For too long, millions of our fellow Britons have lacked the skills or consistent record of employment to justify their level of workplace earnings.
The left-wing cliques at the top of the federated ‘super-unions’ are not representative either of workers or the best traditions of their movement.
Twice the Government’s attempts to circumvent scrutiny by means of the European Scrutiny Committee have fallen – primarily because it feared defeat.
There is a need for a common vision that has buy-in from the party faithful to make them long-lasting – whoever takes over as the next Prime Minister.
The care system often lacks the capacity to take often frail and elderly patients, and beds are occupied for longer as a result.
The post-war New Towns are a great inspiration and demonstration of what can be achieved with determination.
We should also change the tax system to give local authorities skin in the game.
We must say forcefully that we consider his presence in an illegal settlement on land that belongs to the Palestinians to be unacceptable.
Without this Data Communications Bill, excitable European judges could fatally undermine intelligence gathering capabilities.
Now the number of MPs is being cut, why not cut the number of ministers? And SpAds? And local “Champions”?
Instructions given to civil servants contravene the Cabinet Manual, the Ministerial Code, the European Referendum Act 2015 and the precedent from 1975.
“The UK is fighting for its citizens and rights. If every country was doing that it wouldn’t be possible to negotiate anything!”
There are two groups I intensely dislike. The first are the “laptop warriors”. The second are those who play the man and not the ball.
It will achieve next to nothing – other than enabling non-violent extremists to paint it as the British state “criminalising Shariah.”
By 2030, technology and cyber space will have changed warfare to such an extent that spending billions of pounds on nuclear weapons will look practically pre-historic.