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Wednesday 19 January 2011

Telegraph Columnists

The Telegraph's opinion writers, among them Charles Moore, Simon Heffer and Benedict Brogan, inform and entertain with their analysis and commentary on the conduct of Britain's political class, this country's relations with the rest of the world, and how its people live and work.

Getting beaten up in cyberspace does no one much harm

Internet debate can be coarse, but it really does hold journalists and politicians to account, writes Boris Johnson.

The last thing the Lords needs is a mass of elected members

Nick Clegg's proposed reforms will keep talented people out of the Upper House, writes Simon Heffer.

Read Benedict Brogan's columns and Telegraph blog

Benedict Brogan is the Daily Telegraph's deputy editor. Read his columns and blog posts on his Telegraph blog.

Read Peter Oborne's columns and Telegraph blog

Peter Oborne is the Daily Telegraph's chief political commentator. Read his columns and blog posts on his Telegraph blog.

Many black swans, but Cable is the turkey

In a year of big surprises, how long before the Business Secretary is stuffed, asks Jeff Randall.

London to Edinburgh by electric car: it was quicker by stagecoach

The BBC's stunt of taking an electric Mini to Edinburgh reveals just how impractical rechargeable cars are, writes Christopher Booker.

Barack Obama captured the mood of a nation. Can David Cameron do the same?

The president's speech in Tuscon showed the transforming power of language - a power that David Cameron has thus far been unable to master, argues Janet Daley.

Rowan Pelling

Sally Bercow: Behind every great man...

As the Speakers' wife rushes to her husband's defence, she tells Bryony Gordon why she believes she's the perfect political spouse.

The Tories couldn’t deliver goods without Lib Dems

The Tory Right is wilfully blind to the fact that it is getting most of what it wants from a Coalition that it hates, argues Matthew d'Ancona.

Michael Deacon

The battle to understand cancer

The Nobel laureate biologist Sir Tim Hunt tells Liz Hunt about the battle to understand why cancer develops.

The dead hand of the law strikes again

The admonition of Richard Tremelling is tragic for it being no great surprise, writes Philip Johnston.

Even the popular are not safe from the sack

These days, your favourite actor from 'The Archers' is just as much at risk as anyone else, writes Vicki Woods.

Christopher Howse

Mark Kennedy got one of the better undercover assignments

An undercover mission that involves sleeping with as many nubile green women as possible? Sign me up, says Nigel Farndale.

Children accused of witchcraft

Sacred Mysteries: Christopher Howse examines a new study of the response to fears of child possession among settlers in Britain

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Am I going senile?

Disturbed by her forgetfulness, Bryony Gordon turns to Dr Kawashima's Brain Training for Nintendo DSi XL.

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