He’s right that such data is public, even if in private hands. But the route he has taken to try to obtain it is full of difficulties.
Whichever adviser wrote May’s joke about his knighthood is likely now in his shoes after the publication of her resignation honours list.
Seven voted for Grieve’s motion, six voted against, and the remaining eight did not vote.
A High Court judge recommended that Bercow leave his post in order to allow institutional reform to begin.
But will the selections for seats where MPs lost the Whip be under central control? Plus: Bosworth candidate selected.
The approach – and the role of the Chancellor in the forthcoming election offer – has changed markedly.
Mark Spencer has reportedly rung round to inform them that they have lost the Whip.
The Party’s rules – and the history of legal challenges to them – make for grim reading for the former Chancellor.
The Bracknell MP had jumped ship to the Lib Dems in mind if not in deed earlier in the year.
‘I don’t want an election. You don’t want an election…’ – Johnson lays out an ultimatum ‘Boris Johnson has issued a final Brexit ultimatum to rebel MPs by pledging to call a snap general election next month if the House of Commons pushes ahead with a bill tabled by a cross-party group of backbenchers seeking […]
Oddly there is no line that says ‘we might leave the EU, but only if the process passes tests that Philip Hammond isn’t applying publicly at this stage’.
What would they say if Brexiteers used the language of coups, Nazis, and spilt blood that has been so prevalent from the pro-EU camp in the last 24 hours?
“As always my door is open to all colleagues…”
Only yesterday they rejected a confidence vote. Today, in characteristically Cummings style, they are compelled to contemplate one.
Almost certainly not for the advertised year. So ministers will likely swallow any short-term frustrations or restrictions.