NHS Professionals has apologised to prospective non-healthcare vaccinators, who undertook hours of training yet haven’t been able to find work
Customers are estimated to have lost £90 million, showing why proper regulation is more essential than ever, says John Lubbock
Nafeez Ahmed reports on how an official counter-extremism advisor is on the pay-roll of funders behind far-right hate groups
Austerity failed Britain during the COVID-19 crisis, but the Government has not yet signalled a bold new vision for the UK’s economy, says Jonathan Portes
Examining key appointments to Ofcom, the BBC and the Prevent review, Hamza Ali Shah argues that the Government appears to be more intent on rewarding intolerance to Muslims than investigating it
Nearly two-thirds of students classified as ‘disadvantaged’ received no help at all, in the form of mentors or laptops for online learning at home, the National Audit Office says
Hardeep Matharu explores how the tragedy of Sarah Everard’s death has captured public attention in a way many other killings of women have not – and the questions this raises for us all
The company has won two more contracts worth £46.1 million, Sam Bright reports
CJ Werleman speaks to the director-general of the International Committee of the Red Cross about a new report laying bare the immense human suffering caused by 10 years of conflict in Syria
Sian Norris reports on reaction to the controversial Police, Crime, Courts and Sentencing Bill and accusations it ‘dismisses the needs of survivors’
Kat Cary explains how women have been met with doubt and hostility, even when organising a peaceful act of remembrance
Footage from Saturday’s vigil for women threatened on the streets and Sunday’s protest appear to show anti-lockdown campaigners pushing their own agenda, Sian Norris reports
London’s police force has faced repeated questions about its role in sexual misconduct allegations in recent years, reports Sam Bright
Brian Cathcart argues that, if the discussion on how to tackle racism in the press only focuses again on the recruitment of journalists from minority communities, the chance for systemic change will be missed
Mike Buckley reports on how the Government has wasted a year in providing COVID-19 protection for nearly nine million pupils
Women who attended Saturday’s disrupted vigil in Clapham Common share with Sian Norris their experiences of collective mourning and police aggression
With a Government crackdown on protests to be voted on imminently, frontline NHS doctor Meenal Viz explores how powerful taking a stand can be in speaking truth to power and enacting change
The council has committed to producing a dedicated financial report for the first time since the disaster, as many survivors and the bereaved say that funds have been squandered
CJ Werleman explains why the new US President is pivoting his foreign policy toward the challenge of China
Exclusive to print for a month, Peter Oborne shares his observations of the political scene, at home and abroad. Here is his February column
Martin Baker explores how the Coronavirus pandemic has hastened the rise and demise of digital and physical currencies
Jonathan Lis explains how English exceptionalism has forced the rest of the United Kingdom to decide between its identities
With the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, the British Royal Family had an opportunity to change itself and, in a small way, to change Britain – but didn’t take it, says Jonathan Lis
The company owner has donated more than £2.5 million to the Tory Party in recent years
In response to the news that a police officer has been arrested on suspicion of the murder of Sarah Everard, Sian Norris reflects on why women have responded with such sadness and rage
In the wake of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s treatment by large sections of the tabloid press, Brian Cathcart argues that too many decent reporters have been turning a blind eye for too long and that it is time for change
Thomas G Clark argues that Labour’s branding focus on winning back the ‘Red Wall’ shows how lost it is
Professor John Denham dissects a peculiarity on the 2021 English Census, which could have potentially damaging repercussions
Rupert Read analyses how Brexit could be implemented in an eco-friendly way
John Mitchinson explores the connection between liberty and fair play
The distortion of truth, for political and commercial gain, underpins the British newspaper industry, says Sam Bright
Hardeep Matharu explores how the Duke and Duchess of Sussex have exposed the real power structures in Britain – now in full destructive, neo-imperial retreat
Adam Hamdy argues that a year of fighting COVID-19 has revealed the lazy, superior assumptions of the West and Britain in particular
Henry Anderson delves into Farage’s financial newsletter, revealing its ties to an EU-based company and fake health news
Paying inflated rates to companies without competition, Matt Hancock bought a vast excess of equipment, official records reveal
CJ Werleman looks at the ways the conspiracy theory persists despite the facts, and how it is rapidly merging with white evangelical Christian nationalism
A virtual protest organised by Spain’s Women Of The World Platform is part of a global assault on women’s and LGBTIQ rights, reports Sian Norris
Data analysed by Byline Times reveals that firms supporting the International Women’s Day campaign have gender pay gaps of between 10-38%, Sian Norris reports
A protest march to Washington D.C. will bring together radical feminists and activists linked to anti-abortion groups in protest of LGBTIQ rights, reports Sian Norris
Amongst the politics swirling around the Coronavirus crisis, Britain must find time for collective grief, says Stefan Simanowitz