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.
The virus of anti-Semitism
The Spectator
CONTRIBUTORS
PORTRAIT OF THE WEEK
DIARY
18 ways to save your political career
THE SPECTATOR'S NOTES
Starmergeddon • Labour is hurtling further left
Four Seasons
Horror storeys • Get ready for the City’s ugliest new building
The secret of our footballing success? Greed
Death trap • Russians no longer believe Putin’s war propaganda
Relieving taxation
Fan fiction • Why are groupies so weird?
We don’t need another ‘conversation’
BAROMETER
Unwellness • Cancer is rocketing among younger people
FARMING NOTEBOOK
Let’s ditch the idea of the ‘black vote’
Mothers’ ruin • Maternity care is in a state of crisis
The Signal Box Revisited
LETTERS
Don’t blame Trump for food price hikes and cancelled flights
BOOKS & ARTS
The trials of Lady Chatterley • D.H. Lawrence would have been mortified by the tacky merchandise spawned by his last novel, says Frances Wilson
All aboard the QE2
Angel or demon?
A cup of wisdom
Suicidal thoughts
The last line of defence
The changing face of warfare
Costume dramas
Their satanic majesties
A whole new ball game
Fallow Deer
Flower shows • Melanie McDonagh on three new plant-based treats
She wore it well
Make mine a triple
Turning Japanese
Put a spell on you
The art of noise
Same old, same old
Hare brained
Fridge magnets
No life
Real life
Wild life
SPECTATOR WINE
Roman conquest
Laughter lines
2751: Transmission
The left needn’t worry about the Reform apocalypse
MICHAEL HEATH
The ‘airport effect’ that’s ruining modern life
YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED
My antidote to picky bits
Pivot