We’re off! The new organisation for Brexit has a no-nonsense message, all-party support, lots of money – and should become the official Leave campaign.
The contrast with the waxing fortunes of the SNP illustrates the importance of knowing when to pass the torch.
“The primary function of government, surely, is to control the country’s borders, and if they can’t even do that… then they’re simply not up to the job of basic statecraft.”
The UKIP MP challenges the Guardian columnist to hand the Treasury a cheque if he wants to pay more tax.
The row over Short Money is only the latest dispute in an uneasy marriage.
A Royal Commission should put the options before Parliament in time for a referendum in, say, 2018.
Based on recent polls and allowing for a bit of slippage here and there, here’s the worst that could happen.
Gove’s declaration that the Conservatives won’t have discussions with UKIP if the Commons is hung is tactically understandable but strategically wrong.
The fourth in our series investigates the East of England, where the minor parties are making their presence felt in a traditional Tory-Labour front.
There are two reasons not to take this route if one has a strong party preference. One comes from the head, the other from the heart.
Its strategists are chasing the disaffected working class and the media is starting to write libertarianism out of the party script.
Who are the officials, advisers, strategists, donors and communicators who are set to decide what UKIP says and does over the course of the General Election?
Miliband was unable to make the “back to the 1930s” accusation stick. Carswell seemed to forget he is no longer a Conservative.
Something red, Something blue, Something purple, something…khaki.