About Theresa May: Theresa Mary May is a British Conservative Party politician who has been the Home Secretary since 2010.
There's much more we can be doing in Parliament, we could be giving more power back to people at local government level, through local referendums.
We've got a first class leader at the moment. David Cameron is dealing with the issues that he was left by the last government very well indeed.
For voters what matters is what government actually delivers for them.
The universities have got a job here as well in making sure that people actually understand that we're open for university students coming into the U.K. There's a job here not just for the government, I think there's a job for the universities as wel...
I think for voters what matters is the values that drive the government.
We campaigned on the fact that we were going to have to take difficult decisions because of the state of the public finances. When we got into government we discovered that actually the public finances were in an even worse state than we thought.
Just as the police review their operational tactics, so we in the Home Office will review the powers available to the police.
No, I can tell you one of the first things that happens to a home secretary when they arrive in the job is that they are given a briefing about the security matters that they will be dealing with and I deal with security matters on a daily basis.
So we mustn't lower our guard in any sense because of what has happened in terms of the death of Osama Bin Laden and we are certainly not doing that. The terror threat level here in the U.K. remains at severe and we're very conscious of the need to c...
I was looking at a photograph of the 1997 election campaign yesterday, and I thought: 'My God. Did I really have that hairstyle? And that Tory blue suit?'
Communities need to feel that they can accommodate people. Rather than feeling that it's not possible to integrate and that the stress and strain on housing and public services is too great.
I think it's important to do a good job and not to feel that you've got to make grand gestures, but just to get on and deliver.
You can't solve a problem as complex as inequality in one legal clause.
We're getting rid of bureaucracy, so that we're releasing time for police officers to be crime fighters and not form writers.
I think if you talk to anybody who would like to have had children... I mean, you look at families all the time and you see there is something there that you don't have.
Now there is a growing feeling, it's something that David Cameron led on actually, he said this some time ago, that MPs should not be voting on their own pay.
The concept of doing something with child benefit, of changing the rules around child benefit, is something that has been being discussed for some time.
You don't think about it at the time, but there are certain responsibilities that come with being the vicar's daughter. You're supposed to behave in a particular way. I shouldn't say it, but I probably was Goody Two Shoes.
People have to make journeys, what we want is people to have alternatives in public transport so that they can make a choice about the sort of way in which they're going to travel.
I think there is a break down of trust generally, between people and politicians. I think that's come about for a whole variety of reasons.
Tying money up for 40 years doesn't sound appealing when you are young.