Above all, don’t neglect the obvious. May is vulnerable to Tory revolts – as the NICs debacle proved. She wants a real working majority.
The European Convention on Human Rights is critical to holding the UK together.
Most of the latter are used to trying to stop rebellions, not start them.
Parliamentary sovereignty has become fashionable among Europhiles who used to consider it barbaric.
But he urges MPs to work together to secure “the best possible outcome” in Brexit, and will support the Bill.
Otherwise she will provoke a mutiny in her own ranks.
The former Director of Public Prosecutions did not serve under either Blair or Brown, and is hard to place in the strife which rends the Labour Party.
Plus: the downfall of Boles. This Eagle won’t fly. What to do with Gove? Cameron should become Foreign Secretary. And: Out there in the country, Blair is still popular.
Some on the Right hate and despise her. But her admirers outnumber her detractors. Even if they do not agree with her opinions, they like the way she fights her corner.
The Chair of Conservatives for Reform in Europe replies to Paul Goodman’s article of last week arguing the opposite.
As the Prime Minister took questions on his EU deal, only Jacob Rees-Mogg managed to disturb his equanimity.
Writing for Policy Exchange’s Judicial Power Project, Professor John Finnis sets out why the Prime Minister was right to remove reference to ‘international law’.
One of the Labour deputy’s key sources on Brittan claims to have been “right up for witch-hunts” against Conservatives.
People that stab policeman and run over innocent civilians are murderous thugs – and that’s the end of it.