Policymakers should be asking themselves whose quality of life worsens thanks to the current unplanned mess.
The Chancellor extolled principles that point to the possibility of meaningful pro-growth reform of how revenues are raised.
Johnson should be allowed to build a legacy with special projects – provided he agrees to big savings elsewhere. There is plenty of scope.
The EU seems to think that there’s a price to be paid for Brexit – and that is the detachment of Northern Ireland from the UK.
We need to stand up for the value of Parliament and of spending time there improving and working on legislation.
This looks as if it is a terrorist incident, the former Prime Minister says, so we shouldn’t show weakness.
Conservatives must reach out, listen and engage much more with young people.
The Chancellor is damned if he yields to backbenchers’ demands for bailouts – and damned if he doesn’t.
Politicians and civil servants need to relearn that the route to lower taxes lies in sustained economic growth and discipline on public expenditure.
Don’t assume that it will necessarily happen only after the boundary review has come into effect.
The Chancellor will have have more money to play with than was forecast. How he uses these additional resources will tell us a great deal about his priorities.
The Government has a choice. Local solutions with limited funding – or £10 billion on centralised non-solutions.
If the Treasury gets its way, the Chancellor will score a big victory. But Ministers should watch for Labour stealing their thunder over taper rates.
Euthanasia campaigners are misled about what the true impact of this legal and cultural watershed would be.