In conversation / ‘Not all suffering can be relieved’: A debate on assisted dying
Strike out / Ukraine’s Nato fantasy
Reeves’s gambit
The Chancellor’s Budget dilemma
Books / The rollercoaster ride of the world’s most reckless investor
Television / A hit – but please don’t pretend it’s feminist: Disney+’s Rivals reviewed
Food / A teashop like no other: Sally Lunn’s Historic Eating House reviewed
WWII / The rehabilitation of evil
Latest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
JK Rowling deserves a peerage
It’s shameful that an army veteran was convicted over a prayer for his dead son
Let’s see if ‘Patriotic Millionaires’ really want more tax
Badenoch: I’d give JK Rowling a peerage
Zelensky’s ‘victory plan’ is unlikely to impress Europe
Reeves’s Budget is looking increasingly messy
The strange timing of Jacinda Ardern’s damehood
How much trouble is Rachel Reeves in?
The slippery slope of assisted dying
Spectator TV Presents
Britain's race problem: what politicians aren't telling you about multiculturalism
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
The hypnotic competitiveness of Sir Ben Ainslie
From the magazineMy life as a historian of the Great War
From Spectator LifePrivate schools brought this tax hike on themselves
From Spectator LifeI think we’re turning Japanese
From Spectator LifeThe secret to making great oysters Rockefeller
From the magazineThere’s nothing more intriguing than a closely guarded secret recipe. Coca-Cola and KFC are two famous examples, with the precise ingredients for the soda syrup and special coating kept in guarded vaults: the story is that those who hold the information aren’t allowed to travel on the same plane in case of disaster. Lea &
A teashop like no other: Sally Lunn’s Historic Eating House reviewed
From the magazineMagazine
This week's magazine
Reeves’s gambit
The Chancellor’s Budget dilemma
Rachel Reeves has backed herself into a corner on the Budget
As a championship chess player, Rachel Reeves must know that the first few moves can be some of the most important of the game. In preparing her Budget, she appears to be starting her tenure as Chancellor from a position of strength. Her background in the Bank of England gives her institutional credibility, and the
Rachel Reeves has backed herself into a corner on the Budget
As a championship chess player, Rachel Reeves must know that the first few moves can be some of the most important of the game. In preparing her Budget, she appears to be starting her tenure as Chancellor from a position of strength. Her background in the Bank of England gives her institutional credibility, and the
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
Almeida’s Look Back in Anger is flawless
From the magazineStrange title, Juno and the Paycock. Sean O’Casey’s family drama is about a hard-pressed Dublin matriarch, Juno, whose husband Jack ‘the paycock’ Boyle refuses to support his family and spends all day drinking with his penniless cronies. The producers have labelled the show an ‘Irish masterpiece’, which raises the bar. Mark Rylance plays Jack as
A hit – but please don’t pretend it’s feminist: Disney+’s Rivals reviewed
From the magazineLess Riot Grrl than Riot Lladies Who Lunch: Sleater-Kinney’s Little Rope reviewed
From the magazineYou’re unlikely to see a better case made for this Bernstein double bill
From the magazineSerious and gripping – though Trump disagrees: The Apprentice reviewed
From the magazineAn uncompromising master: David Gilmour, at the Royal Albert Hall, reviewed
From the magazineI’m done with Hofesh Shechter
From the magazineCartoons
‘‘The worst bit is the life admin.’’
Cartoon
‘‘Still no sign of a ceasefire.’’
Cartoon
Cartoon