The head of the RAF insists that increased diversity is “mission critical,” with conservative government officials also pushing for quotas to be fulfilled.
Pfizer’s own defence conceded that its CEO was not prepared well enough to discuss the issue, yet he went on to do so in the strongest possible terms.
The move, supported by “many” church officials, could have a “knock-on effect on all our debates about gender and sexuality and women,” according to one supporter.
Migration Watch Chairman Alp Mehmet said the government would not admit why the number will rise again—because “very few illegal arrivals are ever returned or removed.”
Michel Barnier, who led the Brussels’ Brexit negotiating team, said there are certain challenges Britain and the EU “can only face together.”
The average age of Muslims remains far lower, at just 27, while more than half of 27-year-olds describe themselves as atheists.
Toby Young, general secretary of the Free Speech Union, criticised the decision, made by “finger-wagging puritans,” as “ridiculous.”
The UK defence secretary warned that the British Army has been “hollowed out” and needs investment. The country is also forecasted to fare worse than all other developed countries this year, including Russia—so can it continue to support Ukraine?
The Metropolitan Police is also “taking a risk” by hiring individuals whose pasts have been tainted by involvement with the criminal justice system.
More than 23,000 schools have been impacted, with campaigners warning that the disruption to learning will be sizable.
The IMF predicted this week that the UK’s economic growth will lag behind all other developed countries in 2023.
As the world marks International Holocaust Remembrance Day, a new survey suggests that nearly a quarter of young people in the Netherlands believe the Holocaust is a “myth” or has been “greatly exaggerated.”