The implications of the crisis are such that Johnson and Sunak need not so much to think outside the box as to trample it to tatters altogether.
Cameron’s memoirs offer a hint of where the occupant of Number 11 may look to raise property taxes instead.
As the Prime Minister said, many people have lent us their vote, and they won’t be so generous next time if we get it wrong.
That’s a legitimate political agenda, and people are quite welcome to vote for it. But they deserve to know what’s coming.
Who will their taxes really hit? How much will they truly raise? And can this really be described as a ‘moderate’ agenda?
Their manifesto doesn’t provide any costings for their most expensive plans. The IFS says their tax pledge is not believable. But will they get away with it?
We need an overhaul to meet both the immediate challenges posed by Brexit and to maintain our global position as other countries start catching us up.
It’s a bit like the roof of Parliament’s Westminster Hall: which is held up by a lot of huge, ancient beams all resting on each other.
The Conservative Party could become the natural home for the urban working class if it revived these towns, David Skelton argues in his new book.
His time and room are very constricted, but he can at least demonstrate his domestic priorities – police and schools.
His campaign was slow to start, and sometimes misfired. But he found his voice, is part of a Johnson future – and is back on the up.
The former Universities Minister revives his tax-cutting plan from the earlier stages of this leadership contest.
We apologise for not being swept away by the mania for new announcements that infests this leadership contest.
I’m travelling around the country asking the public what their priorities really are. This review should be the People’s review.
In the first piece of a mini-series, our guest author also argues the Government should look again at IR35, and make it more worthwhile to work.