This process is clearly open to abuse from violent males, many of whom will go to any lengths to reach their victims.
For how much longer can Ministers continue to try to defend a relationship which has become increasingly indefensible?
In the first of three articles, the Weston-super-Mare MP looks at how to ensure that the customer, not the corporation, is king.
If MPs want to take the plaudits for creating such laws, they must also take the responsibility of defining their limits.
From Tony the Tiger to the sale of narwhal ivory, from plastic straws to eating dogs, the list of proposed bans grows weekly.
The move formalises a precedent with disturbing longer-term implications for the relationship between the citizen and government.
This is not so much a pro-market position as an anti-democratic one. There is more to politics than market versus state.
So new research suggests. Private businesses must take at least as much responsibility for this state of affairs as Tory politicians.
What do our cliché-ridden rulers propose? Ending plastic cups, gender quotas for boardrooms and banning Tony the Tiger.
What Parliament’s Security Committee began – and was frustrated by the Government in doing – judges must now complete.
Johnson’s latest column on the issue might avoid even mentioning it, but the debate is about how far we go, not whether we do it.
She notes that the choice is not between maintaining prices or building more, but between building more and ushering in Corbynism.
Socialist organisations have vastly more money and staff than those campaigning for lower taxes and smaller state, but they still cannot accept debate.
We have a habit of looking back at policy platforms pursued by previous Conservative Governments, and attempting to bring back popular policies like a poor Hollywood remake.