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 said her reshuffle would make her government “more like the country it serves,” but, as the Sutton Trust showed, the percentage of her Cabinet who went to private, fee-paying schools actually increased, from 30 per cent to 34 per cent, as against 7 per cent of the general population who are privately educated.
Her new chair of the Conservative Party, Brandon Lewis (pictured), has an even greater commitment to private schools.
Lewis himself was privately educated at the independent Forest School, then went to Buckingham University — one of the five private universities in Britain — which has close links to Margaret Thatcher, who helped its launch and became university chancellor there when she left office in 1992.
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 Global Leaders’ Meeting on Women begins in Beijing, it’s clear that China has fulfilled its commitments set 30 years ago and delivered amazing progress in women's education and equality, writes YU BOKUN
It is rather strange that Labour continues to give prestigious roles to inappropriate, controversy-mired businessmen who are also major Tory donors. What could Labour possibly be hoping to get out of it, asks SOLOMON HUGHES


