The vast majority of those who follow the rules have enabled those of us outside Leicester to avoid a second lockdown so far.
It is the Conservatives who have spoken out over illegal and dangerous exploitation at local factories.
“There are some quite significant concerns about the employment practices in some of the clothing factories in Leicester,” he says.
Starmer finds himself the bearer of bad news, a Roundhead reproaching the Cavalier PM for holding out the prospect of a rosy future.
“We will act in future to ensure we protect the health of the entire country…We are the builders, they are the blockers.”
I see my role as being that of an honest broker in a fluid situation. I’m determined not to put information out because I want to be first with the news.
Some seem to believes that they have a right to own the support of ethnic minority voters. Which they don’t.
The new Leader of the Opposition looked more at ease than the First Secretary of State, Dominic Raab, standing in for Boris Johnson.
The Party cannot be one of the South and of the countryside if it is to engage with voters – and to win.
Labour had some startling setbacks – it was usually the independents who benefitted. Elsewhere we saw Conservative losses to the Lib Dems.
Brokenshire must keep an eye on the potential knock-on from the latest flare-up over terror, reprisals, a captured pilot and the disputed territory.
Whether for a pedestrian or a driver it is hard to see crossing points, where to go, where or when was best to stop or proceed. The blind are in fear of their lives.
Her strategy of winning over UKIP voters en masse while not losing Remain Tories to the LibDems worked well yesterday. What will Labour voters do on June 8?
CCHQ is recruiting campaign managers to fight in areas Labour has long taken for granted.
Workers who are effectively modern slaves have been put into the position of having to choose either to work or starve during lockdown.