The fifth piece in our series this week about what the Tory Manifesto should look like.
Our pledge has been to look first to these former industrial sites, to reclaim them and clean them up, when developers come knocking on the door.
A free resource created by left-wing campaigners is nonetheless a useful opportunity for grassroots Tory press officers to up their game.
The UK is very well-placed to make the most of a technological boom age – except for one great and persisting tech weakness: a shortage of trained people.
The new Chancellor should stick to the basics of cutting taxes, spending more on education and rebalancing growth outside of London.
While there is no shortage of ideas, there has been a shortage of leadership. We need a Prime Minister who will take us through Brexit and confront the challenges beyond.
The second article in a three-part series explaining why adapting to a society and economy shaped by technology is key.
Universities have generally had an excellent decade, but the rest of the system has not. It’s time to correct the imbalance.
These opportunities and options should start far earlier in children’s lives, enabling a twin-track of skills training.
It is utterly confusing to provide 12,000 course options at Level 3 or below. The system must be reformed.
Practical skills such as bricklaying, electrical work, carpentry, and plumbing, can be taught alongside GCSEs.
All I am trying to do is give impetus to a national conversation about how our education system should prepare our young people for the future.
Shifting the focus to FE is not only the right thing to do, but would send a powerful message.
Not being white remains the number one demographic predictor of not voting Tory.