MPs should be allowed to decide if former Ministers are capable of offering independent scrutiny to their successors.
Over a third of patients who attend A&E do so for non-urgent, minor injuries. They are unable to get GP appointments.
Ministers have been asked to push the Government’s priorities – tackling crime, funding the NHS, “levelling up”. How can these be effected without faster growth?
Listening to conversations in Westminster in recent days, I fear a number of misconceptions will drive bad decision-making.
Seldom have the politics of magnanimity been used so skilfully to baffle dissent.
There are glossy reports and poorly attended meetings. But obvious failings are ignored.
We have the mandate and the majority. Let’s make 2020 a year of progress and work now to set up a decade we can all be proud of.
What has been the Conservative Party ‘s response at Westminster to this situation? Incredibly, it has been to offer Wales even more devolution.
Not being white remains the number one demographic predictor of not voting Tory.
Patients must always come first, but the best outcomes rely on attracting, training, and retaining the very best staff.
Although Brexit is the headline, the spotlight is on a range of measures aimed at schools, the NHS, the police, and the justice system.
The scale of his domestic ambitions and the legacy of the Iraq War suggest that his ambitions will be limited – for the moment at least.
As the Prime Minister said, many people have lent us their vote, and they won’t be so generous next time if we get it wrong.
The Prime Minister was right to say many voters have only ‘lent’ us their votes. We must now earn that trust, by ensuring the benefits of life in a post-Brexit Britain reach all communities.
Inclisiran was the reason for one of the first phone calls I made when appointed to my present role last year.