Whatever the outcome of Sue Gray’s investigation, we must draw a line under the questions being faced by the Government.
We need to reconnect with 51 per cent of voters pronto. Just not with a pink bus or targeted manifesto.
Who is enjoying his discomfort? Labour, the LibDems, Macron, Rejoiners, woke academics – everyone, in short, who wants to see Brexit Britain fail.
Attempts to push people on to technical courses at local further education colleges, among other proposals, could backfire.
‘Let their frail elderly be unvisited in care homes. Let their weddings be postponed’, is the message of this Prime Minister.
Voters at this week’s by-election in Old Bexley and Sidcup are angry with the Prime Minister, but do not appear to have settled on anyone better.
Leavers and Remainers have been premature to judge this major constitutional change.
Ardingly & Balcombe, Aldeburgh & Leiston, Downs North; Horndean Downs, Brundall: what might all these local government losses have in common?
Here, in a nutshell, is why Labour is struggling to make progress. Its obsession with identity politics puts it at odds with the majority of British people.
If Conservatives don’t take the Opposition seriously, one can hardly blame them. And yet that could prove to be a big mistake.
Most obviously, this complicates their Net Zero strategy; you would have expected fiscal policy increasingly to have rebalanced towards green taxes.
People dismiss this cohort , believing that they’ll grow out of their economic ideals. But it’s a mistake to do so.
The most important task is the resolution of the constitutional crisis and a return to the normal democratic process.
In the public imagination, his vague nuclear threats suggest intercontinental strikes against western cities. But suppose they mean something else.