Party Conference is, as he puts it, “increasingly corporate, expensive [and] exclusive”. So here is his first shot at something different.
The former fear that it will revive what they believe are business-unfriendly ideas about foreign takeovers and workers on boards.
There is much more to politics than an affordable state and competitive taxes. But both will be indispensible for survival, let alone prosperity, after we leave the EU.
Charged with managing Whitehall, trouble-shooting, clocking Sturgeon, and preparing government for Brexit, his workload would make lesser mortals crumble.
He sees the referendum result as a “defining test” for Britain, and is charged with finding solutions to help meet the challenge.
May, Johnson, Hannan, Davidson, Fabricant and others give their thoughts. Plus, has anyone checked on Sir Simon Burns?
To turn Lord Denning on his head, Brexit is like “an incoming tide flowing up the estuaries of England”.
Cameron’s successor will have no mandate from voters and the Government already has no workable majority in the Commons.
Rediscovering the strong, municipal politics of the Nineteenth Century is the key to making Britain thrive in the Twenty First.
While the Fresh Start Group is backing Leave, one of its early leading members is of a different opinion.
It can improve our health and care service to patients and users, and empower our elderly patients to take more control of their own lives and condition.
Holding one would cool the temperature and lessen the chance of an Alistair McAlpine incident – in other words, false accusations.
The new Prime Minister has acted quickly to ensure that crucial work can proceed.