Society is under no democratic obligation to allow well-organised minorities to launch deliberate attacks on everyone’s right to go about their business, in order to change policy via undemocratic means.
It is true that the typical beneficiary of the graduate visa does not turn out to be Lee Kuan Yew, but they still make a net contribution to the economy.
The area thrives economically and we also retain 60 per cent of it as Green Belt.
Further details enclosed.
The Conservative MP for Great Grimsby adds that she is a “traditional, northern Conservative” and calls on the Government get more people off welfare and into work “to mobolise the British population.”
The Shadow Health Secretary adds that he can’t say “we will do x by funding it through y” and so pledge to end the two child limit to Child Benefit.
Th Defence Secretary suggests non-NATO countries benefitting from European security should pay into the alliance.
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If the Tories want to survive, recover, and return to office swiftly after the next election, they should engage with the analysis of the ex-Vote Leave supremo, whilst junking his objective of replacing us.
ConservativeHome’s round-up of ten of our best articles from the preceding week.
There is still time for the Tories to articulate an ambitious vision for Britain that will motivate our supporters, pull them back from the temptation of Reform, and reignite enthusiasm among voters.
While low inflation may be the objective of policy, merely setting a target for it begs the question of how it will be achieved.
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A Brussels club which admits democrats and blackballs Putin is the only proper and practical way forward.
In what will probably go down as the understatement of the decade David Ramsden, the Deputy Governor of the Bank, said in a speech in February that “our approach to this issue differs from other central banks”.