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The Spectator

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Labor does the Time Warp (again)

For those who enjoy their schadenfreude neat, there was plenty to savour watching the NSW election results on the ABC.…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Running on empty

If anything happened to disrupt our imports of oil and fuel, such as a blockade of shipping through the South…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Gladys throws the Libs a lifeline

The return of the Berejiklian government demonstrates that good governments can win a third term, despite self-inflicted wounds. That will…

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc

It was utter bunkum; but typical self-delusion by those ideological crusaders determined to do whatever it takes ‘to save the…

[Photo: Gary Grealy]

Features Australia

Vale Edmund Capon

It is a chilly December evening in London, and on the floor of this hospital the windows are an opaque…

Features Australia

The propaganda is settled

Aussie school children are getting another barrage of third-party climate catastrophism, only  a fortnight since the kids’ climate strike. March…

Features Australia, New Zealand

Christchurch – and saying goodbye to so much

Our saddest times are when those we love leave us. When there is not even time to say goodbye, the…

Features Australia

Selling out the voters

The famous American author Mark Twain is rumoured to have once said ‘If voting made a difference, they wouldn’t let…

Features Australia

Aux bien pensants

No wonder so many politicians live in mortal terror of being interviewed by Alan Jones. No one prepares more thoroughly,…

Features

Features

After May: the battle for the soul of the Tories is now on

The most effective political insult of modern times was delivered by Norman Lamont in 1993, when he declared that John…

Features

Fear, loathing and backstabbing – the battle to replace May has begun

To most of the cabinet, it does not matter if Theresa May announces a timetable for her resignation: they can’t…

Features

As an ex-Brexit minister I can tell you – May’s ‘plan’ was built on sand

Management books often repeat the dictum: ‘If there’s one thing worse than making mistakes, it’s not learning from them.’ So…

Features

Victorian lady travellers aren’t feminist role models – they were tyrants

They cut virgin paths through tropical forests, paddled dugout canoes over West African rapids, sailed along the Yangtze in a…

Life imitates art: Volodymyr Zelensky as Vasyl Holoborodko in Servant of the People

Features

In Ukraine’s presidential elections, life is imitating Netflix

Servant of the People is a hilarious Ukrainian situation comedy currently running on Netflix. It opens with a young high-school…

Features

Netflix and kill: the creepy obsession with true crime

Thumbing avidly through Heat magazine recently in a fevered search for the latest on the Cheryl/Liam/Naomi infernal triangle, I was…

Features

We should take a hard look at our reporting of Trump and Russia

 Washington REVERSE FERRET! When he edited the Sun, Kelvin MacKenzie used to throw open his office door and bellow this…

Features

The UK’s great porn firewall experiment

In just a few weeks, the government begins its crackdown on porn. From April, all UK-based internet users will be…

A British staple and perfect for crumble

Notes on...

Rhubarb: the most eccentrically British fruit

The tale of forced Yorkshire rhubarb has the makings of a David Lean film. Frosty Slavic beginnings, wartime devotion, steam…

The Week

Leading article

The absurdity of censoring anti-vaxxers

It is not hard to make the case that vaccination programmes have been one of the greatest contributions to mankind…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Brexit games, Trump’s win, and the EU stops the clock

Home The House of Commons voted to take Brexit business into its own hands, passing by 329 to 302 an…

Diary

Pints and pretty girls: my week with the March to Leave

I’m famed for my mustard cords. Back in 2013, the press mockingly dubbed my campaign trips around the country in…

Barometer

The maddest road signs from around the world

Silly signs The Department for Transport ordered councils to remove ‘obsolete and unnecessary’ road signs. Some examples of the art…

Ancient and modern

The fake names on the Remain petition are nothing new

The petition calling on the UK to remain in the EU has garnered 8,000 votes from Jacob Rees-Mogg and 700…

Letters

Letters: Theresa May is definitely not the worst ever PM

Still better than Cameron Sir: I disagree with your editorial (‘Agony prolonged’, 23 March) that Theresa May is the worst…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

The obvious solution to the problem of Brexit

There is an obvious solution to the Brexit problem. It is based on a recognition that we want out and…

Freddy Gray

Muller has led to the vindication – not the destruction – of Donald Trump

   Washington Robert Mueller’s two-year investigation into ‘Russiagate’ was meant to bring down President Donald Trump. That was the plan.…

Lionel Shriver

Imagine the uproar if Remain had won, but MPs then made Britain leave

Sometimes it’s worth addressing what didn’t happen. For one exasperating aspect of appearing on television news is leaving the studio…

Qanta Ahmed

Outlawing ‘Islamophobia’ would help jihadis

Last weekend the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, described the massacre in Christchurch as the result ‘of failing to root…

Any other business

The real winner from Brexodus won’t be Frankfurt, Paris or Dublin

How big is Brexodus — the flight of business and people from the City of London in parallel with our…

Books

The creation of Adam and Eve, depicted in a 12th-century Byzantine mosaic from Monreale, Sicily

Lead book review

How much of the Bible are Christians expected to believe?

In this careful study of the sacred texts of Judaism and Christianity, John Barton, former Oriel and Laing professor of…

Books

While Dutch schools ban birthday cakes, the British pine for the next Bake Off

The Way We Eat Now begins with a single bunch of grapes. The bunch is nothing special to the modern…

The final fanfare for the caliphs before the coming of the Mongol hordes. A manuscript miniature from al-Hariri’s Maqamat, showing the caliph’s mounted standard bearers

Books

The Arabs before Islam: a rich, exotic history

In his first book, published in 1977, Tim Mackintosh-Smith described mentioning the idea of travelling to Yemen while studying Arabic…

Demonstration of right-wing ‘patriots’ in Lower Saxony, 2019. Credit: Rex Features

Books

Where is the rise of neo-Nazism around Europe leading?

‘Why would anyone write a historical study of it?’ asks Gavriel Rosenfeld about the Fourth Reich at the start of…

Statue of Socrates at the Academy of Athens

Books

Socrates the romantic hero?

If western philosophy is no more than ‘footnotes to Plato’, so, arguably, is the myth of its founding hero, Socrates.…

Maneki-neko at the Gotokuji Temple in Tokyo. A common Japanese talisman thought to bring good luck to its owner, the ‘welcoming cat’ is often displayed in shops, restaurants and other businesses

Books

What makes Kim Jong-il cute — and Barack Obama not?

Ordinarily, I love books that answer questions I’ve never asked, but Simon May’s baffling book has blown my mind. The…

Philip Kerr, photographed in Paris in 2012. Credit: Getty Images

Books

Farewell Bernie Gunther: Metropolis, by Philip Kerr, reviewed

Philip Kerr’s first Bernie Gunther novel, March Violets, was published 30 years ago. From the start, the format was a…

Books

The cruise of a lifetime: Proleterka, by Fleur Jaeggy, reviewed

Near the start of Fleur Jaeggy’s extraordinary novel Proleterka, the unnamed narrator reflects: ‘Children lose interest in their parents when…

Books

Robert A. Heinlein: the ‘giant of SF’ was sexist, racist — and certainly no stylist

Like someone who has bought a first computer, then reads the manual from front to back but never actually gets…

By September 1942, Hall was being hunted as one of the Allies’ ‘most dangerous’ agents

Books

The Lady with the Limp: homage to the one-legged Virginia Hall, SOE’s ‘most dangerous’ agent

‘This seems to be in your rough area. I mean, it contains wooden legs and everything…’ my commissioning editor at…

Australian Books

Unis? Must try harder

‘I’m a revolutionary Marxist, and if you’re not one by the end of semester I haven’t done my job properly,’…

Arts

Mary, Mary, quite contrary: Mary Quant and fellow-revolutionary Vidal Sassoon in 1964

Arts feature

My ringside seat on the Mary Quant revolution

I think I probably qualify as the oldest fashion editor in the world, because in spite of my advanced age…

Radio dial

Radio

Listening to plays in a foreign language is a weirdly engaging experience

As the ravens circle around Broadcasting House in London’s West End, presaging difficult times ahead for BBC Radio, with less…

Francis Guinan (Fred) and K. Todd Freeman (Dee) in Downstate. Photo: Michael Brosilow

Theatre

Has Bruce Norris bitten off more than he can chew?

Bruce Norris is a firefighter among dramatists. He runs towards danger while others sprint in the other direction. His Pulitzer-winning…

‘Scenes from the Passion: The Hawthorne Tree’, 2001, by George Shaw

Exhibitions

The joy of George Shaw’s miserable paintings of a Coventry council estate

All good narrative painting contains an element of allegory, but most artists don’t go looking for it on a Coventry…

Jonas Kaufmann and Anna Netrebko in Royal Opera's La forza del destino. Photo: Bill Cooper

Opera

The most glorious singing anyone born after 1970 will ever have heard: La forza del destino reviewed

To stage Verdi’s Il Trovatore, they say, is easy: you just need the four greatest singers in the world. The…

The Beatles perform in Liverpool prior to signing their first recording contract: George Harrison, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, and original drummer Pete Best. Photo: Hulton Archive / Getty Images

Television

The greatest Beatle? Pete Best

Which of the Beatles would you most like to have been? Not either of the dead ones, presumably. Nor the…

Back to the future: ‘The Asset Strippers’, by Mike Nelson

Sculpture

Powerful elegy for a world that is slipping away: Tate Britain’s The Asset Strippers reviewed

There was a moment more than 20 years ago when Bankside Power Station was derelict but its transformation into Tate…

When I see an elephant fly: a scene from Tim Burton’s Dumbo

Cinema

Clumsy, long and lacking circus thrills: Tim Burton’s Dumbo reviewed

Dumbo is an elephant we can’t forget. More than 70 years since Disney’s 1941 film, the big-eared baby is still…

Fernando Guimarães

Culture Buff

Fernando Guimarães

The closing chapters of Homer’s Odyssey were the source for the opera regarded as the crowning achievement of composer Claudio…

Life

High life

My prescription to make New York happy again

New York   This place feels funny, a bit like Beirut, where Christians, Jews, Muslims, Druze and encamped Palestinians live…

Low life

I’m making a cave disco in the south of France

I’ve swapped my carer’s tray in Devon for a barrow and spade halfway up a cliff in the south of…

Real life

You should train your man like you train your Labrador

‘This clean sock regime is really annoying,’ said the builder boyfriend, as he rummaged through his newly inaugurated top drawer.…

The turf

Will horse welfare become racing’s Brexit?

As jockeys, trainers, punters and media folk gathered at Newbury on Saturday to say farewell to Noel Fehily, the ultimate…

Bridge

Bridge

Susanna and I don’t play on the same team very often, but once a year Fiona Hutchison puts together a…

Chess

Fischer favourite

A favoured line of the great Bobby Fischer was to meet both the French Defence (1 e4 e6) and the…

Chess puzzle

no. 547

White to play. This position is from Fischer–Myagmarsuren, Sousse Interzonal 1967. How did Fischer conclude his attack in fine style?…

Competition

Cringe benefits

In Competition No. 3091 you were invited to submit toe-curlingly bad analogies. This is an idea shamelessly pinched from the…

Crossword

2401: Sign here please

The unclued lights are of a kind and all have to be ignored in the completed grid.   Across 1   …

Crossword solution

to 2398: All steamed up

The unclued lights are the names of FAMOUS STEAM TRAINS including the pairs at 14/15 and 17/30.  First prize Jenny…

No sacred cows

Jordan Peterson and mob rule at the University of Cambridge

On Monday, the vice-chancellor of Cambridge university, Stephen Toope, issued a statement defending the decision of the divinity faculty to…

The Wiki Man

The uncountable problems with innumerate Brits

Alevels, from the perspective of a ‘choice architect’, are a disaster. While pupils are free to pick and mix freely…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: how do I stop my minister giving sermons about Brexit?

Q. I belong to a religious congregation whose minister is politically minded. Every time I attend a service, I am…

Drink

Three Tories gather for a convivial, and consolatory, glass of wine

Three tribal Tories had gathered for a convivial glass, and also a consolatory one. One quoted Huskisson’s verdict after Goderich’s…

Mind your language

Coining a phrase does not mean stealing it

My husband has been doing something useful but criminal for the past two years. He reads the sports pages, mostly…