This week's column: choose your university wisely
Post-1992 providers have been rapidly expanding business, law and computing courses. Yet the returns for students 5 years after graduating from these courses have, to date, been woeful
1/4
It's absolutely bonkers how much more marginal Britain has become.
With most results in, the average seat majority looks to be about 6,700, down from 11,200 in 2019.
We have a Labour landslide, yet at the constituency level seats are tighter than any point since 1945 #GE24
🇵🇱 My @thetimes column: Poland’s economic miracle
12 out of 17 Polish regions are now richer than West Wales. It has faster internet, cheaper electricity and more high speed rail than Britain
When it comes to regional development it’s the UK, not Poland, that needs to catch up
NEW: Is Britain’s welfare too generous?
Most countries pay workers who lose their jobs more than half of their previous salaries.
In Britain, unemployment benefits are *12%* of the average wage
@thetimes
1/5
NEW: Who are Britain's 9m benefits claimants – and is our system fair?
Some MPs believe benefits are too high. Here are some facts about the UK's welfare system. A thread 🧵📊 @thetimes
1/12
thetimes.co.uk/article/the-re…
NEW: If the Tories lose Wakefield on Thursday, one reason will be that women are set to vote 2 to 1 against them. Why are women in Britain becoming more left wing – and why didn't it happen sooner?
My analysis in tomorrow's @thesundaytimes
1/8
thetimes.co.uk/article/how-wo…
NEW: One in six Tory voters are likely to be dead by the next election
Assuming nothing else changes, the total impact of demographic change alone would mean +29 seats for Labour and -34 for the Conservatives
@Smyth_Chris@thetimesthetimes.com/article/ab2692…
🧵NEW: Who are private schools for in modern Britain?
Private schools are keen to suggest their pupils are from middle class families, who would have to pull them out if Labour stuck 20% VAT on fees.
The data paints a different picture… @thetimesthetimes.co.uk/article/ca7545…
NEW: For the first time in decades, the number of young women not working to look after family is starting to rise
As 1/3 of women barely break even after returning to work, Britain's childcare costs are pushing women out of work
@PregnantScrewed
Interesting. The number of London Covid patients has risen about 50% in two weeks – but around 44% of that rise has been people admitted for other non-Covid reasons...