The right-wing plot to split the Conservative Party
While Jacob Rees-Mogg failed to topple Theresa May, he has sown the seeds for a split within the Conservative Party, and a new hard-right political force may emerge.
Required reading
While Jacob Rees-Mogg failed to topple Theresa May, he has sown the seeds for a split within the Conservative Party, and a new hard-right political force may emerge.
With talk of a so-called People’s Vote aimed at stopping Brexit growing, it’s time for Remainers to ask whether a second referendum might pose some dangers of its own.
Though far from the Marxist bogeyman he is so often portrayed as, Jeremy Corbyn’s response to the Russia crisis highlights why he must never become prime minister.
In retrospect, 2017 hasn’t produced a lot of good news, from Trump to the sexual harassment revalations. But don’t despair: there are signs the tide is beginning to turn.
Letterhole urges a vote for the Liberal Democrats, the only party that supports sensible social and cultural liberalism. But more than anything, this nasty Tory government must be defeated.
This election is a presidential one, in which the discourse has centred around two profoundly weak leaders. The solution to this political malaise is clear: wholesale electoral reform.
With Macron beginning his tenure as president of France, talk has turned to whether Britain needs its own radical centrist movement to stop the Tories. One man has decided he is the one to lead it.