The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Wed Mar 11, 2026 11:23 pm Out Reforming Reform.Also known as "tinkering at the edges".
Palantir’s NHS England contract ‘opens door to government abuse of power’, health bosses toldWhat does a health justice charity look like? Pages on the various issues of health inequality in the UK? Pages on general world wide health issues, vaccination, access to drugs, that sort of thing?
Health justice charity Medact says data-sharing potential could be used for UK version of US immigration raids
New anti-Muslim hate definition announced by governmenthttps://news.sky.com/story/government-a ... y-13517508
A special representative will also be appointed to help facilitate the understanding and implementation of the definition.
Zubir Ahmed, a health minister, tries not to read the comments under his social media feeds, but sometimes curiosity gets the better of him.Dr Zubir Ahmed is strongly supportive of the government on this issue, you may not be surprised to hear.
After performing a transplant on Christmas Day, the vascular surgeon scanned a post about the operation.
He recalled: “It went viral on the internet, but I have also never seen anything like the abuse. There was one comment that stuck out for me that just said: ‘Thanks for the transplant, now go home.’”
Starmer may face more resignations after release of Mandelson WhatsApp messages, say sourcesResignations from embarrassing WhatsApp messages connected with the pandemic that killed 230,000= zero
PM has apologised for his handling of Peter Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador, but next tranche of files could contain further damaging details
Killer Whale wrote: ↑Thu Mar 12, 2026 7:45 am Showtowt to Wales where all primary age pupils are already entitled to free school dinners thanks to Plaid bending Labour's arm when then were in a hurry to get a budget through.Given the overall level of funding of Wales, this is an impressive thing to have got in the budget.
Miliband unveils plans to speed up nuclear power generation for UKWho's accusing them?
Ministers face accusations of carrying out ‘irresponsible deregulation’ as they push through ‘clean energy’ proposals
However, top environmental planning lawyer Alexa Culver of RSK Wilding said: “No ecologists or environmental specialists were invited to shape these proposals into anything that resembles a ‘win’ for nature.Lawyer objects to the law being cheaper, more as we get it.
“Recently popularised and devastating environmental scandals – like within the water industry – prove that high-stakes regulation is complex and easily manipulated when ‘simplified’ without checks and balances. This was a chance for the government to design resilience into our industrial strategy and the government didn’t take it.”
Youngian wrote: ↑Sat Mar 14, 2026 4:41 pm Hannah Spencer is being crticised for dressing like shite and having messy hair. That's prime minister material if you're right wing. 'Authentic' and 'a character.'The man leading the charge:
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Thu Mar 12, 2026 11:58 amPhillipson has written about the child poverty strategy in the Big Issue.The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Wed Mar 11, 2026 11:23 pm Out Reforming Reform.Also known as "tinkering at the edges".
There's some pretty hard rain heading for new sickness benefit claimants, but the policy towards children seems pretty good.
Every child deserves to understand their world – and know we’re fighting for them.
When I was growing up, there were things I didn’t have words for. I knew that life felt harder for some children than others. I noticed the gaps – who had what, who went without – but I didn’t always understand why. Nobody sat down with me and explained it.
Child poverty is a stain on our country. Almost one in three children in the UK is growing up in relative poverty today. In a typical classroom of 30, that’s around 10 children. Ten children whose ability to learn, to thrive, to simply feel secure is being chipped away – not because of anything they or their families have done wrong, but because the system has failed them.
We know what that failure costs. Children who grow up in poverty are more likely to fall behind at school, less likely to go on to good jobs, and more likely to carry the weight of that hardship into adulthood. In England, by the time children reach the end of secondary school, those growing up in disadvantage are on average nearly 20 months behind in their learning. That is not inevitable. It is a choice - and this government is choosing differently.
In December, we published our child poverty strategy – the most ambitious plan to tackle child poverty in a generation. It will aim to lift 550,000 children out of poverty by the final year of the parliament, the largest expected reduction in a single parliament since records began in the 1990s.
It removes the cruel two-child limit, expands free school meals to every family on universal credit, rolls out free breakfast clubs and Best Start Family Hubs, and puts more support where families need it most.