We need to build long-term trust to hold seats like this one. We can win again – but we must deliver.
The relative downsizing of election news is likely to freeze the current campaign in aspic. That ought to help the party which leads in the polls.
“Now I want a nice clean game from all of you” – so said Madam Hooch in Harry Potter. The reality is, it’s not going to happen.
By creating a kind of firewall between her take on Brexit and her view of everything else, she has kept her head at a time when too many others are losing theirs.
The latest in Johnson’s social media game – a casual, chatty take on last week, made direct from an airplane seat. Expect more.
Two different conceptions of it are widely held in the UK, representative and direct. In 2019, they collide.
In this campaign, free for the first time to talk policy and politics after nine years of collective responsibility, it was Hunt whose personality shone through.
Last night’s policy announcement live on Facebook was a first experiment in new ways for the Government to communicate its message.
We must not repeat the mistakes of 2017 in trying to fatten the digital pig on market day.
As the Mayor tours TV studios to express his disapproval of Trump and Brexit, our capital city suffers.
A much-hated traffic management experiment, called the Haughton Throughabout, imposes misery on many residents caught up in daily delays.
There are clearly dangers in accepting the terms set out by green activists – who essentially argue that we can only protect the environment by slowing growth.
Social media is under scrutiny as never before, but there are still simple techniques you can use to connect with crucial voters.