Cameron, Europe, Boris and moving on
The dense detail of the talks is a tough sell. Jobs, interest rates, exports… that’s the stuff David Cameron wants to get on to.
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The dense detail of the talks is a tough sell. Jobs, interest rates, exports… that’s the stuff David Cameron wants to get on to.
One EU diplomat said the whole deal now looks “do-able and likely” and he would be “surprised if it didn’t happen” this week.
Now David Camerom will have to compete with Tory opponents vying for TV time, having perhaps only one news cycle entirely to himself.
The claim “If we can get this deal in Europe, if we can this renegotiation fixed and we can stay in a reformed Europe, you know what you get… you know that the borders stay in Calais.” David Cameron, 8 February 2016 The background Could the kind of squalid migrant camps we see on the…
David Cameron is calling for reforms in prisons to combat high levels of violence, self-harm and re-offending.
David Cameron says he is confident that his temporary emergency brake on in-work benefits will reduce net migration.
The Prime Minister says he has persuaded Brussels to give Britain a blueprint for “substantial change”. Reality or rhetoric?
The Prime Minister says he wants to stamp out an “industry trying to profit” from baseless claims against serving military personnel and veterans.
I’m not convinced the PM is truly relaxed about whether he gets an early deal in Brussels or not. He told a Davos gathering he wasn’t in a hurry. Could’ve fooled Europe.
The Prime Minister is accused of cronyism for awarding his election strategist Lynton Crosby a knighthood and including a number of Conservative party workers in the New Year Honours List.
David Cameron says he is hopeful a deal with fellow European leaders can be achieved by February, as Angela Merkel signals that a compromise is possible.
David Cameron is facing growing opposition to his European Union reform plans from leaders across the continent.
Appealing to MPs to back British airstrikes against Islamic State militants in Syria, the Prime Minister says such a move would not make the UK any more of a terror target than it already is.
The Labour leader will have to respond to a statement from David Cameron calling for Britain to become involved in military air strikes in Syria.
The Prime Minister made the unusual step of intervening when he heard that his local council in Oxfordshire are planning a string of cuts – but is it really the leafy green belt feeling the brunt of cuts?