“If a 16 year old with Aspergers can break into US defence computers, what is to stop a Chinese company putting in trap doors that it can activate whenever it wants?
Our pro-active outreach efforts have built up a substantial contact book, put activists on the ground, and delivered a Tory poll lead amongst these voters.
His sacking is more evidence, were it needed, of the tensions that tear at the Tory coalition – and threaten to render it unsustainable.
Talks with Brussels appear to have stalled completely over agriculture, but things appear more promising in Beijing.
There may be no evidence that it happens here, but this law would be a powerful boost to the global prohibition campaign.
My only criticism of the Defence Secretary? That he was too diplomatic.
Is the Treasury up for funding and voters up for supporting the ideas he sketched out ealier this week?
It is essential that voters do not come to believe that those politicians who support a free economy have become obsessed by leaving the EU.
The 2020 race, then, looks wide open and depends on two things outside the President’s direct control.
The Foreign Secretary had already impressed me with his focus on human rights. Now he has created new hope for Christians around the world.
I still remember the first time when I bit into a Chips Ahoy cookie. Oh heavens, there was nothing like it – this must be what freedom tastes like.
“Because you have the right to have a Defense Secretary whose views are better aligned with yours…I believe it is right for me to step down from my position.”
Len McCluskey’s opposition to a second referendum is explicit, Seamus Milne’s Euroscepticism is unshakeable, and so on. The People’s Voters need Labour’s whipping power, but they won’t get it.
As the UK develops its strategic partnership with China, we must press Beijing to crack down on the breeding of big cats for their parts.