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.
Hollowed out
The Spectator
CONTRIBUTORS
PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
DIARY
Nigel and the Gang of Four
THE SPECTATOR’S NOTES
Indefensible • How Keir Starmer dropped the ball on military spending
Sunrise Symphonies
Continent adrift • Europe remains in denial about its defence
The numbers game • Can Nato troops keep pace with their enemies?
Friends with benefits
Terminates here • The last bus out of Mousehole
Don’t underestimate the ‘stop Farage’ alliance
A right mess
BAROMETER
County crimes • On the trail of the organised gangs terrorising farmers
Crude awakening • David Lammy’s curious relationship with Guyanese Big Oil
The genius of Kenneth Williams
WRITER’S NOTEBOOK
My Epstein confession
Whistle blowers • Why football referees and banks should fear over-regulation
LETTERS
Nostalgia for the City’s banks and buildings is no bad thing
BOOKS & ARTS
Spirits of the Blitz • Philip Hensher is entranced by a fantastical novel set in war-torn London
A grand old democracy
Philosophical rambles
A quiet genius
A hardheaded romantic
Down the rushy glen
Mirror images
Deptford Strand
The art of conspiracy • A new exhibition fails to understand the appeal of mad theories, says Sam Kriss
Sunny delight
Natural born thriller
Strangeness and charm
Athenian rhapsody
Stranger things
An innocent man
Cairn
Radio & podcasts The write stuff
Jim Hacker rides again
Offal
Lloyd Evans
Melissa Kite
Charlie Brooks
Cabinet pudding
Freestyle World Championship
Wintry look
2740: Not so objective by Doc
My brush with Hope Not Hate
MICHAEL HEATH
The Winter Olympics are really delivering
DEAR MARY YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
Joy among the elves
Stele