Traditional, hierarchical attitudes to work are going to stifle the economic growth that Liz Truss so craves, argues Rachel Morris
Despite the racial and ethnic diversity of the Prime Minister’s top team, this counts for little if ordinary people of colour continue to suffer, says Taj Ali
Liz Truss’ proposal to end the cap on bankers’ bonuses is unlikely to spur economic growth, reports Sam Bright
Sam Bright explores the forces propelling the escalating demonisation of ‘woke’ Britain
Thomas Perrett tracks the administrative missteps that have incubated the current energy crisis
Martin Shaw considers why so many politicians of colour have been appointed to top ministerial roles by white Conservative leaders
Rachel Morris tracks the burgeoning influence of ‘free market’ think tanks on Conservative politics
For the first time since Harriet Harman took on the role in 1997, there will be no minister responsible specifically for women – with a man taking on the role of Equalities Minister
Alan Pretsell explains the human cost of privatisation and deregulation
The promotion of MPs who have voted against abortion rights is a worrying precedent, as is the closeness of the new Government to reactionary US think tanks, argues Sian Norris
As Downing Street welcomes its third female Prime Minister, Rachel Morris reflects on social and media expectations of certain women leaders
Boris Johnson’s flagship regional redistribution project has stalled and Liz Truss is likely to send it into reverse, writes Sam Bright
Lauren Crosby Medlicott speaks to modern slavery experts to understand the impact of Priti Patel’s Home Office on victims
The Government’s own data suggests that Britain’s fossil fuel lobbies want to use the cost of living crisis to keep themselves afloat, writes Nafeez Ahmed
Otto English has got his hands on Boris Johnson’s successor’s inaugural speech as PM
As the UK stands on the edge of a cliff, former diplomat Alexandra Hall Hall assesses what the boy who wanted to be ‘world king’ achieved when he fulfilled his relentless ambition
Jack Mosse unpicks the flawed understanding of national debt that has pervaded the Conservative leadership contest and Tory economic policy for a number of years
Orla McAndrew speaks to students about their fears for the future as the Government once again turns a blind eye to young people
Use of outdated security documents has escalated concerns about a ‘poor organisational culture’ in the nuclear regulator, reports Wil Crisp
The Corporation does not know how to respond to the dangerous populism we find ourselves in, writes former BBC journalist Patrick Howse
Rachel Morris considers how distortion and evasion are being used in the rhetoric of the Conservative leadership race to deceive the public
A Labour MP says the Prime Minister and his friend tried to stop him from asking questions about lavish parties held at the newspaper proprietor’s Italian villa, reports Adam Bienkov
Julian Petley explores how the outgoing Prime Minister embodies the triumph of the Conservative political-media nexus
The Labour leader needs to convince a weary public that he has the bold ideas to divert the UK from its damaging path under the Conservatives, argues Chris Painter
From climate change to the cost of living, ordinary people are being forced to compensate for an administration in paralysis, says Lisa Young
In terms of its access to the world, the UK is struggling to keep up with its peers, observes Professor Christopher Phillips
Brexit is compounding, not relieving, the UK’s slurry of economic and environmental problems, says Rachel Morris
Paul Connew reflects on the Prime Minister’s long, scandal-ridden rise to the top of British politics
Taj Ali reports on the ‘Enough is Enough’ campaign, that is attempting to give a voice to those suffering from the worst excesses of the cost of living crisis