Four, deep-rooted currents in are carving out space for movements which seek to prioritise the interests, the culture, the values, and the ways of life of the majority group against what they see as self-interested, corrupt, narcissistic, and incompetent elites.
With better cost controls and an attack on some of these areas of needless spending, Sunak and Hunt could show how you get more public services for less – and free up money for tax cuts too.
The Northern Ireland Assembly has returned after the Democratic Unionist Party accepted a deal for some adjustments to the trade border in the Irish Sea.
Liz Truss has called the policy “profoundly unconservative”. What’s unconservative? Discuss. But what can certainly be said is that it’s illberal and, in this case, Party members line up with individual freedom against government coercion.
Tory MPs have refused to go and canvas for their candidate, the girlfriend of the disgraced Peter Bone.
In his ceaseless campaign to prove Labour compassionate, and the Tories out of touch, the Labour leader said he met an ordinary person.
The Prime Minister and Keir Starmer traded blows over rising mortgage costs.
The Business Secretary is asked whether she should stop being “a shrinking violet” and challenge Sunak for the leadership, given her ratings in the Conservative Home survey.
Pumping yet more money without reform into failing organisations is likely to continue to disappoint.
Downing Street and the White House would have hoped one strike would have been enough to send the Houthis an unambiguous message. That clearly hasn’t worked.
The Prime Minister was furious to be accused of having “the blood of thousands of innocent people” in Gaza “on his hands”.
Sir Keir Starmer attacked the Government over its proposals to expand free childcare, quoting Conservative MPs.
P.S: A poll that compared Sunak’s performance against Sir Keir to, say, Kemi Badenoch’s, Penny Mordaunt’s and James Cleverly’s might tell us something worth knowing. This morning’s nugatory exercise does not.
If they are to stop Labour sweeping to victory, they not only need to bring back in even more “don’t knows” than models suggest they currently will, but also win back a large number of voters who have abandoned the party.