Plus: America, under its next president, is facing unprecedented threats
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Tuesday, November 12, 2024 |
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| Wes he can: Good news from the NHS | The most important news of the day is a research paper by the Institute for Fiscal Studies that finds NHS hospital productivity is increasing. In the year before the election, hospital activity increased faster than staffing. Productivity is still below pre-pandemic levels, but the improvement "shows that future increases are possible, and perhaps starts to assuage worries about long-term scarring from the Covid-19 pandemic", say the IFS authors. They also point out that, since July, Wes Streeting, the health secretary, has ended the strikes, "which will provide a one-off productivity boost". The IFS goes on to praise the chancellor: "We have long argued that a shortage of capital investment could in part explain recent productivity challenges; at the autumn Budget, Rachel Reeves prioritised NHS capital investment, a welcome move that ought to deliver future benefits." That is good news for the nation's health as well as for Labour's prospects at the next election. | | | Which two countries end in T? | Answer at the bottom of today's email | |
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| | PM's former chief of staff was to be 'envoy to the nations and regions' but ministers were 'not enthusiastic' about the idea | |
| | Tory MP was told by the DWP that half her constituents were pensioners | |
| | John McTernan, who served as Tony Blair's political secretary, said family farming is 'an industry we can do without' | |
| What else you need to know today | - The first opinion poll since Kemi Badenoch became opposition leader puts the Conservatives two points ahead of Labour, 29 per cent to 27 per cent; More in Common puts Reform third on 19 per cent, ahead of the Lib Dems on 11 per cent and the Greens on 8 per cent; Keir Starmer's net "good job" rating has recovered to minus 25; Badenoch starts at minus 3
- Diana Johnson, the policing minister, announced the end of the guideline that defined shoplifting of goods worth less than £200 as "low value", and of the assumption that the police would not investigate
- I have written about the prime minister's defensiveness as voters seem to have noticed that he is out of the country a lot
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| Is the latest assisted dying bill likely to be made law? |
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| I think this is a QTWTAIN, but Sean O'Grady seems to think that Kim Leadbeater's bill might pass... Read more |
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| Tomorrow inside the Westminster bubble | Our political commentator Andrew Grice on what to look out for | After clocking up another 2,500 air miles and a late-night return from Cop29 in Baku, Keir Starmer will face Kemi Badenoch at Prime Minister's Questions for the second time at noon. It should be intriguing after last week's opener. The Commons will sit at 11.30am for questions on women and equalities. Later MPs will vote on regulations to ban the sale of single-use vapes from next June.
Louise Haigh, the transport secretary, at 9 am, and Liz Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, at 9.30am, will be quizzed by the select committees which monitor their departments.
Wes Streeting, the health secretary, will speak about Labour's health reforms at the annual conference of NHS Providers in Liverpool at 10.25am. | |
| "There's a word in modern Hungarian slang, egĂ©rmozi, which describes watching films (or shows) on your phone – it means 'mouse cinema'" Adam Sharp |
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| Quiz answer: Egypt and Kuwait | |
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