
Fraser Nelson
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 51 |
Date of birth | May 14,1973 |
Zodiac sign | Taurus |
Born | Truro |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse(s) | Linda Nelson (m. 2006) |
Job | Journalist |
Book editor | |
Education | Department of Journalism, City University |
University of Glasgow | |
City, University of London | |
Spouse | Linda Nelson |
Nationality | British |
Children | 3 |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 402173 |
Fraser Nelson Life story
Fraser Andrew Nelson is a British political journalist and editor of The Spectator magazine.
Rishi Sunak's smoking ban move gets cross-party backing

... Fraser Nelson, the editor of The Spectator magazine, Would it involve shopkeepers having to ask middle-aged folk and older, over time, for ID, to work out which side of the ever moving line of legality they are on? Ministers will hope the effect of the law will more than compensate for its absurdities...
Chancellor branded 'Mr Bean' for inflation video

... In response to the clip, Fraser Nelson, editor of the Spectator magazine, " I wonder if Hunt explains that a Chancellor has no real power over inflation - and that it s expected to halve in France, Germany, US, Canada, Israel & more...
Headlines: 'So much for lockdown, minister!'

... Fraser Nelson, the government proposes to advise was successful to persuade the Minister expected, people to avoid unnecessary travel and has a harmful impact on the economy...
The Papers: Tory rebels 'ready' as Corbyn pledges to stop PM

... Ruth Davidson fought back tears in her resignation speech Fraser Nelson writes in the Daily Telegraph that after she taught her party that the impossible can be pulled off ...
Rishi Sunak's smoking ban move gets cross-party backing
By Chris MasonPolitical editor, BBC News
For all the arguments about HS2, perhaps Rishi Sunak 's announcement on smoking could be The Most profound and long-lasting.
Labour are not seeking to oppose it. The Welsh and Scottish governments are making positive noises too.
A Conservative Prime Minister makes a party conference announcement, and within hours SNP and Labour ministers in Edinburgh and Cardiff respectively sound like they broadly agree.
To put it gently, that doesn't happen very often.
And this matters, because the laws on smoking are devolved. The government at Westminster decides policy for England only.
Let's be clear: those at Holyrood and in the Senedd are not copying, latching on to an Idea that had never crossed their minds before.
Political instincts on this issue are coalescing around a similar position.
The Prime Minister on Radio 4 that his plans to phase out the sale of cigarettes in England will be the " biggest Public Health intervention in a generation".
England's Chief Medical Officer, Sir Chris Whitty - Remember him from all those pandemic announcements -
So is this a moment rather like the ban on smoking in public places? Or gay marriage?
Political ideas that provoked a debate, but quickly became baked in - with next to no prospect of ever being reversed.
Hang on a minute: there is a complicating twist here.
When governments in recent years have passed a law to ban things or allow things, that ban or right has been universal.
Or, at least, universal for adults - and where there was a universal understanding of what an adult is.
The Moving Target of a steadily rising age at which cigarettes can be bought legally is more complicated.
If it happens, the oddities of it may seem minimal in the early years.
But over time, they would become more, well, odd.
Fraser Nelson , The Editor of The Spectator magazine,
Would it involve shopkeepers having to ask middle-aged folk and older, over time, for ID, to Work Out which side of the ever moving line of legality they are on?
Ministers will hope the effect of The Law Will More than compensate for its absurdities.
That an already falling propensity to smoke across Society - and among younger Generations - will be accelerated to The Point that the legal niceties become irrelevant.
It is not long ago that it felt like cigarette smoke was almost everywhere: in pubs and clubs, even on Public Transport and at work.
That now seems like Another World .
But will this Idea - complete as it is with quirks - Manage to achieve its aim of eventually eradicating smoking almost entirely?
There is the political will for that to happen. But bringing it about is tricky.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com