
Left or right – who could unite first?
While speculation about a right-wing pact to ensure that the Tories or Reform can win power is rampant, there’s little mention of any sort of progressive pact to save us from such a fate.

While speculation about a right-wing pact to ensure that the Tories or Reform can win power is rampant, there’s little mention of any sort of progressive pact to save us from such a fate.

“Our story is more powerful than the hatred we saw here last week. Our story places the blame with the billionaires, and we need to tell it loud and clear.”

Liddle recounts being stuck in standstill traffic in a black cab, presumably somewhere in London, when inspiration struck.

“It’s positive to see the government commit to exploring re-association to Erasmus+, subject to a fair financial agreement.”

“After a lot of hard work, I think we have seized success from the jaws of defeat.”

The pro-Brexit outrage machine might crank into gear every September, but those EU flags still wave with a message far more in tune with the future, especially now, given that even a majority of Reform UK supporters want to unpick parts of Brexit and move the UK closer to Europe.

Are we witnessing the beginnings of a Christian nationalist movement in Britain – one inspired by a distinctly American form of evangelicalism, rooted not just in belief, but in an aggressive pursuit of power?

“Can you imagine a British businessman appearing at a rally in Washington, safely 3,000 miles away by video and telling Americans “fight or die”?”

When commentators like Quentin Letts sharpen their claws, it usually means someone’s doing something right.

No sooner had she announced her plans to run, GB News launched a vitriolic attack, framing Ribeiro-Addy as a dangerous radical.