near Carrbridge in…

Features

Can anyone stop J.D. Vance becoming president?

As Donald J. Trump flew to the Holy Land on Sunday to declare peace, his Vice-President took to the airwaves…

Notes on...

Confessions of a skip-diver

Call me disgusting, but I like rubbish, and I like it best from a skip. I am also in good…

The Week

Barometer

How many people admit to using their phones at the dinner table?

King’s speechless There will be no state opening of parliament this year and consequently no King’s speech. This is only…

Leading article

The questions the government must answer over the China spying case

Exactly a year ago, this magazine warned that ministers were showing a dangerous naivety towards China. We revealed that the…

Ancient and modern

What did the ancients consider a ‘just war’?

Since the UN does not provide a definition of the ‘just war’, it is interesting to see the ancient take…

Diary

The day ‘Hitler’ was captured in Tottenham

Given the way the world is right now, I am avoiding it in the main. For the sake of my…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Gaza ceasefire, unemployment increases and a Gen Z uprising

Home Sir Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, praised President Donald Trump for the Gaza ceasefire agreement while in India accompanied…

Letters

Georgia Toffolo: In defence of my husband James Watt

Rough justice Sir: The Church Commissioners’ plan to establish a £100 million (rising to £1 billion) fund for ‘reparative justice’…

Columnists

Any other business

The AI crash is coming

Who knows what Rachel Reeves reads in bed. Perhaps she dips into her own debut book, The Women Who Made…

The Spectator's Notes

The government is too concerned for the tender feelings of China

Poor old Hamas, losing all those dead Jews. The BBC reports that Hamas ‘could not locate the remaining hostages’ bodies’,…

Columns

The ECHR will never be reformed

It is more than nine years since I was suspended by the Labour party for – I think – a…

Columns

Legal immigration is an absolute nightmare

A personal note this week, as 15 October 2025 marked an occasion of sorts: when my husband’s and my Portuguese…

Columns

The pathology of politics

Researchers from Imperial College London this week released an analysis of the health of voters in the UK. In a…

Books

More from Books

Everything and the girl: a lit-crit dissection of the Swifty world

The brilliant but unknowable songwriter is short-changed by this curious hybrid of slangy fangirl excitement and veneer of scholarship

Lead book review

Funny, absorbing and as noir as noir can be: Thomas Pynchon rides again

The elusive novelist’s latest starts off complicated and then rapidly gets more so with its knot of gangsters, thugs, wacky inventors, spies, cops, political operatives and their accomplices

More from Books

When, why and how came the fall – the success and sorry decline of the British Army

An impressively detailed chronicle by an analyst well up to the task. Read it and weep

More from Books

When two worlds collide: Well, This is Awkward, by Esther Walker reviewed

A high-powered childless fortysomething social media exec’s life is turned upside down by the arrival of her 11-year-old niece

More from Books

Revelling in illusion: the French sociologist-cum-philosopher who hit peak absurdity back in 1991

An admirably brief critical biography of Jean Baudrillard, whose prose was to thought what mud is to a windscreen

More from Books

All that was bravest and best: William Miller, forgotten Victorian hero of South American independence

A meticulous account masquerading as adventure story of the life of the baker’s son from Kent who became a brilliant military tactician and soldier pivotal in the struggle against slavery and imperialism

More from Books

On the road, high society style

In 1949, aged 26, Judy Montagu, cousin of Mary Churchill and daughter of Venetia Stanley, criss-crossed the US in a Greyhound bus. The resulting diary is edited and annotated by her daughter, whose mother died when she was only nine

More from Books

The end is nigh – or is it?

Two AI aficionados sound the alarm in this blend of third-rate sci-fi, low-grade tech analysis and bad geopolitical assessment

More from Books

Mad, bad and brilliant: Jesus Christ Kinski by Benjamin Myers, reviewed

The celebrated postwar film actor Klaus Kinski returned to the stage in 1971 to perform a monologue, footage of which has long fascinated the author of this experimental and distinguished novel

Arts

Australian Arts

La de da

Everyone who has read the work of the late great Thomas Bernhard, the Austrian novelist forever spitting his fellow Austrians…

Theatre

Tracy Letts’s magic touch

Tracy Letts’s Mary Page Marlowe is a biographical portrait of an emotionally damaged mother struggling with romantic and family problems.…

Television

Is there anything menopausal women can’t do?

Is there anything menopausal women can’t do (on television)? Last Sunday, as a couple of them were still working on…

Cinema

Very pretty and pretty gruesome: Ballad of a Small Player reviewed

Ballad of a Small Player opens with Lord Doyle, played by Colin Farrell, hiding from security in his trashed casino…

Pop

In defence of Mick Hucknall

Before Simply Red came on stage at the Greenwich peninsula’s enormodome, the screens showed a clip of a very young…

Opera

Handel was derided in his own time – particularly by us, for which belated apologies

Here’s a patriotic thought for you: baroque opera, as we now know it, was made in Britain. Sure, there are…

Exhibitions

A remarkable insight into Le Carré’s working methods

When Richard Ovenden of the Bodleian Library wrote to John le Carré asking if the writer would leave it his…

Radio

Condoms in 18th-century painting

Waldemar Januszczak and Bendor Grosvenor’s art podcast has returned after nearly five years. It is, says Januszczak, ‘the podcast they…

Arts feature

The dying art of costume design

At the receptionist’s desk in Cosprop’s studio and costume warehouse, a former Kwik Fit garage, the sloping bleakness of Holloway…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

It’s not often you can say, ‘I know exactly how he feels’ about your Prime Minister. But in following the…

Aussie Life

Language

Cheryl asks me to explain why we call someone who is off their rocker ‘dotty’. Well, ‘dotty’ has had that…

Drink

A sip of Israeli history

We were drinking Israeli wine as the talk ranged from frivolity to seriousness: from Donald Trump to the tragic paradoxes…

The Wiki Man

Why men are the disposable sex

I am a proud father. Both my daughters got good degrees. But better still, they smoke, go to pubs and…

Competition

Spectator Competition: Right to reply

For Competition 3421 you were invited to submit a reply from Slough to offset Betjeman’s rude lines on the subject.…

More from life

The secrets of sachertorte

My theory is that sachertorte is a victim of its own success. Over the past 150 years, it has become…

No life

Yoga is slow-motion pole-dancing for grannies

It’s hard work being rich. I gave up trying years ago. You must waste money on everything, even the basics,…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: Should I leave a tip for my hard-up friend’s imaginary daily?

Q. My son’s new girlfriend is really sweet but my husband and I find it annoying how she puts her…

No sacred cows

Why I pity the poor eco-zealots

An email popped into my House of Lords inbox last week from Lt Gen. Richard Nugee with the subject line…

Real life

I’ve been won over by a herbivore

‘Data-free vegans incoming by taxi,’ I texted the builder boyfriend, to alert him to the possibility of triple trouble. Quadruple…