The march of technology stops for nothing – not even Brexit – and the businesses and regions which embrace it will be the winners of the future.
There are no certainties – at least, until it’s too late – so the UK should err on the side of caution.
Saving our planet will require a very eclectic bunch of policies. The task calls for moral courage and grinding common-sense.
Hancock’s willingness to embrace such innovation is encouraging, and will bring sizeable benefits.
These opportunities and options should start far earlier in children’s lives, enabling a twin-track of skills training.
It was Henry Willink, supported by Churchill, who declared the NHS should be “free at the point of delivery, according to need not ability to pay.”
Drones can track down criminals on the run. That is more cost-effective than sending a police helicopter.
These archaic machines cause NHS patients to miss appointments, hospitals to lose records, and cost millions of pounds in paper storage each year.
Whilst most drivers are pillars of the community, recent events have shown how regulation and protections can be tightened.
From transport tech and data-driven healthcare, to creative enterprises and the services sector, we are forging ahead.
“Our adversaries are increasingly using cyber-attacks, subversion, and information operations to challenge us and the rules-based international order.”
At the moment, there are many areas where farmers cannot use new technologies. These will increasingly feed not only our consumers but also the world’s poorest ones.
If we do not update the rules governing our elections and referendums, their credibility faces a perfect storm of threats.
To date, they have had to endure a parade of candidates speaking to Westminster, from Westminster, about Westminster.