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By Tubby Isaacs
#103903
I don’t know how you pivot away from this US tech. I don’t see this as being an overly Atlanticist thing. While lots of the “sclerotic EU” stuff is merely demographics, there seems to have been a long term failure on tech. I expect Mario Draghi has some ideas.

With tech, it’s basically what’s called “Wimbledonisation”. The UK can do well out of being the host (of the tennis tournament, or tech investment) but the top players are foreign.

It’s a useful term, first coined of the City of London.
By Youngian
#103948
Steve Richards on the digital ID U-turn as an example of what's going wrong with this government. It doesn't bother arguing the advantages of policies which are then dropped after they are announced.
The country needs serious government after Johnson and Truss's tomfoolery. But I'm getting the feeling if you nominated Keir to be Santa at a kid's Christmas party he'd come in a Grim Reaper costume by mistake.

By Youngian
#103951
So am I as its fixable self inflicted weaknesses that are dragging the government's popularity down. The list of positive policy initiatives introduced in 18 months already outstrip five years of the previous lot. But no one knows about them, Labour can't spend the next three years like Corbyn's supporters blaming the meeja.
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#103973
This was pretty bad, in fairness. Most of it is actually going ahead, and should be handy, despite the bollocks about taking money from cops on the streets from the allegedly grown up Lib Dems. Just not the bit that was the main reason put forward by the Government for it.
User avatar
By The Weeping Angel
#103983
I suppose they'll get a kicking for this as well.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c5yvldj47v9o
The government has pulled an amendment to its Hillsborough Law following a backlash from campaigners and some Labour MPs.

The draft legislation would introduce a legal obligation for public authorities to co-operate with and tell the truth to inquiries.

But bereaved families raised concerns that MI5 and MI6 officers could be exempted from disclosing information, after the government put forward an amendment that would have made doing so subject to the approval of the head of their service.

The government will no longer put this proposal to a vote on Monday, with a spokesperson saying it would continue to work with all parties to strengthen the bill "without compromising national security".

The move was welcomed by the Hillsborough Law Now campaign group, which said it would "engage further with government to ensure the bill fully applies to the security services whilst not jeopardising national security".

The proposed law - named after the football stadium in Sheffield where a deadly crush occurred in 1989 - aims to make the security services more accountable for failings. The government amendment sought to balance this with protecting confidential information.

Ministers were facing a potential rebellion from Labour MPs, with around 30 backing a proposal by Liverpool Labour MP Ian Byrne that would ensure the legislation applied fully to security service personnel.
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