Alamy/Brian Harris
Even though Keir Starmer is more comfortable being associated with the leaders of the last Labour government than Jeremy Corbyn or Ed Miliband, this is not a return to the past.
The number of students going to university has increased significantly over the past 25 years.
Matej Kastelic/Shutterstock
The government in England is promoting apprenticeships rather than “rip-off” university degrees.
shutterstock.
Sarnia | Shutterstock
If some progress was made in the early 2000s, austerity measures from 2010 saw the push for equality, diversity or inclusion die down.
When speaking, Emmanual Macron is the champion of “en même temps” (at the same time), putting ideas that are normally opposed directly together.
AFP
Freshly re-elected in April, France’s president lost his parliamentary majority in June. So who is Emmanuel Macron and what defines his paradoxical politics?
LANDMARK MEDIA / Alamy Stock Photo
The types of people who gathered daily to watch Neighbours are the same who backed Tony Blair in 1997.
Joe Biden: running for president again.
Shutterstock
As Joe Biden runs for US president, the strange tale of how he helped shape the UK Labour party.
There is a fallout between alliance partners the South African Communist Party and the governing ANC.
EPA/Kim Ludbrook
The South African Communist Party’s decision to compete in an election against its alliance partner the ANC is a watershed moment for them, with important implications for the country.
PA/Adam Butler
The Conservative PM is often seen as a failure, but the odds were stacked against him from the start.
On the trail in 1997.
PA Archive/PA Images
Things could only get better. Or could they?
Tam Dalyell (1932-2017).
PA/Chris Young
The unique parliamentarian who coined the West Lothian question.
PA/Pat Hurst
Jeremy Corbyn’s supporters are holding a parallel event to the official Labour summit. Can these protestors ever come in from the fringe?
Reuters/Stephen Hird
It’s unfair to call Lord Adonis a political ‘Judas’. He’s a policy specialist who has always aimed for the centre ground.
Not everyone thinks Corbyn needs spin.
Toby Melville/Reuters
Corbyn appears to see public relations as the pioneers of the profession in the UK saw it, as an add-on to civic society.
The old politics is the new politics.
Reuters/Peter Nicholls
Elected in the party’s biggest ever wipeout, Labour’s 1983 intake of MPs could be about to notch up its third party leader.
Pick me! I’ve got an idea!
PA/Stefan Rousseau
A run down of what each has to say on the top issue of the summer.
The prospect of left-wing frontrunner Jeremy Corbyn becoming Labour Party leader is shaking up Britain’s political establishment.
flickr/Garry Knight
The emergence of ageing left-winger Jeremy Corbyn as the unlikely frontrunner in the Labour Party leadership contest signals that many British voters reject what politics has become.
That halo’s wearing a bit thin, David.
PA/Chris Ison
Why do people continue to think the former Foreign Secretary would have made a better leader than his brother, Ed?
Len’s got a plan for Labour.
'Facundo Arrizabalaga/EPA'
Len McCluskey needs to snap back to reality, if he wants to see Labour in government.
Labour shouldn’t lurch back to the Blairite camp.
EPA/Richard Lewis
The centrist strategy that worked for New Labour won’t work for the party going forward.
Backed by Blair?
Facundo Arrizabalaga/EPA
Labour needs to focus on leadership, policies and image, if it’s to bounce back.