This foolish, futile leadership challenge chatter
Whatever one’s view of Cameron’s future, all that those who raise it now are achieving is to divert attention from the referendum debate.
Whatever one’s view of Cameron’s future, all that those who raise it now are achieving is to divert attention from the referendum debate.
There is uncertainty about what exactly the union will do next, but we know that we have consistently failed to nudge things in a better direction in the past.
An appeal on behalf of the Prime Minister. He urgently needs her support for Remain. Can you help us to find her?
Voters will not forgive us if we form a circular firing squad after June 23rd.
Ministers must give certainty to investors by accepting the Committee on Climate Change’s recommendation on the level of the fifth carbon budget.
Plus: Leadsom does well. Cameron runs away. No normal person I know is voting Remain. And: for LBC, world affairs. For the BBC, bedwetting.
The final post in this series on how the Prime Minister’s aim of a reformed Europe, claimed by him as the basis for a Remain vote, was not achieved by his renegotiation.
By appeasing blackmailing autocrats such as the Turkish President, the EU is undermining the democratic and liberal values which it’s supposed to support.
Hilton is right: Labour’s leader may never be Prime Minister, but he’s re-engaging people in politics. Can the Conservatives really say the same?
The latest in our series on how the Prime Minister’s aim of a reformed Europe, claimed by him as the basis for a Remain vote, was not achieved by his renegotiation.
Nothing in the current campaign gets close to the acrimony that lingered for long years after Maastricht.
The Chancellor, who was standing in for the PM, sounded stiff, over-prepared and ungenerous.
Plus: Boris’s multiple problems. The Chancellor’s dodgy figures. Euro referendum recriminations everywhere. And: SNP MPs in white Y-front shreddies.
If the Prime Minister won’t defend his pro-EU case head-to-head, the Chancellor should.
Part Two of a ConHome series on how the Prime Minister’s aim of a reformed Europe, claimed by him as the basis for a Remain vote, was not achieved by his renegotiation.