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.



Capitalism: a humanitarian mission, but can Tories spread the wealth?

Posted on May 1, 2014 | 0 comments

written for The Telegraph, 1 May 2014 Last night, on Channel 4 News, I used the phrase  “profit is not a dirty word”.  I was talking in that instance about arts funding (as I point out for The Spectator, the arts have been hit hard by the recession – why shouldn’t theatres take BP’s money if it...

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David Aaronovitch doesn’t have to be female to spot that The Vagenda is frippery

Posted on Apr 28, 2014 | 0 comments

written for The Telegraph, 28 April 2014 “Still, in our society, women are subjected to abuse as bitches and ‘hos’, ridiculed for their appearance and somehow incapable of being bishops. Feminism has gone too far? It’s gone nowhere near far enough. Feminism has gone mad? It ought to be as mad...

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Boris, like his attention-seeking dad, is a Europhile at heart

Posted on Mar 18, 2014 | 0 comments

written for The Telegraph, 18 March 2014 Stanley Johnson is in the news today, having apparently barged into the Tory leadership squabble to demand that his son, Boris, be allowed to stand for the leadership while still Mayor of London, without needing to hold a parliamentary seat. Over at the Guardian,...

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Gove’s attack on Etonians: a sign that senior Tories are giving up on the next election

Posted on Mar 15, 2014 | 0 comments

written for The Telegraph, 15 March 2014 Michael Gove’s interview with today’s FT contains an extraordinary attack on Etonian domination of the top of the Tory Party. Sure, he “doesn’t blame any of the individuals concerned”, and sure, it’s part of a broader crusade against social immobility in...

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Putin’s champion Alexander Nekrassov boasts 79,000 Twitter followers. Could most of them be fake?

Posted on Mar 9, 2014 | 0 comments

written for The Telegraph, 9 March 2014     Policy pundits used to be a prim and proper bunch. But in the age of Twitter, the trash-talking starts long before TV panelists make it to a news studio. On Friday, I accepted an invitation to discuss Ukraine on Channel 4 News’s What The...

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Putin’s propaganda machine is in overdrive. But why is a Conservative MP buying it?

Posted on Mar 6, 2014 | 0 comments

written for The Telegraph, 6 March 2014 If anyone was in any doubt of Russia’s expansionist aims in Eastern Europe, Vladimir Putin’s rambling press conference on Tuesday should have made things clear. One direct claim emerged from Putin’s ethical morass of doublespeak:  international agreements are...

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