Plus: the Government should not reveal its Brexit negotiating hand. And: should I contest North Norfolk again after all?
Grayling is a man with a plan.
Meanwhile, Amber Rudd has fallen right to the bottom after trouble with the Child Sex Abuse scandal and her retreat on counting foreign workers.
The Transport Secretary highlighted the “significant” cost of continued inaction.
The Secretary of State lays out the Government’s decision on airport expansion.
After decades of dithering and delay, a decision is expected tomorrow.
The Chancellor’s position recovers despite his advocacy of the Single Market, whilst the Home Secretary falls from 11th to 23rd.
The Mayor of London is still in campaign mode – he should switch to governing mode.
The Transport Secretary warns Parliamentarians against trying to block Brexit.
A focus on fathers: with Andrew Feldman, Oliver Heald, Will Quince, Chris Grayling, Stephen Barclay, Stephen Hammond and Nigel Huddleston.
The drop is best explained by the Chancellor’s well-reported stress on a Brexit settlement as close to single market membership as can be found.
Whatever your view about the desirability of the former, the Prime Minister is under no obligation to sign up to it.
Our Party member readers give the new top team an emphatic vote of confidence.
Truthfully, I expected at every stage that someone would come up with a showstopper reason why it can’t possibly work. No one has come up with one.
Hammond, Fox, Javid. How will a generation of politicians raised under Thatcher adapt to the new Prime Minister’s desire for an industrial strategy?
Truthfully, I expected at every stage that someone would come up with a showstopper reason why it can’t possibly work. No one has come up with one.