The Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport has exceeded all expectations with his recent negotiations.
But if you sup with Desmond, use a very long spoon. Plus: Remainer mania remains. And: Masked, I prepare to take the train.
One of the biggest lessons of the referendum was that newspapers and other outlets had failed to spot widespread sentiment.
As with Brexit, the fundamentals of the Tory position are much stronger than they may seem to be.
“From here, I’m afraid, the journey is all too obvious. The only way to prevent this is to reverse the re-racialisation of our society.”
We stand ready to act as a pilot area that would provide valuable insights for UK venues preparing for life after lockdown.
As one side becomes more sensitive to perceived breaches of neutrality, the other becomes less willing or able to accept when it has erred.
He’s a distraction and so can’t possibly have his mind on the job. But the Guardian and Mirror got a lot of the story wrong – and should apologise.
Enraged voters are not his target: he is zeroing in on the mass of questioning teachers and parents.
There has been a vivid daily demonstration of our collective double-standard in the mass of journalists swarming outside Cummings’s house.
Any fair-minded observer would think better of him at the end of yesterday’s press conference than he or she may have done at the beginning.
There can only be one explanation: that the internal polling is dire. If this event doesn’t move it, resignation inches a step closer.
In the name of cracking down on ‘disinformation’ and controlling infection, governments are centralising power and silencing critics.
If enough of us download this app, we can, through our joint endeavours and the trace and test programme, suppress the virus.
Our rich cultural heritage is essential to the beating heart of this country, and must not be forgotten through Coronavirus.