PREVIOUS ISSUES

CHOOSE A PREVIOUS ISSUE FROM THE LIST    


THIS WEEK'S ISSUE

The Spectator

7 January 2017 Aus

Sign up to The Spectator Australia newsletter

Australia's best political analysis - straight to your inbox

Australia

Leading article Australia

The evil of 2334

If, as the Australian newspaper implied this week, The Spectator Australia has played a minor role in the recent acknowledgment…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Australian notes

Malcolm the Fission Fiasco I don’t agree with all those many right-of-centre commentators who think the current Prime Minister, Mr…

Diary Australia

Java diary

Outdoors, Jakarta’s heat and humidity were oppressive. Inside the 6th World Peace Forum (WPF), most delegates were in heated agreement…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Attack of the Offendotrons

It’s impossible to ignore the story of Greig Tonkins, the Taronga Park zookeeper who punched a giant roo to save…

Features Australia

Obama’s Legacy

No president has ever been such a disaster for the Middle East

Features Australia

Playing with holy fire

In the nearly four years since he was elected, Pope Francis I has achieved the singular distinction of bringing the…

Features Australia

A new breed of ‘historian’

In the next few weeks, thousands of young Australians, having just finished 12 years of schooling, will be preparing themselves…

Features Australia

Make Australia Great Again

 1. Slash Corporate Tax. The centrepiece of the Coalition’s re-election pitch was the ‘enterprise tax plan’ which will see Australia’s…

Features Australia

Annus wonderfulus

For much of last year, left wing media invoked ‘2016’ as a rod with which to chasten the insufficiently progressive.…

Features

Features

Red faces

How to celebrate the centenary of the Russian revolutions of 1917? Modern Russians are deeply divided over the legacy of…

Features

Dumb and dumber

Katie Hopkins did something dreadful this week, which is not unusual, because she craves such things. She retweeted praise —…

Features

The Atomoxetine year

Driving my son’s snake, Todd, a 3ft python wrapped in a pillowcase, to a Brighton vet in August was child’s…

Features

Taught to be stupid

Enough! Enough! For months, the so-called liberal elite has been writing articles, having radio and TV discussions, giving sermons (literally)…

Features

Not cricket

Sport is a serious matter. If you have any doubts on that score, shed them now, because this is to…

Features

Pub quizzes

For more than 20 years now, I have been trudging up the hill to the Prince of Wales in Highgate…

Features

Get ready for a wild ride

Every American president since Harry Truman has arrived in the White House committed to globalism — a belief that America…

The Week

Ancient and modern

From Socrates to Osborne

Ex-chancellor George Osborne is planning a book to be titled The Age of Unreason. He says that ‘it will be…

Barometer

Barometer

Village people The government announced plans for 14 ‘garden villages’. The concept of a garden city or village is attributed…

Diary

Diary

On New Year’s Day I went for a swim off Broad Haven beach in Pembrokeshire. The water was 10.3ºC: pretty…

From The Archives

A killing to celebrate

From ‘News of the Week’, The Spectator, 6 January 1917: The war has been crowded with romantic adventures by sea…

Leading article

Sir Ivan’s exit

The wonder about Sir Ivan Rogers’s resignation as Britain’s ambassador to the EU is that he was still in the…

Letters

Letters

Meatloaf monarchy Sir: I realize that sending pro-republic letters to the Spectator Australia is akin to sending meatloaf recipes to…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home Sir Ivan Rogers, Britain’s ambassador to the EU, resigned; he had been expected to play an important part in…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

‘My deep concern is that because of changed ways that news is now gathered, collated, packaged, delivered and displayed, the…

Hugo Rifkind

In our virtual future, why would anyone work?

A flash of the future, over the holidays, that felt like a flash of the past. It happened on Christmas…

Martin Vander Weyer

Markets start the year strong while Italy totters towards the next crisis

The headline business story of the holiday season was the latest bailout of Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena. This…

Matthew Parris

An age of bright new lights on ugly new estates

‘Trying to determine what is going on in the world by reading newspapers,’ remarked the journalist and screenwriter Ben Hecht,…

World Politics

May’s big chance

It is the fate of all new prime ministers to be compared with their recent predecessors. Theresa May has already…

Rod Liddle

My poster girl for free speech

Now is the time of year to take down the Christmas decorations from your front window and put up, in…

Books

Books

An unmagnificent seven

One of the most interesting developments in modern publishing has surely been the revival of interest in women writers of…

Books

A gentle reproach to Shakespeare

A few years ago, I fell hopelessly in love with Harriet Walter. It only lasted an hour or two: she…

Books

Hit for six

Frankie Howerd, the great, if troubled, comedian, was once asked whether he enjoyed performing. ‘I enjoy having performed,’ he replied.…

Books

Power to the people

Jeremy Corbyn will probably enjoy this book — which doesn’t mean you won’t. Asked to name the historical figure he…

Books

From Balzac to the Beatles

All biography is both an act of homage and a labour of dissection, and all biographers are jealous of their…

Books

Not so cold-blooded

The recent furore over a freakshow ice rink in Japan, with hapless fishes embedded beneath the skaters’ feet, was inexplicable…

Books

Emile in exile

Michael Rosen, a poet, journalist and prolific author of novels for children, has written an account of Emile Zola’s year’s…

Arts

Arts feature

Munchkins and mischiefs

Arthur Rackham shouldn’t have lived in anything as conventional as a house. It should have been a gingerbread cottage, like…

Cinema

Long suffering

Silence is Martin Scorsese’s film about Jesuit priests in 17th-century Japan whose faith is sorely tested, just as your patience…

Exhibitions

Ways of seeing

‘Radical’ is like ‘creative’, a word that has been enfeebled to the point of meaninglessness. Everybody seems to want to…

Opera

Giving it both barrels

In Joseph Roth’s The Radetzky March, the ageing Emperor Franz Joseph regrets the drab field-grey that has replaced his army’s…

Radio

Joining the dots

A new website, radio.garden, lets us browse radio stations across the globe. Nothing new about that. That’s been a key…

Television

Holmes spun

One of the few intelligent responses from the liberal-left to our radically altered political landscape was an essay published last…

Theatre

Hedda Garbler

Hedda Gabler is one of the most influential plays ever written. It not merely illuminated an injustice, the enslavement of…

Culture Buff

Jim Maxwel

Two of the ABC’s most admired radio presenters have published books that are perfect holiday reading: Richard Fidler’s Ghost Empire…

Life

Bridge

Bridge

Simon Gillis’s team has had a very successful year. They won the Gold Cup (for the second time), they joined…

Chess

Missed chances

Magnus Carlsen has retained the World Championship but only after Sergei Karjakin, the challenger, missed some glorious opportunities. In game…

Chess puzzle

no. 438

White to play. This is from Carlsen–Karjakin, New York play-off (Game 4) 2016. What was Carlsen’s stunning move to retain…

Competition

Take five

In Competition No. 2979 you were invited to supply your contribution to a series of parodies of Enid Blyton’s Famous…

Crossword

2291: Seriously?

In ten clues, the wordplay omits one of the letters of the solution. These letters in the grid, read row…

Crossword solution

to 2289: I don’t believe it!

The unclued lights are expressions meaning NEVER (3A, 4D+43A, 21D+14D, 37A+1D and 37A+15D).  First prize Hilary James, London W5Runners-up David…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. I have bought a second-floor flat which comes with a bow-shaped balcony which overlooks a communal garden. My problem…

Food

Garden variety

Margot is an Italian restaurant on Great Queen Street in the still interesting part of Covent Garden. The uninteresting part…

High life

High life

Gstaad  New Year’s Eve was a Rhapsody in Blue, with a clarinet glissando that promised joys to come, and the…

Long life

Long life

The past year has been tumultuous, full of upheaval and tragedy, but my chickens have been spared it all. Indeed,…

Low life

Low life

On the Monday before Christmas, the black dog came around again and I couldn’t get out of bed. I lay…

Mind your language

Americanisms

Here are eight invasive Americanisms to continue annoying us in 2017. Running for office. Liz Kendall was ‘running for the…

Real life

Real life

The most annoying thing about starting a new year is how long it takes for everyone to crank themselves back…

Spectator sport

Unimpressed by the Root cause

Those who occupy them sometimes say that the only two jobs that matter in England are Chief of the Defence…

Status anxiety

Why meritocrats are the new aristocrats

After Sir Stafford Northcote and Sir Charles Trevelyan completed their report on civil service reform in 1854, in which they…

The turf

The turf

The biggest oohs and aahs on the entertainment scene this winter were nothing to do with the ‘He’s behind you…