As in 1983, the choice is is stark: either to continue progress towards recovery, or to follow extreme and damaging Labour policies
Downing Street must play its own part in making peace with the Euro-sceptics.
A Labour Government would exacerbate feelings of unfairness in society as they entrench a welfare-dependent culture built on the backs of those who work hard.
The Conservatives must be for something, not against everything – and thus follow in the footsteps of their greatest post-war election winner.
He should try to have a return to the Commons wrapped up by next autumn’s Party Conference.
Mind you, Heath’s Law probably applies: “The next election will resemble the last election more closely than most people believe.”
If groups of Tory MPs want to pledge sometimes to defy the Whip, that’s all to the good.
If the personal vote was once a strength, it becomes a weakness when their MPs retire.
The Prime Minister dominated a House stilled by death
Will they be annihilated? Or will they benefit from incumbency? The BBC investigates.
The author replies to Paul Goodman, arguing that the CountryB4Party campaign is practicable.
We now need two swingometers: one that swings between red and yellow (Lab and Lib); and one between blue and purple (Con and ’kipper).
To be specific, it goes up by five points. That’s the first increase since July.
And any Coalition negotiations after 2015 should proceed at a less hasty pace than in 2010
If the polls in 2015 suggest a Tory majority is undeliverable, the Party’s conventional election campaigning will be thrown off balance.
A Labour Government would exacerbate feelings of unfairness in society as they entrench a welfare-dependent culture built on the backs of those who work hard.