Even if his proposals for his party are correct, they won’t listen to him.
Labour’s Corbyn troubles open up new opportunities for next May’s contest. A bigger Open Primary than planned offers a means of taking them.
Plus: the four things Labour must do to get back into the game.
Also: New welfare reforms could collapse Northern Irish government; Salmond accused of ignoring the Scottish Parliament; and SNP fears infiltration by the far left.
“One of Miss Harman’s aides said to be yesterday ‘Well, it could have been worse.’ Actually it couldn’t be much worse… bluntly the party seems in pretty much disarray.”
Recently it seemed that Labour’s loony left might one day die out. Now they have a new generation.
Comparing today’s headlines to those from 21st July 2010 is instructive.
There is now a strong case for widening the air strikes against ISIS in which we already take part.
Opportunities to take part in social action should be provided in schools to embed the experience of serving your community into education.
Why and how the Conservatives should work with the Lib Dems in this Parliament.
The heart of the heart of Osbornomics is reducing past excess in order to invest in our future.
Plus: Zac Goldsmith tells me that he won’t stand in a by-election if the Heathrow decision fails to go his way.
The results here find the Tories struggling to break through, but also a strong indication of the rewards should they do so.
The Trade Union Bill is right. But it ends the effective truce on Party funding – so let’s prepare ourselves now for Labour’s revenge strike.
It was the rise of the Liberals, and the decline of the city’s Protestant tradition, that did for the Party.