Theresa may

Revealed: Theresa May and James Cleverly’s heated exchange at meeting of the 1922

From our UK edition

Over the weekend James Cleverly made the news after he admitted to smoking marijuana and watching porn in his youth, during an interview on Radio 5 live. The newly elected Tory MP also gave a surprisingly honest answer when it came to a game of 'snog, marry, avoid'. Cleverly said he would choose to snog Theresa May, marry Yvette Cooper and avoid Isabel Oakeshott, the co-author of Call Me Dave. While Cleverly's admissions don't appear to have done his career much harm yet, Steerpike understands that one of his answers did come back to haunt him when Cleverly came face-to-face with the Home Secretary at Wednesday's meeting of the 1922 Committee. Theresa May was speaking at the meeting, with Cleverly sat a mere four rows away from her.

Theresa May doesn’t rule out supporting leaving the European Union

From our UK edition

Could Theresa May be the politician to lead the ‘Out’ campaign in the European Union referendum? James examined this prospect in his politics column recently, and Westminster watchers have been trying to pick up clues as to whether the Home Secretary is preparing to support leaving the EU. Today she gave very little away on the Andrew Marr Show, but it was what she didn’t say that was the most telling. May insisted that the most important thing at the moment was that Britain did the renegotiation.

So Theresa May, isn’t your own workforce ‘too white’?

From our UK edition

Today Theresa May has hit out at the lack of black and Asian officers in the police forces, arguing that the current diminutive figures are 'simply not good enough'. She said that the current forces must increase ethnic diversity in order to represent their communities, claiming that there are no black officers in Cheshire, Durham, Dyfed-Powys and North Yorkshire. Strong words from the Home Secretary, which left Mr S wondering just how diverse May's own personal work force is. Surely with May -- an apparent champion for ethnic diversity in the workplace -- branding police forces 'too white', she herself has a high proportion of staff from ethnic minorities?

Podcast: the decline of feminism?

From our UK edition

Has feminism won the battle and is it time to move on? On the latest View from 22 podcast, Emily Hill and Charlotte Proudman debate this week’s cover feature on the decline of feminism. Instead of fighting for equal pay and rights, has feminism become about pointless attention seeking? Is Margaret Thatcher a role model for women to look up to? And is Proudman’s case of a fellow professional sending her messages on LinkedIn an example of how feminism has declined? James Forsyth, Isabel Hardman and Fraser Nelson also discuss whether Theresa May will campaign for Britain to leave the EU and whether this makes her the most interesting figure in the Cabinet.

Will Theresa lead the Out tribe?

From our UK edition

[audioplayer src="http://rss.acast.com/viewfrom22/thedeathoffeminism/media.mp3" title="James Forsyth and Isabel Hardman discuss whether Theresa May will lead the Out campaign" startat=1050] Listen [/audioplayer]Who is the most politically interesting member of David Cameron’s cabinet? There’s a good case to be made for Michael Gove. He is as intent on reforming the justice system as he was our schools. If he succeeds, it will be the biggest transformation in Britain’s approach to criminal justice since the Roy Jenkins years. The prison population will begin to fall.

Top Theresa May aide going to work for the Out campaign

From our UK edition

Theresa May’s senior special adviser Stephen Parkinson is leaving government to go and work for Vote Leave, the EU referendum Out campaign. Parkinson, who previously worked on the No to AV campaign, will start next month. [caption id="attachment_9280692" align="alignright" width="225"] Stephen Parkinson, Theresa May's outgoing senior special adviser[/caption] The fact that someone who has worked so closely with the Home Secretary is joining the Out campaign will intensify speculation that May herself will soon come out for leaving the EU. But those close to her emphasise that she is waiting to see the result of the renegotiation before making up her mind.

Cameron tells Cabinet renegotiation will quicken soon

From our UK edition

The Cabinet met this morning, but it didn’t manage to discuss two of the biggest political problems for the Tories at the moment, according to the Downing Street read-out of the meeting. The growing row on tax credits was only referred to when the discussion of parliamentary business touched on the fact that there is an Opposition Day debate on the matter later today, and there was no discussion of the demands from a number of those present at the table for collective responsibility to be suspended during the EU referendum. Not surprising, perhaps, given this was Cabinet rather than political cabinet, but a reflection of the way rows don’t always make their way into the formal discussions between ministers.

The government’s new counter-extremism strategy is careful and rigorous — albeit with one major flaw

From our UK edition

The British government has published its counter-extremism strategy, unencumbered by the Liberal Democrats who held a similar strategy up for five years of coalition. There is much to be said about this strategy, a strategy which is to my mind the most advanced, careful and rigorous counter-extremism strategy anywhere in the Western world. While the US government remains unwilling to even identify the major source of extremism in the world today, the UK government is taking a lead in being willing to both identify and tackle Islamist extremism as the major source of concern, while acknowledging that other concerning types of extremism also exist. Crucially the strategy strengthens the powers of Ofcom, the Charity Commission and other bodies to do the job they need to do.

Theresa May defends Jeremy Heywood’s Heathrow meddling

From our UK edition

Sir Jeremy Heywood has been caught meddling in government matters again. The BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg reveals that the Cabinet Secretary wrote to ministers before party conference season to warn them against speaking out on expanding Heathrow Airport while a decision is still being taken. Heywood helpfully said it was fine to reiterate statements made pre-July but they should keep schtum on anything new now, in fear of opening the door to a legal challenge. For a senior civil servant to dole out orders to ministers in this way is pretty irregular— with one member of the cabinet telling the BBC it was ‘unprecedented’.

Tory harmony is threatened by the EU referendum

From our UK edition

For all the leadership positioning, one of the striking things about Tory conference in Manchester was the level of agreement about what the party’s strategy should be. There was almost no one calling for the party to move right. Instead, the emphasis was on how the party could expand its electoral coalition. Boris Johnson and George Osborne may have very different styles, but the argument of their speeches was essentially the same: the Tories have to show that they are the party for low paid workers. This determination to look for new converts, which was the defining feature of David Cameron’s speech too, is a product of the election campaign.

Podcast: Conservative conference review

From our UK edition

This year's Conservative conference has been very successful event for the party — at least by its own measures. In this week’s View from 22 podcast, James Forsyth, Isabel Hardman and I look back at the Tories’ gathering in Manchester and why the party has been so united. Who gave the best speech of conference? Has David Cameron marked out a success strategy to take the Tories through the next five years and into government again after 2020? Have Boris Johnson’s leadership ambitions been boosted thanks to his rip-roaring speech? Is Theresa May now on the naughty step for her immigration remarks? And how has the political landscape changed, if at all, over conference season?

The Tories are still anxious to reach out. And that’s a very good sign

From our UK edition

Post-election party conferences usually follow a standard pattern. The winning party slaps itself on the back while the losers fret about how to put together an election-winning coalition. But this year, there’s been no talk of compromise or coalition from Labour. They seem happy to be a protest party, unbothered that voters disagree with them on the economy, welfare and immigration. And the Tories, instead of relaxing or moving to the right, have obsessed anxiously about how to broaden their appeal, to make their majority permanent. This determination to look for new converts is a product of the election campaign. Weeks of looking at polls that indicated they were on course for defeat served as a near- death experience for the Tories.

David Cameron, take heed. This is the conference speech that you should learn from

From our UK edition

Maybe it was because of the contrast with Theresa May’s chilly, disingenuous monotone minutes before, but I really think Boris Johnson’s speech to the Conservative party here in Manchester was brilliant. It is a constant puzzle that senior politicians, who spend such ages worrying about how to communicate, do not learn how to make platform speeches. They make basic errors — failing to read autocues, misjudging the timing of applause. They also do not trouble to think about what makes a speech — its combination of light and shade, the sense of an audience of actual human beings both in and outside the hall.

In defence of Theresa May’s immigration remarks

From our UK edition

Some politicians and pundits are brewing a perfect storm across Europe. Migrants are heading into our continent illegally in record numbers, and at the same time many politicians and pundits are spending their time trying to deride and shut down anybody who might be concerned about this. Last week I mentioned Angela Merkel’s skewed priorities in spending even a nanosecond worrying about what Europeans are writing on Facebook about this mass migration rather than trying to get a grip on the influx itself. The combination of a historic change in our continent and a simultaneous push from the top to police what the rest of society is meant to say or think about this would strike me as the best way possible to convert a decent response now into an indecent response down the road.

Theresa May lambasts her own record on immigration. Why?

From our UK edition

What on earth is Theresa May playing at? As Home Secretary she vowed to cut net immigration down to the ‘tens of thousands,’ only to see it increase to a record high of 330,000. A bit embarrassing: the slogans that used to adorn Tory conferences boasting ‘immigration down’ have been quietly removed, and replied by the fictional achievement ‘deficit eliminated’. If I were her, I'd just drop the whole thing. Instead, she chooses this conference to inform us that the immigration she has presided over is bad for Britain, bad for our social cohesion. In her words: 'When immigration is too high, when the pace of change is too fast, it’s impossible to build a cohesive society.

Theresa May has ‘quite a lot of explaining to do’ on immigration before the leadership contest

From our UK edition

Theresa May will today claim that high levels of immigration make it ‘impossible to build a cohesive society’. The Home Secretary will tell the Tory conference that it’s not just about building more schools and homes to deal with immigration, but about driving those numbers down too: ‘Now I know there are some people who say, yes there are costs of immigration, but the answer is to manage the consequences, not reduce the numbers. But not all of the consequences can be managed, and doing so for many of them comes at a high price. ‘We need to build 210,000 new homes every year to deal with rising demand. We need to find 900,000 new school places by 2024. And there are thousands of people who have been forced out of the labour market, still unable to find a job.

Will Nicky Morgan be the next Prime Minister?

From our UK edition

When David Cameron announced that he wouldn’t serve a third term, he made it inevitable that Westminster would spend much of his second term wondering about who would succeed him. Well, in the new Spectator, Nicky Morgan becomes the first Cabinet Minister to make clear that she is interested in standing when Cameron steps down. She says that ‘A lot of it will depend on family’ but makes clear that she believes there needs to be a female candidate in the race and hopes ‘that, in the not too distant future, there will be another female leader of a main Westminster political party’. What I was most struck about when interviewing Morgan was how, when I asked her what her pitch for the top would be, she didn’t shy away from the question.

The right answer

From our UK edition

David Cameron might not be remembered as the best prime minister in modern British history but he will probably be remembered as the luckiest. Jeremy Corbyn’s election as leader of the Labour party is proving worse — or, for the Tories, better — than anyone could have imagined. His wrecking ball is busy destroying everything that was built by Labour’s modernisers. He does not lack authenticity, belief and passion — but his beliefs are ones which would be more at home in a 1920s plenary meeting of the Moscow Soviet than in contemporary British living rooms. The Chancellor sees Corbyn’s leadership as a chance to further blacken Labour’s name.

Why is the Home Office giving in to illiberal youth by banning rappers like Tyler, The Creator?

From our UK edition

In a 2012 interview on Newsnight, foul-mouthed LA rapper Tyler, The Creator told a churlish Stephen Smith that the point of his music was to ‘piss old white people off like you’. Now, the old white people at the Home Office seem to have proved him right, by banning the rapper – real name Tyler Okonma – from entering the UK for the next three to five years. Okonma’s manager, Christian Clancy, wrote in a blog post that he received a letter stating that the rapper would not receive a visa because his work ‘encourages violence and intolerance of homosexuality’ and ‘fosters hatred with views that seek to provoke others to terrorist acts’.

Immigration hits a record high

From our UK edition

There must be an element of masochism in Theresa May that leads her to promise the electorate something she cannot give them: net migration in the tens of thousands. Figures released today show that the balance of people coming into the county rose to 330,000 in the year to March 2015, putting the Home Secretary further than ever—further than any Home Secretary in history—from the target. [datawrapper chart="http://static.spectator.co.uk/6xuHX/index.html"] An increase of 84,000 in the number of people coming the UK, and a fall of 9,000 in the number of people leaving the country made up the 94,000 increase in net migration on the previous year. The balance of migrants from within the EU increased by 53,000 to 183,000.