The UK still hasn’t come to terms with the Muslim Brotherhood
How Pakistan’s rape culture led to the UK grooming gangs
How to eat like a president
The Donald’s plans for the Middle East
Diaries / How Unity Mitford seduced Hitler
Flying high / Prisons have become airports for drones
Scotland / What’s behind Reform’s surge in Scotland?
Latest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
Sunday shows round-up: Labour reacts to the Gaza ceasefire
Gaza’s fragile peace
Trump is coming for Europe on defence
How France’s Jimmy Savile also got away with his evil
How assisted dying changed my mind on religion
True-blue New Yorkers are bracing themselves for Trump’s return
Will MAGA push out Mandelson?
Trump’s plan for day one
The truth about a Tory-Reform pact
Spectator TV Presents
Should Gerry Adams get compensation from the British taxpayer?
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
Partridges and the slow death of Chelsea
From Spectator LifeA big weekend for two young trainers
From Spectator LifeI am facing a future in a wheelchair
From Spectator LifeHow to serve smelt
From the magazineHow to eat like a president
From Spectator LifeJohn F. Kennedy opted to serve New England lobster, Ronald Reagan a California-inspired garden salad – and James Buchanan 400 gallons of oysters. Held at Statuary Hall in the US Capitol, the inaugural luncheon for a new president is as much part of inauguration day as the swearing-in ceremony and the inaugural address. Nixon enjoyed
Rachel Reeves should not pack her lunch
From Spectator LifeMagazine
This week's magazine
Empire of Trump
The President’s plan to make America greater
Empire of Trump: the President’s plan to make America greater
‘The mission of the United States is one of benevolent assimilation,’ said William McKinley, America’s 25th commander-in-chief, who happens to be one of Donald Trump’s favourite presidents. Trump, who barely dodged a bullet in 2024, shares a number of traits with McKinley, who was assassinated in 1901: Scottish blood, ferocious work ethic, an affinity with
Empire of Trump: the President’s plan to make America greater
‘The mission of the United States is one of benevolent assimilation,’ said William McKinley, America’s 25th commander-in-chief, who happens to be one of Donald Trump’s favourite presidents. Trump, who barely dodged a bullet in 2024, shares a number of traits with McKinley, who was assassinated in 1901: Scottish blood, ferocious work ethic, an affinity with
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
The stupidity of the classical piano trio
From the magazineIt’s a right mess, the classical piano trio; the unintended consequence of one of musical history’s more frustrating twists. When the trio first evolved, in the age of Haydn, the piano (or at any rate, its frail domestic forebear) was the junior partner, and the two string instruments, violin and cello, were added to make
Is the tide turning on restitution?
From the magazineAs good a Dylan biopic as you’ll ever get: A Complete Unknown reviewed
From the magazineCheerless and fussy: The Tempest, at Theatre Royal Drury Lane, reviewed
From the magazineThe brilliance of Cicely Mary Barker
From the magazineA new solo album by a former Beatle that – astonishingly – demands repeated plays
From the magazineA feel-good classic: The Armie HammerTime Podcast reviewed
From the magazineCartoons
‘‘Do you really want to know?’’
Cartoon
‘‘If Labour ring, tell them we’re out.’’
Cartoon
‘‘I’m sorry, but we’re ending our DEI programme.’’
Cartoon