The Spectator
Australia
Coup de (dis)grâce
The knifing of Tony Abbott will go down as one of the most destructive and arrogant acts of political bastardry…
Diary
I returned to my work as a Crown Prosecutor for the first time in a year. (In fact it was…
Australian Features
Aux bien pensants
If Malcolm Turnbull is remembered for anything, it will be for his supreme act of treachery in bringing down a…
On books and pollies
I am a lover of books. Reading has been one of the great pleasures of my life. In some ways,…
Feeling the guilt
Increasingly, the West is succumbing to the vicarious virtues of the politics of ‘feelings’
Syrian Anzacs
Let’s train middle-east refugees to fight for their homeland rather than to hate or terrorise ours
Can Turnbull win over Tony’s tradies?
Where Tony Abbott understood the tradie heartland, Malcolm Turnbull may appear aloof and out-of-touch
I come to praise Tony, not to bury him
Despite the flaws, Tony Abbott was a proper conservative
Features
Why I left
Left-wing thought has shifted towards movements it would once have denounced as racist, imperialist and fascistic. It is insupportable
Bad winners
There wasn’t much time for the hopey-changey stuff while there was a chance to be vile about the Tories
Labour’s lost thinker
Ed Miliband’s policy chief talks about why Labour lost and the decline of the Blairites
Our drugs cheat
The London marathon winner’s clash with Tory MP Jesse Norman is symptomatic of a debate that both shames and risks the health of athletes
The man to stop Trump
The neurosurgeon who is suddenly Donald Trump’s closest rival is relaxed, impressive – and not to be pinned down on detail
The library in the Jungle
In the middle of the Calais migrant camp, there is a book-filled haven of peace
Down with slippery slopes!
Real, life-changing medical advances are being blocked for fear of ‘designer babies’; humane laws are stymied because of things they do not propose
La Baule
This seaside town in Brittany was the perfect location for a stag weekend – even if the locals were a bit sniffy at times
The Week
The right answer
The Conservatives have a stunning array of social achievements. They need to talk about them more
The relative experience of consuls and Corbyn
The new Labour leader’s political life has just been one long protest
Time to tax
From ‘The coming budget’, The Spectator, 18 September 1915: At present the large majority of householders and electors pay no direct…
Columnists
Corbyn puts the EU referendum on a knife edge
Political futures hang on the question – not least that of Boris Johnson
The Spectator’s notes
Plus: the origins of Corbynite leftism; a study of manhole covers; Malcolm Turnbull; and Sir Walter Scott
Why emote about migrants during a concert?
Is nothing sacred? They sacked Clarkson, and now they won’t even let us enjoy ‘Land of Hope and Glory’
Soon we will accept that useless lives should end
If the law does not lead, it will follow — at root the reason is Darwinian
The problem with Corbyn’s hatred of the media
To regard the fourth estate as a coherent and malicious political entity is conspiratorial madness
The Living Wage is nifty politics – but let’s see more help for small business too
Plus: uneasy feelings about an oil price war; and ten years of ‘Any Other Business’
Books
The house that Alfred built
Thomas Harding’s A House by the Lake chronicles the rise of Nazism through the story of one small summer retreat on the outskirts of Berlin
Remembering P.J. Kavanagh
Christopher Howse pays tribute to the poet, soldier, actor and former Spectator columnist and poetry editor, who has died, aged 84
A terrible beauty
De Waal’s The White Road finds the history of porcelain manufacture shrouded in secrecy and littered with terrible disasters, says A.S. Byatt
A hero of our time
Former British ambassador Sherard Cowper-Coles hails the Kissinger biography as ‘a great work about a great man by a great historian’
Following the fickle fish
Donald S. Murray’s fascinating Herring Tales shows how vast shoals of this fickle fish have for centuries been appearing in our waters — only to disappear again
Ticks and crosses
Everyone in Bill Clegg’s psychological thriller Did You Ever Have a Family is touched by tragedy — except the reader
A new track record
Simon Bradley’s celebration of the network is likely to become a classic of social history — vivid, authoritative but never trainspotterish
A captivating prospect
The sex-filled dystopia of The Heart Goes Last reflects a writer at the height of her powers cutting loose and having fun
The continent in crisis
Fear and nationalism, along with Nazism and fascism, are the predictable villains of Ian Kershaw’s To Hell and Back — while communism gets off curiously lightly
A myth is as good as a mile
The medieval historian Carolyne Larrington finds tales of green men and black dogs still flourishing in 21st-century Britain
Marvellous, murderous city
Brazil may be the land of the future, as Misha Glenny suggests — but living there now has become practically impossible
When the boys come home
No longer the MoD’s responsibility, our traumatised ex-forces feel abandoned, betrayed and shamefully dependent on charity, according to Matthew Green’s Aftershock
For better, for worse
Ridley’s ‘general theory’ boasts of surpassing even Darwin’s — but his vision of a utopian libertarian future looks like evolution gone horribly wrong
Arts
Culture buff
He may not be a household name, yet, but Peter Boggs is one of our outstanding painters. His works hang…
There will be blood
A new documentary lifts the lid on the Italian horse race-cum-medieval pageant where you're hospitalised for coming second
Deadlier than the male
Nothing by Fanny Mendelssohn, Clara Schumann, Amy Beach, Ethel Smyth or Judith Weir matches up to the work of their male counterparts
All roads lead to Callas
Plus: the Royal Opera's first ever production of Gluck's Orphee et Eurydice is full of risible dancing and pointless directorial decisions
Double tragedy
Adele Thomas's faithful approach to the Greek tragedy achieves something both stately and sickening. Robert Icke's production, meanwhile, warrants a visit from trading standards officers
Bursting the bubble
Plus: though handcrafting his own reputation is Ai Weiwei favoured medium, there are some works of real poignancy and beauty in his Royal Academy show
High and mighty
Oscars do not beckon for this crudely characterised, Gravity wannabe. On the plus side, Keira Knightley is at her least annoying
Fighting talk
The start of the year is all good if sombre stuff, and includes a revival of English National Ballet's Lest We Forget, a version of 1984 from Northern Ballet and a new work from Amici Dance Theatre
Socialist Cluedo
Yet despite the oppressively didactic set-up, the BBC's new TV adaptation of J.B. Priestley's weird melodrama grips and compels
Life
Squeezed middle
An outstanding crop of apprentices are squeezing out more established jockeys
2229: Gnome
The third letters of extra words in two dozen clues spell out a 35 (in ODQ 7&8), associated with the…
To 2226: Whitehouse
X was Ingrid Bergman, winner of a TERN (21) of OSCARs (8), who was born on 29th August 1915 and…
Grand Tour
This week I conclude my coverage of the St Louis leg of the million dollar Grand Tour. Carlsen-So: Sinquefield…
Puzzle no. 379
Black to play. This position is a variation from So-Nakamura, St Louis 2015. How can Black conclude the attack with…
Arty limericks
In Competition No. 2915 you were invited to submit limericks featuring a well-known artist and a destination of your choice.…
My obsession with litter is bordering on mental illness
My fury at the sight of rubbish is now so great that I’ve started picking it up wherever I happen to go
Foodies without the faff
Portland doesn’t offer its diners a ‘philosophy’, despite its spindly Swedish decor – but the food is glorious
Twitter speak
Jamie Reed demonstrates the blithe insouciance useful in the face of trolls


































































