The old hatred has been ushered in by a toxic mix of Islamism, anti-immigrant populism and far-leftism. Liberalism must fight back.
Then come Redwood and Tugendhat to make up the top five. Four of the top ten have been in the Commons for less than three years.
DExEU must continue after March next year to prevent the EU from using constructive ambiguity to implement regulatory absorption.
The consent principle applies now – and we should beware of the potential effects on children of allowing no adequate period for reflection.
To “take the fight to Labour” successfully, as William Hague urges this morning, she requires a more sharply-defined sense of who she is fighting for.
It won’t be easy but regional powers can make it happen if they make the right choices.
The deal’s internal contradictions are coming back to haunt it, to the confusion of May, Varadkar, Juncker, Barnier – the whole lot of them.
Get Heywood and Robbins out; get Rees-Mogg and Duncan Smith in. There is still a chance to reverse last week’s defeat.
Nick Gibb changed the National Curriculum to require schools explicitly to teach reading using the method. The results have been outstanding.
Perhaps while Party members don’t like elements of the deal very much, their main emotional reaction to it is simply relief that trade talks are set to begin.
We fall into the trap of attack Corbyn’s creaking socialism where we should instead be learning from the new movement’s vibrancy.
We must insist that an “in principle” agreement on trade be reached by the end of March 2018 – otherwise the EU will have us over a barrel.
Increasing supply is important, and so is making sure that young Britons have a chance to get on the ladder.