Lara Prendergast

Lara Prendergast

Lara Prendergast is executive editor of The Spectator. She hosts two Spectator podcasts, The Edition and Table Talk, and edits The Spectator’s food and drink coverage.

Brexit was a harsh political awakening for young people

Since Brexit became a reality early on Friday morning, my Facebook feed has been filled with mournful posts written by friends who voted Remain. Those who voted Leave seem to be staying quiet. This is understandable. Most of my friends are in their twenties. They tend to be educated and globalist in their outlook. They have enjoyed the freedom of movement that the EU offered them, and feel they have benefitted overall from Britain being a member. It is painful to see the comity of the EU suddenly stripped away, and I sympathise on many counts. The vote for Brexit will no doubt be a defining political moment for my age group. I sense that more people now feel politically engaged than ever before.

Could Brexit solve the housing crisis?

It is, at times, unclear that George Osborne is aware that the under-30s are voting in this EU referendum. When he talks about house prices plummeting post-Brexit, he talks as if this will strike fear into everyone’s hearts. For older people seeking to downsize, this might be true – but for almost everyone else, it’s not. And when I hear the In side arguing that we should all be terrified of Brexit because it will cause house prices to fall, I can’t help but wonder if this is the best single reason to vote ‘out’. For most people my age, one of the worst changes in Britain has been the way property prices have spiraled out of control – indeed, how the economic system is conspiring against my generation.

Indoor gardening

A year or so ago, I inherited a cardboard box filled with plants. It was an offshoot from an enormous collection that belonged to a young botanist from Stockwell. He was about to be turfed out of the derelict building he lived in and hundreds of plants were being spread across London. I offered to rehome a few. My only outdoor space is a window box, so most of the plants had to face life indoors. Some were happy; others withered. I enjoyed having them, though, so I replaced the dead and began a collection. My one-bed flat now contains more than 20 plants. The window box is bursting with herbs — parsley, sage, rosemary and thyme. I’ve also added some mint. More knowledgeable friends tell me that it has aggressive roots and will soon turn into a despotic ruler.

Labour’s Lisa Nandy suggests that Naz Shah should be suspended from the party

Labour's Lisa Nandy has just been on the Daily Politics, where she suggested that Naz Shah should be suspended from the party. When asked about Bradford West MP Naz Shah's comments about Israel,  Nandy told Jo Coburn that the Labour party should 'suspend anybody who makes anti-Semitic comments in line with our policy and investigate it'. She said: 'We have a policy that people who make anti-Semitic remarks are suspended and an investigation carried out...and the policy ought to be followed without any exception.' 'There has to be a suspension and an investigation when something like this occurs because it is so serious and it does have a knock-on effect outside of parliament. 'There is a real problem for the Labour Party if we don't look like we're taking this things seriously...

Vote Leave given designation as official Brexit campaign

After months of waiting, the Electoral Commission has announced that Vote Leave has been given the official designation for the EU referendum. This means that MPs including Michael Gove, Boris Johnson and Frank Field will now become the official faces of the Leave campaign, while Nigel Farage and Ukip donor Arron Banks, who were behind the Grassroots Out campaign, will be sidelined. Britain Stronger in Europe will be the official Remain organisation. Explaining its decision, Claire Bassett, Chief Executive of the Electoral Commission said: 'Where there are competing applicants for a particular outcome the law is clear, we must designate the applicant which appears to us to represent those campaigning for that outcome to the greatest extent.

Does Paul Mason really want the next century to imitate Renaissance Florence?

'Amid the cobbled passageways and tumbling tenements of the Italian city of Perugia, it’s possible to daydream you are in the middle ages. You are surrounded by medieval art and architecture. And then you think: hold on, what happened to the Renaissance?’ So begins Paul Mason's article for the Guardian on Monday about the Panama Papers, in which he makes the case that because Perugia's wealthy citizens did not pay their taxes, the city fell into decline. 'We want to be the Florence, Bruges or Amsterdam of the coming century, not the Perugia,' he adds. Renaissance Florence may be intoxicating and I don’t doubt that its citizens were possibly better at paying their taxes than Perugia’s.

New Zealand’s flag vote makes me proud to be both Kiwi and British

I'm technically 3/4 Kiwi and 1/4 British, although having lived in the UK most of my life, it doesn't often feel this way. But when it comes to rugby, I support the All Blacks, and when I go walking in the mud, I wear gumboots, not wellingtons. So I've taken a vague interest in the fact that New Zealand has held a referendum about whether to change its national flag, but has now voted by 56.6 per cent to keep the status quo; that is, the traditional flag which features the Union Jack on it. I can see why this has caused so much tension and why it has divided opinion.

Islamic State claim responsibility for terror attack in Brussels

At least 14 dead after two explosions by 'suicide bombers' at American Airlines check-in desk at Brussels airport. 81 injured. Firemen are said to have found a third unexploded device. Separate explosion at Maelbeek metro station in Brussels city centre, 500 metres from an EU institution. At least 20 dead and 55 injured. Islamic State have claimed responsibility for the attack. Brussels airport and the city's Metro have shut down. The airport will remain closed until 6am on Wednesday morning. All Eurostar trains to and from Brussels have been cancelled. All trains to Brussels stations from Paris have been cancelled.

Fear of the baby-snatchers

Baby George was born into a happy family. His mother and father love him dearly. He lives in a cottage in a pretty village, with a six-year-old sister who adores him, and his grandmother lives nearby. His parents both have good jobs and his nursery is filled with toys. By most measures, George has had a good start in life. It was only when his mother was diagnosed with post-natal depression that George’s prospects looked bleaker. Not because his caring mother was feeling blue, but because in this, paranoid, post-Baby P era, the authorities take no chances. The slightest whiff of a mother unable to cope, and they swoop down, ready to whisk the baby away. When Rosie first realised she was depressed, she assumed the doctor would be able to offer her advice about how to cope.

President Hassan Rouhani needs to get over the shock of the nude

Has a new art installation opened up at the Capitoline museum? One might be forgiven for thinking so: nude sculptures were recently encased in white wooden boxes so that only their heads could be seen. So modern! So fresh! So radical! Except there was nothing radical about it. Instead, Italian authorities took the decision to cover up the ancient nude statues in honour of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani's official visit to Rome, during his first trip to Europe since international sanctions against his country were lifted. Rouhani and his entourage could not, reportedly, cope with the sight of marble sculptures of naked women, including a Venus dating back to the second century BC.

Rise of the Norland nanny

The young nannies arriving for their morning lectures at Norland College in Bath make quite a sight. Although the road is empty, they bank up along the pavement waiting for the lights to change. They are in their winter uniform of brown hat and gloves, hair in a neat bun; some push old-fashioned Silver Cross prams with plastic babies in them. Eventually the green man appears and the nannies cross. These girls look as if they are being trained for a bygone era — and that is certainly part of their appeal — but they are well prepared for modern life. Founded in London in 1892, Norland College made its name providing nannies for British aristocrats and royals.

Why are feminists refusing to discuss the Cologne sex attacks?

Regardless of the background of the men who carried out the attacks in Cologne on New Year's Eve, it is a pretty horrific story. A series of sexual attacks took place in the city centre by a group of around 1,000 men. More than 150 women have filed criminal complaints, three-quarters of them for sexual assault. Two cases of rape have been reported. It is the kind of story that should make headlines - and should provide ample fodder for writers who like to tackle feminist topics head on. After all, surely this is the very definition of 'rape culture'? And if the actual attacks aren't enough to merit a reaction, then how about the suggestion by Cologne's female mayor that women should adopt a 'code of conduct' to prevent future assault.

Jeremy Corbyn must be delighted by Simon Danczuk’s suspension from Labour

Simon Danczuk's lightning-fast suspension from Labour - as they investigate whether he sent 'lewd' texts to a seventeen-year-old girl - is an embarrassing note to end the year on. Especially for an MP like Danczuk who has spent much of the last few years positioning himself as a campaigner against child abuse. He has described today's story in the Sun as being 'not entirely accurate' but has suggested that his behaviour 'was inappropriate'. 'I was stupid and there's no fool like an old fool' he said via Twitter. https://twitter.com/SimonDanczuk/status/682531578434686976 Danczuk has now had the party whip removed, so he will sit as an independent MP. He seems to think it won't last long.

Stephen Gilbert to step down as deputy chairman of the Conservative party

In the new year the EU referendum battle will heat up, and it seems the Conservative party are already starting to shuffle things around in preparation. Stephen Gilbert, the party's current deputy chairman, has today announced that he is standing down from this position. When Gilbert originally became deputy chairman, it was agreed that he could also hold non-executive roles with other groups. In November, he took up a part-time position at Populus, the official polling company for the main campaign to keep Britain in the EU, Britain Stronger in Europe (BSIE). While this position was in accordance with Conservative party rules, the move infuriated plenty of Tory Eurosceptics, who felt it undermined the party's commitment to remain neutral during the referendum.

Not all Uber drivers are Islamists, just like not all London cabbies are John Worboys

Uber aren't going to be thrilled to hear that Muhaydin Mire, the man who has been arrested on suspicion of knifing a man at Leytonstone station, while shouting 'This is for Syria', was reportedly one of their drivers. On social media, London cabbies have already started to capitalise on this, by making the case that you're better off sticking with them if you want to avoid catching a ride with a jihadi. A new hashtag is currently doing the rounds: #HeWasAnUberDriverBruv - and the Licensed Taxi Drivers Association has been quick to adopt it, while also wondering how many more 'TFL licensed terrorists' are out there.

Yes, we wear poppies. But we don’t print our faces onto them

'What’s worse: people who add French flags to their Facebook profiles, or those who sneer at them?' asks my colleague Isabel Hardman on Coffee House today. 'Haven’t we always offered small gestures to commemorate sad events? Or to show respect? Why do we buy poppies in November, and feel under-dressed without them?' In some ways, I agree with Isabel - it is normal to want to show respect, and to feel an emotional response to such serious events. What troubles me about the profile picture change is not so much the act - had the option been to change your profile picture simply to a Tricolore, without your face behind it, I might have found it less hard to criticise.

In their own words – the Paris attacks as told by the survivors

Last night, terrorists launched a total of six coordinated attacks at high-profile sites across Paris. French prosecutors have put the current death toll at 128, with 99 critically injured. There were two suicide bomb attacks at a bar near the Stade de France where President Hollande was watching the match. One witness told the Mail: He felt like he was 'in a video game'. 'There was an explosion in front of us. It was a very loud noise. At first I thought it was a bin that had been set alight. But then I thought it wasn't a fire cracker. 'Everyone stopped. A man was on the floor screaming. I don't know what happened to the man. I just heard him scream and move around the floor. He wasn't unconscious.

There’s no shame in the V&A changing their mind about Thatcher’s wardrobe

The news that the V&A had rejected an offer of Margaret Thatcher's wardrobe was met with dismay yesterday. 'Shame the V&A has turned down Thatcher’s personal collection. I for one would have loved to see it!' said the business secretary, Sajid Javid, on Twitter. Conor Burns MP suggested that the collection’s breakup would be a 'tragedy'. Even Vivienne Westwood, hardly a dyed-in-the-wool Tory, said on Radio 2 that while she was no 'fan' of Thatcher, the Iron Lady was 'certainly in her lifetime the best-dressed woman. She had terrific taste.' She also admitted that 'it would be lovely if the V&A showed her clothes.

The V&A must be mad to reject Margaret Thatcher’s wardrobe

The V&A have defended their decision to turn down the offer of Margaret Thatcher's wardrobe on the basis that it only collects items of ‘outstanding aesthetic or technical quality’ rather than those with ‘intrinsic social historical value’. Yet in the same statement, they also suggest that the museum is responsible for 'chronicling fashionable dress'. I'm not entirely sure how the V&A believes it can fillet out the 'social historical value' from their aim of 'chronicling fashionable dress'. I'm also not sure I believe them. Thatcher is a divisive figure, and many people - some of them, presumably curators at the V&A, dislike her intensely.

Unreliable evidence

I hadn’t really thought much about pixels before, despite spending a large portion of my day looking at them. After all, a pixel is just a tiny unit in a digital image, and we all tend to look at the bigger picture. But how about this: this humble unit has now become a key feature of drone warfare. Drone-fired missiles have reportedly been developed that can burrow through targeted buildings, and leave a hole that appears smaller than a pixel on publicly available satellite images. This means that drone strikes are often invisible to groups who try to monitor attacks, such as NGOs or the UN.