Perhaps, against all the odds, we will find a way of muddling through and preserve our broad church for a time after the era of Brexit has passed.
Five task forces cover energising our economy, transforming our public services, building a fairer society, sustaining our democracy and shaping a Global Britain.
It has fascinated me since growing up in a single parent family on the outskirts of Belfast – before attending the lowest-performing secondary school in Northern Ireland.
Rather than allowing the greatest opportunity for each individual to excel, the educational establishment want to hold them back – in the interests of “levelling attainment”.
Setting or streaming tends to benefit high-attaining pupils, but this can be to the detriment of lower-attaining learners.
Research shows that investment in the early years of a child’s life is the most effective way to improve his or her long-term life chances.
Among seven-year-olds in 2012, 24 per cent of free school meal recipients did not reach the expected level in reading, versus 10 per cent of their better off peers.
Those who turn a blind eye to MPs being labelled mutineers are playing with a fire which will eventually consume them too.
We need to train more teachers if the Government is to ensure that every child has the opportunity to fulfil their potential.
The Chancellor should commit to a Family Services Transformation Fund of £100 million over four years to help relationship support and post-separation support.
Voters aren’t focusing on the constitution, but on the SNP’s record in Government. We must be ready to capitalise on this by telling then the truth.
David Lammy and the Social Mobility Commission both made a big splash on the basis of weak evidence and flawed assumptions.
There are better ways to spend money on education than on tax breaks for very expensive profit-making institutions.
We must embrace such issues as poverty, families, prisons and young people.