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The Spectator

16 May 2026 Aus

Albopoly

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Albopoly

And there you have it. After decades of dreaming of and planning a full-fronted assault on the key drivers of…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Brown study

It is with a tone of despair, but some optimism, that I have been cogitating on the result of the…

Features Australia

Thirty years boiling the frog

The technocrats lied to the bush. Now we are paying the price

Features Australia

Enlightenment is not a dirty word

Intellectuals ignore the fertile ground they spring from

Features Australia

Treasurer, you’re no Keating

Thoughts on the 40th anniversary of our ‘banana republic’

Features Australia

The coming Farage revolution

Labour’s election disaster makes clear Britain’s direction of travel

Features Australia

Labor’s shame

Tolerating antisemitism to win elections

Features

Notes on...

Make the fez great again

Ireturned from a recent holiday to Morocco with three mementos: a bright red pair of swimming trunks (teenager-sized; the largest…

Features

‘It’s like a Mexican stand-off but no one has any guns’: inside the farcical coup against Keir Starmer

It is an old adage of leadership contests that ‘If you shoot for the King, you’d better not miss’ –…

Features

The three things Trump wants from his China trip

Donald Trump flew to Beijing this week, and when he sits down with China’s President Xi Jinping on Thursday morning…

Features

How the Saudis wriggled out of the Iran conflict

Some of the highest-paid sportsmen in history, the golfers of the LIV league, had bad news recently. Saudi Arabia said…

Features

The great British flower revival

When Juliet said of Romeo that ‘a rose by any other name would smell as sweet’, she spoke a common…

Features

It’s time to uncancel Enoch Powell

Despite a career of nearly half a century in public life, Enoch Powell is generally remembered for one utterance only:…

The Week

Barometer

Which countries see more UFOs?

Red Wales Labour lost power in the Welsh Assembly for the first time since it was set up in 1999.…

Ancient and modern

Rome vs Jeff Bezos’s yacht

Rumour has it that Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, is selling his agreeable little yacht Koru because it will…

Diary

The truth about Kate Garraway and me

Since Victorian times, sandwich-board men proclaiming doom have been part of our urban street life, particularly in London. I’ve felt…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Labour’s civil war begins, government borrowing rises and Trump arrives in China

Home Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, made a speech without a jacket or tie in an attempt to save…

Leading article

The EU can’t save Labour

Amid the rubble of this government lies a tattered standard – the regimental colours of the current Labour party. The…

Letters

Letters: it’s hard to undo dumbing down

Tales from the City Sir: Simon Jenkins’s article on Liverpool Street Station (‘Horror storeys’, 9 May) is inaccurate, and an…

Columnists

Columns

Things can always get worse

I have spent the past week marvelling at the behaviour of our commentating class. They seem to have whipped themselves…

Columns

Farage’s plan to win over the left

The loudest man in politics knows when to keep his silence. Nigel Farage held his tongue on Monday as Keir…

The Spectator's Notes

Cling on, Sir Keir

People laugh at Sir Keir Starmer for failing to acknowledge that he has almost no hope of survival. This is…

Columns

The unstoppable rise of stupidity

Hold the front page: I’ve found a very good contemporary novel to occupy my time. Such things have become vanishingly…

Any other business

How private equity changed the world

The 50th birthday of New York private-equity giant Kohlberg Kravis Roberts – founded with $120,000 by the cousins George Roberts…

Columns

What the Two Fat Ladies taught us about Britain

‘Grab that crab, Clarissa!/ Eat that meat, Jennifer!’ It was with these words – the start of their self-sung theme…

Columns

Stopping the boats shouldn’t require magical thinking

The BBC’s tracking-down of Kardo Ranya as a people-smuggling mastermind is a triumph of investigative journalism. But anyone who thinks…

Books

More from Books

The tragedy of Sir Walter Ralegh’s impossible quest

After the accession of James I, the life of the ‘ultimate Renaissance man’ depended entirely on his discovery of a mythical ‘city of gold’

More from Books

Love and loneliness in the Outer Hebrides: John of John, by Douglas Stuart, reviewed

Summoned home to his dying grandmother in Harris, a gay young man is treated with both violence and tenderness by his father, a Calvinist precentor with a guilty secret

More from Books

Were the lies we told to combat communism so shameful?

Part of the disinformation strategy of the IRD, a secretive postwar subsection of the Foreign Office, was to counter the blizzard of propaganda issuing from Moscow and Beijing

More from Books

Mourning becomes Siri Hustvedt

Harbouring her grief helps keep her adored husband Paul Auster alive, says the bestselling novelist and essayist

More from Books

The movie brats who changed popular cinema

Paul Fischer celebrates the ‘era of the new Hollywood blockbuster’, exemplified in the films of Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola

More from Books

Paw prints through the ages: a stunning visual history of man’s best friend

Thomas Laqueur helps us appreciate the historic bond between humans and dogs and the subtle messages conveyed in their portrayal in art

More from Books

The good old bad old days: Prestige Drama, by Seamas O’Reilly, reviewed

Set in 1980s Derry, O’Reilly’s novel vividly captures the rifts and festering resentments within a close-knit community during the Troubles

More from Books

Does a propensity for crime depend on one’s DNA?

Kathryn Paige Harden’s research suggests some genetic connection – but this is not scientific determinism, and ‘real moral choices can’t be understood biologically’

Lead book review

At the beginning of the second world war, Winston Churchill seemed a most unlikely hero

His early directives at the Admiralty and his handling of the Norway campaign exasperated his war cabinet colleagues and might even have ended his political career

Arts

Australian Arts

A masterpiece of economy

There’s something very odd about the fuss that’s been made about David Szalay who won the Booker a few months…

Pop

Rosalia’s O2 show was a landmark concert

If Olivia Dean is the girl next door, Rosalia is the girl next planet. Their shows in successive weeks at…

Television

The BBC at its nation-unifying best

Children of the Blitz began with the surprising news – to me anyway – that while 800,000 British children in…

Radio

​A charmingly bold food podcast

It takes some gumption to name a podcast History’s Greatest Dishes and proceed to offer episodes on pizza, blancmange, balti,…

Theatre

A Beatles show without the love

Please Please Me is a play about Brian Epstein whose brief and troubled life remains relatively unknown. Tom Wright’s linear…

Dance

The Trocks’ shtick is getting tired

Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo were popular regulars at Washington’s Kennedy Center until Trump’s demented blast against decadent queerness.…

Cinema

The Christophers is delicious

Steven Soderbergh’s The Christophers is a deliciously sly, twisty, darkly comedic take on the art world starring Ian McKellen who…

Classical

The British modernist who was airbrushed from history

Elsewhere in British music in 1960: William Walton was writing his Symphony No 2, Benjamin Britten his opera on Midsummer…

Classical

In defence of Hindemith

There’s a photo of Paul Hindemith with the pianist Artur Schnabel on hands and knees, surrounded by model railway track.…

Arts feature

Peter Shaffer should be up there with the greats

Commercial success has a way of corroding critical regard. The more popular a playwright becomes, the more the critical establishment…

Arts feature

How Winston Churchill painted himself out of the darkness

At Chartwell, Sir Winston Churchill’s home of 42 years, now owned by the National Trust, lies his painting studio. Reached…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie life

There are statistics and damn statistics, and the truth may lie somewhere between the two. The Economist recently touted that…

Aussie Life

Language

When Donald Trump says he is ready for military action he often says he (or, rather the US military) is…

More from life

The joy of iced buns

‘It’s just a hot dog bun with icing!’ the iced-bun detractors will shriek. I’m a lady with a lot of…

The turf

The secret to Andrew Lloyd Webber’s racehorse success

You meet an eclectic bunch of people in the horse-racing business. Yet it was at prep school 55 years ago…

Sport

Declan Rice is an island of decency in modern football

As all but the most tribal fruitcases would agree, Arsenal’s Declan Rice is an island of decency in the rather…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: how can I shut up a noisy fellow diner?

Q. I was lunching at a writers’ club in Lexington Street. It is a small but agreeable space. At one…

Real life

What do the French see in Ireland?

As the eco-tourism season got under way, the confused-looking French people began to arrive. They come to see ‘la nature’,…

Best life

True freedom is wearing someone else’s pants

Kyrgyzstan Forget the detailed itinerary – a 12-day trip that included the vertiginous 2,446-metre Kotorma pass on horseback – the…

Food

‘I wanted to lie face down in the hummus’: Erev reviewed

Erev is an Israeli restaurant in Notting Hill, though Israeli restaurants do not call themselves Israeli nowadays. They have rebranded…

Competition

Spectator Competition: Shrink away

Comp. 3449 invited you to psychoanalyse, in the manner of Freud/Jung etc, a 2026 phenomenon. In a small but accomplished…

No sacred cows

First they came for Mandelson…

At the time of writing, I haven’t seen the King’s Speech, but it’s a safe bet it will include a…