Only yesterday, Andrew Gimson reported for this site that the party’s Deputy Leader was in deep trouble in his West Bromwich constituency.
Last night’s policy announcement live on Facebook was a first experiment in new ways for the Government to communicate its message.
The more centralised her decision-making became, the less control over events she actually had.
The financial crisis, Brown, Osborne and then the EU and Scottish referendums did not cover the discipline in glory.
He reproached the advocates of no deal for telling a fairy tale.
With average household energy bills around £1000 a year, it would be a cut of about £50 per year per family.
Jon Davis and John Rentoul’s new book contains valuable material, but cannot efface Iraq, or the former Prime Minister’s self-righteousness.
Or as close to it as a site well-disposed to both can get in this fallen world. This is the story of a marriage gone horribly wrong.
The new group’s platform is not very inspiring. But its biggest problem is it they won’t be very different from the Conservatives’.
He’s a Brownite of Brownites with a Leave-voting seat – and one of Corbyn’s main critics. Which explains why he’s going and what he’s doing.
One essential Bank of England chart illustrates what went wrong, beyond reasonable doubt.