Opinion

Not if we reform Labour's party selection processes and put Black candidates in winnable white-majority seats, writes Martin Bailey.
Our frontline workers have been left out in the cold by this government, writes Dr Rosena Allin-Khan MP.
With uncertainty comes a need to think positively and with agility, writes James Melville.
We are moving towards an extremism of thought that historically has often ended in bloodshed, writes an anonymous survivor.
For decades, Northerners have had to put up or shut up. Now they have to gamble with their lives, writes Emmie Harrison-West.
Many regard a vaccine as the solution to the problems being wreaked by Covid-19. But it's no panacea, writes Asha Fowells.
If people are acting "fearlessly" and endangering lives it is because world leaders are giving them tacit licence to do so, writes Jonathan Lis.
The government's recent stress on punishment is a deeply worrying turn, write social psychologists Stephen Reicher and Clifford Stott.
It's time the government focuses on the one "solution" that has been proven time and again to work – safe and legal routes, writes Safe Passage CEO Beth Gardiner-Smith.
By letting the edtech genie out of the bottle and conceding the physical campus, universities are heading for obsoletion, writes Sean Smith.