![]() Inside Jonathan Ross' family barbecue with daughters Betty, 31, and Honey, 26, as they enjoy veggie burgers and champagne in their quirky garden Harrison Ford and Calista Flockhart look stylish as they proudly watch son Liam graduate from college Rita Ora catches the eye in a coral leather co-ord as she steps out in Sydney to promote her new album but we love making this show': Alison Hammond and Dermot O'Leary address Phillip Schofield scandal as they take over This Morning hosting dutiesįrom DMs to down the aisle: Young bride and groom-to-be share their love story and the journey to finding the PERFECT engagement ring Inside Succession star Matthew Macfadyen's fairytale love story with wife Keeley Hawes as his on-screen marriage to Sarah Snook implodesĪ handful of people have a grudge against me': Phillip Schofield hits back at growing accusations of 'toxic' culture and bullying on This Morning If that horror story doesn't concentrate Tory minds, nothing will. Should he fail, with Labour plans to give 16-year-olds and EU citizens the vote and the Lib Dems set to demand proportional representation as the price of a possible coalition, Brexit could be trashed and the Conservatives banished to the political wilderness for a generation. If he can focus on low-tax, small-state Tory values, get a grip on migration, reconnect with his grassroots and restore party unity, he still has a chance of election victory. It is a weakness Mr Sunak can and must exploit. This shows the PM is currently more popular than his party unlike Sir Keir, whose constant reneging on policy pledges have made him appear deeply untrustworthy. As Dominic Lawson pointed out in this paper yesterday, the polls have Mr Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer neck-and-neck on the question of who would make the better prime minister. The horizon looks bleak, but there are bright spots. He must now give the electorate positive reasons to vote Tory. ![]() He has done a good job of steadying the Tory ship after the self-harming defenestration of Boris Johnson and the ill-fated Truss/Kwarteng interregnum. The Mail echoes all of these concerns and trusts that Mr Sunak is listening. Home Secretary Suella Braverman (pictured) called for tougher curbs on legal as well as illegal migration, which has soared since Brexit ![]()
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