The Shadow Home Secretary is also asked to justify her previous votes to abolish MI5, and against proscribing Al Qaeda.
Plus: A diplomatic success for Trump. A Love Actually moment, please, from May. And: has anyone seen Diane Abbott?
This highest of five threat levels means that “an attack is expected imminently”. They are set not by the Prime Minister, but by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre.
The Home Secretary was speaking at the Police Federation conference.
The companies are on solid ground over encryption; their footing is less sure, however, when it comes to pro-terror material on the net.
At best, sending him to Guantanamo failed – and at worst it backfired spectacularly.
The only way to make it will be to hold a small number of made-for-TV events that help tell a story that voters in provincial England will respond to.
The fantasy that the Kremlin is more sinned against than sinning was once the preserve of Corbyn’s hard left. We should stop the rot.
Few noticed the Investigatory Powers Bill becoming law because all eyes are on the process of leaving the EU.
Without this Data Communications Bill, excitable European judges could fatally undermine intelligence gathering capabilities.
We agonise about how much oversight the state should have over us. But government is only going where others can also go, and often do.
A way of approaching the Investigatory Powers Bill, and much else, even before we know all the details.
The test of Cameron’s announcement today is less one of words than deeds. It must be followed up across Whitehall and especially, at a local level, by the police.
Will he make America great again? What is more important – jobs or building the wall? And why do Democrats think Hillary lost?