Plus: Russia’s opposition leader was poisoned, so now slap Magnitsky sanctions on Putin. And: Phil Collins’ ungracious departure.
The Nationalists’ campaign has been so successful that leading pro-UK campaigners shy away from saying ‘Britain’. That isn’t sustainable.
The Treasury should hold one as the year rolls on, along the lines of that undertaken by Canada’s government during the 1990s.
Taxpayers are going to have to pick up the bill for a pseudoscientific method that’s prejudiced in itself.
Starmer had a success, conveying genuine moral indignation as he asked tough questions.
“Even his own MPs have run out of patience”, says the Labour Party leader.
That’s the fourth successive drop. The Government’s rating mirrors it. The Chancellor’s rating is essentially unchanged.
Clearly the Government’s model is flawed. But there is no perfect formula for solving this crisis.
Australia’s former Prime Minister knows all about trade deals – and can supply insights both from his experience and an international contact book.
Anyone else would have known that vandalising the Last Night of the Proms would provoke a furious reaction.
The Prime Minister sets out his views on the BBC’s decision to play an orchestral version of Rule Britannia at the Proms.
The Corporation has lost its grip on its Reithian inheritance – which, for all his criticism of the BBC, the former Telegraph editor understands.
For too many legislators, biffing the Prime Minister for a short-term thrill is the acme of political maturity.
The machinery of state has shown itself to lack the bandwidth and agility required to deliver complexity at pace.