“Dignity, kindness, authority rather than bossiness, and I do believe that those things could be brought to the Chair by a woman.”
My local secondary schools were no-go areas and no one from my primary school went to one. That won’t be my children’s experience, and he can take a lot of credit.
In his need, Labour’s leader is turning for inspiration to a predecessor who will scarcely be at the top of his list of role models.
Bowman and Westlake’s policy ideas are perfectly compatible with this end, but pitching them as a city and town agenda risks creating a false impression.
They frame the rest of our life in terms of health and prosperity. Public policy needs to catch up with this new body of evidence.
He could soon preside over a full-scale proxy war, or else do the Nixon-to-China routine with Rouhani. There is simply no way of knowing.
Bettel’s rant reflects frustration at Westminster’s failure to agree to the deal, but he was hardly welcoming the UK back to the EU top table.
The criteria for new schools have been squeezed too much – children who deserve the chance of a great education are missing out as a result.
Brexit has changed much for them, but less than one might think – at least when it comes to their strategic position at Westminster.
I still want to avoid a second referendum. But unless we can make progress towards Parliament supporting a deal, those calls are going to grow.
He cannot quite bring himself to say that he regrets the referendum that brought him down.
He or she should be totally prejudiced in favour of Brexit, and this should overrule the usual priority of putting Parliament before the Executive.
Even Monday’s one-off attack will add 20 cents to petrol prices. In the US, that will cost families an extra $18 a month at the petrol pump.