I think the future could be bright – but we need to go to them, since they won’t come to us.
Women are now taking lead roles in political dramas – ones where they no longer have to always play Margaret Thatcher.
Chris Hayward, Alan Mak, Michael McManus and Charlotte Vere.
Despite the siren calls of Salmond and Farage, we should jealously guard our parliamentary system.
Nuclear politics is complicated: Thatcher stopped the construction of further nuclear power stations in the UK, and Cameron reversed the decision.
Events then hold some uncomfortable echoes of today’s politics. What, if anything, can we learn?
The FCA has insulated its future size by creating 16 handbooks of “Conduct” which stretch to over four million words.
There is an idealistic vision of a continent which in the last 70 years has become a haven of peace and prosperity. Go to Cracow or Vilnius – and see what they think.
Despite an intense barrage targeted at the New Zealand Prime Minister, he has made history.
His rather pathetic moist-eyed speeches in the latter part of the campaign didn’t display any leadership whatsoever.
Even if there is a No vote on Thursday, my conversations with voters suggest that it will be enormously difficult to calm the passions which have been aroused.
Thatcherite on the economy and Europe. Macmillanite on housing and saving. Carswellian on governance – but lacking popular input on constitutional reform.
The Establishment persists; that much is true. But the correct response is proper conservative economy policy, not more state intervention.