The Shadow Home Secretary is also asked to justify her previous votes to abolish MI5, and against proscribing Al Qaeda.
Plus: A diplomatic success for Trump. A Love Actually moment, please, from May. And: has anyone seen Diane Abbott?
The Home Secretary was speaking at the Police Federation conference.
Corbyn’s Michael Foot tribute act gives the Conservatives the potential to secure a landslide by winning over the patriotic working-class vote.
Plus: May needs Johnson. My election predictions. Strange selection decisions. And: why I decided not to put my name forward for the seat in which I grew up.
The Shadow Home Secretary says social media is being used to ‘poison the political debate’, and that internet providers need to ‘do more to close down these people’.
Those directing their moral outrage at Amber Rudd have the wrong target.
The Shadow Brexit Secretary is incapable of confirming that the Shadow Home Secretary will obey the Labour Whip.
Thank God for great European leaders, like Merkel, whose idiosyncratic approach to border control played such an understated role in last year’s Brexit vote.
We need to encourage people to find ways of belonging that don’t foster hatred, and allow people to mix with others from different backgrounds.
It is scarcely believable for Dianne Abbott to still be stating that Jeremy Corbyn ‘is not concerned about numbers’ – but it’s true.
The Shadow Foreign Secretary on immigration, free movement, Brexit – and her friend Jeremy Corbyn’s election chances.
Plus: Farewell, Tom Swarbrick. Labour’s woes. I doze. And: A truly disgusting story about a Liberal Democrat Coalition Minister.
Her attempted policy announcement was PR fluff, based on a failure to understand the practicalities of law and order.