Should conservative parties pursue liberal-minded centrist support or compete against far-Right populists for working-class voters?
What do our cliché-ridden rulers propose? Ending plastic cups, gender quotas for boardrooms and banning Tony the Tiger.
The former’s readership has risen. The latter’s leadership is changing. What will this and other changes mean for our political culture?
It ought to be focused on those areas that the public really care about and where it can meaningfully offer useful policy ideas.
“The language should be that of giving people their chance to succeed and of being on their side – a “people politics” that many practice locally but which must be scaled up.”
It has been dispatched by one man – New Zealand First’s party leader, Winston Peters, who has Labour’s inexperienced leader in his pocket.
This is important not only because without arguments we are weak in the face of our adversaries, such as Corbyn, but also because we must keep checking that we’re right.
A tumultuous political year has brought a lot of changes to the list.
I have an assumption that most Britons aren’t especially keen to describe themselves, voluntarily, in this way. A quick and very unscientific vox pop didn’t contradict my assumption
Making the state bigger is wrong and rolling it back is not enough.
It’s more a case of the centre-left doing badly than the centre-right doing well.
A third of consumers internationally are now choosing to ‘buy from brands they believe are doing social or environmental good’.