All but one of the current team has been appointed since May became Prime Minister. What institutional memory are they supposed to draw on?
Recent ConservativeHome authors James Wharton and Guto Bebb are present. Both expressed concern about the consequences for their areas of the offer to Scotland.
The case for Bercow as a great reformer tends to be obscured by his astonishingly bad manners.
Only the points of order raised against John Bercow by three Tory MPs struck a partisan note.
All the posts were elected unopposed – another sign of Tory MPs’ growing discipline.
Cllr Sir Merrick Cockell, Kathy Gyngell, Andrew Lilico, Christopher Pincher MP, Simon Richards and others respond to Osborne’s statement.
Ed Miliband had nothing but class war to offer in reply.
Cllr Sir Merrick Cockell, Ruth Lea, Andrew Lilico, Christopher Pincher MP, Simon Richards and others make their recommendations.
A UK Shale Gas fund, developed over time, could provide a sustainable financial legacy for future generations
By Paul GoodmanFollow Paul on Twitter. Stop me if you've heard it already, but ConservativeHome has the crucial detail from the Tory awayday – namely, that Robert Buckland's table won the quiz at yesterday evening's dinner. Take a bow, too, Henry Bellingham, Nicky Morgan and Christopher Pincher, whose knowledge, according to my source, won the […]
Christopher Pincher is the Member of Parliament for Tamworth. Follow Chris on Twitter. Shale gas is back on the agenda in Village Westminster. An all-party group chaired by my colleague Dan Byles was recently launched to a packed audience. The Select Committee for Energy & Climate Change has also just published another supportive report (free of […]
By Matthew BarrettFollow Matthew on Twitter. The Daily Mail this morning reports on the 118 Conservative MPs who have written to constituents indicating their opposition to gay marriage proposals. The Mail says "Their opposition has been expressed in letters and emails sent to constituents who have contacted them with their own concerns", and points out that […]
Open access services have delivered lower fares, more routes, happier passengers, better trains and pose no threat to the viability of the railway.