David Cameron won a General Election majority against seemingly insurmountable odds in May 2015. But given the recent history of the Conservative Party, it looks possible that divisions over Europe and other issues could make the road to 2020 a bumpy one. Christopher D. Raymond argues that given the nature of the issues at stake and the Conservative majority, the Prime Minister’s best bet may be to emphasise party label and the partisan consequences of voting against the whip if he is to get through the next five years unscathed
Theresa May will today become the Prime Minister, following the decision of Andrea Leadsom to abando...
The previous Coalition government attempted to redraw the boundaries of the UK’s Parliamentary const...
It is currently likely that no party will be a clear winner in next May’s General Election. What is ...
The UK’s Conservative Party does not sit with other mainstream centre-right parties in the European ...
While the House of Commons vote for a referendum on EU membership was easily defeated on Monday, it ...
Confounding the pollsters and the pundits, voters in England have given David Cameron another three ...
Ron Johnston, Charles Pattie and David Rossiter consider the background to and likely electoral cons...
It is often said that ‘divided parties lose elections’, with the experience of the Conservatives in ...
With Nick Clegg signalling that in a hung Parliament he would want to back the leading party in term...
This week sees the annual Conservative Party Conference, the lead up to which has been characterised...
David Cameron’s indecisiveness on collective cabinet responsibility and the EU Referendum campaign h...
The Liberal Democrat surge puts us into new territory in forecasting how the 2010 Parliament will lo...
Few expected the Coalition Government formed in the wake of the 2010 General Election to last as lon...
The vote for Brexit poses a fundamental challenge to Conservative statecraft, the most profound the ...
David Cameron’s speech to the Conservative Party conference in Manchester today marks the end of the...
Theresa May will today become the Prime Minister, following the decision of Andrea Leadsom to abando...
The previous Coalition government attempted to redraw the boundaries of the UK’s Parliamentary const...
It is currently likely that no party will be a clear winner in next May’s General Election. What is ...
The UK’s Conservative Party does not sit with other mainstream centre-right parties in the European ...
While the House of Commons vote for a referendum on EU membership was easily defeated on Monday, it ...
Confounding the pollsters and the pundits, voters in England have given David Cameron another three ...
Ron Johnston, Charles Pattie and David Rossiter consider the background to and likely electoral cons...
It is often said that ‘divided parties lose elections’, with the experience of the Conservatives in ...
With Nick Clegg signalling that in a hung Parliament he would want to back the leading party in term...
This week sees the annual Conservative Party Conference, the lead up to which has been characterised...
David Cameron’s indecisiveness on collective cabinet responsibility and the EU Referendum campaign h...
The Liberal Democrat surge puts us into new territory in forecasting how the 2010 Parliament will lo...
Few expected the Coalition Government formed in the wake of the 2010 General Election to last as lon...
The vote for Brexit poses a fundamental challenge to Conservative statecraft, the most profound the ...
David Cameron’s speech to the Conservative Party conference in Manchester today marks the end of the...
Theresa May will today become the Prime Minister, following the decision of Andrea Leadsom to abando...
The previous Coalition government attempted to redraw the boundaries of the UK’s Parliamentary const...
It is currently likely that no party will be a clear winner in next May’s General Election. What is ...