[New comment layout] - details here
There are two clue references to ‘ex-PM’s, but thankfully neither of them is a BoJo, and Cyclops bids ‘no Trumps’ as well…his New Year’s resolution seems to be holding!
The two ex-PMs are HEATH and MAY, contributing to HEALTH and MAYFAIR, respectively.
Starmer’s recent policy FLIP-FLOPPING gets a mention, although he seems to have got the steel toe-capped boots on this week, depending on whose version of events you believe…
I particularly enjoyed the ‘real idiot’ anagram for EDITORIAL, and the multi-faceted clue for KING-SIZED.
The surface reads of 14D and 20D seemed a little fanciful: a Tory politician going after a second lie in STORY (surely they’ve only just started on two?!); and tax (STRAIN) leading to the downfall of Severn Trent (when did a water company ever pay any tax?!)
There were also a couple of nice anagrinds (anagram indicators) – ‘construction’ for LEGO; ‘poor’ for MORALE – plus the lift-and-separated ‘off’ as part of LUST F-OFF!
Not much else to add, except thanks, as usual, to Cyclops, and I trust all is clear below…
NB. Hopefully not treading on beermagnet’s toes, as he likes to add a little joke at the end, but 22D ARMHOLE reminds me of an old chestnut:
Leonid Brezhnev visits a restaurant on a trip to London.
He says to the waiter: ‘I’ll have a chicken pissole, please’.
The waiter looks at the menu and says: ‘Sorry sir, there is a typo there – it should be an R’.
Brezhnev replies: ‘OK, I’ll have a chicken arsehole, please’.
(I’ll get my coat, and leave the jokes to beermagnet!)
| Across | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clue No | Solution | Clue (definition underlined)
Logic/parsing |
||
| 1A | WIRETAP | Westminster’s initial anger at Chuck’s invasion of privacy (7)
W (initial letter of Westminster) + IRE (anger) + TAP (chuck) [a CHUCK can be a gentle stroke or tap under the chin] |
||
| 5A | HEALTH | Ex-PM stifling ultimately frail constitution (6)
HEA_TH (Edward Heath, ex-PM) around (stifling) L (ultimate letter of fraiL) |
||
| 10A | RESIT | Tries out another parliamentary session? (5)
anag, i.e. out, of TRIES [a RESIT is more usually associated with exams, but a parliamentary session is a sitting, so another one could be a re-sit?] |
||
| 11A | KING-SIZED | Quite impressive to be described so in the bed department? (4-5)
CD – KING-SIZED is defined in Chambers as ‘larger than standard’, so ‘quite impressive’; in the bedroom department of a store, they would sell KING-SIZED beds; and if one’s partner was impressed with one’s ‘endowment’, they might describe one as KING-SIZED in the ‘bedroom department’, a euphemism for ‘wedding tackle’?! |
||
| 12A | FLIP-FLOPPING | Fellow gets on edge, with female cutting off Starmer’s thing? (4-8)
F (fellow) + LIP (edge) + F (female) + LOPPING (cutting off) [The right-wing media, in fact most of the media, seem to be obsessed with Keir Starmer’s policy U-turns and ‘flip-flopping’ at the moment…] |
||
| 15A | HOLDS ON | Remains House leader, having sold out – touching (5,2)
H (leading letter of House) + OLDS (anag, i.e. out, of SOLD) + ON (touching) |
||
| 17A | DIALECT | Face crumpled, etc in a manner of speaking (7)
DIAL (face, as in watch dial/face) + ECT (anag, i.e. crumpled, of ETC) |
||
| 18A | TOPLESS | Go easy on the killing, macho Putin-style (7)
double defn.(?) – if you kill, or ‘top’, a lot of things/people, then to go easy on the killing might be to TOP LESS; and Putin often used to like to be photographed TOPLESS to boost his machismo [poignant timing, with the untimely death of Alexei Navalny last week…] |
||
| 21A | MAYFAIR | Ex-PM given fine, London area (7)
MAY (Teresa May, another ex-PM!) + FAIR (fine, in a weather sense) |
||
| 23A | CONSERVATISM | Political doctrine involving Macron in vest, with switch of direction (12)
anag, i.e. involving, of MACRO(N->S) IN VEST, changing one N to S (a switch of direction, from North to South) |
||
| 27A | EDITORIAL | Real idiot prepared to be leader (9)
anag, i.e. prepared, of REAL IDIOT |
||
| 28A | LOOSE | Capital university: “Grabbing balls is immoral” (5)
L_SE (London School of Economics, so a capital university) around (grabbing) OO (round letter O, ball, plural) |
||
| 29A | LAYING | Acting powerless, being a lover (6)
( |
||
| 30A | SURGERY | MP’s face-to-face with constituents when cuts likely to be made? (7)
double defn – an MP might meet their constituents in a SURGERY, where they might be explaining the latest economic cuts; and during medical SURGERY physical cuts are likely to be made |
||
| Down | ||||
| Clue No | Solution | Clue (definition underlined)
Logic/parsing |
||
| 1D | WORK (WELL) | & 25 Labour – I say! – operate smoothly (4,4)
WORK (labour) + WELL (interjection, I say!) |
||
| 2D | RESTFUL | Calm about lust? F-off! (7)
RE (about, regarding) + STFUL (anag, i.e. off, of LUST F) [the hyphen in F-OFF helps with the ‘lift-and-separate’ here!] |
||
| 3D | TUTSI | An African people voices disapproval at independence (5)
TUTS (voices disapproval at) + I (independence) |
||
| 4D | POKE FUN | Mock shag, sport? (4,3)
POKE (slang for shag, itself slang for to have sexual intercourse with) + FUN (sport) |
||
| 6D | EASY-PEASY | No problem getting ‘ayes’ to switch, vegetable-like? (4-5)
EASY (anag, i.e. switch, of AYES) + PEASY (like peas?!, so vegetable-like!) |
||
| 7D | LOZENGE | Religious doctrine into Lego construction? That’s sweet (7)
LO_GE (anag, i.e. construction, of LEGO) around ZEN (Buddhist religious doctrine) |
||
| 8D | HIDE | Said to be an evil character’s skin (4)
homophone, i.e. said to be – HIDE (skin) sounds like (Mr) HYDE (evil character, counterpart to Dr Jekyll) |
||
| 9D | UNFOLD | Reveal fun’s ruined – getting past it (6)
UNF (anag, i.e. ruined, of FUN) + OLD (past it) |
||
| 13D | CHUTE | Adorable, getting hot inside airplane escape device (5)
C_UTE (adorable) around (getting) H (hot) |
||
| 14D | STORY | Politician has to go after second lie (5)
S (second) + TORY (Conservative politician) |
||
| 16D | STEPS DOWN | Stage effects ultimately not working – resigns post (5,4)
STEP (stage) + S (ultimate letter of effectS) + DOWN (not working, as in ‘the computer system is down’) |
||
| 19D | PRODIGY | Electronic group in favour of crack at end of day (7)
PRO (in favour of) + DIG (crack, taunt, poke) + y (end of daY) [a popular beat combo, m’lud)] |
||
| 20D | STRAIN | Tax leads to Severn Trent downfall (6)
ST (leading letters of Severn Trent) + RAIN (downfall) |
||
| 21D | MEASLES | Complaint: mostly paltry drugs (7)
MEASL( |
||
| 22D | ARMHOLE | Hard to crack poor morale? Put your member in this (7)
ARM_OLE (anag, i.e. poor, of MORALE) around (cracked by) H (hard, hardness of lead pencil) |
||
| 24D | IDLER | Slinky type loses head for a time-waster (5)
( |
||
| 25D | WELL | See 1dn. (4)
see 1D |
||
| 26D | SEXY | Provocative once inside Sally’s skirts (4)
S_Y (skirts, or outer letters, of SallY) around EX (once, former) |
||

Thanks mc_rapper67 for the lovely detailed blog.
Loved TOPLESS and KING-SIZED.
Thanks for the blog and the joke ( why Brezhnev ? is it very old ? never heard it )
Good set of clues but a little light on the political satire. TOPLESS has a good cryptic part and avoids the obvious female angle. LOZENGE is very neat.
A good one for me, got it competed in several sessions over a week or so. Didn’t know chuck=tap but was happy with everything else. Lots of nice clues and answers.
Thanks for the clear explanations as ever. There’s a typo in 7D – zed/zen.
Thanks mc_rapper67 for an entertaining and informative blog. You’re not alone Saam @3. I had to look up chuck = tap and only then had the vaguest recollection of the word in that ‘chin tap’ sense.
It took me ages to parse 24d where SIDLER=SLINKY TYPE. It set me wondering if all verbs of this type has an agent noun (a new grammatical term for me). Is it possible the agent noun for SIDLE is a SIDLIST?
Thanks for the comments and feedback so far – much appreciated, as always.
Roz at #2 – not sure why Brezhnev, must have just been the era that I first heard it…I think it is supposed to be delivered in a thick-ish Eastern European accent…
Saaam at #3 – good spot – will fix that.
Having been seriously ill for some weeks (the last Eye crossword I did was no. 767) it gave me great satisfaction to complete this one in a single pass while sitting on a hospital commode. Apologies if that is too much information.
John E at #6 – sorry to hear that…you must be on the mend if you can complete a Cyclops in one ‘sitting’ (;+>)