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The Spectator

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Vehicle metaphors

Various vehicular metaphors are commonly used to describe the unravelling of an incompetent government, usually involving train wrecks, car crashes,…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Slipping on a banana Teal

Two Bs or not two Bs for the seat of Higgins?

Features Australia

Making appointments, Coalition-style

A satirical look at the previous government’s conservative leanings

Features Australia

Four troubling features of the Higgins judgment

Everyone behaving badly, but only one is pronounced guilty in a social justice outcome

Features Australia

The Spirit Whale has spoken

Activists are weaponising indigenous myth-making

Features Australia

Business/Robbery, etc

Lawfare conspirators ordered to come clean

Features Australia

How to be an ‘Approved Jew’

Antipathy to Israel is just the starting point

Features Australia

Tertiary degrees in Intifada

Our universities have abandoned Western civilisation

Features Australia

Bullying the Fed

Will the US central bank skew the US election?

Features Australia

Elon Musk, free speech hero

Policy determined on the steps of the Lakemba mosque

Features

Features

Why Trumpists think the real conspiracy is RFK Jr

A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma. Winston Churchill’s description of Soviet Russia in 1939 could also apply…

Features

Survival plan: is Rishi ready for the rebels?

Ever since Rishi Sunak became leader of the Conservative party, he has been preparing for this week. Entering 10 Downing…

Features

Paris, city of blight

You know that feeling when you haven’t seen someone for several years and when you do, you really notice the…

Features

Meet Hillingdon Man, Britain’s unhappiest chap

It’s official. I live in the unhappiest place in Britain. Who says so? My neighbours here in Hillingdon, that’s who.…

Features

Wales is facing a US-style opioid crisis

In Europe at the end of the Noughties, the problem drug was krokodil. The semi-synthetic, necrosis-causing alternative to heroin was…

Notes on...

In praise of the 1/3 pint

The worst thing that happened to me over the pandemic was I got ‘really into beer’. I was already into…

Features

Joseph Stiglitz: ‘We know where fascism led last time’

When Joseph Stiglitz talks, the left listens. The Nobel laureate has advised multiple Democratic presidents and the World Bank, where…

Features

The government’s pathetic response to the Now Teach scandal

One Saturday last July, a couple of hundred people gathered in a conference centre on the bank of the Thames…

The Week

Letters

Letters: the joy of a male book club

The state of our defence Sir: Your article on the etiolated state of European, including Britain’s, defence, is spot on (‘The…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the Week: Yousaf resigns, Charles resumes duties and Poulter joins Labour

Home Humza Yousaf resigned as the First Minister of Scotland and leader of the Scottish National party, posts he had…

Diary

Tennis is sexy again

For 50 years, I’ve avoided wearing anything resembling formal tennis kit but in a rather lame way, I’ve been seduced…

Barometer

How many people are attacked by sharks?

Horse trials Five Household Cavalry horses bolted in central London, with two reaching Limehouse before being calmed down. It may…

Ancient and modern

How to survive in the ancient world

A recent analysis has concluded that ‘British public opinion has got so used to things being bad/chaotic it’s hard to imagine…

Columnists

The Spectator's Notes

Europe has no answer to its immigration problem

Pulling off the rhetorical trick that Brexit would undermine the Northern Ireland Good Friday Agreement, Michel Barnier, the EU negotiator,…

Columns

Migration reality is biting in Ireland

Iwas trying to work out which event gave me a greater sense of euphoria and contentment – the fall of…

Any other business

Live the high life… in a mid rise

How radically left-wing is Labour’s proposed ‘renationalisation’ of the railways? Though militant Mick Lynch of the RMT union ‘strongly welcomed…

Columns

Why send children to therapy?

I’ve been reading a book by the American journalist Abigail Shrier – Bad Therapy – which describes just how demented…

Books

More from Books

A GP diagnosed me with ‘acute anxiety’ – only to exacerbate it

When Tom Lee suffers a breakdown after the birth of his first child, a doctor warns him against the only drug that proves effective, further adding to his distress

More from Books

Death was everywhere for the Victorians, but it was never commonplace

In a society obsessed with the trappings of grief, funerals were often elaborate occasions, with commemorative medals struck and strict rules applied to the period of mourning

More from Books

Nietzsche’s thinking seems destined to be mangled and misunderstood

Two Italian editors, determined to rescue the philosopher from Nazi associations, find their concern with philological truth derided by French postmodernists

More from Books

A timely morality tale: The Spoiled Heart, by Sunjeev Sahota, reviewed

Conflicting ideals of old-school socialism and modern identity politics are fought out against a background of urban desolation worthy of Dickens

More from Books

Living in the golden age of navel-gazing

Every other book now seems to be a collection of sad, wry, funny reflections by some sad, wry, funny columnist – and Joel Golby’s Four Stars is among the best

More from Books

Are all great civilisations doomed?

If plague, war or natural disasters don’t destroy our own, then ‘a cascading systems failure’ seems likely, on past evidence, says Paul Cooper

More from Books

A surprising number of scientists believe in little green men

Eminent astronomers have explained cosmic anomalies as alien megastructures and spaceships, while the source of the celebrated Wow! signal remains anyone’s guess

Lead book review

The Berkeley scandal of 1681 transfixed London society – and Aphra Behn soon capitalised on it

In The Love Letters Between a Nobleman and his Sister, often called the ‘first English novel’, Behn successfully milked the affair for all it was worth

Arts

Australian Arts

Music as pasta

It’s sad to see that Sir Andrew Davis, the former head of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, has died. The man…

Theatre

An exquisitely funny sitcom that should be on the BBC

Agathe by Angela J. Davis follows the early phases of the Rwanda genocide 30 years ago. The subject, Agathe Uwilingiyimana,…

Arts feature

It’s time to free art from being ‘interactive’ and ‘immersive’

The American artist and critic Brad Troemel once pointed out that art galleries have all turned into a kind of…

Pop

Adrianne Lenker is a treasure for the ages

You could very well sum up their differing approaches to American roots music from how they were dressed. Both wore…

Classical

The mutilation of Radio 3

On Saturday 12 December 1964, Harold Wilson addressed his first Labour party conference as prime minister, George Harrison was photographed…

Dance

Don’t write off Hofesh Shechter – his new work is uniquely haunting

In 2010, when his thrillingly edgy and angry Political Mother delivered modern dance a winding punch right where it hurt,…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

From a nation that gave us riot police, rude waiters, baguettes and non-negotiable submarine contracts we have a new word,…

Aussie Life

Language

The expression ‘non-racist’ is still missing from most of the world’s major dictionaries (Oxford, Merriam-Webster, Collins, Macquarie) but perhaps this…

No sacred cows

Who decides which politicians are liars?

This week the Welsh parliament has been debating a law that would ban politicians from lying. Assuming it ends up…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: how can I help pay for an expensive lunch without seeming rude?

Q. My husband and I (both in our eighties) recently visited a carpet shop with a view to replacing the…

Spectator sport

The strikers giving Southgate a headache

Poor Gareth Southgate. Having three outstanding finishers is giving him a thumping headache ahead of the European Championship. Harry Kane,…

Mind your language

Can MPs really defect?

‘He did it years before William Donaldson did The Henry Root Letters,’ said my husband querulously, as though I had…

After Life

The real reason I don’t drink

It’s been 30 years this month since I last touched alcohol and I still can’t face the prospect of a…

More from life

How to make ham and parsley sauce

Poor old parsley sauce. As someone who writes regularly about old-fashioned food, it often feels that we are living through…

The turf

Amo Racing’s Flat supremacy

You don’t often walk into a racing yard and find the trainer engrossed with two owners –apropos of horse names…

Real life

My parents and the sorry state of the NHS

Pushing through a crowded hospital corridor behind my father, I heard a voice calling me. Then a nurse grabbed me…