None the less, a fall in the Conservative poll lead is not unhelpful to Downing Street and CCHQ at this stage of the campaign.
Previous Labour voters wondered whether the party’s pledges were credible or affordable.
Leaving the EU matters, but it shouldn’t drive out other important issues entirely.
The Home Secretary was speaking at the Police Federation conference.
Tax isn’t paid by companies, any more than the television licence is paid by televisions.
The Labour manifesto isn’t just full of bad ideas, it’s based on dubious or non-existent costings. At least it makes their grassroots happy.
The Labour leader received a rapturous welcome from his fans.
The Bevan “quote” he keeps citing was made up for a 1990s television play.
I truly believe that this election will finally banish the tribal, class-driven polarisation of workers versus bosses. That rhetoric will be firmly placed in the dustbin of history.
“Labour is committed to actively pursue disarmament…and we are committed to no first use of nuclear weapons.”
“I just feel worried. I don’t know if I would a hundred per cent want to vote for the Conservatives, because still emotionally I’m attached to Labour.”
We need policies to meet the challenge of an ageing population, mass immigration, pressured families, job insecurity – and grotesquely expensive housing.
Plus: UKIP abandons the field against Remain Tories. A bike-riding Minister isn’t canvassing. And: Michael Crick should apologise.
Rail liberalisation is being extended into the EEA agreement: the Fourth Railway Package is set to increase competition further.
The basic principles of limited government, economic and civil liberties, freedom and equality under the law are almost entirely absent from her programme.