I draw on Public First’s Conservative Leadership Policy Tracker which is being continuously updated for all the above.
In future, the economy may run into inflation bottlenecks earlier in economic recoveries than before, thus constraining growth.
The Government should learn from how Johnson got the trains to run on time when he was Mayor of London.
To waste time now on internal factionalisation would be indefensible to so many party members who worked so hard to secure our majority.
With the majority of adults in the UK now overweight, the case for taking action on our waistlines has never been stronger.
There is a clear opportunity for the Conservative Party to be on the side of those who have suffered for doing the right thing,
The Government needs to trust the people more and resort to rule-making less. This Queen’s speech should set that tone.
From vaccine take-up to underlying conditions, the pandemic showed how far we are from health equality.
Before the pandemic one in nine young people had a probable mental health condition. That number has now jumped to one in six.
Javid needs to address public dissatisfaction with GPs without further degrading their professional competence.
The Health Secretary knows voters are unlikely to back the Tories in 2024 in gratitude for getting Ukraine right.
People tend to be risk-averse – one of our focus group participants referred to the “psychic assurance” that the NHS will always be there for them.
It contains ideas for the NHS which would genuinely help deprived communities. But the DLUHC should be wary of overstretching itself.
Centralising power and imposing top-down reforms usually ends up backfiring on service users in the end.