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  • INSIGHTPA COALITION MINDMAP - 2012Coalition Government Mind Map

    Two years ago today, Gordon Brown departed Downing Street marking the end of the Labour years, as David Cameron’s arrival heralded the dawn of a new era in British politics with the first coalition Government in 70 years. Promising to “govern in the national interest”, the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats set out a coalition agreement the following day in the Downing Street Rose Garden.

  • Gareth ElliotInnovative Roads Funding and Charging Briefing, Gareth Elliott

    Insight Public Affairs’ infrastructure lead, Gareth Elliott, comments on the Government’s shifting views on how to attract significant investment into the UK’s road network. With little money in the bank and an urgent need to repair and renew the nation’s roads the Government is turning to the private sector for funding. The question is whether this means bringing in charging for road use.

  • Sarah LaphamDraft Groceries Code Adjudicator Bill Briefing

    For over a decade the Office of Fair Trading (OFT), the Competition Commission (CC) and the Government have been striving to make the relationship between large supermarkets and suppliers fairer. This resulted in the introduction of a ‘Supermarket Code of Conduct’ in 2001. It was clear to the OFT, however, that a number of supermarkets were not adhering to this Code of Conduct and a report in 2008 by the CC found that excessive risk and unexpected costs were still being passed on to farmers, growers and suppliers

  • john_lehalQueen’s Speech 2012: what does this mean for you?

    The Queen has today presented the Government’s legislative agenda for the coming year, a programme focussed on “economic growth, justice and constitutional reform”. After what has been an uneasy few weeks for the Coalition – with the recent announcement that the UK economy is back in recession, a battering for the Coalition at the hands of Labour in the local elections, and tensions vocally expressed within and between the Coalition parties – the Government’s priority is to demonstrate that, in David Cameron’s words, it “gets” voters’ concerns about the economy, jobs, the cost of living, and is on their side.