Columnists M - Z
Steve Richards: Blunkett's only real revelation is just how sidelined the Cabinet has been under Blair

Published: 12 October 2006
Janet Street-Porter: It's time to ditch this unhealthy stereotype

Published: 12 October 2006
Can I write in praise of the North? If you've been reading the woeful tale of Fat Britain, the main culprits all seems to reside north of the Humber. Not only has Britain been shamed this week as the fattest country in Europe, a north-south divide seems to emerge, according to the latest Health Report for England.
Joan Smith: Madonna doesn't need to 'rescue' this child

Published: 12 October 2006
Deborah Orr: Hope doesn't always make economic sense

Published: 11 October 2006
Hamish McRae: YouTube is young, democratic and shows that the world is changing before our eyes

Published: 11 October 2006
Mark Steel: Why didn't Straw mention the veil to the Saudis?

Published: 11 October 2006
Brian Viner: Country Life

Published: 11 October 2006
Miss Whiplash, who lives about five fields away from us, is selling off the macabre memorabilia that she collected while she was working as a dominatrix and madam in London.
Thomas Sutcliffe: Has North Korea made the world a safer place?

Published: 10 October 2006
We're told that North Korea's nuclear test registered 4.2 on the Richter scale as measured by the US Geological Survey. Small earthquake, nobody - so far as we know - dead. But according to the international media's informal seismographic, the tremor was far greater, setting off all kinds of global diplomatic aftershocks. Teacups rattled in Beijing, plaster came off the ceiling in Washington and in Tokyo tiles slipped off the roof and shattered.
Steve Richards: Ignore all this cheap populism on prisons

Published: 10 October 2006
Deborah Orr: So many good intentions squandered

Published: 10 October 2006
John Walsh: Tales of the City

Published: 10 October 2006
Joan Smith: Putin's Russia failed to protect this brave woman

Published: 09 October 2006
Andreas Whittam Smith: Has the Turner Prize lost its way?

Published: 09 October 2006
John Rentoul: Power dressing, Cameron-style We're all cross-dressers now Dave Through the Looking Glass

Published: 08 October 2006
Joan Smith: The veil is a feminist issue

Published: 08 October 2006
Editor-At-Large: Madonna's got it right for once - this is the way to help Africa

Published: 08 October 2006
Madonna is not adopting a child from Africa to bring home to London. What she's doing in Malawi may be considered far more worthwhile than the public perception of Meg Ryan or Angelina Jolie, who rescue cute toddlers from deprived countries and are then photographed at airports around the world with a cuddly, smiley, orphan. Madonna's staff have spent the last few weeks in Africa, helping to set up the Raising Malawi centre to feed and educate orphans in a country (the 10th poorest in the world) where the population has been decimated by Aids.
Alan Watkins: The age of the Silly Party is here. Which is bad news for Gordon's Sensible Party

Published: 08 October 2006
Deborah Orr: Capricious or not, celebrity adopters are a symptom of a crisis at home

Published: 07 October 2006
Madonna's people may be furiously denying that the star was doing anything more controversial than kissing babies in Malawi this week. But the story of her alleged adoption still illustrates perfectly how celebrities are gradually becoming the culture's useful idiots.
Brian Viner: When Amir met Ali it was the real deal rather than reality-show ersatz

Published: 07 October 2006
Matthew Norman: Only the US could ban online gambling

Published: 06 October 2006
Christina Patterson: Macho government is on the warpath

Published: 06 October 2006
It's hard to think of a Western government more parodically testosterone-fuelled than that of George W Bush. Here he is: the taciturn man of the people, strutting around his ranch in cowboy boots and jeans. Here he is again: the conquering hero, kitted out like Barbie's Ken, hailing his new Jerusalem in Iraq. And here's the 43rd President of the United States: suited, booted and quietly informing the world that he will hunt down and "smoke out" America's enemies - that he will launch, in fact, a war that can never end.
Thomas Sutcliffe: Don't cast Asperger's on Holbein

Published: 06 October 2006
I felt a little for Boris Johnson the other day, fending off the wasp-like attacks that followed his foolish decision to say what was actually on his mind, rather than process his statements through the usual Passport Control of political acceptability.
Steve Richards: For the Tories, as for Labour, this has been a conference that has failed to move them on

Published: 05 October 2006
Mark Steel: Yo, dudes, meet the new Conservative crew

Published: 05 October 2006