Our new initiative in South Holland will inspire children from disadvantaged backgrounds that they can succeed.
If Conservatives believe in anything, it’s the chance to work hard and get on. Gaining experience in a workplace is crucial for social mobility.
The Treasury should hold one as the year rolls on, along the lines of that undertaken by Canada’s government during the 1990s.
Lockdown has taken a significant toll on the younger generation, and we need help to make up for lost time.
For all the Government’s devaluing reputation for competence, the party hasn’t yet shaken off the Corbyn era legacy.
A major part of the problem is high tax rates driven by borrowing for higher education courses that they’d be better off not taking.
He has seen the SNP hold out for a week before swallowing teachers’ impossibly rosy predicted grades in full – and clearly thinks he can do better.
The new zone proposals will take away the effective monopoly of the big developers, allowing a genuine market to deliver for people.
A Community Foundation in the county helps the old with insulation improvements and the young to turn away from knife crime.
We should have a laser-like focus on reducing the tax burden, instead of relying on nannying to get us off of our bottoms.
We have a university system where 34 per cent of graduates don’t get graduate jobs and which subsidises unlimited courses in media studies.
The world of work has moved on, so that training, and indeed retraining, needs to happen not just for 18 year olds, but everyone throughout their lives.
Poor, white, working-class children are the group most in need to help. But theirs is not a fashionable cause.
Never underestimate the power of Labour. Its message of helping the underdog and the poor is enduring, still popular and extremely potent.
This policy threatens their work, training and future. The Government should think again.