Willingness to leave the EU with no deal, but to pay for specific programmes, is popular. Intervention in businesses and the economy is not.
Her new administration would be on the right side on the big issues – Brexit, immigration, Islamism; and would likely feel its way towards the right answer on the economy and trade.
Whilst policy-wonks like to describe the differences in public spending on the old and young as an “injustice”, that’s not how thrifty pensioners see it.
The manifesto makes collapsing devolution far less tempting for Sinn Fein and could give unionists the confidence and breathing space to reform.
The way in which the 0.7 per cent target is defined is out of date. Lack of money is not necessarily the primary cause of underdevelopment.
Recent attacks on private landlords are restricting housing supply, hurting investors, and will push up rents.
There is a radical, ambitious zeal evident throughout the document, and it is shown again in the desire to end iniquitous disparities between the generations.
The first part of a ConHome mini-series on the future of technical education after this general election.
It both firmly believes in home-owning democracy and aims to be a friend to renters too.
May has a campaign for the country. She must complement it, as best she can, with one for you and your family.
Instead the Party talks about “consolidation”, but is that just a sign that the reforms have no champion left in Number 10?
The Government must do more to unlock the sector’s potential – and the Conservative manifesto is a welcome start.
The party seems to be trying to make health and care services more responsive to their users’ wants and needs.
The polls may be overstating the Opposition; Corbyn may under-perform his national share in key marginals; or the Tories may just be slipping.
Some voters have gone off Theresa May over the course of the campaign – but many won’t switch to Labour because of Brexit.