The party seems to be trying to make health and care services more responsive to their users’ wants and needs.
The polls may be overstating the Opposition; Corbyn may under-perform his national share in key marginals; or the Tories may just be slipping.
If it keeps coming up on the doorstep, the same might be needed for the level of means-testing Winter Fuel Payments.
Plus, we now present the different potential outcomes in each seat on a variety of turnouts.
For the most part, those in SW1 don’t actually set out to deceive the public. The trouble is – they deceive themselves.
The Prime Minister has shown determination and boldness – and the alternative is enormous tax increases under Corbyn.
Tory voters on the Devon coast show no sign of being worried by the manifesto muddle, nor is there a Liberal Democrat revival.
Tim Farron has led his party into an electoral cul-de-sac on the EU. He needs a change of course to save his MPs – and his leadership.
She wouldn’t have chosen for it to be this way. But the biggest issues – Brexit and Corbyn – are still the same.
The department may not be the force that it was, but protecting its interests is still a powerful imperative within government.
None the less, a fall in the Conservative poll lead is not unhelpful to Downing Street and CCHQ at this stage of the campaign.
May’s manifesto is real politics – that’s to say, a serious attempt to prepare Britain for the post-Brexit challenges of the future.
Using low interest funds from Public Works Loans Board to develop their own land into housing makes sense.
We offer state incentives for people to look after their children – why not their parents?
The Government must do more to unlock the sector’s potential – and the Conservative manifesto is a welcome start.