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The Spectator

13 June 2026 Aus

And it’s Pauline, by a nose

Albo’s lies, One Nation’s rise

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Australia

Leading article Australia

The monster

To create his own monster, Dr Frankenstein required an abundance of cheap, reliable and available electricity, which he sourced by…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

Melbourne is presently engaged in one of those uniquely Melburnian controversies where everyone has an opinion on some allegedly moral…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Toilet nullius

Time to decolonise the dunny

Features Australia

What could have been

The Libs are being punished for Turnbull

Features Australia

Any deal with Tehran is a deadly farce

‘You cannot reform a snake. Venom is in its DNA.’

Features Australia

Cold peace or cold war?

When ‘great leaders’ play the Great Game

Features Australia

Housing by scapegoat

Labor blames boomers. One Nation blames foreigners. The real culprit is government.

Features

Features

Forever war: will Zelensky and Putin be brought to an exhausted peace?

Volodymyr Zelensky stood proudly on the steps of 10 Downing Street this week, flanked by Sir Keir Starmer and the…

Features

Revealed: Andy Burnham’s reassuringly bland Cambridge years

There appears to be a missing chapter in the story of Andy Burnham. Depending on the whims of voters in…

Features

From Holbein to Snapchat, how royals have mastered their own image

When Aston Villa won the Europa League recently, the focus was less on the football than on the Prince of…

Features

Thanks to Trump, Tehran is winning

Among examples used to demonstrate the law of unintended consequences is the possibly apocryphal ‘cobra effect’. British colonial administrators in…

Features

Might England just do it in the World Cup?

The World Cup has never been just a football tournament. Even if we don’t realise it at the time, it…

Features

‘Make Germany normal again’: an interview with Germany’s exiled spy chief

Hans-Georg Maassen is an unlikely dissident. In his trademark three-piece suits and small glasses, he looks more like a law…

Features

Norman Balon was much more than ‘London’s rudest landlord’

Norman Balon, who has died at the age of 99, missed the point when he defined himself as ‘London’s rudest…

Notes on...

My love for black and white birds

All my life I have been obsessed by black and white birds. Magpies are my tormentors, my morning omens of…

The Week

Diary

Pity us poor Celtic fans

Although the past few footballing weeks have been dominated by the convulsive conclusion to Arsenal’s season – and the upcoming…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Belfast burns, Sullivan resigns and the Iran ceasefire cracks

Home A horrible video circulated on social media of a man on the ground in a Belfast street being stabbed…

Leading article

Securing Britain’s defence should be Starmer’s legacy

Few critiques of British mythmaking have been more astute than that of Correlli Barnett. He argued that 18th-century statesmen were…

Ancient and modern

An Ancients’ guide to sexual incontinence

King’s College Cambridge has lost (according to the papers) a ‘famous’ classicist, who resigned because he slobbered wet kisses all…

Barometer

Which trade unions are the most pro-Reform?

Badger over Bard The Bank of England is to discontinue issuing banknotes with historic figures in favour of animals. Which…

Letters

Letters: many are waiting for the Tory comeback

Con’s the word Sir: In his article ‘Neo con’ (6 June) Michael Simmons claims that neoliberalism powered this country into…

Columnists

Columns

‘Rupert Lowe turns up for work; Nigel Farage doesn’t’: an interview with Kemi Badenoch

There was a moment backstage, before I interviewed Kemi Badenoch for a Spectator event this week, when I felt like…

Columns

In defence of two-tiering

What has been remarkable about Henry Nowak’s case was not the story itself, tragic though it is, but the potency…

Columns

Beware the ‘matrescence’ con

Every so often, a fashionable new concept is born. Witness the arrival of ‘matrescence’, which, for the uninitiated, is a…

The Spectator's Notes

The posh are persecuted for their accents

Mark Nowak, father of the murdered Henry Nowak, spoke powerfully in public after Vickrum Digwa was convicted of the crime.…

Columns

Are we allowed to feel angry yet?

I get the sense that the political and media class badly miss Katie Hopkins. Back when the reality TV star…

Columns

Save us from the Gospel according to Grok

The Rt Revd Martyn Snow, the handsome and up-to-date Bishop of Leicester, has decided that it’s OK, even admirable, for…

Any other business

No, minister: investing in tech ventures isn’t your job

To the London Stock Exchange (LSE) for a ‘scale-up capital’ circus in which 18 ambitious tech ventures had ten minutes…

Books

More from Books

Nothing works: The End of Everything, by John M. Harrison, reviewed

Set in ‘one of the well-known seasonal waterside art towns of Kent’, Harrison’s novel is both a bracing vision of environmental collapse and a post-Brexit cri de coeur

More from Books

Tuscan escapades: Villa Coco, by Andrew Sean Greer, reviewed

An American archivist, hired to catalogue an elderly baronessa’s antiques, finds himself drawn into increasingly absurd adventures in the Italian countryside

More from Books

Symbol of wisdom or harbinger of death – the owl preserves its mystery

The many legends of humans and gods taking owl form continue to give the ghostly nocturnal predator an indefinable allure

More from Books

The agonies of an abandoned wife: Mrs Dickens, by Emily Howes, reviewed

Charles Dickens is cast as a cruel, coercive controller, accusing the mother of his ten children of idleness and stupidity before discarding her for a younger woman

More from Books

The banality of Hélène von Bismarck’s view of Britain is astounding

The passionate EU supporter seems to scold Britain for taking a contrary path while barely acknowledging the rights and freedoms the British have long taken for granted

More from Books

The disgrace of Juan Carlos of Spain, a modern-day Don Juan

The once popular king was forced into exile in 2014 when rumours of profligacy, illegitimate children and ‘an unbridled sexual appetite’ finally caught up with him

More from Books

The botched coup that presaged the end of the Soviet Union

In August 1991, Vladimir Kryuchkov, the head of the KGB, attempted to oust President Gorbachev. But the plot’s failure was guaranteed when the army refused to fire on protestors

More from Books

In the dazzling company of Alexander Pope and friends

For three months in Twickenham in 1726, Pope and his guests John Gay and Jonathan Swift worked on their satirical masterpieces while entertaining each other with their repartee

Lead book review

The sham shaman: the fantastic lies of Carlos Castaneda

An entirely invented memoir, supposedly relaying the wisdom of a Mexican guru, was not only a cult bestseller but was endorsed by anthropologists and even UCLA

Arts

Australian Arts

A man of music

The other day saw the opening of the Peter Corrigan Collection at RMIT which comprises his personal collection of architectural…

Cinema

Spielberg fumbles his final sci-fi

Steven Spielberg has said his latest film, Disclosure Day, is ‘the summation of my life in science fiction’, which began…

Theatre

Michelle Terry is ferocious in Brecht’s simplistic tutorial

Bertolt Brecht’s classic, Mother Courage, is about a female war profiteer who drags a wagon of supplies through no man’s…

Pop

The liberating delights of Aldous Harding

The first thing I did after getting home from the Barbican the other week was google ‘Aldous Harding neurodivergent’. It…

Television

Another thriller, another teenage incel

At just over two hours, Martin Scorsese’s 1991 remake of Cape Fear was 20 minutes longer than the 1962 original.…

Opera

Delightful Rossini at Glyndebourne

It’s impossible to say what Rossini would have made of Glyndebourne’s production of Il turco in Italia, but you can…

Exhibitions

This Lucian Freud belongs on the compost

From 1940, at Benton End, near Hadleigh in Suffolk, the artist Cedric Morris brought his eye to breeding irises. Eliminating…

Arts feature

Three cheers for the new illustration museum

In the artistic pecking order, illustration long languished behind what were seen as the fine arts, even though it was…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

‘Chloe’, Young and Jackson’s famously elongated dining room nude is a Rorschach test for people who say they know a…

Aussie Life

Language

‘Codswallop’ means ‘Nonsense, rubbish, drivel’. The experts at the Oxford think they have nailed it down. They write, ‘Popularised in…

More from life

Embrace the squidge of a custard slice

Ihad a culinary revelation this week. I like to think I’m an egalitarian when it comes to food – I…

The turf

The Derby is the most interesting race of the year – and I missed it

In 1949, the 18th Earl of Derby revived the tradition of the Derby Club dinner in London, three days before…

No sacred cows

Was I too right-wing for MI6?

Like many people, I’ve been bemoaning the woke capture of our security services for some time. In 2024, Sir Richard…

Dolce vita

My beautiful friend’s beautiful manifesto

Dante’s Beach, Ravenna When I was still beautiful, a famous Italian TV art historian and politician chose me to be…

Real life

Why do Americans always want to have ‘the talk’?

‘I’m Native American,’ said one half of the honeymooning couple from Plattsburgh, holding out a small gift as they left.…

Best life

The horror of being offered a seat on the Tube

It would have been my mother’s 84th birthday on 29 May. I thought about her as I clattered down the…

Drink

Bring back vermouth hour

In the vermuterias of downtown Palma, locals talk of little other than ‘totality’. That is, the moment on 12 August,…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: how can I wangle a private jet invitation?

Q. Mary, can you rule on an aspect of private jet etiquette? I have been invited to a house party…

Sport

Who cares if cricketers drink?

Cricketers Have Beer, Shock: well, who knew! This wretched incident in some joint in Chelsea involving Ben Stokes and Gus…

Seen elsewhere

Why gentlemen relish Kemi

As seen in the Telegraph Two thoughts on the sad and controversial death of Henry Nowak. The first is about…

Mind your language

Grab bags are up for grabs

My husband’s task was a simple one: to buy a couple of bottles of water from the Morrisons opposite the…

Competition

Spectator Competition: The secret is…

Competition 3453 invited you to describe a new, infallible personal regime that promised to make one healthy, rich and irresistible.…