Ed Miliband and the state
Tonight Ed Miliband will make a speech arguing that the Blairite push for competition, the big market approach continued by the coalition, has reached the end of its productive life.
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When Conservative MP Jacob “The Mogg” Rees-Mogg travelled to the north east with Channel 4 News, he was harangued and rebuffed by locals – and then spent a session as a bingo caller.
Maria von Trapp, the last of the singing children immortalised in the musical The Sound of Music, dies at the age of 99. Channel 4 News looks back at her life.
Tonight Ed Miliband will make a speech arguing that the Blairite push for competition, the big market approach continued by the coalition, has reached the end of its productive life.
US Secretary of State John Kerry says America will help Iraq fight al-Qaeda-linked militants – but not with troops – after the government loses control of the key city of Fallujah.
The 1979 one-child law has left an ageing population and a gender imbalance. On Friday, the Chinese lawmakers announced they will allow families to have two children.
Computer hackers and tech security experts are listening in to the subtle noises your computer makes to figure out how to crack complex security codes.
A cross-party joint parliamentary committee recommends giving prisoners serving under a year the right to vote, against a strong swell of opposition.
Whoever is behind a global quest for the world’s best code-crackers has got the cyber elite hooked. Is it a recruiting tool for the CIA? Or their hacktivist enemies Anonymous? Or a cult for nerds?
Actor and former footballer Vinnie Jones reveals both he and his wife are battling skin cancer.
Sir John Chilcot would dearly like to get the row with Number 10 over Tony Blair’s Cabinet minutes and contacts with President Bush sorted before Christmas.
It’s something I’ve longed to see all my adult life. An element that was once synonymous with power – superpower in fact: plutonium.
David Tennant’s widely-praised Richard II will be broadcast live from the RSC to cinemas on Wednesday. The former Dr Who actor says it gives people “the chance of being live in the theatre”.
Humans have been making maps for at least 14,000 years, when one was scratched on a cave wall in Barcelona. But could new technology spell the end of this ancient tool?
Add them up, and the pauses from Sir Brian Leveson at his culture select committee hearing may have taken up longer than the answers.
Nick Clegg will close the economy debate on Monday but Vince Cable will not be chipping in with a helpful speech, indeed he will not be in the conference chamber.