Nigel Farage stands to benefit from having a talented politician with cabinet experience Daily Telegraph 18/02/26 It’s hard to know which Tory claim of the last week is more ridiculous. The one suggesting Kemi Badenoch handled Robert Jenrick’s defection to Reform well. Or the one suggesting the Tories are better off without him. We’ve heard both absurdities in the last week, when the reality is Nigel Farage has been handed yet another nail to hammer into the Tory coffin. Let’s take the first one first: that Badenoch did a great job in firing him. It’s true that taking fast and decisive action – with a rapid briefing on her own terms – was a technical success. But too many people are missing a more fundamental point: Jenrick partly left because she consistently treated him badly after her leadership win. Jenrick ran a decent, energetic leadership campaign and had extensive experience in Government, not least as a cabinet minister. Even though Tory ranks were hugely depleted after...
Even power cuts and the three-day week seem preferable to today’s circumstances for businesses Daily Telegraph 13/01/26 While the voice of big business is seldom absent from public debate with its professional lobbying and media operations, family businesses receive less of a hearing, which is surprising because they comprise 85 per cent of all British businesses and provide more than half of the UK’s private-sector employment. To get a sense of what the people who run the businesses, that make up the backbone of our economy, think about the current economic and political climate, the Jobs Foundation commissioned a poll of more than 1,100 family business leaders. The verdict is in, and it’s not pretty. It is important to say from the outset that their deep sense of disillusionment is not confined to the current government. Just one in five say that they trust the Conservatives the most to help their business thrive – a poor result for a party which has historically received stron...