Category: Blog

Lisa Nandy on left, looking at signpost which reads "future". Backdrop of a map of UK.
Blog
Matt Bevington

“All In”— a signpost, not a roadmap, to a better future

Britain isn’t working. That is the inciting claim of Labour shadow levelling up secretary Lisa Nandy’s new book, All In: How We Build a Country That Works. In the ensuing 200 pages, Nandy lays out a litany of public policy failures that have afflicted the UK in the Thatcher and

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Blue background of outside school gates, pink outline of parent holding the hand of a child on the left hand side of image.
Blog
Adam Cadoo

Repositioning Childcare – A Silver Bullet for Prosperity

Childcare in this country is broken. The UK has the second most expensive childcare costs in the world. The average cost of a full-time nursery place for a 2-year old is just under £14,000 a year, for two-thirds of families this equals the costs of mortgage fees or rent. Childcare

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Clement Attlee, Harold Wilson, Tony Blair and Keri Starmer in line in front of faded image of 10 Downing Street. Text reads "Paul on Politics"
Blog
Paul Richards

A century which proves Labour only wins on the centre-ground

This November marks the one hundred years since the Labour Party became the official opposition to the Tories for the first time. The 1922 general election delivered 142 Labour MPs, as the Liberals split into two, never to form a government again. I’ve written a longer essay on it here. JR

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Blog
Chris Worrall

Where does housing fit into the productivity puzzle?

Our country has faced a productivity slowdown at a level not seen for the last 250 years. This slowdown impacts living standards, investment in public services, and paints a bleak outlook for the level of future tax revenues the Government will be able to spend. Historically, UK productivity growth has

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Taiwan landscape with two emerging mechanical arms and a semiconductor between them.
Blog
Sabina Khan

Semiconductors, where industrial strategy and geopolitics meet

Our everyday lives, wealth and security rely on the tiniest of things – semiconductors. These microchips are essential components in our healthcare, communications including phones and tablets, appliances, computing, clean energy, transport, military and defence systems. You might be surprised to learn though that despite the ubiquity of these technologies

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Blog
Jay Asher

Uganda to Ukraine: 50 Years of British Immigration

50 years ago this year, in 1972, my father and tens of thousands of Ugandan Asians were ordered to leave Uganda by the brutal dictator Idi Amin. In a chilling interview, the journalist Richard Lindley asked “what will happen to these people if they don’t go?” Amin replied, “I think

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An office scene overlayed with a florist, delivery driver and dressmaker.
Blog
Olga Fitzroy

Why Labour Must Champion Small Business

Self-employment and entrepreneurship have traditionally been claimed by the political right, but the truth is, the Tories have long ceased to be the party of business, unless of course it’s their mate’s business and there’s a PPE contract involved. In particular they have abandoned small businesses – failing to listen

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Blog
Paul Richards

Conference for a Shared Future

On the eve of last year’s conference in Brighton, there was a Queen on the throne, a Johnson in Downing Street, and few had heard of Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Now, as we gather in Liverpool, the political landscape that Keir Starmer surveys is changed utterly. As he rehearses his big speech in

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