Podcast

Coffee House Shots

Daily political analysis from The Spectator’s top team of writers, including Tim Shipman, James Heale, Michael Gove, Isabel Hardman and many others.

Daily political analysis from The Spectator’s top team of writers, including Tim Shipman, James Heale, Michael Gove, Isabel Hardman and many others.

Starmer vs the basics of politics

Coffee House Shots

Starmer vs the basics of politics

Does Keir Starmer have confidence in Rachel Reeves? Kemi Badenoch pressed the Prime Minister on his Chancellor’s future at PMQs – and he declined to answer, twice. Westminster (and Twitter) is now awash with reshuffle rumours. No 10 has since issued a denial, but the damage may already be done, raising a familiar question: is

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Starmer vs the basics of politics
Morgan McSweeney faces the music

Coffee House Shots

Morgan McSweeney faces the music

It’s a blockbuster day in parliament today. To kick things off, we had Philip Barton pleading ignorance; to close the proceedings tonight we have a vote on a possible Privileges Committee probe. But in between we have Morgan McSweeney, the longtime bete noire of the Labour party left, giving testimony on the appointment of Peter

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Morgan McSweeney faces the music
Can the King handle Trump?

Coffee House Shots

Can the King handle Trump?

King Charles is about to travel to Washington to visit President Trump. The brief? Fix the strained relationship. No pressure! Can royal diplomacy steady relations? Will the trip be awkward given Trump’s recent words on Starmer, Chagos, The Falklands, and Canada? Does the King have what it takes to navigate such a diplomatic minefield? Elsewhere,

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Can the King handle Trump?
'I used to be Labour. No more.' – who will win Wales?

Coffee House Shots

‘I used to be Labour. No more.’ – who will win Wales?

Is Labour about to lose Wales? That’s what the polling suggests. After 27 years, Wales is seeking change. The beneficiaries look to be the outsiders, Plaid Cymru and Reform UK. Why is it this moment in particular that people are seeking new answers? In this special episode of Coffee House Shots, James Heale goes on

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'I used to be Labour. No more.' – who will win Wales?
Is Lord Hermer fit to be Attorney General?

Coffee House Shots

Is Lord Hermer fit to be Attorney General?

The long-debated assisted dying bill is expected to fail in the House of Lords today – described by the bill’s leading advocate Lord Falconer as failing ‘not on its merits’ but ‘due to procedural wrangling’. Natasha Feroze speaks to Tim Shipman and James Heale about whether that is a fair description of the bill. Plus

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Is Lord Hermer fit to be Attorney General?
‘Worse than the worst of Boris Johnson’ – are Labour turning on Starmer?

Coffee House Shots

‘Worse than the worst of Boris Johnson’ – are Labour turning on Starmer?

Somewhere in the documents surrounding Peter Mandelson’s ambassadorial appointment, the Spectator’s political editor Tim Shipman reveals, is a text Keir Starmer sent the night before the announcement. ‘You’ll be brilliant in challenging circumstances,’ he told the Prince of Darkness. ‘And after many years of our discussions, we get to work together side by side. I

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‘Worse than the worst of Boris Johnson’ – are Labour turning on Starmer?
'When, not if' – who will move against Starmer?

Coffee House Shots

‘When, not if’ – who will move against Starmer?

It will come as no surprise that Keir Starmer appears to have heard a very different evidence session from Sir Olly Robbins to the one everyone else thought the ex Foreign Office mandarin gave yesterday. The Prime Minister arrived in the Commons for questions today convinced that Robbins had in fact largely backed him up,

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'When, not if' – who will move against Starmer?
Why Olly Robbins testimony is 'quietly devastating' for Starmer

Coffee House Shots

Why Olly Robbins testimony is ‘quietly devastating’ for Starmer

‘The most gripping testimony’ since Dominic Cummings which could prove ‘extraordinary and quietly devastating’ for Keir Starmer. That’s the verdict of the Spectator‘s political editor Tim Shipman following sacked Foreign Office chief Sir Olly Robbins’s testimony today before the Foreign Affairs Committee. Tim and former FCDO mandarin Ameer Kotecha join James Heale to explain why

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Why Olly Robbins testimony is 'quietly devastating' for Starmer
'They expect us to believe this?' – Starmer’s Mandelson story doesn’t add up

Coffee House Shots

‘They expect us to believe this?’ – Starmer’s Mandelson story doesn’t add up

Westminster is braced ahead of two key interventions in the Mandelson scandal. This afternoon, the prime minister will give a statement in which we understand he will convey his ‘anger’ at being kept in the dark about Peter Mandelson’s (failed) vetting process. Then tomorrow morning, we are expecting to hear Olly Robbins’s side of the

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'They expect us to believe this?' – Starmer’s Mandelson story doesn’t add up
Second in local government: who should the Lib Dems target? with Al Pinkerton MP & Mark Pack

Coffee House Shots

Why the Lib Dems are aiming for second – with Al Pinkerton MP & Mark Pack

Liberal Democrat peer Mark Pack and MP for Surrey Heath Al Pinkerton join James Heale to explain that it is a matter of ‘when not if’ the party become the second biggest in local government. Overtaking the Conservatives would be ‘seismic’ but they see it as inevitable, following a ‘long-run of sustained wins’ in the

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Second in local government: who should the Lib Dems target? with Al Pinkerton MP & Mark Pack

Coffee House Shots

Danny Kruger: Reform’s plan to tear up the system

Danny Kruger joins James Heale to set out Reform’s plan to overhaul the British state – from taking on the civil service to restoring ministerial control – and why he believes the system will resist change.

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Mandelson latest: can we trust Starmer's ignorance?

Coffee House Shots

Mandelson latest: can we trust Starmer’s ignorance?

The Peter Mandelson scandal just got more scandalous. Last night the story broke that Mandeslon actually failed his enhanced vetting before being made US Ambassador. Number 10 are pleading ignorance. Their defence sits on the suggestion that the Foreign Office’s most senior official unilaterally decided to ignore the findings and – what’s more – that

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Mandelson latest: can we trust Starmer's ignorance?
Inside parliament’s ‘summer of sex’ | Cindy Gallop & Cleo Watson

Coffee House Shots

Inside parliament’s ‘summer of sex’ | Cindy Gallop & Cleo Watson

It is a hard time to be a Labour MP. The polls are flagging, the economy is stagnating and the Middle East remains in crisis. But facing electoral armageddon in three weeks’ time, one brave backbencher has taken it up on herself to raise her party’s spirits. Samantha Niblett, the Honourable Member for South Derbyshire,

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Inside parliament’s ‘summer of sex’ | Cindy Gallop & Cleo Watson
Why won't Starmer answer the question!?

Coffee House Shots

Why won’t Starmer answer the question!?

PMQs is back and – predictably – Lord Robertson’s intervention on the state of the armed forces dominated proceedings. The Prime Minister gave six responses to questions about defence spending, none of which addressed the criticism properly. While it was not a painful session for Starmer, it did show how little he has to say

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Why won't Starmer answer the question!?
Are the Treasury & the MOD at war?

Coffee House Shots

Are the Treasury & the MOD at war?

George Robertson (pictured), a former defence secretary and former NATO secretary-general, has accused the government of ‘corrosive complacency’ towards defence, which puts the UK ‘in peril’. This is all the more stinging because the Labour peer was one of the authors of the government’s Strategic Defence Review – and that makes two of the three

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Are the Treasury & the MOD at war?
Keir Starmer thinks he's Henry VIII

Coffee House Shots

Keir Starmer thinks he’s Henry VIII

Two big stories to chew over on today’s podcast, starting with Viktor Orban’s landslide defeat in Hungary. The left have been celebrating this as a victory over populism, but have they misunderstood Peter Magyar’s politics? He’s hardly the Hungarian Ed Davey – as figures such as Zack Polanski would have you believe – and shares

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Keir Starmer thinks he's Henry VIII
Will Labour lose Wales?

Coffee House Shots

Will Labour lose Wales?

With one month to go until the local and regional elections, Megan McElroy and James Heale have hit the road with Luke Tryl and Louis O’Geran of More in Common. They report back from the focus groups they’ve been running in Wales, where voters view Labour through the prism of a double incumbency, as they

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Will Labour lose Wales?
Left turn: who should Reform target?

Coffee House Shots

Left turn: who should Reform target?

Gawain Towler, Reform UK board member and their former director of communications, sits down with James Heale to talk about Reform’s appeal ahead of the local elections. Gawain argues that Reform needs to broaden its appeal as it won’t find the votes to win to its right, but points to their anti-establishment, nationalist and pro-business

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Left turn: who should Reform target?
The 'Anglo-Gaullism' debate | Ben Judah

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The ‘Anglo-Gaullism’ debate | Ben Judah

In the magazine this week, Ben Judah – former adviser in the Foreign Office – makes the case for ‘Anglo-Gaullism’. He says that Britain should learn the lessons of France’s Charles de Gaulle when carving out its place in the world, especially given the increasingly erratic nature of the US and the fragmentation of politics

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The 'Anglo-Gaullism' debate | Ben Judah
Antonia Romeo takes on the civil service

Coffee House Shots

Antonia Romeo takes on the civil service

The new cabinet secretary, Antonia Romeo, has published a list of objectives setting out her vision for what the civil service will look like under her. Many have interpreted it as her tightening control over government … especially since Darren Jones stepped back from his Downing Street role. The path is clear for her to

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Antonia Romeo takes on the civil service
Iran deadline: is it too late for Trump to back down?

Coffee House Shots

Iran deadline: is it too late for Trump to back down?

We are hours away from Donald Trump’s deadline for Iran to reopen the strait of Hormuz. The President has ‘chickened out’ many times before and offered an extension of some kind, but the threats and posturing ahead of this deadline make it difficult for either side to back down. Will Trump really ‘end Iranian civilisation’

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Iran deadline: is it too late for Trump to back down?
Hero voters: who should Labour target? with Chris Curtis MP & Deborah Mattinson

Coffee House Shots

Hero voters: who should Labour target? with Chris Curtis MP & Deborah Mattinson

Labour won the 2024 general election in part by focusing on ‘hero voters’ – so called because they may have voted Labour in the past but felt the party had abandoned them. Now they risk losing them again – so how does Labour maintain their support? Chris Curtis, Labour MP for Milton Keynes North and

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Hero voters: who should Labour target? with Chris Curtis MP & Deborah Mattinson
Why is Starmer so unpopular? with Lewis Goodall

Coffee House Shots

Why is Starmer so unpopular? with Lewis Goodall

Opinion polls consistently show Keir Starmer as one of the most unpopular Prime Ministers in history. His critics point to inertia and a lack of vision, while his supporters argue that media spin is harming the image of a decent man. Less than two years on from Labour’s landslide victory, broadcaster Lewis Goodall joins James

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Why is Starmer so unpopular? with Lewis Goodall
Conservative radicalism: who should the Tories target? with Jack Rankin MP

Coffee House Shots

Conservative radicalism: who should the Tories target? with Jack Rankin MP

Can the Conservatives win back voters’ support through a new kind of ‘conservative radicalism’? Jack Rankin, Conservative MP for Windsor, joins James Heale to explain why he believes a focus on aspiration and wealth creation, paired with political courage to combat ‘short-termism and stakeholderism’, would enhance the Party’s appeal and energise its supporter base. Jack

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Conservative radicalism: who should the Tories target? with Jack Rankin MP
EU déjà vu: the emergency brake is back!

Coffee House Shots

EU déjà vu: the emergency brake is back!

Charles Grant from the Centre for European Reform and Tim Shipman join James Heale to reflect on the rumours about Britain’s latest set of negotiations with the European Union. There are reports that the EU may be willing to accept some form of mechanism, that the UK could use, should Britain ever wish to temporarily

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EU déjà vu: the emergency brake is back!
Will Trump pull the US out of NATO?

Coffee House Shots

Will Trump pull the US out of NATO?

Donald Trump has said he is ‘strongly considering’ pulling the US out of NATO, in comments made to the Telegraph – and it doesn’t appear to be an April Fool. This isn’t the first time he has rallied against the Alliance so should the UK take him seriously? Plus – what is Keir Starmer’s strategy?

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Will Trump pull the US out of NATO?
Why is Britain so exposed to rising energy prices?

Coffee House Shots

Why is Britain so exposed to rising energy prices?

The IMF has warned Britain is particularly vulnerable to another spike in energy prices, and is more exposed than many of its European neighbours. Why is that the case? And does the government have any real plan to shield households and businesses from the fallout? With the Tories and Reform calling for the government to

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Why is Britain so exposed to rising energy prices?
Where does Labour's centre of gravity lie?

Coffee House Shots

Where does Labour’s centre of gravity lie?

Patrick Maguire, chief political writer at The Times, sits down with Tim Shipman for a reflection on Labour’s odd year so far. From potential leadership challengers, like Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner, to cabinet heavyweights, like Yvette Cooper and Ed Miliband – where does power in this Labour government really lie? What does Keir Starmer’s

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Where does Labour's centre of gravity lie?
LIVE: Should we defund or defend the BBC? | Michael Gove & Jon Sopel v Charles Moore & Allison Pearson

Coffee House Shots

LIVE: Should we defund or defend the BBC? | Michael Gove & Jon Sopel v Charles Moore & Allison Pearson

Should we defund – or defend – the BBC?   Live from London, the Spectator hosted a debate on the future of this iconic British institution, compered by associate editor Isabel Hardman. The Spectator’s chairman – and long-time Beeb-critic – Charles Moore, and the Telegraph’s Allison Pearson went head-to-head with the Spectator’s editor – and former

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LIVE: Should we defund or defend the BBC? | Michael Gove & Jon Sopel v Charles Moore & Allison Pearson
Energy crisis: are we in 1973 territory?

Coffee House Shots

Energy crisis: are we in 1973 territory?

The panic has set in around the cabinet table about this energy crisis, and fears of history repeating itself. Tim Shipman writes in the magazine about the comparisons being made to 1973 and the Opec oil shock, with the government preparing for oil prices to reach £150 a barrel. What levers are available to the

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Energy crisis: are we in 1973 territory?