Other options for the economy?
The Spectator Australia
by Natasha Poole
2h ago
In the UK, inflation figures were stated to have been disappointing, with CPI falling down from 3.4 per cent to 3.2 instead of the anticipated 3.1 per cent. Unfortunately, interest rates sitting at 5.5 per cent seem to be compromising the average person’s purchasing power and one’s ability to meet day-to-day expenses. What other options could be explored, therefore? Interest rate reductions are certainly not off the table for later this year. Excessive spending might be, but that is another area altogether… Ultimately, decreasing them ought to boost productivity and doing so for a mo ..read more
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Whisper it, but Rishi Sunak has had a good week
The Spectator Australia
by Patrick O’Flynn
4h ago
If you have been doing as badly as Rishi Sunak has as prime minister, then it doesn’t take much to register a notable improvement. Yet there is no point in his detractors denying that over the past week he has done just that. First, he got stuck into the issue of Britain’s burgeoning ‘sick note culture’. Left-wing brickbats predictably followed. Lib Dem leader Ed Davey accused him of ‘attempting to blame the British people for his own government’s failures’, while Labour’s Matthew Pennycook complained that he was pursuing a ‘cheap headline’. But headlines are headlines and if they are cheap th ..read more
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Taylor Swift is a rotter
The Spectator Australia
by Julie Burchill
4h ago
Taylor Swift has released another album spilling the beans on her private life. ‘I’d written so much tortured poetry in the past two years and wanted to share it all with you,’ she says. Her fans are lapping up The Tortured Poets Department, but her critics say dishing the dirt on her ex boyfriends isn’t fair. Swift is famous for two things; being so massively successful that a musical visit by her can boost a country’s GDP, and for writing snarky songs about her exes. There is something very appealing about the extremes at play here; the former so grown-up and the second so teenage. Why do p ..read more
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A fairytale of Luton: why the Hatters deserve to stay in the Premier League
The Spectator Australia
by Rakib Ehsan
4h ago
As the Premier League season draws to a nail-biting close at both ends of the table, my hometown club of Luton Town FC is still in with a shout of surviving the drop back to the Championship. The club is one point from safety with four games to play. Staying in the Premier League is vital not just for LTFC but for the town itself. It is safe to say that Luton doesn’t have the most positive reputation; a running joke is that most people visit Luton to fly right out of it from the international airport. My hometown all too often ranks highly when it comes to lists on the worst places to live in ..read more
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How Ukraine will use American aid
The Spectator Australia
by Michael Evans
4h ago
The Kyiv government will need to rush to make use of the new batch of American weapons coming to Ukraine. With the much-delayed aid available at last, Ukraine will have to build up its defences to withstand a Russian offensive in the summer, and make enough headway to prove to the US – and in particular a sceptical Donald Trump – that all this taxpayers’ money is being well spent. US officials say the objectives have not changed. But there is less talk of victory for Kyiv But whether the money and weapons will buy victory for Kyiv remains doubtful. Russia’s invading force has been making lim ..read more
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Life was better in the 1990s
The Spectator Australia
by Gareth Roberts
4h ago
Does anyone else miss the nineties terribly? Everything seemed simpler in that pre-internet era of The Fast Show, the band Suede and heaving nightclubs. Twenty-five years ago today, one of the defining films of that decade – Notting Hill – held its premiere in London. In the years since, we’ve made progress, of sorts: technology has improved immeasurably and we’re all living longer. But are we any happier? I’m not convinced. It’s true that the 1990s weren’t perfect: there was a sprinkling of identity-based grievance and envy, but it was still safely contained in the universities. We genuinely ..read more
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The King’s improving health is a relief for the country
The Spectator Australia
by Alexander Larman
4h ago
Today it was announced that, after a very positive response to his treatment for cancer, King Charles will resume public-facing duties next week. The statement went on to say that both he and the Queen will be making a joint visit to a cancer treatment centre next Tuesday, in a conscious nod to the help that he has been receiving over the most recent months in his illness. He will also be hosting the Emperor and Empress of Japan for a state visit in June, all being well. It concluded that ‘as the first anniversary of the coronation approaches, Their Majesties remain deeply grateful for the man ..read more
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Sadiq Khan should be ashamed of his attack on the Chief Rabbi
The Spectator Australia
by Stephen Daisley
4h ago
A while back, Lee Anderson got himself into trouble for claiming Islamists had ‘got control’ of Sadiq Khan. Levelling said charge at London’s Mayor was said to be ‘Islamophobic’ but surely more important is that it was wrong. Khan is neither an Islamist nor under their sway. He is a standard-issue identity-politics progressive, and with that comes a toxic farrago of communalism, victimhood narratives and offence opportunism. It is Khan’s identity-politics progressivism that was on display when he implied that comments by Sir Ephraim Mirvis were motivated by anti-Muslim prejudice. In the space ..read more
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Germany’s AfD has become its own worst enemy
The Spectator Australia
by Lisa Haseldine
4h ago
As the German AfD’s European election campaign kicks off tomorrow, the far-right party’s leadership could be forgiven for counting down to polling day in June with dread. This campaign launch marks the end of a torrid fortnight for the party that is threatening to jeopardise the AfD’s future in Brussels. Two of the party’s top politicians have been embroiled in foreign influence scandals that have plunged the party into crisis. On 19 April, Der Spiegel reported that Petr Bystron, the AfD’s second-choice party list candidate at the European elections, was caught in a sting operation receiving ..read more
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How to stop China spying on our universities
The Spectator Australia
by Rory Cormac
4h ago
Our universities are not safe from the messy realities of spies and geopolitical competition. The most infamous Soviet spy ring in history – the Cambridge Five – was recruited from, obviously, Cambridge University, back in the 1930s. Kim Philby and co. went on to share all sorts of damaging secret information with Britain’s Cold War adversary. There is an obvious solution The threat has evolved, and hostile states like China are now targeting academia to steal sensitive research from the UK’s world class universities. UK-based scholars are at the cutting edge of research into things lik ..read more
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