MP Nick Boles dismissed the threat as "sad cowards, sitting in their living rooms with nothing better to do" Lincolnshire MP Nick Boles has revealed he received a death threat after he voted ...
Former Conservative MP Nick Boles has accused the cabinet of being "cowardly and selfish" for failing to challenge Theresa May's approach to Brexit. Mr Boles, who quit the parliamentary party on ...
In a scathing attack in the Evening Standard, Nick Boles accused Mr Johnson of being a "compulsive liar" and called Mr Corbyn a "totalitarian". Mr Boles - who quit the Tories over their stance on ...
Treasury minister Liz Truss said the idea was "deeply sinister" but Nick Boles replied "no its not". Landowners, he said, should not make a huge profit from the planning system. The former ...
Nicholas Boles was re-elected as Conservative MP for Grantham and Stamford on May 7th 2015 with 28399 votes, taking 52.8% of the vote. Nick Boles was born in 1965. Nick studied Politics, Philosophy ...
Nick Boles is one of the cross-party group of MPs that has been promoting the idea of Common Market 2.0, otherwise known as Norway plus, as a model for the UK's future relationship with the ...
Clockwise from top left: Keith Vaz, Heidi Allen, Philip Hammond, Rory Stewart, Amber Rudd, Nick Boles, Tom Watson and Nicky Morgan The general election date is fast approaching and many familiar ...
Or as Nick Boles, a former Conservative MP, views it, an "appalling choice" between a "compulsive liar" and a "totalitarian". The former - in Boles' opinion - is Conservative Prime Minister Boris ...
That did not happen, and one Tory MP - Nick Boles, who was behind one of the proposals - resigned the whip in frustration. Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay told MPs that if they wanted to secure a ...
Today the former minister Nick Boles, considered one of the Tories' big brains, is venturing an idea that he believes could provide a solution, give long-term stability to the NHS finances and ...
Nick Boles resigned the Conservative whip after his Common Market 2.0 proposal failed by 21 votes. It would have seen the UK remain in the single market and join a temporary customs union.