Our interviewee on the lockdown, the NHS, free school meals – and Government assessments of the effects of policy on lives and livelihoods.
Duncan Smith names “five giants”: family breakdown, worklessness, serious personal debt, addiction and educational underachievement.
The first in a mini-series of pieces from the Centre for Social Justice on Covid-19 – and helping those in deep poverty.
We need to start listening to the right people – not hopeless people who get it wrong time and again, but face zero accountability.
We need to separate the Nightingales from other hospitals, build more of them – and use them as a means of isolating the infected.
Our latest survey finds that nine in ten Party members support such a move – a total that this latest news is unlikely to have reduced.
We need a long-term poverty strategy and a Social Justice Cabinet Committee. And here’s a Christmas holiday plan for childrens’ food.
Fewer than one in four are holding out for Biden. Does this reflect their view of which will be better for Britain, or simply instinctive mistrust of the Left?
A magisterial survey of conservatism since the French Revolution brings home how various it is, and how impossible to reduce to an ideology.
Perhaps the charge of opportunism won’t stick to Starmer, but the Tories are striving, with a vigour that’s been rare recently, to ensure that it does.
Plus: After the kidnapping of this Christian girl, we should cut off aid to Pakistan. And: Muslims must face up the fact that terror is claimed in their name.
Ae consultation on the issue is taking evidence now – and terms of reference for a review will be published in the Budget.
“Trump lies a lot and Biden’s kind of not all there.” And it’s less than a week to go until voting day.”
He is averse to using numbers as the main instrument of control – perhaps viewing them as an arbitrary measure of success.
The second in our mini-series of pieces from the Centre for Social Justice on the virus – and helping those in deep poverty.