Politics & Comment
I comment regularly on British and American politics, with a broad focus on foreign policy. I also maintain a particular expertise in the internal workings of the Conservative Party. I have contributed columns to most major British newspapers, starting my career at The Spectator, and am currently most likely to be found at The Financial Times and The Guardian, as well as number of US outlets. I have recently joined the Board of Index on Censorship.
In addition to my perspective as an intellectual historian, I also have a strong hinterland in the Anglican church, and write regularly on issues of faith and ethics. Much of my insight into British politics has been shaped by my time as part of the team responsible for establishing Bright Blue, the think tank associated with the Tory modernisation agenda. In 2014, I published a collection of essays with Ryan Shorthouse on the future of the Conservative Party, entitled The Modernisers’ Manifesto, for Bright Blue.
I have also made available here the three articles I wrote in late 2017 about Damian Green MP, which formed part of the #metoo movement and eventually led to his resignation as First Secretary of State. Originally published behind paywalls, they were widely reported in more sensationalist terms and it is important to me that my own words on the matter are publicly available.
Like most people who write for newspapers, I have no control over the headlines added to my articles. So I sometimes post articles here with my own choice of headlines, when I feel strongly that the published headlines are inappropriate.
Ben Sullivan may be a hypocrite, but he’s right: Oxford has a toxic ‘lad’ culture
written for The Telegraph, 23 June 2014 Oh, Ben Sullivan. 21, and you’ve already got a Newsnight appearance under your belt. Not bad for an aspiring politician. And you’ve got a new cause: lad culture at our elite universities. Given the women who’ve been writing about this for the last five years –...
Read MoreDefending women’s freedom isn’t pretty. It takes an army
written for The Telegraph, 17 June, 2014 In 415BC, the Athenian army raped and slaughtered its way across the island Melos, the most notorious by-casualty of Athens’ 27-year war with Sparta. The brutal treatment of the island’s women remains infamous, not least because it inspired Euripides’ great...
Read MoreSyria’s humanitarian crisis must be addressed by Turkey
written for The Spectator, 16 January 2014 On Tuesday morning, Turkish police in the border cities of Kilis and Gaziantep arrested 25 people on suspicion of aiding Jihadi fighters in neighbouring Syria, including two said to be high ranking Al Qaeda operatives. Seven Conservative MPs had flown out...
Read MoreBordering Isolation: on the margins of the Middle East
written for Index on Censorship, Summer 2014 Kate Maltby reports on the Dom people, nomads who have been forced by the Syrian war into Turkey and “pass” as Kurds to improve their treatment Before the Syrian civil war, 60-year old Shaima was used to slipping over Turkey’s porous eastern border...
Read MoreCan we please stop talking about a Tory-Ukip pact?
written for The Telegraph, 29 May 2014 Perhaps, next year, the comments below these blogs will be full of diatribes against LibLabConKip. Such, surely, is the natural conclusion of any pact between the Conservatives and Ukip, which my colleague Daniel Hannan MEP has called for. At the end of this tumultuous...
Read MoreFeminists should celebrate the closure of Nuts: it was never pornographic enough
written for The Telegraph, 3rd May, 2014 Porn, like the poor, will always be with us. Nuts magazine, which brought polythene packaged nudity down from the top shelf to the middle market, has just unveiled its last ever cover image (a weeping Lucy Pinder, because the real victims of Nuts’...
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