The Shadow Climate Change Secretary has not been forgiven by some in the Labour Party for his conduct as its leader.
A day out with the new Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party, former miner, Labour councillor and admirer of Benn, Scargill and Skinner.
It seldom occurs to this author that the best way to deal with fashionable absurdities is to laugh at them, and trust in the public’s common sense.
What turns young people away from the Conservatives isn’t more education. It’s the retreat of the property-owning democracy.
Plus: Ferguson’s evidence, two metres distance, Desmond’s donation, Jenrick’s response.
The racism of both men is well known – so why have they been spared from the chop?
Some of those loudest in denouncing a young Downing Street adviser, seem unaware of the views of their intellectual heroes.
The Speaker must rein in self-indulgent MPs who no longer try to express themselves with the greatest possible concision and force.
Instead, the Party must demonstrate how the Labour leader as Prime Minister would raise living costs and damage public service.
The Prime Minister lives to fight another day, and with a bit of help from Labour she could still get her deal through.
Len McCluskey’s opposition to a second referendum is explicit, Seamus Milne’s Euroscepticism is unshakeable, and so on. The People’s Voters need Labour’s whipping power, but they won’t get it.
If he can’t get an early election, he would take a disorderly departure from the EU, leading to a recession – and to victory at a later date.
The magazine has taken a break from conspicuous consumption to blunder instead through the world of history and economics.
There would, quite rightly, be outrage if a senior Conservative figure delivered a speech to a crowd which waved fascist flags.
Many of these institutions claim to be “safe spaces”. Not if you voted Conservative, though.