Downing Street may have briefed in advance that there’s no real comparison. But she will clearly play on it for all it’s worth.
“Let us renew the relationship that can lead the world towards the promise of freedom and prosperity marked out by those ordinary citizens 240 years ago.”
Plus: Can Corbyn survive losing both by-elections? Trump has the tone of Mussolini and the content of Lindbergh. And: another Lib Dem blunder.
The President doesn’t indulge in euphemism or try to dodge the abhorrent idea. And he’ll keep on talking about it.
Too many politicians now treat diplomacy as an arena for domestic culture wars, but must recognise how ineffective, and harmful to our national interest, that can be.
“I had one of your guys in here the other day. Amazing guy. Brilliant guy. Gove. Gorgeous Gove. Wrote a tremendous article – a stupendous article – about me.”
We never thought we would write the words “Bring back Ed Miliband”.
The idea that information about the incident in question was crucial to the Commons vote on renewal is ridiculous.
She is uninterested in playing the traditional Westminster game in which policies are presented as the final word from governments.
His critics have fallen for the Fact-Checking Fallacy: the illusion that in politics or journalism, accurate facts are all that matter.
“I will be there as a female Prime Minister, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.”
She waited for a phone call when Trump won his election. And she watched as he puffed Farage. But he seems to have decided that he needs her.
We need sectoral centres of excellence that strengthen our economy, create higher wage jobs and help us trade across the globe.
Will he make America great again? What is more important – jobs or building the wall? And why do Democrats think Hillary lost?