This political treatise by Danny Kruger, Reform UK's ex-Conservative policy guru, offers a glimpse into what kind of platform the emergent party will put forward at the next general election. Reform UK, which is currently leading all the polls by a quite wide margin, pulled off a major coup by attracting this intellectually capable MP who served successive Prime Ministers from David Cameron to Boris Johnson, and Covenant nudges the conservative (small 'c') agenda forward. Betraying his background as what used to be called a 'Compassionate Conservative', or 'Cameroon', it doesn't so much look to repeal liberal ideas such as gay marriage, Net Zero, or being able to obtain British citizenship through having what I think are nebulous and irrelevant 'British values', but it does seek a return to a more family and community-focused politics, where the state's role shrinks and people are encouraged to care more for each other instead of outsourcing everything - education, healthcare, adult social care - to a central government. I don't think there is anything really radical in these ideas but Kruger's book does offer a sense of direction for the modern conservative movement in the post-Woke, post-Globalism era, if indeed that's where we are at the moment.