The Department for Education has had a year to work out how to prevent a repeat of last year. It has rolled over.
‘We’ve seen a year where students, schools, the whole nation has had to deal with incredibly large challenges’, he says.
Yet the Chancellor comfortably holds on to his silver-medal spot, despite sharing in the u-turn.
They claim mandatory jabs are an “infringement on personal freedom”. Never mind when they locked students down in halls last year.
The Department of Education wants to address school disruption by “reducing pressure” on students.
Our introduction to: what each Bill is, the politics of it, who’s responsible, arguments for and against – and a controversy rating out of ten.
Javid comes straight in at fifth place; Williamson’s score is in freefall; and the podium positions are unchanged.
The Health Secretary now languishes very near the bottom, while Truss secures her sixth month at the top and Johnson recovers a little.
Plus: The North London polenta-eating intelligentsia can’t cope with a North East accent. And: A secret wedding is possible.
If not we risk failing to empower people to train or upskill for good jobs, and losing the economic growth our nation needs.
Should he be handcuffed under public restraint, like a suspect watched by Priti Patel? Or freed to run wild through Alpine meadows, like Julie Andrews?
The Government should instead look into reviewing the Equality Act, which makes these institutions subject to its harassment provision.
In Britain, we don’t ‘do God’ too much. Should we go to church, most are not C of E, but C and E – Christmas and Easter.
Furthermore, they should be more proactive in defending the financial interests of their members.