Andrew Roberts

Historian

Andrew Roberts was born in London, England on January 13th, 1963 and is the Historian. At the age of 61, Andrew Roberts biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
January 13, 1963
Nationality
England
Place of Birth
London, England
Age
61 years old
Zodiac Sign
Capricorn
Andrew Roberts Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

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Andrew Roberts Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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ANDREW ROBERTS: I knew Lady Thatcher and see echoes of her in Badenoch - and the hatred she attracts from the Left

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 18, 2024
ANDREW ROBERTS: There's a distinct sense of déjà vu. 'Strident', they call her, and 'shrill'. 'She'll cross the road to pick a fight,' they say. 'Aggression across the despatch box is not the way to win an election,' they opine. Every single public criticism of Kemi Badenoch (left) was once employed against the greatest British politician of the past eight decades: Margaret Thatcher (right). There are other criticisms you can be sure are not made openly, but lurk in the minds of snobs and bigots. Thatcher was a mere chemist, they said; Kemi is an engineer and so not from the Politics, Philosophy and Economics-infused world of so many modern politicians. Thatcher came from Grantham, the 1970s equivalent of Kemi's Nigerian heritage as far as a lot of people were concerned. She was a woman when politics was very much a man's world, but it is because of her that Kemi could yet be the Tories' fourth female leader when Labour has had none.

ANDREW ROBERTS: Expertise and hard work is being thrown away because of Labour's decision to kick out hereditary peers from the Lords

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 10, 2024
ANDREW ROBERTS: As the Government introduces its bill to expel the 92 hereditary peers from the House of Lords, we should be appalled at the way an efficient and elegant part of the British ­Constitution is being sacrificed on the altar of Labour hypocrisy, party advantage and class prejudice. Hypocrisy because, although Labour denounces as undemocratic the accident of birth that gives the hereditary peers their seats, they are content that the rest of the peers should be there by equally undemocratic ministerial appointment. Party advantage because they want to hobble the Tories in the Lords, so there is less proper scrutiny of their own (already extremely unpopular) legislation. Allegiance and class prejudice because although they rationally know the hereditary peers work harder in the Lords proportionally than the appointees - and I say this as an appointee myself - anti-toff ideology must trump all.

This isn't Torygeddon - people will quickly recognise Starmer as a vacillating bloviator, says acclaimed historian ANDREW ROBERTS

www.dailymail.co.uk, July 7, 2024
This is not Torygeddon. Labour's vote share in this week's election was only 34 per cent, in the lowest turnout for 20 years. Which means that more than 80 per cent of the electorate did not vote Labour (if you include those who didn't vote at all). Millions of Tories stayed at home, and much of Labour's majority derives from the collapse of the SNP and the size of the Reform vote rather than any discernible ­enthusiasm for Sir Keir Starmer. The prospect for a phoenix-like resurrection of Toryism is, therefore, excellent if led successfully.