PREVIOUS ISSUES

CHOOSE A PREVIOUS ISSUE FROM THE LIST    


THIS WEEK'S ISSUE

The Spectator

6 February 2016 Aus

Fighting over the crumbs

Sign up to The Spectator Australia newsletter

Australia's best political analysis - straight to your inbox

Australia

Leading article Australia

The cost of freedom

‘Military madness’, sang Graham Nash, ‘is killing my country.’ That was back in the ‘70s when US and Australian forces…

Australian Columnists

Consider This

Consider this…

Australia was invented Malcolm Turnbull appeared on Channel Ten’s The Panel on Australia Day. Panellist, Waleed Aly chided the PM…

Brown Study

Brown study

I don’t know what made me change my opinion so dramatically on a certain matter of public interest that has…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc

Cheap petrol comes at a cost to our exports

Features Australia

Republicans’ cunning stunts

Gimmicks and tricks are far easier than trying to come up with a workable republican model

Features Australia

Defending Mitchell

The scandal that reveals Australia’s real moral crisis

Features Australia

Betting on, er, Trump

The appeal of a rude, narcissistic reality TV star cannot be under-estimated

Features Australia

Latte sipper of the Year

The Woolies’ Employee of the Month has more merit than the Australian of the Year

Features

Features

Fighting over the crumbs

They are too divided and their campaigns too shambolic to seize this opportunity

Features

The bad book

The publishers have asked for all review copies of That Was the Church That Was to be returned

Features

Hollande’s own emergency

The French president’s response to the November terror attacks has left him increasingly isolated and unpopular

Features

Inside the new Navy

The helmsman’s a woman, the wardrooms are unisex... but the stokers are disappearing in droves

Features

A lesson in self-censorship

I thought it was part of our job to promote tolerance and challenge orthodoxy. I was wrong

Features

Death on the NHS

Ten years ago the National Health Service eased my father’s last days. My mother, this year, was not nearly so lucky

Features

Fear of the baby-snatchers

The care system’s eagerness to separate babies from parents is taking a large but secret toll

Notes on...

South Africa

Jacob Zuma's economic mismanagement has a benefit for tourists: it’s as if a whole country has become half-price

The Week

Leading article

Cameron’s “deal” has backfired – badly. So what will he do now?

David Cameron must stop campaigning for an ‘in’ vote and improve the terms of his inadequate deal

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Plus: more migrant children drowning, Islamic State kill 71 in Damascus, Ted Cruz beats Donald Trump in Iowa

Diary

Diary

Also in Alexander Chancellor’s diary: Honouring Lord Hutchinson, Olivia de Havilland and Aung San Suu Kyi

Barometer

Barometer

Elections, US presidential election 2016, Iowa caucuses 2016, Oxford University, University admissions, Golf, Tax

Ancient and modern

In defence of discrimination

The ancients – unlike our Prime Minister — recognised it as a vital quality

From The Archives

What to do with Syria?

One thing was certain: keeping the British there long-term wouldn’t help

Letters

Australian letters

Madness Sir: I always enjoy The Spectator book reviews. The review by Terry Barnes on Jeremy Sammut’s excellent book The…

Columnists

World Politics

The Donald isn’t dead yet

Even if his bubble was burst in Iowa, his campaign has exposed deep cracks in the GOP power structure

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s notes

Also in Charles Moore’s Notes: US media groupthink; ‘Islamophobic’ hate crimes; remembering George Weidenfeld

Rod Liddle

What fun it will be if Trump becomes president

It would be Trumpageddon for all the worst people in Britain, and the prospect is rather attractive

Matthew Parris

Why I now believe in positive discrimination

It need not rule out selection by merit – but to assess ‘merit’, potential as well as performance should be considered

Hugo Rifkind

The London mayoral election will be a battle between whatsisface and whatsisname

Hardly anyone voted when it was Boris vs Ken – they’ll care even less about Zac vs Sadiq. And it doesn’t matter anyway

Any other business

I told you so: the UK electricity gap looms wider than ever

Plus: Some good economic news; a film-worthy banking drama; and the case for using your connections

Books

Jennifer Jones in her first starring role as Bernadette Soubirous

Lead book review

Tawdry tales of Tinseltown

Jean Stein’s collection of Tinseltown tittle-tattle is moderately interesting, unpleasantly salacious and largely unsourced

Books

‘Crazy mixed-up Yid’

Litvinoff apparently knew everyone in Sixties London, including Lucian Freud, Mick Jagger to Ronnie Kray (who slashed his face)

‘The Evening’ by Caspar David Friedrich

Books

Roaming in the gloaming

Peter Davidson’s meditation on the role of twilight in European culture is too nebulous — or protean — to be very illuminating

Books

Odi et amo

Daisy Dunn’s own passion for the earthy yet urbane Catullus is evident in her skilful recreation of his life and times

Books

Down and out in Park Lane and Plaistow

Following in the steps of Orwell, Judah reports on the desperate circumstances of the city’s (mainly immigrant) down-and-outs

Pyramid texts at Saqqara

Books

Riddles in the sand

According to the distinguished Egyptologist Susan Brind Morrow, the famous pyramid texts are more poetic — if simpler — than previously thought

The Duke of Cumberland takes centre stage at Culloden

Books

Muskets v. the Highland charge

Trevor Royle gives an even-handed account of this last desperate throw of the dice for Bonnie Prince Charlie

Books

From surgeon’s scrubs to patient’s gown

When Breath Becomes Air is the neurosurgeon Paul Kalanithi’s powerful — and posthumous — account of finding himself on the wrong end of the scalpel

Books

We are not all in this together

Owen Hatherley’s polemic on public expenditure cuts is less ranty — and more reflective — than one might expect

Books

The making of a legend

Will Andrew Hankinson’s study of Raoul Moat’s spree-killing obsession become a script for further murder?

Humboldt talks to one of the indigenous people in Turbaco (today’s Columbia) en route to Bogotá.

Books

Humboldt’s gift

Andrea Wulf has brilliantly resurrected the gifted naturalist and geographer who was once (bar Napoleon) the most famous man in Europe

Books

Escaping the Slough of despond

Mick Herron’s novel explodes like a firecracker in all directions when an MI5 misfit is kidnapped

The SS deport Jews from the Warsaw ghetto

Books

No end to the Final Solution

Avoiding German-language sources doesn't help when you're arguing about the Holocaust

Arts

A fusion of ‘Fungus the Bogeyman’ and Dungeons and Dragons, Dashi Namdakov’s ‘She Guardian’ is a grotesque, inappropriate and embarrassing intrusion into London

Arts feature

Public offence

Dashi Namdakov’s 'grotesque' She Guardian is a worthy first winner of our new annual award

Dance

Unforgettable fire

Plus: a fascinating snapshot of home-grown styling versus bought-in from the Royal Ballet in Rhapsody

Dream team: the cast of ‘Dad’s Army’ 2016

Cinema

It’s doomed!

The casting is a dream but the script lacks nuance and is painfully padded out, and the only decent moment is an outtake played over the end credits

Woman on the verge of a nervous breakdown: Gina McKee as The Mother

Theatre

Being and nothingness

Plus: a new play about bulgy-eyed comedian Marty Feldman at Leicester Square Theatre directed with subtlety and quietness by Terry Jones

‘Untitled (Oxidation Painting)’, 1978, by Andy Warhol

Exhibitions

‘So quick and chancy’

Plus: A delightful new display of early Tom Wesselmann collages at David Zwirner that shows a more subtle and complex artist than at first appears

Opera

Straight talking

Plus: a second way not to do French operetta at St John’s Smith Square from Opera Danube who took on Offenbach’s Orpheus in the Underworld

Radio

Terry’s all gold

Plus: a solo voice singing ‘Amazing Grace’ from inside a British prison stops Kate Chisholm dead in her tracks

Television

Weekend world

Plus: the woman who agreed to have sex with Axl Rose as part of the Guns N’ Roses track ‘Rocket Queen’

Australian TV

Riotously unfunny

Enthusiastically touted as the first Australian sitcom in fifteen years, Channel 9’s highly promoted Here Come the Habibs has a…

Culture Buff

Culture buff

It may well be the most stimulating theatre presentation of the year and it is just what the most prestigious…

Life

High life

High life

These gripping memoirs of a king, coup-maker and exile are looking for an English-language publisher

Low life

Low life

Denis may have been a Cambridge-educated former Special Branch officer but he couldn’t convince me to believe in ghosts

Real life

Real life

It was so informative and entertaining I might have to break the speed limit so that I can go on another one

The turf

Second thoughts

Thistlecrack and Yanworth are bankers, based on their form at Festival Trials Day

Bridge

Bridge

The Brits have done brilliantly in Icelandair’s annual bridge festival in Reykjavik and this year was no different. The winners…

Chess

Irresistible force

Alexander Alekhine was one of the immortals of the chessboard — world champion from 1927, when in an epic war…

Chess puzzle

No. 394

White to play. This position is from Alekhine-Flohr, Bled 1931. White has a positional advantage but can you spot the…

Competition

Woe is me

In Competition No. 2933 you were invited to submit a blurb for a misery memoir. Thanks to Tom Dulake for…

Crossword

2246: Where’s Maggie?

Unclued lights (including one of two words and three pairs, 37 doing double duty) are characters in a play. A…

Crossword solution

To 2243: Obit III

WARREN MITCHELL (42/43), STAR (39) of stage and screen, died on 14th November 2015. He won an Olivier Award as…

Status anxiety

Why does no one speak up for poor white boys?

They are now the lowest-achieving group in Britain

Spectator sport

Don’t cry for John Terry

One day soon he’ll be off to China for big money. He just has some public contract negotiation to do first

Dear Mary

Your problems solved

Plus: How to stop neighbours interfering in puppy training; and letting a widower down gently

Food

Past Caring

One of the most talked-about restaurants of the Thatcher era turns to self-mythology

Mind your language

Not even a thing

From Alfred the Great to Kim Kardashian