The Brexit negotiation. Don’t believe everything you see in the media. (Not that you would anyway.)
Here are five reasons why you, we and all concerned should keep a cool head.
Here are five reasons why you, we and all concerned should keep a cool head.
Her book is full of laugh-out-loud moments. And it has important points to make about violence, trolling and discrimination.
Plus: May’s legs, Starmer’s hair, Sturgeon’s legs, Warsi the enemy within, Carswell the rebel without, pigs may fly in Dumfries. And: A Rudd-faced Home Secretary.
People that stab policeman and run over innocent civilians are murderous thugs – and that’s the end of it.
There is a danger that those of us with strong opinions are not always the best judges of balance.
Impartiality shouldn’t be mistaken for overlooking so much that is good about Britain.
The first piece in our mini-series on reducing the deficit explores ideas from addressing ‘grey welfare’ to closing Whitehall departments.
Thank God for great European leaders, like Merkel, whose idiosyncratic approach to border control played such an understated role in last year’s Brexit vote.
We have to be furtive when at the theatre, but the benefit is we have no choice but to hear and learn about the opinions of our opponents.
The Stratford MP and ConservativeHome columnist is now banned from visiting his sons at Princeton, despite being a British citizen.
He also points to various “practical problems” with President Trump’s order.
Plus: Off I go to Washington for the inauguration. Time to strip Southern of its franchise. And: what happened when I had breakfast with Andrew Pierce.
France’s choice, then: economic (global) liberalism, versus (communitarian) promises of welfarism and border control. Remind you of anything?
Hammond, Green, the Work and Pensions Select Committee – even Clegg. All agree that it needs reviewing at least. And not before time.
“I cannot let you say something so insulting,” she tells Marr, who quotes her father dismissing the Holocaust as “a detail of history”.