With almost 200 votes behind her, she is the only candidate with a chance of steering a coherent Leave plan through a pro-Remain Commons.
Plus: the downfall of Boles. This Eagle won’t fly. What to do with Gove? Cameron should become Foreign Secretary. And: Out there in the country, Blair is still popular.
The former is better qualified to be Prime Minister. The latter is the candidate that members want in the final.
A tale of fatal misunderstandings, tensions and deep differences – and of a potential cycle of grievance which all the leadership candidates must stop before it starts.
How Cameron can bind up the Party’s wounds post-election.
Boles was wrong about the Party Chairman. Yes, I fess up to knowing Donal Blaney. And: The UKIP GLA candidate trying to borrow a London address.
The Trade Union Bill is right. But it ends the effective truce on Party funding – so let’s prepare ourselves now for Labour’s revenge strike.
Its leader voted for Cameron in 2010. Now he’s trying to occupy ground that Cameron has vacated.
The choice is between building lots of new homes in many places and lots of new homes in fewer places.
The two parties within the government have missed a trick, to their mutual self-harm.
The text of my speech from yesterday evening’s debate on the future of the centre-right with Matthew Parris.
Nick Boles was a great planning minister. Now Brandon Lewis has the chance to continue his work with housing in the same brief – where it should be.
The housing crisis offers a chance to reinvigorate the property-owning democracy.
The system should be shaped by residents, small-scale developers and practitioners of good design – not lawyers, consultants and the big developers.
How this new vehicle can help to break down resistance to building new homes that are desperately needed.