Oh, and Timothy and Hill should be moved on from being co-Chiefs of Staff – the former to head up policy, the latter press.
Her new administration would be on the right side on the big issues – Brexit, immigration, Islamism; and would likely feel its way towards the right answer on the economy and trade.
Only eleven per cent put it in the top three categories for effectiveness. By contrast, 32 per cent placed it in the bottom three.
Recent opinion polls which show Labour doing better bear little relation to what is happening on the ground.
Marxism, that failed social science, leads him to focus on terrorists’ circumstances, not the beliefs which really drive them to kill.
There is no need to keep fighting the last equality war – our society should allow women to choose pure egalitarianism or more traditional gender roles.
The manifesto makes collapsing devolution far less tempting for Sinn Fein and could give unionists the confidence and breathing space to reform.
The moral of the finding is that, regardless of the size of any majority, the Prime Minister must handle the economic liberals and free marketeers very carefully indeed.
Continuing our ConservativeHome series on the key contests in each region or nation.
Placing every single decision in the hands of a tiny group is not a viable long-term strategy, but a recipe for total (nervous) breakdown.
The way in which the 0.7 per cent target is defined is out of date. Lack of money is not necessarily the primary cause of underdevelopment.
What will count most on election day is not so much how many votes are cast for each party, but how those votes are distributed across all constituencies.
The idea that Brexit is a threat to defence co-operation is a myth.
The second part of a ConHome mini-series on the future of technical education after this general election.
Whilst policy-wonks like to describe the differences in public spending on the old and young as an “injustice”, that’s not how thrifty pensioners see it.