If so much, as Ministers suggest, depends on common sense, nuance, context and common sense, people will draw the inevitable conclusion.
A successful test, track and quarantine policy would open the door to local paths out of this national shutdown.
The political logic of the Prime Minister’s choice is solid enough. But we’re past the stage where his Sunday statement can simply be taken on trust.
Sensationalising data is all too common in politics. We have to end this trend if we want to keep people safe.
Today’s choice is between Marxist extremists and a Conservative Government different from its predecessors only in that it wants to leave the European Union.
I’ve been nervous after last time – but here goes. Plus: Farage is having a dreadful campaign. And why election night TV will never be the same again.
The fifth piece in our series this week about what the Tory Manifesto should look like.
“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.
The abuse became so bad that I felt the need to stop giving media interviews, writing articles and to remove myself from the public arena.
Amid heated speculation, we reproduce the possible outcome presented by the former EU adviser to Theresa May.
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.
Plus: How I was booed in Birmingham. On to Nottingham…via Exeter. And: who would I vote for, if I had a vote?
As the Mayor tours TV studios to express his disapproval of Trump and Brexit, our capital city suffers.
The Prime Minister’s Brexit night message should have been broadcast on BBC and ITN.