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Fraser Nelson

British political journalist (born 1973)

Fraser Andrew Nelson (born 14 May 1973) is a British political journalist and editor of The Spectator magazine.

Contents

  • 1 Early and personal life
  • 2 Journalism career
  • 3 Style and beliefs
    • 3.1 Immigration
    • 3.2 Gay marriage
    • 3.3 The nuclear family
    • 3.4 Charlie Hebdo
  • 4 References
  • 5 Further reading
  • 6 External links

Early and personal life

Nelson was born in Truro, Cornwall, but raised in Nairn. He attended Nairn Academy before boarding at Dollar Academy while his father, who was in the Royal Air Force, was posted to Cyprus. He went on to study history and politics at the University of Glasgow and gained a diploma in journalism at City University. He is Catholic, and he once worked as a barman at Cleos in Rosyth.

Married with two sons and a daughter, the family live in Twickenham. He is married to Linda, a Swede, and said in 2014, "I am a soppy Europhile who speaks a second language at home. The idea of a united Europe was one that really excited me when I was younger, and which I love now."

Journalism career

Nelson began his journalistic career as a business reporter with The Times in 1997, followed by a short spell as Scottish political correspondent. At a party he met Andrew Neil, then editor of The Scotsman who recruited him as its political editor in 2001. In 2003 he moved to The Business, a sister *le of The Scotsman in the Barclay brothers' Press Holdings group.

In July 2004 the brothers bought The Telegraph Group, which included The Spectator and in December 2005 they sold The Scotsman Publications Ltd. Neil had been appointed Chief Executive of The Spectator after the Barclays bought it, and in 2006 he brought in Nelson as *ociate editor and then political editor of the magazine. He replaced Matthew d'Ancona as editor of The Spectator when the latter left in August 2009. Under his editorship, the magazine has reached a record high in print circulation.

In addition to his role as editor of The Spectator, Nelson was a political columnist for the News of the World from 2006 and a board director with the Centre for Policy Studies think tank. He was named Political Columnist of the Year in the 2009 Comment Awards.

In 2013, the Evening Standard named Nelson as one of the most influential journalists working in London. The British Society of Magazine Editors awarded Nelson the 2013 Editors' Editor of the Year. In the same year he won the British Press Award as Political journalist of the Year.

Style and beliefs

Nelson is a supporter of the Conservative Party. He describes The Spectator magazine under his editorship as "right of centre, but not strongly right of centre". He on occasion criticised David Cameron's leadership but was generally supportive, and has also been known to praise Cameron's Liberal Democrat coalition partner from 2010 to 2015, Nick Clegg.

In May 2018 he was heavily criticised for publishing a defense of German troops by Taki *led "In praise of the Wehrmacht" which said readers should feel sorry for Wehrmacht soldiers at Normandy.

Immigration

Nelson has stated that he is a supporter of immigration.

On 4 April 2014, Nelson published a piece in the Daily Telegraph en*led "The British Muslim is truly one among us – and proud to be so", which praised the integration of mainstream Islam in the UK and described it as one "of our great success stories". He returned to the theme in May 2015, with an article en*led "The unsayable truth about immigration: it's been a stunning success for Britain".

  • "The irony is that Britain does not need legislation to make it more liberal. It can already claim to be one of the most tolerant places on earth. The 2011 census showed how we have absorbed the unprecedented rates of immigration over the past decade without anything like the far-Right backlash seen on the Continent."

Gay marriage

  • "If the Unitarian Church and certain strands of Judaism want to marry gay couples on their premises, then why should government stand in their way? For the record, I quite agree. Religious freedom in Britain ought to be universal, extended to the handful of churches or synagogues who want same-sex marriage."

The nuclear family

  • David Cameron is the "Prime Minister of a country where 48 percent of children will see their parents split up. Strip out immigrants (who flatter most social statistics) and only a minority of British babies are born to married parents. By the age of 16, a British child is considerably more likely to have a television in the bedroom than a father in the house."

Charlie Hebdo

Nelson wrote two days after the Charlie Hebdo shooting a reflective piece in which he compared that m*acre to the Deal barracks bombing by the Provisional Irish Republican Army:

What does a m*acre in Paris have to do with ? To denounce this would accept the premise that, as a Muslim, you are somehow caught up in all of this. The difference, of course, is that the IRA murdered in the name of Irish republicanism, not Catholicism. Few people in Britain thought that the former was an extension of the latter. Any priest who voiced support for terrorism, anywhere, would be excommunicated – so no one could credibly claim any overlap. Islam is not so lucky. It has no effective means of banning hate preachers, and now has a new breed of fanatics happy to murder in its name... Overall, British Muslims have been poorly served by their leadership.

Nelson also noted that the Muslim Council of Britain released an unequivocal statement condemning the Paris m*acre, while the Islamic Human Rights Commission had released nothing to that date.

References

    Further reading

    • Interview in the Sunday Herald, June 2009
    • Interview in the Independent on Sunday, March 2010

    External links

    • Articles at The Spectator