The Spectator is Britain’s oldest and most influential magazine, with incisive political and economic analysis, unrivalled books and arts reviews, and unmissable lifestyle writing, plus the funniest cartoons. It’s more cocktail party than political party, and we’d love it if you joined us.
Lazarus’s thirtieth
Bondi exposed
The Spectator Australia
CONTRIBUTORS
The Jim & Katy Show • Are they now the weakest link?
Business/Robbery, etc • Why a bullying China wants its Darwin port
Howard’s 30th anniversary • Remembering the last worthwhile government this country had
Is this really our worst government ever? • It’s certainly up there
Israel’s actual failing • Where judges give themselves the power to rule
The American project endures • The tariff decision proves the wisdom of the US Supreme Court
Albo brings back the dobbers • Informing on and denouncing your fellow citizens is now Australian law
Carry on Caliphate • Radical insurgents will never leave us alone
Return of the zombie guerilla writers • Adelaide’s toxic talkfest is back from the dead
Degrees of frustration
PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
DIARY
Quid pro quo • The troubling closeness of the Treasury and the City
My Cavafy Poem
In bed together • The writers of HBO’s Industry on bankers and politicians
My neurological condition
Bloc parties • A guide to Britain’s new radical right
Radio active • Our first encounter with aliens is closer than ever
‘Idiots, sycophants and traitors’ • Inside Russia’s rotten army
BAROMETER
Trial by outrage • Ghislaine’s case shows why we must not abandon due process
Aussie rules • Young Brits now aspire to be more Australian
Leader board
The perils of idiocracy
Operation Certain Death • The daring plan to reclaim Chagos
The real reason I left Britain
LETTERS
The quango stopping London building new homes
The Welsh chancer • Henry Tudor’s claim to the English throne was dangerously tenuous, and securing it came at a heavy cost, both to himself and the country, says David Crane
What the bellhop saw
Woke wars
A Poetic Connection
Close but no cigar
Venice’s dark backwater
Painting like a banshee
Eliminate the negative
Power dressing
To read is to love
Savage beauty • Architect, adventurer, playwright and spy, John Vanbrugh defies taxonomy, says Jonathan Meades
Relative values
Vanity fayre
The man who would be King
Bland ahoy
An inconvenient truth
Don’t Take It For Granted
God’s little artist
A hoard of lost treasure
Moustaches
Dolce vita
Real life
Aussie life
Language
Remembering Jan Timman
Hope stings
2741: Unsurpassable
What’s Starmer’s game with the Lords?
The Battle for Britain
It’s time to give the Welsh their due
DEAR MARY YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
Liquid gods
Both things can be true
Pauline, Tribune of the Disillusioned • Importing Islamist radicalism from Cairo to Lakemba