The Spectator
6 September 2014 Aus
Divide and don’t rule
Cameron’s inability to manage schisms within his own party could cost him the election
Australia
Death cults and dole bludgers
Twelve months ago, it all seemed a little too easy. Fix up Labor’s mess, stop the boats, scrap the pointless…
Australian Columnists
Brown Study
There have certainly been some changes in how governments go about their business. In the past, when trying to work…
Polynesian diary
Speccie Oz editor Rowan Dean called, sounding incredulous. His mother had just rung him. Radio 2GB said I was eloping…
Australian Features
Labor – the gift that keeps on giving
Tony Abbott must do more than just rely on the Rudd / Gillard catastrophe that brought him to power
It’s the high achievers, stupid
The quiet truth of politics is that it all comes down to the character and calibre of those running the show
Reform interruptus
Tony Abbott is determined to run a government along the lines of Hawke, Keating and Howard
Better than those other bastards
Some Prime Ministers grow into the job - where others clearly did not
Features
Divide and don’t rule
Some Conservative MPs are planning their careers on the assumption that the election is already lost
Revolt on the right
Douglas Carswell's defection gives others on the Tory right new leverage – and they're not afraid to use it
A ladder for everyone
The International Development Secretary says her party needs to get back to Thatcher's message of aspiration for all
Russia’s Nato myth
Secret official records contradict the stab-in-the-back myth that justifies Russian expansionism
A life worth living
Eddie is capable of living a fulfilling life, and if he’s a luxury society can’t afford then that’s not a society I want to live in
The final crossing
The 'mare nostrum' policy has acted as a magnet for boat people; the crisis is only growing
A vote for real politics
This campaign has brought back conviction politics. It’s been as invigorating as a seaside walk on a raw and windswept spring morning
Waiting for the backlash
Attitudes in this country are still tolerant. But current headlines give reason to fear that might change
Sicily
This isn't some Italian Isle of Wight. It's an ancient cultural treasure with enough variety in landscape for a continent
The Week
A new Nato
European countries seem to think of their defence alliance as a means of getting security on the cheap. That won't work any longer
Portrait of the week
Home Britain’s terror threat level was raised from ‘substantial’ to ‘severe’ in response to fighting in Iraq and Syria, meaning…
From the archives
From ‘The giving up of Louvain to “Military Execution”,’ The Spectator, 5 September 1914: Germany has dealt herself the hardest…
Columnists
Parenting? Leave it to the bureaucrats
Of course normal people can't be trusted to bring up children. They might be middle-class, or have the wrong views, or smoke
The problem with a wider definition of rape
The reason there are so many acquittals is that juries reach ‘perverse’ verdicts when they are uneasy about the law itself
Is looking at a nude photo of Jennifer Lawrence really the same thing as stealing it?
And if so, what was your justification for clicking on the headline above?
Applause for the Beeb’s new leading lady – but did the male runner-up deserve such a kicking?
Plus: Another good job for a mother of three, and the battle of Boris Island
Books
After Albert
A review of Victoria: A Life, by A.N. Wilson. A superb new revisionist biography argues that it was only after her husband’s death that Queen Victoria found her true self
The Forgotten Army remembered
A review of Another Man’s War, by Barnaby Phillips. A book about courage and friendship that transcends time, distance and race
Pile-up on the reincarnation superhighway
A review of The Bone Clocks, by David Mitchell. This restless new novel is full of student satire and undercooked fantasy
From dram shop to Queen Mother’s handbag
A review of Gin Glorious Gin, by Olivia Williams. A diverting, if not remotely scholarly, history that charts the social ascent of this spirit, from dram shop to the Queen Mother’s handbag
Off the beaten track
Vincent Deary’s How We Are is crammed with ideas. William Leith can’t wait for the next two volumes
All the usual suspects
A review of The Establishment: And How They Get Away With It, by Owen Jones. The analysis is better when it is ideological rather than historical
Lost in transfusion
A review of The Children Act, by Ian McEwan. The characterisation is scant and the writing poor, and he never gives religion a chance
Arts
The treasures of Turin
Italy's car capital is also now home to a 55,000 sq m cultural gem, the magnificent Polo Reale
Bloomsbury bores
By contrast the work of Frank Dobson and Matthew smith pack a punch, as a new National Portrait Gallery exhibition shows
Bad night for Berlioz
Teatro Regio di Torino’s concert performance of William Tell was, by contrast, superb
Brain drain
And Nicole Kidman’s face looks like those leftovers you keep in Tupperware in the fridge
Bent bureaucrats and bakers
Comic potential is squandered in Southwark Playhouse’s Eye of a Needle, while Matthew Kelly gives Richard Bean’s Toast an unexpected layer of pathos and humanity
Sight and sound
Plus: the pain of depression is far more powerfully felt when heard and not seen
Journey’s end
… and A.N. Wilson, whose Return to Betjemanland (BBC4) was a lesson on how to make great TV
Nursing on the front line
Ten paintings by Victor Tardieu depicting the pioneering work of first world war nurses are on show at the Florence Nightingale Museum
Culture Buff
After a red-carpeted fanfare the Emmy Awards were announced last week in LA. There is no hope for me; my…
Life
Gifted and talented
Despite occasional evidence to the contrary, I have persisted in the belief that the ability to play chess well indicates…
No. 330
White to play. This position is from Polgar-Bareev, Moscow 1996. Neither king is entirely happy and in such situations having…
Rhyme time
In Competition No. 2863 you were invited to recast a well-known nursery rhyme in the style of a well-known author.…
2178: Saint and playwright
The unclued lights are connected by 33/23. One pair of unclued lights gives one context, in which two further pairs…
to 2175: Elated grunt
The four works were Waverley (anagram of 12/21), Kenilworth (15/8), The Talisman (29/2) and Ivanhoe (38/37) by SIR WALTER SCOTT (diagonally…
The wolf in all of us
I suspect more and more that Isis fighters are motivated more by bloodlust than by ideology
Those ‘traditions of English football’ in full
Perfect your celebration, don’t sweat the League Cup, and learn to spit properly
Vienna without the Austrians
When I wrote about the Famous Bavarian Village, people complained. I would now like to show you that I take such complaints very seriously...
Escalated
One of the smaller things for which South Yorkshire police commissioner Shaun Wright might consider apologising
































































