The pandemic has sparked a new sense of community spirit and civic participation; the question is whether this can extend into the future.
He is tipped by some as a future Prime Minister, but is more plausibly seen as a future Chancellor.
After this disruptive start in life, many young people drift into an adulthood of crime and prison.
The former Prime Minister also failed to grasp that Merkel was not going to do anything very much for him.
Bowman and Westlake’s policy ideas are perfectly compatible with this end, but pitching them as a city and town agenda risks creating a false impression.
He cannot quite bring himself to say that he regrets the referendum that brought him down.
Johnson’s first biographer confesses to feelings of bemusement, even incredulity, at the recent turn of events.
He reproached the advocates of no deal for telling a fairy tale.
The noise that he picks up, with an almost clairvoyant sense, is not that of a queue waiting to vote but of a mob pitching the mighty from their seats.
The task of choosing the final two runners must remain with MPs, who know them better than the members do.
Ministers like Amber Rudd have great difficulty finding able SpAds because the Conservative Research Department, which used to train them, has been destroyed.
Lower interest rates and monetary manipulation have been presented as the solution to our economic woes. But increasingly they create them.
Luckily, Hancock has recognised the need for change, which has been made more urgent by the Coronavirus.