We would like to hear from people under the age of 35 with an exciting idea or contribution to policy debate.
We should have a laser-like focus on reducing the tax burden, instead of relying on nannying to get us off of our bottoms.
The Government is poised to reverse the trend to competition rather than collaboration that has marked healthcare policy for 30 years.
The Prime Minister’s hospitalisation accentuates the need for a new strategic structure to support a new strategic plan.
Britain imposes uniquely heavy burdens on low-income workers with dependants, which create a huge drag on social mobility. Profound reform is needed.
It offers interesting insights into the shape of public opinion in 2019. But talk of a ‘sea change’ away from freedom is hard to stand up.
Years of sound economic management give the Government space to invest in public services, working families, and rebalancing the British economy.
This is not so much a pro-market position as an anti-democratic one. There is more to politics than market versus state.
It is little wonder that young people are turning away from the Right when they find it so difficult to make their way in the world.
It would be a mistake for the Conservatives to even try to recruit him. Instead, they should follow his lead of thinking – and saying – the unsayable.
Plus: Why call McCain a maverick?; the Labour MPs who deserve an award for courage; and who is the right’s Artist Taxi Driver?
The former’s readership has risen. The latter’s leadership is changing. What will this and other changes mean for our political culture?
Anything that is easy to administer and available to everyone at low cost has to be a useful aid in dealing with this epidemic.
The big parties can wait until we have seen off Covid-19. But the marriages themselves cannot – and they can be performed safely.