Andrew Gimson’s Budget sketch: Sunak the model schoolboy dominates the House
The Government has a new star.
The Government has a new star.
As the old saying doesn’t quite put it, scientists advise, but Ministers decide – on moving to mitigation or anything else.
The Coronavirus will punch a hole in Sunak’s sums sufficient to throw levelling-up, Boosterism, Brexit bonuses – what have you – off course.
He has claimed that the campaign against him is a political tactic – to distract from Labour’s record on anti-semitism.
At one point he even started firing questions back at me from the stage, putting paid to the moderators’ hopes of continuing the Q&A.
The Shadow Chancellor responds to allegations from Lisa Nandy about the hard left’s conduct during Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership.
It froze up during Brexit stasis, thawed when Boris Johnson won his majority – and is closing down again as the coronavirus advances.
The overall numbers are down slightly after the allegations against the Home Secretary and the Government’s defeat over Heathrow.
Students are the next round of lawyers, politicians and other key decision-makers. That’s why we must tackle their censorious ways.
The decision illustrates how previous parliaments have freighted the process of policy-making with an increasingly onerous lattice of ill-defined obligations.
They don’t believe that the Government’s moratorium on it is justified by the evidence about safety.
Historians concentrate on such great men as Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln, and ignore the more Trumpian figures who reached the White House.
Corbyn refused to pull together.
These results are moderately encouraging for Boris Johnson and his team as they head towards this autumn’s COP26 summit in Glasgow.
Given that older generations will be most affected by an outbreak, we must encourage young people to volunteer their help.