Immigration / Don’t expect an end to Europe’s migrant crisis any time soon
Starmer out / Why the general election petition matters
Assisted dying / Why I cancelled my trip to Dignitas
Troubled waters / Will China soon rule the waves?
From the magazineThe Wiki Man / Why forcing a return to the office won’t work
From the magazineThe Descartes question / Am I alone in thinking?
From the magazinePlayground police / In defence of trolls
From Spectator LifeBrutalism is back / The second life of Colonel Seifert
From Spectator LifeMidlife vices / The rise of the reckless divorce columnist
From Spectator LifeTroubled waters / Will China soon rule the waves?
From the magazineThe Wiki Man / Why forcing a return to the office won’t work
From the magazineThe Descartes question / Am I alone in thinking?
From the magazinePlayground police / In defence of trolls
From Spectator LifeBrutalism is back / The second life of Colonel Seifert
From Spectator LifeMidlife vices / The rise of the reckless divorce columnist
From Spectator LifeLatest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
Why are the police allowing trans officers to strip-search women?
The truth about Labour’s ‘class war’
Why does Oxford not Cambridge dominate British politics?
Why Trump shouldn’t boot trans people out of the military
Did Covid vaccines really save 12 million lives?
The fall of English Literature
The insufferable rise of the sportswriter bore
Is swimming racist?
Why farmers – not the Treasury – are right about inheritance tax
Spectator TV Presents
Rory Sutherland on Jaguar's bizarre rebrand and why they've abandoned their British roots
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
The rise of the reckless divorce columnist
From Spectator LifeHollywood is quietly welcoming Trump
From Spectator LifeThe fundamental flaw in Britain’s maternity care
From Spectator LifeWould we even notice a farmers’ strike?
From Spectator LifeIn defence of trolls
From Spectator LifeIt’s not just that the lunatics – sorry, ‘neuro-diverse’ – have taken over the asylum. They’ve taken over the asylum and started walking on their hands, and they’re determined to make us do the same or feel ashamed for staying the right way up. That is what I thought, anyway, when I read that children
The surprising second life of Colonel Seifert
From Spectator LifeMagazine
This week's magazine
Wild Wes
Streeting is causing trouble for Starmer
Wild Wes: Streeting is causing trouble for Starmer
Avote on assisted dying was supposed to be one of the easiest reforms for Keir Starmer’s government. To many, including the Prime Minister himself, a law allowing terminally ill patients to choose to die would be a self-evidently progressive and historically significant change. It would mean Britain could transcend the objections of a religious minority
Wild Wes: Streeting is causing trouble for Starmer
Avote on assisted dying was supposed to be one of the easiest reforms for Keir Starmer’s government. To many, including the Prime Minister himself, a law allowing terminally ill patients to choose to die would be a self-evidently progressive and historically significant change. It would mean Britain could transcend the objections of a religious minority
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
A spectacular failure: Royal Ballet’s MaddAddam reviewed
From the magazineAdapting ballets out of plot-heavy novels set in fantasy locations and populated with multiple characters is a rubbish idea. The profound truth of such a proposal is forcefully borne out by the wretched muddle of Wayne McGregor’s MaddAddam, an over-inflated farrago drawn from a triptych of visionary fictions by Margaret Atwood. McGregor – hugely talented
What a remarkably bad electric guitar player Bob Dylan is
From the magazineAvoids the breathless hype of so many podcasts: Finding Mr Fox reviewed
From the magazineHow did Wolf Hall escape the attentions of the BBC’s diversity commissars?
From the magazineStimulating little exhibition: Scent and the Art of the pre-Raphaelites reviewed
From the magazineDazzling: Marc-André Hamelin’s Hammerklavier
From the magazineHeart-warming but safe biographical drama: Going for Gold, at Park90, reviewed
From the magazineCartoons
Cartoon
‘‘It’s grown organically’’
Cartoon
‘‘Let your dad rest. He’s spent all day pounding the tweets...’’
Cartoon