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The Spectator

3 July 2021 Aus

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Conservatives and Covid

It is the absence of political convictions that has landed the federal government in the Covid mess it is currently…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

At The Spectator Australia, we go behind the news to tell you the truth, no matter how unpalatable it may…

Australian Notes

Australian notes

A Guide to Understanding this Pandemic We are all living through the worst inroads on our freedoms and civil liberties…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Infrastructure: the new motherhood?

Big government building projects aren’t always virtuous

Features Australia

How high, Helmsman Xi?

Certain Australians would have us as China’s vassal state

Features Australia, New Zealand

Kiwi saboteur?

Jacinda Ardern’s socialist disasters risk destroying the country

Features Australia

Rule by fear across the nation

Lockdown hides incompetence and double standards

Features

Features

Kompromatt

How I missed the Hancock story

Features

Cake expectations

Afternoon tea has gone OTT

Features

Who cared?

Lockdown killed my mother – and thousands like her

Features

Stage fright

Uncertainty is crippling our cultural life

Notes on...

Pigeon racing

Pigeon racing isn’t much of a spectator sport. Race birds are driven to the ‘liberation point’, where they’re released to…

Features

China’s manhunt

Is anywhere safe for the Uighurs?

Features

Capital gains

Don’t pity me for living in London

Features

The lost legacy

Merkel is leaving the EU in chaos

The Week

Letters

Letters

Excess demand Sir: Liam Halligan (‘The house mafia’, 26 June) treats us to an exposé of the shoddy products of…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home A lively game of hunt the issue followed the resignation of Matt Hancock as Secretary of State for Health…

Leading article

Teach first

Aswitch of personnel at the Department of Health this week has brought a welcome change in the government’s tone. No…

Barometer

Barometer

Isolated cases Large numbers of people are still being ordered to self-isolate in spite of having been vaccinated — 137,560…

Ancient and modern

A word to the wise

The delicious hypocrisy at the heart of today’s cancel fraternity is that it is strongly opposed to censorship. Romans grappled…

Diary

Diary

It turns out that if there’s one thing more expensive than making theatre, it’s not making it. Empty buildings haemorrhage…

Columnists

Columns

The political baggage of moving house

We are currently house-hunting — please let me know if you have one going spare. We are looking for a…

Any other business

Will surging house prices send the English young to save Scotland?

Nicola Sturgeon depresses me and seems to be having the same effect on Scottish house prices. In a housing market…

Columns

Immigration figures don’t add up

Journalists filing to deadline are apt to dig only so deep when googling for statistics, which in themselves are sometimes…

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

Is Winston Marshall — guitarist, banjo player, composer of Mumford & Sons, and father of the west London ‘Nu-Folk’ music…

Columns

A boat trip back through time

I was looking forward to my dinner at Daquise in South Kensington, a Polish restaurant that’s been there for ever…

Columns

Sajid’s cold reality

The most difficult time for a new secretary of state is normally the first three months in the job. An…

Books

Australian Books

Australian art in the Roaring Twenties

The only criticism that can be levelled at For the Fallen by Paul Paffen is that it lacks the hard…

More from Books

An imaginative interpretation of the past

Antiquaries have had a bad press. If mentioned at all today, they are often derided as reclusive pedants poring over…

More from Books

Where’s Leni?

Leni Riefenstahl was a film-maker of genius whose name is everlastingly associated with her film about the German chancellor, Triumph…

More from Books

Broadmoor tales

True crime is having a moment: every day there’s a new documentary, book, podcast, or blockbuster film announced, detailing the…

More from Books

Dishing the dirt

Even by James Ellroy’s standards, the narrator of his latest novel is not a man much given to the quiet…

More from Books

So near and yet so strange

This pleasant volume, the author announces in the introduction, is ‘not a nature book, or even a travel book, so…

More from Books

City of dreams

I’ve never been to Barcelona, but Rupert Thomson makes it feel like an old friend. The hot, airless nights and…

More from Books

Sublime strangeness

Whose were those feet in ancient time that walked upon England’s mountains green? That William Blake assumed his readers were…

Lead book review

Tortured genius

Andrew Motion describes the inner turmoil of the neglected poet Ivor Gurney

More from Books

A load of oddballs

For reasons I can’t seem to remember, I have read an awful lot of cricketing histories. The dullest, by a…

More from Books

The second-worst journey in the world

The epic story of the Antarctic voyage of the Belgica (1897-9) has all the ingredients of a truly glorious misadventure:…

Arts

Australian Arts

Singing Shakespeare

Britain is certainly revving up when it comes to culture. Andrew Lloyd Webber’s defiance about social distancing for his new…

Culture Buff

The Dictionary of Lost Words

These days I don’t read many novels although occasionally I have to read one for my book group. Recently our…

Television

The importance of being earnest

Ken Burns made his name in 1990 with The Civil War, the justly celebrated 11-and-a-half-hour documentary series that gave America’s…

Cinema

Men behaving drunkenly

Thomas Vinterberg’s Another Round has been heaped with awards: an Oscar, a Bafta, it swept the European Film Awards. And…

Arts feature

Bohemian rhapsody

Rosie Millard is transported to the Impasse Ronsin, a tiny, squalid cul de sac in Paris’s 15th arrondissement that was once the centre of the modern-art world

Opera

Spelling disaster

When you think of Handel’s Amadigi (in so far as anyone thinks about the composer’s rarely staged, also-ran London score…

Radio

Miliband’s last supper

You have to hand it to Ed Miliband. After bacon sandwich-gate, he might never have eaten in public again, but…

The Listener

Kings of Convenience: Peace or Love

Grade: A– The problem with Norwegians is that they are so relentlessly, mind-numbingly pleasant. Well, OK, not Knut Hamsun or…

Theatre

This will hurt

Before the National Theatre produced Dylan Thomas’s Under Milk Wood they had to make a decision. How could they stuff…

Opera

Tsar quality

There are worse inconveniences than having to wear a face mask to the opera. But there’s one consequence that hadn’t…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie Life

The only time that the BBC has ‘emu-lated’ an Australian broadcaster was in the early Seventies, when it suspended its…

Aussie Life

Aussie Language

‘Muck-raking’ is an old journalism expression coined in the US around 1900 to describe two types of journalists: a) those…

No sacred cows

My problem with the Euros

I’m struggling to work up much enthusiasm about England’s progress in the Euros. I know, I know, Tuesday night’s victory…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. The other night, while hosting a house party, I was one of only three people still chatting by the…

The Wiki Man

Why I won’t buy a Tesla

I loved the Ford Mustang Mach-E which I had on loan for four days. It was gorgeous to drive, and…

Mind your language

Huntin’, shootin’, fishin’

In 1923 in Whose Body? we were introduced to Lord Peter Wimsey on his way to an auction where he…

Drink

A time for New Zealand wines

‘The doors clap to, the pane is bright with showers.’ With ‘summer’ determined to do its worst, there is one…

High life

High life

Wimbledon is here at last, after its absence in 2020. What struck me watching the French Open on television a…

Bridge

Bridge

I have a confession to make. I did something I haven’t done for over 20 years: I went on holiday.…

Crossword

2513: Golden anniversary

1A, on 23 17, 41 1D 8 in this 31 was 21D. This anniversary announcement consists of eleven words and…

Competition

Pop culture

In Competition No. 3205, you were invited to supply a rigorous literary-critical analysis of a well-known pop song. Thanks to…

Crossword solution

Solution to 2510: Prom Session

Twelve symmetrically disposed unclued entries comprise three pairs of Spoonerisms (an anagram of the title): POURING RAIN/ROARING PAIN, FRYING PAN/PRYING…

Crossword

Fifty years of The Spectator crossword

by Tom Johnson aka Doc   During the early spring of 1971, a package of eighteen unsolicited crosswords arrived in…

Chess

Firestarter

It’s a joy to watch a player like Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, who can light a fire with his bare hands. Where…

Real life

Real life

The woman sat alone and stony-faced in the passenger seat of the car as it blocked the road. She was…

Wild life

Wild life

Kenya In March, Global Britain signed a new, post-Brexit trade deal with Kenya. This was a welcome agreement for my…

Low life

Low life

The village square is a long and pedestrianised oblong shaded along its length by massive pollarded plane trees. It’s known…

Chess puzzle

Puzzle no. 660

White to play. So–Vachier-Lagrave, Paris, June 2021. The queen on e7 can be taken, but Black’s last move was …Rd8,…