The result that will finally give the British people the Brexit they voted for
We sometimes thought it wouldn’t happen, but the instruction is unambiguous. The voters have responded to the Prime Minister’s call to Get Brexit Done.
We sometimes thought it wouldn’t happen, but the instruction is unambiguous. The voters have responded to the Prime Minister’s call to Get Brexit Done.
Plus: Leaders who will have to go and reflections on my eleventh general election. How things have changed.
Today’s choice is between Marxist extremists and a Conservative Government different from its predecessors only in that it wants to leave the European Union.
It contains 70 testimonies from current and former Labour staffers, and concludes that “the party is no longer a safe space for Jewish people”.
All in all, a Conservative win is still the most likely result. But if the YouGov MRP, the Ashcroft dashboard and other polls are accurate, it is less likely than it was.
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.
That’s a legitimate political agenda, and people are quite welcome to vote for it. But they deserve to know what’s coming.
What vocabulary is left for a choice like the one we face tomorrow? We have no words to convey the magnitude.
We economic liberals should be cautiously thankful for the stay of execution that his leadership and manifesto have given us.
Johnson’s lead over Corbyn in the best Prime Minister stakes has narrowed slightly to 15 points.
Or: what would happen to the service once Corbyn ran out of other people’s money – which is needed to fund it.
A Black, sorry, Red Swan may carry him off. But in less than six months he has rescued the Conservatives, and is on the brink of delivering the referendum mandate.
Twelve months on from Thursday’s election, Johnson faces an unpalatable choice – and Cabinet resignations…
She would ask Labour to agree that a referendum on Scottish independence is not a matter for Westminster, as a condition to support a minority government.
“I apologise to the Jewish Community for the suffering we have inflicted on them,” he says.