Fraser Nelson

Fraser Nelson

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

12 shot dead at US Navy base in Washington

Twelve people have been killed in a shooting at US Naval Sea Systems Command’s HQ in Washington DC by a gunman later shot dead by police. The below charts events as they unfolded yesterday. It began at 8.20am EST in Building 197 of the Washington Navy Yard complex, which is home to 3,000 workers. Latest

How to deflate Osborne’s housing bubble?

During the Brown bubble, most economic commentators spotted nothing – buying the theory that the West was adopting to a new era of permanently lower interest rates. Jeremy Warner and Jeff Randall stood out amongst a consensus which spied no danger. But a new generation of economic commentators are more sceptical. Allister Heath, an associate

What use is a GDP recovery if living standards are stagnant?

Labour had better get used to headlines of economic upgrades. There’s about two dozen major forecasters out there, and each will take a turn to say that Britain’s doing better than they’d thought. To have such good news repeated will be a headache for Labour, as Iain Martin blogs today. But Labour are right to

David Frost 1939-2013: a video tribute

Sir David Frost died of a heart attack this morning, aged just 74 Here are a few videos from his truly extraordinary career – starting with his own take on satire: His famous Richard Nixon interviews – highlights: With Margaret Thatcher:- With Mohammed Ali: And John Lennon: The exiled Shah of Iran:- With Brian Clough,

Fraser Nelson

Syria defeat: the anatomy of an omnishambles

Britain has not rejected America nor abdicated its role in the world. The Sun’s reports of the death of the special relationship are exaggerated. Thursday’s vote may have given John Kerry a chance to indulge his Francophillia (‘our oldest ally,’ purred the Swiss-educated State Secretary) but this was not us chickening out. It was a

George Osborne’s tendentious logic on Syria

A sombre George Osborne has just popped up on the Today programme saying that parliament last night triggered ‘soul searching’ in the country. ‘I think there will be a national soul-searching about our role in the world and whether Britain wants to play a big part in upholding the international system, be that big open

Fraser Nelson

Syria defeat: What next for David Cameron?

Having lost last night’s vote, David Cameron needs to spend today fighting back. There are quite a few ways he can do so. He can easily brush off the more excitable charges: that he faces a leadership challenge, or that Tories will come for him at party conference. They won’t. Cameron was elected to fix

Cameron’s historic defeat

David Cameron has lost far more than the argument over Syria. He put his credibility on the line tonight, and lost. This is not just an extraordinary defeat but a spectacular political misjudgment, as I say in my Daily Telegraph column tomorrow. There will be a great many more questions asked tomorrow: from a sleepy

Theresa May, action woman

The Sunday Times p1 today reveals (to people who don’t read the Daily Telegraph or CoffeeHouse) that Theresa May is planning a Modern Slavery Bill. The Home Secretary writes about its details in the newspaper and in so doing exhibits a very peculiar trait. She appears to belong to a tiny subcategory of politicians: those

It’s time to end slavery in Britain – again

Today is the United Nations day for he Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition – and the school packs have been readied to tell pupils about Britain’s part in this great evil. But the way we tend to remember (and, occasionally, apologise for) slavery has two main problems.  Yes, British traders played a full

David Cameron denies he’s planning another coalition. Good.

I’m just back from three weeks away to find the summer momentum very strongly behind the Tories. A ComRes poll suggests that the majority of Labour supporters think Ed Miliband is doing badly, and things are going so strongly for the Tories (as George Trefgarne writes) that the odds on a Tory majority are shrinking

Sales of The Spectator: 2013 H1

The ABC circulation figures for The Spectator are out today. But they show only print sales which, in the digital age, are now just part of the story. Many of our readers are migrating to digital, especially our overseas subscribers who can now access The Spectator online and via the Spectator app on the same day as British readers.