He gave a brave speech to the Adam Smith Institute on some of the most contentious issues of our time.
Williamson’s new policy is an important step – but Conservatives cannot legislate themselves out of the culture wars.
If the Spartans hadn’t held out against the pleas of our colleagues then Britain would have been trapped in a customs union with no way out.
The UN genocide system is broken and needs a shot in the arm from a country willing to stand and be counted.
From January 1, no longer will anyone be able to say: “you can’t – EU rules”. We have jumped from the passenger seat to the pilot seat. So what should we do?
And, as with yesterday, Truss came second in our survey, this time for her speech on the “Fight for Fairness”.
Liz Truss came second after our panelists offered their own suggestions for this category.
From managing the pandemic, to trying to spark a green industrial revolution, the Prime Minister has taken on an enormous number of projects.
Home to some of the fastest-growing economies of the 21st century, it has never been more urgent to build new trading relationships there.
The Women and Equalities Committee has been been captured by the self-ID campaign. So others should make their voices heard.
It has shown itself incapable of advocating for the one group specifically named in its title – women – and is too emblematic of identity politics.
This agreement paves the way for what could be the most exciting step yet for Global Britain’s independent trading story.
The insidious idea that one’s sex is a solely matter of personal demand is seeping into policy and practice, almost unnoticed.
The EU started trade talks with the country back in 2007 and suspended them in 2013. Will post-Brexit Britain find it easier?