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  • Mark my words - Gorton and Denton: Impact and aftermath

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, takes a look at the result of the Gorton and Denton by-election and what it means for the main political parties. 

     

  • Mark my words: The fracturing of the Right

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, takes a look at Restore Britain now it has been transformed into a political party. 

     

  • Mark my words: The (non) debate around Sir Jim Ratcliffe

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, takes a look at the response to Sir Jim Ratcliffe's comments about Britain being "colonised by immigrants.

     

  • Mark my words: Do all roads lead to Gorton and Denton?

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, takes a look at the forthcoming Gorton and Denton by-election. 

     

  • Mark my words: Jenrick's jump to Reform

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, writes about Robert Jenrick's defection from the Conservatives to Reform UK. 

     

  • Mark my words: Drifts, shifts and what comes next

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, writes, "Our challenge for next year is to ensure that this proposition – the need for a full unravelling of the Blairite settlement – isn’t just part of a noticeable change in political discourse but becomes cemented as the centrepiece of the next government’s policy platform." 

     

  • Mark my words: "We don’t like each other, but we hate Starmer more"

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, writes that at the next election it won’t merely be desirable to remove this wretched government from office, it will be a necessity in order to save the United Kingdom. We will need the broadest possible base of support behind a coherent and deliverable agenda.

     

  • Mark my words: A Budget from The Blob

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, writes about next week's Budget. "Brace yourself. Wednesday is going to be grim." 

     

  • Mark my words: The BBC, the Blob and the Backlash

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, writes about the latest scandal to engulf the BBC. "This latest disaster for the BBC might - just might - be a catalyst to bring about real change."

     

  • The Quiet Revolution Against Britain's Unaccountable Elites

    What Britain is witnessing is a quiet, peaceful, but determined revolution. The old guard — those who thought they could continue to ignore the rising cries and common-sense mandates of ordinary people — should be deeply afraid of what is still to come.

     

  • Mark my words: Is it really the economy, stupid?

    PopCon Director, Mark Littlewood, takes a look at the economic speeches made this week by Rachel Reeves, Nigel Farage and Kemi Badenoch.