Fewer Than Half of British Tories Want Sunak To Remain Party Leader
The Conservative Party is riddled with speculation about new leadership, but none of the possible candidates would bring any meaningful change.
The Conservative Party is riddled with speculation about new leadership, but none of the possible candidates would bring any meaningful change.
A beleaguered Rishi Sunak is considering calling an early election if more MPs defect to the former Brexit Party.
The weaponisation of the Western financial system is being used to punish political dissidents—and the practise is spreading.
Calling the numbers “staggering,” Nigel Farage said “if immigration is making us that much poorer, then real political change must happen.”
Recent small demonstrations show promise, but pundits are concerned by the “barriers” to wider action, including not having clearly-defined goals.
Meanwhile, Nigel Farage, to whom the Right often turns in times of trouble, is taking a break … in the jungle.
Nigel Farage’s former political vehicle appears to have polished up its act.
If what I am imagining to be Farage’s strategy is successful, he will have pulled off the most dramatic internal regime change in the history of the Conservative Party.
Top Tories are having to fill front-row seats with their aides to make the conference hall appear full.
Those who have no sympathy for the rural community or its fieldsports should nonetheless express extreme indignation at banks freezing accounts or suspending services because they dislike the opinions or activities of their clients.
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