May has a campaign for the country. She must complement it, as best she can, with one for you and your family.
Community Land Trusts and other schemes are making a positive difference around the country.
A victory for Create Streets which has been making the case that beauty matters and that high density does not need to mean high rise.
May’s manifesto is real politics – that’s to say, a serious attempt to prepare Britain for the post-Brexit challenges of the future.
The Prime Minister’s manifesto will have its flaws, but she has grasped the implications of Brexit more surely than any other senior politician.
A key problem for Farron’s party is that Labour is competitive among young people – many of whom have not forgiven it for tuition fees.
If she tries to work through populist edicts and diktats, she will fail. And if the Right argues that a few tax cuts for the richest will solve our problems, this will be no better.
Using low interest funds from Public Works Loans Board to develop their own land into housing makes sense.
Over the last year, I’ve set out a number of policy ideas designed to appeal to lower middle class voters. Here are some of them.
The first piece in our mini-series on housing argues for the reduction of barriers to entry for the SMEs that are key to hitting the housebuilding targets.
The policy has been applied in Vancouver – and meant that house prices fell.
We need policies to meet the challenge of an ageing population, mass immigration, pressured families, job insecurity – and grotesquely expensive housing.
Corbyn’s Michael Foot tribute act gives the Conservatives the potential to secure a landslide by winning over the patriotic working-class vote.
The second article in our mini-series series focusing on the topic of intergenerational fairness argues that none of us cannot afford to neglect the young.
The second piece in our mini-series on housing argues that the planning system needs a far greater focus on buildings that people like.