| | Welcome to your new-look Week in Politics newsletter, where you'll find all our most-read stories from the week, delivered at the exact moment you least want to read serious journalism. Friday afternoons can often be a time of disarming joy, where the people of Britain express feelings of optimism and hope. Well don't worry, we are here to take care of that. Every Friday, just as you are leaving work, we will deliver five stories of government incompetence and social injustice directly to your inbox so you can ignore the sun, smiles and ice cold beers of the world outside. In all seriousness, this newsletter is designed to offer some quality weekend reading for your time off. As usual, we'll bring you stories and opinions you won't find anywhere else, about a world other political journalists ignore. Welcome to your weekend briefing. | | | 5) Charles Kennedy was right about almost everything Most public figures receive broadly positive obituaries, but there was a particular warmth to the tributes paid to former Lib Dem leader Charles Kennedy this week. Kennedy's friendly and generous nature meant he was a widely liked figure both at Westminster and among the general public. However, it was his political judgement that he should be best remembered for. On all the big decisions of his career, from the war in Iraq, to the coalition with the Conservatives, history will judge Kennedy as having made the best and the bravest call. | | | 4) The government just banned everything The government's new blanket ban on the supply of psychoactive substances, continued to cause controversy this week. This piece from last week set out the huge potential flaws with the bill. Aside from the practical implications, the blanket nature of the bill goes against the very foundation of our unwritten constitution. In a free society, everything should be considered legal until stated otherwise. This bill turns that fundamental premise on its head. | | | 3) Parents to be stripped of power to challenge academies There is a widening gap between the government's rhetoric on localism and its actions. Nowhere is this more clear than in it's drive to turn ever more schools into academies. This week, education secretary Nicky Morgan announced plans to prevent parents from being able to use the law to challenge the decision to convert their local schools into academies. The government is fond of talking in vague terms about how it returns power to local communities. But where citizens actually have the power to restrain government policy, it strips them of it. | | | 2) 30 years on: What really happened at the Battle of the Beanfield? Thirty years ago this week, a convoy of between 500 and 600 new age travellers left a campsite they'd illegally occupied on the Earl of Cardigan's land. They were heading towards Stonehenge for an outlawed celebration of the summer solstice when they were stopped by a police roadblock. The convoy turned into a field, at which point around 1,300 police descended upon them and a violent confrontation took place.Read on to find out what happened next. | | | 1) Things you own which the legal high bill is going to make illegal Do you like smelling incense while sucking whipped cream from a can? Of course you do. In which case, you could be in for a shock, as it became clear this week that the government's new legal highs crackdown could make a whole series of everyday items illegal. This lighthearted piece listing just some of the many things that could be affected by the new ban, was our most read article of the week. | | Opinion Former videos On Jun 04, 2015 05:04 pm For the first time ever, Alzheimer's Society is running an advertising campaign to make people more aware of the Society and how we can support people affected by dementia. Read more... » On Jun 01, 2015 11:30 am Only 25% of people "trust" Parliament, but 50% trust the overall democratic process. So how can we bridge the divide? Read more... » Jobs and courses | | | | | |
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