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Best of the Spectator

The Edition: soul suckers of private equity, Douglas Murray on Epstein & are literary sequels ‘lazy’?

Best of the Spectator

The Spectator

News Commentary, News, Daily News, Society & Culture

4.4785 Ratings

🗓️ 24 July 2025

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The soul suckers of private equity, Douglas Murray on Epstein and MAGA & are literary sequels ‘lazy’?


First up: how private equity is ruining Britain


Gus Carter writes in the magazine this week about how foreign private equity (PE) is hollowing out Britain – PE now owns everything from a Pret a Manger to a Dorset village, and even the number of children’s homes owned by PE has doubled in the last five years. This ‘gives capitalism a bad name’, he writes. Perhaps the most symbolic example is in the water industry, with water firms now squeezed for money and saddled with debt. British water firms now have a debt-to-equity ratio of 70%, compared to just 4% in 1991. Britain’s desperation for foreign money has, quite literally, left Britain ‘in the shit’. 


Gus joined the podcast to discuss further, alongside the journalist Megan Greenwell, author of Bad Company: Private Equity and the Death of the American Dream. (00:46)


Next: why is MAGA so incensed over Jeffrey Epstein?


Six years after he died, the Jeffrey Epstein scandal is still haunting Donald Trump. Trump had vowed to release all files on various cases that attract conspiracy theorists – from JFK to Martin Luther King Jr. What makes the Epstein case different, as Douglas Murray writes in the magazine this week, is that the case was so recent and Epstein’s ties with the elites, many of whom are still in power. Trump appeared to backtrack on releasing files relating to Epstein, prompting ire from the MAGA world, and there is now mounting cross-party pressure to uncover who knew what. Mike Johnson, the House speaker, sent representatives home early for summer, and there is even talk of Ghislaine Maxwell testifying.  


Why is the Epstein scandal such a lightning rod for MAGA rage? Douglas Murray joined the Spectator to discuss. The full interview can be found on Spectator TV. (15:49)


And finally: are literary sequels ‘lazy’?


It’s ‘sod’s law’, says the Spectator’s literary editor Sam Leith, that when a friend’s book is due to be reviewed in the pages of the books section that you edit, the review will be bad. Mike Cormack reviews Men In Love by Irvine Welsh this week, calling the decision by Welsh to pen another sequel to Trainspotting ‘lazy’. At the Spectator this made us ponder whether this is true of all literary sequels, and what motivates authors to stick with characters and stories that they know.


Sam joined us to discuss further alongside Lucy Thynne, the Telegraph’s deputy literary editor. (33:59)


Hosted by William Moore and Lara Prendergast.


Produced by Patrick Gibbons and Megan McElroy.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the edition podcast from The Spectator, where each week we shed a little light on the thought process behind putting the world's oldest weekly magazine to bed.

0:18.5

I'm Lara Prendergast, the Spectator's executive editor. And I'm William Moore, the Spectator's Features Editor. On this week's podcast, we ask, has private equity ruined Britain? Why is the Epstein scandal causing so much trouble for Trump? And are literary sequels lazy? be. sequel, Lazy.

0:49.1

First up, in his cover piece for the magazine this week,

0:52.8

Gus Carter writes that private equity is hollowing out Britain.

0:55.2

He points to how private equity has been buying everything in Britain, from Pretta Manger to Thameswater to even a Dorset village.

1:01.1

Gus argues that, while no one could object to genuine investment, this practice gives

1:06.0

capitalism a bad name. He joined the podcast earlier to discuss, along with the journalist Megan Greenwell,

1:13.3

whose new book, Bad Company, Private Equity and the Death of the American Dream is out now.

1:18.7

I started by asking Gus to give us a summary of his thesis. So I started this by looking at

1:24.7

Thames Water, which as most people in Britain will know, is one of our

1:28.3

main utilities when it comes to water provision, and looking at just how crap it's become,

1:33.8

and asking the question why that is. So you can go back from privatisation in the late 80s,

1:39.9

and you can look at the different people that have owned Thames Water. And what's happened is essentially they bought the company, they loaded it with debt,

1:47.9

they underinvested in things like infrastructure,

1:51.3

and then they paid themselves very large dividends, you know, in the billions of pounds.

1:55.6

And this is now having real world consequences.

1:57.9

And it's been happening for a few years, but it is getting worse.

2:01.1

So incidents of serious pollution have increased by 60% on the year. Only one in seven rivers in the

2:07.1

whole of the UK are considered ecologically healthy. And the point that I was making is that

2:12.5

this is the result of decisions that people have made. This isn't some kind of slow burn natural

2:17.4

disaster. This is the

2:18.5

result of company choices. And the particular companies involved are private equity companies.

...

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