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The Spectator

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Loveless labours lost

It seems like yesterday – last September, in fact – that Prime Minister Anthony Albanese arrived at Number 10 Downing…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

Recently, an issue arose that was a milestone in public affairs. It surfaced in a speech by Justice Ian Jackman,…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Labour’s messiah seizes the crown

But the King of the North’s honeymoon will be brief

Features Australia

Chokepoints seldom last

They rarely achieve political goals

Features Australia

An American Monarch

If only the United States had been allowed to keep the King

Features Australia

Comrade Chalmers’ class war budget

The rhetoric of intergenerational fairness is a front for multigenerational theft

Features Australia

Housing daze

Chalmers seems determined to learn from Keating the hard way

Features

Notes on...

Is the Princess of Wales watermaxxing?

It’s no secret that the royals struggle with relatability. But every so often, they stumble upon a PR masterstroke, almost…

Features

Can Burnham resist the siren call of the left?

Power, when it is gained and lost, is transferred in stages: the actual, the visual and the constitutional. The latter…

Features

The Iran war is Trump’s Suez crisis

Clarissa Eden famously declared that ‘in the past few weeks I have really felt as if the Suez Canal was…

Features

Can I save Britain from war with Russia?

I t won’t be much of a consolation to Keir Starmer but I too was overwhelmed by the responsibilities of…

Features

Long holidays are the worst

‘Is there ever a holiday so heavenly that one is not counting down the days?’ a friend texted me last…

Features

The Spectator’s role in the birth of America

The Spectator was there at the founding of America. George Washington had six copies of the original 18th-century Spectator at…

Features

The secret to dressing exceptionally well

As I scribble these words on a train to London, I’m wearing a lightweight Italian wool suit, a shirt from…

Features

The real reason for the Dartmoor pony cull

Try as I might, I cannot think of an animal welfare issue that is more misunderstood than the survival of…

The Week

Barometer

How does this week’s heatwave compare with 1976?

Prime numbers It looks as if Britain will just miss out on having seven prime ministers in the space of…

Diary

Bring back lunchtime drinking

The usual blindfolds, handcuffs and gags were slapped on live news and discussion programmes last Thursday, including me and my…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Burnham wins, Starmer resigns and a heatwave hits

Home Sir Keir Starmer, the Prime Minister, stood outside 10 Downing Street and said that he would resign as leader…

Leading article

How Burnham can avoid Starmer’s fate

Welcome to the cabaret, Andy Burnham. Last year, the editor of this magazine wrote about ‘Weimar Britain’: the fear that…

Ancient and modern

Would the ancients have appreciated David Hockney?

David Hockney has died, and there has died with him an artist whose work has given those of us who…

Letters

Letters: Why the left loves Larkin

An irresponsible drama Sir: Britain is faced with a fabricated panic which has prioritised personality over policy. Keir Starmer has…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

Even Andy Burnham doesn’t know what Andy Burnham stands for

The British constitution is an admirably flexible thing, so I would not claim that Andy Burnham’s leadership campaign, and the…

Columns

How the right can fight Burnham

Andy Burnham has not yet entered No. 10, but the Conservatives and Reform are already preparing for the possibility of…

Columns

Burnham’s worryingly vague vision for Britain

Once again the question occurs: ‘Why do they want it?’ Keir Starmer held a very important role in the legal…

Columns

The death of two-party politics has been greatly exaggerated

Every twist in the winding road of our politics brings a latest thing to say. These wisdoms usually survive a…

Columns

‘It’s going to make Liz Truss look like a savant’: Are you ready for Burnham’s first Budget?

If I were Andy Burnham, I’d be terrified about the inheritance Keir Starmer has left. Yet instead of stepping gingerly…

Any other business

Alan Greenspan and the slow death of independent central banking

The passing, aged 100, of the former US Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, prompts thoughts about shifting tensions between politicians…

Books

More from Books

Dull, duller and Dulles – was Churchill’s jibe about America’s Cold War icon unfair?

John Foster Dulles was forever going on about ‘boldness’ and dynamic change, but his limitations of perspective and philosophy become glaringly obvious in this latest biography

More from Books

Nagging doubts: Twenty Minutes of Silence, by Hélène Bessette, reviewed

In a luxurious French villa, a man lies dead, shot with his own gun – and his wife and son become suspects. But new information emerges every time the scene is reviewed

More from Books

Chinese puzzle or matryoshka doll – the complexity of Sino-Russia relations

For centuries, the wary neighbours have been united mainly in their opposition to the West – but is there now a new dynamic between the global powers?

More from Books

Hot and bothered: Trouble Was, by Charlotte Edwardes, reviewed

Tempers boil over when nine-year-old Frank, his mother and siblings go to stay with an aunt on Exmoor in the blistering summer of 1976

More from Books

Blame the Enlightenment for species extinction

Even such a key figure as Adam Smith believed that we would reach economic fulfilment before turning to the ‘real problems’ of nature and human life

More from Books

The imaginative genius behind the Great Exhibition

The revenue derived from the international fair of 1851 helped fund the V&A, the Natural History and Science Museums and many other ‘Albertopolis’ institutions

More from Books

Who needs an Italian beach when we have our own lidos?

With the continent now unbearably hot, these magnificent temples of swimming are experiencing a welcome revival, says Tom Fort

Lead book review

The tragedy of Paul Celan – trapped in his own allusive poems

By his late thirties, the great poet of the Holocaust had succumbed to clinical paranoia, in which every aspect of daily life was saturated with evil significance

Arts

Australian Arts

Beauty, blarney and banshees

It’s a bit odd in its way that a fair fraction of the more or less British theatre we watch…

Television

An enjoyably honest portrait of Rik Mayall

If you’ve tended to think Rik Mayall was both very funny and quite annoying, it turns out you’re not alone…

Theatre

The power of Glengarry Glen Ross

The Old Vic presents an eccentric new version of David Mamet’s ultra-masculine play, Glengarry Glen Ross. Director Patrick Marber populates…

Classical

Choral church music must be heard within the liturgy

Choral church music is at its most effective when it’s embedded in the liturgy as it was designed to be,…

Exhibitions

Anish Kapoor – spectacular, pompous and vulgar

I miss the New Labour years, when the government gushed money at cultural initiatives and Britain, previously a backwater in…

Exhibitions

The joy of willow-pattern ceramics

My granny used Spode willow-pattern crockery for everyday use. There was another grander service for Sunday lunch, also blue-and-white chinoiserie:…

Arts feature

The uprising against ugly cities

Arriving in Oslo, the Barcode District is unavoidable. It is so named because its blocks are laid out like dominos…

Opera

An entertaining Rheingold from Grange Park Opera

Grange Park Opera has acquired a new chandelier for its theatre at West Horsley; a jumble of foliage and fairy…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

Measuring tobacco consumption is dirty work, but somebody has to do it. The antiseptic image of the government statistician has…

Aussie Life

Language

The word of the moment is undoubtedly ‘monocultural’. In her take-no-prisoners speech at the National Press Club Pauline Hanson said…

Drink

To survive the heatwave, drink beer

Heat and dust, plus nonsense. If the high temperatures had arrived earlier, the England cricket authorities could claim that their…

More from life

Chicken Milanese is the king of homemade fast food

When it comes to home cooking, we’re obsessed with optimisation. Today this manifests itself in reels on Instagram offering a…

Competition

Spectator Competition: In the field

Comp. 3455 invited you to supply some local response (in prose or poetry) to the absence of Glastonbury Festival, which…

Seen elsewhere

Do I vibe with Rupert Lowe?

As seen in the New World What are the vibes of Rupert Lowe? That’s the question on my mind as…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: can I accuse a writer of using AI?

Q. I work at a magazine and am occasionally (and perhaps with increasing frequency) sent articles that strike me as…

Sport

Why are the Belgians so bad at football?

Whisper it if you must, but it looks as if Gianni (‘Today I feel gay…’) Infantino might have got it…

No sacred cows

Farewell to the school I founded

My son Charlie sat his final A-level paper last week and the significance of this has only just sunk in.…

The turf

My first trip to Britain’s best racecourse

The importance of Royal Ascot can never be overstated. It was beautifully summed up by His Excellency Mansoor Abulhoul, the…

Dolce vita

Why is the Italian media spreading fake news about Churchill?

Dante’s Beach, Ravenna I know that, as the heat intensifies, you want me to write about the highly trained nudists…

Real life

The tree that nearly sent me over the edge

‘We need to get into bed and watch a really good Poirot,’ I said, for I had given him such…

Best life

God save The World Tonight

We were driving to the V&A summer party, windows down, scent of jasmine floating on the liquid June air, prospect…