In the second piece in our mini-series, the Chair of Homes for the North argues that driving public investment in housing towards the South East is not sustainable.
Can have a bold enough economic policy that people in these newly gained seats can see the difference in five years’ time?
In 2017 the Party remained inflexibly committed to an excessively aggressive campaign. CCHQ has learned lessons, but must not fight the last war.
I hope that we will see more of the Chancellor during the campaign explaining how his plans can help support investment to boost productivity.
This region shows that Liberal Democrat progress, at the expense of Labour, remains modest.
The Conservatives are down to four MEPs: Hannan, McIntyre, Mobarik, and Van Orden.
Full slates of Tory candidates have been achieved in the East Midlands, West Midlands, North East, South West and London (the first time in the capital since 1986).
You would have to go back more than 20 years to find a time when fewer secretaries of state held northern constituencies.
We can’t continue to favour projects such as Crossrail over developing infrastructure in other parts of the country which generate much greater relative returns.