Quite right! - podcast cover

Quite right!

The Spectatorshows.acast.com

Welcome to Quite right!, the podcast from The Spectator that searches for sanity and common sense in a world which increasingly seems devoid of both. Each week, join Michael Gove, editor of The Spectator, and Madeline Grant, assistant editor of The Spectator, for a mixture of politics, culture and mischief as they unpack the stories that most piqued their interest, amusement or exasperation.


For more podcasts from The Spectator: spectator.co.uk/podcasts


Subscribe to The Spectator: spectator.co.uk/subscribe

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Last refreshed:
Download Metacast podcast app
Podcasts are better in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episodes

Q&A: Why Rwanda failed – and were the Tories serious about migration?

To submit your urgent questions to Michael and Maddie, visit spectator.com/quiteright. In this week’s Q&A: Michael and Maddie tackle Labour’s uneasy majority and ask why a government with a 174-seat majority already looks so skittish. Are backbench rebellions a sign of weakness – or a rational response from MPs who expect to be out in one term? Does Keir Starmer lack the political instincts needed to hold such a sprawling parliamentary party together? Also this week: could the Rwanda scheme ...

Jan 30, 202627 min

Is it nearly over for Keir Starmer? – and Reform's next defector revealed

This week: Michael and Maddie ask whether Keir Starmer’s grip on the Labour party is beginning to slip. After the party machine moved to block Andy Burnham from returning to Westminster, is Starmer governing from a position of strength – or fear? Does the decision expose a deeper crisis of authority at the top of the Labour party, and are we entering the early stages of a succession battle over who comes next? Then: Suella Braverman’s long-anticipated defection to Reform UK. Was her exit inevita...

Jan 28, 202647 min

Debate: is Britain really broken?

On this week’s Q&A: Michael and Maddie ask the question dividing the British right: is Britain really broken? As ‘Broken Britain’ rhetoric surges on the right, they debate whether it clarifies the country’s problems or corrodes national confidence. Should we trust those who stand to benefit from a declinist narrative? And is Nigel Farage too much of an English nationalist and nostalgist? Also this week: from national decline to family drama. Why has the Brooklyn Beckham fallout gripped the c...

Jan 23, 202634 min

The death of the special relationship – and was Jenrick right to leave the Tories?

This week: Michael and Maddie ask whether the so-called special relationship between Britain and the United States has finally reached breaking point. As Donald Trump’s threats over Greenland and his reversal on the Chagos Islands unsettle allies, has the British right begun to turn decisively against him? Was the special relationship ever more than a comforting myth – and what does a more erratic, transactional America mean for Britain’s security, sovereignty and strategic future? Then: Robert ...

Jan 21, 202644 min

Q&A: Rory Stewart vs Dominic Cummings – the problem with political prophets

This week: Michael and Maddie examine the rise of the Green party and ask whether it represents a passing protest vote or a genuine realignment on the British left. As Labour’s support continues to leak away and figures once loyal to Jeremy Corbyn drift towards the Greens, are Keir Starmer’s U-turns finally catching up with him – and how far can a ‘hipster–hobbit alliance’ really go? Then: the row between Rory Stewart and Dominic Cummings, after claims about overseas students and radicalisation ...

Jan 16, 202629 min

Why Nadhim Zahawi (and Reform) are making a mistake

This week on Quite right! , Michael and Maddie examine Nadhim Zahawi’s dramatic defection to Reform UK and ask whether it strengthens the party’s insurgent credentials or exposes a deeper strategic mistake. Is Reform becoming a genuine outsider movement, or simply a refuge for disaffected Tories? And what does the pattern of Boris-era defections reveal about credibility, competence and the challenge of turning populist energy into a governing force? Then, Iran: mass protests against the regime h...

Jan 14, 202651 min

Q&A: A Labour rebellion is coming – can Starmer survive?

This week: Michael and Maddie look ahead to a turbulent political year, asking who will rise, who will fall – and whether Keir Starmer can survive the mounting unrest within his own parliamentary party. With Labour backbenchers showing an increasing willingness to defy the leadership, is a full-blown rebellion inevitable? They also discuss the government’s controversial decision to welcome Alaa Abdel-Fattah back to Britain, and ask what the episode reveals about two-tier politics, herd mentality...

Jan 09, 202630 min

Venezuela vs Chagos: what Britain can learn from America’s ‘audacity’

This week: Michael and Maddie dissect Donald Trump’s audacious raid on Venezuela and ask what it reveals about power, national interest and the unravelling of the rules-based order. Was America acting like a rogue state – or simply doing what states do when their interests are at stake? And could Britain learn a thing or two from how they conduct their foreign policy, specifically with regard to the Chagos Islands? Then, closer to home, they unpack the scandal surrounding West Midlands Police an...

Jan 07, 202650 min

Part two | Dominic Cummings: what I told Farage & why the system will ‘do anything’ to stop him

Dominic Cummings profoundly critiques the state of British politics, describing a "pre-revolutionary" mood fueled by economic stagnation, institutional failures, and widespread voter disillusionment. He dismisses government promises on immigration as "nonsense" and attacks the political class's handling of major crises. Cummings also assesses the prospects of Nigel Farage's Reform party, highlighting the critical need for building a strong team, and warns of an aggressive establishment response to outsider movements, drawing parallels to US politics.

Jan 01, 202641 min

Part one | ‘Boris didn’t care!’: Dominic Cummings on lawfare, lockdowns & the broken British state

In this interview, Dominic Cummings dissects Britain's institutional decline, arguing that established systems are increasingly detached from reality, leading to systemic failures in public services and defense. He criticizes Whitehall's opaque "lawfare" against British troops, the Human Rights Act's silent obstruction of reforms, and Boris Johnson's failure to deliver on the 2019 mandate. Cummings also highlights the critical issue of elite talent abandoning public service and the disconnect of Westminster from public sentiment.

Dec 30, 202548 min

Q&A: How has being adopted impacted your politics?

Submit your urgent questions to Michael and Maddie at spectator.co.uk/quiteright. This week on Quite right! Q&A : is demography destiny? With Britain’s birth rate falling, Michael Maddie Grant discuss whether the country is quietly drifting towards decline – and whether immigration, pro-natal policy or something more radical is the answer. Is importing labour a short-term fix that stores up long-term problems? And can advanced economies really persuade families to have more children? Then: a...

Dec 19, 202527 min

Bondi attack: understanding Islamism & the causes of anti-Semitism

Michael Gove and Madeline Grant confront the horror of the Bondi Beach massacre and ask why anti-Semitic violence now provokes despair rather than shock. As Jewish communities are once again targeted on holy days, they examine the roots of Islamist ideology and the failure of political leaders to name it. Why has anti-Semitism metastasised across the radical left, the Islamist world, and the far right – and why does the West seem so reluctant to grapple with its causes? Then, on the 250th annive...

Dec 17, 202550 min

Q&A: Should Ukraine join the Commonwealth?

Submit your urgent questions to Michael and Maddie at spectator.co.uk/quiteright. This week on Quite right! Q&A : should Britain reinvent the Commonwealth – and should Ukraine be invited to join? Is the Commonwealth an embarrassing relic… or an untapped strategic asset? Then: what if Jeremy Corbyn had actually won in 2019? Maddie and Michael sketch the counterfactual Britain – from a Jezza-led lockdown to vaccine chaos, union-driven school closures and a very different Brexit. Plus: the grea...

Dec 12, 202532 min

Has Reform peaked? – racism allegations & Farage's toughest week yet

After a summer in which Nigel Farage seemed to bend the news cycle to his will, Michael and Maddie ask whether the party’s momentum is slipping. Do the allegations dredged up from Farage’s schooldays mark a decisive turning point – or, perversely, strengthen his outsider appeal? And with questions over Reform’s election spending, defections from the Conservatives, and the small matter of finding 500 people to staff a government, is the insurgent right entering its moment of vulnerability? Then: ...

Dec 10, 202545 min

Q&A: Lockdown ‘sins’ & where Conservatism went wrong

To submit your urgent questions to Michael and Maddie, go to spectator.co.uk/quiteright. This week on Quite right! Q&A: was lockdown the right call – and what did Britain get catastrophically wrong? Michael and Maddie unravel the ‘sins’ of the Covid era, from criminalising everyday behaviour to the rise of snitch culture. Did Sweden show there was a better way? Then: is conservatism suffering from a crisis of confidence? Michael reflects on 14 years of Tory drift, why the party ‘talked right...

Dec 05, 202541 min

Why Rachel Reeves should go & would Corbyn be a better prime minister?

This week: Rachel Reeves reels as Labour’s Budget unravels – and a far-left Life of Brian sequel plays out in Liverpool. After a bruising seven days for the Chancellor, Michael and Maddie ask whether Reeves’s position is now beyond repair. Did Keir Starmer’s bizarre nursery press conference steady the ship – or simply confirm that the government is panicking? And is the resignation of the OBR chair a shield for Reeves – or a damning contrast with her refusal to budge? Then: the inaugural confere...

Dec 03, 202548 min

The 'wickedness' of Labour's gender war

This week: After leaked EHRC guidance threw Labour’s position on biological sex into disarray, Michael and Maddie ask whether Bridget Phillipson is deliberately delaying clarity on the law – and why Wes Streeting appears to be retreating from his once ‘gender-critical’ stance. Is Labour quietly preparing to water down long-awaited guidance? And has the return of puberty-blocker trials pushed the culture war back to square one? Then: Shabana Mahmood unveils her first major moves as Home Secretary...

Nov 26, 202548 min

Q&A: Is it time to abolish the Treasury?

To submit your urgent questions to Michael and Maddie, go to: spectator.co.uk/quiteright This week on Quite right! Q&A: Is the Treasury still fit for purpose – or has ‘Treasury brain’ taken over Whitehall? Michael and Maddie dig into the culture and power of Britain’s most influential department, from the Oxbridge-heavy ‘Treasury boys’ to a ‘visionless’ Chancellor. Then: after Michael’s suggestion that Piers Morgan should be the next director-general of the BBC – why, in his view, could cnly...

Nov 21, 202536 min

Is Net Zero ‘mania’ over? And Labour’s migration crackdown

This week: a Commons showdown over asylum – and a cold shower for Net Zero orthodoxy. After Shabana Mahmood’s debuts Labour’s new asylum proposals, Michael and Maddie ask whether her barnstorming performance signals a new star in Starmer’s government – or whether the Home Secretary is dangerously over-promising on a problem no minister has yet cracked. Is her Denmark-inspired model workable? Can she get it past the Labour left? And are the right-wing plaudits a blessing – or a trap? Then: at COP...

Nov 19, 202548 min

Q&A: Who could replace Keir Starmer?

To submit your urgent questions to Michael and Maddie, go to: spectator.co.uk/quiteright This week on Quite right! Q&A: Could Britain see a snap election before 2029? Michael and Maddie unpack the constitutional mechanics – and explain why, despite the chaos, an early vote remains unlikely. They also turn to Labour’s troubles: growing pressure on Keir Starmer, restive backbenchers, and whether Angela Rayner’s sacking has boosted her chances as his successor. Plus: should the Scottish Parliam...

Nov 14, 202532 min

BBC bias & Bridget ‘Philistine’s’ war on education

This week: a crisis at the BBC – and a crisis of standards in our schools. Following the shock resignations of Tim Davie and Deborah Turness, Michael and Maddie ask whether the corporation has finally been undone by its own bias, and discuss how it can correct the leftward lurch in its editorial line. Then: Labour’s new education reforms come under the microscope. As Ofsted scraps single-word judgements in favour of ‘report cards’, could this ‘definitive backward step’ result in a ‘dumbing down’...

Nov 12, 202548 min

Q&A: Boris, Cameron or May? Plus, our most left-wing beliefs revealed

To submit your urgent questions to Michael and Maddie, go to: spectator.co.uk/quiteright This week on the first ever Quite right! Q&A: What’s your most left-wing belief? Michael & Maddie confess their guilty liberal secrets on the Elgin Marbles, prison reform and private equity – or ‘the unacceptable face of capitalism’. Also this week: who would you trust to save your life on a desert island – Boris Johnson, Theresa May or David Cameron? And finally, a literary turn: from John Donne to ...

Nov 07, 202536 min

Rachel Reeves’s Budget ‘bollocks’ & Britain’s everyday crime crisis

To submit your urgent questions to Michael and Maddie, go to: spectator.co.uk/quiteright This week on Quite right! : Rachel Reeves goes on the offensive – and the defensive. After her surprise Downing Street address, Michael and Maddie pick over the many kites that have been flying in advance of the Budget at the end of the month. Was she softening the public up for tax rises, or trying to save her own job? Michael explains why Reeves is wrong to say that Labour’s inheritance is the reason for o...

Nov 05, 202547 min

‘I was reported for bullying!’: inside the Home Office dysfunction & collapsed grooming gangs inquiry

To submit your urgent questions to Michael & Maddie, go to: spectator.co.uk/quiteright This week on Quite right! : the great Home Office meltdown. After a week of fiascos – from the accidental release of a convicted migrant to the collapse of the grooming gangs inquiry – Michael and Maddie ask: is the Home Office now beyond repair? Why is Britain’s most important department also its most dysfunctional? And what does it say about a civil service more obsessed with ‘listening circles’ and ‘wel...

Oct 29, 202556 min

Should Prince Andrew be exiled? And how multiculturalism failed in Birmingham

This week on Quite right! : the slow-motion disgrace of Prince Andrew. As Virginia Giuffre’s new book reignites the Epstein scandal, Michael and Maddie ask: how much longer can the monarchy carry its most toxic member? Or should the Duke of York be stripped of his titles and sent into exile? Then to Birmingham, where sectarian politics, bin strikes and football collide. After Israeli fans were barred from attending a Europa League match, Michael and Maddie debate how Britain’s second city became...

Oct 21, 202546 min

Lab leaks & spy scandals: was Cameron wrong about China?

This week on Quite right! Michael and Maddie turn their sights to Westminster’s latest espionage scandal – and the collapse of the case to prosecute two men accused of spying for China. Was the case dropped out of incompetence, or out of fear of offending Beijing? As Michael puts it, ‘Either we’re not being told the truth, or this is a government of staggering incompetence.’ They also unpick the growing row over Jonathan Powell, Keir Starmer’s National Security Adviser, and his alleged role in s...

Oct 14, 202548 min

Was that Kemi Badenoch's last conference? Quite right! live from Manchester

This week, Michael and Maddie record Quite right! in front of a live audience at the Conservative Party conference in Manchester – with attendance down, the big question is whether Kemi Badenoch can survive as leader of the opposition. There is the unmistakable air of fatalism among MPs staring down electoral annihilation – but would another change in leadership cement the Tories as pathologically regicidal? They also debate Badenoch’s bold pledge to bar candidates who won’t back leaving the Eur...

Oct 07, 202542 min

Is Labour ‘racist’ too? Plus Trump’s Gaza gamble & Rowling vs Watson

The hosts delve into the Labour Party conference, dissecting Keir Starmer's attempts to reclaim patriotism and his party's aggressive rhetoric against Nigel Farage, questioning its effectiveness and potential backfire. They then pivot to Donald Trump's surprising Middle East peace initiative, assessing its audacity and the controversial involvement of Tony Blair, considering the challenges of dealing with ideological actors like Hamas. Finally, the discussion covers the public dispute between Emma Watson and J.K. Rowling, analyzing Watson's reconciliation attempt against Rowling's steadfast gender-critical views and the broader implications of celebrity political advocacy.

Oct 01, 202548 min

Blair's ID card dystopia & the 'hell' of conference season

This week, Michael and Maddie lift the lid on the strange rituals of party conference season and why the ‘goldfish bowl’ reality of a week in Birmingham (or Manchester, or Liverpool) often leaves politicians with ‘PTSD’. They then turn to the government’s revived enthusiasm for digital ID cards. Is this a sensible fix for illegal immigration – or, as Michael puts it, ‘snake oil rubbed onto an already weak idea’? And why does Tony Blair always seem to be the ghost whispering ‘ID cards’ into Westm...

Sep 23, 202548 min

Why Danny Kruger's defection changes everything & could Boris Johnson be next?

This week Michael and Madeline unpick the shock defection of Danny Kruger to Reform UK’s ‘pirate ship’ – as described by Michael – and ask whether this coup could mark the beginning of the end for the Conservative party. They also dive into Westminster’s most charged moral debates: the assisted dying bill in the Lords and the quiet decriminalisation of abortion up to birth. What do these changes say about parliament’s ‘intoxicated liberal hubris’ – and the protections given to the vulnerable? Al...

Sep 16, 202554 min
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android