What matters most for deciding on lockdown is hospitalisations – not deaths
To both treat every Covid patient who needs it and maintain regular services through the ‘winter crisis’, the NHS needs a more muscular intervention.
To both treat every Covid patient who needs it and maintain regular services through the ‘winter crisis’, the NHS needs a more muscular intervention.
All in all, it’s much of a muchness – with Douglas Ross down by about 25 points, now that his Party Conference coverage has faded.
Duncan Smith names “five giants”: family breakdown, worklessness, serious personal debt, addiction and educational underachievement.
Our latest survey finds that nine in ten Party members support such a move – a total that this latest news is unlikely to have reduced.
Fewer than one in four are holding out for Biden. Does this reflect their view of which will be better for Britain, or simply instinctive mistrust of the Left?
Perhaps the charge of opportunism won’t stick to Starmer, but the Tories are striving, with a vigour that’s been rare recently, to ensure that it does.
He is averse to using numbers as the main instrument of control – perhaps viewing them as an arbitrary measure of success.
It’s important to have advisers, but “advisers advise and Ministers decide” – because the latter are accountable to the rest of us.
Johnson’s troops are issuing declarations of intent in public. His success will depend on his ability to learn from mistakes.
And that Biden would doubtless be a one-term president leaves a mass of unknowns about his candidacy.
Ministers could not have handled the matter worse if they’d tried. But Paul Maynard, pictured, is championing a solution.
If this morning’s reports are correct, Sunak should be congratulated for starting to take action.
The First Minister’s absurd decree banning the sale of ‘non-essential’ goods spotlights the tension between devolved lockdowns and reserved finances.
It was good to see Mel Stride pushing yesterday for a Treasury assessment of the economic effects of Government restrictions and the virus itself.
From medical issues to the political warfare it could spark, immunising the nation is more complicated than it seems.