Fownhope’s Heart of Oak Society traces its roots to the age of friendly societies, when communities provided their own safety net. Its anniversary celebrations reveal a tradition still very much alive, says MARK SEDDON
THERESA MAY has made some noises about the hurt caused by the banks, but her government is still too close to the City to do anything about it.
They are so close to the banks that one of May’s ministers — one of the ministers in charge of Brexit, no less — came into government as a servant of a Spanish banker. He has left government to serve the same banker, almost without comment.
In her “social justice” speech at the recent Tory conference, May agonised about how “the effects of the financial crisis — nearly a decade of low growth, stagnating wages and pay restraint — linger.”
While politicians fixate on defence budgets, the real answers lie in peace-building and economic justice, says ALAN SIMPSON
Martin Taylor, the hedge-fund multimillionaire who has poured millions into pushing Labour rightwards, helped finance Lucy Powell’s supposedly dissenting campaign — suggesting her victory was not the ‘soft-left’ rebellion some have claimed, says SOLOMON HUGHES
As the PM and his chief of staff’s blunders have mounted up, ANDREW MURRAY wonders who among Labour’s diminished ‘soft left’ might make a bid for the leadership
SOLOMON HUGHES asks whether Labour ‘engaging with decision-makers’ with scandalous records of fleecing the public is really in our interests


