Get your free ticket for this live online event next Monday with the Minister for Africa.
The UK needs a fresh, robust template. Central to it should be a differentiation between strategic and non-strategic areas.
Its development reputation has been tarnished, and nobody is able to define quite what the UK’s foreign policy actually is.
The overseas aid and Universal Credit decisions suggest that, for the first time in a while, the cause of fiscal conservatism is gaining the upper hand.
His report mischaracterises and simplifies the recommendation of a government commission on which I sat.
“If we don’t provide support for people in Afghanistan they’re ultimately going to find their way into Europe”, warns the former DfID Secretary.
By reminding backbenchers of manifesto commitments on debt control, he is squaring up for battles to come over the spending review.
The voice of the law abiding majority needs to be heard loud and clear in the wake of Sunday’s events: we won’t tolerate this.
If more former Ministers stayed in the Commons, it would be a more effective chamber.
Which is what comes of the virtue-signalling practice of setting targets in law, rather than having MPs vote on expenditure.
The UK has an historic opportunity to demonstrate real global leadership at Carbis Bay and in Glasgow. We must rise to the occasion.
The centre isn’t where he or ConservativeHome or anyone else wants it to be. It’s where it is – “Far From Notting Hill”.
Only the US can take the People’s Republic head-on, but Britain can play a vital diplomatic role in defending Western values.
Shaun Bailey MP and Abi Brown, Leader of Stoke-on-Trent City Council, join a timely discussion with the British Red Cross.
We need a Free World Trade Organisation – a democratic alliance to achieve energy independence and control crucial supply chains