Theresa may

What the papers say: Jean-Claude Juncker’s ‘deluded’ Brexit punishment talk

From our UK edition

Finally, we have a date: March 29th will see Theresa May trigger Article 50 and set the Brexit train in motion. After all the hype, what can we expect? The Sun says it hopes that the European Parliament will handle things better than its ‘muppet of a President’. Jean-Claude Juncker, who the paper says is a man who sees his bottle as ‘completely empty’ rather than half-full, has surpassed himself with his latest ‘belligerent Brexit ­outburst’, according to the paper. Juncker, who suggested that Britain’s Brexit punishment will put other countries off from jumping ship, clearly thinks he can use ‘fear’ to ‘whip millions of disenchanted voters across Europe into line’, says the Sun.

Caption contest: Theresa May’s Vogue shoot

From our UK edition

Brexit and Budget 'omNICshambles' are enough to keep any Prime Minister busy. But even with her bulging in-tray, the Prime Minister has still made time for a vital appointment: her photoshoot with US Vogue magazine. Theresa May is pictured relaxing at Chequers and is also photographed on a well-dressed stroll with her husband Philip. In the accompanying interview, May insists Donald Trump was just 'being a gentleman' when he held her hand during her US visit: 'We were about to walk down a ramp, and he said it might be a bit awkward'. After her last photoshoot in the Sunday Times sparked a row over the PM's decision to wear a pair of leather trousers costing £1,000, Mr S notes that the PM has tightened the purse strings this time around.

Revealed: the 63 Labour seats the Tories could snatch at the next election

From our UK edition

Theresa May has once again ruled out a snap general election but that doesn’t mean the temptation to hold one will go away. Today’s ICM poll shows why: the Tories, on 45 per cent, have a 19-point lead over Labour. This pushes the Government’s poll lead up by three points following a fortnight dominated by Philip Hammond’s Budget debacle, his subsequent u-turn over hiking national insurance rates and Theresa May coming under pressure from the SNP. With Jeremy Corbyn in charge of the Labour party, the usual rules that a government would be punished for a bungled budget need not apply.

How quickly can a reciprocal rights deal be done for UK and EU citizens?

From our UK edition

The EU has been adamant that there will be no negotiation with the UK without formal notification that Britain is leaving. But next Wednesday, Theresa May will formally trigger Article 50—beginning the two-year process for Britain leaving the EU.  Many in government expect the start of the talks to be difficult: ‘get ready for a spot of turbulence’ says one of those intimately involved in the preparations for the negotiations. The expectation is that the EU will insist that the so-called ‘divorce bill’ must be settled first while the UK is adamant that it will only discuss that if the future trade relationship between the UK and the EU is also on the table.

If the EU didn’t like Boris’s prison guard joke, why conform to the stereotype?

From our UK edition

A few weeks ago, Boris Johnson made a point about the EU negotiations and the futility of the idea of punishing Britain for the sake of it. ‘If Monsieur Hollande wants to administer punishment beatings to anybody who chooses to escape’, he said, ‘rather in the manner of some World War II movie, then I don’t think that is the way forward, and actually it’s not in the interests of our friends and partners’. Cue howls of outrage. ‘Abhorrent and deeply unhelpful’, said Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament’s chief Brexit negotiator. But was Boris really so wide of the mark?

Numbers 10 & 11 need to find a better way of working together

From our UK edition

Philip Hammond should be sending George Osborne a case of the finest claret. For Osborne’s decision to accept the editorship of the Evening Standard, has distracted Westminster’s from  this week’s spectacular Budget reversal. But, as I say in The Sun this morning, the fallout from it will be felt for some time. Even Hammond’s Cabinet allies admit that ‘Of course, he’s damaged’ by the whole issue. But those in May’s circle are blunter. Pointing out the mistake was ‘staring you right in the face’ before he made it and that the National Insurance hike on the self-employed ‘was pushed back several times' by Number 10.

Government’s ‘plan for Britain’ isn’t working

From our UK edition

Theresa May's omnishambles of a week is showing no signs of improvement. As the Budget U-turn and expenses probe play out, many have been left asking: is this a government that is ready for Brexit? But fear not -- they have a plan. In fact, Theresa May has even had a website built so she can share her 'Plan for Britain' with the nation. Only there's a snag. The website isn't working. On the day of its launch, it's down as a result of technical issues. Visitors to the page are told that it 'isn't working' -- much like Theresa's government at the moment.

‘Now is not the time’ – Theresa May plays hardball with Nicola Sturgeon

From our UK edition

Theresa May has just declared that ‘now is not the time’ for a Scottish independence referendum. Given that no referendum can take place without the UK government’s consent. May is effectively ruling it out whatever the Scottish Parliament decides next week.  Now, it is not a surprise that the UK government won’t let an independence referendum take place during the Brexit negotiations. Scottish voters can’t possibly make an informed decision until they know both the terms of the Brexit deal and what kind of relationship with the EU or the single market an independent Scotland could have. But what is new in May’s statement is her refusal to suggest when she might agree to a second independence referendum.

The Spectator podcast: Double trouble

From our UK edition

On this week's edition of The Spectator Podcast, we discuss Theresa May's double bind in Edinburgh and Brussels, Milton's cultural relevance in 2017, and the slaughter of Cypriot songbirds. First, Lara Prendergast spoke to James Forsyth about his cover piece in this week's magazine. Have Theresa May's negotations with the European Union been hamstrung by this latest intervention from Holyrood? And will she be able to find a version of Brexit that soothes the fears of pro-Remain Scots? Time will, of course, tell, but in the meantime James joins the podcast along with the Spectator's Scotland Editor, Alex Massie. As James writes in his piece this week: "Theresa May is a cautious politician.

Double trouble | 16 March 2017

From our UK edition

Theresa May is a cautious politician. She has risen to the top by avoiding unnecessary risks; no one survives 18 years on the Tory front bench by being a gambler. But few prime ministers have the luxury of choosing their battles, and she would not have chosen the two that may now define her premiership: successfully negotiating Britain’s exit from the European Union while saving the United Kingdom. If she achieves both, she will join the pantheon of great prime ministers. If she fails, she’ll be keeping Lord North company in the history books. Unlike David Cameron, May has been preparing for a new Scottish referendum from the moment she entered Downing Street.

Welsh secretary accidentally ‘unsacks’ Michael Heseltine

From our UK edition

It's not turning out to be a great day for the government. After announcing a u-turn on the NICs rise in last week's Budget, Philip Hammond has spent the afternoon having to face down angry MPs in the Chamber. Now it turns out that a 'clerical error' has meant Michael Heseltine has been temporarily 'unsacked' from his post as a government advisor. After the government sacked the Tory grandee last week over his Lords rebellion on Article 50, many were surprised today to receive a letter from the Welsh Secretary declaring that he was counting on the 'expertise of Lord Heseltine' for the upcoming City Deal for the Swansea Bay City Region. Mr S has since been assured it's just a mistake -- rather than the second u-turn of the day. Don't worry Theresa, it's only two days until Friday...

Beware the cult of Brexit

From our UK edition

In their frequent moments of self-congratulation, conservatives describe themselves as level-headed and practical people. If there were a scintilla of truth in the stories they tell themselves the government would not think of activating Article 50 this week. Unfortunately, for our country, actual conservatives and mythical conservatives have next to nothing in common. Unconstrained by a political opposition and egged on by a Tory press that makes Breitbart seem like a reputable news service, modern Tories resemble no one so much as the right-wing parody of left wingers: utopian, contemptuous of detail and convinced the world owes them a living. No practical government would invoke Article 50 this week, this month or any time before the end of the year.

How Philip Hammond’s National Insurance hike affects the ‘gig economy’

From our UK edition

You might argue that the self-employed enjoy less security than the employed, so it’s fair they contribute less; you might argue that the ‘sharing economy’ is a nifty pocket-money source for hard-pressed families, and that tax grabs will swiftly kill it. But revenue-starved Chancellor Hammond will retort that all income and commerce, however novel in form, must be taxed unless specifically exempted, otherwise government can’t make ends meet: tax should keep pace with changing patterns of life and technology. Thus Microsoft founder Bill Gates recently proposed that if robots are replacing humans in business, then companies operating robots should pay income tax on their behalf.

Philip Hammond’s budget disaster

From our UK edition

Some Budgets are historic, most are boring and a small number can be remembered as a disaster. After just a few months, Philip Hammond has managed a budget - his first - that can be placed in this last category. Economically, it made very little difference. Politically, it is shaping up to be a disaster. His Budget was supposed to have been conducted under the pledge, issued no fewer than four times in the 2015 Conservative manifesto, that his party not raise taxes. ‘Instead, we will ease the burden of taxation,’ the Tories promised. It seems plausible enough, and the Conservatives were returned with an absolute majority.

Guy Verhofstadt is playing politics with his ‘special arrangement’ offer to Brits

From our UK edition

Guy Verhofstadt thinks Brexit is a 'disaster', a 'tragedy' and a 'catastrophe'. That verdict, from the European Parliament’s chief Brexit negotiator, won't surprise many. But Verhofstadt has a solution to what he sees as a looming crisis for despairing Remain voters. During his interview on the Today programme this morning, he brought up the prospect of British citizens being allowed to keep their EU benefits as part of a ‘special arrangement’. This isn’t the first time we’ve heard this pitch from Verhofstadt. Back in November, the Belgian touted the idea that Brits could pay a fee to retain free movement and a vote in EU elections. 'Many say 'we don't want to cut our links’, he told the Times.

The newspapers dump on Hammond’s National Insurance hike – again

From our UK edition

Theresa May and Philip Hammond were in a laughing mood in the Commons on Wednesday. After a second day of dreadful headlines in the newspapers, they certainly won’t be now. The Government’s honeymoon period in the media is over - and the Chancellor’s National Insurance hike for the self-employed is entirely to blame. So far, the Prime Minister has stuck to her guns by insisting the policy will go through (even if the PM did kick it back to the Autumn). If she really is to go through with the controversial policy - and the number of Tory rebels is growing - she’ll have to resist a mounting barrage of criticism in the media.

Philip Hammond brews trouble with his National Insurance hike

From our UK edition

Philip Hammond had, in his first few months of Chancellor, gained rather a reputation for being an ‘Eeyore’ about the consequences of Brexit. In the run-up to today’s Budget, it was briefed that he would be much more upbeat about things, while also storing up a ‘war chest’ to guard against any future shocks to the economy caused by Britain leaving the European Union. In the event he barely talked about it at all.  He told the Chamber that ‘as we start our negotiations to exit the European Union, this Budget takes forward our plan to prepare Britain for a brighter future’, and ’our task today is to take the next steps in preparing Britain for a global future’.

Jeremy Corbyn’s bleak Budget response fails to trouble the Chancellor

From our UK edition

Jeremy Corbyn now has more experience of responding to Budgets than the Chancellor of the Exchequer who he stood opposite today. So did the Labour leader offer a good response to Philip Hammond’s statement today? The answer will depend on how you evaluate Budget responses. If you’re expecting the Leader of the Opposition to look like a Prime Minister in waiting, then you’re expecting too much. If you’re measuring him against his own record, which remains largely that of an obscure and unimpressive backbencher who was never promoted for very good reasons, then this was a passable Budget response. It’s been a few years since we had a decent Budget response, to be fair.

A perfect example of how Corbyn’s inability to think on his feet lets him down

From our UK edition

Today's Prime Minister's Questions was a good example of how Jeremy Corbyn's inability to be nimble on his feet lets him down. The Labour leader had a perfect peg for his questions about social care, which was last night's leak of recordings in which Surrey Council leader David Hodge spoke of a 'gentlemen's agreement'. His first question was a good one, asking the Prime Minister to explain the difference between a 'sweetheart deal' and a 'gentlemen's agreement'. May denied that there was a special deal for Surrey, and repeated that denial in subsequent answers. But what Corbyn didn't pick up on was the careful wording of May's denial. She said: 'If he's asking if there was a special deal for Surrey that was not available to other councils, the answer is no.