From renationalisation of the energy and train companies to a bonfire of environmental and employment regulations, taking back control from Brussels has opened a new range of possibilities that were previously off the menu.
Airbnb looks forward to working together with policymakers to establish clear and proportionate rules on short-term lets
The Truss premiership proved a false dawn for free marketeers. But there is still an opportunity for the fortunes of Britain and the Conservative Party to revive.
If our members are constricted further, with no freedom to compete and invest, it is not just they and their customers which will suffer. It will be the Treasury.
The Prime Minister must make up his mind whether or not to see through a policy to stop the small boats – now an issue of profound symbolic importance.
It isn’t perfect, but it now focuses on real harms to vulnerable people rather than dangerous attempts to police free speech amongst adults.
The second part of a mini-series on ConservativeHome this week about how the Government can help Britain’s economy to grow faster.
I am concerned about the proposal in the Retained EU Law Bill to remove all EU law from the statute book by the end of 2023, unless departments have brought forward fresh legislation to keep it in force.
the risk is that the fiscal errors made by the Truss administration tarnish the vital goal of improving the UK’s sluggish long-term growth rate.
Since the Crash we’ve failed to grow at a per capita rate of more than roughly one per cent, home ownership is stagnant, and savings rates have steadily declined.
Decades of EU funding mechanisms, and centralised policymaking with multiple objectives for farmers, have left us lagging behind.
The different approaches between London and Belfast on one side, and Edinburgh and Cardiff on the other, will mean higher costs and less choice for consumers.
What voters need is a clear case for reform in ordinary language; what they’ve been getting is a wonkish seminar.
An evidence-based overhaul of the classification system would be a worthwhile proposal, but this proposed crackdown would make a joke of it.
Our laws are now indisputably biased towards far-left organisations, and unfairly penalise ideologically-aligned groups that have a right-wing programme.