Plus: Hooligans shame the name of West Ham. Team Corbyn spins the local elections. And: Is Ruth Davidson actually Alec Douglas-Home in disguise?
Meanwhile, and on a happier note, Timothy Kirkhope has finally steered the Passenger Name Records (PNR) legislation through the Parliament.
The challenge to a Party that holds not a single seat in Merseyside.
No institution – regardless of its fame or its long history – has a God-given right to success or even to continued existence.
Plus: The ludicrous Evan Harris. My broken mobile. The menace of TTIP. The smears of Yvette Cooper. And: why Polly Toynbee swiftly changed the subject.
The Tory campaign in 1966 was not a success, but neither was it a complete failure. Heath’s warnings of economic troubles ahead were vindicated as early as July.
If all but one of them shy away from even debating the issues in a public forum, what chance do we have?
Plus: A return to Fleet Street. A venture to Edinburgh. West Ham win, David Laws loses. And: UKIP’s London members will have no say in the selection of its Mayoral Candidate.
That’s the five-a-side league season concluded successfully. Now our attention turns to the eleven-a-side season in September.
Could it be that she has done Cameron a favour by helping to avert a relaxation of the hunting ban?
“This is merely the latest sorry episode which suggests that FIFA is a deeply flawed and corrupt organisation.”
If there is no change, the ultimate sanction would be for the FA to boycott future tournaments.
He later insisted he remained an Aston Villa supporter.
Outnumbered as we were, it could have been a lot worse.
Too many conservatives allowed their judgement to be clouded by prejudice and inherent trust in the authorities.