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.

Keir Starmer gets angry

Coffee House Shots

Keir Starmer gets angry

PMQs today and – as predicted – Keir Starmer came out worst in a pretty unpleasant session. Kemi Badenoch pinned the Prime Minister on the continued Mandelson fallout and now the scandal over Matthew Doyle, the former No. 10 comms chief who – just four weeks after his ennoblement – Labour have already been forced

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Keir Starmer gets angry
Is Starmer back from the brink?

Coffee House Shots

Is Starmer back from the brink?

After a dramatic day in Westminster, the threat to Starmer appears to have receded – at least in the short term. But with the Gorton and Denton by-election less than three weeks away, (more) trouble could be on the horizon. Luke Tryl – from pollsters More in Common – and James Heale join Patrick Gibbons to

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Is Starmer back from the brink?
McSweeney resigns – is Starmer next?

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McSweeney resigns – is Starmer next?

Morgan McSweeney resigned yesterday as Keir Starmer’s chief of staff and – while it was not a surprise, given his role in appointing Peter Mandelson – the news that the Prime Minister has now lost his closest aide and political fire blanket is a huge shock. The repercussions are numerous: Starmer loses the man widely

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McSweeney resigns – is Starmer next?
Jonathan Hinder: ‘I don’t know if Starmer should fight the next election’

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Jonathan Hinder: ‘I don’t know if Starmer should fight the next election’

On this special edition of Coffee House Shots, Tim Shipman is joined by Jonathan Hinder – a rising star of the back benches and a blue Labour acolyte – for a candid discussion about the state of the Labour party and the security of its leader. They discuss the Peter Mandelson scandal and the impact

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Jonathan Hinder: ‘I don’t know if Starmer should fight the next election’
Keir's worst week – but Kemi's best?

Coffee House Shots

Keir’s worst week – but Kemi’s best?

The sun is setting on Keir Starmer’s worst week in No. 10 – but potentially Kemi’s best. We go into the weekend with MPs publicly calling for his most senior aide, Morgan McSweeney, to step down because of his role in the botched vetting of Peter Mandelson, and with huge questions remaining about how much

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Keir's worst week – but Kemi's best?
Could the herd move on Starmer?

Coffee House Shots

Could the herd move on Starmer?

James Heale, Tim Shipman and Oscar Edmondson discuss the continuing fallout over the Mandelson scandal. The mood amongst Labour MPs is pretty dire – following a bruising PMQs and a government climbdown over the release of Mandelson’s vetting files – but is it bad enough for Labour MPs to challenge Starmer? And could his chief

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Could the herd move on Starmer?
The Mandelson scandal could spell the end for Starmer

Coffee House Shots

The Mandelson scandal could spell the end for Starmer

Another impressive PMQs from Kemi Badenoch – but she had plenty of ammunition to deploy after the Peter Mandelson scandal took a bleaker turn this week. The Prime Minister clearly wanted to make a strong statement in his first answer to Kemi Badenoch, saying that ‘Mandelson betrayed our country, our parliament and my party’. He

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The Mandelson scandal could spell the end for Starmer
Gorton & Denton by-election: everything you need to know

Coffee House Shots

Gorton & Denton by-election: everything you need to know

Coffee House Shots is on the road today. James Heale and Megan McElroy have travelled up to the frozen north to speak to the candidates who are lobbying locals in the lead-up to the Gorton and Denton by-election. This is the seat vacated by Labour’s Andrew Gwynne, and made famous by Keir Starmer refusing to

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Gorton & Denton by-election: everything you need to know
What next for Peter Mandelson?

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What next for Peter Mandelson?

It is one of the staple headlines of British politics: Peter Mandelson has resigned. The so-called Prince of Darkness was sacked as US ambassador last September, yet that has done little to stem the flow of stories about the alleged nature of his relationship with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. This weekend saw the publication of a

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What next for Peter Mandelson?
How should the UK manage its relationship with China?

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How should the UK manage its relationship with China?

As Keir Starmer’s visit to China draws to a close, Sam Olsen – who runs the States of Play substack – and Times columnist Cindy Yu join Patrick Gibbons to discuss how the UK should manage its relationship with China. Starmer’s visit has drawn criticism from various China hawks – and from President Trump –

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How should the UK manage its relationship with China?
Rayner vs Streeting – and what is 'active government'?

Coffee House Shots

Rayner vs Streeting – and what is ‘active government’?

In his column this week, Tim Shipman has finally hit upon an answer to the age-old question: what is Starmerism? After a concerted effort from his team to tie the Prime Minister down to a definitive ‘-ism’, he has delivered a threefold structure: firstly, the contestable claim that Labour has achieved macroeconomic stability by clinging

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Rayner vs Streeting – and what is 'active government'?
Is centrism dead? | with David Gauke, vice-chair of Prosper UK

Coffee House Shots

Is centrism dead? | with David Gauke, vice-chair of Prosper UK

Is centrism back? This week a group of former Tory heavyweights – including Ruth Davidson, Andy Street, Amber Rudd and David Gauke – have launched a new group aimed at reclaiming the centre ground and dispelling the myth that politics in 2026 is a straight shooting match between increasingly diffuse left/right poles. They say that

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Is centrism dead? | with David Gauke, vice-chair of Prosper UK
Breaking news: Lammy was good at PMQs

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Breaking news: Lammy was good at PMQs

It is our solemn duty to inform listeners that David Lammy won deputy PMQs at a canter today. To be frank, it was a low-rent affair. Andrew Griffith was the Tory sent out to question David Lammy while Keir Starmer is in China, and the shadow business secretary didn’t do a particularly good job. Perhaps

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Breaking news: Lammy was good at PMQs
What does Starmer want to achieve in China?

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What does Starmer want to achieve in China?

Keir Starmer lands in China tonight as he becomes the first British Prime Minister to visit since Theresa May in 2018. Sam Hogg from the Oxford China Policy Lab and James Heale join Patrick Gibbons to assess the UK-China relationship right now, what Labour is hoping to get from the visit and whether there are

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What does Starmer want to achieve in China?
Suella Braverman defects – not another one!

Coffee House Shots

Suella Braverman defects – not another one!

It’s psychodrama all round on Coffee House Shots today. Between Andy Burnham – who over the weekend was denied the opportunity to stand in the Gorton and Denton by-election – and Suella Braverman – who has just announced that she’s defecting to Reform (shock horror) – it seems like the main parties are competing to

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Suella Braverman defects – not another one!

Coffee House Shots

Reasons to be optimistic | with Michael Gove, Tim Stanley, Steve Baker & David Goodhart

Post-holiday depression, failed New Year’s resolutions and battered bank balances: January’s Blue Monday has long been branded as the most miserable day of the year. Headlines warn of ongoing war, political turmoil and economic gloom – but could they be mistaken? Join The Spectator and special guests as they defy the doomsters to deliver an optimist’s guide

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Coffee House Shots

Does British politics reward traitors or faithfuls?

With the Conservatives on watch for further defectors, academic Richard Johnson and Conservative peer Danny Finkelstein join James Heale to discuss whether British politics rewards traitors or faithfuls. Richard points out that often personal success is dependent on whether the party goes on to be a major or minor player in British politics; Winston Churchill

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Andy Burnham is back in the game – and Robert Jenrick reveals all

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Andy Burnham is back in the game – and Robert Jenrick reveals all

Three big stories for James Heale and Tim Shipman to pick over today: Andy Burnham’s return, the Donald Trump that refuses to go away, and the continued fallout of Robert Jenrick’s defection to Reform. This afternoon we found out that former Labour minister Andrew Gwynne is on the brink of standing down as an MP,

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Andy Burnham is back in the game – and Robert Jenrick reveals all
Starmer turns on Trump

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Starmer turns on Trump

Keir Starmer scored a rare win at PMQs, talking tough on Trump in light of the President’s escalating rhetoric on Greenland and the Chagos Islands. Kemi Badenoch pressed the Prime Minister on foreign affairs and Britain’s relationship with the US president, and Starmer departed from his usual caution to strike a notably firmer tone. What

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Starmer turns on Trump
The scandal of China’s ‘super embassy’

Coffee House Shots

The scandal of China’s ‘super embassy’

China’s controversial ‘super embassy’ has been approved, after years of debate over the security risks. Campaigners had called on ministers not to give the site the green light, given its proximity to important internet cables that support the City of London. MI5 have admitted they can’t ‘wholly eliminate’ the national security risks around the site.

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The scandal of China’s ‘super embassy’
Greenland: why Europe needs to 'grow up' | with Tim Marshall

Coffee House Shots

Greenland: why Europe needs to ‘grow up’ | with Tim Marshall

Donald Trump has thrown another diplomatic hand grenade. This weekend, the President threatened sweeping tariffs on countries backing Greenland’s independence – a move that has rattled European capitals and reignited questions about America’s global strategy. Is this about Arctic security, rare earth minerals, or something more personal? As tensions rise, how should Britain respond? Can

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Greenland: why Europe needs to 'grow up' | with Tim Marshall

Coffee House Shots

Debate: what’s the point of the Lib Dems?

As Ed Davey condemned Donald Trump’s military manoeuvres abroad, Annabel Denham looked on and asked ‘what’s the point of the Liberal Democrats?’. Thinking about the Lib Dem’s longstanding europhile stance, the senior political correspondent at the Telegraph wrote: ‘the party that once stood on a tradition of civil liberties now wants us to rejoin a

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Jenrick vs Badenoch: who won yesterday's defection?

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Jenrick vs Badenoch: who won yesterday’s defection?

Yesterday was a breathless day in Westminster. The defection of Robert Jenrick spawned plenty of headlines and even more memes. But now that the dust has settled, how has the news been received? Was it a total victory for Reform, and evidence that they are slowly swallowing up the Tory party, or is Kemi still

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Jenrick vs Badenoch: who won yesterday's defection?
Inside Jenrick & Reform's shotgun marriage

Coffee House Shots

Inside Jenrick & Reform’s shotgun marriage

Robert Jenrick has sensationally defected to Reform. After a day that started with his sacking from the Conservatives – over plotting to reject – continued with the will-he-won’t-he drama of whether Farage would accept him as a new Reform member this afternoon; it ends with a press conference welcoming him to Farage’s gang. So what

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Inside Jenrick & Reform's shotgun marriage

Coffee House Shots

Is Jenrick joining Reform?

Kemi Badenoch has sacked Robert Jenrick from the shadow cabinet, removed the Tory whip and suspended his party membership. In a video on X she claims, ‘I was presented with clear, irrefutable evidence that he was plotting in secret to defect in a way designed to be as damaging as possible’. The Tories compiled a

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Coffee House Shots

What’s the future of the Scottish Tories?

The leader of the Scottish Conservatives, Russell Findlay MSP, sits down with James Heale to look ahead to May’s pivotal Holyrood elections. He pushes back against the threat from Reform, arguing that Nigel Farage is trying to be ‘all things to all people’, and he is scathing about the lack of loyalty shown by those

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Coffee House Shots

Why Ed Davey is happy being boring

The Liberal Democrats have unveiled a new strategy on the NHS. Sir Ed set out his big, bold plan this morning: scrapping the UK–US pharmaceutical deal to redirect £1.5 billion into social care. It sounds like a substantial sum – until you remember it amounts to less than 1 per cent of the NHS’s annual

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Coffee House Shots

Zahawi defects: are Reform becoming Tories 2.0?

How many Tories is too many? That’s the question Westminster is asking after the unveiling of Reform’s latest defector. Nadhim Zahawi, Boris Johnson’s brief-lived Chancellor of the Exchequer, is Nigel Farage’s latest recruit. He told journalists that the UK had reached a ‘dark and dangerous’ moment, and that the country needed ‘a glorious revolution’. But

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Coffee House Shots

Mums for Reform?

Britain’s mums are backing Nigel Farage. One in five Mumsnet users intend to vote for Reform at the next general election, the first time a party other than Labour has topped its poll. Having been more negative towards Farage and the right in the past, why are its politically engaged users changing their minds? Are

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Coffee House Shots

Keir Starmer, pub harmer

Another year, another U-turn. We expect that the Labour government will be forced to climb down on forthcoming increases to the business rates bills faced by pubs in England. This comes after ferocious industry backlash, spearheaded by figures such as Tom Kerridge, who has been out in the media this week drawing attention to the

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