
Tories Lose Two Parliamentary By-Elections
The Prime Minister has vowed to continue as leader, claiming he understands that his government must “listen to what people are saying.”
The Prime Minister has vowed to continue as leader, claiming he understands that his government must “listen to what people are saying.”
The truly significant fact is that Boris Johnson performed worse in his confidence vote than Theresa May did in hers over three years ago.
Starmer can’t stop insisting he’s a patriot, and that he wants to ‘make Brexit work.’ But these superficial gestures belie the same old policies, now served up in the most cynical and disingenuous ways possible.
The Ordinariate is a fine example of realising Newman’s foundational conservative principle, namely that “of uniting what is free in the new structure of society with what is authoritative in the old, without any base compromise with ‘Progress’ and ‘Liberalism.'”
The problem with complacent ruling elites is that, to justify their dominance, they are forced to resuscitate old terrors and to make up new ones. They rely on phantom enemies against which they can pose as our protectors.
For all his faults, we need Cobbett today, or at least something of his fighting spirit, because he really did love the little guy.
Like any great performer, Boris knows his audience. So when, last month, it came to his first in-person speech at a Tory Party conference as leader—it is not surprising that we heard little about the challenges facing the UK. Instead, we were left smiling at jokes about lockdowns accounting for the fall in reported crime or, better still, about the return of beavers to the British countryside—“Build back beavers”—and enough alliteration to keep a poet happy for months. Here was Boris promising nothing except that it would all be alright.