The People’s Army has lost thousands of members, has barely any money and is still beset by infighting.
Plus: John Rees-Evans’s bizarrre views. May’s flourishing line in jokes. Trump’s chances of winning. And: let Article 50 be put to a vote in Parliament and let’s get on with it.
Arise, Lord Farage of Beer.
Plus: Osborne – terrible at predictions but brilliant at quizzes. The Brexiteers sweep the Select Committee board. And: all the very best to Nick Boles.
I quiz David Davis. I speak for freedom. And: I will not back down over our book about Hillsborough by Norman Bettison.
Plus: The UKIP London Mayoralty selection – latest rumours and plots.
Raheem Kassam is the Executive Editor of The Commentator. Follow him on Twitter. There is a false dichotomy when discussing press regulation. Unfortunately Nadhim Zahawi MP has been the one espousing it. Flatly, the banking scandal taught us one thing. Regulation cannot safeguard against everything. What's more is that regulation often creates oligopolies and further […]
Raheem Kassam is the director of the campus watchdog ‘Student Rights’ and Executive Editor at The Commentator. You can follow him on Twitter at @RaheemJKassam. Here he responds to Bruce Anderson's column from this morning. Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum viditur. And that’s all the semi-relevant Latin you’ll hear from me. Frivolities like this lend little to an argument […]
Raheem Kassam is the Campaigns Director for The Henry Jackson Society. Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush and the most recent idol of the masses – Senator Congressman Ron Paul. Long bygone and more recent speakers you could expect to find at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, DC. It took place last week, with […]
Raheem Kassam is the Executive Editor of TheCommentator.com and tweets at @RaheemJKassam As the recent conflict between Israel and terrorist organisations in Gaza escalated, I was sitting in a hotel in Jerusalem, keeping ears peeled for the next potential rocket siren. I've continuously argued, publicly and privately, that the real tragedy of this conflict is that of the […]