MPs and activists should be asking themselves a big question: what is it that made him popular in the first place?
The unrebuttable fact is that the Prime Minister is in breach of her word, and that the collapse of trust in the Party threatens to be terminal.
After three decades as a Tory activist, this Prime Minister and this Government have pushed me too far.
In trying to find a way across, and to secure the votes she needs from Labour MPs, the Prime Minister risks unintended consequences.
Campaigners say the site influenced 871,000 voters and prevented a Conservative majority. The Statistics Authority says its calculations are wrong.
Losing 150,000 members, and the money that comes with them, has knock-on effects for the Opposition and for the Conservative Party.
A party which usually operates with an almost eerie level of phalanx-like discipline is struggling to contain a split at the very top.
It’s time to set aside the false choice between the Prime Minister’s deal and ‘No Deal’. Young voters are demanding a chance to have their say.
A new study of the 2017 general election shows May failing to insist on a message and a manifesto which supported each other.
The party has selected a local candidate to win back what was one of only a few Conservative footholds in the North East.
Numbers applying for target seats are down across the board. At least one Tory association has refused to shortlist, and demanded applications be reopened.
In England, the Tories have a majority of nearly 60 over all the other parties. So bring on new grammar schools – and much else.
A focused and accountable drive to build the grassroots is required. It can be done, but it requires difficult questions and honest answers.
Tacking towards the devocrat consensus and positioning for a pact with Plaid seems to be the preferred option, but it looks like a tactical cul-de-sac.
Blaming the system for our predicament is at best a cop-out, and worst an attempt to distract from the fact that MPs are abrogating their responsibility.