Ed Miliband has his work cut-out on economy
Labour may be firing off policies, but they still have a long way to go before they win the public’s trust on the economy.
1,591 items found
Imagine a lieutenant-colonel in the Saudi Arabian army. Now imagine a conceptual artist from the same country. Put them together and you get Abdulnasser Gharem, who has his first big show in London.
A Muslim free school in Derby, which was closed during an Ofsted inspection amid health and safety concerns, reopens.
With 111 bodies found so far, the final victim count in Thursday’s migrant boat tragedy off Italy could reach three times that number. What can be done to prevent similar events in future?
Birmingham children’s services missed opportunities to save three-year-old Keanu Williams in the weeks before he was beaten to death by his mother. A report describes how the child became “invisible”.
David Cameron tells the Conservative conference he wants to create a society built on hard work, tax cuts and enterprise, in which everyone has “the chance to make it”.
David Cameron and Nick Clegg defend Ed Miliband as the Labour leader hits back at the Daily Mail for depicting his late father as “the man who hated Britain”.
Twenty-five hours of free childcare funded by the state. Labour is promising to help working families beat the cost of living crisis – with a higher tax on banks to pay for it.
Labour may be firing off policies, but they still have a long way to go before they win the public’s trust on the economy.
It was a disaster one could have seen coming: Ukip MEP Godfrey Bloom billed to appear at a champagne reception to discuss women in politics… and being asked about his infamous “sluts” comment.
He was the subject of the most iconic image of the 1976 Soweto riots and has been missing in exile for 37 years. But now authorities believe Mbuyisa Makhubu may have turned up in a Canadian prison.
Channel 4 News obtains a letter about Ukip leader Nigel Farage, from his days as a schoolboy, in which teachers are quoted as accusing him of being “racist” and “fascist”.
Health groups welcome plans to turn doctors and nurses into “high-flying” managers under a new government scheme but warn that hospital wards mustn’t be left short-staffed.
Every child in an English infant school will be eligible for a free lunch under a £600m plan revealed by Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg.
With the Scottish referendum one year away, former chancellor Alistair Darling argues against independence and says the UK works because people from across the union pool their resources.
The report into the murder of four-year-old Daniel Pelka by his mother and her partner details how agencies failed to protect him – but omits to blame anyone. So will it make any difference?