“Her Majesty said that our country owed her husband ‘a greater debt than he would ever claim or we shall ever know’ and I am sure that estimate is correct.”
The success in procurement and distribution prompts the question of what else we are outstandingly good at.
The principle behind any settlement for the Sussexes should be simple: one can’t be half in and half out.
Let me give seven examples of principles that most Conservatives would support. I struggle to reconcile them with those pursuing a No Deal Brexit at any cost.
Middle class hostility to the working class and lower middle class is common, while working class and lower middle class hostility is practically non-existent.
“When I attended the commemoration of the 60th anniversary, some thought it might be the last…but the wartime generation, my generation, is resilient.”
Between the idea and the reality, between the motion and the act, falls the shadow.
The electorate are less and less convinced by such arguments about party identity and destiny. Far underground, the tectonic plates are moving.
It is an extremely tough task to prepare to be a constitutional monarch, or indeed to take on the actual role.
He fears that while “the Government’s words remain robust, its deeds become weak”. Plus: the Rees-Mogg family spent the Royal wedding playing “sermon cricket”.
The Government should consider setting up a domestic policy Cabinet sub-committee to help alleviate the Brexit bandwidth problem.
Congratulations to the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.
Parliament is not, should not be and probably cannot be a faithful reflection of the flux that confuses us in daily life.
Reports that the former brought pressure to bear on ITV are alarming. Can we look forward to a new series – Britain’s Got Feudalism?