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Best of the Spectator

The Edition: Labour’s growing pains, survival of the hottest & murder most fascinating

Best of the Spectator

The Spectator

News Commentary, News, Daily News, Society & Culture

4.4785 Ratings

🗓️ 20 March 2025

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week: why is economic growth eluding Labour?

‘Growing pains’ declares The Spectator’s cover image this week, as our political editor Katy Balls, our new economics editor Michael Simmons, and George Osborne’s former chief of staff Rupert Harrison analyse the fiscal problems facing the Chancellor.

‘Dominic Cummings may have left Whitehall,’ write Katy and Michael, ‘but his spirit lives on.’ ‘We are all Dom now,’ according to one government figure. Keir Starmer’s chief aide Morgan McSweeney has never met Cummings, but the pair share a diagnosis of Britain’s failing economy. Identifying a problem is not, however, the same as solving it. As Rachel Reeves prepares her Spring Statement, ministers are bracing themselves for cuts in day-to-day spending as the public finances deteriorate.

Is austerity back? Michael and Rupert joined the podcast to discuss further. (1:02)

Next: survival of the fittest vs seduction by the hottest

Biologist and Conservative peer Matt Ridley writes about the concept of sexual selection in the magazine this week, explaining that evolution might not just be driven by survival of the fittest but also by section by the hottest. This, he says, would explain some of nature’s most colourful oddities, particularly within birds, as outlined in his new book Birds, Sex and Beauty. Charles Darwin proposed this as a later part of his evolutionary theory, but it caused a rift amongst his contemporaries – why is it a controversial concept? And could it be true for other species such as humans?

Matt joined the podcast alongside David Puts, Professor of Anthropology and Psychology at Penn State University. (19:13)

And finally: what makes historic murders so fascinating?

Historian and author Hallie Rubenhold’s new book, Story of a Murder: The Wives, the Mistress and Dr Crippen, retells the famous murder case from the perspective of the women involved. Lisa Hilton declares it an ‘intellectual adventure’ in the lead book review in the magazine this week. But why do these cases continue to capture our imaginations, decades and even centuries later? And, whether as victims or as accomplices, what makes women such compelling subjects in historic cases like these?

Hallie joined the podcast alongside the historian and broadcaster Alice Loxton, author of Eighteen: A History of Britain in 18 Young Lives. (30:40)

Presented by William Moore and Lara Prendergast.

Produced by Patrick Gibbons.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On the 27th of March, the Coffeehouse Shots team will be joined by special guests to give you their take on a Spring Statement.

0:05.9

We will be live on stage at London's Cadogan Hall. To get your tickets today, visit spectator.com.

0:11.6

UK forward slash spring statement live. We'll see you there.

0:28.1

Hello. Hello and welcome to the edition podcast from The Spectator,

0:34.1

where each week we shed a little light on the thought process behind putting the world's oldest weekly magazine to bed.

0:37.2

I'm Lara Prendergast, the Spectator's Executive Editor. And I'm William Moore,

0:38.5

the Spectator's Features Editor. On this week's podcast, we ask, why is economic growth alluding

0:44.7

labour? Does survival of the hottest explain why birds are so colourful? And what makes

0:50.2

murders from the past so fascinating? This new government has come in with a determination, a number one mission to grow the economy.

1:13.5

That takes time.

1:15.1

This government is determined to turn around the poor performance of more than a decade when it comes to growth.

1:21.5

And we need to go further and faster in growing our economy.

1:28.3

The way that I believe that you can reduce inequality, reduce poverty,

1:34.3

and actually also improve the living standards of ordinary working people, not in poverty,

1:39.3

but struggling to get by, is through growing the economy.

1:43.3

The growth numbers have come in higher than many expected, but I'm still not satisfied.

1:49.9

You're not going to get growth without fighting for it.

1:55.1

That was just some of the many, many, many times.

1:58.4

The Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has mentioned her central mission,

2:03.2

which is growing Britain's economy. But why is economic growth proving so elusive for labour?

2:09.5

Our political editor, Katie Balls, and our new economics editor Michael Simmons,

2:13.6

asked this question in the spectator's cover piece this week. And also in the magazine, George Osborne's former chief of staff, Rupert Harrison,

...

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