Catherine Bennett



Profile:
Full name: Catherine Dorothea Bennett

Area of interest: Politics, Society, Culture

Journals/Organisation: The Observer

Email: [mailto:catherine.bennett@guardian.co.uk catherine.bennett@guardian.co.uk]

Personal website:

Website: http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/catherinebennett

Blog: Mrs Cameron's Diary - 'A peek at the diary of Samantha Cameron, the Prime Minister's wife, as seen by Catherine Bennett'

Representation:

Networks: https://twitter.com/#!/mrscamerondiary



Biography:
About:

Education: Lawnswood High School, Leeds; Hertford College, Oxford

Career: Various jobs; Honey Magazine; Sunday Telegraph Magazine: features editor; Mail on Sunday: senior reporter; freelance contributor - The Sunday Times, Vogue, Elle, The Sunday Telegraph Magazine; The Times: writer, 1985/1989; Sunday Correspondent: writer; The Guardian: features writer and columnist, 1990/2007

Current position/role: Feature writer and Columnist


 * also writes/has written for:

Other roles/Main role:

Other activities:

Disclosures:

Viewpoints/Insight:

Broadcast media:

Video: Contributions to Start the Week; the Late Show; UK and The Baby Business, BBC2; Spoiling the Child, BBC 1
 * Wrote and presented BBC Television three-part series Strange days, 1996

Controversy/Criticism:

Awards/Honours: Winner of Catherine Pakenham Award

Scoops:

Other: Partner of BBC journalist John Humphrys (see: ‘I've always felt like a bit of a fraud‘ - John Humphrys on his career, his new partner, and the troubles at the BBC - The Daily Telegraph, 22nd September 2009)



Books & Debate:


Latest work:

Speaking/Appearances:

Debate: 

The Observer:
Column name:

Remit/Info: Politics, Society, Culture

Section: News

Role: Columnist

Pen-name:

Email: [mailto:catherine.bennett@guardian.co.uk catherine.bennett@guardian.co.uk]

Website: Guardian.co / Catherine Bennett

Commissioning editor:

Day published: Sunday

Regularity: Weekly

Column format:

Average length: 1100/1200 words



Articles: 2014

 * When did being a woman become a special condition? - Is menstrual leave such a good idea? Femaleness is not actually an illness and biology is not destiny - 25th May
 * We should hail the celebrity boycott of the Dorchester over the sultan and sharia law - It may be a 'fashion thing' but the stance taken against the sharia-loving sultan reflects a new pro-activism - 11th May
 * Don't fret about girls and pink. What about everyday sexism in later life? - Campaigns for gender-neutral toys ignore the fact that the problem is much bigger than who plays with dolls - 4th May
 * David Moyes fired? Remind me why I should give a damn - Why were news media obsessed with the manager's sacking? Perhaps because men still run the show - 27th April
 * A humane asylum policy should be led by law, not emotion - Yashika Bageerathi's deportation seemed harsh – but so would many others. And we can't bend the rules in every case - 6th April
 * The BBC arts coverage goes back to the future - Lord Hal's arts programme proposals are aimed at a middle-class, miidle-aged audience. We may as well still be in 1969 - 30th March
 * The week when Mick Jagger found the true cost of fame - Some of the coverage of L'Wren Scott's death was shameful but it doesn't justify curbs on the press - 23rd March
 * Don't patronise the elderly. Just show them some respect - NHS staff should ditch 'ageing suits' and faux empathy for older patients and show some compassion instead - 9th March
 * Pre-nups are no threat to marriage. They're good for it - Making financial pacts part of wedding plans need not be unromantic. And what's more, it'll vex divorce lawyers - 2nd March
 * There has been no end to the era of office 'cuddles' - Inappropriate behaviour wasn't left behind in the 1970s. Sexism is still with us today – just ask any woman - 16th February
 * What price equality within today's Conservative party? - David Cameron champions the rights of women in business. His frontbench tells a very different story - 9th February
 * Scarlett Johansson and Oxfam: is celebrity sponsorship a lost cause? - Scarlett Johansson chose SodaStream over Oxfam, but do charities really need famous ambassadors? - 2nd February
 * Valérie Trierweiler and the status of first ladies - François Hollande is a warning against building on a man's career, even though some consorts use their position for good - 26th January
 * Benefits Street: will their lives be better when C4 has gone? - Reality shows are ubiquitous and dignity rarely gets a look-in. But at least celebrities are thrown some dosh - 19th January
 * Need some help at your local library? Look under A for amateur - Ed Vaizey is crowing about his untrained volunteer army dispensing books to the public. But read the small print before you congratulate him - 12th January
 * Prince William: sustainable course in how to be a king: very few need apply - Wouldn't it be lovely if everybody had access to their own classes at Cambridge? Lucky old Prince William - 5th January



Articles: 2013

 * Does it really matter if Jack Monroe isn't as poor as she was? - demand 'authenticity' from everybody – food writers, charity chiefs, politicians. What nonsense - 22nd December
 * Segregation by gender has no place in our public realm - The appeasers have much to learn from those Muslim women vehemently opposed to discrimination - 15th December
 * Are all-women lists patronising? Well, it depends… - We have them where we don't need them – in fiction prizes. And not where we might – at Westminster - 1st December
 * The arts are more than a way to make money, Maria Miller - The culture minister tells Hull what a financial boon being City of Culture will be. She's missing the point - 24th November
 * At times, refusing an invitation is the wisest option - David Cameron has taken flak for going to Sri Lanka. Engagements at home should also have raised concern - 17th November
 * Dangerous dogs: oh don't worry, he really doesn't mean you any harm - Once you've been attacked by a dangerous dog, it's hard to appreciate the arguments against control orders - 10th November
 * Is the passion for HS2 just about big boys and their toys? -Suspicions the project is loco are reinforced when one sees a model railway enthusiast on the task force - 3rd November
 * Can't work through stress? Tough luck if you are poor - An exhausted banker gets unlikely sympathy from the City. Atos shows no sign of following this example - 20th October
 * Malala: remember the young girl behind the public persona - With her huge intelligence and courage it's easy to forget that she is still a teenager. Let's give her space to grow - 13th October
 * It's a cross-party phenomenon – the invisible woman - All three main party leaders have a lot to say about how the female profile must be raised. Then do nothing - 6th October
 * Sorry, Andrew Mitchell. I was too ready to believe the lies - The Metropolitan Police's tardiness in dealing with Plebgate is casting British justice in a worrying light - 29th September
 * Yes to Scottish independence. No to nationalism - Even those of us sympathetic to Scotland's right to rule itself are repelled by the chauvinistic yes campaign - 22nd September
 * Prince William is devoted to Africa. Lucky, lucky Africa - Having left the armed forces, Prince William is following in his father's footsteps and adopting a whole continent - 15th September
 * The winner of the Carbuncle Cup looks like a joke. Sadly, it is a sign of the times - The old Mallett, Porter & Dowd building in Islington is just one example of how the planning inspectorate is flouting local opinion - 1st September 2013
 * First it's a visit to Auschwitz, then an organised bar crawl - We are in grave danger of trivialising history, which is why it is vital that the young are taught it properly - 25th August
 * Our selfish society: all for one and one for all is so old-fashioned now - The main parties all appear equally keen on promoting selfish individualism – to everyone's detriment - 18th August
 * Let's not be pious about do-gooders' handsome salaries - Donors may feel uneasy that charity bosses earn a lot. But well-meaning volunteers simply couldn't do the job - 11th August
 * Sex addiction? Sorry, chaps, it's just plain old lust - Scientists no longer believe the condition exists, which is bad news for US politician Anthony Weiner and his ilk - 28th July
 * David Cameron listens to Sam. Pity he won't give more women jobs - For all the tutting of Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg, gender discrimination is as rife at Westminster as St James's - 21st July
 * Greenpeace's Shard stunt was bold, but will it help its cause? - The group's motives are clearly sound, but such vivid protests are no guarantee of winning the war of words - 14th July
 * Don't blame women if we ignore what passes for politics - A report claims women are less interested in current affairs. Maybe that's because of the level of discussion - 7th July
 * The fashion world's ethics are in rags and its soul shabby - From suicide-themed fashion shoots to tax evasion – the rag trade is notable now only for moral bankruptcy - 23rd June
 * Is this parade of 'genius children' a really stupid idea? - Parents pushing clever offspring into the Channel 4 limelight are uncomfortably close to US TV moms - 16th June
 * Pregnant women deserve more than this infantile advice - A new warning of the unproved risks of everyday objects to a foetus is alarmist. It is best ignored - 9th June
 * Don't older people often say the funniest things? - No, they can be bigoted, as the gay marriage debate has shown, but be kind – their views are from another time - 26th May
 * Aristocrats make bid for equality? That's a new one - Why are so many liberals excited by the campaign to allow women equality in inheriting hereditary titles? - 19th May
 * Outcast to national treasure. How did Camilla do that? - It seemed once as if Diana's legacy was here to stay. Either we are very fickle or the royals are very clever - 12th May
 * If sex offenders are named, victims will come forward - Granting Stuart Hall the right to anonymity might have prevented many women from declaring themselves - 5th May
 * Gove's boarding academy borders on the ridiculous - The Durand school in Sussex is an experiment that will be about as accessible as Hogwarts to most pupils - 28th April
 * Who will call a halt to the excesses of plastic surgeons? - Nipple tattooing is the latest example of the tinkering with bodies that remains shamefully under-regulated - 21st April
 * We've seen sense on measles, but we're not yet rid of quacks - Finally, reason has won the day over MMR, so why does the NHS still defy science by indulging homeopathy? - 14th April
 * At-home mothers should stay out of childcare debate - Childcare subsidies: how to reconcile work demands and home-life is hard enough without women setting up warring camps - 24th March
 * Let's call time on the moral lectures – I'll drink to that - Bullingdon boys on booze, Gwyneth on carbs – being told what to do by pseudo-experts is hard to stomach - 17th March
 * How can the royals champion women and endorse Saudi? - Charles and Camilla's visit to the repressive state makes a mockery of the couple's support for female rights - 10th March
 * In seats of power, groping has a long and tawdry history - Lord Rennard is the latest in a long line of prominent men to have been accused of abusing his position - 3rd March
 * Think every hospital should survive? You need to see a doctor - It is wrongheaded for MPs to claim that their local health establishments are a credit to their communities - 17th February
 * Real neighbours from hell? They're the stinking rich - Judging from reality TV, you'd guess trouble from next door was only for the poor. Take a trip to west London - 10th February
 * Real neighbours from hell? They're the stinking rich - Judging from reality TV, you'd guess trouble from next door was only for the poor. Take a trip to west London - 10th February
 * Yes, pay MPs more. But only if they then up their act - Parliamentarians spoil their own chances of getting a higher salary with their moonlighting and absenteeism - 3rd February
 * Why bother with boring facts when prejudice is easier? - Anna Soubry's ill-founded speech about obesity was typical of politicians refusing to engage their brains - 27th January
 * Sharon Olds's silence is golden in an era of endless media exposure - If only more writers were like the poet Sharon Olds and realise that discretion is better than endless revelation - 20th January
 * Chilcot's continuing silence on Iraq is an affront to us all - The invasion of Iraq was a decade ago – and the public is still waiting to find out what really happened in the run-up - 13th January
 * Can a royal save the nation from obesity? Fat chance - Against all evidence, the Royal College of Physicians is looking for role models to help us live healthier lives - 6th January



Articles: 2012

 * The real Olympic winners? Sports played by the elite - While the government invests vast sums in yachting and rowing, countless children are being left behind - 23rd December
 * Never has London seemed more like a city state apart - The census suggests a huge gap between the lives and concerns of Londoners and their fellow Britons - 16th December
 * Anna Wintour as US ambassador is a step too far - US ambassadors are not known for their discretion, but surely Vogue editor Anna Wintour is a step too far - 9th December
 * What future for the arts with these Tory philistines? - Little wonder our great creative talents despair as dark falls on regional theatres, libraries and the humanities - 2nd December
 * No to women bishops? It's high time the Church of England was taught a lesson - Given its regressive stance on equal opportunities, is the church a fit organisation to educate our young? - 25th November
 * Matrimonial tax breaks: paying people to marry is divorced from any reality - MPs who want to reward marriage through tax are expressing their unreasonable horror of the many who don't conform - 18th November
 * Lists of 'top women' simply perpetuate a patronising myth - Especially when some of those included are celebrated because they can get frocks flying off the shelves - 11th November
 * Why should we save the houses of the rich and famous? - The row over the sale of Edward Heath's house has highlighted our ludicrous obsession with preserving the nation's past - 4th November
 * Damien Hirst has brought public art to a new low - When you have an attention-seeking artist and an ambitious town, you end up with this monstrosity - 21st October
 * Rude, impulsive, sulky… still, let our 16-year-olds vote - The idea of teenagers being actively engaged in the political process is nothing more than common sense - 14th October
 * Why does Jeremy Hunt want to turn the clock back on the abortion debate? - The health secretary's intervention on abortion time limits is part of a concerted attack on women's rights - 7th October
 * JK Rowling is wrong: it's money, not class, that we worship - The novelist's new book misses the point. In modern Britain, wealth counters any other perceived handicaps - 30th September
 * It's time we ditched this bogus notion of 'real manhood' - Society's expectations of men are leading to high levels of depression, lack of self-worth and even suicide - 23rd September
 * Tawdry pictures. But Kate's role is itself demeaning - The outrage seems over the top, for the duchess suffers daily scrutiny of the most intrusive kind - 16th September
 * David Cameron's way with women? Show them the exit - The prime minister's latest cabinet reshuffle confirms his contempt for female talent. It's time for quotas - 9th September
 * Who'd really want to belong to this first wives club? - Ann Romney deserves the same scorn for her 'lady-rhetoric' as has been poured on pink phones and pens - 2nd September
 * Since when did we start cherishing cheating politicians? - The Tories seem very forgiving of infidelity these days. Just look at the mayor of London's rising popularity - 19th August
 * Not on Facebook? What kind of sad sicko are you? - So all-pervasive is the social networking service that non-users are now treated with deep suspicion - 12th August
 * Tiger moms are pussycats compared with Games moms - Who would happily force their child through punishing training for the fleeting chance of Olympic glory? - 5th August
 * Circumcision is an affront to decent human behaviour - We rightly decry female genital mutilation. Why, then, are so many happy to condone the male equivalent? - 22nd July
 * Civic pride is alive and well – but no thanks to Cameron - Today it's Britain's waterways. Tomorrow will our crime fighters and teachers be (underfunded) volunteers too? - 15th July
 * Why does the BBC persist in putting men in charge? - The appointment of yet another male director general suggests that the Beeb is wary of promoting women - 8th July
 * Poor Chloe Smith? She deserves our contempt, not pity - The Tory MP's idiocy on Newsnight has been excused because of her sex. How depressingly condescending - 1st July
 * We really do not need lessons from public school heads - It's ludicrous that principals of independent schools are regarded as authorities on state school teaching - 24th June
 * Has the Almighty's name ever been so taken in vain? - Pity Lord Justice Leveson, confronted as he is by a barrage of obfuscation, evasion and connivance - 17th June
 * Even America is tackling obesity, so why aren't we? - In New York, huge sodas have been banned. Here, by contrast, junk food giants are sponsoring the Olympics - 10th June
 * New Elizabethans? No, our triumphs owe nothing to her - The outpourings of adoration for our monarch this Jubilee weekend won't put a stop to republicanism - 3rd June
 * Prison is not always the answer, even for vile crimes - But why do some lenient judges appear to reserve their compassion only for male sex offenders? - 27th May
 * There's power dressing and then there's Steve Hilton - The singular sartorial style of David Cameron's former adviser smacks not of eccentricity, but arrogance - 20th May
 * the country? Sorry, far too busy texting my chums'' - Mobiles in schools face a ban but politicians, as we've discovered at Leveson, are as addicted as any child - 13th May
 * Louise, you don't know the half of online cruelty - Ms Mensch should be applauded for highlighting Twitter abuse, but internet hatred goes far beyond sexism - 6th May
 * Not all roads lead to London when it comes to culture - Three giant marionettes in Liverpool left more of a legacy than any Olympiad, sporting or otherwise - 29th April
 * Don't be suckered by the siren call of the expat idyll - Those jumping ship in search of a better life abroad forget that Britain, for all its faults, is a great place to live - 15th April
 * Will nobody finally rid us of these bumptious buffoons? - As bishops remain in the upper house, hopes of any substantial change in this antiquated chamber are dying fast - 1st April
 * Can we just please sink the Titanic once and for all? - The usual obsessing over the disaster has reached unfathomable depths for its 100th anniversary - 25th March
 * Never confuse a love of Louboutins with western values - Asma Assad's modern style led people to think she was not a typical dictator's wife. How wrong they were - 18th March
 * Forelock-tugging is all the rage thanks to Harry and Kate - The Queen's diamond jubilee has coincided with a new era of unbridled genuflection to the House of Windsor - 11th March
 * Art galleries: it's time we started paying to see great works of art again - Saving masterpieces for the nation is commendable and entrance fees to galleries is a small price to bear - 4th March
 * Nostalgic for the 50s? Let me give you a history lesson - The anonymous author of the viral email eulogising the good old days seems to have a very bad memory - 26th February
 * The bishops love the idea of equality – but not for women - Why the outrage over Hooters and Page 3 when our established church is still practising discrimination? - 12th February
 * Will modern-day politicians never stop saying sorry? - From the Iraq war to bank bailouts, our leaders are keen to atone. If only we could believe they were sincere - 5th February
 * Thanks, Joan Rivers, you're an object lesson to us all - Calls for regulation of cosmetic surgery mask a deeper scandal of the weak and vulnerable being exploited - 29th January
 * A new royal yacht? A very British way to waste money - The Dome and the Diana water feature should have taught us a lesson. It seems we just won't learn though - 22nd January
 * Sure, you can 'work'. Just don't expect a job at the end of it - From Smythson to Poundland, the exploitation of the young desperate for internships continues unabated - 15th January



Articles: 2011

 * Oh, Ed. Only you couldn't even get being a geek right - All the cards seem to be in his favour, and yet the Labour leader continues to stumble. Time for Yvette? - 18th December
 * Imposing quotas is not as crucial as changing cultures - Blair is hardly the face of feminism, so let's be wary of an inherently flawed scheme she advocates - 11th December
 * Why on earth is the history man being quite so hysterical? - Niall Ferguson's resort to legal threats over a bad book review smacks on bullying, not intellectual rigour - 4th December
 * Don't put your children on the stage, Mrs Mensch - She has perfected her role as the ideal Tory mother but some of us would prefer to hear less about her kids - 27th November
 * The ban that was guaranteed to have people fuming - There are many greater evils being visited on our children than being exposed to passive smoking - 21st November
 * Living together? Beware, the state's set to move in too -Some hail the supreme court ruling on cohabitees. Not those who prize privacy and freedom from regulations - 13th November
 * Please, render unto caesareans a little less hysteria - The response by the natural birth brigade to Nice's decision to endorse c-sections is unthinking prejudice - 6th November
 * Royal succession is a feminist issue. Or so the men say - Funny how few women were involved in the fight for the rights of Kate Middleton's daughter (should she have one) - 30th October
 * If you really want to hurt someone, call them a Gervais - The comedian says he didn't mean to cause offence. Only the feeble-minded would use that as a defence - 24th October
 * Liam Fox personifies all that is wrong with the House of Hubris - MPs' culture still veers between the eccentric and the scandalous. No wonder it breeds the likes of Liam Fox - 16th October
 * Only the lean shall inherit the political earth these days - By all means mock politicians such as Eric Pickles and Chris Christie for their policies, but not their waist size - 9th October
 * Even if you show me yours, I'm not showing you mine - It's brave of journalist George Monbiot to reveal his pay, but would salary transparency really boost harmony? - 2nd October
 * Can't we invite more worthwhile people into Number 10? - The government's love affair with the fashion industry is to the detriment of other manufacturing sectors - 25th September
 * Cyber bullies are vile, but should we be locking them up? - The furore over trolling obscures the real bullying that causes this despicable practice in the first place - 18th September
 * The Man Booker judges seem to find reading a bit hard - It's a false notion to set 'zippiness' against literary merit. After all, nothing is a good read if it is badly written - 11th September
 * and overpaid but not over here, thanks'' - For all his glittering reputation, Bill Bratton is not the answer to solving the crisis on Britain's streets - 21st August
 * riots: Greedy, amoral, irresponsible… Now who could that be?'' - From what we're told of the psychology of the rioters then perhaps they've missed their vocation in the City - 14th August
 * is a platform for hysteria rather than people power'' - The repeated calls on the petitions website to bring back hanging hardly represent democracy at its best - 7th August
 * do we sneer at Sarko for trying to improve himself?'' - No wonder the arts in this country are so undervalued when our leaders seem so determinedly lowbrow - 24th July
 * Dave and Nick have got better things to do?'' - It's good that Nick Clegg and David Cameron show so much concern for their children, but there's a country that needs looking after, too - 17th July
 * Mr Darcy, shouldn't we be taking precautions?'' - Damning romantic fiction for failing to educate its readers is both patronising and nonsensical - 10th July
 * no one halt the vandalising of London's skyline?'' - Buildings such as the Shard are proof positive that the capital has become a greedy developer's playground - 3rd July
 * in circuses: if you're going to rebel, find a better cause'' - Yes, the welfare of circus animals is a concern, but not more important, say, than elderly people in care homes - 26th June
 * time to kick the clerics off the moral high ground'' - We should drop our assumption that churchmen have an automatic right to be heard in this secular age - 19th June
 * service is resumed for Kate and Wills'' - The Cambridges' decision to have staff-free marriage, however laudable, was just so much window dressing - 12th June
 * pickings from living off the fat of the land'' - We know that diets are inherently flawed, so why do we keep swallowing regimes such as the Dukan? - 5th June
 * shouldn't make entertainment out of others' tragedy'' - The musical about the Ipswich murders is an artistic triumph but it's also crassly insensitive to the bereaved - 17th April
 * that – being accused of hypocrisy by Harriet Harman'' - Those eagerly rushing to put the boot into Nick Clegg would be well advised to put their own houses in order - 10th April
 * are often the losers when the west weighs in'' - Afghanistan shows their rights tend to be forgotten in our eagerness to intervene. Libya deserves better - 3rd April
 * strange case of Liz Taylor as a 'real woman' role model'' - If we believe all the eulogies to the Hollywood star, how can we say that only thin women are truly beautiful? - 27th March
 * agony? Just think about the effect on celebrities'' - The reaction of certain people and companies to the tsunami has been a deeply unedifying experience - 20th March
 * what you're marrying into, Kate'' - Never mind the bride-to-be's 'dodgy' uncle. He's very small beer compared with all the Windsors' goings-on - 13th March
 * but cheaper car insurance patronises women'' - Europe is right – it's just the same as saying that we empathise more or make better nurses than engineers - 6th March
 * won't be shocked by a naked man on the stage'' - Given the overly sexualised nature of today's society, children aren't going to be fazed by Frankenstein - 27th February
 * told marriage is being undermined by Hello! Rubbish'' - For the coalition, a wedding will cure many of society's ills, even if minsters flounder when asked why - 12th February
 * 'big society' is collapsing under its inherent absurdity'' - The prime minister still thinks his cherished dream has force. It's a pity everyone else is rapidly deserting him - 6th February
 * getting rid of sexism in sport. Let's get rid of sport'' - The shock and horror that has greeted Andy Gray and Richard Keys is as nothing to my boredom with football - 30th January
 * me again why we're supposed to be so optimistic'' - From all sides, we are exhorted to be optimistic about the future. Try telling that to a jobless school leaver - 23rd January
 * is the easiest word. It has seldom been so devalued'' - Public repentance is all the rage, as seen at the BBC. Not that Sarah Palin and Bob Diamond are listening - 16th January
 * the postcard from Klosters, George, it said it all'' - How noble. By swanning around on the Alpine slopes, Mr Osborne is taking the heat off bankers and CEOs - 9th January
 * all join in not signing up to this idea of e-petitions'' - David Cameron's pledge to put popular demands to the Commons is neither new nor good for democracy - 2nd January



Articles: 2010

 * Mr Assange, why won't you go back to Sweden now?'' - The WikiLeaks founder's reluctance to face his accusers sits badly with his avowed role as champion of freedom - 19th December
 * it is immoral to deny payment to surrogate mothers'' - Everybody from IVF consultants to the laboratory staff is paid. So we need to reward those who give the most - 12th December
 * Mr Cameron, do stop all that annoying nudging'' - The prime minister believes we can be gently pushed into self-improvement. That smacks only of neglect - 5th December
 * libraries, we will lose a mark of our civilisation'' - 250 libraries are earmarked to be closed, yet the government ignores this huge loss to the community - 28th November
 * are the days of rejoicing over a royal wedding'' - While the media are in a frenzy, public apathy gives a more realistic view of our attitude to Kate and William - 21st November
 * forget that to tweet is human, to forgive is divine'' - Do we really want to become a country that turns twitterers, however misguided they are, into criminals? - 14th November
 * in worse taste – Cameron's photographer or Blair's house?'' - While the Blairs taste in housing improvements is questionable, Cameron has put his his photographer on the payroll - 7th November
 * should stop whingeing about the coalition cuts'' - For the simple reason that both sexes are going to be hurt. And it does nothing for those who will suffer most - 31st October
 * laws should not be made by the grotesquely rich'' - The Radmacher-Granatino case has been great fun, but let's have a grown-up discussion about marriage - 24th October
 * are we letting business big shots alter our society?'' - As a student, Lord Browne was once mocked by his professor. To some, his report may smack of revenge - 17th October
 * a sadist would inflict Dryden on our schoolchildren'' - Michael Gove's plan to put the literary 'greats' back in our schools shows how far out of step he truly is - 10th October
 * we really want to be policed by hobby bobbies?'' - There are certain services – the police, hospitals, care homes – that are too important to be left to volunteers - 3rd October
 * childhood should be more dangerous? Stuff and nonsense'' - We love the world of The Dangerous Book for Boys, but few of us actually want our children falling out of trees - 19th September
 * woman could ever compete with Tony 'cojones' Blair?'' - Given the macho culture of Mr Blair's cabinet, it's little wonder so few of his female colleagues prospered - 11th September
 * the coalition really need this foul-mouthed tycoon?'' - Sir Philip Green is just the latest magnate to advise government. Their record has been a sorry one - 22nd August
 * that's the Top Gear vote sewn up for the coalition'' - Only petrolheads will welcome government plans to save money by cutting funding for traffic cameras - 15th August
 * when was giving people a choice a good idea?'' - The coalition's obsession with self-determination, whether on schools or GPs, penalises the least able - 8th August
 * thing is, Dave, giving is an art. But not that sort of art'' - If the prime minister was trying for cool when he presented the Obamas with a graffiti print, he failed - 25th July
 * 'genius' is only a defence to the morally vacuous'' - The apologists for the film director, like those for Raoul Moat, are guilty of putting loyalty before humanity - 18th July
 * stop moaning and just leave the baby-boomers alone'' - Bashing my generation is the new sport for anyone born after 1965. But could anything be more fatuous? - 11th July
 * Charles, if I may make so bold as to offer some advice'' - We know that the Prince of Wales loves a letter. So, in a desire to broaden the dialogue, here's my missive to him - 4th July
 * At last we can ignore the gurus peddling happiness'' - For all their sunny disposition, feelgood professionals aren't doing very well at lightening the national mood - 27th June
 * Fiona, for giving women another bum deal'' - From the Rear of the Year to the Scottish Parliament, it's been a bad week to be a self-respecting woman - 20th June
 * bribery really the best way to wean people off chips?'' - Health authorities and councils love offering us financial sops to improve ourselves. And do we? Fat chance - 13th June
 * drink laws are driven by middle-class hypocrites'' - There's so much fulminating about Saturday night excesses, nobody pays attention to their own intake - 6th June
 * world is still thriving in the House of Lords'' - Hereditary peers are about to elect two new members. It's democracy, I suppose, but not as we should know it - 30th May
 * pitiful Olympic mascots sum up this sorry affair'' - It seems all that counts in 2012 is getting gold medals. So forget any proper investment in sport - 23rd May
 * you're not online these days you're a second-class citizen'' - People who don't want to – or simply can't – be part of the digital world are being subjected to bullying tactics - 16th May
 * thing the parties agree on – keep women out'' - Welcome to the new middle ages when only sugary stereotypes were allowed out on the campaign trail - 9th May (Election 2010)
 * awful truth: to get ahead you need a private education'' - No election in the last 30 years has shown so clearly that privilege is now almost the only route to power - 2nd May
 * – at least Boris Johnson's father got home'' - The flying ban has proved yet again that resilience is one thing, but deep pockets achieve better results - 25th April
 * ludicrous ban that will only comfort bigots'' - Eventually we'll have to realise that by censoring others from expressing themselves we undermine ourselves - 4th April
 * on. Buy yourself an It bag. It's your duty to your nation'' - Remember the new frugality? Few of us seem to, but that's because of the example our leaders set us - 21st March
 * to us about politics, not your lovely home life'' - The Cameron and Brown personality parade misses the point that voters care about issues, not character - 14th March
 * we should celebrate the end of Asian Network'' - As the BBC announces that it is to axe the station, shouldn't we be glad it has outlived its usefulness? - 7th March
 * push for faith schools just promotes prejudice'' - Despite government reassurances we have no idea what children are being taught in those classrooms - 28th February
 * ho! It's the hunting debate… all over again'' - It must be election time when both major parties revisit the most inconsequential issue of the past 20 years - 21st February
 * don't have to be crazy to run the country but it sure helps'' - We wouldn't tolerate an airline pilot with issues of anger management, so why do we overlook it in government? - 14th February
 * are so many young girls still being lured into the beauty trap?'' - The latest survey suggests that if children are unhappy, it's because they don't like what they see in the mirror - 31st January
 * obesity isn't a disease, why are we funding gastric surgery?'' - Stopping children eating junk food is surely a better way to tackle the problem of Britain's overweight population - 24th January
 * what you like, as long as it meets with the mob's approval'' - As Mike Savage and Rod Liddle are finding, speaking your mind means being damned by a cast of thousands - 17th January
 * we really need advice on how to deal with boomerang kids?'' - Parent Motivators, issued by Lord Mandelson, shows the nanny state at its most patronising and absurd - 3rd January



Articles: 2009

 * sort of society praises vigilantes with cricket bats?'' - Far from being a miscarriage of justice, the jailing of Munir Hussain has seen the law working just as it should - 20th December
 * absurd to think that you can measure happiness'' - If only life were that simple. Promoting that belief means we ignore measures that can really make a difference - 13th December
 * such fans of marriage, Cameron's Tories do seem to split up a lot'' - David Cameron says that a wedding is good for society, but his tax plans seem only to wag a finger at the poor - 6th December
 * many weird lessons, yet so little time for proper teaching'' - The government wants to warn children about domestic violence. It would be best to teach them to read and write - 29th November
 * long last, a newsreader who made us face reality'' - Broadcasters believe that looks are more important than the message. James Partridge proved them wrong - 22nd November
 * England's World Cup bid in the bag? I really hope not'' - Give them to Russia, give them to Spain, but please don't let this country host the 2018 finals of 'the beautiful game' - 15th November
 * to the age of the eco-martyr. God help us'' - Nothing will harm climate change campaigners as much as a judge decreeing that the green movement is a faith - 8th November
 * Gordon, but your body politic doesn't match Putin's'' - What is it with male politicians and their obsession with looks? Couldn't they work rather than working out? - 1st November
 * trafficking? Well, there's a hell of a lot of women suffering'' - Beware those who argue that prostitution is just another job. If it is, why do so many women die in this sordid trade? - 25th October
 * Henry v Nick Griffin. I'd certainly stay up to watch that'' - Question Time had to invite the BNP leader. If only he'd been confronted with a scathing and witty opponent - 18th October
 * they still need us, will they still feed us when we're 66?'' - George Osborne's proposals for a delayed retirement will rob the poorest pensioners of a valuable slice of life - 11th October
 * silence of the ladies who lunch over the ladies who die'' - Suddenly, Sarah Brown loves the limelight – so why won't she condemn the plight of brutalised women? - 4th October
 * princes we trust ... to do absolutely nothing useful'' - Prince William says he doesn't want to be an ornament, but that's exactly what Britain has brought him up to be - 27th September
 * lunatic act that panders to paranoia over paedophiles'' - Legislation intended to defend society against child abusers is actually an indictment of unthinking MPs - 20th September
 * who can you bank on to deliver real benefits?'' - No interest if you're in credit, high overdraft rates and no incentives for being loyal. Lisa Bachelor reckons now's the time to consider your options - 13th September
 * BBC, why oh why don't you just ditch the licence fee?'' - Beset by complaints and facing a generation raised on free information, the Corporation has only one option - 13th September
 * the compassion for the old lags who truly deserve it?'' - The outcry over the Megrahi case reveals the very real plight of old and dying prisoners in English jails - 6th September
 * Alyce Faye, what a shining inspiration you are. To Wags'' - The millions that John Cleese's ex-wife is due in alimony highlight the very strange state of feminism nowadays - 23rd August
 * to Monsanto still leaves a nasty aftertaste'' - Rather than ceding control to biotech companies, the government must take full charge of food policy - 16th August
 * are we so squeamish about paying egg donors?'' - If women are prepared to offer their eggs to childless couples, they should be properly rewarded financially - 2nd August
 * top jobs for northerners? Whoever next? Pagans, actually'' - Labour's desire to ensure fairer representation for all minorities is beginning to look actively disreputable - 19th July
 * it comes to fawning, our politicians are in pole position'' - F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone has an inexplicable hold over our leaders. Are they really all just petrolheads? - 12th July
 * whatever became of the great British sex scandal?'' - Our politicians would have to hit long-lost form to match the ardent poetry of a cheating US governor - 5th July
 * just don't get it, do they? Actually, they just don't care'' - It is the phrase that encapsulates a nation's discontent. Shame it's lost on those who caused the convulsion - 28th June
 * one gains from blowing the cover of this secret policeman'' - Naming the award-winning blogger NightJack has had only one result: the silencing of an independent voice - 21st June
 * you thought the age of child labour was over in Britain ...'' - We rightly applaud the sacrifices of young carers, yet do nothing to alleviate their isolation or vulnerability - 14th June
 * time we created special schools for MMR dodgers'' - The continuing resistance by a certain kind of mummy to vaccination is selfish, ignorant and downright dangerous - 7th June
 * may not act like Silvio, but they stink all the same'' - We should resist the growing tendency of people to say scandals are much worse abroad - graft is still graft - 31st May
 * by celebrity? Not if it means Esther is in charge'' - However disenchanted we may be with our MPs, the famous alternatives present a nightmare vision - 24th May
 * hire relatives'' - A new politics: Small surprise that MPs are suddenly united over reform of expenses, but why should we put up with state-funded nepotism? - 20th May
 * spiteful campaign has neither rhyme nor reason'' - Surely there should be statute of limitations on hounding Derek Walcott. After all, his actions weren't unusual then - 17th May
 * Jacqui, let's keep out those dangerous homeopaths'' - When the Home Office bans people, we should at least know why. Surely it can't have been for views on autism? - 10th May
 * time to get in touch with your feminine side, David'' - The Tory leader talks boldly of women having a vital role in politics. If only he practised what he preached - 3rd May
 * don't want to live in a country manipulated by YouTube bullies'' - Laugh at Gordon Brown if you must, but save us from a world dominated by smarmy, techno-savvy politicians - 26th April
 * seeking help from Derek Draper needs therapy'' - If you wonder why psychotherapy is in urgent need of regulation, just consider the actions of this practioner - 19th April
 * for the Malawians who stood up to the Material Girl'' - How shaming that it takes a poor country in Africa to show it's still possible to put ethics before wealth - 5th April
 * would you believe it? The Queen hailed as feminist heroine'' - While we get exercised over primogeniture, the fate of many horribly exploited women still goes unnoticed - 29th March
 * BBC has become the weakest link in children's TV'' - Catherine Bennett: Once home to quality programmes, the corporation now excels only at producing noise and stupidity - 22nd March
 * plain English, Harriet, you're taking the public for a ride'' - The leader of the house promises to tell it to us like it is, which translates as keeping us in the dark – as normal - 15th March
 * to hurt Sir Fred? Well, take away that knighthood'' - It's not realistic or effective to seize the disgraced banker's pension. But his title is quite another matter - 8th March
 * you are being a complete twit about Twitter'' - Networking websites might be full of inane chatter, but there's absolutely no proof they do anyone any harm - 1st March
 * you think women would have saved us. Think again'' - We're told that what the world needs is more females at the top. So, I give you Hazel, Tessa, Harriet... - 22nd February
 * Wilders has just made our leaders look truly idiotic'' - What were the Labour hierarchy doing giving publicity to an obscure Dutch right wing politician? - 15th February
 * Thatcher is dim, but don't pillory her for thought crime'' - People have thoughts which we may find abhorrent, but hounding them leads us down a dangerous road - 8th February
 * Labour really think John Prescott is the new Obama?'' - 1st February
 * licking a fish is not my idea of public service TV'' - Channel 4 says it needs our money to survive, but its obsession with the vacuous doesn't merit our support - 25th January
 * beauty industry is at it again ... it's not a pretty sight'' - Many doctors feel that perfectly normal women need some enhancing. And we Brits are their guinea pigs - 18th January
 * beavers and wolves, why not bring back the black rat?'' - Those who argue for the reintroduction of lost species must understand it will devastate a landscape we love - 4th January



Articles:

 * is this really the great new idea - saving the gas-guzzler?'' - A public bail-out of Jaguar Land Rover would have nothing to do with rationality, fairness or morality - 21st December 2008
 * shows the Elders no respect ... But then, would we?'' - It's absurd to be shocked by one dictator's disdain for wise old heads when we often do the same to our elderly - 14th December 2008
 * Mia! My, my, how can I resist you? Quite easily'' - Any woman who says she doesn't like the movie is regarded askance. Even feminists love it. This is scary - 7th December 2008
 * injured feelings really worth more than a lost limb?'' - For maimed soldiers, Kerry Fletcher's huge award for sexual harassment must have been a further insult - 30th November 2008
 * would we do without the BBC, strictly speaking?'' - Licence fee rebels are hellbent on wounding one of the few organisations that defends national traditions - 23rd November 2008
 * P exposes our need to believe in the perfect parent'' - People swallow hogwash about evil cults but find it hard to accept the realities of child abuse in the family - 16th November 2008
 * mind pensioners, just be nice to Fido and Tiddles'' - The new pet care code shows we still put the welfare of our animals before that of vulnerable human beings - 9th November 2008
 * the time for Guy to rise above Madge's material world'' - Another celebrity divorce ... except this couple have laid some moral guidelines. Will they live up to them? - 19th October 2008
 * teachers must be spies - now that really is a bit extreme'' - Where are school staff to learn their anti-terrorist techniques? Turn to the pages of a John le Carré novel - 12th October 2008
 * this woman die as she chooses, not in a death plant'' - Debbie Purdy says the present legislation on assisted suicide is cowardly. She's wrong - it's barbaric - 5th October 2008
 * did my heart sink when Sarah stepped on to the stage?'' - This season, spouses are essential political accessories, so expectations will be high for Samantha Cameron - 28th September 2008
 * a tip, Gordon. Take no notice of the rubbish revolt'' - Apparently it used to be a British right to have your bin emptied weekly, but it's a bizarre cause for martyrdom - 21st September 2008
 * rich get all the good press. Now let's hear it for the poor'' - Despite Tatler's best efforts, a new report says that media coverage of poverty leaves a lot to be desired - 14th September 2008
 * women and snails still have so much in common'' - Even after three Labour governments, the progress of women's equality moves at a painfully slow pace - 7th September 2008
 * madness makes Tories think that fat is a political issue'' - 31st August 2008
 * me, but I still can't see the point of the Olympics'' - We're basking in the golden glow of the Games, but they are no more than an expensive distraction from real life - 24th August 2008
 * may be hip, but it's horrible. I say that sincerely'' - Political phonies are thriving as our tolerance for their antics grows. Still, David Cameron should beware - 10th August 2008
 * It's only words, maybe. But we must take care of our language - The casual indifference to English, whether written or spoken, is beginning to reach epidemic proportions - 13th July 2008
 * Where are our anti-royalists when you need them the most? - Prince William has been praised for his derring-do on the high seas. We didn't let his father have it so easy - 6th July 2008
 * Since when did politics become the equivalent of potty training? - After trying bribery, the new tactic is to use psychology to manipulate our behaviour. And it's just as likely to fail - 29th June 2008
 * Caroline, tell me, where can I get a nanny like yours? - If the Tories addressed themselves properly to childcare issues, Mrs Spelman could be more easily forgiven - 22nd June 2008
 * Spare us these commissioners bewailing the lot of the young - Sir Al Aynsley-Green is convinced we are dreadful to our children. The facts suggest he is behind the times - 15th June 2008
 * Don't be stupid, be a smarty, come and join in Max's party - Next time you renew your car breakdown insurance, consider the curious case of FIA boss Max Mosley - 8th June 2008
 * Why can't we stop the spread of degrading adverts for sex? - The number of strip clubs has doubled in the last four years, an unforeseen byproduct of liberal licensing laws - 1st June 2008
 * Green politics, like all fashions, has proved sadly transient - For politicians and ordinary people alike, the passion for toting your eco-credentials was predictably brief - 25th May 2008
 * Whoops! She did it again. And she's not one bit sorry - The more Cherie Blair tries to vindicate her husband, New Labour and herself, the more culpable she becomes - 18th May 2008
 * The toffs are back - and, frankly, no one gives a damn - Our likely next government will come from a tiny seam of society. And the nation simply doffs its cap - 11th May 2008
 * I'm game for Grand Theft Auto. You should be too - Those who play the game say that it 'gets their anger out'. Perhaps Gordon Brown ought to try it - 4th May 2008
 * Pity those poor souls who have to cut back and let nanny go - 27th April 2008
 * Clever women must be mad to seek power in this country - 20th April 2008
 * At least the torch shone a light on Olympic hypocrisy - 13th April 2008
 * What a costly way to air the fantasies of a rich old man - Families of soldiers killed in Iraq do not have the luxury of the exhaustive inquiry granted to Mohamed al-Fayed - 6th April 2008
 * They led us to a disastrous war, yet still they prosper - 23rd March 2008
 * Less happy families, more ideas, please - David Cameron's hope that the televised scenes of his home life will persuade us to vote Tory proves how very out of touch he is - 16th March 2008
 * Oh no, not another psychopathic nun - 9th March 2008
 * Trips to war-torn countries are smug, not ethical
 * This great capital deserves a better choice for leader - 17th February 2008
 * It's one sharia law for men and quite another for women - The government is feeble in protecting our values. Now Dr. Williams has given it the perfect camouflage - 10th February 2008
 * It will take more than a parade to pick up our soldiers' morale - 3rd February 2008
 * Why is anyone fooled by this slick operator - As past leaders have found, Richard Branson hasn't made his billions by putting his country first - 27th January 2008
 * Why do so many men still think the sex trade is fine? - 20th January 2008
 * Once there was discretion at the Elysée, now there is farce - President Sarkozy's passions have swiftly destroyed the civilised secrecy enjoyed by our closest neighbour - 13th January 2008
 * In this age of the political 'man-beast', what has become of our dreams of more women in power? - 6th December 2007
 * The Lords were hopping up and down over IVF for lesbians. So were the hybrid Christian rabbits outside - 22nd November 2007
 * Why is the suffering of young soldiers treated so callously compared with that of non-combatants? - 15th November 2007
 * Is the branding of the al-Qaida franchise by the boss of MI5 actually a frightfully cunning plan? - 8th Novemeber 2007
 * The government says Britain has 'shared values' with Saudi Arabia. But we don't subjugate women, do we? - 1st November 2007
 * It's the nightmare scenario at the BBC. I fear that Mark Thompson, like John Birt, is in fact a Dalek - 25th October 2007
 * Is David Cameron promoting the Tory party - or his wife's line of luxury accessories? - 11th October 2007
 * Let's dig up Diana again - 6th October 2007
 * Haven't the police got better things to do than censor art works that offend religious groups? - 4th October 2007
 * Gordon Brown likes to preach his father's values. But who wants a sermon aimed at errant children? - 27th September 2007
 * Something gone wrong at the bank? Blame the panicking customers - 20th Septeber 2007
 * I can think of only one explanation for our prime minister's behaviour: there are two of him - 6th September 2007
 * Did the 'Diana effect' really change the nation? Weren't we already confused and over-emotional? - 30th August 2007



News & updates:

 * Observer hires Guardian columnist - 30th November 2007



References:


Links:

 * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_Bennett_(journalist)