
WATCH: Cameron – “I want everyone to know how strongly we feel that the right choice is to stay in.”
“A lot of people want to know: what does the Government think?”
“A lot of people want to know: what does the Government think?”
The nub of our case is that the Justice Secretary is well placed to help bring the Government together and drive it forwards.
More power and control must be devolved to Cabinet members if we are to see the improvement in the quality of government that is now plainly necessary.
Do people find sovereignty in a Parliament they regrettably take little interest in – or in actual power and the pound in their pocket: their job; their standard of living?
Were they all to do so, it follows that Cameron would have no need to offer Ministers a free vote – as he should.
The Strathclyde proposals are welcome and further change should be gradualist.
The Institute for Government’s new guide reminds us that the Conservative-Liberal Democrat partnership helped to improve Britain for the better.
They ought to be an important opportunity for the Government to quicken the pace and improve the quality of reform.
It’s time for a Parliamentary prerogative to replace the Royal prerogative.
It gets you thinking about why, as a society, we are becoming less human and more robotic and sclerotic by the decade.
On polling day, we honour the unknown heroes of this government – the Special Advisers, without whom little of what has been done would have been done.
Reducing the number of ministers does little in itself to shrink the state – in fact, it may be counter-productive.