The Prime Minister reports that the Foreign Secretary has summoned the Russian ambassador to account for his country’s actions.
Reversing the decline of collective bargaining would help to curb extortionate executive pay, under-investment and short-termism.
May to “blame Russia” for Skripal poisonings “Theresa May plans to formally blame Russia for the Salisbury poisonings on Monday after meeting the heads of Britain’s intelligence services and will immediately come under pressure to prevent Russians with links to Vladimir Putin entering the UK. The Prime Minister will chair a meeting of the National […]
Countries with which we strike future trade deals – the top priority for Party members according to our survey – should be treated more favourably than those with which we don’t.
Day-to-day spending being brought back into balance is good news, and it makes some spending decisions easier, but beware hype about the ‘end of austerity’.
The erroneous assumption that hostile states were no longer relevant has rightly been abandoned. Now our Armed Forces need the resources to meet the challenge.
As Labour councils around us abolish libraries, we’re building new ones. We are working flat out to win the local elections. Our message is: “Keep moving forward.”
However the Wyre Forest MP is less optimistic than some about the prospect of a ‘Brexit dividend’ which will further boost public spending.
“If there is evidence of a foreign state’s involvement, we will need to respond in a way which is appropriate.”
“Where lectures are missed at this vital time, as you said exam time, I would want some of those lectures made up during non-strike time.”
The leader of the European Research Group explains why he is supporting the Prime Minister’s overall negotiating strategy.
“But we are still in the tunnel at the moment. We have to get debt down. We’ve got all sorts of other things we want to do.”
Ministers 1) Hammond hints that he could ‘turn on the spending taps’ “Philip Hammond has claimed that bullish signs from the economy mean that he should soon be able to ‘turn on the spending taps’ to counter the political threat from Jeremy Corbyn. The Chancellor, who will deliver his first Spring Statement on Tuesday, declared that there […]
The election result was simply voters’ latest desperate attempt to send political elites at home and in Brussels a final warning.