Even if future governments can succeed in delivering our eye-raising targets for banning non-electric cars or installing gas boilers, we are still going to need fossil fuels.
In last week’s local elections, several results went against the national trend. Unpacking why shows how the Tory vote has changed since 2010.
From Labour’s perspective, the one thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about.
I wish to be your guardian angel, and whisk you off to another reality for a moment – one where a Conservative government did not exist…
The market reaction to the mini-Budget raises questions over whether the Opposition could fund their own prospectus without a financial panic.
Local communities have been held back by Labour’s high council tax rates and poor funding. The current settlement is not fit for purpose.
The Shadow Chancellor was being asked about a possible intervention by the human rights watchdog.
“We absolutely oppose this Conservative Government… [but] in all conscience, we can no longer knock on doors and support a Government led by Jeremy Corbyn”.
“I have not changed… The values that I hold really dear, and which led me to join the Labour Party as a student almost 20 years ago, remain who I am.”
“They can’t be the change, because they have become the problem.”
“Labour… is passive in circumstances of international humanitarian distress; is hostile to businesses large and small; and threatens to destabilise the British economy”.
Halfon is wrong to attribute the rise in school exclusion rates to any disregard for those affected.
Kelvin Hopkins’ belated suspension contrasts with the treatment of Simon Danczuk over very similar claims.
Corbyn isn’t some misguided but well-meaning old man, but a deeply committed socialist intent on crashing our economy.
A quarter-century of socialist rule has given the UK Opposition nothing to write home about, and Welsh voters much to regret.