A new book argues that the country is divided between a metropolitan elite, which rules for its own advantage – and the rest.
Last week’s Question Time audience in Derby delivered a warning shot when they cheered the prospect of No Deal.
Unlike the angel, we’re unable to announce tidings of great joy. But it’s worth mulling why the Christmas season can pause even Brexit hostilities.
The founder of The Big Issue expresses his aversion to liberalism, and his disappointment with the middle class.
Rather than obsess about lack of aspiration, it is the lack of social capital that we should be focusing on.
Middle class Corbynistas are more concerned with the rights of Palestinians than they are with working conditions to be found in an Amazon warehouse in Staffordshire.
Instinctively, voters in Leigh will not vote for a candidate that is either from out of town or has a lack of working class attitudes. Sitting in an office does not win any votes here.
It would be easy, but mistaken, to take the path of least resistance and simply re-enact the dated Cameron ‘modernising’ agenda.
Given that they saved the Party’s bacon, you would expect senior figures to say and do whatever it takes to keep them on side.
The new Home Secretary dually offends the twisted illogic of identity politics, and many of Corbyn’s followers hate him for it.
Understanding what makes these voters tick could be key to the outcome of the next election. No party can afford to ignore them.
Research shows that investment in the early years of a child’s life is the most effective way to improve his or her long-term life chances.
The issue lies in the Party’s image and how it communicates with voters, not the actual message.