A reassessment of Enoch Powell’s immigration argument in light of his academic distinction, his 1971 Dick Cavett interview, the Race Relations Act 1968, and Britain’s unresolved post-imperial citizenship problem. Powell’s case is examined as a constitutional and demographic argument, not as a simple slogan.
Kemi Badenoch speaks with confidence, but confidence is not judgement. Her support for Trump over Iran raises a wider question about modern politics: whether sharp performance and quick positioning are being mistaken for the seriousness needed to address Britain’s long-term problems.


