immigrator
Westminster’s bogus immigration consensus
Reliance on migrants is hurting workers and limiting innovation
The darkness of assisted dying
The desire to end terrible pain is understandable — but the dangers are severe
The Roman Republic is worth thinking about
The life and death of Tiberius Gracchus illustrate the virtues of populism
How Britain fell in love with cars
From Wind in the Willows to Wodehouse, cars captured the imagination
Making art of the Holocaust
As dramatic opera, The Passenger inhabits a grey zone of guard–prisoner relations
Maligning the missionaries
Should the Church of England regret the promotion of Christianity?
Is Britain on course for abortion up to birth?
Diana Johnson’s amendment creates a medical and legal vacuum that would endanger women and their babies
A great conductor leaves the stage
No conductor from China or Japan ever commanded world orchestras before Seiji Ozawa, and none has since matched his impact
War on Nazis in Oz and in the air
LeBor reviews Our Dad the Nazi Killer and Masters of the Air
A festival for women — and men?
You cannot address the underrepresentation of women by including men
Sunak of many colours
He has become all things to all people, that he might save some seats
The poverty of miners’ strike nostalgia
We should not romanticise a futile and sometimes thuggish struggle