Brady reports no confidence moves against May that might not be no confidence moves at all.
As elected representatives, we must help the police and the public fight this hidden evil.
Much of the establishment now accepts that Islamist ideology must be named and challenged. But this view doesn’t seem to be held by the new DPP.
Thornberry gave no sign that she might be an improvement on the present Leader of the Opposition.
May’s appeal next week at Chequers will be founded in grinding detail, not Churchillian rhetoric. Key to agreement will be taking Ministers with her and springing no untoward surprises.
It’s about neither the principle nor the form of Brexit. Its purpose is to make leaving orderly. MPs should effect it this week.
If Ministers believe that 30p on annual bills is too high a price, they should seek the right number – and a deal to get us there.
Also: female Tories press the Prime Minister for action on Ulster abortion law; and Davies urges Party to unite over Brexit.
It’s a counter-intuitive take – but it’s what the sum of opinion polling in recent years tends to suggest.
Plus: Crunch point on Brexit. Farewell to Biteback. Bannon’s loose tongue and persistent loyalty. And: face to face with Jacqui Smith.
Traffic jams are already bad enough – this project would make them worse. Road improvements are a better way to boost tourism.
Here are five priorities. Sort out the extremism mess. Get an immigration policy move-on. Beef up your Windrush review. Don’t mess with ID cards. Or identity politics. Oh, and P.S…
The Home Office is poorly placed to manage the post-Brexit systems of the future. Which means an independent inquiry into the past. Which means making necessary evidence available to it.
In all, there are 30 new entries in the whole list, one down on last year and two down on the 2016 record of 33.