The Education Secretary must navigate skilfully to get the proposals safely to port.
The Education Secretary is grappling with reform of the national funding formula for schools at a time when spending on them is under pressure.
The recently departed Prime Minister is re-emerging – and working on his memoirs. He will want to project his greatest achievement: public service reform.
There is still some way to go before we can be sure this is a truly new approach, and not a return to what has been tried before.
A narrow, national criteria for success punishes the very diversity and autonomy the Government aims to foster in our education system.
At last “the system” is becoming more flexible.
Some Labour councils have overcome their hostility and are helping to find sites.
We are often poor at commercialising technology. Doing so requires scale, which in turn means we need large numbers of qualified people.
The lifting of the admissions cap of particular importance to Catholics.
They will be adding to a diverse state education system far removed from the binary system of the past.
Far from a throwback to the past, the public needs urgently to see that this welcome debate is about equipping us for a post-Brexit future.
We have to accept that they represent a trade-off between a small minority than benefit and large majority that are penalised.
Their opponents often deploy arguments that are simply out of date.
Self-employed people earning less than £15,900 a year will still see a reduction in their NICs bill, and also benefit from the increased income tax personal allowance.