PREVIOUS ISSUES

CHOOSE A PREVIOUS ISSUE FROM THE LIST    


THIS WEEK'S ISSUE

The Spectator

6 February 2021 Aus

Sign up to The Spectator Australia newsletter

Australia's best political analysis - straight to your inbox

Australia

Leading article Australia

Flawed democracy

In an interesting report by Catherine Philp in the UK Times, we learn that the coronavirus has seriously damaged democratic…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Rome, the sequel

Americans need to rekindle their love of ancient history

Features Australia

Keating does loopy

Who really benefits out of the changes to super?

Features Australia

Maskerade

To wear or not to wear?

Features Australia

Business/Robbery, etc.

Why Australia must defend Taiwan

Features Australia

Covid cuckoo clock

Australia is stuck in a viral Groundhog Day

Features Australia

Australia Day outrage

Republic portfolio dies under shadow minister

Features

Features

Holy relic

The Church of England as we know it is disappearing

Features

Taking stock

Inside the online army waging war on Wall Street

Features

Calling the shots

How the Vaccine Taskforce did it

Features

Stresses and strains

The evolution of the virus is not random

Features

All that is sacred

The church authorities’ priorities are all wrong

Notes on...

Hotel rooms

A few Spectator readers may soon find themselves confined to quarantine hotels, so the magazine thought it timely to find…

Features

Coup de grâce

The downfall of Aung San Suu Kyi

Features

Smokescreen

The Fire Brigades Union’s pandemic response has been a disgrace

Features

Chill out

Why I’ve warmed to cold showers

The Week

Barometer

Barometer

Best before The government plans to introduce labels on domestic appliances informing consumers how long they are likely to last.…

Diary

Diary

My great-great-grandmother, born on a Barbadian plantation and transported to what was British Guiana in the 19th century, gave rise…

Letters

Letters

Good conductors Sir: Yes, it is sad to see talents like Sir Simon Rattle and Mirga Gražinyte-Tyla leaving our shores…

Ancient and modern

On liberalism

Certain parts of academia seem to wish to turn the study of classics away from a historical, language- and evidence-based…

Leading article

The Scottish play

Scottish politics tends to go through long bouts of single-party dominance. In the 19th century, the Liberals were in charge.…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home About 80,000 people in eight places in Surrey, London, Kent, Hertfordshire, Southport and Walsall were asked in door-to-door visits…

Columnists

Any other business

Reddit’s righteous uprising must end in a bloodbath

The Reddit story — in which a ragtag army of small investors have executed a spectacular short squeeze against hedge-fund…

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

Some Leavers are perturbed that Lord Frost was suddenly stood down as the next National Security Adviser. This anxiety may…

Columns

Daydream believer

I miss daydreaming. It’s a small problem to have in a pandemic, but it nags at me. Laptop, cooker, home-school,…

Columns

The disconnect of Davos Man

You may have missed Ursula von der Leyen’s big speech at Davos last week. Most people did. Perhaps because Davos…

Columns

The year of living contagiously

We have reached Covid-19’s first anniversary in the UK — and I really think we should do something fitting to…

Columns

A boost for the Tories

Imagine for a minute what British politics would be like without a Covid vaccine. The cabinet would be deeply, and…

Books

More from Books

Hard times for the arts

As readers of a certain age will realise, Looking for a New England derives its title from ‘A New England’,…

Lead book review

A thoroughly modern Romantic

Keats is a much stranger poet than we tend to realise – who shocked his first readers by his vulgarity and gross indecency, says Philip Hensher

More from Books

No room at the top

‘Whatever your background,’ Margaret Thatcher told the Sun’s readers in 1983, she was determined that ‘you have a chance to…

More from Books

Apocalypse then

Tragically, the current pandemic lends this sparkling study of London in its most decisive century a grim topicality — for…

More from Books

No regrets

Kim Philby once remarked to the journalist Murray Sayle that ‘to betray, you must first belong. I never belonged’. Kim,…

More from Books

Anonymous alcoholics

Mick Herron has been called ‘the John le Carré of his generation’ by the crime writer Val McDermid, and in…

More from Books

The monk’s tale

In an essay for Prospect a few years back the writer Leo Benedictus noticed how many contemporary novels used what…

More from Books

Rich man, bankrupt, thief

‘Everyone’s heard of Ghislaine Maxwell,’ says the blurb for Power: The Maxwells, a podcast series launched last month. ‘But there’s…

More from Books

Misery handed on

What happens to a child raised without love? This is the agonising question that the American lawyer Justine Cowan braces…

Arts

Australian Arts

It’s a sin

It’s easy to forget what Russell T. Davies has achieved to date. Twenty-odd years ago, Queer As Folk altered a…

Culture Buff

Ensemble Theatre, Kirribilli

For 60 years, in an idyllic location at Kirribilli, the Ensemble Theatre has been providing entertainment in an intimate format.…

Classical

Holy maximalism

The two most depressing words in contemporary classical music? That’s easy: holy minimalism. I know, I know. Lots of people…

Film

Lowering the baa

Rams is an average film with a better film trying to get out, and you may already have seen that…

The Listener

Matthew Sweet: Catspaw

Grade: A– The early 1990s were a lovely time for rock music: Beck, Sparklehorse, Sugar, Green on Red and Royal…

Arts feature

Sea fever

From ancient Greece to TikTok: Alexandra Coghlan on the pulling power of shanties

Television

You’ll wish you were gay

To promote his new drama series about Aids in the early 1980s, Russell T. Davies insisted in an interview that…

Radio

They had it coming

This year marks three decades since Robert Maxwell fell naked to his death from the deck of his yacht, The…

Dance

Bar-room ballet

Thank God for the fast-forward button. Sadler’s Wells had planned a tentative return to live performance last month but the…

Theatre

Spirit worlds

The Fabulist Fox Sister is a one-man show about the three American women who are credited with inventing the trade…

Life

Kiwi Life, New Zealand

Kiwi Life

Dear Australia, I would like to formally offer an apology on behalf of New Zealand. I have no authority to…

Aussie Life

Aussie Language

The North American Scrabble Players Association, has issued a list of 236 banned words – all deemed to be ‘offensive…

Food

Ticking the boxes

The Compass Group boast of serving 5.5 billion meals a year, so you might think they would be good at…

Crossword solution

to 2489: Fade away

All the unclued lights can be linked with PETER, 35/38 is the paired solution. First prize Gerry Fairweather, Layer Marney,…

Spectator sport

The BBC is failing the Test

Michael Vaughan might disagree but — putting aside 2005 and all that — was there a more thrilling and satisfying…

No sacred cows

Where’s my bloody peerage?

Watching Lord Hannan of Kingsclere being introduced in the House of Lords on Monday was a bittersweet moment. On the…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. I was instrumental in finding some much-needed work for a local retired secretary/PA when I recommended her for the…

Mind your language

Grim

‘Thus I refute Bishop Berkeley,’ said my husband, multitasking by kicking the stone and slightly misquoting Samuel Johnson at the…

Competition

Laughter lines

In Competition No. 3184 you were invited to tell a joke in verse form. This challenge, suggested by a reader…

Real life

Real life

The kitchen tap began dripping as if it knew perfectly well that this would land me in a predicament whereby…

Chess

Double Dutch

Are you not entertained? The climax of this year’s elite Tata Steel tournament was as riveting as it was vulgar.…

Crossword

2492: Little man

Unusually this week, one unclued light includes the theme word which can also be linked with all the other unclued…

Chess puzzle

Puzzle no. 639

White to play. Giri-Wojtaszek, Wijk aan Zee 2021. On his last move, Black waited with 48… Ba1-b2, yielding White a…

Bridge

Bridge

The American professor Martin Seligman is one of the most influential psychologists in the world. Known as the father of…

High life

High life

Gstaad Imagine a beautiful, sexy woman, an Ava Gardner or a Lily James, with a wart on the end of…

The turf

The turf

Dry January it wasn’t and I am not referring to the trainers who normally undergo an annual abstinence but who…

Low life

Low life

I was tipped off to meet a white Hyundai at a French motorway toll rest area at 2.30 p.m. (I…