Matthew Taylor

Matthew Taylor reviews the Sunday politics shows for The Spectator

Sunday political interviews round-up: Carswell, Farage, Rudd and Corbyn

From our UK edition

Douglas Carswell: Why I won’t call a by-election On the Sunday Politics, the Clacton MP said: 'I'm not submitting myself to the authority, to the whip of a new party. If I was doing so then quite rightly, as I did previously, I would feel obliged to trigger a by-election.' And anyway, he said, he’d consulted 20,000 constituents by email and had 'a huge number of responses back' and ‘all but a handful were overwhelmingly supportive'. Asked if he would run in 2020 as a Tory, he didn’t rule it out, saying he felt 'pretty comfortable with being independent' but added: 'let's wait and see.

Sunday political interviews round-up

From our UK edition

Tim Farron's fearsome foursome: May, Le Pen, Trump, Putin What can Tim Farron, leader of the Liberal Democrats, do to get attention? He had an idea  for the party's conference in York today: suggest that the world is in the grip of a fearsome foursome: Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, Marine Le Pen... and Theresa May. He claimed that have the same traits in common: being "aggressive, nationalistic, anti-Nato, anti-EU. It is the post-war internationalist consensus unravelling in real time. Winston Churchill's vision for a world that achieves peace through trade, common values and shared endeavour evaporating before our eyes." Clegg: Bring on the election.

New poll finds twice as many young people voted in the EU referendum as previously thought

From our UK edition

A new poll has indicated that in last month's referendum, younger voters turned out to vote in twice the numbers as was previously thought. A Sky Data poll in June suggested that as few as 36 per cent of 18-24 year olds had bothered to make an appearance at the polling station, alongside a relatively disappointing 58 per cent of those aged 25-34. However Opinium, conducting a new poll for the London School of Economics, found that 64 per cent of registered voters under 24 had cast a vote in the referendum, with a similar number for 25-39 year olds. The finding goes some way to contradict the received wisdom that Brexit was mainly achieved through the apathy of younger voters.