Streets of shame / Britain’s shopfronts are a national embarrassment
The Spectator’s notes / Channel 4 shouldn’t get to decide the next Archbishop
Wasting away
Launching the Spectator Project Against Frivolous Funding
Books / Is the future of democracy in the balance?
Sorry state / My impossible task as ‘minister for efficiency’
Books / Putin’s éminence grise: The Wizard of the Kremlin, by Giuliano da Empoli, reviewed
In search / The mysterious life of John R. Bradley
Latest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
How long will Sturgeon cling on in Holyrood?
Will the Munich attack lead to a crackdown on asylum seekers?
How Prevent failed David Amess
Car rams crowd in Munich, injuring at least 28
Reeves faced expenses probe in previous job
Labour MP WhatsApp scandal worsens
Does Rachel Reeves’s industrial strategy even exist?
Judges have finally backed a Christian who was sacked for LGBT posts
UK recession fears ease but Rachel Reeves has little to celebrate
Spectator TV Presents
Rebuilding Gaza & a deal with Putin – Professor John Mearsheimer on Trump
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
Smoking is sexy again
From the magazineBritain’s shopfronts are a national embarrassment
From the magazineWhy Gen Z worships the pickle
From the magazineWhat kind of woman envies her daughter?
From Spectator LifeHow to get a table at Audley Public House
From the magazineThe Audley Public House is on the corner of North Audley Street and Mount Street in Mayfair, opposite the Purdey gun shop where you can buy a gun and a cashmere cape, because the world has changed. The Audley is a vast pale-pink Victorian castle, and it meets Mayfair in grandeur and prettiness. If the
Emperor Trump and the spectacle of the Super Bowl
From the magazineMagazine
This week's magazine
Wasting away
Launching the Spectator Project Against Frivolous Funding
Introducing Spaff: The Spectator Project Against Frivolous Funding
All too often, the Prime Minister recently lamented, Britain’s public servants are happy languishing in the ‘tepid bath of managed decline’. There is, however, one area in which Britain’s public servants are dynamic, innovative and world–leading: at spaffing gazillions of pounds of taxpayers’ money on wasteful projects which are variously inane, insane and indefensible. The
Introducing Spaff: The Spectator Project Against Frivolous Funding
All too often, the Prime Minister recently lamented, Britain’s public servants are happy languishing in the ‘tepid bath of managed decline’. There is, however, one area in which Britain’s public servants are dynamic, innovative and world–leading: at spaffing gazillions of pounds of taxpayers’ money on wasteful projects which are variously inane, insane and indefensible. The
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
Strangely moving: Bridget Jones – Mad About the Boy reviewed
From the magazineBridget Jones: Mad About the Boy is the fourth outing for our heroine as played by Renée Zellweger and I was not especially hopeful. Who can still be bothered? Particularly after that silly Thai jail business (second film) and then all that flailing about in the mud at a music festival (third). But this takes
Is work really more fun than fun?
From the magazineThe art of the anti-love song
From the magazineIf you have two hours to spare, spend it anywhere but here: The Years reviewed
From the magazineDoes Sadler’s Wells really need a lavish new building?
From the magazineAre these performances of the Bach cantatas the best on record?
From the magazineTarot isn’t very old or esoteric – but it does work
From the magazineCartoons
‘‘Oh, that’s by Ed Miliband.’’
Cartoon
‘‘Oh, just sitting back and letting algorithms do all the stock trading.’’
Cartoon
‘‘It appeared in our account the minute the school started charging VAT on fees.’’
Cartoon