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The Spectator

6 December 2025 Aus

Four funerals and a wedding

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Four funerals and a wedding

Within the space of a week, the federal Labor government managed to rack up one happy wedding, which they downplayed,…

Australian Columnists

Australian Notes

Australian notes

I have written before about my love for rebels and outlaws. As a general rule, I have no time for…

Australian Features

Features Australia

The Juukan myth

‘Aboriginal heritage’ is now a major risk

Features Australia

Peak China

No longer the economic juggernaut it once was

Features Australia

Surge of The Purge

Lefties projecting their very worst traits

Features

Features

Why British diplomacy needs the royals

Watching David Dimbleby watching the royal family, I am instantly reminded of the BBC’s other royal David. It is pure…

Features

Bring back the album

Usually when my tweenage sons ask about relics from my 1990s adolescence – ‘What’s a landline?’ ‘What’s a phone book?’…

Features

Labour is now the party of welfare, not work

Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves have gone into bunker mode. The pair – whose political fortunes are so tightly bound…

Features

The great climate climbdown is finally here

Finally, thankfully, the global warming craze is dying out. To paraphrase Monty Python, the climate parrot may still be nailed…

Features

The ‘Crewkerne Man’ is reviving political satire for the AI age

You’ve probably seen the videos. Kemi Badenoch delivering her Budget response in the form of a rap to a sobbing…

Features

An apology to Hope Not Hate and Harry Shukman

In August, The Spectator began to investigate allegations that Harry Shukman, a 33-year-old freelance journalist, had used a fake British…

Notes on...

The art of the party trick

I’ve decided I need a party trick. This thought occurred to me at a recent dinner party as I watched…

Features

How I bonded with Tom Stoppard over the classics

Many years ago, and well retired, I was working in my study when the phone rang and a voice said:…

The Week

Barometer

Should a two-bedroom flat worth £2m be called a ‘mansion’?

Many mansions Does a two-bedroom flat worth £2 million deserve to be called a ‘mansion’? — The word ‘mansion’ is…

Ancient and modern

Why does the Latin mass prevail?

The Pope is visiting Lebanon and Turkey. Will anyone be raising the vexed question of the Latin mass and sacraments…

Leading article

Labour’s dereliction of duty over defence

Last week, our political editor, Tim Shipman, revealed a recent meeting between Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Knighton, the Chief…

Diary

Singapore’s future is in capable hands

I was in Singapore last week, a city that hums with energy. It feels efficient, cosmopolitan and yet personal –…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: ‘Misleading’ Reeves, trial without jury and Great Yarmouth First

Home What Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, told voters about the economy in a special press conference on…

Letters

Letters: How to clear the courts backlog – without scrapping juries

Tried and tested Sir: Your otherwise excellent leading article opposing proposed restrictions on jury trials (‘Judge not’, 29 November) misses…

Columnists

Columns

Where was my invitation to Your Party?

For perhaps the first time in my life I have experienced ‘fomo’ – fear of missing out. It is strange…

Columns

The mind-body conundrum

I’m committed this winter to too many expensive building projects at once. As the balloon of my bank balance drifts…

Any other business

Why the Budget let banks off the hook

‘Banks don’t vote and citizens don’t love them, so they’ll always be the Chancellor’s target of choice,’ I wrote in…

The Spectator's Notes

The conservatism of Tom Stoppard

Sir Tom Stoppard, who died last week, never wrote a memoir, but he did sort of speak one. Just over…

Columns

Labour’s plan to unite the left

It is easy to criticise the Budget. The process was a chaotic mess. For many on the right, Rachel Reeves’s…

Columns

Hands off my prostate

Too much information. That’s what you’re about to get. I wouldn’t read another line if I were you. I will…

Books

More from Books

The young Anton Chekhov searches for his voice

In Chekhov’s first stories, rooted in the provincial Russia of the early 1880s, we see various plots and characters take shape that will emerge fully formed in later works

More from Books

Nostalgia for the 1980s New Romantic scene

Robert Elms recalls the glory days of London’s Blitz Club, where the likes of John Galliano, Boy George and David Bowie danced in outlandish costumes to futuristic electronica

More from Books

Revenge of the invisible woman: Other People’s Fun, by Harriet Lane, reviewed

Things turn nasty when lonely Ruth finds herself taken advantage of once too often by selfish, glamorous Sookie, a faux friend from distant schooldays

More from Books

The last straw in Lloyd George’s cash for honours scandal

A peerage for the Randlord Sir Joseph Robinson, convicted of fraud, caused such an outcry in 1922 that even Lloyd George realised it was a step too far

More from Books

The nearest we’ll ever get to experiencing the horrors of 1914

Robert Cowley’s agonising account of the bloody struggle for Ypres and the stalemate on the Western Front transports us to the very heart of the action

More from Books

Homage to the herring as king of the fishes

A fascinating compendium of herring-related stories includes the attempted poisoning of St Patrick, the message contained in a Van Gogh still life and the superstitions of Manx mariners

More from Books

Pride and Prejudice retold in a thousand different ways

Some of the stranger reimaginings involve dragons, zombies, Lydia Bennet as a witch, Lizzy ending up with Charlotte Lucas and the story narrated by Anne de Bourgh

More from Books

What not to say when visiting Santa’s grotto, and other tips from Ben Schott

Also discussed in the latest miscellany are classic Italian gesticulations, the nuances of graffiti, the hierarchy of Venetian gondoliers and how to deter paparazzi

More from Books

How Hans Holbein brought portraiture to England

Before Holbein’s arrival in 1526, painting in England tended to be religious in nature. But that soon changed when his portraits spread like an exquisite virus through the country’s elites

Lead book review

John Updike’s letters overflow with lust, ambition, guilt and shame

‘Affairs are cruel, and if they are sin, they carry the punishment with them’, he wrote to one of the many women he cheated on throughout a long life

Arts

Australian Arts

The sheer scope of his work

When Tom Stoppard, playwright extraordinaire, was at the early height of his fame, with Glenn Close and Jeremy Irons in…

Theatre

Ivo van Hove tries and fails to destroy Arthur Miller

All My Sons, set in an American suburb in the summer of 1947, examines the downfall of Joe Keller, a…

Theatre

The wit of Tom Stoppard

The playwright Peter Nichols created a character based on Tom Stoppard. Miles Whittier. On a car journey across London, I…

Television

The Beast in Me is surprisingly addictive

The Beast in Me is one of those ‘taut psychological thrillers’ that everyone talks about in the office. This might…

Classical

Bruckner on Ozempic – and the première of the year

Bruckner at the Wigmore Hall. Yes, you heard right: a Bruckner symphony – his second: usually performed by 80-odd musicians…

Cinema

Noah Baumbach needs to try harder: Jay Kelly reviewed

Noah Baumbach’s Jay Kelly stars George Clooney as a handsome movie star playing a handsome movie star who has an…

Arts feature

A Spectator poll: What is the greatest artwork of the century so far?

Slavoj Zizek Hegel thought that, in the movement of history, the world spirit passes from one country to another, from…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

Like mansplaining and body hair, the ability to hold and express conflicting opinions is probably something most people would hesitate…

Aussie Life

Language

In the NSW parliament Premier Minns referred to another member as ‘mate’. Then an opposition member got up and took…

Best life

A poignant and perfect send-off

We knew the church would be packed as Shelley had died so young. We knew the church would be freezing,…

Food

A right royal travesty: Lilibet’s reviewed

Elizabeth II was a god and a commodity: now she is gone it is time for posthumous exploitation. Lilibet’s is…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: How do I avoid getting shown up by a more chivalrous bachelor?

Q. My godfather, who has managed to get me a valuable internship in the Far East, has also sent me…

The turf

My House of Lords dinner disaster

It was just a straightforward dinner in the bosom of the House of Lords, talking to members of the Jockey…

Real life

The power of tear pressure

The smashed pick-up truck was delivered back to us after I burst into tears and began wailing at the recovery…

Sport

Ben Stokes’s run-in with Aggers

There’s tetchy, and then there’s Ben Stokes ‘tetchy’ – pulling out his mic and stomping off cursing, or so I’m…

Competition

Spectator Competition: Frankenpoem

Comp. 3428 was inspired by Rose Ruane’s Larkin/Shelley mash-up (many thanks to Bill Greenwell for flagging this up): They Oz…

No sacred cows

Juries are defenders of free speech

On Tuesday, David Lammy announced in parliament that a bill would be included in the next King’s Speech restricting the…