MPs seem to think ‘it doesn’t affect me, so I’ll think about it later’ when they hear complaints from Generation Rent.
The choice facing voters on May 6 is simple: do we accelerate the progress of the last four years, or do we go back to the old failing approach?
It’s not surprising that I do things differently, since I came to the role from a business background, rather than via the world of politics.
These figures will change substantially in the final version of the algorithm, especially because it will take into account green belt restrictions.
When Crisis is saying the same thing as the Centre for Social Justice and ourselves at the Adam Smith Institute, politicians should listen.
Labour has increased the Council Tax, doubled the number of senior officials, and seen Children’s Services go from “outstanding“ to being placed in special measures.
Our pledge has been to look first to these former industrial sites, to reclaim them and clean them up, when developers come knocking on the door.
The rest of our economy is shifting to greater sustainability. The system to provide places to live should do the same.
A Guardian author suggesting otherwise is wrong. The picture we get is of mostly stable land ownership.
People may be switching off when they hear negative stories about him, in the same way that Americans ignored Hillary Clinton’s warnings about Trump.
Johnson’s latest column on the issue might avoid even mentioning it, but the debate is about how far we go, not whether we do it.
Given the long lead times involved in constructing new homes, we can’t afford to let the Government’s weakness or distracted state delay us.
The Government should mull the Heathrow Hub proposal. Plus: Nanny is yet to see her own appearance on Tracey Ullman’s show.
Conservatives failed to win people over to building hundreds of new homes on a former golf course.
I am very conscious that I am only one of 141 Conservative candidates campaigning in these elections.