There are plenty of interesting ideas in here, but they add up merely to trying to do established policy a little better.
A new report argues that recent attacks on her decision have been neither fair nor well-judged.
The Government’s aim should be to make pricing more competitive, less complicated, less bureaucratic and more flexible.
Two recent judgments reflect the concerns about overreach we have covered at Policy Exchange’s Judicial Power Project.
Ministerial powers to intervene should be increased. Some contentious proposals can already be referred by a local authority to the Health Secretary.
Government should ensure any plan delivers lower bills overall, not merely local subsidies paid for by the rest of us.
Such is the logic of the new Justice Secretary’s appointment – and the combative stance of the Attorney-General.
You might think that it’s fine to work as a nurse or an army reservist, but not as a consultant. Who gets to decide, though?
We need to deliver a more robust, and more balanced, outcome than we could in 2019.
Elections, referenda and political fora are the appropriate settings for such debate, not the courts.
Zahawi, the new Education Secretary, should consider whether the bill as it stands is a sticking plaster.
There is much to be said for incremental reform, but too much caution can tip over into a failure to act boldly.
Our international obligations do not oblige us to accept people attempting to reach this country from a safe country.