Foreign students – the battleground of migration vs growth becomes the battleground of the leadership hopefuls
Already a vexed debate, the addition of May, Osborne and Boris to the mix won’t calm it down one bit.
Already a vexed debate, the addition of May, Osborne and Boris to the mix won’t calm it down one bit.
At the risk of stating the obvious, the targeting of Charlie Hebdo and its staff for murder had nothing whatsoever to do with western foreign policy.
The murderers of Stéphane Charbonnier and his staff understood that freedom isn’t the only challenge to their fanaticism.
As a spectator sport, this continual tripping, kicking, stamping, striking, biting, gouging and even emasculating of the other side leaves something to be desired.
It is important not to fall in to the error of imagining the two countries to be more similar than they really are.
The Speaker’s ill-judged intervention in the case is the latest in a long series of serious errors on his part.
Answer: probably not.
The Chancellor’s cunning strategy forced Labour onto weak territory – and into alienating their own core vote.
Includes five jobshare posts, and returns to the front bench for Ken Clarke, Liam Fox, Tom Watson…and Emily Thornberry.
The longer no party can gain no more than about a third of a vote, the louder the debate about changing the system will become.
Will Tory MPs be allowed to vote on a second Coalition? Will Party members? Graham Brady’s intervention reminds us that there are yet no answers.
The months before an election hold great temptation to make rash and unworkable promises that come back to haunt us. Let’s try something else.
CCHQ is not giving up on the prospect of snatching seats off Labour and LibDems, though there is a fly in the ointment…
How the deficit is to be reduced matters far, far more than how it is calculated.
As well as taking a crack at Vince in Twickenham, the PM and Chancellor have been to Halifax, St Austell & Newquay and Telford.