Plus: Diversity sweeps Essex. Forget the Conservative Party – this is May’s campaign. And: Give Anne Jenkin a peerage. But of course: she already has one.
They are willing to support the Corbyn leadership even though they expect it to break a similar tuition fees promise to that broken by Nick Clegg.
Continuing our series on the key contests in each region and nation.
Successful Singapore is simply copying what previous Conservative governments have done – namely, to deliver directly hundreds of thousands of new houses.
CCHQ has been taken to task elsewhere for imposing lists of candidates on seats with no connection to it. It certainly hasn’t done so in this case.
Why spend money on grammars, rather than dealing with school overcrowding? And why back Trident rather than the Navy’s conventional fleet?
Among our readers as a whole the majority for doing so is more narrow.
I can’t recall a more important election – we simply can’t to lose sight of our vulnerabilities at this crucial moment.
A strong lead in the polls is an opportunity to make difficult decisions about funding health and welfare spending.
Continuing our ConservativeHome series, which will run each Monday during the election campaign, on the key contests in each region.
Many have already described why he is unfit for the job. Indeed, many have tried to remove him. Their support now is a joke, a delusion, a denial of reality.
One place where there is unlikely to be any dithering is the West Midlands. The prospect of someone like Andy Street becoming mayor is hugely exciting.
She refuses to recommit to the tax lock that David Cameron reiterated at the last general election, and to the state pension triple lock.
The message is one of strong and stable leadership. But what does it actually mean?
“Labour’s EasyJet and they’ll just tell you, oh, the pilot’s sick today, don’t worry, there’s a bloke from down the road who’s just woken up to fly your plane.”