Britain finds herself between a ‘Keynesian’ America and a ‘Monetarist’ EU – but is doing better than both of them
And that will require further sanctions, added the Prime Minister. They, apparently, have been “put onto the starting block” today.
For a government to legislate effectively to defy the court’s rulings while continuing to recognise its authority would be a contradiction in terms.
And the subject of their joint sermon? Europe, of course, and the chances of repatriating powers from Brussels.
Were it not for our differences over the EU, the country whose team won the World Cup yesterday could be our closest allies in Europe.
“Common rules don’t mean that every market stall needs to look the same.”
With India’s imports from Germany coming in at almost double Britain’s, William Hague and George Osborne must make the most of this week.
The new neo-Keynesianism: Britain must run a deficit to prop-up demand in the Eurozone
Would the Conservatives survive an EU In/Out Referendum in one piece?
If he wants Britain to stay in, he needs a programme which can both address concerns here and win support abroad.
Unsurprisingly, they disagree.
The man with a track record of shaking up the status quo is Martin Callanan.
Cameron wants to stay In. So he’s warning Britain that Britain may pull Out. The lesson of this week is that this gambit may not succeed.
Strikingly, Labour’s advantage on the NHS precisely mirrors its deficit on the deficit. Which will matter more?