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The Spectator

21 September 2013 Aus

Ed Miliband’s last laugh

Unless something drastic changes in the polls, the Tories will pay dearly for treating Miliband as a joke. And so will the rest of us

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Global warming pause

Given that the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change now apparently acknowledges that an unexpected and unexplainable ‘pause’ in…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Australian Notes

Will its allies around the world ever recover that confidence in the United States, which they lost with President Obama’s…

Brown Study

Brown study

September 7 was the first election day I have not spent handing out how-to-vote cards since I was 15. Not…

Diary Australia

Diary

For me, the worst day of any campaign is election day. After three years of intense, all-consuming activity the phones…

Diary Australia

An Abbottphobe’s diary

I remain in rehab following the election nightmare. When the all-shining, coiffed, permed and waxed Abbott family appeared at the…

Australian Features

Features Australia

In praise of the Liberal Democrats

Far from being dismissed, David Leyonhjelm may spark a genuine libertarian renaissance

Features Australia

Why I’m homeschooling

And I’m not telling the bureaucrats

Features Australia

Julia’s myth makers

The historical revisionism around the discredited former PM must end

Features

Features

Ed Miliband’s last laugh

Unless something drastic changes in the polls, the Tories will pay dearly for treating Miliband as a joke. And so will the rest of us

Features

A Blairite for Ed

Tristram Hunt represents the slice of Labour that Miliband most needs to hold on to

Features

Old friends

Social networks make reinventing yourself at university much trickier

Features

My 50 weddings

The lessons of a perpetual guest

Features

Merkel will win – but why?

Germany’s integrationalist elite are prepared to pay out forever to protect the euro

Features

The mystery of ‘plebgate’

Was there a conspiracy against Andrew Mitchell? And why have the police gone quiet on the subject?

Features

Notes on …Vodka

James Bond’s ‘Vodka martini, shaken, not stirred’ will never be a mark of sophistication for me because vodka and I…

Features

Fresh wit and wisdom

A selection from the latest edition of The Oxford Dictionary of Humorous Quotations, edited by Gyles Brandreth

Bran Castle — but don’t mention Dracula

Notebook

A Transylvanian notebook

Ehe-Gefängnis. The word, strictly speaking (which is how one should always speak), means ‘marriage prison’, and refers to an austere…

The Week

Leading article

A climate glasnost

Next week, those who made dire predictions of ruinous climate change face their own inconvenient truth.  The summary of the…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home The government sold 6 per cent of Lloyds Banking Group to big investors for £3.2 billion. It still owns…

Diary

Diary

The looming centenary of the outbreak of the first world war offers an opportunity to break away from the Blackadder/Oh!…

Barometer

Barometer

Vitamins and the veil A judge at Blackfriars Crown Court allowed a niqab-wearing defendant to identify herself only to a…

Ancient and modern

Pleb power

Momentarily banish thoughts of policemen on duty at the House of Commons, and picture a Roman pleb. You will probably…

Letters

Letters

Party politics Sir: I don’t think it is true that I would be unhappy in any party, as Ross Clark…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

We are not allowed to know any details about the Muslim woman, charged with intimidating a witness, who has been…

Matthew Parris

Nick Clegg should stick with the devil he knows

I write this in Glasgow, at the Lib Dem conference. Nick Clegg has invented a constitutional doctrine. The doctrine teaches…

Rod Liddle

Does the BMA prefer real fags to e-cigarettes?

What strategy should we adopt to cope with the British Medical Association? Its members kill more people each year than…

Any other business

Twitter looks much more expensive than Royal Mail, but which one will last longer?

Royal Mail delivers to 29 million UK addresses; last year it generated £9 billion of revenues, of which £324 million…

Books

Lead book review

Darling Flufftail … beloved Pinkpaws

The correspondence between Christopher Isherwood and Don Bachardy is good for celebrity-spotting but too cloyingly self-absorbed to be of wider interest, says D. J. Taylor

Books

Another Old Wives’ Tale

Sathnam Sanghera, in his family memoir The Boy with the Topknot, heaped much largely affectionate contempt and ridicule on his…

Books

Master of suspense

In the outrageous 2010 press hounding of the innocent schoolteacher Christopher Jefferies over the murder of his young female tenant…

Books

The power of the word

The recorder of early Jewish history has two sources of evidence. One is the Bible. Its centrality was brought home…

Books

Shady groves of academe

The scene is the common room of All Souls College, Oxford, in the first week of March 1963. It is…

Books

The name game

In South Korea, some 20 million people share just five surnames. Every one of Denmark’s top 20 surnames ends in…

Books

Driving me crazy

My various Oxford dictionaries define bizarre as eccentric, whimsical, odd, grotesque, fantastic, mixed in style and half-barbaric. By so many…

Books

Pericles for king

My brother Pericles Wyatt, as my father liked to say, is by blood the rightful king of England, the nephew…

Books

All work and no play

Stage Blood, as its title suggests, is as full of vitriol, back-stabbing and conspiracy as any Jacobean tragedy. In this…

Books

Flower power

After the success of their animal series of monographs, Reaktion Books have had the clever idea of doing something similar…

Books

Back to the camps

Confronted by this lavishly endorsed book — ‘compelling’ (David Lodge), ‘gripping’(John le Carré),‘thrilling’ (Jonathan Freedland) — I felt depressed. Two…

Books

A unique capacity for personal egotism

It is peculiarly apt that the author of this autobiography should be the man who coined that now fashionable term…

Books

Belgian fancy

In 1958 a vast international trade fair was held just outside Brussels. As well as being a showcase for industry,…

Arts

Yorkshire Sculpture Park: the 500-acre site is a great artwork in its own right

Arts feature

Northern rocks

William Cook is inspired by England’s sculptural heartland in Yorkshire, just as Moore and Hepworth were

Burn Moor (Double Rainbow)’, 2013, by David Tress

Exhibitions

Gut feelings

Like all artists of independent spirit, David Tress (born 1955) resists categorisation. He has been called a Romantic and a…

Theatre

Freudian slip

Terry Johnson’s acclaimed farce Hysteria opens in Sigmund Freud’s Hampstead home in 1938. The godfather of psychobabble is ambushed by…

Theatre

Look on the bright side

Ah yes, Candide, the adventures of an innocent abroad in ‘the best of all possible worlds’, as philosophers of the…

Winningly diminutive: Eri Nakamura as Liù

Opera

Beyond redemption

It’s a cynical start to the Royal Opera’s season to have this 1984 production of Puccini’s last opera Turandot. Not…

Cinema

Platitude in pearls

Someone who knows their Dianaology will have to fill me in – did this actually happen? The late Princess Di…

Television

Gangs busted

You wait a whole lifetime for a lavishly shot, starrily cast, mega-budget gangster drama set in Birmingham to come along.…

Culture notes

The pity of war

Of all folk memories the Blitz remains one of the most enduring. In the autumn of 1940 the Luftwaffe strafed…

Life

High life

High life

Gstaad Why are hacks scared to state the obvious? In Britain the excuse is the strict libel laws. But in…

Low life

Low life

‘Jeremy! Jeremy! I can’t believe it! There’s no bloody booze!’ I’d walked into the music room where Elgar and Fauré…

Real life

Real life

The Builder Boyfriend has nearly moved in. I say nearly because we are both quite nervous about committing to each…

Long life

Long life

My village, Stoke Bruerne in south Northamptonshire, is just getting back to normal after a great influx of visitors for…

Wild life

Wild life

It was towards dusk by the time we had given the tourist police the slip and started climbing the pyramid…

Bridge

Bridge

If you are allergic to wasp stings, may I give you a word of advice? Keep away from them! Don’t…

Chess

World Cup

The recently concluded Fide (World Chess Federation) World Cup held at Tromso in Norway resulted in a triumph for Vladimir…

Chess puzzle

puzzle no. 284

Black to play. This position is from Riazantsev-Felgaer, Tromso 2013. Black’s forces have invaded the white kingside. Can you spot…

Competition

Our self-help winner: “Psychopaths of Glory — Unlocking the Bastard Within”

In Competition 2815 you were invited to contribute to the booming genre of self-help by proposing a new title guaranteed…

Crossword

2131: Present

16/17 (four words in total) is a work by 11 which suggests the remaining unclued lights. Five clues contain a…

Crossword solution

Solution to 2128: carbon copy

The puzzle marked a DOUBLE TON (42/27) by DUMPYNOSE (11) in THE SPECTATOR (17/19). Remaining unclued lights suggest a DOUBLETON:…

Status anxiety

Why I want my schools to ban the burka (and the miniskirt)

For most people, the question of whether to ban the burka is a purely theoretical one. Not for me. As…

Spectator sport

$10 million nobodies

Golf has reached the eye-watering end of the season in the United States. By Sunday night, one man in a…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. Some years ago, on holiday in Egypt, we found ourselves in the company of a couple who wanted to…

Food

Proper kosher

A restaurant in a synagogue may be too mad even for this column but we are Jews, so why not?…

Mind your language

Capital letters

One man’s grammatical nicety is another man’s grotesque solecism, I thought, as I perused a report in the Gulf News,…