The Prime Minister has vowed that Ukraine “will never be alone” as the UK announced £2.5bn of military aid to Ukraine over the coming year.
Fifty years on from Edward Heath, another Conservative Prime Minister faces their premiership being brought even lower by a Middle Eastern energy shock.
“He’ll always be Mr Nobody!” Sir Keir Starmer declared of Rishi Sunak. How odd to find the Labour leader mocking the Prime Minister for being a man of the people.
“This is one of the greatest miscarriages of justice in our nation’s history. People who worked hard to serve their communities had their lives and their reputations destroyed through absolutely no fault of their own.”
The British people require action. It is clear that Conservative members genuinely wish to reduce net immigration. Doing so will achieve a net reduction in population. Not all wish to see this occur. But I do.
“Of course, I would rigorously scrutinise any proposal that crossed my desk,” Sunak adds. “But ultimately we funded the proposal. The proof is in my actions.”
Skidmore was already planning to stand down at the next election, but said his decision to resign now was ahead of a vote on Monday on the issuing of new oil and gas licences.
Combing an income tax cut with a reduction in stamp duty could form an obvious sequel to Hunt’s Autumn pairing of a reduction in national insurance with permanent full expensing.
The MP for Harborough this week took a step towards fame when The Times picked up his attack on the Prime Minister’s failure to stop record migration.
“My working assumption is that we’ll have a general election in the second half of this year”.
The longer Number Ten fails to declare, the more cheerfully Labour will pile in – preparing to frame the Prime Minister as a bottler if he waits until after the Budget to rule out a May poll.
Christmas can be a trying time – but this list of diversions, distractions, and silver linings should help even see the most dispirited activist through the holidays.
Warm words won’t cut it: victims need action. Their lives will always be defined by their treatment. They need life-changing compensation, and the quashing of unjust convictions.