How to Fix Social Care
10 November 2024
In the Telegraph, the Secret Landlord recounts his surreal conversation with an Energy Performance Certificate assessor who tells him the best way to secure the must-have 'C' rating is to lower his ceiling by 400mm.
On GB News, a Labour Party advisor said he hadn’t heard about the RE teacher in Batley who's still in hiding after showing his students a cartoon of Muhammed three years ago. Is Labour's echo chamber really that small?
Welcome to Pendle, where lockdown didn’t just harm work – it crushed it. With jobs down 26%, the Telegraph's Melissa Lawford explores how local efforts offer hope, but the pandemic’s scars run deep.
With the collapse of Germany’s "traffic light" coalition, Eugyppius explains how we got here and why the political gridlock will persist, no matter who wins the upcoming elections.
Defiant farmers are gearing up to blockade ports, choke supply chains and withhold produce in a backlash against Labour's inheritance tax hike.
To fix social care we need to return to the principles laid down by Florence Nightingale, says Dr Ann Bradshaw – principles recklessly cast aside in the 1980s when nursing began its shift to being a graduate profession.
Meet Sal Naseem, the diversity activist who, as Regional Director of the Independent Office of Police Conduct, decided to open a 'homicide' investigation into Sgt Martyn Blake after he shot Chris Kaba.
A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ‘climate emergency’, public health ‘crises’ and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
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