Plus: I am seriously considering stepping back from Twitter. And: the play you must see.
Plus: Starmer needs to bring Cooper and Benn into his top team. But will they even want the jobs?
Ministers may be right in assuming that nothing like the full complement of those entitled to settle do so. But what if they’re wrong?
Japan, Korea, Taiwan and now China, have all invested heavily in new technologies – through government support for new industries.
The Government got “Brexit done” – and now wants to deliver on its pledge to spread “opportunity across the whole United Kingdom”.
Likewise, if a cruise ship wants proof of vaccination before you board, it should have the right to. Here’s why.
The app was never about absolute free speech, but promoting conversations between different political groups.
Plus: What I discovered when I interviewed James Comey. And why I can’t think of a single interesting anecdote or conclusion from Tim Sainsbury’s memoir.
State action to regulate social media is unproblematic in principle, but deeply problematic in practice – and the law of unintended consequences applies.
One of our best selling papers recently ran a piece promoting the views of an “NHS worker” who claimed hospitals were “empty” and Covid was a “hoax”.
Identifying heart-warming human interest stories boosts our councillors’ name recognition.
The Brady amendment is part of the developing story of a clash between leaders and backbenchers over Party management, culture and MPs’ status.
But his new book conveys very well what is wrong with social media, and how it might be put right.
The UK has a lot to learn from the recent regulatory punch-up between Facebook and the Australian government.