We all know Britain is broken. The answer is less red tape, not more
We are so addicted to legislation that even those things we do well - like English football - risk being strangled by bureaucrats

We are so addicted to legislation that even those things we do well - like English football - risk being strangled by bureaucrats
As an MEP, I represented many Chagossians living in the UK. I know a a moral and mutually beneficial way to solve this crisis
PCCs were supposed to hold the force to account, but instead they have made excuses for the end of free speech
Trade barriers make us all poorer – and are worst for the country that imposes them. But cosying up to the EU would make things worse
They make me nostalgic. Pro-EU fanatics are powerless now - just as Brexiteers were in the 90s, resorting to eccentric stunts for attention
The images of freed criminals celebrating outside jails will remain in the minds of voters for years to come
They’re not just playing to the gallery. They believe they can interfere with prices and wages without any cost
Keir Starmer and David Lammy headed to Berlin and Brussels as supplicants – they could have walked with heads held high
Ukraine’s incursion into Kursk will have been intended to bring forward the end of the dictator’s rule
Savour the UK’s growth figures. Sadly they won’t survive with Labour’s return to Brussels style statism
The vital takeaway from the past two weeks is that robust policing and stiff sentencing are the way to uphold public order
Tory successes are being binned for no more reason than political ideology
Labour will soon discover that you can’t squeeze more tax out of Britain without crushing the economy
This King’s Speech saw a doubling down of the trend that began under the Tories - handing power to bureaucrats and quangos
Shaking up the party machine, recruiting members and fixing candidate selection are essential tasks too
Britain has not shifted Left. But if the Right is split, it will keep losing. What divides the parties is personalities, not policies