Shamik Das | Politics Summary: Tuesday, February 9th
Time for Maya's voice to be heard amid the non-tears
Guest | Has the left won the first round in spending cuts?
Guido Fawkes | Apparently those MPs facing theft charges still take the Labour whip. Tories di...
Chris Bryant | I'm definitely backing AV tonight. Every labour candidate is selected by AV and ...
John Redwood | Why should Lib Dems vote twice?
Mark Reckons | What difference does political blogging really make? - Event review
Jim Knight | Great quote in Guardian: Cameron may be a pretty face; a pity that lower down he...
Genuine regionalism could save the economy and Labour
Dizzy | Derek Wyatt launches MyMP
Guido Fawkes | Will Dave Really Crack Down on Lobbyists?: Yesterday Dave in his speech had a g...
Mark Pack | What happened to the 19 Conservative MPs who voted to keep MPs’ expenses secret?
Guido Fawkes | Will Dave Really Crack Down on Lobbyists?
BBC Radio 4 Today | Met police "without a doubt" still institutionally racist - Sergeant Alfred John...
Paul Waugh | Former LibDem mayoral candidate and copper Brian Paddick says Ali Dizaei was a "...
PPC Profile: Chris Williamson
Hattie Garlick | Tuesday's comment from the papers in...
Henry Macrory | Letter to Times: Do we now assume that if an MP takes a revolver into the Common...
Morning Call: pick of the comment
MPs ready to vote on AV referendum - 8 in the morning, February 9th
Toby Young | Can Cameron successfully spin himself as the anti-spin candidate?
ConservativeHome | (1) Vote Conservative... because of George Osborne
Dizzy | Playing the race card?
Nile Gardiner | Barack Obama faces Armageddon in latest polls
Mike Smithson | Is it because the marginals ARE different?
noreply@blogger.com (Working Class Tory) | Wilderness years
Laurie Penny | Women, political blogging and the future of the left.
Polly Curtis | Alistair Darling criticised over hidden £18bn indemnity plan
Fiona Millar | Beware the market experiment with schools
Steve Bell | Afghanistan death toll matches Falklands as two British soldiers die
Poll List: Populus poll points to hung parliament
Peter Watt | None of my friends in the pub was talking about the election tonight. The opposi...
Stephan Shakespeare | "Should America copy Britain?" Momentum for Presidential version of PMQs http://...
Kerry McCarthy | Lies, damn lies and Lib Dem statistics
Nicholas Watt | David Cameron promises two-year lobbying ban and pension penalties for former mi...
Mark Pack | A polite round of applause directed towards The Times
Ben Bradshaw | tories admit ashcroft doesnt pay full UK tax ie is non domiciled for tax purpose...
Why is France selling amphibious assault ships to Russia?
Why is France selling amphibious assault ships to Russia?
Miliband and Jowell join forces to meet the mutual moment
Jonathan | Why don't the Tories come clean on Lord Ashcroft's tax status?
Iain Dale | The Daley (Half) Dozen: Monday
Norfolk Blogger | Cameron's speech - Seeing through the spin
Meir Javedanfar | Tehran's nuclear glue | Meir Javedanfar
editor | Joanne Cash resigns…
Alastair Campbell | Tories start day talking tough on sleaze. End it falling apart on Ashcroft. Big ...
Paul Waugh | Surely @joanne_cash must have better reason than 'tensions' with local pty for q...
baronessdeech | Schoolgirls
Ian Katz | The case for climate action must be remade from the ground upwards | Ian Katz
James Forsyth | The Tories think Brown is their most potent weapon
Richard Norton-Taylor | Cabinet did not need to hear legal doubts over Iraq invasion, says Straw
Boris Johnson | V excited about launching our groundbreaking online consultation for climate cha...
Patrick Wintour | Labour considering paying benefit informers - Guardian
MPs are to vote on Gordon Brown's plan for a referendum on changing Britain's voting system later today.
The deaths of three British soldiers in Afghanistan over the past two days brings the number of British military personnel killed there to 256 - one more than the number killed during the Falklands war.
The three major political parties clashed on the ongoing row over expenses yesterday as the Labour MPs facing criminal charges were suspended from the party and told they will only receive retirement pay-offs if they're cleared.
A new Populus poll for the Times found support for Labour up two points from last month at 30 percent, while the Conservatives were down one point at 40 percent.
According to a new report, the Treasury does not know why state-owned banks are still not lending money to small businesses.
Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth is to face the defence select committee over the latest developments in Afghanistan and the defence green paper today.
Labour's manifesto team are considering proposals that would give people who inform on benefit cheats a share of the money saved, according to reports.
Joseph Stiglitz has urged Gordon Brown to reject "fiscal fetishism", defy the markets and maintain, or even extend, the fiscal stimulus of the British economy.
According to reports, a £20,000 compulsory inheritance levy could be introduced to pay for Labour's social care plans, but some cabinet ministers fear endorsing such a radical plan close to an election.
Most voters believe Britain is "broken" and 42% of people say they would emigrate if they could, according to a new Populus poll for The Times.
The BBC is set to reveal the total amount paid to its performers who broadcast on radio and television.
The Shadow Defence Secreatry, Liam Fox accepted a £50,000 donation from a venture capitalist who helped buy a company selling defence equipment.
Britain's immigration system is not operating effectively and faces a damaging loss of public support, a report from the Parliamentary Ombudsman has warned.
The City minister Lord Myners will tell institutional investors this morning that an excessive bonus culture is hitting UK pension funds.
Tony Blair suggested the Iraq Inquiry was part of a British obsession with conspiracy, deceit and scandal.
Metropolitan Police Commander Ali Dizaei was yesterday sentenced to four years in jail for assaulting a man and trying to falsely accuse him in a spat over money.
Laws protecting workers' rights must be improved to tackle poverty, according to a report from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation.
The amount of benefits overpaid due to errors by officials has doubled from £400m to £800m since 2000, say the work and pensions select committee.
All paramilitary groups involved in the ceasefire in Northern Ireland have now decommmissioned their weapons, just 24 hours ahead of a scheduled deadline.
Harriet Harman is in line for the annual Rear of the Year award, according to The Sun.
Scottish quangos should be scrapped and replaced by independently run organisations, according to think-tank Reform Scotland.
The Archbishop of Canterbury is expected to challenge Anglican infighting over women bishops and gay ordinations at the General Synod today.
The BBC needs to "wake up" to the dearth of older females on its programmes, Harriet Harman has said.
The Commons education select committee has said the entry requirements for teacher training courses in England are too low, recommending trainee teachers have at least a 2.2.
BSkyB says it has sold a 10% stake in rival broadcaster ITV - more than half of the shares it owned.
Some 1,000 UK professionals are to be deployed around the world to rebuild countries hit by conflict or disaster.
The Conservatives have pledged to increase broadband speeds across Britain by providing BT’s rivals with regulatory incentives to introduce new telecom networks.
The Treasury will not pursue reforms to gift aid, it has been reported.
Thursday 1st October 2009 | 16:01
A majority of the public anticipate that a Conservative government would raise taxes as well as make significant cuts to public spending, according to a new PoliticsHome poll.
1,151 voters were asked whether they thought the Conservative party would cut or raise taxes if they won the next election.
Fifty nine per cent of people expected the Tories to raise taxes, with almost a quarter (twenty four per cent) thinking that they would ‘significantly’ raise taxes.
It comes as less of a surprise to discover that there is a widespread expectation that the party would cut spending: eighty eight per cent think that a Tory government would cut spending in real terms, with fully two thirds of the panel anticipating ‘significant cuts’.
The Conservatives have so far highlighted the need for cuts, but have been less willing to talk about tax rises.
Cameron has made it a central part of his strategy to show the public that the Conservative party has ‘modernised’, while Labour have at times attempted to hark back to memories of high unemployment under the last Conservative administration.
The proportion of people (fifty two per cent) with a negative perception of the last Tory administration is considerably larger than the proportion with a positive perception (thirty six per cent).
Opinion was split along predictably partisan lines, but non-aligned voters tended to take a more negative view.
Opinion is also divided on the question of whether the Conservative party has changed since 1997.
Of those who think the party has changed, more people think the party has changed for the better than for the worse, but almost half the public (forty six per cent) think that it has not changed significantly.
A majority of Conservative supporters (sixty nine per cent) think that the party has changed for the better – but seventy two per cent of Labour supporters are not convinced that it has changed significantly.
PoliticsHome interviewed 1,151 adults between 30 September and 1 October 2009. Results are weighted by party ID to reflect the UK at large.
Philip Hammond MP
"Some part of the front line will suffer" in drive to cut spending, says Hammond The Daily Politics, BBC 2
Liam Byrne MP
Improving services while cutting costs "difficult but do-able" says Byrne Sky News10:38 Brown outlines spending cuts
19:23 Cameron discusses emergency budget
09:52 Repay or don't stand as Tory, Cameron warns MPs
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