Opinion

Our party should always provide a home for the Luciana Bergers of the world – but the Phillip Lees need to check their baggage at the door, writes Chris Whiting
Look through history and you'll see Boris Johnson lacking a Westminster majority does not make for a real crisis of the constitution, writes Duncan Weldon.
Sajid Javid was born the son of a bus driver and rose to become one of the country's most powerful people. Will he offer my young constituents the same chance? Labour MP Gloria De Piero writes
While the government throws money at Brexit, they are saddling the next generation with a triple whammy of social and economic costs of automation, climate change and trade disadvantage, writes Faiza Shaheen
Tonight, Boris Johnson faces defeat at the hands of his own MPs. His strategy is looking increasingly like a case of the 'Emperor’s new clothes', writes former No10 advisor Chris McShane
Facing workplace discrimination and inadequate welfare systems, women are increasingly feeling ignored and let down by our system, writes Sophie Walker
The teen campaigner is targeted for her ‘disturbed’ bluntness, tone of voice and even her facial expressions. I know first-hand what that’s like, writes Ellen Jones
Churchill would not engage in endless finger-pointing and blame-shifting. He would trust the nation with the truth, writes Laurence Geller
Amid the most ferocious political storm in recent memory, we must stem the tide of abuse and intimidation in public life, write the Jo Cox Foundation's Jacqui Smith, Catherine Anderson and Kim Leadbeater
Two million people of colour like Walter Tull fought for Britain in two world wars, often against their will. Their sacrifice deserves to be remembered with dignity, writes author Lola Jaye