You probably won’t have read much about these announcements over the past few weeks
After 115 days without food, activist and mathematics professor Laila Soueif speaks about her British-Egyptian son’s ongoing detention and her determination to secure his release
Murdoch’s newspaper group apologises for 15 years of privacy breaches in landmark settlement – but the Prime Minister’s office quickly dismisses calls for a fresh investigation
It blows a hole in the party’s claim to have ‘fixed the roof while the sun is shining’
Trump is taking the US in a dark direction and we must not let ourselves be dragged along with him, argues Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer
The Labour Government is heading for an electoral reckoning unless it backs a more proportional voting system, argues Neal Lawson
Both the UK economy and the new Labour Government needs an urgent shot in the arm. Could this be the solution?
Keir Starmer’s biographer Tom Baldwin on how the national broadcaster has helped to amplify Elon Musk’s lies
The relentless criticism of the Labour Government from a hostile media is completely at odds with its record and the historical context
Russell Jones looks back at how the ‘worst parliament in history’ came to its calamitous conclusion
Fed by an irresponsible media, neither voters nor political leaders are willing to accept the trade-offs inherent in fiscal choices, writes Chris Grey in his monthly column for the Byline Times print edition
The Prime Minister’s acceptance of right-wing economic orthodoxy is pushing his party and the country towards disaster, argues his former adviser Simon Fletcher
You won’t have read much about these announcements over the past few weeks
Less than 5% of people with learning disabilities are employed, while 86% want to be. The Government must think about which Brits it values as being worthy of work
The Government’s new plan for welfare has a fundamental flaw at its heart, argues Izzy Wightman
Sex workers in the UK speak out after Belgium grants people in the industry employment rights in historic first
The Prime Minister’s new target-driven ‘Plan for Change’ is based on a badly outdated view of how the modern world actually works, argues Neal Lawson
The Prime Minister is blocking reform after the House of Commons voted in favour of a more representative voting system
You don’t have to look very hard to see that Starmer’s Government has been far more active than the Daily Mail is telling you
The treaty represents a rare victory for international law and the “rules-based order” the UK is meant to stand for
The UK Government is dominated by figures from a discredited past at a time of radical global change, argues Neal Lawson
Europe must wake up to the growing security threats posed by Russia and the new Trump administration
The mother of late TV presenter Caroline Flack calls for Starmer to “find the courage” to restart it as exclusive new YouGov polling finds public wants reform
Donald Trump’s second victory in the United States is a warning sign to democracies everywhere of the centrality of emotions – and their manipulation – in the new politics of gross inequality and psychic rebellion fuelled by tech-driven alternative realities, writes Hardeep Matharu
Hysteria around Labour’s VAT on private schools and inheritance tax on farms are not the existential threats they’ve been made out to be in the press
The UK needs a revolution in the way politics and democracy works – starting with proportional representation, writes Neal Lawson
The Conservative Party’s new leader has the potential to do a lot of damage, whether or not she wins the next general election
Reeves’ budget only looks radical if you believe the Conservative spin that their own plans were anything other than a cynical scorched earth tactic by a desperate government that knew it was going to lose
The unspoken truth of Rachel Reeves’ Budget is that leaving the EU has left Britain permanently worse off
Maintaining the £3bn tax break for motorists has been a long-term campaign of The Sun newspaper
‘The argument against labour rights is politically flawed, because it ignores the impact of having a large number of workers in insecure and bad jobs’
Starmer’s Government has an opportunity to reverse years of Conservative attacks on impartiality and independence – our democracy requires it to act beyond narrow party interests, former BBC producer and journalist Patrick Howse writes
The Foreign Secretary David Lammy is being urged to go much further in response to violence by Israeli settlers