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University of Brighton Academies Trust runs 11 primary schools and three secondary schools.
'Families should move to avoid school run issues'
Parents need to use "common sense" when picking where to live, claims one councillor.
Free school meals 'would tackle child poverty'
Bishop Auckland MP Sam Rushworth wants to eventually see free meals for all pupils.
Where's Trump on Venezuela?
Mixed messages from Republicans worry the opposition to Maduro in Caracas.
In California, Human Beings Come Last
Efforts to protect endangered species contribute to disasters like the Los Angeles wildfires.
Joe Biden's Legacy of Deceit
The attempts to deny inflation were bad enough. But the falsehood that history will remember is the conspiracy to cover up his infirmity.
School forced to close after 'ransomware attack'
The school will be closed on 20 and 21 January while the data breach is investigated.
Decision to cut road safety GCSE reversed
Grants to schools to teach a GCSE in Motor Vehicle and Road User Studies were axed in 2023.
Can Trump Do Better the Second Time?
He’s stronger now, but his brand of political disruption has limits.
Trump, TikTok and Xi Jinping
The President’s duty is to enforce the law, not cut a deal with China.
Scott Bessent vs. Bernie Sanders
Their exchange on the minimum wage shows two views of the world.
China's Cut-Rate Economic Growth
Rosy official data mask a deepening malaise—except for exports.
Journal Writers Look Ahead to Trump 47
Our hopes, fears and expectations for the first nonconsecutive White House term in 132 years.
Nebraska Will Fight the Radical Campaign for Electric Trucks
Unelected regulators and oligopolists try to force a change that will leave rural Americans high and dry.
Trump Is a Realist on Greenland
In fact, stability depends on the U.S. being ready to act in places the president-elect keeps talking about.
'The Köln Concert' at 50: Keith Jarrett's Solo Flow
The landmark recording—which came from a concert in Cologne, West Germany, that almost didn’t happen—is a work of gorgeous, stream-of-consciousness pianism.
'Somewhere to Roost' Review: Domestic Bliss With a Feathered Twist
At the American Folk Art Museum, notions of home are explored through objects that, at their best, create an intimate bond across centuries between visitors and the people who once owned them.
Swamp Creatures Scurry
Unelected policy makers realize they shouldn’t have been making policy.
16 Books We Read This Week
The transformation of Anne Frank, the early days of the Federal Reserve, why matter still mystifies and more.
The Limits of 'Running Government Like a Business'
After a long and successful private-sector career, I came to Washington—and it made me more humble.