Can Starmer save Britain’s lost generation?
Almost 1 million young people are not in education, training or employment
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Almost 1 million young people are not in education, training or employment
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How Britain failed a generation of Neets
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Punishing idlers into work has never produced full employment
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“Scroungers” are back, courtesy of the Conservative party and the right-wing press
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Britain cannot afford to bribe well-off pensioners any longer. Rachel Reeves must invest in the young
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Expanding free school meals is a great policy, but the government does not seem to have accounted for the extra…
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Pre-conference pressure means the policy could be abolished next week. But why has it taken so long?
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Also this week: Fighting for disability rights and Labour at a crossroads.
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The Starmer-Reeves regime is bruised, it needs a new comms strategy.
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We were elected on a mandate for change. After this welfare fiasco, we must return to that mission.
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Instead of parliamentary bust-ups, Scottish politicians have found a novel answer to the benefits bill: silence and inertia.
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Major tax rises by Rachel Reeves at the Budget are now inevitable.
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Labour must get a grip on insurgent backbenchers who oppose its welfare bill.
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The proposed cuts may produce a dire electoral outcome for the government come 2029.
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Keir Starmer’s political authority is now on the line.
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Government figures are telling rebels that this vote will be a confidence matter in Keir Starmer.
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Rebel MPs are unimpressed by the government’s “olive branch”.
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Martin Lewis’s charity has uncovered a false economy within the government’s disability benefit cuts.
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This was a masterclass in bad comms.
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As many as 40 of Keir Starmer’s MPs are threatening to rebel against benefit cuts.
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