Some voters are angry, but anger doesn’t define most people most of the time.
Helping hard-working people get the homes, services, and security they deserve should be at the front of the Chancellor’s mind as he prepares the Autumn Statement.
I see you: the trade union boss who makes a hell of that daily commute. I know you: the apparatchik who’d sell her “principles” for a piece of dead ermine to wrap around her throat.
Forget IDS’ Easterhouse modernisation and Osborne’s Soho modernisation. It’s time for Erdington modernisation.
Why is discrimination on the ground of the family into which you born less unfair than discrimination on the ground of the colour of your skin?
A thriving economy needs thriving domestic consumers
Nor wealth taxes, but savings credits.
On the eastern fringes of London, drinkers worried by immigration reckon that Farage speaks for them.
And they want deficit reduction even more than a 40p rate cut.
The Opposition come out against a co-operative business, beloved by the middle class, for reducing the cost of living.
Communities become more conducive to social mobility when the poor live side by side with those in the middle of the income range
The conventional wisdom is that UKIP’s new voters are disaffected Tories. Nigel Farage insists they come from all parties and none. Who is right?
The key battleground for the twenty-first century won’t be an arms race; it will be an education race.