Dominic Grieve, no Better Off Outer, is concerned. And there are some on the Opposition benches feeling the same way.
Macmillan and Heath and Thatcher (in government, anyway) went one way. Now Cameron is going the other.
Recent ConservativeHome authors James Wharton and Guto Bebb are present. Both expressed concern about the consequences for their areas of the offer to Scotland.
Downing Street is mulling a means of putting Labour on the spot. How inspiring it would be to see evidence that it’s more than a tactical wheeze.
The departure of of Suarez from Liverpool is more understandable than that of Damian Green, Nick Hurd or Dominic Grieve.
For a government to legislate effectively to defy the court’s rulings while continuing to recognise its authority would be a contradiction in terms.
A week on from the day of sackings, who’s rocking the Prime Minister’s boat?
With the reshuffle barely over, noises are already being made about ditching the meddlesome Convention and Court. But how?
While new women smiled on the Treasury Bench, scattered about the Chamber were ex-ministers who imagined they could afford to think for themselves.
The Telegraph’s Andrea Leadsom story helps to show how the join between executive and legislature is under pressure as never before.
(Or was Tom Stoppard right when he joked in Jumpers: “It’s not the voting that democracy. It’s the counting”?)
We must be free to criticise each other’s faults if we are to live in a country rather than a balkanised airstrip.
British judges in British courts should have the final say on British laws passed by the British Parliament.