Brady reports no confidence moves against May that might not be no confidence moves at all.
If I were May, I’d be listening to activists at fringe events instead of beating to Whitehall’s hesitant drum.
It’s a bold gambit. The Labour Party may be changing, but the people the Shadow Brexit Secretary is taking on still have claws.
Even the Labour Party itself seems aware that the Shadow Chancellor is visibly more wily than his leader.
The Shadow Chancellor praises Corbyn’s “dignity” in the face of “vilification” by the media.
How the far left uses a feedback loop to shut down people in the short term – and ideas in the long.
The Shadow Chancellor’s “preference” is a general election.
What do our cliché-ridden rulers propose? Ending plastic cups, gender quotas for boardrooms and banning Tony the Tiger.
The shadow chancellor says, however, that he’s a “natural pessimist”, and thinks it’ll be a “long haul”.
Saying “f**k business” is the kind of lack of understanding I’d expect from our Marxist-sympathising Shadow Chancellor – not from a Conservative Foreign Secretary.
This week was meant to be all about Tory rebellions and blue-on-blue conflict. Instead, the Opposition’s civil war has intensified.
At Policy Exchange, we see prosperity, people, place, and patriotism as the four pillars of a politics which seeks to unite the four nations, town and country, and north and south.
The combination of crucial Brexit votes, crumbling ministerial discipline, growing grassroots discontent and a rail crisis serves to intensify pressure on Downing Street.
They want to bring down the system of free enterprise, and replace it with a committee of Corbyn, McDonnell and Abbott telling us how we should live our lives.