
David Cameron’s latest tax announcement: not new and certainly not progressive
Struggling households won’t benefit from Cameron’s latest announcement – and he’s made it before

Struggling households won’t benefit from Cameron’s latest announcement – and he’s made it before

Rather than paying respect to a tyrant, Britain should be extricating herself from legitimising Saudi rule

David Cameron can have a united Conservative Party or he can keep Britain in the EU. He will struggle to have both.

David Cameron will today accuse Labour of lacking credibility. As we’re on the subject, it’s worth looking at the credibility of the PM when it comes to the three big pledges he made in 2010.

With friends like these who needs enemies?

Claim will do little to enhance Cameron’s reputation at Stormont.

The former chancellor warned that whilst the issue of Scottish MPs voting rights on English-only matters needed to be addressed, to link it with further powers to Holyrood risked putting the SNP back into the ascendency.

The ComRes survey suggests that Labour could lose centre-ground votes to Farage.

It would in fact be Cameron’s constitutional turkey.

Ed Balls’ task tomorrow will be to establish Labour as a party that can be trusted to get its hands back on the levers of power.