Most of the media coverage has been on the survey’s woke and anti-woke findings, but there was another important discovery.
The first of a mini-series of pieces on ConHome this week about the most distinctive of the Prime Minister’s big aims.
If you want societies that seek to impose virtue by force, leave the rest of us to muddled old Britain, and try Jonestown.
Wind and nuclear power both produce electricity. But if someone said we needed a tax on wind power to subsidise nuclear, you’d think they were mad.
In a world that changes as fast as this one, constant intellectual regeneration should be our goal. Our recovery papers are a contribution to that.
Is economics the key after all – driving the culture wars in western liberal democracies?
Absent a clearly articulated strategy business uncertainty will heighten, and severe non-compliance is risked
Our aim is to show that conservatism is alive and well outside of the walls of Parliament, even if it is on life-support within the Conservative Party.
The legacy of the Fujimorista regime has shaped Peru to this day, and has been far more pervasive and corrosive than General Velasco’s.
The fifth piece in our series this week about what the Tory Manifesto should look like.
“If parliament were a laptop, then the screen would be showing the pizza wheel of doom. If parliament were a school, Ofsted would be shutting it down.”
Governments are more likely to help create conditions for it by seeking economic growth, rather than well-being.
The second article in a three-part series explaining why adapting to a society and economy shaped by technology is key.
If you believe in this idea of conservatism; if you want new faces at the table; if you share these ambitions, then please say so.
A careful reading of Hayek and Adam Smith will confirm that neither was invariably opposed to state action.