The Prime Minister reminded the House of his formidable abilities as an electioneer.
This inconclusive squabble about whether to hold a general election cannot go on.
The patriotic, Brexit-voting working class, neglected for decades by Labour, must now be championed by the Conservatives.
He increased the pressure on Labour to facilitate a Brexit deal by reminding everyone that he is a formidable electioneer.
The Prime Minister, though brought to a standstill by the loss of the second vote, continues to convey a sense of direction.
The Prime Minister made it as easy as he could for Labour MPs to support the Bill, and the Leader of the Opposition did not make it very hard.
May gave Johnson her full backing, and so, after the vote, did Letwin.
He presented a clear choice between his deal and the people’s wrath.
By reaching a deal in Brussels, the Tory anarchist has exceeded what the official classes and conventional wisdom supposed was possible.
By being so scornful, his critics have set a low bar for him. We are about to see whether he can astonish them by bounding over it.
The start of the debate on the Queen’s Speech showed how the general election will be fought.
As the final volume of the authorised biography appears, its author remarks that by the end, there was almost no one who could say: “Come on Margaret, stop it.”
And Tories have known since Thatcher’s time that climate change has to be taken seriously.
The vehement Johnson of last week transformed himself into a master of the soft word that turneth away wrath.
The Prime Minister demonstrated his abounding vitality, and his love of teasing the prigs who oppose him.