34 episodios

Ayesha Hazarika and Sam Freedman present The Power Test, the weekly political podcast asking whether Labour can really change Britain for the better.
Follow @ThePowerTest on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThePowerTest
Follow @AyeshaHazarika: https://twitter.com/ayeshahazarika
Follow @SamFreedman: https://twitter.com/Samfr
Subscribe to The Power Test substack for all the latest developments: https://thepowertest.substack.com/
For more information head to thepowertest.co.uk.

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The Power Test Podot

    • Noticias

Ayesha Hazarika and Sam Freedman present The Power Test, the weekly political podcast asking whether Labour can really change Britain for the better.
Follow @ThePowerTest on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThePowerTest
Follow @AyeshaHazarika: https://twitter.com/ayeshahazarika
Follow @SamFreedman: https://twitter.com/Samfr
Subscribe to The Power Test substack for all the latest developments: https://thepowertest.substack.com/
For more information head to thepowertest.co.uk.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Manifesto Destiny: will Keir Starmer's 'Change' manifesto live up to its name?

    Manifesto Destiny: will Keir Starmer's 'Change' manifesto live up to its name?

    On this special manifesto episode of The Power Test, Ayesha Hazarika and Sam Freedman are joined by two special guests: Nick Pearce, one of the authors of Labour's 2010 manifesto, and Claire Ainsley, who was Keir Starmer's policy guru from 2020 to 2022. Together, this quartet dissect and discuss the Labour party's 2024 manifesto (titled, simply, 'Change'). Does it live up to that name? What are the big policy areas it covers, from housing to the NHS? And are there any notable omissions from the a document that could be foundational to how a Labour government does business?
    Looking at whether this is a bold statement of the party's intention to change Britain for the better – the key question that The Power Test has been asking for three seasons – or a cautious testament to Starmer's "safety first" mentality, this is your breakdown of the first clear indication of where the country is headed.

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    • 49 min
    Paying for Crime: can Labour reignite the "respect agenda"?

    Paying for Crime: can Labour reignite the "respect agenda"?

    The academic who inspired Blair’s “respect agenda" on tackling crime and anti-social behaviour urges Labour to ensure that there is effective investment in community support alongside law and policing.
    Talking to Ayesha Hazarika and Sam Freedman, Professor Richard Sennett, Professor of Sociology at the London School of Economics, says he recognises the similarities between the approaches taken by Keir Starmer and Blair on crime and anti-social behaviour but fears that the economic circumstances make effective action much harder today.
    For more, visit THEPOWERTEST.CO.UK

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    • 39 min
    From Pledges to Prevention: can Labour fix the NHS?

    From Pledges to Prevention: can Labour fix the NHS?

    Sam Freedman and Ayesha Hazarika sit down with the Chief Executives of the The King's Fund and NHS Confederation, Sarah Woolnough and Matthew Taylor, to discuss Labour's health pledge on waiting lists and what lies ahead.
    This week as the general election campaign hits full swing, and The Power Test is focused once again on one of the top issues for the voting public: The NHS.
    To find out more visit ThePowerTest.co.uk and become a Power Member so that you can access episodes early and ad-free.

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    • 46 min
    Getting Schooled: Can Labour reform our schools?

    Getting Schooled: Can Labour reform our schools?

    Schools expert, and Teacher Tapp co-founder, Laura McInerney, joins Sam Freedman and Ayesha Hazarika to speak about Labour’s commitment to recruit extra teachers by removing the VAT exemption on private schools - as well as the party’s other plans on education.
    With election fever setting in, The Power Test is not being knocked off course. With just six weeks until a new government will be in place, Sam and Ayesha look in detail about what Labour is offering and whether its plan adds up.
    Joined by McInerney, the team look at Labour’s pledge to recruit 6,500 extra teachers, a review of the national curriculum, the role of Ofsted, special needs education, and culture war arguments in schools.

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    • 43 min
    The State of the Unions

    The State of the Unions

    With Labour under pressure from trade unions to remain committed to its 'New Deal for Working People', this week Ayesha Hazarika and Sam Freedman look at the party's relationship with the unions and the future ahead.
    They're joined by the General Secretary of the Prospect trade union, Mike Clancy, to look at Labour’s relationship with the union movement and how any future government can build a productive relationship to reshape the economy and support its growth mission.
    They also look at Natalie Elphicke's defection to Labour and the delicate balance Keir Starmer faces in holding together his broad church. In the Quickfire round, Mike nominates Barbara Castle to the Fantasy Cabinet and suggests that Labour should be less shy about facing the impact that Brexit has had on the British economy and society more generally.

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    • 41 min
    Squeezed Middle: detangling the local elections

    Squeezed Middle: detangling the local elections

    In the aftermath of last week's local elections, Sam Freedman and Ayesha Hazarika, together with author and Political Science Professor Rob Ford, look at what the results might mean for a future Labour government on this week's episode of The Power Test podcast.
    Under the surface of a very good set of elections for the party, and another very bad few days for the Tories, Ford, who was part of the BBC's elections analysis team, suggests however there are a few trends that may give an early warning to some of the challenges the party may face in power. In particular, the willingness of the left to be "much less partisan and back other options" such as the Green Party which now has a "serious and credible base in local government - having quadrupled the number of councillors they have in the last five years".
    Sam warns that the party may therefore find itself squeezed in the middle - between a more centrist leadership trying to play to Red Wall voters, and others at the same time trying to defend from a rising left flank.
    "If I'm a Labour MP in Hastings or Stroud or places like that where the Greens are coming on very strong and I'm in a Labour government that is being tough on benefits because that's what the newspapers want us to do, and not spending money, I'm going to start getting nervous pretty quickly that I'm going to lose my voter base."

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    • 39 min

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