Anne McElvoy
British journalist
Anne McElvoy (born 25 June 1965) is a British journalist, contributing to The Economist, the Evening Standard of London, and programmes broadcast by the BBC.
Quotes
edit- [Describing a visit to Germany to prepare a radio documentary] The country's military past and future demands collide, often awkwardly but in a way that reminds us that one "change in times" is often soon succeeded by another emergency. The museum ship in the port is named after Werner Mölders (the first pilot in aviation history to shoot down 100 enemy aircraft while supporting Franco in the Spanish civil war and against France in the Second World War). It’s a bit unclear in the presentation whether he is seen as a dashing military ace or a legacy embarrassment.
- "In Germany, the times are changing. But many would rather turn back the clock", The Guardian (16 April 2023).
- The context was Zeitenwende (trans. change in times), the shifts in German foreign and military policy brought about by the Russian invasion of Ukraine in late February 2022.
- [On Giorgia Meloni, at the time prime minister of Italy] After decades of fractious coalitions and technocratic solutions, supporters relish her dominant leadership approach and mission to “defend” the country from outside influences.
Meloni has now announced the "mother of all reform packages", a power grab that would allow prime ministers to be directly elected on minority vote shares. She will first have to escape the opprobrium of opposition in parliament and win a possible referendum. Given her success in manoeuvring herself and her party from the fringes of Italy's changeable landscape to outrun other far-right contenders such as Matteo Salvini and heirs to the Berlusconi legacy, it would be unwise to underestimate her chances.- "Ruthless, clever, pragmatic: why Giorgia Meloni is so dangerous to Italy – and Europe", The Guardian (14 November 2023).
- Surely, if the Windsors were a business, analysts would say that it has a key vulnerability built on the absolute primacy of the chief executive, too small a board and too little flexibility in its model.
- "King Charles's cancer blow will cause a cascade of change for the royals", Evening Standard (6 February 2024).