It’s no surprise Mhairi Black has turned on Nicola Sturgeon
Mhairi Black can clearly see which way the wind is blowing. ‘I did always feel a wee bit uncomfortable,’ the…
Israel’s supreme court verdict spells trouble for Benjamin Netanyahu
Israel’s supreme court has overturned a law passed by Benjamin Netanyahu’s government last year that would have limited the power…
Life’s too short to battle public health puritans – I’m over it
When I’m not compiling the Morning Double Shot email, or talking on the radio, my professional role is as a…
Clover Moore’s ‘Blak power’ New Year’s Eve fireworks (for kids?)
The ABC has been dragged from one end of social media to the other after the appallingly political and nauseatingly…
The haunting certainties of Australian Digital ID
Of what can we be certain regarding the two Digital ID Bills opened by our federal government to public comment…
Labour won’t fix Britain’s childcare mess
Labour appeared stumped when, earlier this year, the government announced it would be drastically increasing its ‘free’ childcare provision. Given…
Kim Jong-un is in no mood to calm down
South Korean voters will be among the more than four billion people going to the polls this year. With a…
King Charles vs Ayn Rand
Is it only the political movement of Climate Change in which we need to be wary of King Charles III,…
Fact check: the truth about the asylum backlog
When is a backlog in asylum applications not a backlog? When it is made up of ‘complex cases’ and of…
Wayne Rooney’s failure is no surprise
There was a certain inevitability to the sacking of Wayne Rooney as Birmingham City manager. The only real surprise is…
The trouble with Ofsted
Ruth Perry’s death last year was a tragedy. The headteacher had carried the burden of an Ofsted inspection pretty much…
Why protests in Serbia won’t lead to regime change
Serbia’s president, Aleksandar Vučić, has followed in Vladimir Putin’s footsteps this week by blaming popular protests on western meddling to discredit the…
Japan’s earthquake has brought back painful memories
The year 2024 began in the worst possible way for Japan. At least 30 people were killed by a powerful…
The European Court has become positively immoral
Another new year, and on the very first day we hear of two cases where human rights law has made…
Cyclones are not evidence of a climate apocalypse
The damage from recent Cyclone Jasper has taken many, including the Bureau of Meteorology, by surprise. The failure to predict…
How Queen Margrethe made the Danish monarchy popular
Danish New Year’s Eves are to be savoured partly for their predictability. First, on the main Danish State TV channel,…
Dear Chris Bowen – a New Year’s letter
Stop enduring those night sweats, Mr Bowen … fear not! CO2 is safe. It’s welcome. I write to you openly…
Power on, livelihoods off
While some companies are set to gain millions of dollars, other individuals fear they will lose hundreds of thousands of…
Just Say No to abstinence this January
Today’s a day for waltzes from Vienna and loafing around on one of the three days of the year when people…
Aussie republicans are fawning over Denmark’s new queen
According to opinion polls, more Australians want to ditch the country’s ties with the British monarchy than retain it. The…
Why Putin didn’t mention the war in his New Year’s address
With ‘don’t mention the war!’ the order of the day, it felt as if Vladimir Putin’s message to his people…
Watch: Sadiq Khan grilled on London knife crime
Sadiq Khan was hoping to project a message of ‘unity to the world’ with this year’s New Year’s Eve fireworks…
Why Europe’s centrists are terrified of 2024
New Year’s Eve passed off peacefully in France give or take the odd incident. There were 211 arrests in total,…
The ancient roots of Italy’s Festa della Befana
In Italy if you are not careful, you are condemned to measure out your life in religious festivals. There are…
The trouble with the United Nations’s fringe organisations
A new year is a good time for nations, like families, to review the institutions they support. For 2024 I…