The Centre for Social Justice, which I am now chairing once again, is turning its attention to the quality of growth and jobs.
There’s a whiff of the apocalypse in reports from Labour’s karaoke party on Tuesday night. Are old songs all the moderates can offer?
If the former Prime Minister thinks it so important that voters have space to reflect and reconsider, why did he not fight for a less punishing exit mechanism in 2007?
New ideas in familiar packages remains by far the most likely, if less exciting, result of this post-Brexit upheaval.
From the perspective of 1997, a description of current events would seem like the ravings of a lunatic.
The Labour Party only has to look to Scotland to see what happens when the centre-left looks like part of the establishment.
They are touching the same sensitive spot that makes the public go gooey as Blair touched – in the same way, but with different lines.
These elections are your free hit against a deeply complacent and craven establishment that is wedded to outdated ideas that are failing the British people.
The unreformed House of Lords is an insult to democracy that could get a lot worse
Over the past four decades or so, Labour has suffered a remarkable decline in its political biodiversity
Some people just can’t help themselves. Faced with a hornets’ nest, their immediate response is to aim a well-placed kick and then stick around to see what happens. Such a person is Dan Hodges, whose hornets’ nest of choice is the Labour Party of which he is a member. A stickler for economic responsibility, Hodges […]
Voters should remember the damage that the Blair and Brown-led governments are responsible for.