
One Nation Leader Senator Pauline Hanson exclusively told The Spectator Australia today:
Apparently, you can wear the symbols of Islamic terror in Parliament and escape criticism or censure.
You can threaten to burn Parliament down and escape censure.
But you can’t wear a simple burqa and escape censure.
I never really expected anything else from ...

Bruno Retailleau, France’s former interior minister, has with his Senate group just published the toughest report on Islamism in a generation. They warn that Islamist networks have taken hold of entire swathes of French public life – from schools and sports clubs to student housing, neighbourhoods and councils. In the report, 29 Republican senators set ...

Pauline Hanson dines with Barnaby Joyce in her office at Parliament House The Senate might be thoroughly sick of Pauline Hanson’s antics – on Tuesday it suspended her for seven days over her appearance in a burqa – but she’s Barnaby Joyce’s kind of politician. Both are attention-seekers, and they

The Reverend Kate Bottley, the celebrity vicar who came to fame on Gogglebox, has a message for the nation. ‘The woman who goes skinny-dipping for charity and posts the pictures on social media is far removed from the cultural archetype of the meek and stuffy vicar,’ the Telegraph breathlessly tells us. ‘I don’t know who these stuffy vicars are,’ says ...

As an American who respects the constitutional role and historical continuity of the British Crown, I view the recent congressional request to interview Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor with disgust. In early November, several of the most progressive Democratic members of the US Congress sent a letter asking him to participate in a ‘transcribed interview’ ...

For years, there was a broad consensus in Israel that there was no benefit to reintroducing the death penalty. But now, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is reportedly considering supporting a bill which would bring back capital punishment for convicted terrorists.
The bill, which has passed its first reading in the Knesset, would ...

A flurry of recent diplomatic activity has seen two competing peace plans for Ukraine emerge. The first, widely touted as a US plan, was apparently hashed out between Kremlin insider Kirill Dmitriev and Steve Witkoff, President Donald Trump’s Russia point-man. The second, hurriedly drafted by the United Kingdom,

Recent developments in the Bruce Lehrmann case in Toowoomba show how complicated the justice system is to navigate. The post The justice system wants victims to be silent — and

Nicolas Rakotopare, CC BY-NDAustralia is home to extraordinary reptiles and frogs, from giant lace monitors to tiny alpine froglets. Over 1,100 reptiles and 250 frog species are found across the Australian continent and islands. But we are losing them. So far, one of Australia’s reptiles has become extinct, the

The way a national redress scheme exceeding $5 billion has been managed by the Department of Social Services (DSS) has been deemed partly effective overall, with improvements recommended for governance arrangements, administering processes, monitoring and reporting. An Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) review of the scheme — which was established

With the 2026 national census rapidly approaching, it is more important than ever for Australia to collate ethnicity data. The Australian Bureau of Statistics’ 2024 reversal of its decision to collate such data is a significant setback for Australia’s ability to understand itself and, crucially, to build the social cohesion

While the BBC’s mis-editing of Donald Trump’s words has dominated the headlines, less attention has been paid to another example of the corporation’s bias: its coverage of history. The BBC’s latest blockbuster history series, Empire, fronted by David Olusoga, shows the extent of the problem.
This slanted and biased version of history is nothing ...

One Nation Leader Senator Pauline Hanson exclusively told The Spectator Australia today:
Apparently, you can wear the symbols of Islamic terror in Parliament and escape criticism or censure.
You can threaten to burn Parliament down and escape censure.
But you can’t wear a simple burqa and escape censure.
I never really expected anything else from ...

Bruno Retailleau, France’s former interior minister, has with his Senate group just published the toughest report on Islamism in a generation. They warn that Islamist networks have taken hold of entire swathes of French public life – from schools and sports clubs to student housing, neighbourhoods and councils. In the report, 29 Republican senators set ...

Pauline Hanson dines with Barnaby Joyce in her office at Parliament House The Senate might be thoroughly sick of Pauline Hanson’s antics – on Tuesday it suspended her for seven days over her appearance in a burqa – but she’s Barnaby Joyce’s kind of politician. Both are attention-seekers, and they

The Reverend Kate Bottley, the celebrity vicar who came to fame on Gogglebox, has a message for the nation. ‘The woman who goes skinny-dipping for charity and posts the pictures on social media is far removed from the cultural archetype of the meek and stuffy vicar,’ the Telegraph breathlessly tells us. ‘I don’t know who these stuffy vicars are,’ says ...

As an American who respects the constitutional role and historical continuity of the British Crown, I view the recent congressional request to interview Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor with disgust. In early November, several of the most progressive Democratic members of the US Congress sent a letter asking him to participate in a ‘transcribed interview’ ...

For years, there was a broad consensus in Israel that there was no benefit to reintroducing the death penalty. But now, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is reportedly considering supporting a bill which would bring back capital punishment for convicted terrorists.
The bill, which has passed its first reading in the Knesset, would ...

A flurry of recent diplomatic activity has seen two competing peace plans for Ukraine emerge. The first, widely touted as a US plan, was apparently hashed out between Kremlin insider Kirill Dmitriev and Steve Witkoff, President Donald Trump’s Russia point-man. The second, hurriedly drafted by the United Kingdom,

Recent developments in the Bruce Lehrmann case in Toowoomba show how complicated the justice system is to navigate. The post The justice system wants victims to be silent — and

Nicolas Rakotopare, CC BY-NDAustralia is home to extraordinary reptiles and frogs, from giant lace monitors to tiny alpine froglets. Over 1,100 reptiles and 250 frog species are found across the Australian continent and islands. But we are losing them. So far, one of Australia’s reptiles has become extinct, the

The way a national redress scheme exceeding $5 billion has been managed by the Department of Social Services (DSS) has been deemed partly effective overall, with improvements recommended for governance arrangements, administering processes, monitoring and reporting. An Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) review of the scheme — which was established

With the 2026 national census rapidly approaching, it is more important than ever for Australia to collate ethnicity data. The Australian Bureau of Statistics’ 2024 reversal of its decision to collate such data is a significant setback for Australia’s ability to understand itself and, crucially, to build the social cohesion

While the BBC’s mis-editing of Donald Trump’s words has dominated the headlines, less attention has been paid to another example of the corporation’s bias: its coverage of history. The BBC’s latest blockbuster history series, Empire, fronted by David Olusoga, shows the extent of the problem.
This slanted and biased version of history is nothing ...
