The Brexit Secretary wants “as far as possible, within the grounds of propriety, to not let this put us off” the democratic course.
There is a concerted effort this morning to suggest that it is business as usual. This isn’t good enough. Voters deserve a sober examination of the choices.
Her new administration would be on the right side on the big issues – Brexit, immigration, Islamism; and would likely feel its way towards the right answer on the economy and trade.
Marxism, that failed social science, leads him to focus on terrorists’ circumstances, not the beliefs which really drive them to kill.
From the IRA through to today’s Islamist extremist threat, the Labour leader has misidentified the causes and proposed the wrong solutions.
There is a radical, ambitious zeal evident throughout the document, and it is shown again in the desire to end iniquitous disparities between the generations.
The Scottish Conservative leader criticised Jeremy Corbyn’s “simplistic” attempt to blame British foreign policy for the Manchester attack.
“It is significant that the Commission for Extremism in the manifesto was put in before Manchester. We know we need to do more, we recognise the scale of the threat.”
The Shadow Home Secretary is also asked to justify her previous votes to abolish MI5, and against proscribing Al Qaeda.
May has a campaign for the country. She must complement it, as best she can, with one for you and your family.
“Throughout the ’80s and the ’90s you spoke at scores of hardline Republican gatherings which backed the IRA and the armed struggle.”
The Labour leader pledged “change at home and abroad” would reduce the threat of terrorism.
Plus: A diplomatic success for Trump. A Love Actually moment, please, from May. And: has anyone seen Diane Abbott?
The tenacity of his public image as a well-meaning grandfather figure doesn’t change his shameful record.