The Prime Minister and Keir Starmer traded blows over rising mortgage costs.
Pumping yet more money without reform into failing organisations is likely to continue to disappoint.
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.
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.
Voters believe four of the Government’s five key pledges are more likely to happen under Labour than the Conservatives. Meanwhile, 2019 Tory voters prioritise spending on public services over tax cuts,
Sunak and Starmer talked past each other, with the PM receiving roars of support which it was very hard to trace to their source.
The Rwanda Bill, Scottish taxation, and dementia research funding were amongst the subjects discussed at today’s session.
Most Conservative MPs are desparate to avoid one any time soon. It may not have occured to some that bringing down the Bill could bring about precisely the outcome they want to avoid.
Labour’s leader adds that “while we back the action… these strikes still do bring risk, we must avoid escalation across the Middle East”.
Sir Keir will have to work hard to keep his party on the right side of the line. Which will require withdrawing the whip from any Labour MPs who support attacks on our troops.
The government in Cardiff is the living proof of what Labour in power looks like. Don’t just take my word for it – it was Starmer who said that.
Given that latent support for capital punishment is not a fringe position in Britain, one should expect that view to be more widespread in our political and media circles than it appears on the surface – and it is.
Is teacher-supervised brushing for three to five-year-olds any more absurd than banning anyone born after 2009 from ever legally buying a cigarette?
I hope the British public get an answer. Because these are highly consequential decisions about the future shape of the state. £28 billion is £4 billion more than the annual Home Office budget.