After a stumbling start, the Government is heading in the right direction on human rights reform. But there remains much to do.
The solution is emergency legislation that lists in a schedule every Russian national who has been the target of EU and US sanctions.
Two recent judgments reflect the concerns about overreach we have covered at Policy Exchange’s Judicial Power Project.
Such is the logic of the new Justice Secretary’s appointment – and the combative stance of the Attorney-General.
A month after his tragic death, we must re-establish social norms around respect for people’s faith in society.
The auditorium may be dull but the fringe is not – as questions from our past haunt the future, such as: will the productivity gains come?
The Government’s scheme is deeply problematic and there’s a potential Commons majority against it.
And we’re all for a rebalancing – but Parliamentary government must mean Parliament in full, not just the executive.
The fifth of a series of pieces from Policy Exchange looking at specific issues that arise from the Brexit trade deal.
We wouldn’t want constraints on free speech imposed on the basis of opaque agreements between platforms and politicians.
If the BBC wants to balance its coverage of the culture war, it should commission this Oxford ethicist to tell the truth about Britain’s past.
Johnson and Cummings’ previous assaults on the pre-Brexit order have been brilliantly conceived. This one may not be up to the same standard.
It was promised “in our first year”. Instead, there will be mini-commissions, and a push to reform a Government bugbear: judicial review.
Proposals that define Convention rights in ways other than the Court determines send the wrong message.