Diary / My plans for The Spectator
Amy Wax / My friend, Amy Wax, the pariah
Dragon’s den
Can Labour resist China’s embrace?
Power failure / Britain’s foreign policy is increasingly feeble
Books / How can Ireland survive the seismic changes of the past three decades?
Fighting talk / The ladies who punch
Television / A fashion series made by people who hate fashion: Apple TV+’s La Maison reviewed
Latest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
Pro-life buffer zone residents could face £10,000 fines
Ron DeSantis’s climate bill has nothing to do with Hurricane Milton
Labour under fire over Taylor Swift policing fiasco
Can HS2 be fixed?
It’s time to stop the war on Malbec
Wimbledon won’t be the same without line judges
The ‘Green Budget’ could leave Rachel Reeves red-faced
What’s the problem with zero-hour contracts?
Labour’s House of Lords peerage reform is just hot air
Spectator TV Presents
‘We’re giving up a strategic asset for no reason’ — Bob Seely on the Chagos Islands
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
An ode to lamplighting
From the magazineWhat horror does to us
From Spectator LifeLondon is a great Eastern European city
From Spectator LifeI’m finally a proper villager
From Spectator LifeAlan Clark’s wines were as remarkable as he was
From the magazineOù sont les bouteilles d’antan? For that matter, où sont les amis with whom one consumed them? These autumnally melancholic musings arose because a young friend asked me about Alan Clark. He had been reading the Diaries. Were they truthful? Was Alan really such a remarkable character? The answer was simple. An emphatic yes, on
The ladies who punch
From the magazineMagazine
This week's magazine
Dragon’s den
Can Labour resist China’s embrace?
Can Labour resist China’s embrace?
The Foreign Secretary David Lammy will touch down in Beijing next week to pay his respects. Next year, Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, is expected to do the same. We haven’t seen this level of deference to the Chinese Communist party since 2019. Back then, Philip Hammond heaped praise on his hosts. He endorsed their Belt
Can Labour resist China’s embrace?
The Foreign Secretary David Lammy will touch down in Beijing next week to pay his respects. Next year, Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, is expected to do the same. We haven’t seen this level of deference to the Chinese Communist party since 2019. Back then, Philip Hammond heaped praise on his hosts. He endorsed their Belt
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
Three great minds explore the enigmas of the universe
From the magazineIt sounds like a Tom Stoppard play. A big-shot philosopher meets a big-shot boffin by way of a big-shot writer to descant on the biggest of big-shot debates – what The Rigor of Angels’s subtitle calls ‘the Ultimate Nature of Reality’.True, William Egginton can’t match Stoppard for punchy one-liners, nor for puns and pratfalls and
Panning for music gold: The Catchers, by Xan Brooks, reviewed
From the magazineSmall-town mysteries: A Case of Matricide, by Graeme MacRae Burnet, reviewed
From the magazineHow is Arnold Wesker’s Roots, which resembles an Archers episode, considered a classic?
From the magazinePotato crisps and the British character
From the magazineThis UFO testimony had me hooked
From the magazineFog, tea and full English breakfasts: Monet and London, at the Courtauld, reviewed
From the magazineCartoons
‘‘I think some kind of party is in order’’
Cartoon
‘‘If Gary Lineker goes as well they’re in trouble.’’
Cartoon
‘‘I did this one in a four-day compressed week.’’
Cartoon