Doing so would at guarantee continuity to her negotiation planning, and free Johnson to do what he does best without distraction – namely, campaigning.
Fairness for younger people. A shift to technical education. More homes. Tax help for families. Cut the Lords in half. A voluntary cap on party donations.
In her belief in “the good that government can do”, she is quite unique in terms of UK political post-war history.
Above all, don’t neglect the obvious. May is vulnerable to Tory revolts – as the NICs debacle proved. She wants a real working majority.
If universities want a more relaxed policy, they should argue for it – not seek to hide statistics that they find inconvenient.
Their atrocities are without parallel in the modern world.
This proportion would be content to rely on WTO terms if necessary, or say that Single Market access isn’t important to them in the first place.
It makes spending commitments which exceed the amounts it budgets to spend. Those escalating commitments…will approach E250 billion by the time we leave.
In a nutshell, members’ top priority isn’t cutting immigration from the EU, let alone stopping payments to it: instead, it’s restoring self-government – and fast.
Outcries over the loss of soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq show that the British public is simply unwilling to see soldiers dying.
Incarcerating more criminals for longer has saved millions of people from becoming victims of crime.
Reports of the Church’s decline ignore worldwide growth, even in such apparently unlikely places as Iran, and throughout much of the Muslim-majority world.
Before constituency parties are too quick to re-nominate existing candidates, let us make sure that they can deliver the post-Brexit referendum message.