The nearer a Corbyn win gets, the more seriously Tories take it – and the less they like the look of it.
“It’s a quite incredible result that we’re facing here, with untold consequences for the Labour Party… this is potentially one of the transformative moments in British politics.”
“I don’t think actually, in the end, most people will want the actually quite statist, nationalising ideas from the 20th Century.”
The other candidates, capitalist lackies, counter-revolutionaries and secret Tories all, are struggling in our poll.
Yes, it really is spelt like that. Plus: I bet four candidates go through to the London Conservative Mayoral primary, and that Yvette Cooper is Labour’s next leader.
Burnham cites decentralisation, Cooper Labour’s business relations, Kendall wants to wait until she’s won… and Corbyn doesn’t offer one.
Our readers may not be taking this entirely seriously.
Burnham is ahead, apparently – but that could just be because he’s comparatively the best-known.
Plus: Go, Corbyn, go! Go, Zac, go! Happy Birthday, IEA. Racism in America. Welfare in Britain. And: If Wellington had lost, we’d all be speaking French.
Sky News provides at-a-glance crib sheets for the four people in the running to be the next Ed Miliband.
All a unionist party does by dissolving its British connections is signal to the electorate that the SNP are right.
ConHome apologises to her for any damage caused.
The former apprentice and Conservative candidate for Pontefract says that Labour’s caricature of the Party is a ploy to keep the North and people down.
Twenty years at Harriet Harman’s high altar of all women shortlists and selection quotas are duly delivering their reward – for the Conservatives.
This week, hundreds of thousands of Year 10 pupils will start being taught the new and more rigorous English and maths qualification.