Politics

Read about the latest political news, views and analysis

Is it time to stop changing the clocks?

15 min listen

On this special Saturday edition of Coffee House Shots, The Spectator's James Heale, journalist Peter Hitchens and the IEA's Christopher Snowdon argue the cases for and against daylight saving time. Are we all being needlessly robbed of an hour in bed? Or should we lighten up and embrace the longer days?  Produced by Natasha Feroze and Oscar Edmondson.

Why was the West so slow to see Putin’s true colours?

Cast your mind back just over a decade, to a charity benefit gig in St. Petersburg in 2010. Sharon Stone, Kevin Costner, Gerard Depardieu, Vincent Cassel, Goldie Hawn and Monica Belluci are in the audience. But the star-turn is performed by a man from another branch of entertainment altogether (‘show-business for ugly people’) who in a warbling voice is giving us his rendition of Fats Domino’s ‘Blueberry Hill.’ The stars clap and beam at this new addition to their ranks – the man then taking time off as president to play Russia’s prime minister and, on special occasions, chanteur to the stars: Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin. In this, you might argue, the celebrities are only following fashion. In 2007, Putin was named ‘Person of the Year’ by Time magazine.

Liz puts the Trussketers in the Lords

Even out of office, she's still causing chaos. Details of Liz Truss's resignation honours list have been leaked to the Sun this afternoon, with the newspaper reporting that the former Tory leader is considering awarding at least four peerages to mark her 49-day premiership. The names in the frame for Britain's shortest-serving prime minister are allegedly Mark Littlewood of the Institute of Economic Affairs, Matthew Elliott of Vote Leave, Brexit donor Jon Moynihan and Ruth Porter, Truss's former No. 10 deputy chief of staff. Talk about a Tufton Street mafia... The suggested names are being billed by Truss's allies as a 'modest' resignation honours list despite calls for her to forgo the traditional handing out of gongs.

Why Russian priests are being expelled from a monastery in Kyiv

In my hometown we have three Orthodox churches, two of which are formally aligned with the Moscow patriarchate. They mostly say Russian prayers but, growing up, this was not seen as important. My family would go to both and see them as interchangeable: you’d stand, pray, kiss icons, take communion. Many Ukrainians never gave it much thought. This all changed when Vladimir Putin invaded last year. Only then was it clear just how he had been using the Russian church as a tool of his state: not just in Russia, but in Ukraine too. Previously neutral priests publicly prayed for Putin’s success, telling their parishioners how to help the invading forces. When Ukrainian forces investigated, they found guns, rubles and Soviet symbols in some church vaults.

Deutsche Bank’s collapse would be a threat to the whole eurozone

It could be next month. It might be next week. Or it might well happen over the weekend. But today’s collapse in the share price of Deutsche Bank, and the huge rise in the cost of insuring its debt against default, means it is probably only a matter of time before there's an intervention. It looks increasingly inevitable that Deutsche will require some form of rescue, led by the German government and the European Central Bank. The trouble is: that will be a threat to the entire eurozone. If you have any money in Germany’s largest bank, the only rational move right now is to get it out To market insiders, the real surprise of today’s collapse in confidence in Deutsche Bank is that it took so long.

What’s going on in France?

16 min listen

This morning Buckingham Palace has announced that King Charles's State visit to France has been cancelled as the country struggles with nationwide strikes against the government's pension reform. The King was due to visit Paris and Bordeaux, two of the cities which have been hit by the most extreme violence. Will his trip to Germany go ahead as planned?  Also on the podcast, Rishi Sunak has been buoyed by a successful week in which he pulled off his Brexit plan. Will he be able to weather the storm next week when small boats are back on the agenda? Is there a world in which Sunak could pull off an election victory? James Heale speaks to Katy Balls and Fraser Nelson.  Produced by Oscar Edmondson.

Watch: Marcon removes luxury watch during pensions TV clash

Oh dear. It seems that Emmanuel Macron has done it again. The preening French president was in the middle of a television interview last night, discussing his unpopular attempt to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64, when he realised that his, er, €2,400 (£2,100) watch might be causing him difficulties. Hardly the best way to rebut criticism that you're just a 'president of the rich'... So what did Macron decide to do? During the half-hour prime time interview, Macron attempts to subtly remove his Bell & Ross timepiece around eleven minutes into the grilling. He placed his left arm under the table while casually answering answering a question but, when he brought it back up, the watch was nowhere to be seen.

Watch: Nadine Dorries savages the Privileges Committee

Boris Johnson was all probity and contrition on Wednesday when it came to the small matter of the Privilege Committee's integrity. He oozed praise on the 'distinguished' panel of MPs and assured them, in his most sincere tones, of his believe that it isn't a 'kangaroo court.' But it seems that not all of his supporters got the memo. First Jacob Rees-Mogg went on GB News that very evening and declared that the committee was 'determined to get Boris', insisting 'it was never really about cake or curtains... it was fundamentally about Brexit.' And TalkTV have now released a trailer ahead of Nadine Dorries' show tonight in which she labels the Privileges Committee a 'kangaroo court', an 'egregious abuse of parliamentary procedure' and are 'prepared to bend the rules.' Feisty stuff.

Why did it take Seb Coe so long to see sense over transgender athletes?

World Athletics has decided to protect women's sport by restricting it to females. From 31 March, transwomen will not be allowed to compete in elite female competitions if they have gone through male puberty. Following yesterday’s meeting of the World Athletics Council, Seb Coe – the governing body’s president – explained that the decision was 'guided by the overarching principle which is to protect the female category'. That decision should be welcomed by everyone, but why did it take them so long? Swimming’s world governing body came to the same conclusion last summer; world rugby got there in 2020. Athletics, meanwhile, dithered and fiddled with rules based on the level of testosterone in an athlete’s blood.

Dmitry Medvedev and the weakness of Putin’s Kremlin

It’s a long time since Dmitry Medvedev was last considered a potential liberal hope for Russia. Most recently, after all, he has threatened to bomb any country that seeks to apply the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) recent arrest warrant on Vladimir Putin and separately read a working group of the Military Industrial Commission a 1941 telegram from Stalin that threatened anyone who failed to meet their targets with being 'smashing as criminals who disregard the honour and interests of the homeland'. What is going on?

France is on a knife edge

Yesterday was a day of anarchy in France – and the protests overnight have led to King Charles's state visit to France, which was due to start this weekend, being cancelled. The King had been due to visit Paris and Bordeaux, two of the cities hit by the most extreme violence. In Bordeaux, a town hall was sacked. In Lorient, a police station was attacked – and in Nantes a court was vandalised. The worst of the violence was in Paris. Hundreds of thugs clad in black fought running battles with police, 149 of whom were injured, and they also smashed and looted shops, banks and restaurants.

Nicola Sturgeon’s successor should be careful what they wish for

We are almost there: on Monday, the SNP will appoint its new leader after five weeks of what will surely be remembered as the most controversial and consequential change of leadership in the short history of devolution. Nicola Sturgeon's resignation in February came as a surprise even to her closest allies. They knew the First Minister was closer to the end of her tenure than the start; it seemed likely she would find a way to avoid standing in the 2026 Scottish parliament election.

Why Boris Johnson might escape a partygate punishment

After several months of anticipation, two contentious legal submissions from Lord Pannick KC and a bumper 52-page witness statement, Boris Johnson finally made his appearance before the Privileges Committee yesterday. Regular select committee watchers might have been surprised to see the panel of seven MPs conduct a forensic examination of Mr Johnson, sticking doggedly to their task, asking detailed questions and marshalling the facts at their disposal with some skill. Harriet Harman proved an adept Chair, keeping the committee on track and precluding too much lengthy meandering by the witness. Johnson was provoked to tetchiness, and even anger. But he could not be goaded into any explosive revelations.

Why is Sadiq Khan giving the police Ulez camera footage?

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan was quick out of the blocks to join the condemnation of the Metropolitan Police following the publication of Louise Casey’s report. He even slapped down Met Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley for daring to question Casey’s assertion that the Met was ‘institutionally misogynistic, racist and homophobic’.      So does that mean that Khan will now revisit his decision to share with the Met data from hundreds of cameras set up to police his Ultra Low Emissions Zone (Ulez)? Alas, it seems not. If we are going to use mass surveillance in this way, ought it not to be part of the public debate?

Starmer wants to steal crime from the Tories

It's tempting to see Keir Starmer as a political wind-up merchant given the number of times he likes to quote people who annoy his own activists. Recently he adopted the ‘take back control’ slogan and today he approvingly quoted Margaret Thatcher. Hell, the man has even praised Tony Blair.  Labour sees an opportunity in the rising salience of crime among voters The Thatcher quote today was in a speech about crime. The Labour leader told his audience in Stoke that: ‘The rule of law is the foundation for everything. Margaret Thatcher called it the “first duty of government” – and she was right.’ He later accused the Tories of having ‘thrown in the towel’ as he promised, like Blair in the 1990s, to make Labour tough on crime.

Will the interest rate hike be enough to tame inflation?

There was no easy option for the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) this week. Raising interest rates, even by a small amount, could add to financial instability following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and takeover of Credit Suisse over the past few weeks. But holding the base rate at 4 per cent might lead to accusations of ignoring double-digit inflation, which rose on the year in February for the first time since the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) peaked last October. Today, the MPC opted for the latter – voting 7-2 in favour of raising the base rate by 0.25 percentage points, from 4 per cent to 4.25 per cent. It’s the eleventh consecutive hike since the UK emerged from a period of ultra-low interest rates during the pandemic.

The decline and fall of the DUP

Along with death and taxes, life has only one other certainty: the DUP will never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity. Fresh from insulting Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer in the annual St Patrick's Day Washington jamboree as a man who needs to 'read a history book', the DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson has now antagonised Downing Street, the EU, the Irish Government, of course, and President Joe Biden by his rejection of the Windsor Framework. Quite an achievement. The ugly Irish DUP cousins have ruined Biden's parade with their stone wall refusal to go along with the show In the American polity, Ireland, and St Patrick's Day, is a positive brand, not just the feast day of a small nation.