Trump card / The Donald’s plans for the Middle East
Books / We are all people of faith, whether we realise it or not
Empire of Trump
The President’s plan to make America greater
The new censors / How I fell foul of YouTube’s fact-checkers
Books / The awful calamity of Stalin being a music lover
Beyond Brexit / Is Europe really faring better than Britain?
Television / Irritating but watchable: American Primeval reviewed
Latest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
High Court puts £1.3 billion in benefit savings in doubt
Regulators don’t create growth
Badenoch shuts down idea of Reform-Tory merger
Blue Labour founder jets off to Trump inauguration
Netanyahu: Hamas is backtracking on ceasefire
The questions that need answering on the Chagos Islands deal
Starmer’s support for Ukraine has become half-hearted at best
How the CCRC failed Andrew Malkinson
Starmer should bite the bullet and scrap the triple lock
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.
My wife earns more than me – and it doesn’t feel great
From the magazineThe unnecessary complexity of the World Test Championship
From the magazineHow The Traitors betrayed itself
From Spectator LifeWealth and hedonism are a fatal combination
From Spectator LifeHow to serve smelt
From the magazineDonald Trump has form with the smelt. In his 2016 presidential run, he complained that California’s authorities were prioritising the endangered fish (which are native to the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta) over farmers’ irrigation needs. ‘Is there a drought?’ he asked a private audience of farmers ahead of a rally. ‘No, we have plenty of
The victory of Instagram over food: Gallery at the Savoy reviewed
From the magazineMagazine
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