The choice facing voters on May 6 is simple: do we accelerate the progress of the last four years, or do we go back to the old failing approach?
Our fringe event with the TaxPayers’ Alliance, including Paul Scully MP, Minister for Small Business.
Japan, Korea, Taiwan and now China, have all invested heavily in new technologies – through government support for new industries.
It will probe whether or or not Sunak can prepare the country for that future – and perhaps succeed Johnson himself, “one fine day”.
The Government can do a lot in a short space of time. A key question should be: how do we make these towns nicer places to live?
Research indicates that over half of customer-facing staff have experienced abuse from customers since the pandemic began.
McDonnell wanted a state-run pharmaceutical industry. So now we will never know how it would got on with producing Covid vaccines.
The OBR’s horrid forecasts of an output implosion and soaring unemployment will do nothing to quell Tory resistance to tougher Covid tiers.
They are simply outdated and, given the financial challenge we now face, the often-suggested online sales tax looks even more attractive.
If they can’t make a real impact on the lives of working class voters in provincial seats, Johnson will meet the same electoral fate as Trump.
Proposed changes to the VAT Retail Export Scheme will undermine British businesses and put jobs at risk, to the benefit of Paris, Amsterdam, and Milan.
Ae consultation on the issue is taking evidence now – and terms of reference for a review will be published in the Budget.
Amazon should not be allowed to further undermine the high street with soulless, automated shops that the public neither need nor want.