Editorial The EU has failed to solve the migrant crisis – why?
These are not people who have been duped by people smugglers – they are people who have no choice
These are not people who have been duped by people smugglers – they are people who have no choice
Steve Baker makes the debating point that his opponents wish to reverse Brexit. Well, so what if they do? It is a legitimate cause in a democratic society
A long, and extendable, transition period could be a way of Britain staying in the single market ‘temporarily’ but for the foreseeable future
A trade war is not the answer to the huge trade imbalances between America and China
News out of the World Economic Forum is illuminating in terms of home and international politics. Not for the first time, Donald Trump has rashly promised rather more than he can deliver, even if the UK does turn out to be 'first in line' for talks
The censorship of The Death of Stalin is a reminder that there’s an inevitability about Russia's confrontations with the West
The Turkish authorities should long ago have realised that the Kurdish issue can only be solved in the longer term through some form of political settlement
The game was up for the party long before Mr Bolton found himself with a model to go out with
We know why the decision was made not to pursue a judicial review, but it isn't enough
It may seem futile for Macron to keep telling the UK that it is welcome to remain in the EU, but it is part of building up soft pressure on the British to see some sense before they inflict irrevocable harm on their own economy and that of our closest trading partners
Our polling shows that people are willing to make changes in their everyday lives to reduce plastic pollution. Even tentative first steps can be meaningful
The latest evidence of Mr Kadyrov’s unhinged ways is his prosecution of what we in the West mildly call ‘the war on drugs’
Those who argued for Britain to leave the EU did so on the basis that we would be a buccaneering, free-trading nation, paying our way in the world; not some kind of bargain-basement bucket-shop money-laundering outfit
The US President let off not one, but two verbal hand grenades today, over proposals to restore Temporary Protected Status permits for a number of countries and his cancelled state visit to the UK
Jo Johnson has been sent to the Department for Transport to work under the demanding Chris Grayling and with the semi-hostile London Mayor Sadiq Khan – the very definition of a punishment demotion
As she herself might have put it in more confident times, for the most part: 'Nothing has changed. Nothing has changed' – except, of course, Justine Greening is gone
His hysterical response to Wolff's book publication appears to confirm everything the book accuses him of; meanwhile, we're left wondering how and why Trump and Bannon diverged so much on so many issues in so little time
These kind of green levies are one of the best instruments in pursuing environmental sustainability
Natural disasters caused by climate change often affect the world's poorest people, so the fact that the leader of one of the most powerful countries in the world can dismiss global warming so flippantly is alarming
Ms May should ignore this silly overreaction by a section of her party that is never satisfied, no matter how many Brexit sweeties she throws in its direction
In an interview with The Independent, Jeremy Corbyn promises that a Labour government would abolish ‘no fault’ evictions