People in Britain see the horrendous sufferings of the Ukrainian people and want to help now, not in six months’ time.
Schröder and Merkel long insisted Putin was a trustworthy partner, but Germany under Scholz has now been forced to take the side of freedom.
The Prime Minister much preferred talking about a serious subject, the defence of Ukraine, indeed the defence of freedom.
The Salisbury attack constituted a kind of education in how brutal and shameless Moscow is prepared to be when flouting national sovereignty.
Parts of the media suspected, wrongly, that she was an Establishment stooge: her work leading the Vaccine Taskforce has since been triumphantly vindicated.
The Prime Minister’s manner was robust. His position is not yet robust, which means the Commons is more powerful.
A new volume of essays laments the lack of support for the Union from anywhere outside Northern Ireland.
The Prime Minister was in ebullient form, full of hope for himself and his country, two entities he wishes never to see sundered.
And that is a judgment for politicians to make, not for civil servants or for the Metropolitan Police.
He had to stand in the stocks and allow himself to be pelted, sometimes by members of his own party.
NATO has to accept that the Germans will never voluntarily take part in another war against the Russians.
Anyone who refuses to understand why calling Sir Keir Starmer “a lawyer” is an insult will never comprehend Johnson’s appeal to the wider public.
Lord Agnew’s account of why he decided he must go has not had the attention it deserves.
The PM was unable to play his natural game of ridiculing the prigs, but did point out that his policies show every sign of succeeding.