How Santa came to recruit his elves
A Christmas Carol is the gift that keeps on giving
There’s a reason we only eat Christmas food at Christmas
In defence of faith
The Spectator’s notes / The joy of our village Christmas play
Priest’s notebook / What The Spectator taught Benjamin Franklin
Books / Modern-day ghosts: Haunted Tales, by Adam Macqueen, reviewed
Latest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
The plight facing Gaza’s Christians
Gaffe-prone Labour spend £17,000 on media training
South Africa dreams of a black Christmas
Let’s hope Donald Trump doesn’t mess it up
Australia’s godless Christmas
Why this Jew loves Christmas
Giorgio Perlasca’s Christmas in wartime Budapest
Reform is rattling the establishment
Wales exam board removes Steinbeck book from curriculum
Spectator TV Presents
Douglas Murray on Britain's riots, the Democrats' downfall & Europe's 'far right' – 2024 archives
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
The curious history of the Christmas cracker
From Spectator LifeBets at Ascot and Haydock tomorrow
From Spectator LifeWhere do you stand on ‘I was sat’?
From Spectator LifeWere Boney M the weirdest pop act of all time?
From Spectator LifeThere’s a reason we only eat Christmas food at Christmas
From Spectator LifeThe 1990s comedy series the Royle Family includes a perfect scene in which Barbara says she won’t bother getting a turkey the following year, as nobody actually likes it. Everyone looks horrified. But she’s right. Advocaat, mince pies, Christmas pudding, Christmas cake (especially the marzipan) cranberry sauce, and balls of sausage meat made into stuffing
What’s your Christmas Eve pub tribe?
From Spectator LifeMagazine
This week's magazine
Christmas special
Javier Milei • Cate Blanchett • Ayaan Hirsi Ali • Rick Rubin • Tom Holland ... and more
‘The public sector is the illness’: Javier Milei on his first year in office
Buenos Aires ‘I never wind down,’ says Argentina’s President Javier Milei when we meet in his Presidential Office at the Casa Rosada. ‘I work all day, practically… I get up at 6 a.m., I take a shower and at 7 a.m. I am already at my desk working. And I work all the way until
‘The public sector is the illness’: Javier Milei on his first year in office
Buenos Aires ‘I never wind down,’ says Argentina’s President Javier Milei when we meet in his Presidential Office at the Casa Rosada. ‘I work all day, practically… I get up at 6 a.m., I take a shower and at 7 a.m. I am already at my desk working. And I work all the way until
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
Carols are much weirder than we think
From the magazineWhy, my sharp-minded colleague Tom Utley once asked after a Telegraph Christmas Carol service, should anyone think God would abhor the Virgin’s womb? He was talking about the line in ‘O come, all ye faithful’ that goes: ‘Lo, he abhors not the Virgin’s womb.’ Wasn’t it a bit weird? At last I found the answer
Superb: Ruination, at the Linbury Theatre, reviewed
From the magazineWhen will Ronald Reagan get the recognition he deserves?
From the magazineMeet the king of comic opera
From the magazineThomas Kyd wasn’t a patch on Shakespeare
From the magazineThe rotten core of Credit Suisse
From the magazineVivid, noble and bouyant: AAM’s Messiah reviewed
From the magazineCartoons
‘‘You missed your green targets.’’
Cartoon
Cartoon
Cartoon