SNP: a path to fiscal autonomy, but do the sums add up?
What Scots will do if the mandate contained in the SNP manifesto is first delivered then ignored will determine whether the UK survives as a political entity.
356 items found
Ed Miliband says he won’t do a deal with the SNP. Does that he won’t be the next Prime Minister? No.
The IFS has scathing words for all the biggest parties as it accuses them of not being straight with voters over spending plans.
What Scots will do if the mandate contained in the SNP manifesto is first delivered then ignored will determine whether the UK survives as a political entity.
Labour spinners frantically retweeting the hen party selfies (#Ed #henparty #adorable #lovely) should remember what happened to Cleggmania in the privacy of the ballot box.
Tony Blair would look disloyal if he didn’t raise a finger to help his successor. He’s already sprinkled £106,000 around local parties – not all of it welcomed with open arms.
The general election campaign has officially begun after the prime minister informed the Queen of the dissolution of parliament.
Low wages, unaccountable welfare cuts and an immigrant-based economy. The Sun’s budget splash could tell a different story.
George Osborne unveils a new raft of powers for prosecutors and tax authorities to clamp down on wealthy people who use offshore accounts to evade or avoid tax.
Though the Greek PM is still talking tough, a Greek exit from the Eurozone is looking ever more possible. But a planned demonstration of public emotion could yet have the most impact of all.
The UN is frequently accused of waste and incompetence. Maybe if they started appointing senior people on merit that might change.
The European Central Bank abruptly cancels its acceptance of Greek bonds in a bid to isolate the country until it strikes a new reform deal.
The exit polls put the far-left party Syriza on track to win the Greek election. If the predictions hold this is an earthquake: for Greece, for the eurozone and for centrist politics.
David Cameron hails legislation to deliver new powers for Scotland as “built to last, securing our united future.” But is it what Scotland was hoping for? Channel 4 takes a look.
For the first time in nearly a decade and a half we are not formally at war – but exactly how many “security” or “military” people we have left behind in Iraq and Afghanistan is an imprecise matter.
The populist left has begun from a recognition that – in the highly marketised, globalised and granular economy of the past 25 years – social justice begins small and from below.