Corbyn’s Michael Foot tribute act gives the Conservatives the potential to secure a landslide by winning over the patriotic working-class vote.
The Opposition’s promise to extend the policy is opportunistic, expensive, and unjust. The Conservatives must do what is necessary and right.
The Dudley South MP and keen Leaver was in intensive care during previous readings, but will make the trip to vote today.
Plus: Hammond’s blunder. Peers’ folly. Stephen Hawking is not, repeat not, controlled by MI5. And: my inner Mary Whitehouse meets Katie Hopkins’ slack vagina.
The 2012 Republican nominee for President talks about his campaign, his successor, and his party.
“I can’t vote for Clinton, so I think, I’m going to vote for him, but then every time he opens up his mouth I go: ‘Good God!’ ”.
The instinct of our readers is that the justification of development spending is not that it will have benefits for Britain, but that it is good in itself.
The EU referendum result marks a posthumous triumph over his old opponent, Edward Heath. Or does it?
Our new Prime Minister must sort out Ministerial confusion over what a post-Brexit immigration policy looks like.
…“all the opinions we are getting are from people in the Conservative Party”… Lifelong Labour voters in particular found all this disconcerting and rather off-putting.
Plus: Leadsom does well. Cameron runs away. No normal person I know is voting Remain. And: for LBC, world affairs. For the BBC, bedwetting.
Plus: Would leaving the EU really reduce immigration? What will Labour voters do? Does anyone remember Cameron’s deal? And: did Boris date a bondage queen?
If there were a simple way for the exchequers of the world to get their hands on more money, you can be sure they’d have tried it by now.
Plus: Contrite Soubry. Ashcroft’s Party. The Chancellor’s forecasts and the OBR’s admission. P.S: Re those Clarke memoirs, I admit that I can’t wait to read them.
I will match all donations to The UK Sepsis Trust up to a total of £250,000. Join me in this struggle.