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The Spectator

6 May 2017 Aus

Ruth, Queen of Scots

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Up Badgerys Creek

It would probably be wrong to predict that the Turnbull government’s decision to build an airport at Badgerys Creek will…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Australian notes

The ABC of ESPN I confess to being something of a sports addict. I like playing and watching competitive sports,…

Australian Features

Features Australia

German attacks on Israel

It might be thought that Germany would still feel a bit… er… sensitive in its dealing with Jews. Indeed, the…

Features Australia

Marine or Macron?

If the voters obey the elites and elect Emmanuel Macron, the Fifth Republic may well be doomed, which could have…

Features Australia

Restoring the Romanovs

Our exclusive interview with Alexander Zakatov, Head of the Chancellery of the Russian Imperial House

Features Australia

Laughing gas

The latest lunatic government intervention into Australian energy markets conjures up the old lady who swallowed a fly. In 2001,…

Features Australia

Dance of the budget veils

Conventional wisdom holds that an elected government’s first budget should be its bravest. Albeit with a micro-majority, Malcolm Turnbull is…

Features Australia

Time to scrap the rebates

Malcolm Turnbull almost lost an election because he had no health policy. Bill Shorten and Labor’s blatant, fabricated ‘Mediscare’, claiming…

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc

The Liberals’ broad church? In NSW it’s getting thinner on a diet of expulsions and desertions. Remove the nave, the…

Features

‘A spectacle of strength and savage wildness’

Notes on...

Scafell Pike

Within a couple of miles of England’s deepest point is its highest. Towering a kilometre above the hidden depths of…

Features

Is Le Pen really ‘far-right’?

What is ‘far-right’? With the progress of Marine Le Pen to France’s presidential run-off, the term has been liberally used…

Features

At the cutting edge

There’s a graveyard inside Henry Marsh’s head, though you’d never guess it to look at him. There he sits in…

Features

Divided they stand

 New York As the malevolence and incoherence of the Trump administration continue to amaze, Democrats are taking heart from the…

Features

Moths vs the middle classes

It’s not the free movement of people I spend my nights fretting about; it’s the free movement of pests. It’s…

Features

Liberté, egalité, supériorité

The French election, of unprecedented interest, hazard and potential for violence, has been largely about who is to blame. Blame…

Features

Ruth, Queen of Scots

Twenty years ago, Conservatism all but died in Scotland. Tony Blair’s landslide victory made Scotland, at least in terms of…

The Week

Barometer

Barometer

Spend, spend, spend London mayor Sadiq Khan ended support for the Garden Bridge, probably killing it off. How are other…

Diary

Diary

The Prosperity UK conference over a week ago kicked off with a dinner at Hatfield House that brought together Leavers…

Leading article

The art of the deal

If elections were decided on voter enthusiasm rather than on plain numbers, Marine Le Pen would win this weekend’s battle…

Letters

Australian letters

Attacking Sophie Sir: Your contributor, Michael Danby (Sophie’s bad choices, The Spectator, 15 April 2017) has used your pages to…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the European Commission, told Theresa May after dinner with her on 26 April, ‘I’m…

Columnists

Any other business

Why binding shareholder votes on pay should be a manifesto promise

Will executive pay pop up in Theresa May’s manifesto? An objective of her snap election is to secure a larger…

Hugo Rifkind

Labour’s election strategy – vote for us and watch us lose

The crapness of Corbyn’s Labour is a phenomenon. It fascinates me. Frankly, it does my head in. For there is…

James Delingpole

Thanks, Jamie Oliver – you’ve stolen my childhood

Whenever I want to travel back in time to my 1970s childhood, all I need is a glass of Lucozade.…

World Politics

Never mind the election – Corbynism isn’t going away

General elections are meant to produce a government and an opposition — ideally, a decent version of both. It is…

Rod Liddle

Diane’s grey matter and Labour’s sticky votes

I awoke the other morning to hear Diane Abbott’s brains leaking out of her ears and all over the carpet…

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament’s main Brexit negotiator, tweeted on Monday: ‘Any #Brexit deal requires a strong & stable understanding…

Books

An early modern battle scene depicted in a Mughal miniature looks like a graceful pageant compared to today’s nuclear and cyber warfare

Lead book review

When will we ever learn?

In 2012, sugar became more dangerous than gunpowder. According to the historian Yuval Noah Harari, of the 56 million people…

Books

On the trail of a lost masterpiece

On 27 May 1939, the German liner St Louis docked in Havana with 937 passengers on board: all but a…

Novelist and filmmaker Xiaolu Guo attends the Hay Festival on May 29, 2011 in Hay-on-Wye, Wales. (Photo by David Levenson/Getty Images)

Books

Cinderella in China

She was a foundling in her own family, shunted to adoptive parents for two years, then to the edge of…

Walt Whitman, aged 35, as he appeared in the first edition of Leaves of Grass

Books

Climb trees and grow a beard

A few years after Walt Whitman brought out the first edition of Leaves of Grass (it didn’t do well), he…

The 19th-century craze for mesmerism led to séances that were more freak shows than scientific demonstrations

Books

Suspension of disbelief

The history of modern medicine is a roll call of brilliant minds making breakthrough discoveries. We rarely hear about the…

Books

In a dark forest

In his mid-forties Will Ashon realised he was adrift and confused, confronted by the situation Dante described in the Divine…

Portrait of a lady in black, thought to be Margaret Douglas, c.1545

Books

Burning issues

Set discreetly into a wall in Smithfield, amid the bustle and bars of this rapidly gentrifying part of London, is…

Books

Appointment with death

It’s reassuring that of Ed Docx’s three admirably eclectic, though sometimes uneven, previous novels, Let Go My Hand most resembles…

Books

The fearful forties

In an early chapter of All Grown Up, the narrator Andrea says to her therapist: ‘Why is being single the…

Ida Nettleship, aged 24, the year she married Augustus John

Books

A husband to die for

What will we do when there are no longer caches of letters to piece together and decipher; only vague memories…

Arts

Sunyoung Seo as Liù, Alastair Miles as Timur and Rafael Rojas as Calaf in Opera North’s production of Turandot

Opera

Stand and deliver

Some opera-lovers prefer concert performances to full stagings. I don’t. It’s that whole Gesamtkunstwerk thing: opera needs to be seen…

A must for Auster devotees; a mustn’t for the rest: Mark Edel-Hunt as Daniel Quinn and Jack Tarlton as Stillman in ‘City of Glass’

Theatre

Masonic bodge

Left-wing groupie Paul Mason has written a costume drama about the suppression of the Paris commune in 1871. We meet…

Culture Buff

Alexander Campbell

Inheriting abilities from one’s parents is one of the happy accidents of birth. A remarkable example of inheritance of exceptional…

Edward Watson as Crown Prince Rudolf and Natalia Osipova at Mary Vetsera in Royal Ballet’s Mayerling

Dance

The unhappy Prince

A tragic flaw is one thing — every hero should have one — but Mayerling’s Rudolf, a syphilitic drug addict…

The Body Zone, centrepiece of the Millennium Dome, a true symbol of the fatuousness, vapidity, incompetence and dishonesty that later characterised the Blair government

Arts feature

Dome truths

It was 50 years ago today, Sergeant Pepper taught the band to play. The result was a popular masterpiece. Thirty…

Sweet and sour: Michelle Holmes (Sue, centre) and Siobhan Finneran (Rita, centre right) in ‘Rita, Sue and Bob Too’

Cinema

Thatcher’s Britain with her knickers down

Two 16-year-old schoolgirls from a sink estate in Bradford find fun and happiness by shacking up with a middle-aged married…

‘The Caged Bird’s Song’, 2014–2017, by Chris Ofili

Exhibitions

Put a spell on you

Many of the mediums from which art is made have been around for a long time. People have been painting…

Master of dramatic interplay: Jack Rosenthal in 1962

Radio

Discovery channels

Bashing the BBC often becomes a popular blood sport in times of political instability, and especially if the left is…

1932. Right, John Cockcroft adjusts a pump at the Cavendish Laboratory's atom splitter. Left, Ernest Walton sits working in the detector of a Cockcroft-Walton generator.

Television

Arms race

Like most documentaries, Britain’s Nuclear Bomb: The Inside Story (BBC4, Wednesday) began by boasting about all the exclusives it would…

The finest Wotan around: Latvian bass-baritone Egils Silins

Music

Beyond comprehension

The London Philharmonic Orchestra’s ‘Belief and Beyond Belief’ season is drawing to a close, without making it in any degree…

Life

Competition

Acrostic spectator

In Competition No. 2996 you were invited to submit an acrostic sonnet in which the first letters of each line…

Crossword

2308: Landmark

This puzzle is a landmark for D(0)C: his first crossword appeared in The Spectator in the issue dated July 4th…

Crossword solution

to 2305: Whodunnit?

The unclued lights are trios of Cluedo © rooms at 1A, 14A and 40, weapons at 6, 13 and 14,…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. I have a very good cleaner who comes once a week. She is far more efficient than anyone I’ve…

Drink

A very British bildung

Over the long weekend I read a couple of bildungs-romans; one a revisit after many years, the other a recent…

High life

High life

I’m sitting in my office and the place is still. The rest of the house is dark. Everyone’s out and…

Low life

Low life

‘Emmanuel Macron est le plus grand con du monde,’ said the elderly gent taking the vacant seat on my right…

Mind your language

Compliance

Ralph Bathurst was accused shortly after his death in 1704 of being ‘suspected of Hypocrisy and of mean Complyance’. I…

Real life

Real life

A gentleman on Twitter ‘writes’ to say I’m boring him with my house move. ‘Snooze-fest’, says this chap, and he…

Status anxiety

It’s time you made some enemies, George

Dear George Osborne, I thought it worth passing along some advice about your new job. I’ve never edited a news-paper,…

The Wiki Man

The MBA idiocies that ruin everything

I rang a company’s call centre the other day, and the experience was exemplary: helpful, knowledgeable, charming. The firm was…

Wild life

Wild life

Laikipia, Kenya On my way home to the ranch, I stopped for a beer with my neighbour Martin. It was…

Bridge

Bridge

Janet likes to tease me that whenever it’s my turn to write this column, it ought to be renamed The…

Chess

Catalan

The Catalan opening looks as if it should be relatively harmless, combining as it does the Queen’s Gambit with the…

Chess puzzle

no. 455

White to play. This position is from So–Kramnik, Gashimov Memorial 2017. So retreated with 1 Ne3 and eventually won. How could…