A recent report launching a new coalition explains why we need new technologies that will deliver these at scale.
The first piece in a mini-series on ConHome this week on Net Zero and climate change.
These would allow individual streets, when a large majority of homeowners agree, to give themselves permission to increase the size of their houses.
We need a thriving construction workforce. A shortage of skilled workers has been exacerbated by foreign-born workers returning home.
The lessons from history are clear. If you give stakeholders no reason to back reform, you will fail.
From hospitals to town centre clinical hubs, new infrastructure will show voters that the Government is serious.
And the longer the impasse goes on, the stronger argument becomes that hypothetical risks to the Single Market are overriding political stability.
The key theme in the Planning White Paper is local consent, which could unlock the door to new development.
The Lord Chancellor post could be returned to the Lords – and once again become both a senior judge and a Cabinet member at once.
Due to internal tensions, the Union can lack coherence and focus, often particularly evident in its efforts to implement a collective foreign policy.
Lidington writes that “the UK has the potential to be world-leading in areas such as fintech, life sciences, artificial intelligence and genetic modification”.
Preventing as much long-term damage to the economy as possible now should be the Chancellor’s priority.
There is much to be said for incremental reform, but too much caution can tip over into a failure to act boldly.