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The Spectator

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Dear Sussan

Congratulations on your elevation to leadership of the Liberal party of Australia. It is a position of great honour, although…

Australian Features

Features Australia

What the hell

The Coalition’s economic policy mistakes

Features Australia

Leo in the ascendant

The new pope’s reign will not be a simple extension of the Francis era

Features Australia

The Farage earthquake

Is Keir Starmer a secret agent for Reform UK?

Features Australia

Saving the West

Believe in ourselves or perish

Features

Features

‘No peens in our pond’: the ‘Pond Terfs’ manning Kenwood ladies’ pond

For a century, Kenwood ladies’ pond on Hampstead Heath in north London had been a haven for women – gay,…

Features

Abolishing the care worker visa is a mistake

For years I worked as an NHS manager, seeing first-hand the consequences of Britain’s broken social care system spill over…

Features

Death comes to the Chelsea Flower Show

It’s a matter of life and death at the Chelsea Flower Show this year. No murders are planned as far…

Features

The rich are fleeing – what next?

Keir Starmer is worried about who’s coming into the country. This week, he launched a white paper with the aim…

Features

Leo XIV’s papacy is off to a surprisingly promising start

Rome In the days before the conclave that elected Pope Leo XIV, traditionalist Catholics were so worried about interference from…

Features

Your state pension is a socialist bribe

Every four weeks the government sends me my state pension. Those words have a socialist, almost Soviet, ring. The amount…

Features

Shabana Mahmood: ‘There’s still a moment of reckoning to come’ on grooming gangs

Shabana Mahmood may be the only Labour politician to have persuaded Rishi Sunak to vote for her. The former prime…

Notes on...

Should gentlemen wear pearls?

There are few phrases more terrifying than ‘men’s fashion’. It reminds me of yuppies in salmon-coloured jorts on their way…

Features

The search for the mother of three abandoned babies

Elsa had been alive less than an hour and her umbilical cord was still attached when she was wrapped in…

Features

The Kurds have finally given in to Erdogan

All wars end, one way or another. One of the longest wars in the Middle East, between Turkey and Kurdish…

The Week

Letters

Letters: how to clean up ‘Scuzz Nation’ Britain

Decline and brawl Sir: Gus Carter’s insightful portrayal of ‘Scuzz Nation’ (‘Streets of shame’, 10 May) is less of a…

Diary

Can the British film industry survive Trump’s tariffs?

On the road with a new book, I recently spoke at a literary luncheon hosted by the Cambridge Festival. What…

Leading article

The left is finally accepting immigration control

When it comes to immigration, Keir Starmer has been ‘on a journey’. As a young barrister, he authored a review…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Immigration pledges, trade agreements and a new pope

Home Sir Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, said, ‘We risk becoming an island of strangers’ as the government published a…

Ancient and modern

Pope Leo XIV – lion or a pussycat?

Will Pope Leo turn out to be a lion or a pussycat? That depends on what he has to confront,…

Columnists

Columns

In defence of virgins

If we were really an island of strangers, as Sir Keir Starmer attested this week, then it might be OK.…

Columns

Should you be arrested for reading The Spectator?

Regular readers will know that I have an obsession with home burglaries. Specifically those occasions when a burglar goes into…

Columns

Kemi Badenoch now leads the ‘Tinkerbell Tories’

Market choice has long been an article of faith in the Conservative party. But the Tories are less keen on…

Columns

How English are you really?

I’ve struggled to ascertain from afar the true nature of Germany’s Alternative für Deutschland. Progressive media love to quote its…

Any other business

Beef farmers have been stitched up

An awkward delay in the unveiling of the Mansion House Accord was, we’re told, nothing more than a Downing Street…

Books

More from Books

The problem with Pascal’s wager

Graham Tomlin focuses on the Catholic philosopher’s search for intellectual certainty, but the cosmic gamble’s serious flaws don’t get the attention they deserve

More from Books

Richard Ellmann: the man and his masks

James Joyce’s celebrated biographer seemed a mild man to fellow academics – but his ambition and steely self-belief made him a callous husband and father

More from Books

Consorting with the enemy: The Propagandist, by Cécile Desprairies, reviewed

The debut novel by a historian of the Vichy regime is a personal J’Accuse, indicting the collaborators in her family for their part in France’s collapse in the second world war

More from Books

Private battles: Twelve Post-War Tales, by Graham Swift, reviewed

The latest short stories focus on everyday traumas: ageing, PTSD in a former soldier, and the loss of a parent, spouse or grandchild

More from Books

A David Bowie devotee with the air of Adrian Mole

Plodding through suburbia in Bowie’s footsteps, Peter Carpenter might be Sue Townsend’s hero incarnate – and there’s even an omnipresent friend called Nigel

More from Books

From the early 1930s we knew what Hitler’s intentions were – so why were we so ill-prepared?

Intelligence provided by William de Ropp made the situation painfully clear, but the British political establishment, determined on peace, wilfully ignored the warnings

More from Books

Driven to extremes: The Rest of Our Lives, by Ben Markovits, reviewed

Haunted by his wife’s affair, a middle-aged professor leaves his home and job to take a road trip across America. But will his act of emancipation bring him peace?

More from Books

The mixed messages of today’s architecture – retro utopias or dizzy towers?

The way out of the muddle, says Owen Hopkins, is ‘post-architecture’ – tied to the earth and purged of vanity – which can be achieved by a close study of 21 remarkable buildings

More from Books

Keith McNally: ‘Still craving the success I pretend to despise’

In a self-lacerating memoir, the restaurateur describes his many regrets, dislikes and feuds with celebrities, his longing for recognition and his love of family and friends

Lead book review

Why shamanism shouldn’t be dismissed as superstitious savagery

Our need for belief in the supernatural gave rise to a demand for ‘mystical intermediaries’, or shamans, forging man’s earliest religion from which all others developed, argues Manvir Singh

Arts

Australian Arts

Dark lowering road

Bill Henson, the greatest Australian photographer, has a show at the Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery at 6pm Friday 16 May. It’s…

Television

Better than Hollywood: Netflix’s The Eternaut reviewed

‘Next time you do a review, you’ve got to find something you like. You’ve been far too negative,’ said the…

Opera

Our half-time scorecard on the Royal Opera’s Ring cycle

With Die Walküre, the central themes of Barrie Kosky’s Ring cycle for the Royal Opera are starting to emerge, and…

Exhibitions

Decent redesign, ravishing rehang: the new-look National Gallery reviewed

A little under a year ago, it emerged that builders working on the redevelopment of the National Gallery’s Sainsbury Wing…

Cinema

Tantalisingly ambiguous – or just plain baffling: Hallow Road reviewed

An 80-minute film which for almost all of the time features two people in a car mightn’t sound particularly ambitious.…

Dance

Budget Ballets Russes: BRB2’s Diaghilev and the Birth of Modern Ballet reviewed

Although I doff my hat to Carlos Acosta’s BRB2, Birmingham Royal Ballet’s junior troupe, for a reminder of what is…

Theatre

Two hours of yakking about Israel: Giant, at the Harold Pinter Theatre, reviewed

Two hours of yakking about Israel. That’s all you get from Giant at the Harold Pinter Theatre. Endless wittering laced…

Arts feature

The odd couple: Austen and Turner at 250

History is full of odd couples: famous but unrelated people who happen to have been born in the same year.…

Pop

I think I’ve found the new Van Morrison

Young male singers won the right to be sensitive in 1963, when The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan was released. And in…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

In 1968 the anthropologist Bill Stanner gave the Boyer Lectures on ABC Radio and coined the phrase ‘the great Australian…

Aussie Life

Language

Joe Hildebrand excitedly told me about a new word he had come across while doing a Times cryptic crossword puzzle…

Drink

The art of the political lunch

We had been discussing Ukraine, Gaza, Iran, the possibility of a nuclear exchange across the Punjab and other trifling matters.…

No sacred cows

My son took drugs – and they were mine

The weekend before last, I came home from walking the dog at about noon to find Caroline asleep in bed.…

The Wiki Man

How emotions shape our decision-making

Ask any estate agent: most potential house buyers arrive with a detailed list of criteria for their new home, only…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: how can I relax about the clothes moths in my home?

Q. Having previously lived in the country in a field with my nearest neighbour not even visible, I recently moved…

Wild life

Remembering the horror of Rwanda’s genocide

Rwanda It had been more than 30 years, yet I recognised the church and its surroundings instantly. Superimposed on the…

Dolce vita

Pope Francis, my love rival

To be honest, I felt relief when Pope Francis died. This had nothing much to do with his regular assertion,…

Competition

Spectator Competition: That’s your cue

Competition 3399 called for a traditional bedtime story updated for the 21st century.We’re tight on space, so I’ll pause just…

More from life

Devilled kidneys: a heavenly breakfast

Iam standing in my kitchen preparing kidneys for devilling. Snipping their white cores away piece by piece until they come…

Real life

The £486 driving licence con

By changing the address on my driving licence, I was somehow signed up to something that began charging my credit…