‘The Spectator has, since its founding in 1828, always stood on the side of free expression and thought. Without those freedoms, civilized society will quickly fall apart.’
Wayward electors run in our family
From the Magazine
Back in 2016, only three Democrats made it to Iowa
From the Magazine
In the age of social media, we have the largest mobs in the history of mankind
From the Magazine
Liberal journalists are so desperate to be canceled they’ve begun to form secret societies around the theme
From the Magazine
Those who believe Britain can only trade effectively with the nearest markets know little history
By Robert Tombs
From the Magazine
The Tehran students were chanting in the streets: ‘Our enemy is right here, they’re lying that it’s America’
By Paul Wood
From the Magazine
A US-Britain trade deal would be a boon for Boris Johnson and Donald Trump
By Ross Clark
From the Magazine
Bars that served me were harassed and ‘Hate Has No Home Here’ signs appeared on my lawn
From the Magazine
The kind of people who want to cancel someone are looking not for an apology, but for vengeance
By Amber Duke
From the Magazine
Macron needs help and his new best friend, bizarrely, is Britain’s prime minister
From the Magazine
The emotional anti-war right is susceptible to its own wishful thinking about the irenic intentions of Iran
From the Magazine
Let’s make 2020 the year cancel culture gets canceled
By Toby Young
From the Magazine
The silence of decent people allows the bullies to get away with it
From the Magazine
Cancel culture is real. It destroys lives, ruins careers, causes suicide and silences reasonable debate
From the Magazine
Books + Arts
Euphoria is doing for young people’s morality what British Bomber Command and the USAAF did for the architecture of Dresden
By Taki
From the Magazine
The guitarist and songwriter Pete Townshend talks to Sam Leith about madness, sleep bubbles and his new novel
By Sam Leith
From the Magazine
D.J. Taylor tracks down the proofreaders and heartbreakers who were the toast of Blitz-era London
By D.J. Taylor
From the Magazine
Chandler’s California is a cultural desert stretching along the western edge of a continental wasteland
From the Magazine
Priapic shower-stalking and domestic haunting were never Wells’s style – not on the page, anyway
By Will Lloyd
From the Magazine
From the Magazine
By 1969, Churchill was dead and the Kinks, as an album group, were toast
By Luke Haines
From the Magazine
The banning of Roman Polanski’s film about the Dreyfus affair is history repeating itself
From the Magazine
Tom Stoppard talks about inspiration, growing older and his new play, Leopoldstadt
From the Magazine
A House in the Mountains: The Women Who Liberated Italy from Fascism by Caroline Moorehead reviewed
By Clare Mulley
From the Magazine
The Frozen River: Seeking Silence in the Himalaya by James Crowden reviewed
By Mark Cocker
From the Magazine
A conversation with Christopher Caldwell about America today
From the Magazine
Despite everything, I have so much to be grateful for
From the Magazine
The comedian on why he will never apologize for his jokes
By Andrew Doyle
From the Magazine
Life
I’ve wintered here all my life and during that time Vermont has, like old Digby’s marital status, seen three permutations
By Digby Dent
From the Magazine
At first glimpse there appears to be no serious backlash against incomers
From the Magazine
Some call Chatham slightly precious, too sure of its own perfection. They have a point
From the Magazine
If you have a ‘type’ when it comes to matters of the heart, then your narrow-mindedness sickens me
From the Magazine
The British election of 2019 offers them an obvious warning
By David Frum
From the Magazine
In the vacuous, conservative world of Instagram, it’s just easier to accept that the color pink is shorthand for femininity
From the Magazine
Food and Drink
Hummus is the cement of the Levant and claimed, like the land, by both Israelis and Palestinians
By Josh Glancy
From the Magazine
Animals deserve to be treated well in life and that consumers deserve to know how animals are treated
By Ben Sixsmith
From the Magazine