On Boxing Day, our season of Christmas carols continues, and will end on the last of the twelve days of the feast.
“On Christmas Day in the morning.” Our season of Christmas carols continues.
“O come let us adore him, Christ the Lord.”
And the ConHome team wishes all of you a very Happy New Year.
Our annual series of carols continues from today until the last of the twelve days of Christmas.
Our annual series of carols continues from today until the last of the twelve days of Christmas.
Our annual series of carols continues from today until the last of the twelve days of Christmas.
Our annual series of carols continues from today until the last of the twelve days of Christmas.
Our annual series of carols continues from today until the last of the twelve days of Christmas.
Our annual series of carols continues from today until the last of the twelve days of Christmas.
The first in our annual series of Christmas carols. “What can I give Him, poor as I am?/ If I were a shepherd, I would bring a lamb.”
We have become a party for whom the grotesque is the primary mode of communication. Just to reiterate, I’m not talking about policy or principle here, but a predilection for the odd and off-putting in presentation.
It is much easier to defend the sanctity of the collection in toto than to start making difficult and diplomatically awkward judgements about the return of individual artefacts on a case-by-case basis.
The elements that came together to see a Conservative elected Mayor in 2008 – a national mood turning against Labour, a near-celebrity candidate in the as-yet-untarnished form of Boris Johnson, and a radical and increasingly unpopular incumbent – are not currently at hand.
It’s past time that mainstream Tory politicians recognised these realities and engaged with it as an opportunity rather than as the broadcasting equivalent of a leper colony.