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The Spectator

6 April 2019 Aus

Simon Collins

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Labor’s electric road to nowhere

It’s like déjà vu all over again. The economy, although slowing, is growing at a respectable 2.3 per cent. Unemployment…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

What do the ABC and the New Zealand terrorist horror have in common? Apart, I mean, from the fact that…

Simon Collins

Simon Collins

There are two kinds of political figure who cannot be effectively satirised. One is the kind of leader who makes…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Doomed yoof

Asians need not fear the Australian Labor party, but they should lock up their kids. Labor ‘yoof’ is on the…

Features Australia, New Zealand

Black and white clouds over New Zealand

The Christchurch mosque massacres of March 15 brought out the best and the worst in New Zealanders. The best was…

Features Australia

Vale Peter Coleman

William Peter Coleman (15 December 1928 – 31 March 2019) was that increasingly rare creature in contemporary Australia, a great…

Features Australia

Useful idiots at the ABC

ABC’s Four Corners remains proud of Sarah Ferguson’s three-part nothingburger last June about President Trump’s Russia collusion – its ‘story…

Features Australia

Sneak peek

When Rone first conceived of Empire – his vast sensory installation in an abandoned Dandenong Ranges mansion – he never…

Features Australia

Electric fantasies

A looming Australian federal election and the increasingly bitter carbon wars have resulted in a series of campaign promises that…

Features

Features

If there’s no deal, there’s no Brexit

Iraq, the financial crisis, the expenses scandal — all of these undermined trust in politicians. They created an impression of…

Features

Johnny Mercer: the Tories would be wiped out in a snap election

A few weeks ago, Johnny Mercer spoke in Westminster on the future of conservatism. At the end, the audience was…

Matteo Salvini takes a selfie with five children who helped to save their classmates during the 20 March Milan bus attack

Features

Matteo Salvini: the man reinventing populist politics

While Britain continues to try to struggle its way out of the EU, perhaps it is wise to consider what…

Features

Ireland’s strange decision to become a French colonial outpost

Seventy years ago this month, a prime minister led a divided nation towards the exit from what was then one…

Notebook

Fraser Nelson: The biggest myth is that editors have control over their columnists

The power of editors is comically overstated. I’m struck by the number of politicians who imagine that there’s a hierarchy:…

Features

There’s little difference between Question Time and Britain’s Got Talent

The contestants for the 13th series of Britain’s Got Talent, the variety show which starts on Saturday, certainly showed variety:…

Features

Men are playing with fire by having drunken sex

It is late, on a wet Tuesday evening in November, and I am driving home, listening to endless talk of…

Features

Charity muggers are no longer on the streets — they’re your friends

There was a time when you couldn’t walk down your local high street and not be set upon by a…

Preparing to ride up Warren Hill

Notes on...

Newmarket, where the fastest horses in the world thunder past

Standing on Warren Hill in the morning mist, watching Britain’s finest thoroughbreds thunder past, you realise what makes Newmarket so…

The Week

Leading article

If the EU refuses an extension, voters want a no-deal Brexit. MPs should listen

One of the many tragedies of Theresa May’s premiership is that, having come up with a coherent policy on how…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Brexit complications, avocado woes and London knife crime

Home Brexit exerted ever stranger effects on politics. After an eight-hour cabinet meeting, Theresa May, the Prime Minister, said she…

Diary

Piers Morgan: why, as a former Remainer, I’d now back Leave

I voted Remain, and still don’t think Brexit is a good idea. However, if there were to be a second…

From The Archives

Supreme but not respected

From ‘The disconsideration of the House of Commons’, 5 April 1919: The House of Commons is legally supreme in the…

Ancient and modern

Can ancient Greek comedians tell us how to leave the EU?

Since comedians these days seem to be the authorities on all matters spiritual and temporal (puts on funny voice, knife-crime…

Barometer

How is the country split over Brexit?

German customs The original customs union, or Zollverein, was established by Prussia along with 17 other states which make up…

Letters

Letters: The Brexit chaos isn’t David Cameron’s fault

About the Bible Sir: I was confirmed by Richard Holloway as a schoolboy at Fettes College, and then taught by…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

The logic behind Theresa May’s late move to Labour

There is a logic in Mrs May’s late move to Labour. It is the same logic by which both parties,…

Rod Liddle

In what possible way was Nick Boles ever a Conservative?

Who is your favourite brave Remainer Conservative MP? Anna Soubry has to be near the top of the list, for…

James Delingpole

How I know the Conservative party is doomed

Gosh, it’s depressing watching the natural party of government committing slow-motion suicide. It’s depressing even if you’re not, as I…

Any other business

UK business investment has nosedived – what’s to blame?

Business investment in the UK declined in all four quarters of 2018 to complete a year-on-year dive of 2.4 per cent,…

Books

The English model Jean Shrimpton’s appearance at the Melbourne Races in 1965 hatless, gloveless and bare-legged in a mini-dress caused a press furore in Australia

Lead book review

It was pretty good for me: Joan Bakewell on the Sixties

For me this book evokes a Gigi duet moment: ‘You wore a gown of gold.’ ‘I was all in blue.’…

A soldier’s widow and child in Greece c. 1950

Books

Greece is not just for Greeks — it belongs to the world

It often proves difficult to talk about modern Greece. Not just because of the relentless stream of news coming at…

Books

The Bears v. the Rabbits: The Feral Detective, by Jonathan Lethem, reviewed

Jonathan Lethem’s new book is billed as ‘his first detective novel since Motherless Brooklyn’, which won America’s national book critics…

Books

Barefoot in the park: Tokyo Ueno Station, by Yu Miri, reviewed

In 1923, an earthquake with a magnitude of 9 struck Tokyo and Yokohama. A huge area of Tokyo burned. But,…

Books

Can anyone get away with murder anymore?

When the 24-year-old Angela Gallop started working at the Home Office forensic science service, her boss lost no time in…

Books

The vast human cost of the Panama Canal keeps unfolding

There is nothing new about Latin America’s fractious relationship with her northern neighbour. In 1900 the Uruguayan writer José Enrique…

At the Tropicana nightclub: Dr Hasselbacher and Wormald celebrate with Milly on her 17th birthday. A scene from Carol Reed’s film of Our Man in Havana with Burl Ives, Alec Guinness and Jo Morrow

Books

‘Where every vice was permissible’: Graham Greene’s Cuba

Cuba meant a lot to Graham Greene. Behind his writing desk in his flat in Antibes he had a painting…

A drawing of the massacre by Eduard Thöny for the satirical German magazine Simplicissimus, January 1920

Books

Bloodbath at Baisakhi: the centenary of the Amritsar massacre

On 10 April 1919, the peppery governor of the Punjab, Sir Michael O’Dwyer, ordered the immediate arrest of two leaders…

Australian Books

Into oblivion

Moribund for about nine years now, Clive James has released his newest transcription of the Grim Reaper’s call. You might…

Arts

Arts feature

Why were the Victorians so obsessed with the moon?

In Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, a group of slightly ramshackle workmen decide to put on a play. The play…

‘The New and Fashionable Game of the Jew’, 1807

Exhibitions

Is now a good time to talk about Jews and money?

Is now a good time to talk about Jews and money? The Jewish Museum in London thinks so, and perhaps…

Radio

Art is often best experienced on the radio

At its best audio can be a much more visual medium than the screen. Making Art with Frances Morris (produced…

Opera

ENO’s Jack the Ripper needs to decide if it wants to be a gore-fest or social history

Is it possible to write a feminist opera about Jack the Ripper? Composer Iain Bell thinks it is, and his…

Television

The mob is right about Line of Duty – it remains unmissably exciting

On Sunday a drama began with ED905 being stolen by an OCG who’d faked an RTC that required IR, little…

Music

Aurora Orchestra’s Brexit concert nearly turned me into a Leaver

Back when the UK was assumed to be leaving the European Union on 29 March, the Aurora Orchestra was invited…

Dancer, choreographer, iconoclast: Merce Cunningham in 1962

Dance

A masterclass of menace and magnificence: Romeo and Juliet reviewed

Two households, both alike in dignity. Capulets in red tights, Montagues in green. Kenneth MacMillan’s Romeo and Juliet opens in…

Star quality: Jade Anouka, right, as Bea in Ella Road’s The Phlebotomist

Theatre

An exceptional dystopia that’s made for TV: The Phlebotomist reviewed

The Phlebotomist by Ella Road explores the future of genetics. Suppose a simple blood test were able to tell us…

The innocent: Adriano Tardiolo as Lazzaro

Cinema

Intriguing and beguiling but God know what it adds up to: Happy as Lazzaro reviewed

Alice Rohrwacher’s Happy as Lazzaro sets out as a neorealist tale of exploited sharecroppers, but midway through the story it…

Culture Buff

Self portrait 1934 Nora Heysen

In his new biography of Winston Churchill, Andrew Roberts notes that ‘it was said of Emperor Napoleon III that he…

Life

High life

Mortimer Sackler and me

New York   It was 51 years ago, in the Hôtel du Cap d’Antibes, that I first met the man…

Low life

Am I about to be usurped by Philippe, our handsome French gardner?

We have a gardener, Philippe, who comes once a week. He lives in a ruin a little way down the…

Real life

The builder boyfriend and I have left the EU – and it’s great

After all that waiting and arguing, I must say I thoroughly enjoyed leaving the EU. The builder boyfriend and I…

Wild life

My time in Somalia with Michael Meacher, Tony Benn’s ‘vicar on earth’

East Africa   The late Michael Meacher represented almost everything I loathe in a politician. Before his death in 2015,…

Bridge

Bridge

Each March, a roll call of bridge superstars come to compete in the Vanderbilt Knockout Teams, one of America’s most…

Chess

Advance planning

One way to improve your results is to develop a specific opening repertoire and learn it thoroughly so as to…

Chess puzzle

no. 548

White to play. This position is a variation from Mamedyarov-Li Reufeng, PRO League 2017. This game also started with White…

Competition

Spring villanelle

In Competition No. 3092 you were invited to submit a spring villanelle. The villanelle lends itself to themes of loss…

Crossword

2402: Test pilots

Eight unclued entries are of a kind. A 9-letter word for their position must be highlighted in the grid.  …

Crossword solution

to 2399: Lines of Work

The unclued lights form the folk rhyme ‘Tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor, rich man, poor man, beggar-man, thief’.  A.A. Milne (MILNE…

No sacred cows

Now – as in the Soviet Union – making a joke can be a dangerous, life-changing mistake

I was surprised to learn that the novelist Milan Kundera celebrated his 90th birthday on Monday. I had no idea…

Spectator sport

Have referees just given up?

Sometimes you fear for Neil Warnock. The embattled Cardiff manager is 70 and operates at level 11 all the time;…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: how can I stop my husband from hijacking my punchlines?

Q. A woman I’ve known for years is getting divorced and rings me every day to talk about it. I…

Food

The joy of garlic and easy listening: Pucci in Mayfair reviewed

I grew up in south-west London in the 1970s when Italian restaurants had exposed brick walls and paper tablecloths in…

Mind your language

‘Shame’ is no longer one’s greatest fear, it’s offence culture’s default response

In 1663, just before Samuel Pepys visited the stables of the elegant Thomas Povey, where he found the walls were…