Progress Chair Alison McGovern and political commentator Tris Brown talk through what could happen when Chancellor Philip Hammond gives the 2018 Budget on Monday, and whether the Tories can produce a progressive budget or deliver on the "end of austerity". Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Oct 26, 2018•15 min
Do young people see themselves as feminists – and do they have different attitudes to society as a whole? 100 years after the first women got the vote in Britain, what are the next big goals for fighting feminism? And what is the latest in the campaign to legalise abortion in Northern Ireland? The Fawcett Society’s Doris Amankwaah talks to Alison McGovern, Stephanie Lloyd and Conor Pope. Further reading: * Without cues or exposure, the questions about the women who changed Britain never get aske...
Oct 23, 2018•27 min
With Brexit talks being put off due to lack of progress, how many political solutions are there to the Brexit deadlock? Why was Angela Merkel so dumbfounded by Theresa May’s speech? And which politicians are the most likely to be chessmasters? Conor Pope and Joe Cox look at the big issues in politics this week. Demand a say: * Join the Labour bloc at the People’s Vote march in London on Saturday 20 October Use your code: * Ayesha Hazarika tour dates and tickets Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/pri...
Oct 19, 2018•13 min
Summer holiday hunger. The universal credit saga. Why do we see more people facing acute poverty and hunger, and what can we do to tackle it Alison McGovern and Stephanie Lloyd are joined by Garry Lemon director of policy, external affairs and research at the Trussell Trust to discuss the reality of food poverty in Britain today. Further reading: * Financial insecurity, food insecurity, and disability report: the profile of people receiving emergency food assistant from the Trussell Trust Foodba...
Oct 16, 2018•27 min
The Conservatives have woken up to the problems around universal credit – but will they do anything about it? (No.) And a year on from when the #MeToo movement started, why does it seem as though the initial hope of a societal shift has fallen away? Conor Pope and Stephanie Lloyd discuss. Further reading: * Sign the petition to stop the universal credit rollout * Women have been lulled into thinking things would get better after #MeToo – we were wrong Listen again: * Universal discredit: can the...
Oct 12, 2018•15 min
Should the government ensure that everyone in the country receives a basic, non-taxed income regardless of the work they do? How would it work? Would it alleviate poverty? And could it destroy the working class? Conor Pope, Richard Angell and Henna Shah discuss the topic with UBI proponent Anthony Painter, director of the Action and Research Centre at the RSA. Further reading: * A radical new state – Anthony Painter’s essay on what comes next for Labour’s outdated centre-left * Incoming universa...
Oct 09, 2018•26 min
Conor Pope and Stephanie Lloyd on how Labour came out top in conference season, whether Theresa May’s speech means anything at all, and if austerity is actually over. Further reading: * Tories squabble over ‘chuck Chequers’ badges * Theresa May dancing to Thomas the Tank Engine Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Oct 05, 2018•15 min
What's going on at Tory party conference? Will this Brexit mess ever end? These questions and others discussed by Chair of Progress, Alison McGovern, with Frank McKenna and Tris Brown. Further reading: * We are internationalists or we are nothing, by Richard Angell at Progress . Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Oct 02, 2018•36 min
Conor Pope speaks to Richard Porritt, political editor of the New European, about Labour conference 2018 and the party’s new approach to Brexit. Further reading: * Labour conference was a big win for a People’s Vote and the party’s moderates – Richard Angell in the New European * The members triumph: Conor Pope why the Brexit motion matters so much Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Sep 28, 2018•15 min
A change in Brexit policy will be voted on at conference, but how did it get there – and what are its effects? Is Labour now committed to single market membership? Does the party support a People's Vote? And is a 'deal or no deal' referendum really on the table? Conor Pope, Alison McGovern, Richard Angell and Stephanie Lloyd work out what matters. Further reading: *' We all must be better' – Alison McGovern's speech to the Progress rally * 'We are all idealists' – Wes Streeting's speech to the P...
Sep 25, 2018•29 min
Conor Pope and Richard Angell discuss what issues will come up at Labour conference this year – including Brexit, the democracy review, and mandatory reselection – as well as the biggest question of all: what on earth is compositing? If you want to know how the conference works, this is what you need. Further reading: * All the Progress events at Labour conference * How to get Brexit discussed at conference Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Sep 21, 2018•15 min
Labour and the Tories have been neck and neck in the polls since the 2017 election. Can Labour do anything to get ahead? Conor Pope, Richard Angell and Stephanie Lloyd talk to Britain Thinks’ founding partner Deborah Mattinson about their new research into the question. Further reading: * Breaking the Deadlock – read the Britain Thinks report * Britain Thinks’ Ben Shimshon and Cordelia Hay on how 2016 changed politics Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Sep 18, 2018•24 min
Conor Pope and Richard Angell discuss the IPPR Prosperity and Justice report, the archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby’s intervention, and the upcoming Progress interview with Ed Miliband. If you want to receive Progress magazine every month, sign up here: prog.rs/join Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Sep 14, 2018•14 min
After major shifts in the 1940s and 1980s, is it time again for a major overhaul of how our economy functions? That’s the argument in the new major report from the IPPR’s Commission on Economic Justice, Prosperity and Justice. Catherine Colebrook talks to Conor Pope, Richard Angell and Alison McGovern about the report’s findings, and what it might mean for the economy of the future. Further reading: * Down with the cult of GDP. For us economists, it’s yesterday’s yardstick – Catherine Colebrook ...
Sep 11, 2018•29 min
Conor Pope and Richard Angell discuss the way communication strategies played out in the NEC elections, and reflect on Michael Foot's wit. Further reading: Full Labour NEC election results. Further watching: Jack Straw recites Michael Foot's 'magician' speech. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Sep 07, 2018•10 min
Social media has changed the way we talk to each other, changed the way we read, the way we work, changed the way we consume news, music, sport, television and art. It has even changed the way we think. What does this mean for politics, and how parties, campaigns and activists communicate with voters – and how voters communicate with politicians? Conor Pope discusses that with Richard Angell and journalist, director of Political Human, and host of the Zeitgeist Tapes podcast, Emma Burnell. Furth...
Sep 04, 2018•31 min
How important is the upcoming Trades Union Congress? Conor Pope and Richard Angell discuss how important the trade unions will be for Brexit, the single market and freedom of movement when they meet ahead of Labour conference next month. Further reading: * What are Labour’s new immigration divides? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Aug 31, 2018•15 min
Mike Clancy, general secretary of the trade union Prospect, speaks to Conor Pope, Richard Angell and Henna Shah about how to reverse the decline in trade union membership and make unions more relevant in modern workplaces. Further reading: * Emma Reynolds MP on why it’s time for workers on boards * Trade unionist Kate Dearden on how the trade union movement should respond to automation and globalisation Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Aug 28, 2018•42 min
The Progress team recommend their favourite books to read before the summer’s over. The recommended reads: Things Can Only Get Better by John O’Farrell Ugly by Constance Briscoe The Death and Life of Charlie St Cloud by Ben Sherwood A Vindication of the Rights of Women Labour’s Failure and My Small Part In It by Martyn Sloman Why Fonts Matter by Sarah Hyndman The War On Women by Sue Lloyd-Roberts Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Aug 24, 2018•13 min
How have major recent scandals affected perception of international development, does Brexit suggest a turning of opinion against it, and is this an opportunity to change how aid works? Conor Pope, Stephanie Lloyd and Henna Shah discuss with Kathryn Llewelyn, the CEO of aid charity United Purpose. Further reading: * Brexit will harm our ability to help poorer nations, writes Alison McGovern * Find out more about United Purpose Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Aug 21, 2018•32 min
Conor Pope and Henna Shah discuss the best books – politics and otherwise – to read on the beach. Want to recommend us a book? Email us at office@progressonline.org.uk Further reading: * Podcast: Philip Collins on political oratory * Podcast: John O’Farrell on being a Labour activist * Danielle Grufferty on Punch and Judy Politics * Richard Angell on Militant * Conor Pope on the French Exception Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Aug 17, 2018•14 min
Since 1997, the number of women councillors in the country has barely risen, falling far behind the proportion of female MPs. How do we improve that? Conor Pope asks Katie Curtis and leader of Waltham Forest Clare Coghill. They also discuss what new polling means for the debate around Brexit. Further reading: * Clare Coghill: What works in London does not always work elsewhere * More than 100 seats that backed Leave now want to remain in EU * Hope Note Hate map of constituencies’ changing opinio...
Aug 14, 2018•32 min
Will the Tories have the principles to hold Boris to account for his comments on the burqa? Could it trigger a proper investigation into Islamophobia in the Tory party? And is Jean-Luc Melenchon a crank? Conor Pope and Henna Shah discuss. Further reading: * Antisemitism in Labour: symbolism is not a solution * A Waco week, as Corbynistas do politics in paranoid style * Who will challenge Boris Johnson for Labour in Uxbridge? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Aug 10, 2018•19 min
Brexit could increase the cost of European holidays by 31 per cent, cost thousands of jobs, and take a billion pounds out of the exchequer in lost tax revenue. Conor Pope speaks to Richard Angell, Henna Shah and the Seasonal Businesses in Travel organisation’s Charles Owen about the risks to the holiday economy. Further reading: * How Brexit will change summer holidays * Find out more about SBiT * Support the Labour Campaign for the Single Market Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more i...
Aug 07, 2018•27 min
What does Tommy Robinson's release from jail mean for the far right? How different is British fascism to five years ago? And what were your first protests? Conor Pope and Henna Shah discuss. Further reading: * How to beat Farage if he comes back * Let's remember the role Labour activists played in beating the BNP Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Aug 03, 2018•14 min
Conor Pope speaks to Richard Angell, Henna Shah and Hope Not Hate’s Gurinder Singh Josan about how the far right diversified its tactics, the use of terror, the alliance of Ukip and Steve Bannon, and why we still have reason to hope. Further reading: * Inside Bannon’s plan to hijack Europe for the far-right * #FreeTommy – the making of a far-right English martyr * If Farage returns to frontline politics, we must change how we fight him, writes Joe Cox * Pepe the Frog removed from Daily Stormer a...
Jul 31, 2018•42 min
Should Amazon run libraries? Conor Pope and Henna Shah discuss the social importance of shared spaces, and why the latest election is one worth participating in. Further reading: Why public libraries are still essential in 2018 How the digital skills divide must be stopped Centre-left NEC candidates: Luke Akehurst Lisa Banes Johanna Baxter Jasmin Beckett Eda Cazimoglu Gurinder Singh Josan Marianna Masters Heather Peto Mary WImbury Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Jul 27, 2018•11 min
Jo Maugham talks to Conor Pope, Richard Angell and Henna Shah about his work at the Good Law Project, trying to enact progressive change through the courts – and how he might get a £1bn for the country’s coffers. Further reading: *Find out more about the Good Law Project here * Uber challenges: how Labour can lead the debate on the gig economy Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Jul 24, 2018•41 min
Conor Pope and Henna Shah discuss the latest general election that never was, Ian Paisley’s apology, and Labour’s antisemitism definition. Further reading: * Join the Jewish Labour Movement * Learn about the centre-left NEC candidates * Why this week makes a People’s Vote more likely Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
Jul 20, 2018•13 min
The trials forcing voters to bring identification with them to polling stations could start reversing the rising turnout levels in British general elections. So what should we do about it? The Electoral Reform Society’s Darren Hughes speaks to Conor Pope, Alison McGovern and Henna Shah. Further reading: * UK’s voter ID trial in local elections could be illegal * ‘It’s a warning shot’: Experts say ICO’s fine to Facebook signals seriousness of its GDPR enforcement * Here’s why posters replacing wh...
Jul 17, 2018•30 min