Matthew Ellery: Both possible successors to Corbyn have electorally disastrous views on the EU
This offers May an historic opportunity.
This offers May an historic opportunity.
The sector is already a success story – this is a chance to make it even better.
Modern Britain’s new report, released today, proposes increasing the number of highly-skilled migrants while significantly reducing low-skilled immigration.
An experienced pilot warned David Cameron of the problems seven years ago.
We need higher skill apprenticeships, a maths requirement at 16-19, and the GCSE level of English and maths to be a prerequisite for Further and Higher Education.
The tie-up may appeal to the French company more from the perspective of neutralising a rival and preventing it falling into, say, Chinese hands than any wider synergy.
The correct response to its aftermath and to Blair’s speech is not to refight old battles, but to build a positive relationship with the Union from the outside.
Our real interests derive from forging understandings and ties with countries which have traditionally considered themselves British in all but name.
By giving women the support they need to succeed companies can win the talent war and boost the British economy.
We should not only meet our spending minimum, but exceed it in order to maximise our vital strategic and tactical needs.
Join me and hundreds of other Conservatives helping their campaigns: I know from my own by-election fight how very close they can be.
My worry is that we will end up simply substituting EU immigration with non-EU. We need to buy time to train our own workforce up.
My Private Members’ Bill would improve the situation for lenders as well as borrowers.
To make STPs work, Ministers need to have the courage of their convictions. That starts with the NHS and social care budget, of which STPs should take full control.
Tomorrow marks the anniversary of Peel moving his great measure – to which much of the Lords was also opposed.