Trump’s sanctions will hit the ICC hard
Lego isn’t homophobic
My great-grandfather gave his name to Grenfell Tower
‘Our side is significantly sexier’: an interview with Germany’s most controversial politician
Cracking Copilot / How I took on Microsoft’s AI – and won
Books / The strange potency of cheap perfume
Meme me up / Why young MAGA supporters are flocking to Remilia
Latest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
Keir Starmer is caught in a Trump trap
Labour dodges scrutiny on efficiency savings
Kemi Badenoch has a secret weapon in the fight against Nigel Farage
Why Beckham’s wait for a knighthood goes on
Russia’s quest to woo Africa is paying off
Starmer will need a miracle to boost his ‘AI growth zones’
Can a second Kursk offensive give Ukraine bargaining power?
Can Ukraine stop the bombings at its draft offices?
The lesson Starmer should take from Trump’s foreign policy
Spectator TV Presents
How Britain turned its back on gender ideology
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
The brash shall inherit the Earth
From Spectator LifeMy great-grandfather gave his name to Grenfell Tower
From Spectator LifeThe time-poor woman’s perfect chocolate cake
From the magazineThe best way to approach sake
From the magazineSteve Coogan should stick to comedy
From Spectator LifeHow amusing to hear Steve Coogan and Emily Maitlis pontificate about the dreaded ‘establishment’ on Maitlis’s News Agents podcast recently. During a discussion about Coogan’s role as Brian Walden in Brian and Maggie – Channel 4’s two-part drama about Walden’s final, sensational interview with Margaret Thatcher in 1989 – the comedian admits that although he identifies with
Wagers for the weekend and the Cheltenham Festival
From Spectator LifeMagazine
This week's magazine
The insurgent
Morgan McSweeney is urging Keir Starmer to go for the kill
Morgan McSweeney is urging Keir Starmer to go for the kill
Morgan McSweeney, the Prime Minister’s Chief of Staff, does not immediately display the demeanour of a disruptor. He speaks softly, picks his phrases with care, and cultivates an unassuming image. But underneath the sober blue suit are the scars of a streetfighter. As a young man, McSweeney came to political maturity fighting the hard left in
Morgan McSweeney is urging Keir Starmer to go for the kill
Morgan McSweeney, the Prime Minister’s Chief of Staff, does not immediately display the demeanour of a disruptor. He speaks softly, picks his phrases with care, and cultivates an unassuming image. But underneath the sober blue suit are the scars of a streetfighter. As a young man, McSweeney came to political maturity fighting the hard left in
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
Stylish facsimile of Carol Reed’s film: Oliver!, at the Gielgud Theatre, reviewed
From the magazineOliver! directed by Matthew Bourne is billed as a ‘fully reconceived’ version of Lionel Bart’s musical. Very little seems to have been reconceived. This stylish and dynamic show develops like an unblemished copy of Carol Reed’s film. Fair enough. Punters want comfort, not novelty when they go to see a 65-year-old musical. Billy Jenkins, as
Stately, sly and well-mannered: BBC1’s Miss Austen reviewed
From the magazineFKA Twigs is the most interesting pop musician we have right now
From the magazineA cheaper, shinier, more processed Chris Stapleton: Brothers Osborne reviewed
From the magazineOpera North’s Flying Dutchman scores a full house in cliché bingo
From the magazineExtraordinary: The Seed of the Sacred Fig reviewed
From the magazineThe thankless art of the librettist
From the magazineCartoons
Cartoon
Cartoon
‘‘Panic over – he had gone to see The Brutalist.’’
Cartoon
Philip Patrick
Why Japan is best at whisky, tailoring, cheese, pastries… I could go on
From Spectator Life