As the Labour leader visits Dublin and Belfast, he shrinks from disclosing how he would solve the present difficulties.
The PM showed how good it feels to be alive after dodging the attempt by 148 of his own followers to push him under a bus.
Some of the Tory tribe still drummed their desks in support of their chief: others stood in sombre silence having just assaulted him.
In these days of her Platinum Jubilee, we give thanks both local and ceremonial for her faithful service to her people.
It seldom occurs to this author that the best way to deal with fashionable absurdities is to laugh at them, and trust in the public’s common sense.
She is pushing through reforms which are of tremendous significance, but as yet unnoticed by the wider public.
Tory MPs felt no great urge to leap to the PM’s defence, but also showed no desire to defenestrate him, and instead drifted off to lunch.
The subject has not yet been sufficiently studied, but there is clearly an affinity between the Hindu ethic and the spirit of conservatism.
Cooper is on top of her brief, yet somehow failed to press home her advantage as she pointed out to Patel that many criminals are getting off scot free.
Hannah White, of the Institute for Government, refers in passing to “the UK’s infamous ‘unwritten’ constitution”. What is “infamous” about it?
As long as this former priest and aspirant actor can find some high moral reason for doing so, he loves to make trouble.
All concerned were anxious to declare in the clearest possible terms that they and their colleagues oppose sexism and misogyny.
Our political constitution rightly puts our representatives, not the permanent bureaucracy, in the driving seat.
The Prime Minister replaced Tuesday’s contrition with fighting spirit, and dismissed his opponent as “a Corbynista in a smart Islington suit”.