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Pen Portraits of our monarchs

A brilliant collection of them has been republished in an updated edition . Alistair Lexden reviewed it in Parliament’s  magazine The House on 29 April.

Gimson’s Kings & Queens: Brief Lives of the Monarchs since 1066
By Andrew Gimson
Published by Square Peg

The rebirth of Sutherland's portrait of Churchill

In a letter to The Daily Telegraph published on 23 April, Alistair Lexden drew attention to the existence of a copy of Graham Sutherland’s remarkable portrait, painted for Churchill’s 80th birthday in 1954, which his wife later arranged to have destroyed.

 

More boarding school places for children in care

The number of children in the care of local authorities is rocketing - up from 64,500 in 2010 to nearly 84,000 today. But local authorities, strapped for cash, have cut back their services.

How Queen Victoria hounded her Prime Ministers

She gave them no peace. A marvellous new book gives the details of her tempestuous relations with them. Alistair Lexden reviewed it in Parliament’s magazine The House on 15 April.

Queen Victoria and Her Prime Ministers: A Personal History

Labour's threat to Special Educational Needs

Labour’s plan to slap VAT on independent school fees would hurt (indeed destroy) many schools and harm many pupils—in an attempt to raise money for extra public spending, which would be considerably less than the £1.6 billion they claim.

A Conservative statesman and his portrait painter

In March, a superb portrait of Arthur Balfour by the famous portrait painter, Philip de Laszlo, in Trinity College, Cambridge was seriously damaged by vandals claiming to be supporters of the Palestinian cause.

The wrong 1910 election

1910 was a year of two general elections, the first in January and the second in December. At both elections the Liberal Party was led by Herbert Asquith, who had been prime minister since 1908.

Women at the Carlton Club

In mid-March the Garrick Club came under intense fire for excluding women from membership. Questions were asked about other well-known London clubs. Some have changed their rules so women can become members.

Lexden on the 1923 General Election

December last year brought the centenary of a General Election which had a double significance: it put an end to Stanley Baldwin’s short-lived first Government (Baldwin fought it on the unpopular issue of economic protection), and led to a hung parliament in which the Labour Party formed a Govern