
Parliament, politics and government
Parliament, but in this parliament (before a general election); parliamentary (the parliamentary Labour Party); House of Lords, the House of Commons, the Lords, the Commons, the Chamber. The Speaker, James Smith.
Acts are always capitalised, bills are not unless we are spelling out the name of the bill in full. Private Member's Bill.
Front bench (group of leaders), front-bench (adj), frontbencher, back benches, back-bench (adj), backbenchers. He took his seat on the front bench.
Party names for debates and lists: Conservative (C), Labour (Lab), Liberal Democrat (Lib Dem), Reform UK (R), Scottish National Party (SNP), Plaid Cymru (PC or Welsh Nationalist), Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP), Ulster Unionist (UU), Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), United Ulster Unionist (UUU), National Front (NF), Communist Party (Comm), Socialist Workers' Party (SWP).
Tory is acceptable as a synonym for Conservative; Socialist is no longer acceptable as a synonym for Labour. Sects within parties are capped; the Tory Reform Group, the Militant Tendency, One Nation Tories, Momentum.
Ministers: Cabinet (upper case) positions are capped up (the Defence Secretary, the Education Secretary), while more junior briefs are not (the homelessness minister, the minister for water and flooding). A list of current Cabinet ministers can be found here.
The Government, but government spokesmen: the Opposition but opposition policies.
Parliamentary committees and sub-committees take lower case. The public accounts committee, the environmental audit committee, the Commons liaison committee etc, a select committee.
When writing about departments of state verify the correct title. There can be difficulties with prepositions, and titles often change at reshuffles. Note, for example, that it is the Department of Health, but the Department for Transport. A full list of government departments can be found here.
The old rule about capping general election only when we meant the current one, and lower-casing the words when we meant the last, the next, or any previous one, was confusing. Use lower case. Once a general election is called, MPs cease to be MPs - but ministers remain ministers. People standing for Parliament are candidates.
The Scottish Government, also referred to as the devolved administration. Members of the Scottish Government should be referred to as ministers rather than secretaries. From devolution in 1999 to 2007 it was known as the executive. The Scottish Parliament is at Holyrood and can be referred to as Holyrood. The First Minister is capped.
The Welsh Government, also referred to as the devolved administration. Members should be referred to as ministers, not secretaries. From devolution in 1999 until 2007 it was known as the Welsh Assembly Government. The Senedd (Welsh Parliament) is in Cardiff Bay and may be referred to as the Senedd in English. The term Welsh Assembly is now obsolete and should not be used. The First Minister is capped.
The Northern Ireland Executive, also referred to as the devolved administration. Members are ministers, not secretaries. The Northern Ireland Assembly sits at Stormont, which may be used as a shorthand term. The Executive and Assembly were established under the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. Power-sharing arrangements mean offices such as First Minister and Deputy First Minister (both capped) are held jointly. Avoid outdated terms such as 'Stormont government' or 'Ulster Assembly'.
'Mayor' is upper case for London and directly elected mayors; but lower case for local mayors
The European Union
The UK voted to leave the EU on June 23 2016. Brexit officially took place on Jan 31 2020. A transition period then ran until Dec 31 2020, at which point the UK left the single market and customs union.
The EU incorporates 27 countries: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, and Sweden
The EU does not include the European Court of Human Rights, which is part of a separate body, or the Council of Europe. Its key institutions are:
European Commission: The executive body. Do not abbreviate to EC. Proposes legislation, manages the EU budget, enforces EU law. Additionally, it represents the interests of the EU on the global stage. 'Brussels' is an acceptable synonym. It has a president, Ursula von der Leyen.
European Parliament: Directly elected by EU citizens, it shares legislative power with the Council and has a say in the EU budget. Rotates between sitting in Strasbourg and in Brussels. An MEP is a Member of the European Parliament. Do not say 'EU Parliament' and lower case p at subsequent mentions (unlike Parliament in Westminster).
European Council: Composed of the heads of state or government of the member states, it defines the overall political direction and priorities of the EU. Not to be confused with the Council of Ministers or the Council of Europe.
The Council of Ministers represents the governments of the member states and creates EU law through negotiation with the European Parliament.
US politics
United States: use at first mention. US acceptable thereafter (no full stops). Avoid using America to describe the country. American is the preferred adjective unless there is risk of confusion with other countries in the Americas.
President Donald Trump: then Mr Trump. Use 'President Trump' only in quoted material or formal titles (e.g. 'President Trump said…' in a direct quote). Avoid 'the president' with a lower-case p unless context makes clear it refers to the current officeholder.
Former presidents: Joe Biden, the former US president, then Mr Biden 'President Biden' only in direct quotes or formal titles.
Vice-President JD Vance, then Mr Vance.
The administration: lower case unless part of a proper noun (e.g. the Trump administration, the Bush administration).
Parties and political identity
Republican Party: at first mention. GOP (short for Grand Old Party) acceptable in headlines or in second reference when clear from context. Do not use 'the GOP' as a subject without prior clarification.
Democratic Party: never 'Democrat Party'. The adjective is 'Democratic', not 'Democrat'.
Democrats, Republicans: both capitalised.
Right-wing, left-wing: hyphenated. Avoid in straight reporting – use only in analysis, commentary or when quoting.
Moderate, progressive, conservative, liberal: lower case unless in a formal title or quoting a self-description.
Institutions and roles
Congress, congressional: Capitalise when referring to the US Senate and House of Representatives together. The adjective is lower case, in the same way as we would do here for Parliament, parliamentary. See Names and titles for an explanation of style rules on foreign leaders and politicians.
House of Representatives: cap up. Use Representative John Smith at first mention, then Mr Smith.
Senate: cap up. Senator Jane Doe, then Ms Doe.
Avoid 'congressman' or 'congresswoman' unless quoting or unavoidable for clarity. Prefer 'Representative'.
Speaker of the House: title is capitalised; e.g. Speaker Mike Johnson, then Mr Johnson.
The Capitol: capitalised when referring to the US Capitol building.
Capitol Hill: capitalised; acceptable shorthand for Congress and its inner workings.
The White House: capitalised when referring to the executive office or presidential administration.
Supreme Court: cap up. Justices are Justice Sonia Sotomayor, then Ms Sotomayor.
Chief Justice John Roberts, then Mr Roberts. Avoid 'Judge' for Supreme Court justices.
Elections and voting
Election Day: c ap up.
Midterms: shorthand for midterm elections; no hyphen.
Primaries: acceptable in general copy; refer to presidential primaries at first mention if clarity is needed.
Super Tuesday: cap up. The day in early March when many states hold primary elections.
Caucus, primary: lower case unless part of a named event (e.g. Iowa caucus, New Hampshire primary).
Presidential race, presidential election: lower case.
Electoral College: cap up. Use 'won the Electoral College' or 'lost the popular vote'.
Popular vote: lower case.
Swing state, battleground state, red state, blue state: lower case. Avoid in straight news copy unless quoting or widely understood. Prefer 'Republican-leaning' or 'Democratic-leaning' where appropriate.
Government structure
Federal government: lower case.
States' rights: plural possessive, lower case.
State governor: e.g. Governor Gavin Newsom, then Mr Newsom.
Do not use 'Gov.' except in headlines or when space-constrained (e.g. tables or graphics).
Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State: cap up when attached to a name; otherwise lower case (e.g. 'the attorney general of Texas').
Judicial and legal terms
US Supreme Court, federal court, district court, appeals court: 'court' lower case unless part of full title.
Roe v Wade, Brown v Board of Education: italicise case names.
Amendments to the Constitution: e.g. First Amendment, Second Amendment.
Gun rights, abortion rights, civil liberties, due process, executive order: all lower case.
Impeachment: lower case. Use specific language: 'Donald Trump was impeached twice but acquitted both times.'
Indictment, arraignment, plea deal: all lower case unless part of a formal title.
Media and political language
The Beltway: cap up. Shorthand for the Washington political establishment or mindset.
Red state, blue state: shorthand for Republican-leaning or Democratic-leaning states; acceptable in analysis or features.
Base, grassroots, establishment, lobbyist, PAC (political action committee), super PAC: acceptable but explain if used in unfamiliar context.
Filibuster, gerrymandering, whistleblower, special counsel, classified documents, deep state: acceptable but should be explained or clarified unless context makes clear.
Fox News, CNN, MSNBC: cap up. Avoid opinion-based characterisations ('right-wing Fox News', 'liberal MSNBC') unless quoting or in analysis.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
7 minutes ago
- The Independent
Labour must speed up plans to shut all asylum hotels, says party's red wall chief
Labour must shut down all asylum hotels 'a lot quicker' than its current plan to put a stop to them by the end of the current parliament in 2029, the chairman of the party's red wall group of MPs has said. Jo White, the MP for Bassetlaw, who leads a caucus of around 40 MPs in the party's traditional heartlands, said Chancellor Rachel Reeves ' plan to axe the use of asylum hotels by 2029 needed to be sped up. There are currently around 32,000 asylum seekers in hotels around the UK. Anti-migrant demonstrations last week outside one of those hotels, in Epping, led to more than a dozen arrests. The hotel was thrust into the spotlight after a man living there was charged with sexual assault, harassment and inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity. The man, from Ethiopia, has denied the offences and remains on remand in custody. Ms White told The Telegraph: 'There's a commitment to close down the hotels by the end of the parliamentary term. I think we all want it to be a lot, lot quicker than that.' 'There is a huge sense of unfairness because people work hard here in this country and commit to supporting the country and then there's the sense that what asylum hotels cost is a huge drag on what should be invested into our NHS, our schools and our infrastructure. 'So they have to close, we have to get those asylum hotels cleared out.' She added that she believes Labour ministers share her frustrations and went on to urge Sir Keir Starmer to 'stop the incentives' for those seeking to reach the UK illegally. A record 24,000 migrants have crossed the Channel so far this year, the highest tally for the first half of the year since records began in 2018. It represents a 48 per cent rise compared to the first six months of last year. Ms White welcomed home secretary Yvette Cooper 's plan to share asylum‑hotel locations with food‑delivery firms, calling it a sensible measure to crack down on illegal working. She also urged Sir Keir Starmer and Ms Cooper to revisit the idea of national identity cards, a proposal repeatedly ruled out by Downing Street. Reflecting on last week's demonstrations in Epping, however, she described the scenes as 'really frightening and quite scary', adding that while anger is understandable, violence against asylum seekers could not be condoned. It was revealed last week that plans to reduce the number of asylum hotels could see migrants rehoused in vacant residential properties and council‑owned homes. Public concern over the scheme has intensified as Sir Keir has vowed to significantly reduce both legal and illegal migration. At the same time, more than 40,000 failed asylum seekers remain in limbo, having appealed against their decisions and still requiring housing. A government spokesman said that since taking office, ministers had acted immediately to fix the asylum system, closing hotels and removing over 35,000 people with no right to be here.


Telegraph
7 minutes ago
- Telegraph
European leaders are disrupting Trump's golfing holiday at their peril
When president Donald Trump stepped off Air Force One on to Scottish soil, he had one thing on his mind. 'There's no place like Turnberry,' he told his travelling press pool beneath the wing of his presidential jet. His Ayrshire golf course, he continued, was 'the best … probably the best course in the world'. Minutes later, he climbed into the Beast – his armoured limousine - to travel 35 minutes along country lanes and through Scottish villages, lined with supporters, protesters, and the merely curious, to Turnberry. Mr Trump may be determined to have a break, but European leaders have other ideas. Willingly or otherwise, Mr Trump faces a string of meetings in the coming days as the Continent's power brokers sit down with the unpredictable president. For now, though, he is secure inside a ring of steel. The historic course, home to some of the most exciting Opens in history, has been locked down. It now sits inside an eight-foot fence, its fairways dotted with burly men in dark suits and earpieces. Snipers watch over the course from a watch tower. Police officers – some on quad bikes – patrol the famous course and the dunes that flank it. Mr Trump arrived with his golf clubs for four days at his two Scottish courses but without some of the trappings of a travelling American president. He travelled with a stripped-down retinue of aides. There was no chief of staff, director of communications, secretary of state or other cabinet ministers, who might be expected on an important foreign trip. His public weekend schedule showed no planned events. Instead, it was a chance to spend time at his golf course with his sons Eric, who manages the family businesses, and Don Jr. Officials insisted that this was a 'working trip' including a meeting with Sir Keir Starmer on Monday, although they were vague on agenda items. Yet all that changed shortly before Mr Trump flew out of Washington, when Ursula von der Leyen, European Commission president, announced on X that she would be meeting Mr Trump on Sunday as she closes in on a trade deal: Following a good call with @POTUS, we have agreed to meet in Scotland on Sunday to discuss transatlantic trade relations, and how we can keep them strong. — Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) July 25, 2025 EU members have drawn up a retaliatory hit list. The plan is to impose 30pc tariffs on bourbon whisky, yachts, soybeans and other American products if a deal cannot be reached by August 1 to lift US levies. Mrs von der Leyen had better tread carefully. A diplomat who has prepared ministers for meetings with Mr Trump said she was playing a high-risk game. 'Very dangerous,' they said. Mr Trump's chat with reporters at Glasgow Prestwick Airport showed a president relaxed and looking forward to four days of golf, but one who was quick to bristle when it came to policy and politics. Mr Trump left Washington bugged by the drip, drip, drip of headlines about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, the billionaire paedophile who took his own life in a jail cell six years ago. He flashed irritation and lobbed sharp words at reporters who asked him how much he knew about the case on Friday, but relaxed as soon as he could talk about the love of his life: golf and the course at Turnberry. 'Sean Connery helped get me the permits,' he claimed after landing. 'If it weren't for Sean Connery, we wouldn't have those great courses.' There is a lesson for European leaders looking to muscle in on his tee times with their trade demands or for John Swinney, the Scottish First Minister, who is likely to tell Mr Trump that his tariffs are hurting the Scotch whisky industry. When the chat with reporters turned from golf to more substantial matters, he said he had a simple message for Europe. 'On immigration, you better get your act together,' he said in another flash of passion. 'You're not going to have Europe anymore... This immigration is killing Europe.' Anyone meeting with Mr Trump will remember the lessons of Volodymyr Zelensky's Oval Office row. The Ukrainian president was roundly chastised by Mr Trump and his vice president for daring to push back on the US position. And by hosting leaders at his Turnberry and Aberdeenshire courses, Mr Trump retains home advantage even while on foreign soil. Sir Keir may have got the memo. Mr Trump billed their meeting as little more than a chance to celebrate their recent trade deal. Although the Prime Minister does run the risk of upsetting Mr Trump over plans to raise the plight of civilians in Gaza, British officials played down the chances of any major diplomatic announcements. 'It's not like other meetings where we would go in with deliverables we planned to announce,' he said. On Saturday, all that was far from Mr Trump's mind. He spent the day golfing with son Eric, and his ambassador to London. The sound of Billy Joel's 'Uptown Girl' and 'Memories' from the musical Cats drifted out from the dunes on Saturday morning as Mr Trump's motorcade of golf buggies arrived at the fourth hole. Photographers huddled on a mound in the dunes, hoping to get a shot of the president on the course. Mr Trump, wearing a white USA cap and dressed in black, waved at the mound before teeing off in the direction of Turnberry lighthouse. Cheers from his baseball-cap-wearing entourage could be heard above the din of the speakers as the group wasted little time in rattling off their drives. A photographer camped in the dunes with a long lens later claimed to have witnessed the president cheat on the third fairway. He said Mr Trump had been handed a ball by a caddy, which he then dropped to the floor and pushed forward a little with an iron before taking a swing. The golf course has been surrounded by an eight-foot-high metal fence, while dozens of officers patrolled the entrances to the beach from Turnberry all the way down to Maidens, the next town along the coast. A temporary watchtower had been erected to monitor the Turnberry perimeter with a sniper rifle trained on the course below. A drone scanned from above, and police boats patrolled the coastal waters. Asked whether there would be a repeat of protesters taking to the beach in front of the golf club, an officer said the incident in 2018 had likely convinced the authorities to close off the entire beach to the public. Fears that the visit would be a magnet for protesters appeared unfounded. Matt Halliday, from Stranraer, said he had been driving around for two hours trying and failing to find protests to join. He said Mr Trump had 'stamped all over Scotland' with his grand golf resort plans, strong-arming local farmers and 'bullying' the council over wind farm plans. One of his signs bore a picture of the president with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. 'I think it is going to bring him down,' he said. However, supporters were easier to find than protesters. Two wearing red 'Make England Great Again' hats arrived shortly after the president had disappeared over the crest of a dune. 'We love Trump,' said Kay English, 37, wearing a face mask sporting the president's face. Tom English, a 38-year-old driver, said the pair had driven up from Liverpool last night to catch a glimpse of the president. 'We support Maga, Trump and what he is doing,' he told reporters, adding: 'I like the way he is, the way he speaks. It is comedy gold. 'He is putting the people first. He is trying to help the whole world to make peace - he is the president of peace.' Mr English said he would return on Sunday and hopefully get within 'shouting distance' to offer words of encouragement to the president and cheer on his cost-cutting Doge unit. He added: 'We love Doge, we are trying to get that here through Reform. There is so much being wasted.' Mr Trump has long blurred the line between family, business and public life. But any world leader intruding on his golfing getaway had better be ready for a possible sharp response.


Telegraph
7 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Give grooming victims role in Islamophobia definition, suggests Badenoch
Grooming gang victims should help draft the Government's definition of Islamophobia, Kemi Badenoch has suggested. The Conservative Party leader has urged the Prime Minister to suspend the current 'secretive process' to draft the definition and introduce 'full public scrutiny'. She suggested such scrutiny would include adding representatives of victims of the grooming gangs, along with counter-terror experts and free speech activists, to the working group drawing up the definition. In a letter to Sir Keir Starmer, seen by The Telegraph, Ms Badenoch said: 'Why has the Government refused to include counter-terror experts, free speech campaigners, and representatives of grooming gang victims in their working group?' She said the definition currently being drafted risked 'enabling a de facto blasphemy code' and letting 'fear of offence compromise national security'. Writing to Sir Keir on Friday, Ms Badenoch said: 'I urge the Government to suspend this process entirely, or at the very least ensure full public scrutiny by reopening the call for evidence, and publishing all the consultation responses and recommendations of the working group.' 'Establishing a definition of 'Islamophobia' will further hinder honest discussion of grooming gangs,' she claimed, adding that 'a definition that chills speech will only make it harder to confront Islamist extremism'. She argued 'the term 'Islamophobia' conflates criticism of ideas with hatred of people'. While the term 'anti-Muslim hatred' has been floated as an alternative title for the definition, Ms Badenoch also appeared to dismiss this in her letter to the Prime Minister. She wrote: 'Anti-Muslim hatred is focused on hatred of a people, and there are existing laws to protect against discrimination.' Though it is not clear which definition would be proposed by the panel, the Labour Party has formally adopted for internal purposes the definition of Islamophobia drafted by the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on British Muslims. Critics of the APPG definition point to one part which appears to state that using the phrase 'sex groomer' in relation to a person of Muslim background may be Islamophobic. Dominic Grieve, a former Tory MP and chairman of the working group drafting the Islamophobia definition, previously wrote the foreword to the APPG's 2018 report on its Islamophobia definition which included the apparent reference to grooming gangs. Ms Badenoch suggested an Islamophobia definition would make the country less secure. She wrote to Sir Keir: 'We must not let fear of offence compromise national security. Islamist extremism remains the UK's most lethal threat. Yet still, people are scared of causing offence.' Ms Badenoch warned Sir Keir that 'the panel is not impartial' and accused some of its leading members of 'minimising the role of Asian Muslim men in grooming gangs'. She went on to characterise the panel's work as a 'secretive process' and said 'it appears the process is predetermined'. Ms Badenoch has identities 'a disturbing trend in religiously motivated intimidation, from the case of the Batley Grammar School teacher still in hiding after being hounded out of his job by angry mobs, to violent threats against MPs, cinemas cancelling film screenings, and schoolboys suspended for dropping a copy of a Quran.' This week, a businesswoman who is helping to draw up the definition of Islamophobia for Angela Rayner, the Deputy Prime Minister, has become embroiled in a conflict of interest row. Akeela Ahmed is one of five people on a working group advising Ms Rayner on the definition. On Monday, Ms Rayner's department announced that the British Muslim Trust – which Ms Ahmed is due to lead as chief executive – would receive up to £1 million a year to monitor incidents of Islamophobia and 'raise awareness' of hate crime.