There has been progress – and there are signs that many BME Labour voters are beginning to feel that their votes are being taken for granted.
This fourth piece of our mini-series on what should be in the manifesto argues she must build a fair market for all.
In her belief in “the good that government can do”, she is quite unique in terms of UK political post-war history.
In a nutshell, members’ top priority isn’t cutting immigration from the EU, let alone stopping payments to it: instead, it’s restoring self-government – and fast.
We are keen to gather views from interested parties (such as businesses, industry groups, politicians, academics and others) about what would happen.
With the public sceptical after years of letdowns, and the importance of the manifesto fresh in the headlines, it’ll be 2019 before action is possible.
With growing problems at home, many member states are at odds with the Commission’s punitive line on Brexit.
She is giving people what they want, and heading off a populist revolt with a moderate, balance system.
We must find more local authority spaces for unaccompanied child refugees.
If there is one lesson we learnt from the EU referendum last year, it is that people are crying out for more control over their lives.
Modern Britain’s new report, released today, proposes increasing the number of highly-skilled migrants while significantly reducing low-skilled immigration.
The right answer is to discourage people from coming to Calais in the first place, and to help people directly in the Middle East.
As a party known for strong economic management, we must work doubly hard to avoid appearing to know the price of everything and the value of nothing.
I’m tired of being lectured by Labour politicians. When they were in government, around 800 refugees were resettled each year. We are doing five times that.
France’s new president may be a more positive force for Britain than people expect. But we need to be ready – deal or no deal.