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  • Major catch: Serial killer

    In a major exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a notorious serial killer has been spotted.

    The suspect was seen in Canary Wharf. She’s alleged to be involved in serious crime and is under constant surveillance.

  • Who is Mel Stride?

    Mel Stride is standing for the Conservative leadership on a wordy platform, that is according to his campaign website.

    He’s iterated a complete vision of a better party based along the lines of his leadership. The question is over what he can bring to the table.

    He represents Central Devon, typically a place known for old age. His experience in politics has served an ill-fitting reputation well. His ambition, however, is to lead a political party to power.

    His secular experience is in the line of work the party is known for; conferences, publishing, and business activities. It stands him well with members, but would it count towards a general election?

  • Call for information: Recruitment and employment criminal

    In a news release from ConservativeNewsSite.com, a request for information is made to the public regarding the man pictured.

    He’s thought to be criminally involved in recruitment practice and management exercise across workplaces in the UK.

    Any information relating to this individual must be passed to a relevant public body. It will be used to build an accurate case, if one exists.

  • America’s got VP talent

    Choosing a running mate has become a side serving alongside the staple of an American election in recent years. It’s a novelty that turns into a reality much later on but it’s a bolt of lightning if the right move is made.

    Trump has chosen JD Vance, who came as a surprise but he’s slotted in by a continuation of his folksy appeal. He’s shown charm meeting with ordinary voters, and has an off-pitch energy which connects with people.

    Kamala Harris has chosen Tim Walz, who strode on stage with pizzaz at the DNC. He pumped the room with energy for their campaign and has helped to instil a sense of optimism in their plans for election.

  • Exclusive: Trafficking runner

    In an exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a “Runner” previously operating at the French coast of the Channel has been located.

    The suspect is believed to have been active in Romania before his involvement in illegal activity across the Channel.

  • Is Badenoch up to it?

    Kemi Badenoch is a fresh figure in conservatism but relatively inexperienced as well. She, like a few of the other leadership candidates, face a problem of lack of gravity. The likes of Lord Cameron and more recently Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak loom larger.

    Her efforts haven’t gone unnoticed, however, largely because she tries so hard. She has a campaign of her own – Renewal 2030 – that pledges to restore the party. It’s underpinned by a belief Starmer takes off Blair too much and Reform UK threaten to undermine the party also.

    Indeed, in an article written three days before the election she said Labour winning would “surrender” Number 10 to the enemy. These are strong terms, but Badenoch knows her territory. She even defended Nigel Farage when Natwest debanked him, so she’s cut her teeth too.

  • Crime couple spotted

    In an exclusive story for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a fugitive couple alleged to be financiers of criminal enterprise have been spotted.

    They are alleged to be involved in trafficking, smuggling, and further illegal activity in the UK.

  • Republican politics

    The Republican Party is dominated by strong figures, historic moments, and large policy programs. It isn’t easy to shake the shadows of the past and any candidate has large boots to fill.

    However, sharing power with the Democrat party makes it easier to juggle expectations because of the reality of mistakes. The truth is parties leave legacies for each other, and these often define what it is.

    In recent times Donald Trump has campaigned off the faults of President Obama, as well as the record of President Biden during his term. The idea is to not make policy too fine a point in a campaign.

  • Harris sets her terms

    In departing from the Biden era of spend, spend, spend Harris is taking a dip into the middle class politics of America.

    Her campaign theme is an “opportunity economy” and it reflects in lower taxes for middle income families, greater mortgage take up, and furnishing a lifestyle that brings about the American dream through ownership and by enterprise.

    These are simple ideas but carry a strong Democrat message. It doesn’t however reassure voters about the national debt or provide implicit reassurance about hiring, as it were.

    The losers are above and below the belt of Harris’ middle America.

  • Caught: Trafficking researcher

    In an exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a researcher has been spotted. The role played as a part of a criminal network is detailed and useful.

    The suspect is alleged to play a role in trafficking events on the English Channel.

  • Who is a serial killer?

    In a popular way a killer is seen as a random, unidentifiable person who kills others almost for sport. It’s not straightforward to use a story by way of identification nor is it presented as needful for it. Why should we expect to know of a potential murderer down our street?

    The facts of the matter are laid out in more detail elsewhere. It’s not possible to take all of it and make sense out of it in one full swing as if such a job should exist. A murderer in this instance is different to a murderer in another. It’s just the way it is.

    A serial killer is different because he or she takes the law into their own hands and abuses it. They’re not seeking a chance meeting to make an opportunistic kill. They’re plotting one for their own benefit and they’ll make efforts to get to it.

    The tracking of a serial killer is tight and dense labour. It takes a lot of effort, and can take decades to solve. Sometimes it stops it from happening and sometimes it doesn’t. The facts of the matter state that working on it helps support a broader picture as well.

  • True blue for Cleverly

    James Cleverly is standing to be leader of the Conservative party on an eerily reminiscent platform. It’s all about unity, fighting off Labour, and delivering results.

    James Cleverly – jc24.co.uk

    However, his mini-manifesto is a bundle of contradictions. He pledges to lower taxes and raise defence spending. He promises to shrink the state and prosper a free and fair society.

    It’s not a coherent plan on the surface of it. Maybe a plunge into the deep end of politics will change things. It can shape a leader in the long term.

  • Ukraine realities

    Europe is a tightly packed continent but it falls out from time to time with its neighbours over vast differences. These aren’t easy to understand primarily because we’re citizens of different nations.

    Wars only make sense where they happen and yet they can make sense to us because we’re also involved in some way. It may jeopardise our security to stand apart so it’s necessary to lend support.

    However the ramifications of a war like this involves many parts of the world besides. In a report The Economist suggests 36% of nations don’t support Russia, 31% are neutral, and 33% do support it.

    These are even numbers considering the gravity of a war it entails. It isn’t possible to end conflict by giving or removing support alone. Only implicit movements will determine what the outcome will be.

  • Exclusive: Top tory hooker

    In an exclusive, ConservativeNewsSite.com can reveal a hooker for a top non-political tory has been spotted on public transport.

    The girl in question is notorious in hooker circles, has previously dated her clients, and is involved with a leading tory figure at present.

  • The who’s who in politics

    The riots of late have proved that self-organisation doesn’t always work. It produces results we don’t like. The same goes with politics but as a democracy we tolerate it. The parties are hated by either side and they’re the culprits for bringing it together.

    The idea of electoral reform however is a different approach to it. There may be nefarious elements inside parties that seek to disrupt without a word spoken. This leads to calls for tightening of regulation over what counts as participation and by whom.

    It doesn’t stand that any party – left or right – is able to operate on a basis of scant regulation and only scrutiny by controversy. Since there’s little room for regular reviews due to fears of a police state, there are fewer ideas on the table to start with.

    The insurgent Reform UK are not an answer to this problem but to a different one, and they only add to the fray. There’s reason to believe people participate here wilfully rather than intelligently. The media realms encourage “gotcha” moments by way of redress.

    In future, to avoid protests that tear apart our streets and divide families it may prove productive to scrutinise participation. It doesn’t carry to just look a particular way or rebuke a specific person. Surely our politics needs to be sophisticated for outcomes to be more intelligent.