The Spectator
23 November 2013 Aus
An icon of our time
The Paul Flowers scandal says much about social and political priorities of modern Britain
Australia
A delicate diplomatic dance
‘Few international problems in the postwar period have proved as difficult for Australia as the development of a friendly and…
Australian Columnists
Australian notes
The protest rally across the road from Parliament in Sydney was no lynch mob. They were ordinary, mostly elderly people…
Brown study
Everyone was supposed to burst into howls of protest when the government announced last week that it was abolishing 20…
Conrad Black’s diary: Sydney, Murdoch, Paxman and other stories
What a pleasure it was to be back in Sydney this month after an absence of 14 years. That city…
Notes from abroad
Flying across the Pacific, I am reading two new works from the recent explosion of books on the outbreak of…
Australian Features
Apology and appeasement
Tony Abbott will be the latest Australian prime minister to kowtow to Jakarta
What drought?
Victoria’s desalination plant is a reminder of the perils of making public policy in a panic
Confessions of a climate denier
A mini-tornado hits north Sydney: what on earth can it mean?
Features
An icon of our time
Sustainability. Tick! Inclusivity. Tick! Fairtrade. Tick! All that mattered to Labour was the Crystal Methodist's show of liberal piety
Save the soundbite!
In three years in power, the coalition has produced almost no memorable line. Should we be worried?
Beyond belief
Issues like gay marriage and women bishops show how distant the Conservatives are from their Christian roots
How we invented freedom
British prime ministers today have powers like monarchs, and EU laws sideline primary legislation — let's repatriate our revolution
Pants to the fatties
As fat women become more powerful as a lobby, slim women who eat sensibly and exercise are treated as neurotic obsessives
It all began in 1963
The twelve months that brought heaps of snow, satire, sex, pop — and ended with an event that outstripped all the rest
The 2013 Michael Heath Award for cartooning
The theme of the contest is 'Man in Motion'; here are four of the nine entries shortlisted
Notes on…London galleries
Everybody knows that the London art scene is thriving, and so of course the big international commercial galleries have set…
The Week
Alex Salmond’s economic policies would drive an independent Scotland into the ground
While the SNP flirts with economic liberalism, it remains a high-spending party of the left that will impoverish the people
Portrait of the week
Home The government announced proposals for the National Health Service, including a law to criminalise wilful neglect by doctors and…
Aristotle on the age of consent
Rather charmingly, he wanted both parties to reach the end of their reproductive cycles together
Columnists
How long can the Eds keep it together?
The two Eds are trying to make things go smoothly — but do Cameron and Osborne need more friction?
The Spectator’s Notes
Plus: The PCC finds against the Guardian; Mrs T to a T; my book as a drug haul; this is your pilot Prince William speaking
Go on, own up: which of you female TV stars is secretly a godawful novelist?
I've ruled out Wark and Coren, the Guardian thinks its Vorderman or Robinson — the question is why the author fears using her name
Is even Radley not safe from the lentil-eating progressives?
From primary school onwards, we're handed this starter pack of right-on notions — and if we question them we're regarded as pariahs
Cameron’s war on porn is a pointless stunt
Plus: There is no need to ask whose fault it is when a cyclist dies; here's how we can have bike-only streets without building any
The naughty Methodist is a comic sideshow: it was professionals who ruined the Co-op
Plus: Thriving northern companies that disprove the 'north-south divide'; one night with bankers at Imelda's palace for the Pope
Books
Books of the Year
Books of the year from Philip Hensher, Jane Ridley, Barry Humphries, Jane Ridley, Melanie McDonagh, Matthew Parris, Nicky Haslam and more
Jack all alone
New letters and a group biography by Robert Dallek help round out our portrait of John F. Kennedy
Criminal damage
Gavin Stamp's Anti-Ugly and Lost Victorian Britain are a glorious lament for our lost architectural heritage - and a celebration of what remains
Evil under the sun
The connections that Patrick Marnham makes in Snake Dance - from the Congo to Fukushima, from Conrad to the Bomb - are sometimes tenuous but always compelling
Worshipping from afar
In Man Belong Mrs Queen, Matthew Baylis discovers some excellent reasons
Seeing double
The Naked Eye plays some remarkable games with pictures. But what does it amount to?
The long and winding road
If you have read Iain Sinclair’s books you will know that he is a stylist with a love of language.…
A choice of cookery books
A brilliant new brick from Nigel Slater, and the other cookbooks you should want for Christmas
Violence was his vocation
J. Michael Lennon's biography does his his old friend proud - without always making him sympathetic
Pirates on parade
Neil Rennie's Treasure Neverland shows how real buccaneers turned into legend
The manager, not the man
My Autobiography shows just how much he wants to win - and perhaps how little he's learned
Shame and blame
The facts in Ben Urwand's The Collaboration are shocking enough, without his tendentious interpretation
Captain courageous
Driving Ambition reveals why he commands respect, sometimes by not giving away secrets
Arts
Guiding dream
The new museum of art and craft stays true to its ethos of community, fellowship and shared culture
Weaving wonder
Scottish Opera has commissioned a huge tapestry to celebrate one of the world's most painterly operas
Remembering John Tavener
The composer believed in miracles, but the image of an unsmiling preacher is just his public persona
The killing fields
In the future, everyone will have silly names. Some people will be called Haymitch Abernathy. Others will be Effie Trinket…
Baroque brilliance
Jason; The Coronation of Poppea; Agrippina; all by the English Touring Opera — review
Squirming at Screwtape
Air Force One; Book of the Week (The Screwtape Letters); Curlew River — review
Images of war
Catalyst: Contemporary Art And War; Mike Moore and Lee Cracker; Donovan Wylie - review
Life
Twelve to Follow
Women have some of the top-class horses — look out for those of Rebecca Curtis, Emma Lavelle, Venetia Williams
Bifurcation
As predicted last week, the samurai standoff between Anand and Carlsen was swiftly shattered. After quiet draws in games one…
No. 293
Black to play. This is a variation from Anand-Carlsen; World Championship (Game 4), Chennai 2013. Anand avoided this position, although he…
Sporting double
In Competition 2824 you were invited to submit double clerihews about a well-known sporting figure past or present. The…
2140: Essex Man
Our hero must be revealed by shading six cells appropriately. Four unclued lights are key words in 11s featuring the…
to 2137: Speculation
The two words were BULL and BEAR. BULL is suggested by 36, 41, 6 and 10; BEAR by 34, 37,…
My life as a litter monitor
The think tank Policy Exchange has just published an excellent report on Britain’s urban green spaces called ‘Park Land’. The…
Retrofitted arguments
Sexual orientation and immigration are so emotionally charged, sometimes we retro-fit our arguments to fit our instincts
Mineral reserves
St James’s Street is a repository of urban comfort. It contains majestic clubs, a gunsmith, a boot-maker, a barber, a…
Aunt
Catching up with the excellent biography of the 3rd Marquess of Bute (the man who built Cardiff Castle among other…




































































