
George Osborne is our readers’ Conservative Minister of the Year
The Home Secretary is second, and Gove wins plaudits among the write-ins.
The Home Secretary is second, and Gove wins plaudits among the write-ins.
Sajid Javid is now third.
Boris is second, Osborne third, and Paterson comes up on the rails to fourth.
Michael Gove’s successor upholds his reforms, opposes new grammar schools, dismisses Tristram Hunt as “vacuous”…and admires Henry VIII.
The former Environment Secretary sets out the alternative to joining the “new country” the Eurozone is set to form.
In his second big speech since leaving the Cabinet, he urges Cameron to trigger the process for Britain leaving the EU.
But the Conservatives need fundamental change.
Gove is up to third – but it’s still a two-horse race between the Home Secretary and Boris Johnson.
The text of my speech from yesterday evening’s debate on the future of the centre-right with Matthew Parris.
Like a latter-day Gladstone, the former Environment Secretary has come among us unmuzzled.
Post the announcement of his intended return to the Commons, the Mayor’s support is up by eight points.
May’s lead falls. Boris is static. Osborne stays in third. No big boost for Hammond.
The former Defence Secretary gives his view on quitting the EU, its appeasement of Putin, and the reshuffle – “what’s done is done”.
Also: PM stands by attacks on Cardiff government in visit to Royal Welsh Show; and Scottish businesses urged to make plans for rUK.
“If you are to introduce radical change and drive radical change it is inevitable that you will be involved in controversy and it is inevitable that you will be unpopular.”