Meanwhile, both Humza Yousaf’s personal ratings and support for independence on the wane as the Sturgeon magic wears off.
In launching a campaign for a metro mayor, a local businessman (and Labour activist) has said aloud what many Welsh Conservatives seem to think privately.
We cannot stand by whilst Welsh Labour fail our children, and pack our schools with their union cronies.
Spurious cost concerns mask a misguided spirit of egalitarianism which will only inflict more pressure on style-conscious teens.
Where the Conservatives have scrapped centuries-old taxes, Labour and Plaid Cymru can’t stop dreaming up new ones.
Also: watch as those who studiously ignored Trimble over the Protocol neuter his memory to canonise him in death.
We cannot fall into the Corbynista trap of being more obsessed with running the party than running the country.
Meanwhile observers are already speculating about whether today’s performance will cost Douglas Ross his job.
Also: it looks like it will be a good day for Labour in both Wales and Scotland as Douglas Ross struggles to make headway.
With traditional cluelessness, Westminster devolved planning policy without a carve-out for vital national infrastructure projects.
I am very pleased that the Treasury has refused to finance Mark Drakeford’s anti-science socialist agenda.
Also: Drakeford strikes a deal with the Welsh Nationalists in Cardiff Bay; Sturgeon insists she’s going nowhere.
Mark Drakeford and his ministers are never slow to demand more powers, but seem much less keen on proper accountability.
As Chancellor, he has almost unique scope to make the presence of the UK felt in people’s lives throughout the country. That carries risks.
A quarter-century of socialist rule has given the UK Opposition nothing to write home about, and Welsh voters much to regret.