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The Spectator

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Australia

Leading article Australia

It was Mr Turnbull wot dunnit

As we go to press, it’s unclear whether the inevitable second round of the Liberal party spill drama will already…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

You may have noticed that, up to now, I have been fairly restrained in what I have written about Malcolm…

Diary Australia

Australian diary

After my stoush with Graham Richardson on Sky News last month I haven’t been invited back onto the show where…

Australian Features

Features Australia

That Jewish problem

I recently wrote of anti-Semitism in the US Presbyterian Church. It would, however, be wrong to suggest this is an…

Features Australia

Police and thugs

Victoria Police has been brought into disrepute lately by unfortunate bureaucratic decisions with tragic political consequences. At first gradual and…

Features Australia

Turnbull’s litany of failures

Turnbull must go. With Abbott, and only Abbott, the Coalition will win in a landslide and save the nation from…

Features Australia

No mandate? No problem

Parliamentary democracy is underrated as a safeguard of personal liberty. From the outside, the perception is that Parliament is mired…

Features Australia

Good Trump, bad Trump

The great Austrian economist Friedrich von Hayek said ‘the curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little…

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc

Continuing Hayne Royal Commission revelations of institutional dishonesty by Australia’s big four banks have not only killed off Malcolm Turnbull’s…

Features Australia

Falling out of love with Jordan Peterson

I was not the only free speech worrier to fall for Jordan Peterson, the Canadian academic who first came to…

Features

Illustration of Maduro wheelbarrowing money into a grave with a headstone marked 'Venezuela'

Features

Venezuela’s great socialist experiment has brought a country to its knees

Imagine if Theresa May suddenly announced that her government was going to devalue the pound by 96 per cent; increase…

Features

Trumpworld is spinning out of control

Donald Trump’s Twitter feed was oddly silent as the news came that his former campaign manager and his former lawyer…

Features

Our jails crisis is even worse than we’ve been told

You need a strong stomach to be Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Prisons, as a letter from Peter Clarke —…

Features

Sperm donors and the incest trap

It is hard to think of a code of behaviour which is common to all societies on earth, let alone…

Notebook

Rory Bremner: Why comedians are getting political

The brilliant Irish comedian Andrew Maxwell describes doing stand-up at the Edinburgh Fringe as ‘exams for clowns’, and even though…

Features

Stop calling me ‘a privileged white man’ – I’m more than that

I got some bad news this week. I discovered that I’m a ‘privileged, white male’. It was my agent who…

Features

Freedom of movement isn’t an EU invention. Victorian London thrived on it

Here’s a bracing lesson from Victorian history that might possibly help to slice some impossible Brexit knots. In the 19th…

Let’s go fly a kite...

Notes on...

The highs – and lows – of learning to fly a kite

I’ve flown only three kites in my life. My stepfather bought me the first. I remember seeing him from a…

The Week

Leading article

If the UK economy is a wreck, why are jobs and exports booming?

Economies run on confidence — as Franklin D. Roosevelt observed when he told Americans, in his first inaugural address during…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Government surpluses, desperate Donald and a prisons meltdown

Home Government finances were in surplus by £2 billion in July. Public sector net debt rose to £1,777.5 billion, equal to 84.3…

Diary

Richard Madeley: Thanks to Gavin Williamson, everyone is calling me ‘the Terminator’

Down here near Nice, you find most locals unsurprised by the catastrophic Genoa bridge collapse. The Italian border is only…

Barometer

How bad is the drugs problem in British jails?

Cultured tastes Dawn Butler accused Jamie Oliver of ‘cultural appropriation’ for coming up with his own recipe for jerk rice.…

Letters

Australian letters

No go zone Sir: In the leading article of the Spectator Australia (‘Outrage over Anning’, 18 August) it is warned…

Columnists

World Politics

The plot to stop Brexit

Every Wednesday morning in the House of Commons, about a dozen people can be seen making their way along the…

Rod Liddle

And I think to myself, not a wonderful world…

The story of Jay Austin and Lauren Geoghegan is an interesting one, I think, for what it tells us about…

James Delingpole

It’s not science I don’t trust – it’s the scientists

Everyone knows the real reason people like Donald Trump are sceptical of climate change is that conservatives are fundamentally anti-science.…

Any other business

Decent broadband is a public right. Get on and kick BT, minister

As I set to compiling your email responses into our ‘broadband dossier’ to send to BT chairman Jan du Plessis,…

Books

A woman churns butter while her customer and children wait. Below, her husband milks a cow with a calf tied to it

Lead book review

How scary is dairy?

For tens of thousands of years, humans have been domesticating other mammals — cows, buffaloes, sheep, goats, camels, llamas, donkeys,…

Books

Caught between fascism and witchcraft: All Among the Barley, by Melissa Harrison, reviewed

All Among the Barley, Melissa Harrison’s third ‘nature novel’, centres on Wych Farm in the autumn of 1933, where the…

Books

Modernist architecture isn’t barbarous – but the blinkered rejection of it is

When I was younger, one of my favourite books was James Stevens Curl’s The Victorian Celebration of Death. His latest…

Richard Burton at the Old Vic in 1953. and Adrian Lester in Peter Brook’s 2001 production

Books

Glenda Jackson might have made a magnificent Hamlet

The role of Hamlet is, Max Beerbohm famously wrote, ‘a hoop through which every eminent actor must, sooner or later,…

Books

Will all whales soon be extinct?

Nick Pyenson, curator of fossil marine mammals at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, is quick to tell us he’s not…

Books

Too much American angst: the latest short stories reviewed

In ‘A Prize for Every Player’ — one of 12 stories in Days of Awe, a new collection by A.M.…

Books

The translator and spy: two sides of the same coin

Translators are like bumblebees. In 1934, the French entomologist August Magnan pronounced the flight of the bumblebee to be aerodynamically…

Jimmy Page performing with Led Zeppelin in May 1975. ‘He did believe that he had the power to control the universe’

Books

Jimmy Page is a Capricorn – that says it all

In 1957, aged 13, Jimmy Page appeared with his skiffle group on a children’s TV programme dedicated to ‘unusual hobbies’…

Arts

Bad Ischl: the spiritual home of Viennese operetta, and where Franz Joseph signed the declaration of war on Serbia

Arts feature

Operetta is serious business in Bad Ischl – and seriously glorious

It’s the lederhosen that grabs you first. Two gents were walking down the street ahead of us in full Alpine…

Emma Thompson as Fiona Maye in The Children Act

Cinema

If you think you can’t have too much Ian McEwan, then you are wrong

The Children Act is the third Ian McEwan film adaptation in 18 months (after The Child in Time and On…

Television

I had no idea how fascinating rubbish could be: The Secret Life of Landfill reviewed

Not the most beguiling of titles, I admit, but The Secret Life of Landfill: A Rubbish History (BBC4, Thursday) was…

The Listener

Teenage Fanclub reissues

Still got your record player? Dig it out. The crunchier the music, the better it sounds on vinyl: a broader…

‘The Acrobat Schulz V’ (1921), by Albert Birkle

Exhibitions

Caricature, satire and over-the-top horror: Magic Realism at Tate Modern reviewed

‘It is disastrous to name ourselves!’ So Willem de Kooning responded when some of his New York painter buddies elected…

Radio

The power of Sue MacGregor’s The Reunion

The return of Sue MacGregor’s long-running Radio 4 series The Reunion (produced by Eve Streeter) is a welcome reminder of…

Rob Auton (Chris) in Frank Skinner’s Nina’s Got News

Festivals

Is Frank Skinner the new Alan Bennett? Edinburgh Fringe round-up

For recovering teetotallers, like me, Thinking Drinkers is the perfect Edinburgh show. On stage, two sprucely dressed actors perform sketches…

Music

A Beggar’s Opera that beggars belief in Edinburgh

Robert Carsen’s new updating of The Beggar’s Opera is a coke-snorting, trash-talking, breakdancing, palm-greasing, skirt-hiking, rule-breaking affair — and every…

Culture Buff

Grace Cossington Smith (1892-1984)

Exhibitions prior to major art auctions can be a wonderful way to view works by significant artists that may not…

Life

High life

My marriage secret? I’m a faithless husband, but a good one

This was a real surprise, and on my birthday (11 August) to boot: a grown man, whose parents I used…

Low life

A spiritual journey to see some very expensive paintings

The Villa Carnignac art gallery is located on a Mediterranean island off the French Riviera called Porquerolles. Purpose-built to show…

Real life

I am high as a Kite on gloss paint (excuse the pun)

After I had been glossing the woodwork for a few days, I started to feel light-headed. It hadn’t occurred to…

Wild life

I’m taking the bull by the horns and heading to the prize show

Laikipia ‘This year we’re too broke to take our cattle to the show,’ I told Mark. For six months we…

Bridge

Bridge

Long-married couples are notoriously intolerant of one another at the bridge table. It’s as if all their pent-up irritation comes…

Chess

Royal road

The mathematician Euclid once boldly informed King Ptolemy Soter I of Egypt that there was no royal road to geometry.…

Chess puzzle

no. 520

White to play. This position is from Nakamura-Mamedyarov, St Louis 2018. Unfortunately for Mamedyarov, he has just blundered in a…

Competition

Where there’s a Will

In Competition No. 3062 you were invited to submit a Shakespearean-style soliloquy that a contemporary politician might have felt moved…

Crossword

2373: Susurrus

Unclued lights are three groups of three words of a kind, each group defined by the name of a different…

Crossword solution

to 2370: Problem XII

The numbers were linked to titles of classic works of FICTION (12): The Two DROVERS (26) (Walter Scott), The Three MUSKETEERS…

No sacred cows

Jamie Oliver’s jerk rice comes with a side serving of insanity

Earlier this week, the Labour MP Dawn Butler ‘called out’ Jamie Oliver for ‘appropriation’. His sin, according to the shadow…

Spectator sport

The baby who could transform English cricket

Alice Cook’s impending third child could turn out to be the perfect delivery for England. Already the expectant father Alastair…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: How do we evict a narcissistic flatmate without starting World War III?

Q. I live in a houseshare with two other people; one of whom I am very fond of and the…

Food

Empty restaurants are becoming a bad habit of mine: Coq d’Argent reviewed

I wouldn’t normally visit Coq d’Argent, which I think means the chicken of money. It is a moderately famous restaurant…

Mind your language

Why would you relish an opportunity?

The Sun gave a sad picture of British loneliness recently in a report about the national yearning to play a…