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Fraser Nelson

Fraser Nelson

Fraser Nelson is a Times columnist and a former editor of The Spectator.

Fraser Nelson

Cameron’s great escape

The last time David Cameron sat down with The Spectator for an interview, he was on a train and looking rather worried. There were just weeks to go until the general election and the polls were not moving. At the time, almost no one — and certainly not him — imagined that he was on

The Spectator Dashboard: UK Economic Data

Great steps have been made in open data in the last few years. Most figures for the UK economy can be found online and the creation of the Office for Budget Responsibility means that official forecasts, too, are now available. But they have not, so far, been expressed in a way that’s easy to understand.

The Spectator’s Isabel Hardman named Journalist of the Year

This evening Isabel Hardman was named Journalist of the Year by the Political Studies Association, becoming the youngest winner in the history of the awards. The judges had this to say: ‘Hardman’s contribution to political journalism over the past five years has been truly impressive. The breadth of her work across both a wide range of

Junior doctors were right to call off their strike

Right now, the junior doctors have public support. But that would fast change if any NHS patient died during the strike in any way that could be linked to lack of junior doctor. Even as things stand, the very threat of a strike has seen up to 20,000 NHS patients having treatment postponed. The British Medical Association has other strike dates in

As we fret about Syria, the Islamic State is moving into Libya

What is it about war that makes normally sensible politicians prone to hype and exaggeration? No10 is today briefing that Cameron has instructed the RAF to ‘decapitate’ the leadership of the Islamic State in Syria – as if the thought hasn’t occurred to the Americans, who have spent the last 17 months (and $11 million-a-day) bombing Isil positions

George Osborne’s Spending Review in ten graphs

Politically, the story was George Osborne’s (wise) retreat on tax credit cuts. Economically, here’s the upshot:- 1. The end of austerity: state spending is shooting up. [datawrapper chart=”http://static.spectator.co.uk/FOVmc/index.html”] Everyone expected a hatchet day; instead, this was a tax-and-spend budget. Total state spending is now on the rise, and will be for the foreseeable future. The

Fraser Nelson

Wanted: commissioning editor for maternity cover

Mary Wakefield, our commissioning editor, leaves for six months’ maternity leave on Valentine’s Day. We’re looking for someone to cover her, which will be a real challenge. The job involves thinking of fresh, original features – and finding authors whose writing reaches the standards required of Spectator readers. And, where necessary, working with writers to

Syrian war heats up as Turkey shoots down a Russian jet

The complications of acting in Syria have just become more apparent. The Russians are fighting in support of Assad – but Turkey, a Nato member, is backing anti-Assad rebels and has just shot down a Russian Su-24 jet. The Turkish foreign ministry says that the pilots were warned ‘ten times in five minutes’ that they were violating Turkish

James Forsyth starts a weekly column in The Sun

As Spectator readers know, James Forsyth is the most insightful and best-informed political columnist around. Today, he also becomes the best-read – starting a column in The Sun, the country’s favourite newspaper. It has dropped its paywall, so you can now read it here. His column is, as you’d expect, a mixture of his brilliantly-sourced insights into

Wanted: online news editor for The Spectator

The Spectator is creating a new position, fusing together the work of print, digital and broadcast journalism. We’re looking for someone who can write, loves language and loves intelligent debate – but the emphasis, for this job, will be on audio and video. It’s a great time to join Britain’s  most influential magazine. We recently

Fraser Nelson

Paris massacre: ten developments, as of Sunday morning

Barack Obama flies into Turkey for a G20 conference now likely to have the Islamic State as its theme. Here are ten developments. The death toll has risen to 129, with 352 others wounded, 100 critically. Five Britons are feared dead, and another five injured. A passport found near the body of one attacker was that

The shocking rise of anti-refugee attacks in Sweden

Sweden, perhaps the most open country in the world, is on course to take almost 200,000 asylum seekers this year. Adjust for population size and that’s like the UK taking a refugee city the size of Birmingham. It can’t cope. Yet political refusal to admit this is incubating concern – sending voters towards the anti-immigrant Sweden Democrat parties.