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The Spectator

28-february-2026-aus

Carry on Caliphate

Radical insurgents will never leave us alone

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Lazarus’s thirtieth

This week sees the 30th anniversary of the election of one of Australia’s greatest governments, the Howard government. If Australia…

Australian Features

Features Australia

The Jim & Katy Show

Are they now the weakest link?

Features Australia

Business/Robbery, etc

Why a bullying China wants its Darwin port

Features Australia

Howard’s 30th anniversary

Remembering the last worthwhile government this country had

Features Australia

Israel’s actual failing

Where judges give themselves the power to rule

Features Australia

The American project endures

The tariff decision proves the wisdom of the US Supreme Court

Features Australia

Albo brings back the dobbers

Informing on and denouncing your fellow citizens is now Australian law

Features Australia

Return of the zombie guerilla writers

Adelaide’s toxic talkfest is back from the dead

Features Australia

Carry on Caliphate

Radical insurgents will never leave us alone

Features Australia

Pauline, Tribune of the Disillusioned

Importing Islamist radicalism from Cairo to Lakemba

Features

Features

‘I bet there are loads of women who find Farage sexy’: the writers of Industry on putting politics on screen

No TV show better encapsulates the nexus between money and power than Industry. The HBO drama sees investment bankers screwing,…

Features

‘It’s a Faustian pact’: Rachel Reeves is giving bankers what they want

The Epstein files lift the curtain on how power is exercised and influence traded by our financial elite. It is…

Features

A beginner’s guide to Britain’s right-wing parties

The crowded market place emerging on Britain’s right is bewildering. Nigel Farage and Reform UK appeared to have successfully colonised…

Features

Strewth! Australian culture is taking over Britain

Catherine and Heathcliff. These are surely roles that every attractive British actor should aspire to. Why mope between auditions for…

Features

My sister Ghislaine became a prop in the theatre of global online outrage

My family name has become a byword for scandal. My father Robert went from press baron to tabloid monster within…

Features

Inside the daring plan to reclaim the Chagos Islands

Peros Banhos on the Chagos archipelago looks like your basic tropical island paradise: turquoise waters and golden sands, waves lapping…

Features

‘More than half our squad were executed’: Inside Russia’s rotten army

The Russians are on the warpath – and Europe is Vladimir Putin’s next target. That was Sir Keir Starmer’s alarming…

Features

How to listen for alien life

For more than 60 years, scientists have been on the stealthiest stakeout in history. Using state-of-the-art listening devices, they’ve tapped…

Notes on...

‘It was making me think like a Latin American dictator’: why my moustache had to go

Iloved my moustache. Unfortunately, my fondness for it seemed inversely proportionate to its popularity among my peers. After much unsolicited…

The Week

Leading article

Is it still worth going to university?

When self-styled ‘Money Saving Expert’ Martin Lewis gate-crashed Kemi Badenoch’s Good Morning Britain interview to reprimand the Conservative leader over…

Diary

Could Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor become ‘Lord Andrew’?

Never one for introspection, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor has still managed to provoke some searching questions about the institution he once served.…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Andrew arrested, tariff rulings and Boris in Ukraine

Home Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested on his 66th birthday on suspicion of misconduct in public office, and released under investigation.…

Letters

Letters: Why I love my Jellycats

Defence agreement Sir: If (a big ‘if’, I know) our politicians really would like to address the parlous state of…

Ancient and modern

Is Al Carns rich enough for the Romans?

Some Labour MPs are demanding that Colonel Alistair Carns, a former Royal Marine who served in the military for 24…

Barometer

Who has been removed from the line of succession?

Out of line Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor may be removed from the line of succession. When was the last time this happened?…

Columnists

Columns

Do we really want our politicians to be uneducated?

The interesting thing about political pendulums is that they always over-swing. In the campaign for this week’s Gorton and Denton…

Columns

Has it all gone wrong between Trump and Starmer?

‘The Special Relationship only exists when the Americans want something,’ a former Downing Street aide observed after Donald Trump rejected…

The Spectator's Notes

Am I a Zionist?

The death of Quentin Deranque is strangely under-reported here. He was a 23-year-old beaten up in Lyon on 12 February…

Columns

My night at the Baftas

Sometimes things work out much better than one could have imagined, as if God, looking down, had decided that for…

Columns

The real reason I left Britain

This is a two-parter, albeit linked. If you’re interested in the duplicitousness of British journalists, then keep reading. If you’re…

Any other business

The no.1 quango that deserves the axe

There are elements of economic life, such as the impact of President Donald Trump’s ever-changing tariffs, that are far beyond…

Books

Lead book review

‘He never drew a peaceful breath’: the tormented life of Henry VII

The challenges faced by the minor Welsh earl with tenuous claims to the English throne shattered his health, weakened his grip on affairs and eventually lost him the trust of his subjects

More from Books

Nights at the Lutetia – the dark history of a luxury hotel

When the great Left Bank establishment was requisitioned by the Abwehr in 1940, the staff continued to serve the new guests with their habitual courtesy – and even welcomed them back postwar

More from Books

The woke wars intensify

Nigel Biggar argues eloquently for countering ‘cancel culture’ with classical liberalism – but a far more fanatical anti-woke ideology is gathering pace

More from Books

Learning from history requires sophistication and skill

While the past can never provide ‘how to’ guides for the future, Odd Arne Westad makes some interesting comparisons between the balance of power pre-1914 and the present

More from Books

The Venice Ghetto was a landmark in the history of Jewish persecution

In the early 16th century, on the orders of the Doge, Jews were herded en masse to the foundry district of Venice, which became a model for segregated Jewish quarters throughout Europe

More from Books

From enfant terrible to dame: Tracey Emin in her own words

Steeped in the seascape of Margate, Emin is above all a Romantic, for whom dreams are a vivid source of inspiration and art is a kind of salvation

More from Books

Women have never had it so good as now

Rather than feeling angry or afraid, or viewing their bodies as a source of pain, women should embrace the benefits of the sexual revolution and ‘grab life by the ovaries’, says Zoe Strimpel

More from Books

Streamlined chic or lacy froth: royal style wars of the 1930s

Nothing signalled the personalities of the warring sisters-in-law more clearly than the contrasting fashion sense of Wallis Simpson and Queen Elizabeth

More from Books

Revelling in reading: The Enchanting Lives of Others, by Can Xue, reviewed

A group of young fiction enthusiasts and intellectuals channel their energies into devouring novels – and marvel at how enlightened it makes them feel

Arts

Australian Arts

A hoard of lost treasure

Ray Lawler’s Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is the most celebrated of all Australian plays; and this story of the…

Exhibitions

Marvellous but repetitious: Gwen John – Strange Beauties reviewed

A pilgrimage to Cardiff Central, sorry, Caerdydd Canolog (according to the signage in the station, which also had my return…

Pop

U2’s childlike response to world affairs

Whither the protest song in 2026? In January 1970, John Lennon wrote and recorded ‘Instant Karma!’ in a single day…

Theatre

The blandness of Hugh Bonneville

Shadowlands, by William Nicholson, is a solid and unsurprising account of the brief marriage between C.S. Lewis (known as Clive),…

Cinema

Fascinating: EPiC – Elvis Presley in Concert reviewed

EPiC: Elvis Presley In Concert is a concert documentary that grew out of the 65 boxes of unseen Las Vegas…

Television

Enjoyably old-fashioned: ITV’s The Lady reviewed

I lasted all of five minutes with Netflix’s tasting menu-length Being Gordon Ramsay. This surprised me, because I’ve long had…

Classical

A playful, big-hearted, intelligent new opera

Some people like art to have a message. So here’s one, delivered by Katsushika Hokusai near the end of Dai…

Arts feature

The genius of John Vanbrugh

Van’s genius, without Thought or Lecture, Is hugely turn’d to Architecture. Jonathan Swift’s dismissive jest has never been forgotten. It…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

Now that Mr Albanese seems finally to have woken up to the problem of Australian antisemitism, nobody should be surprised…

Aussie Life

Language

Speccie reader Reona writes to ask where the expression ‘peppercorn rent’ comes from. Well, there once was a time when…

Competition

Spectator Competition: Hope stings

Competition 3438 was inspired by the 1986 film Clockwise, in which John Cleese is constantly impeded in his attempt to…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: How can I stop people pitying me for being made redundant?

Q. I have just got off a nine-hour overnight flight from Miami to Heathrow. I was in premium economy in…

The Wiki Man

Does The Spectator hate the Welsh?

This St David’s Day weekend, I devote this column to a celebration of the world’s most under-appreciated ethnic group. Under-appreciated,…

Mind your language

‘Both things can be true’: The creep of an annoying cliché

‘It’s lunchtime and it’s raining. Both things can be true at the same time,’ said my husband, putting on the…

Drink

Hell is Dry January

‘Earth has not anything to show more fair.’ I have always believed that the notion of a Dry January must…

Real life

My mother has become a hostile stranger

‘Do you know who I am?’ said the voice belonging to the lady who used to be my mother, crossly,…

Dolce vita

My wild house parties with Rose Wylie

Dante’s Beach, Ravenna I rang up my old best friend, Luke-John, for a chat a few days ago and to…

No sacred cows

Keir Starmer’s selective ageism

If the newspaper reports are correct and Margaret Hodge is about to be named as the next chair of Ofcom,…