My generation are a generation who don’t watch TV and don’t read newspapers – but do watch YouTube and get their news from Facebook.
There are only five days to go until the start of the Brexit negotiations. May cannot afford to make a reshuffle mess of a department from which she has now lost two Ministers.
She threw herself on the mercy of Tory MPs, and the gambit appears to have paid off – for the moment.
There is a natural path ahead: announce a resignation by the end of next week, and allow a contest to take place over the summer.
The Prime Minister says that she intends to serve a full term and is “getting on with the immediate job”.
The Party is damned if she goes quickly, and damned if she doesn’t. And, all the while, the threat of a no confidence challenge hangs over her head.
Labour’s handouts must be exposed as a self-defeating deception – as must the danger of what happens when “there is no money left”.
First Timothy quits as May’s co-Chief of Staff. Now Hill, the other co-Chief of Staff, has gone too.
May understands Britain’s divisions, and has been working to address them. The campaign, however, failed to get her positive plan for the future across.
Plus: An apology on behalf of the pundits, the press, the pollsters, the politicians and the parties for calling this election utterly, totally and completely wrong.
The “modernisers” think that people with clear principles are cranks. In five years, they may find themselves queuing for food at their local Red Star state supermarket.