Max Caller, the inspector who brought change to Tower Hamlets, has been sent in to the city. The Government could take control.
The Prime Minister was obliged to listen to some advice from Wellingborough Conservative Party: “Say the first thing that comes into your head.”
The emergency measures enacted to battle Covid have exposed the groupthink of Whitehall’s expert establishment.
That’s a comfortable majority. But almost three in ten do not – a significant minority. Thirteen per cent don’t know.
The Transport Secretary has set up a reform committee which is getting ready to use the pandemic to rout the Luddites in the rail unions.
This account of three and a half years as a special adviser confirms how trivial and transitory the role can be.
The final article in ConHome’s series on the Prime Minister’s Reset Moment – and what should follow from it.
Plus: Johnson’s sub-optimal Brexit trade deal choice. I’m not dreaming of a normal Christmas. And: green jobs – overall, a cost not a benefit.
The fifth piece in a ConHome series this week on the Prime Minister’s Reset Moment – and what should follow from it.
America’s result is having knock-on effects in Downing Street: see yesterday’s green speech and today’s defence news.
She may appear to present a softer target than he does, but she has never been afraid of fighting her corner.
Our interviewee on the “disgraceful” treatment of Symonds and Johnson’s longstanding Euroscepticism.
The former Chief Adviser has had little to do with the negotiation recently, but his leaving has knock-on effects on it. Here’s why.
The first of a ConHome series this week on Boris Johnson’s Reset Moment – and what should follow from it.
In spite of Cummings’ departure, DARPA should remain a manifesto priority: we need its approach to risk – and indeed failure.