We have the mandate and the majority. Let’s make 2020 a year of progress and work now to set up a decade we can all be proud of.
Its success in innovative industries is based on an R&D-intensive, novel-product-based, export-oriented business model. One that the UK should adopt.
I am arguing that there is some limited space for radical candour with the electorate on the difficult choices facing the country in the 2020s.
The only sustainable route to reducing carbon emissions will come precisely from the sorts of innovation that drive the “fairytales” that she bemoans.
We need to redefine our purpose, move forward with our global partners, unite the UK – and defeat Corbynism.
Britain Beyond Brexit, a New Conservative Vision for a New Generation, is published today by the CPS.
Governments are more likely to help create conditions for it by seeking economic growth, rather than well-being.
This is a contribution to the debate – now let’s see what the candidates offer during the week ahead.
We need to give innovators space to succeed (and fail), citizens more power online and off, and keep our country competitive.
The second article in a three-part series explaining why adapting to a society and economy shaped by technology is key.
The battlegrounds of the next election, as well as the wider economy, are being shaped by new technology.
The march of technology stops for nothing – not even Brexit – and the businesses and regions which embrace it will be the winners of the future.
These opportunities and options should start far earlier in children’s lives, enabling a twin-track of skills training.
This is the final article in a three-part series on using technology to boost our economy after Brexit.