Very few businesses could survive a lockdown of the type we’re currently in for six months. A sustained one will have to be more focused.
We lost Putney, but gained loads of poorer seats in the north and midlands. That’s highlighted the tensions.
The schism between between Tory Eurosceptics and Europhiles has been overcome; now another divide must be healed.
My lawyer friend Victoria Hewson and I have launched a small, non-funded campaign called ‘Radical’, aimed at fighting for truth and freedom in this arena.
The Government seems to be gearing up for a big fight over human rights laws in the wake of the Streatham terror attack.
It is no secret that some senior civil servants in the Foreign Office do not share the Prime Minister’s commitment to implementing the Truro Recommendations.
The scale of his domestic ambitions and the legacy of the Iraq War suggest that his ambitions will be limited – for the moment at least.
There are three main issues for us. The HE/FE balance, making all students welcome on campus and the Conservatives’ own internal housekeeping.
We economic liberals should be cautiously thankful for the stay of execution that his leadership and manifesto have given us.
Labour’s broadband policy is not about investment in infrastructure, but about a revolution in content to shape our collective political culture.
Briefing that Johnson will “lock up terrorists and throw away the key” is taking the voters for fools.
It really is remarkable. Every self-reported measure of wellbeing has improved near continuously in the past eight years.
The Neoliberal Manifesto, a joint project between the Adam Smith Institute and 1828, champions an approach based on freedom, markets and choice.
It’s a bit like the roof of Parliament’s Westminster Hall: which is held up by a lot of huge, ancient beams all resting on each other.
A small community radio station with a few thousand listeners requires a license, but a social media channel with millions of individual subscribers does not.