Coffee House
Wind power is unnecessarily stretching the cost of living
The perfect news to greet a freezing Britain today — energy bills are set to take another hike thanks to a series of dodgy wind energy contracts. According to today’s… Continue reading
Briefing: Simplifying the state pension
Mexico must legalise drugs
Hostilities deepen in Whitehall Wars
Peers get ready to kill the boundaries bill
Lib Dems and Labour to push for changes to benefits uprating bill
Why the armed forces make young people proud
Blogs
Claws out for Caitlin Moran
The ladies of the London chatterati are at each other’s throats. Left-wing identity politics has been eating itself since the New Year, when the leading feminists of Fleet Street went… Continue reading
David Cameron’s Europe “strategy” is going to fail
The Duchess of Cambridge, defining a portrait
Mary Fitzpatrick made the BBC less ‘hideously white’
The Spectator’s new Shiva Naipaul Prize winner
Did Jimmy Savile nonce the entire country?
Scientologists trap us in the closet
Magazine
Britain’s accidental EU exit
If Britain leaves the European Union, historians will say that 30 June 2012 was when the great exit began. That day, David Cameron was due to write an article for… Read more
America’s strategic stupidity
Every few months, America’s four-star admirals and generals gather at a military base not far from Washington to participate in what General Martin E. Dempsey, Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman,… Read more
Stop the drugs war
‘They’re all bad, our politicians, all corrupt,’ said Maria, her cheery face dissolving into distaste. What about the new president, Peña Nieto? I ask. ‘That pretty boy? Ugh!’ It was… Read more
A hit man at 13
After a long wait in the visiting room of the maximum security wing of the ‘Gib Lewis Unit’, Rosalio Reta finally arrived for our interview. He was only five feet… Read more
Paying Osborne’s bills
In her early campaigning days as Conservative leader, Mrs Thatcher had the gift of being able to relate the national economy to the domestic finances of ordinary voters. The battle… Read more
Wedding hells
In the good old days of the gay liberation movement, in the 1970s and early 1980s, the excitement of challenging the orthodoxy attracted even the shy and apolitical to its… Read more
The great aid mystery
One of the more bizarre mysteries of contemporary British politics is the ironclad, almost fanatical intensity of the government’s commitment to foreign aid spending and the activities of DFID, the… Read more
Greening’s challenge
At first glance, it looked like very good news when David Cameron appointed Justine Greening as Secretary of State for International Development in his September 2012 reshuffle. Greening is an… Read more