Recently it seemed that Labour’s loony left might one day die out. Now they have a new generation.
Comparing today’s headlines to those from 21st July 2010 is instructive.
The ideological gap between Labour members and MPs is growing wider and wider.
They are the only party to have lost vote share in every single ward they have previously contested.
The German Chancellor just made a teenage girl cry on television. Any politician doing that in the UK would be crucified.
Let’s not get carried away: he might not win the Labour leadership. But after such a strong performance, surely he deserves a Shadow Cabinet job.
It was a political masterstroke – but already a backlash is growing on the question of whether it was good economics.
HMRC is renowned for its errors and dismissive attitude towards taxpayers. So why give it powers to raid people’s bank accounts?
The current regulations are outdated, ineffective and nonsensical.
Was this a Robin Hood budget or a disaster? The experts have their say.
What does yesterday’s vote mean for British eurosceptics, for the Eurozone itself and for Cameron’s renegotiation?
From Kaufman calling English Votes on English Laws ‘racist’ to Thornberry’s sneering flag tweet, the left just don’t get England.
If the Conservatives are the party of growth, of jobs and of enterprise, as we regularly hear, then we must also be the party of airports.
Spoiler: it’s both, actually.
It is bad enough that the EU undermines our democracy and harms our economy – but we also pay a fortune for the experience.