Boris Johnson claimed child poverty has reduced – has it?
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Boris Johnson claimed in a BBC interview that child poverty was going down. An expert on child poverty looked at the data.
Drumming up support: Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn canvasses the youth vote, October 2019.
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Instagram has become a major battleground for the attention of young voters.
Just the two of us.
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Single mothers I interviewed described feeling isolated, stigmatised and frustrated with negative stereotypes.
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The Labour Party has to convince voters in the north of England that privatisation is not the solution to NHS woes.
Finally, the handshake.
Facundo Arrizabalaga/EPA
The US president, Donald Trump, has arrived in the UK for a summit of NATO leaders – but it’s awkward timing for the British prime minister, Boris Johnson.
The Conservative Party’s official Twitter feed was changed to resemble an independent fact checking site during the leaders’ debate.
Twitter
The voting public is being forced to wade through a fog of disinformation thanks to some cynical ploys.
It’s fight time in Uxbridge and South Ruislip, but the prime minister has good form.
Stefan Rousseau/PA
A politics professor is bombarded with questions about the constituency in which he works.
Corbyn hits the road in Scotland.
Andrew Milligan/PA
Corbyn can’t get enough of Scotland while Johnson is playing it safe with strategic stop offs.
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Conversation academic experts get behind the soundbites and campaign claims.
The main parties are fighting a fierce battle on social media platforms.
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A close look at the way the parties are using video in the campaign can tell you a lot about their approach.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Things could have been quite different if Jeremy Corbyn swung more decisively to Remain or if Jo Swinson hadn’t been in such a rush to the polls.
Joe Giddens/PA
The Brexit Party’s most baffling decision is to continue to fight key Labour-held seats. But all is not what it seems.
Jez-ebel.
Andrew Milligan/PA
With Labour in danger of coming fourth in Scotland, they could have done without fresh independence trouble.
President Donald Trump meets with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson at the United Nations General Assembly in September 2019. Both men have put the rule of law in their crosshairs.
(AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Authoritative statements by esteemed officials that the rule of law has been violated no longer have political consequences. Scandals that would have ended careers only a few years ago barely register.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire/PA Images
From Boris Johnson to Donald Trump, a new breed of bullshitting politicians is flourishing.
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Both main campaigns are focusing on the enemy, not the plan, in part, because the British political system hasn’t caught up with societal changes.
Danny Lawson/PA Wire/PA Images
With the promise of more periods of intense rainfall in years to come, what do we need to do to protect ourselves more from flooding in future?
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Broadcasters snubbing the likes of Nicola Sturgeon and Jo Swinson in favour of head-to-head debates with the two big party leaders just serves to stoke political tensions.
Danny Lawson/PA
In order to win a majority in the upcoming election the Conservative Party is targeting traditional Labour strongholds that voted Leave.
Stefan Rousseau/PA
‘Why are we having this election?’ is a question that undermines Johnson’s ‘get Brexit done’ narrative.