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.



Since when was the hijab a feminist statement?

Posted on Jun 25, 2015 | 0 comments

written for The Spectator, 25 June 2015   Over ten years ago, the satirical American magazine The Onion published an article under the headline: Women Now Empowered By Everything A Woman Does. If you’ve ever heard someone insist that pole dancing is empowering, The Onion predicted it. In a...

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Trigger Warnings have no place in education

Posted on May 26, 2015 | 0 comments

written for The Spectator, 26 May 2015 I get defensive when feminists are accused of being prudes. There’s nothing prudish in critiquing a monotonously promiscuous culture; in despairing of unrealistic body standards, or believing, as I’ve argued before, that porn is healthy, even necessary, when it’s...

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We Conservatives can’t be the party of both meritocracy & monarchy

Posted on May 14, 2015 | 0 comments

 written for The Guardian, 14 May 2015 There’s nothing like royalty to get ministerial pores oozing grease. If my stomach turned on reading Prince Charles’s “black spider memos”, released under the Freedom of Information Act after a five-year campaign by this newspaper, it wasn’t in response to...

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Labour’s sex-segregated rally is a disgrace

Posted on May 4, 2015 | 0 comments

written for The Spectator, 4 May 2015 Labour MPs who spoke at Satruday’s sex-segregated rally in Birmingham don’t seem too keen on explaining themselves to The Spectator.  Siôn Simon, now a Labour MEP for the West Midlands, proudly tweeted a picture of a Labour rally in Hodge Hill, in which seven...

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Learn from Elizabeth I, Cameron: a named successor is a shroud

Posted on Mar 24, 2015 | 0 comments

written for The Spectator, 24th March 2015   As Fraser Nelson says on this morning’s Spectator podcast, David Cameron will likely be regretting yesterday’s announcement for the rest of his premiership. He’s not a ripe watermelon; highlighting that he has a best before date won’t encourage...

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The Death of Klinghoffer is simplistic and dangerous. So is banning it

Posted on Oct 27, 2014 | 0 comments

written for The Spectator, 27 October 2014     My father’s house was razed In 1948 When the Israelis passed over our street   I’ve never forgotten the opening lines to John Adam’s 1991 opera, The Death of Klinghoffer. Crisp, elegiac, this  ‘Chorus of Exiled Palestinians’ rises up to...

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