The Home Secretary faces a busy year – and a very important decision on the EU referendum.
Strife within the so-called ‘People’s Army’ topped the poll on 32.3 per cent.
With 30 per cent of the vote, it pipped Duncan Smith’s Universal Credit to the post.
It would be better to quit on their own terms than sit on death row, waiting for the reshuffle axe to fall.
Will lefty Oxford students purge Gandhi, Guevara and Hardie from history for their dubious views on race?
The Conservative Deputy Chairman left to respect the Party’s neutrality policy in the EU referendum. CCHQ’s digital consultants are in exactly the same boat.
Hammond promised MPs that ‘the Government have no intention’ of sending pro-EU mailshots to every home. Now Downing Street thinks differently.
The Home Office opens a consultation on reforms to the Independent Police Complaints Commission.
Yet again, a member of the Lords raises questions that most MPs would not dare to.
It is fashionable to sneer at her, and at the decade which she dominated, but even now she runs rings round her opponents.
Many activists wonder if the flinty euroscepticism voiced in selection meetings will be replicated in practice.
Would any politician dare to arrive at a summit and say “Actually, I’m here with the interests of my electorate in mind?”
The weakness of the Government’s EU renegotiation demands is a boon to the Leave campaign.
Angela Eagle’s appearance at PMQs raises the question again: when, if ever, will Labour catch up?
Does it make me a hypocrite to rise from a pew alongside my family and friends as the organist kicks off ‘Hark! The herald angels sing’?