The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20070118220547/http://comment.independent.co.uk:80/columnists_m_z/

Columnists M - Z

Steve Richards: Gordon Brown does not have any foreign policies. And why on earth should he?

Published: 18 January 2007

The downfall of Thatcher and Blair can be traced to their fixed positions on foreign affairs

Janet Street-Porter: Show caution with these stupid inmates

Published: 18 January 2007

On Tuesday 9 January I discussed the current series of Celebrity Big Brother on GMTV with Lorraine Kelly, and pointed out that the way that Jade Goody's mother, Jackiey, repeatedly asked glamorous Bollywood star and fellow housemate Shilpa what her name was, and continually pronounced it incorrectly, was verging on racism. I said this made for very uncomfortable viewing, and was surprised, as a former television executive, that Channel 4 had not edited the programme to remove the remarks because there are strict guidelines about such matters.

Deborah Orr: Give Scotland its economic independence and it will start to flourish like Ireland

Published: 17 January 2007

Scotland shouldn't be doing as badly as it is, given its natural resources and its educated population

Mark Steel: Help the rich to save the poor

Published: 17 January 2007

Beckham is often derided as stupid, but he's exhibiting the spirit of his age

Hamish McRae: If house prices keep rising, so will inflation

Published: 17 January 2007

Inflation will be a constraint on policy for the foreseeable future in a way it has not been for a decade

Brian Viner: Country Life

Published: 17 January 2007

More than a fortnight has now passed since New Year's Day, but still I am incredulous at a turn of events that I will now attempt to describe for you.

Donald Macintyre: Glimpse of how breakthrough could transform whole region

Published: 17 January 2007

The disclosure that there were nearly two years of secret talks between Syrian and Israeli interlocutors is not in itself that historic. Successive prime ministers in the 1990s, after all, pursued the diplomatic track with Damascus - and much more officially. Moreover, Alon Liel himself told Ha'aretz that such unofficial meetings had been fairly common and that there had been "no official Israeli connection" to the talks.

Steve Richards: An injection of common sense, or the promotion of a reckless revolution?

Published: 16 January 2007

David Cameron confirmed that he wants power within the NHS devolved to individual hospitals

Thomas Sutcliffe: Don't even think about it - or you're nicked!

Published: 16 January 2007

It's the mark of a successful satire that it changes the way you see the world. In the immediate aftermath of The Thick of It, for example, many government pronouncements now tend to be accompanied in my mind by a lively playlet which fills out the back story of this policy initiative.

John Walsh: Tales of the City

Published: 16 January 2007

'The behavioural fascists tell us we must get organised. Nonsense. Mess is good!'

Andreas Whittam Smith: The truth behind the missed MRSA targets

Published: 15 January 2007

This Government has form in listening only to those experts who tell it what it wants to hear

Editor-At-Large: Icons for our age. Shallow, inarticulate - but enthralling

Published: 14 January 2007

David Beckham signs a deal which makes him the second highest-paid sportsman in America, and what happens? The British press unites in sneering at its least favourite celebrity couple. She's too thin, too miserable, and can't be bothered to pout for the paparazzi. He's as tongue-tied as ever, coming up with a risible justification for their decision: "I don't want to go out to America at 34 years old [in three years' time] and have people saying, 'He's only going there to get the money' ... Soccer is huge all over the world except America and I want to make a difference."

Alan Watkins: An influx of one-legged Romanian roofers and plumbers? Someone had to pay

Published: 14 January 2007

Jenkins secured a debating triumph in the case of the escaped spy

John Rentoul: The confession and trial of Tony Blair - a simple fiction for happy haters

Published: 14 January 2007

The secular hell is a war crimes tribunal at The Hague

Deborah Orr: Don't bother trying to exert yourself when everything has to be 'average'

Published: 13 January 2007

Can government education policy become any more confused? The headlines this week may have been dominated by the decision of the minister for communities to ship her child out of her community to be schooled. But the really gobsmacking thing is that the clumsy, weird legislation Ruth Kelly steered through Parliament as education minister precisely to wrong-foot all those ghastly middle-class state school users doing their best for their child, "like any parent", also came home to roost this week.

Brian Viner: False hunches about Notre Dame and true confessions of a homework cheat

Published: 13 January 2007

There was a wonderful response to this column's end-of-year quiz a fortnight ago, which just possibly had something to do with the marvellous prize generously donated by brewers Shepherd Neame: 365 bottles of Spitfire beer.

Will Self: PsychoGeography

Published: 13 January 2007

Highway to heaven

Matthew Norman: While Blair burns, Brown plays his fiddle

Published: 12 January 2007

His refusal to do the decent thing is creating the most curious atmosphere Britain has known

Deborah Orr: She should not be sacked for these political beliefs

Published: 12 January 2007

I love it that the people who bandy around the word "fascist" as an insult to others, also want to see people fired from their jobs for believing things that they find unpalatable. The BNP has a right to exist, though to me this is an ugly and dangerous part of British culture. If Clarke wants to align herself, that's her look-out. And if ballet lovers don't want to see a BNP member dance, they can stay away if they wish to.

Janet Street-Porter: Set an example, Tony, and holiday in Britain

Published: 11 January 2007

How important is it to think of the environment when planning your holiday? If you're Prime Minister, not really. Although we are told all governmental activity will be carbon-neutral by 2015, and that Downing Street leads the way in energy conservation and recycling, Mr Blair clearly thinks that when he's relaxing, it's no one business but his own. His conscience stops when he runs up the steps of that jet whisking him off to Florida, Tuscany or wherever the sun is shining.

Mark Steel: Bush and English cricket have a lot in common

Published: 10 January 2007

The US President's plan can only come from someone who runs an empire

Hamish McRae: The slow shift of economic power

Published: 10 January 2007

As the workforce becomes more flexible, the more this swings the advantage towards women

Deborah Orr: Face the facts: if we don't want a privacy law, we need to change our behaviour

Published: 10 January 2007

The press guards jealously its interest in publishing any old tosh about 'people in the public eye'

Brian Viner: Country Life

Published: 10 January 2007

Here in Docklow, the festive break contained more emphasis on the word "break" than we would have liked. A few days before Christmas, Richard, who lives a couple of fields away, appeared at our kitchen window looking unusually agitated for a man who is normally as calm and resourceful as James Bond.

Thomas Sutcliffe: Will Saddam's life be played out on stage?

Published: 09 January 2007

How long will it be, I wonder, before Saddam takes his bow on stage? Perhaps some assiduous writer is already at work now, penning the death cell monologue for this year's Edinburgh Fringe or working on the first draft of a screenplay. If The Last King of Scotland, Kevin McDonald's film about another murderous thug, Idi Amin, proves to have box office legs after it opens this week (or picks up an Oscar nomination for Forest Whitaker ) then it might not be a bad time to pitch Baathtime: The Saddam Hussein Story. And when such projects eventually appear we will no doubt have a minor fuss over the ethics of Saddam's representation. But however Saddam's post-humous career goes I doubt he will ever threaten the continuing supremacy of taboo achieved by Adolf Hitler - still able to stir unease in all his fictional appearances.

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Editor's Choice

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How to live and succeed in the cutthroat movie world

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Do some schemes do more damage than good?

Olivier awards

Nominations boost for 'Spamalot' and Sondheim

Vulnerable children

How our state schools are letting down dyslexics

Behind Shilpa row

These are the realities of racism in Britain

Music piracy

Industry threatens ISPs

The EU Question

Is constitution coming back?

Day in a page


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