General election 2015: David Cameron pumps it up
David Cameron has done another very psyched up outing to convince anyone who doubted it that he is desperately keen to carry on in the job.
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The Sun is backing the SNP in Scotland. Does Britain’s biggest-selling paper still have the power to win elections… if it ever did?
Eight drug traffickers are reportedly executed by firing squad in Indonesia after pleas for clemency from around the world were rejected – but a Filipino woman is spared the death penalty.
David Cameron has done another very psyched up outing to convince anyone who doubted it that he is desperately keen to carry on in the job.
Britain’s biggest bank HSBC says it is considering moving its headquarters out of London. Why is this on the agenda and how many British jobs are at stake?
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.
If he did get back in, what sort of David Cameron would we see? The long gone husky-cuddling eco-warrior won’t make a reappearance presumably.
Labour and the Tories say they’ll spend 2 per cent of GDP on defence, as a Nato commitment. Both are pledged to spend 0.7 per cent of GDP on foreign aid. Why? To what end?
David Cameron is accosted during his first on-camera walkabout of the election campaign, by a man with a ukulele who tells him – in somewhat colourful language – to go “back to Eton”.
Pope Francis and TV star Kim Kardashian have weighed into a debate, causing outrage in Turkey. But what is the reason behind it?
The SNP is poised to make big gains in Scotland, according to YouGov, but a poll for Channel 4 News suggests that tactical voting could save some Labour MPs and two Liberal Democrats.
All is not stable in every part of Labour’s ethnic minority vote, and it may suffer from a failure to act on this – if not at this election, then at the next.
Outside Scotland widespread alienation of voters from politics means the upcoming election has failed to engage the public.
Foreign policy: two words that have so far played very little part in the run-up to the general election. What would the parties do?
Scottish voters turned out in huge numbers to decide on independence, outdoing general election turnout by 20 per cent – so is the rest of the UK anywhere near as engaged?
Unlike the US, the Iranians are not releasing fact sheets about the scale of nuclear reduction because they would rather be a little vague on the compromises they’ve made.