In the run up to the White Paper on Levelling Up, our interview with the former Chancellor opens this week’s ConHome series on localism.
The Deputy Leader lays into the Tories, accusing them of “sleaze after sleaze, corruption after corruption”.
The Levelling Up Secretary declared that the opposition “say they’ve embraced fiscal rigour but voted for hundreds of billions of new spending.”
Sunak brought Californian sunshine to the rainy skies of Manchester, while preaching Thatcherite morality.
The Labour Party leader spoke about Brexit, the culture wars and climate change.
The former Shadow Chancellor urges the Labour leader to “forget” proposed changes to the party’s electoral rules.
“It’s a phrase that you would hear very often in Northern working class towns”, claims the Deputy Leader of the Labour Party.
A new essay by Starmer will merely raise questions about how much longer he can be Labour leader.
Local pride in towns like Blyth is wounded at every turn by evidence of neglect, shoddiness and former greatness.
Leadership during the pandemic has involved, even more than usual, the strength to put up with uncertainty.
David Skelton catalogues the snobbish abuse heaped by progressive intellectuals on workers in neglected towns.
The last year has been a national disaster for our young people. Never again should we shut our schools.
It could take action to reduce industrial electricity costs, among other important steps.
This comedian who came out as a Conservative also explains why Labour, by espousing vengeful moral certainties, has lost the working class.