Fight crimes not Grimes
Patel should haul in Dick for an interview without coffee. Meanwhile, Loughton intends to raise the case at the Home Affairs Select Committee.
Patel should haul in Dick for an interview without coffee. Meanwhile, Loughton intends to raise the case at the Home Affairs Select Committee.
In August, this stood at almost 75 per cent. In January, it was 92 per cent. Can the Prime Minister revive grassroots optimism?
The Government’s tendency to take more responsibility, rather than devolving it to local networks, is at the root of many of the scheme’s problems.
Growing anti-lockdown sentiment among northern Labour mayors and councils offer him new opportunities – and dangers.
The Prime Minister needs a new, more straightforward manner in order to carry parliamentary and public opinion with him.
The author takes issue with our columnist Ryan Bourne’s piece on the site published a week ago today.
Superior pundits fail to see the Prime Minister’s debt to Disraeli, and consider Johnson such a scoundrel they underestimate his chances of success.
If the Prime Minister hopes to get anything out of his speech today, he must deploy it to help salvage his test and trace plan.
The former Chancellor was interviewed earlier today at a joint ConHome / UK in a Changing Europe fringe event.
Today, we present two Secretaries of State, a former Chancellor and a host of other great speakers across six events.
He is right to suspect value placed on the Union by some senior figures in this government. The Prime Minister must lead by example.
Forty-six per cent of respondents back the plans and forty per cent don’t, which mirrors the divisions seen elsewhere.
All six of our fringe events today will be broadcast open to all on Zoom, as well as on the Party Conference platform.
It’s a rotten springboard from which to vault into Party Conference as it begins today. But what goes down may go back up.
The Justice Secretary and the Chief Secretary to the Treasury lead our cast of ministers, MPs, and experts for Day One.