Instead of listening to what Scotland can’t do without Brussels, I want our government to start talking about the opportunities on our doorstep.
Were his allegations against Sturgeon are substantiated, she would probably have to resign, and damage to the broader Nationalist cause could be severe.
Also: civil servant at heart of Salmond fiasco set for retirement windfall; Foster threatened by loyalist terrorist; and Bogdanor attacks federalist folly.
Much the best way to embarrass its members at Westminster would be to hail them as friends and fellow members of the Establishment.
Also: fresh woe for Nicola Sturgeon has her husband, the SNP’s chief executive, appears to contradict her evidence to MSPs on the Salmond scandal.
Surely they have seen enough zombie films to know that pumping yet more bullets into a zombie doesn’t work. Fresh tactics, not ‘more powers’, are needed.
She claims more young people from deprived backgrounds are now leaving school with qualifications and going to university.
SNP ministers are blocking witnesses and withholding legal advice. Can the opposition capitalise?
Also: true scale of the Irish Protocol’s impact on commerce, and Stormont’s ‘rank incompetence’, show how Ulster unionism needs a refresh.
Finding a new Chief of Staff is only the start of the changes that Johnson needs to make his government work.
The different administrations are all in different places with increasing bad blood between them. Also, devosceptics look set to win seats in Wales.
It worked so well the last ten times, after all. Also: Reckless defects to Abolish as controversy over Drakeford’s lockdown – and who’s paying – deepens.
Welsh ministers get soft-soaped while UK Government ministers face the full rigors of the national media
The 70-strong Conservative Union Research Group wants to support the Government’s mission to strengthen the United Kingdom.
Just a few months ahead of the Scottish Parliament Election, voters deserve to know the truth of whether they can trust the First Minister’s word.