...Alexander of Tennessee as their potential champions. The hero for dispositional conservatives is not Ronald Reagan but David Cameron, the leader of Britainâs Conservative Party. Cameron has rehabilitated what once seemed to be a dying outfit by pulling his...
...in portraying Gordon Brown as one suppressing his glee over a flattering recession is well done, though he has not yet got David Cameron. Bird and Fortune were, in a mock dinner party, a bit feeble; their partners, however, two harpies who squealed about current...
...shortly after taking over from Tony Blair. The frenzied speculation ultimately backfired. After months of languishing behind David Cameron, the Conservative leader, in the polls, Mr Brown has repositioned himself with his handling of the economic crisis. The...
...the first true test of his mettle, David Cameron buckled. He has scuppered his own brilliant repositioning of his party. Steam-cleaning the nastiness has been abandoned in a probably needless panic. Let the sunshine in? Forget it, along with his general wellbeing...
...by Emma Kruger and her husband Danny. (He, interestingly, used to be the main speechwriter for British Tory leader David Cameron, and wrote Cameron's 2006 âhug-a-hoodieâ speech in defence of teenagers.) The success of Any Which Way, which the playwright based...
...back the state. No wonder Mr Osborne decried bank nationalisation before finally, and reluctantly, endorsing it. When David Cameron, the Conservative leader, denounces excessive City bonuses, he may well mean it. But Labour MPs will always jeer at the stoney-faced...
...up between them. The outcome of this debate which will determine the shape of British politics for many years to come. David Cameron announced a fundamental shift in the opposition's strategy last week. His willingness to raise public spending less rapidly...