A proper commitment to British technological advancement would create jobs and boost skills – but above all, saves our communities.
It could take action to reduce industrial electricity costs, among other important steps.
Labour isn’t focused on the second, preferring to blame others for problems, and too many of its activists aren’t the first, either.
The calling-in of a planning application to open a coalmine at Whitehaven suggests prioritising green optics over Northern livelihoods.
It’s striking that the countries that did best during Covid are those, like Taiwan and South Korea, which live under threat of annihilation by their neighbours.
If politicians are going to take voters with them, we need to be honest about the trade offs and develop policies to help those who stand to lose out.
This week marks a bleak anniversary for those from the former princely state. But there’s a new corrective to the Tory pro-India tilt.
It is a bad sign both for the Government and devolution that the Greater Manchester Mayor has been able to run rings round Ministers.
These figures will change substantially in the final version of the algorithm, especially because it will take into account green belt restrictions.
Most Tory MPs will be seeing large increases in the housing targets for their seats, while many Labour MPs see their local targets reduced.
I hesitate to disagree with Daniel Finkelstein, but city growth has been powered more by smalltown commuters than flat-cap wearing uber-boheminans.
The ideas of that decade are still with us, staggering around like a zombie in a garish “Global Hypercolor” t-shirt.
Often, these are not only hugely inaccurate, but paint a damagingly distorted picture which can influence public opinion and, through doing so, public policy.
We must address the challenge of climate change and the role that business can play in making our economy more sustainable.