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Daily Politics from the New Statesman
Student loans: Should graduates sue the government?
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Britain faces a looming student loan crisis. What can graduates do?
Last week's episode on student loans prompted a flurry of questions. How did it get this bad? Should students sue over mis-sold loans?
Rachel Cunliffe and Anoosh Chakelian answer your questions.
Also in this episode:
- Labour's internal factions explained
- What does Nigel Farage really believe?
- Local government changes: what's really going on
Mentioned in this episode:
Meet the Blue Labour bros, by Morgan Jones
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What is the future for jury trials?
30:40|On Tuesday 10 March, MPs will debate the Courts and Tribunals Bill, in what could be the biggest shakeup of the justice system since the 1970s.To tackle the Crown Court backlog of over 80,000 cases, the government has put forward proposals to radically reform which cases are heard where, including restricting the right to a trial by jury in all but the most serious cases.Sarah Sackman, Minister of State for Courts and Legal Services, speaks to Rachel Cunliffe to discuss the legislation and its potential impact on British justice.
Exclusive: the progressive voters abandoning Labour
20:02|Labour is losing the voters it used to count on, a new study reveals.In the aftermath of the Green Party’s triumph in the Gorton and Denton by-election, and with local elections in London councils and other major cities coming up, Labour is losing the left progressive voters it could once rely on having “nowhere else to go”.Now, the biggest study ever of these voters – shared exclusively with the New Statesman – reveals the true risk to Labour’s future of leaving them behind.This work, done by surveying 10,000 voters and a randomised control trial style approach, has found out who the so-called progressive defectors are, why they’re deserting Labour, and what impact this could have on Labour’s electoral prospects.Anoosh Chakelian is joined by Steve Akehurst of Persuasion UK who co-authored this report with 38 Degrees.
Was Rachel Reeves’ spring statement out of date on arrival?
23:12|Yesterday, the Chancellor Rachel Reeves delivered her spring statement - an economic update - to the commons.With the news completely dominated by conflict in the Middle East, you would be forgiven for not noticing. In fact, many have deduced that this was exactly what the government were hoping for.Anoosh Chakelian is joined by Will Dunn to discuss.
Should the phrase "special relationship" be banned?
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Iran war: Trump is playing into Putin's hands.
23:24|While the US bombs Iran, the Kremlin will see immediate advantages for Russia.Vladimir Putin expressed “deep condolences” to the people of Iran over the killing of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei by US and Israeli forces.The Russian president – currently leading his own brutal and illegal war in Ukraine – condemned what he called Khamenei’s “assassination” as a “cynical violation of all norms of human morality and international law”.Russia and Iran are long-term “strategic partners”. They signed a new treaty in January last year.But while Putin offers consoling words to Iran, the Kremlin will undoubtedly have eyes on the potential benefits to them of a US-Israel war on Russia’s ally.So, is Trump’s war in Iran playing into Russia’s hands?
Does Trump have an endgame in Iran?
45:20|Fiona Hill, former presidential advisor, joins Megan Gibson.
Rare diseases: from lived experience to lasting treatments | Sponsored
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"I'll handle a sea bass however I like" | Anoosh & Will's weekly round-up
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The end of the Starmer project?
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