Certainly not scribbled out at the last minute.
Reuters/Toby Melville
It has taken a long time to write, but the PM still hasn’t produced an entirely realistic plan for reform.
Maria Gloria Polimeno
When the ‘Arab street’ came to Downing Street, passions ran high and fear and loathing were in the air.
Right of centre.
Reuters/Toby Melville
Until this week’s tax credits debacle, the Conservatives have performed exquisitely the role of the reasonable and pragmatic English party that swears by its faith in “whatever works”. So far, under the…
No room for unconscious bias with these grades.
Peter Nicholls/Reuters
Names of applicants will no longer be shown on university admissions forms from 2017. But will it help?
David Cameron wants religious education to be inspected.
Zurijeta/www.shutterstock.com
Dubbing Islamic supplementary schools as incubators for extremism and intolerance could be counter-productive.
Playing truant is no game.
Young student via kilukilu/www.shutterstock.com
David Cameron’s plans to deduct child benefit from parents of truants will not fix a complex problem.
Land of hope and Tory.
Reuters/Suzanne Plunkett
Big laughs, attacks on Corbyn but what’s the plan on Europe?
And then a step to the riiiiight.
Reuters/Suzanne Plunkett
The Conservative Party is the Harry Houdini of British politics – it puts itself into impossible situations, apparently for the sheer thrill of it
Leaving the club?
tristam sparks
We should be debating the options for Brexit to better understand what is at stake.
Having it large with a majority of 12.
Reuters/Suzanne Plunkett
Tim Bale reports from the Conservative conference as the top contenders make their first subtle plays for the leadership.
A delegate at the Conservative conference prepares for battle.
Stefan Rousseau/PA
The PM has been on tour to try to renegotiate the UK’s place in Europe. Now he faces his party.
Lord Ashcroft: Business man, politician, number-cruncher.
Reuters/Paul Hackett
Ex-Conservative Party treasurer, businessman, political mischief maker and Conservative peer – just who is Lord Ashcroft?
Stephanie Lecocq/EPA
Why Twitter went wild for stories from David Cameron’s university days.
Edinburgh remains in play.
SurangaSL
Twelve months on from the vote on Scottish independence, there are no signs of constitutional healing - nor elsewhere in the UK.
Minding his Ps, his Ms and his Qs.
PA
Armed with a devilish crowdsourcing strategy, Jeremy Corbyn did his best to drain Prime Minister’s Questions of its boorish theatricality. Did he succeed?
George, is that trouble I see looming on the horizon?
Reuters/Leon Neal
The Conservatives could govern for a long time, but it won’t be an easy ride.
The lucky ones: bound for Germany.
Leonhard Foeger/Reuters
Much of the conventional wisdom among academics over the last decade or so has focused on the convergent trends in European government policies toward both migrants and asylum seekers. Spurred on by European…
Judge, jury and executioner.
UK Ministry of Defence
The deaths of two British men after a drone strike leave David Cameron on questionable ground.
Reuters/Osman Orsal
The UK will take in 20,000 refugees but how many is enough and should we be counting?
The bringer of bad news.
Reuters/Peter Nicholls
The Cameron government has announced it killed two British citizens in a drone strike in Syria. Was the announcement timed for maximum impact?