The Spectator

Sponge

From our UK edition

‘I don’t believe you’re genuinely looking for work. I think you’re just a sponge.’

Settle

From our UK edition

‘So far, I’ve not met anyone I’d want to settle down and get into debt with.’

Argue

From our UK edition

‘In retrospect, I’m glad we decided to argue at home rather than abroad this year.’

Opera

From our UK edition

‘Must we go in and see it? Can’t we just stick to telling people we paid £1,000 a ticket?’

Letters | 3 October 2012

From our UK edition

On Israel and Iran Sir: Your leading article (‘Israel Alone’, 29 September) implies that there is consensus among Israelis that Iran must be attacked. This is far from the case. There is vigorous internal debate, with opposition MPs, a judge, and senior military and intelligence officials publicly denouncing Netanyahu’s calls for a strike. Padraic Rohan

Portrait of the week | 3 October 2012

From our UK edition

Home In a well-received 65-minute speech without notes to the party conference, Ed Miliband, the Labour leader, presented himself as a human being and concluded: ‘This is who I am. This is what I believe. This is my faith.’ Mr Miliband presented Labour as a One Nation party. He also said that if banks do

The Right Revd

From our UK edition

It is a good job that the Crown Nominations Commission chooses its two favoured candidates for Archbishop of Canterbury in secret and without the pageantry involved when the cardinals choose a new Pope. Otherwise, there would be some extremely unhappy reporters stationed on a pavement somewhere, waiting in exasperation for a puff of white smoke.

Jeremy Hunt: no promises on the NHS ringfence

From our UK edition

In this week’s Spectator James Forsyth interviews new Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt about how he will continue Andrew Lansley’s legacy on NHS reform. He says his ‘burning mission’ is to ‘demonstrate that we have as much to offer the NHS as Labour ever did’. But while Hunt is keen to praise the work of his