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The Spectator

20 August 2022 Aus

First among equals

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Australia

Leading article Australia

First among equals

There was much hysteria this week over the news that former prime minister Scott Morrison had secretly sworn himself in…

Australian Features

Features Australia

You Newton Denier, you!!

Good news on the Great Barrier Reef challenges climate ‘science’

Features Australia

Business/Robbery, etc.

India’s strategically significant coal warning

Features Australia

The United Banana Republic

The FBI raid on Trump diminishes America

Features Australia

Too close to China?

Angus Houston’s responses to MH370 raise questions about his fitness to review our defences

Features Australia, New Zealand

A very talented family

Conflicts of interest at the heart of the Ardern government

Features

Features

Edinburgh Notebook

When I was in my twenties, exactly 50 Edinburgh Festivals ago, Frank Dunlop directed the first professional production of Joseph…

Features

Back on track

Might cryptocurrencies stage a return?

Features

Ignorance is bliss

My holiday from the news

Features

Censors’ charter

The hidden harms in the Online Safety Bill

Features

Prima donna

Giorgia Meloni is favourite to be Italy’s next prime minister. What does she really believe?

Features

Unfit for purpose

The General Medical Council has lost the trust of doctors

Notes on...

Hand luggage

The general flying advice this year, with airports resembling cattle markets and when you can’t be sure if you’re ever…

The Week

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home The annual rate of inflation rose to 10.1 per cent, its highest since 1982. Average wages rose by 4.7…

Letters

Letters

No competition Sir: Ross Clark’s compelling critique of the water companies comes to the wrong conclusion (‘Water isn’t working’, 13…

Barometer

Barometer

Testing, testing When were A levels first sat? They can be traced back to the Oxford Local, an external examination…

Ancient and modern

Truss, Sunak and Cicero

As Miss Truss and Mr Sunak spray policies around on a range of topics which they hope will appeal to…

Leading article

The new benefits trap

It has become received wisdom that Brexit has condemned Britain to chronic labour shortages. Many of the migrant workers who…

Diary

Diary

I love Suffolk, not just for its beauty but for the stories to be found all around me. Every day…

Columnists

Any other business

The realpolitik of Saudi oil profits and that infamous fist-bump

How outraged should we be that Saudi Aramco has reported a world-record quarterly profit of $48 billion, representing a giant…

Columns

The shameful truth: terrorism works

This is a bleak version of looking on the bright side, but what’s astonishing about last week’s vicious stabbing in…

Columns

The Truss challenge

‘Whatever else you do, don’t step backwards,’ a man in the crowd shouts to Rishi Sunak as he stands on…

Columns

The dangers of vegetarianism

I do not doubt that hot weather occasioned by climate change is the primary cause of the many wildfires we…

Columns

What art will represent us?

It glows. The whole painting glows. Glows not just with the way the light from a fire unseen beyond the…

Books

More from Books

How far could he go?

I have never had much time for Aleister Crowley. Magic(k) is nonsense; the mystical societies he founded were simply pretexts…

More from Books

Village villainy

Cosy crime was once the literary world’s guilty secret, a refuge for any reader seeking entirely unchallenging entertainment – like…

More from Books

The Russian Proust

Yuri Felsen, born in St Petersburg, was an exile in Riga, Berlin and Paris and died at Auschwitz in 1943.…

More from Books

Nasty, brutish and short

As Tory writers reflected on the safe passage of the Stuart dynasty through the Exclusion Crisis of 1679-81, an anonymous…

More from Books

The comfort of strangers

For two and a half years, as Britain adjusted from normality to the most disorienting collective trauma of our lifetimes,…

More from Books

The best of the bunch

It’s hard (if not impossible) to imagine a world worth living in that doesn’t include the Marx Brothers; and equally…

More from Books

A sentimental journey

Publishers lately seem to have got the idea that otherwise uncommercial subjects might be rendered sexy if presented with a…

More from Books

Perturbed spirit

Long Shadows, a powerful novel set mainly in the American civil war, is very unlike Gone with the Wind. The…

More from Books

The French scapegoat

On 15 June 1645, as Thomas Fairfax’s soldiers picked over the scattered debris on the Naseby battlefield, they made a…

More from Books

Adrift in Berlin

Feelings of dislocation are at the heart of Amit Chaudhuri’s award-winning novels. Friend of My Youth (2017) followed a writer’s…

More from Books

A shaggy drug story

The Scottish writer David Keenan has published five novels in five years: This is Memorial Device (2017), For the Good…

More from Books

Seize the moment

Barney Norris’s third novel opens with a wedding in April. The couple tying the knot don’t matter; it’s the occasion…

Lead book review

The Russian enigma

Nothing is certain in a country where the past is constantly rewritten, says Owen Matthews

Arts

Australian Arts

Don’t be routine

It’s a marvellous thing that the great Indian conductor Zubin Mehta will be wielding the baton for that illustrious group…

Arts feature

Falling stars

If you want real acting in films, forget the leads – it’s in the supporting roles that you’ll find true talent, says Tanya Gold

Exhibitions

We get the picture

Philip Guston is hard to dislike. The most damning critique levied against the canonical mid-century American painter is that he…

Television

Finger-wagging and flawed

‘Diversity is woven into the very soul of the story.’ If those words of praise from a rave review in…

Festivals

Doctor doctor

In a new hour-long monologue, Burn, Alan Cumming examines the life and work of Robert Burns. The biographical material is…

Cinema

Curiouser and curiouser

My Old School is a documentary exploring a true story that would have to be true as it’s too preposterous…

Opera

Joyous freefall

The first part of the adventure was getting there. Out of the subway, past the tower blocks and under the…

Festivals

A legend comes to town

‘Human beings are in trouble these days,’ says Herbie Hancock, chatting to us between songs. ‘And do you know who…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

‘Why can’t a woman be more like a man? complains Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady, a musical whose title…

Aussie Life

Language

British journalist Richard Godwin has alerted me to what may be the trendiest word of the moment: ‘namecore’. This is…

More from life

Sole Véronique

One of the joys of writing about old-fashioned food is coming across dishes that are new to me, and turn…

High life

High life

Coronis I suppose there’s always a first time, and looking back it was bound to happen. I scrambled off a…

Low life

Low life

An isolated Provençal stone farmhouse from the outside; from the inside a comfortable English country house. Sunk into the garriguea…

Bridge

Bridge

My husband is a writer (John Preston), whose recent books were better received than he had ever dared hope. When…

Crossword

2569: Anadad

Round the grid from 1 runs a quotation (1,3,4.2,5,3,5,3,2,6) from a play followed by the dramatist’s name (two words). Two…

Chess

The first Olympiad

Everyone remembers their first Olympiad. As I boarded the flight to Chennai last month, it struck me that two full…

Chess puzzle

Puzzle No. 716

Black to play. A variation from McShane-Hamitevici, Chennai 2022. I avoided this position, but lost in a different way. White…

Competition

Initial embarrassment

In Competition No. 3262, you were invited to submit a poem on behalf of Rishi Sunak or Liz Truss in…

Crossword solution

Solution to 2566: Somewhere XII

30 July is Independence Day in Vanuatu in MELANESIA (23D). Its capital city is PORT VILA (39/16), one of its…

The turf

The turf

I don’t miss too many from the political world I once inhabited but I was saddened by the death of…

Real life

Real life

From the veranda of a small Irish farmhouse, I looked out over the sun-drenched West Cork peninsula. All I could…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: Your problems solved

Q. Some older American friends take me and my husband out to dinner once a year when they are over…

No sacred cows

Bad guys have rights too

As a defender of free speech, I’m used to taking up the cudgels on behalf of unsavoury people. To quote…

The Wiki Man

The danger of Dylanomics

The problem with attempts to make everything in life more scientific is that reality hates generalisation. You can try to…

Mind your language

Missing in action

Someone in the Guardian wrote that Boris Johnson had his ‘out of office’ on, and the Chancellor was ‘missing in…

Drink

At least we still have wine

Even in recent heat, the English summer can be magical. As long as there is shade, a pool and a…