Time is not on our side – but under a new Prime Minister, the UK can stand with Hongkongers and uphold our freedom.
When there are genuine threats, foreign and domestic, our democracy needs better protection than this visibly failing organisation.
The Prime Minister deplores the “rancour and tribal bitterness” of modern debate, and criticises politicians “making promises you cannot keep”.
He also dismisses “this lunatic policeman” who threatened press freedom, and says “if necessary I will read out every word of [Darroch’s cables] in the House of Commons.”
Will pro-EU voters ditch the Lib Dems in favour of a Labour Party that has been dragged only reluctantly to a mushier, more confused version of the position?
We should make it clear that further attempts to encroach on Hong Kong’s freedoms and rule of law would have consequences for China.
Who are you voting for to run the EU Commission? Have you watched the debates and scrutinised their manifestos? Oh, wait.
What he detests is less liberalism than democracy, and the obstacle it poses to Russian foreign policy objectives.
‘Liberal democracy’ is not an inevitable combination. Nor, it seems, is it necessarily a sustainable one.
Good luck to every Conservative standing for election today. Let us hope that in future much more power is devolved to the roles you are competing for.
Turkey’s strongman is far from all-powerful, and he is risking an almighty backlash.
Occasionally, though, we need to recognise warning signs – and they is in those areas where politicians’ control and the peoples’ attitudes truly overlap.
Their latest plan is to push through in a single day legislation which would involve major constitutional changes.
In her haste to hijack the EU referendum result to serve her cause, Sturgeon badly misjudged it.