Spectator Australia · Mark Harman
A literary warning about the perils of Kafka from a magazine whose real contribution to alienation is its subscription renewal process.
The Spectator's worried about the catastrophic consequences of reading Kafka. Mate, the catastrophic consequences are reading the Spectator — at least Kafka warned you the bureaucracy was the problem before he made you part of it.
Spectator Australia · Robin Simcox
As Tony Blair contested a third election in 2005, the Labour government’s popularity was in tatters. The divisions in the…
The post How Gaza became one of the biggest issues of the local elections appeared first on The Spectator Australia.
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A British commentator in a British magazine's Australian edition explaining British local elections to Australians — the Spectator's colonial franchise model is a bloke in Surrey shouting at a bloke in Sydney about a bloke in Bradford. Gaza's the subject; the nostalgia is the product.
Spectator Australia · Jawad Iqbal
A British commentator in the Australian Spectator speculates on Iranian leadership from London — the colonial franchise model exports opinion and calls it analysis.
The Spectator asking who's really leading Iran is like a bloke who's never been to the pub demanding to know who's behind the bar. Jawad Iqbal in London, published in Sydney, speculating about Tehran — three degrees of separation and not one of them useful. Trump extends a ceasefire and a British columnist reckons he's cracked the code. Mate, nobody's leading Iran to you because you're not in the room.
SMH · Matthew Knott
A US military leader warns that China is racing ahead in space weaponry, framing the orbital domain as the next theatre of great-power rivalry.
A visiting American general flies in to tell us the Chinese have built space weapons, and the press transcribes it like stenographers at a revival meeting. Every decade the threat moves up another floor — land, sea, air, cyber, now the vacuum of space — and every decade the answer is the same: buy more of their kit. We haven't had an independent strategic thought since Curtin looked to America. Now we're looking to America to tell us what to look at.
Guardian Australia · Presented by Tom McIlroy. Produced by Daniel Semo. Executive producer Allison Chan
The government announces the biggest NDIS reforms since inception, cutting at least 160,000 participants over four years while lifting defence spending — Butler calls it 'necessary'.
Gillard built the scheme on the promise nobody would be left behind. Butler's now explaining which 160,000 get left behind, while defence gets another hundred billion for submarines that'll arrive when the participants being booted today are drawing the pension. The scheme isn't unsustainable — it's just losing the Canberra arithmetic contest to a frigate.
Spectator Australia · Klaus Dodds
A commentary piece invoking 19th-century explorer David Livingstone's disdain for 'easy chair geographers' to skewer Trump's remote-control approach to Iran policy.
Trump's doing foreign policy with a globe he got for Christmas. Livingstone at least walked the ground — this bloke's running an empire from a recliner, squinting at Iran like it's a crossword clue. The Persians have been outlasting armchair strategists since Xerxes was in short pants.
Sky News Australia
The Coalition has cut a preference deal with One Nation ahead of the Farrer by-election, a short-term tactic with a long-term smell about it.
Menzies built a broad church, Howard built a fortress, and this mob is handing the keys to Pauline Hanson for a preference flow in Farrer. The Liberals aren't absorbing One Nation — One Nation is absorbing them, one by-election at a time, and the only people who haven't noticed are sitting in the party room congratulating themselves on the arithmetic.
Guardian Australia · Josh Butler and Tom McIlroy
The health minister has defended cuts that will remove 160,000 participants from the NDIS by 2030, acknowledging public disquiet days after the government announced $53bn in fresh defence spending.
Fifty-three billion for frigates, a haircut for 160,000 people in wheelchairs, and a minister telling us we'll feel 'uneasy' about it. Mate, uneasy is what you feel when you've left the oven on. This is the budget as a set of priorities written in invisible ink — readable only under the lamp of who gets cut and who gets a contract.
Spectator Australia · Eliot Wilson
Chancellor Rachel Reeves is reportedly weighing war bonds to plug Britain's defence gap — a vintage solution to a structural problem decades in the making.
Reeves is dusting off war bonds like a bloke finding a 1940s recipe in the back of the cupboard and serving it to guests who've already eaten. Britain's defence isn't broken because the Treasury ran out of fundraising gimmicks — it's broken because successive governments spent thirty years pretending the world had ended. You can't patriotism your way out of an empty arsenal.
Spectator Australia · Mark Higgie
Mark Higgie reflects on the surprise defeat of Viktor Orbán in the Spectator Australia, a masthead that spent a decade treating him as a model.
The Spectator's discovered Hungary now that Orbán's lost, which is the publishing equivalent of showing up to the wake with a casserole and opinions about the deceased. Ten years of strongman fan mail and suddenly the masthead's interested in the messy democratic aftermath. Metternich understood losers. This lot only know how to barrack for winners until the scoreboard changes.
Spectator Australia · Freddy Gray
The Spectator reads Trump's half-hearted Starmer shout-out like tea leaves. The real story is a knife that never came out of the drawer.
Trump posts a lukewarm 'Prime Minister Keir Starmer of the United...' and the Spectator treats the ellipsis like Kremlinology. Starmer's safe because Trump can't be bothered, which is the diplomatic equivalent of surviving the pub fight by being too boring to punch. Talleyrand worked rooms. This is just a bloke forgetting whose turn it is to shout.