It’s not just an auction of promises we can never win, but an essential way to reach out to an increasingly consumerist electorate.
We are waiting for Labour to deliver their proposals. Because this should be too important an issue to become a political football.
Do they become the party of the provincial working class and lower middle class? Or do they fight to maintain their status as the party of the affluent middle class?
Those claiming to oppose “Hard Brexit” have now voted for the most severe separation possible from the EU.
The MP for Don Valley faces heckling from her own Party’s benches while making the case to honour the referendum.
While London is experiencing the greatest demand for housing, the prospect of building in the capital is fraught with political risk.
The Government is seeking recognition of its working majority in the Commons – and can only prevail if that majority exists.
The Opposition are hoping that everybody will have forgotten about it by 2022.
By 2022, Corbyn will no longer look ‘new’, and that he came close to winning in 2017 should mean that he will then be exposed to far greater scrutiny,
Most Labour voters think their party should support strike action if pay demands are not met, and most voters think private sector wages are higher.