The Foreign Secretary knows that she is being played off by them against the Chancellor. They know she knows. And she knows they know she knows.
Here’s a list of five of the most shocking and revealing disclosures.
In the weeks before recess, trans rights activists became more vocal in their efforts to stop Truss’s reform of the Gender Recognition Act.
Two recent cases show how easy it is for such documentation to be challenged.
This would be the very definition of political corruption – using the party’s influence to intimidate a legally independent institution would be reprehensible.
Most voters will have what to them are more pressing reasons to reject Corbyn than anti-semitism. But none expose more fully why he must be stopped.
The Shadow Chancellor was being asked about a possible intervention by the human rights watchdog.
Over time, proposals have either been denounced as politically correct nonsense, or embraced with an enthusiastic “me, too”-ism. Neither approach is exactly rigorous.
Enshrining the doctrine of reasonable accommodation in the Bill would substantially improve the status quo.
Parliament has left a gap in legislation that the courts and a quango are filling.
It has a wonderful opportunity to preserve this value on campus. One that may not present itself again for some time.