Last year, it was Sir Peter Luff. Political balance, you see.
“…When the lights come on at four/At the end of another year…”
There was also a shout-out for his annuity changes.
We have named four – IDS, Grayling, Gove and Hammond. The Times cites Letwin. Javid has said that he’s not afraid of Britain leaving.
Support for one with the Liberal Democrats ticks up very slightly.
Boris Johnson is the runner-up.
The Home Secretary is second, and Gove wins plaudits among the write-ins.
Like the resurrection, the incarnation is one – literally, a stumbling block. But that is not the end of the story.
Douglas Alexander is right to urge the creation of a Government envoy for it.
At the heart of the row over two of the Home Secretary’s SpAds is the view at the very top of the Party that the next election is all that matters.
The story of why the Aldridge-Brownhills selection was pulled.
Will it be re-run under the pre-election rules that give more powers to CCHQ?
Whether English votes for English laws gets through the Commons or not, we need a constitutional convention to give wider reform legitimacy.
“There is an opportunity for a Labour administration with our support if the Labour Party want that.”