The UK competes as itself too rarely to allow the Corporation’s complacency to let Britain down. Time to bring some Olympic focus.
Perhaps the answer is bound up with China – and our inability to focus on more than a single problem at once.
The Government is turning a blind eye to self-evident politicisation – a miserable milestone in the Conservative Party’s masochistic colonisation by woke ideology.
In Claire Fox, the Prime Minister has elevated to the peerage someone whose former party defended terrorism.
The Court of Appeal’s judgement in the Begum case is a reminder of wider issues – and the pledge in last December’s manifesto.
As with Brexit, the fundamentals of the Tory position are much stronger than they may seem to be.
We will be re-running the Foreign Affairs Select Committee Chairman’s piece for us above each day this week.
It’s deeply disturbing for many that a modern European democracy might shortly be led by a party that continues to have its strategy overseen by an Army Council.
As long as their activists call them “colonialists” and candidates glorify the IRA, the idea is as convincing as a Hannukah greeting from Jeremy Corbyn.
The Prime Minister pledged to defend those who defended us. I believe him.
Most voters will have what to them are more pressing reasons to reject Corbyn than anti-semitism. But none expose more fully why he must be stopped.
After 45 years, justice has still not been served for the 21 people who were murdered. Their families and their city deserve closure.
They have spent their lives attacking the people who risk their lives trying to protect us from evil and dangerous people. And they lie as they try to cover their tracks.
Also: Democratic Unionists attack Corbyn for backing IRA as it murdered judges; and growing concern of risk of loyalist violence against backstop.
Will they fight any following cases all the way to the Supreme Court, and ask it to overturn Kerr’s decision?