Fraser Nelson

Fraser Nelson

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

France bombs Islamic State bases in Raqqa. But will it make much difference?

From our UK edition

Yesterday, Francois Hollande promised “merciless” retribution against the Islamic State. This evening, armed with American intelligence, the French Air Force dropped 20 bombs on two Isil positions in Raqqa – in what tomorrow’s newspapers will almost certainly portray as a swift and dramatic act of vengeance. But in fact, it won’t be much different to

Paris massacre: ten developments, as of Sunday morning

From our UK edition

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

From our UK edition

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.

Spectator Parliamentarian of the Year 2015: the winners

From our UK edition

The Spectator’s 32nd Parliamentarian of the Year awards, sponsored by Benenden, took place at the Savoy Hotel this afternoon. Here are the winners – and a few extracts from my speech. The awards were presented by Alex Salmond. The winners’ speeches, and my spiel, are below: 1. Speech of the year – Johnny Mercer Our winner is a

Osborne’s ‘living wage’ will help richer households the most

From our UK edition

Last week’s tax credit debacle has highlighted how even well-informed people believe that the £9 minimum wage (misleadingly dubbed ‘living wage’ by the government) is a progressive measure that will help the poorest the most. The low-paid are being hit by tax credit cuts, it’s argued, but don’t worry, soon they’ll get a £9 minimum wage!

The British public agrees: China is buying our foreign policy

From our UK edition

A few weeks ago, the Dalai Lama gave an interview to The Spectator where he summed up what he regarded as David Cameron’s policy of not seeing him again, so as to not upset his new friends in Beijing. ‘Money, money, money,’ he said. ‘That’s what this is about. Where is morality?’ A powerful point – and

The jobs miracle continues: UK employment now at all-time high

From our UK edition

Another milestone has been reached in the recovery: 73.6pc of working-aged British people are now in employment (see above) – the highest in recorded history. And, needless to say, the highest of any country in Europe. What kind of jobs? Mainly full-time employees (up 2.1pc) not self-employment (down 0.6pc). The total number of hours worked is also up,

The SNP bow out of the shambolic EU ‘in’ campaign

From our UK edition

After the chaotic launch of the Britain Stronger in Europe campaign (didn’t they work out that having the acronym BSE is not a good idea?) the Scottish National Party has made its mind up: it’ll stay well clear of this. John Swinney, the SNP Deputy First Minister, has just been on BBC Radio Scotland laying

Six ways in which the Conservatives became Britain’s true progressives

From our UK edition

‘Britain and Twitter are not the same thing’ said David Cameron this week – eight words that summed up the difference between the two parties. One has disappeared down a rabbit hole of social media, convinced that Britain is becoming more unequal and that the poorest have been suffering the most. The other, the Tories, are hard at work

Theresa May lambasts her own record on immigration. Why?

From our UK edition

What on earth is Theresa May playing at? As Home Secretary she vowed to cut net immigration down to the ‘tens of thousands,’ only to see it increase to a record high of 330,000. A bit embarrassing: the slogans that used to adorn Tory conferences boasting ‘immigration down’ have been quietly removed, and replied by

The chaos of Libya returns to haunt David Cameron

From our UK edition

‘Were we right to stop a massacre? Yes, we absolutely were,’ said David Cameron on his Radio 4 Today programme interview. But the real question is different: were we right to depose Gaddafi, given the chaos (and bloodshed) that has followed in Libya? Are things so much better for the citizens of Benghazi (and the 80,000 souls