Category: Blog

Blog
Tom Collinge

Explainer: The Government’s Rwanda ‘Deal’

This week the government of the United Kingdom has spent most of its energy putting forward and defending a new bill which it says will enable the deportation of illegal immigrants to Rwanda.  Labour do not back the plan, Yvette Cooper has said the Party will “replace” the scheme, but

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Blog
Cllr Hazel Simmons

Improving infrastructure is key to Labour’s G7 growth mission

The first words in Labour’s mission to secure the highest growth in the G7 are “Britain has immense potential”. I couldn’t agree more with this and firmly believe that improving infrastructure up and down the country will unlock the jobs and productivity growth needed for us to kick on as

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Blog
Cllr Anntoinette Bramble

How can we help? Reforming financial assistance in local government

I was born and raised in Hackney. I have been a teaching assistant, nursery nurse, an assistant headteacher, a councillor, and now Deputy Mayor of our borough. I have seen how Hackney and our communities were empowered under a Labour Government, and I have seen how they have been systematically

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Blog
Gerard Rinse Oosterwijk

Shock Wilders win leaves Dutch progressives in despair

In the run-up to the 22 November election for the Dutch Parliament, the Tweede Kamer, pollsters predicted a tight result. Several parties were competing to become the biggest and potentially deliver the new prime minister after 13 years of Mark Rutte’s hegemony. Very few predicted the landslide win by the

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Blog
Louise Ellman

Why is Hamas’s sexual violence of October 7th being ignored?

The UN’s International Day for Elimination of Violence Against Women and Girls on 25 November is a time to face reality: the atrocities of Hamas gunmen in on October 7 included the widespread rape of women and girls. With most of the rape victims subsequently murdered, a full account may

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Blog
Mark Galeotti

What can Labour do with Russia?

Next year’s general election is likely to centre on domestic issues rather than Russia and its invasion of Ukraine, not least as it is hard so far to see any substantive policy differences with the Conservatives on this issue, beyond a possibly performative demand that the government do more of

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Blog
Roger Liddle

Review: Richard Toye’s Age of Hope

Richard Toye’s Age of Hope is the first major study of the post war Attlee government to be published since 1997. It stands alongside the two much earlier classic overviews of this period, Kenneth Morgan’s Labour in Power (1984)and Peter Hennessy’s Never Again (1992), but benefits from a longer and equally

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Blog
Tom McNeil

AI Ethics in Law Enforcement: Navigating Innovation and Oversight

The shiny facade of the recent ‘global AI safety summit’ doesn’t offset the government’s serious lack of ambition on ‘safety and ethics’ in the UK. This broad ambition to lead the diplomatic effort on AI, is honourable in its own right. Dystopian depictions of our future, envision AI attacking our

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