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The Spectator

18 April 2026 Aus

Top Brasso

When responsibility for war crimes runs downhill

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Australian values

It has been a while since this magazine felt any great desire to praise the Coalition for fresh new policy…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

The Albanese government seems to have abandoned its plan to increase the size of the parliament and give us the…

Australian Features

Features Australia

What do you most despise?

Conservatives who won’t conserve

Features Australia

The ignorant Aussie

Imagine paying for a public broadcaster that works against you

Features Australia

Modern slavery

What reparations are owed to the victims of enforced marriages?

Features Australia

FoolWatch

Monitoring how Labor manages our energy supplies

Features Australia

Top Brasso

When responsibility for war crimes runs downhill

Features Australia

Chained to the chariot wheels

An ossified duopoly dooms Australia to decay, waste and impoverishment

Features

Features

My shameful confession: I’m not a good baker

Contrary to popular conception, I’m not a great baker. I was hired by Bake Off for my judging experience, not…

Features

Trump has underestimated the Pope

Donald Trump’s latest clash with the Catholic Church stunned even the most hardened veterans of culture-war Twitter. According to the…

Features

Flat out: the property squeeze crushing the young

Last month, a new account called London Price Drop appeared on X. It has already gained more than 14,000 followers…

Features

Treasure Britain’s last railway dining car while you still can

The 17.48 from Paddington does not, on first sight, seem exceptional. Over-hard seats, over-bright lights and a scrum at the…

Features

What’s Britain’s place in the post-Iran world order?

Midway through James Joyce’s Ulysses, the character J.J. O’Molloytips his hat to ‘Our watchful friend, the Skibbereen Eagle’, a playful…

Features

‘People are at breaking point’: on the road with the Irish fuel protestors

A fuel protestor stood on top of a tractor waving a tricolor. In Ireland, everything is about nationhood and the…

Notes on...

Americans will never understand Marmite

‘I fucking hate Marmite,’ said Andy McLeod, a young ad man who at some point in the mid-1990s was tasked…

The Week

Leading article

The Spectator won’t give up on Gentleman’s Relish

Last week our cookery writer Olivia Potts scooped the world by revealing that AB World Foods was to cease production…

Diary

Why Donald Trump won’t embarrass the royals

Elizabeth II was never particularly enthusiastic about birthdays. They were a good excuse for a parade or an honours list,…

Leading article

We can’t afford to keep the pension triple lock

When Britons go to the polls next month, the results will likely reveal just how un-United the Kingdom has become.…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Trump attacks the Pope, Trump praises the King and Melania goes public

Home Lord Robertson of Port Ellen, the former secretary general of Nato, said: ‘We are under attack. We are not…

Barometer

Which racecourses have seen the most deaths?

Hero worship Peter Magyar, the new PM of Hungary, has the unique distinction among world leaders of bearing the name…

Ancient and modern

Space travel, ancient Greek style

Apollo, Artemis and Orion have not been named at random. The first two are brother and sister, and all three…

Letters

Letters: No, pensioners don’t ‘‘have it easy’

Same old Sir: In Michael Simmons’s otherwise excellent yet alarming essay on ‘Benefits treats’ (11 April), one sentence spoiled the…

Columnists

Columns

Britain’s ‘drone gap’ makes us vulnerable

When John Healey was asked, on stage at the London Defence Conference, whether the armed forces were ‘ready’ for war,…

Columns

What we can learn from the Southport killer

It was a matter of some disappointment to me that Kanye West was barred entry to this country as a…

The Spectator's Notes

How nice it is we no longer have to think about John Bercow

On Tuesday, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport approved the sale of my employers, the Telegraph Group, to Axel…

Columns

Trump’s goals in Iran have always been clear

The bombing of the Revolutionary government in Iran is drawing comparisons with the war in Iraq. But the comparisons are…

Columns

Tomorrow belongs to the vegetarians

Can there be any thinking person who has passed a lorry filled with live animals peering out through the slats…

Columns

What happened to Britain’s fighting spirit?

When war is in the air, young men traditionally sign up – and they traditionally sign up, disproportionately, from the…

Any other business

A private credit crash is coming

What with headlines focused on the Strait of Hormuz and scare stories about out-of-control AI, forecasts of a storm in…

Books

More from Books

Why one of Renoir’s most celebrated paintings languished unloved

Relegated to a servants’ hall soon after it was finished, the double portrait ‘Pink and Blue’ may have been caught up in a swirl of rumours about its subjects’ mother

More from Books

Unravelling the infinite mysteries of physics

DeepMind’s brilliant co-founder Demis Hassabis hopes to ‘create a machine that can occupy a position in the cosmos once ascribed to an all-powerful divinity’

More from Books

Derided as ‘feminists’: the unsung witnesses of the Nuremberg trials

Of particular note was the lawyer Harriet Zetterberg, who compiled the case against Hans Frank, and Marie-Claude Vaillant-Couturier, the first concentration camp survivor to testify

More from Books

A dying fall: The Last Movement, by Robert Seethaler, reviewed

Gustav Mahler looks back on the pleasures and pains of the past from the windblown deck of SS Amerika on his final journey across the Atlantic

More from Books

The typo that spelled death in the Soviet Union

When Pravda Vostoka misprinted Joseph Stalin’s military rank on 25 October 1944, most of the print run was destroyed and the editorial team was shot

More from Books

‘A lost generation’: My Year in Paris with Gertrude Stein, by Deborah Levy, reviewed

Stein coined the phrase to describe the disillusioned writers and artists she mentored – but it is the woman herself who proves most elusive

More from Books

The cormorant – symbol of gluttony and the Devil

Gordon McCullan explores the representation in art and literature over the centuries of a much maligned bird

Lead book review

A deadly imitation game: the fate of the British teenager who posed as a Russian oligarch’s son

Patrick Radden Keefe investigates the mystery of Zac Brettler’s fall from the balcony of a luxury riverside apartment into the Thames one November night in 2019

Arts

Australian Arts

Like him or loathe him

It’s cheering to hear very promising reports of Barrie Kosky’s production of Siegfried at Covent Garden suggesting that the Melbourne-born…

Dance

Excruciating tedium from Pina Bausch

You’re never too old to dance we are told nowadays. This encouraging injunction has been taken up by everyone from…

Radio

The first woman to climb Mt Blanc took 18 bottles of wine and 24 roast chickens

The dark side of the Moon, a broken loo and a floating jar of Nutella: such was Artemis II. When…

Television

Big Mistakes is hysterical – but not in a good way

When following up a successful sitcom, should a writer head off into new territory or not? That was the question…

Pop

The joy of Belle and Sebastian

Do Belle and Sebastian have the most polite audience in pop? Normally when a pop singer leaves the stage to…

Cinema

Glenrothan is painfully bad

Glenrothan is Brian Cox’s directorial debut and I wish there were a nicer way of putting it but, Brian: please,…

Classical

Heart-melting loveliness from John Rutter

Anyone for a spot of acoustic science? Apparently the distinctive colour of a musical note is concentrated almost wholly in…

Exhibitions

Tracey Emin at her most operatic

I feared this summing-up of Tracey Emin’s career might be self-congratulatory – biennale here, damehood there. But it’s Emin at…

Theatre

The torture of Michael Frayn’s Copenhagen

Copenhagen by Michael Frayn is a problem play. It debuted at the National in 1998 and ran for two years…

Arts feature

In defence of museum charges

It occurs to me only now that I might have spent far too much time in France. Indeed, so familiar…

Life

Aussie Life

Language

‘Hypocorism’ is another strange and wonderful word (hip-OCK-ah-riz-um.) The Oxford’s definition is: ‘pet name’. But there is a bit more…

Aussie Life

Aussie life

St Arnaud is a tiny speck on the map of Australia. The western Victorian town is surrounded by farmland and…

Sport

The inner secrets of Rory McIlroy

It’s easy to be sceptical about top sportsmen turning to psychologists for help. A bit precious, no? After all, what’s…

More from life

How do you make a tart that doesn’t really exist?

There are few things more delicious than falling down a rabbit hole. No, don’t worry, I’m not serving up a…

Food

‘An adequate meal for a Cornish giant’: Brasserie Angelica reviewed

Brasserie Angelica is the – is the word signature? – restaurant inside the Newman, Fitzrovia, a new hotel that has…

The turf

Zack Polanski’s plan to abolish the Grand National

Having trained the runner-up in the Grand National twice – and once in the Topham Chase for good measure –…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: how can I interrupt a gossipy friend who won’t shut up?

Q. I went to a party last weekend and my father asked me to go and introduce myself if I…

Real life

Is my plumber right about Armageddon?

The plumber was shouting hysterically at me down the phone because I had asked him to install a heated towel…

Crossword

2748: What’s in a name?

The unclued lights are linked to the title, two using the same thematic content. Across 11    Search volunteer army among…

No life

My lesson in misery from an anti-AI march

Automation is about to take over the world, apparently. But the fightback has begun. On a cold, blowy day a…

No sacred cows

Does Jolyon Maugham have any self-doubt?

I was leaving the CNN presidential election night party at dawn in 2016, having celebrated Donald Trump’s victory, when Paul…

Competition

Spectator Competition: Bring up the bodies

For Competition 3445 you were invited to provide a sonnet to a previously overlooked body part.In a stellar week –…