We should still want to see young people up and down Britain navigating their own digital journeys up and down Britain – and the Conservative Party should play a fundamental role in ensuring that can happen.
64.5 percent of responders said the policy was the right one. Just 23.9 percent said no. That’s still nearly a quarter, but with don’t knows at just 11.5 percent it’s pretty decisive.
Left in the hands of the opposition parties, they have free reign to voice a narrative that suits their agenda.
The government has a Schrödinger’s Cat approach to job creation: desperate to attract investment in UK plc, while ensuring its meddling with employment law, allied with its increases in employer’s National Insurance Contribution, will deter companies from hiring anyone at all.
The proposal to make parents responsible for whether or not their children are allowed to use social media is absurd.
Meta suspending its partnership with RMIT Factlab highlights the danger of entrusting too much power to online censors to decide and declare what is and isn’t true online.
For a long time, we have marvelled at the innovations of Big Tech, and rightly so. But its power hinders economic growth worldwide because new companies with great ideas cannot challenge their supremacy.
We should still want to see young people up and down Britain navigating their own digital journeys up and down Britain – and the Conservative Party should play a fundamental role in ensuring that can happen.