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
EARLIER this week we saw Liz Truss announce her new flagstream policy — to cut the wages of anyone in the public sector that doesn’t live and work in south-east England.
Rishi Sunak of course is no better than Truss — while they tear chunks out of each other, neither of them has an actual plan to help our communities.
Just last week we saw evidence that despite their levelling-up promises and empty rhetoric, the reality is that the gap in public spending between northern England and London doubled between 2019-21 — growing from a difference of £1,513 to £3,008 per person, according to the Institute for Public Policy Research.
Roger McKenzie talks to general secretary of Unison CHRISTINA McANEA about the impact of the cost-of-living crisis on members, the local government funding emergency and the threat of Reform UK
We cannot refuse to abolish the unjustifiable two-child benefit cap that pushes children into poverty while finding billions of pounds for defence spending — the membership and the public expect better from Labour, writes JON TRICKETT MP
Climate justice and workers’ rights movements are uniting to make the rich pay for our transition to a green economy, writes assistant general secretary of PCS JOHN MOLONEY, ahead of a major demonstration on September 20


