
Labour’s headaches get worse
Labour would be forgiven for reaching for the paracetamol this morning.

Labour would be forgiven for reaching for the paracetamol this morning.

Gordon Brown has warned of the dangers of walking into a Tory trap on devolution.

It says all you need to know about the modern Conservatives that they are prepared to gamble the future of the United Kingdom based on electoral arithmetic.

With pro-independence parties seeing record-breaking membership growth, the indy camp could be the real winners after all.

On English votes for English laws, Labour has been caught like a rabbit in the headlights.

After a tumultuous day in British history that will be seen as the start of radical changes to our political system, Ed Jacobs outlines what we now know.

As the party looks to respond to the referendum at party conference, Labour needs a distinctive and radical offer that delivers for England.

If we carry on letting populists kick at an open door, one day we will wake up and it won’t be Alex Salmond or Nigel Farage gesticulating on our television screens, but something far worse.

Scotland may have been persuaded to stick with the UK, but the unity that brought Labour, the Conservatives and the Lib Dems together looks set to unravel quickly.

Not any time soon at least.