Summary

  • Junior doctors' new contract set to be imposed by Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt

  • It follows junior doctors' strikes. Jeremy Hunt announced change in Commons statement

  • Parliamentary committee says 'significant changes' needed to draft web monitoring plans

  • Google has been giving evidence to MPs about its tax affairs

  1. Support migrants who can't claim benefits, say MPspublished at 13:04 Greenwich Mean Time 27 March 2020

    They say some individuals and organisations are not covered by the government's coronavirus plans.

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  2. 'Support the self-employed' MSPs tell chancellorpublished at 07:51 Greenwich Mean Time 24 March 2020

    The Scottish government is demanding more support for self-employed workers impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic.

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  3. Caroline Lucas breached rules with tour fundraiserpublished at 17:54 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2020

    The Green MP gave a tour of the Commons in exchange for a £150 contribution, a probe finds.

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  4. Lord Speaker to work from homepublished at 17:03 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2020

    The chair of the House of Lords says he is following government advice for those over 70.

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  5. Coronavirus: This is not a drillpublished at 16:39 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2020

    Overtly partisan politics appears suspended while the government tackles the virus outbreak.

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  6. 'No crime committed' by former finance secretarypublished at 11:31 Greenwich Mean Time 19 March 2020

    Derek Mackay will not face criminal charges over hundreds of social media messages he sent to a 16-year-old boy.

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  7. MPs stay away from House of Commons chamberpublished at 17:50 Greenwich Mean Time 18 March 2020

    Tories and Labour ordered that only those asking the PM questions attend, amid coronavirus fears.

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  8. The government plan to stop you touching your facepublished at 15:28 Greenwich Mean Time 18 March 2020

    With coronavirus spreading, ministers are looking for new ways to make us behave more hygienically.

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  9. Empathy during 'monumentally difficult' crisispublished at 11:54 Greenwich Mean Time 16 March 2020

    There is confusion over some of the measures being planned to protect older people from coronavirus.

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  10. NHS beds plan as coronavirus cases rise to 153published at 19:06 Greenwich Mean Time 15 March 2020

    Health Secretary Jeane Freeman says Scotland will double the number of intensive care beds to cope.

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  11. Tributes after 'unique' ex-BBC correspondent diespublished at 21:30 Greenwich Mean Time 13 March 2020

    John Stevenson had spent periods of his life homeless and fighting alcoholism.

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  12. Foster repeats RHI apologypublished at 16:38 Greenwich Mean Time 13 March 2020

    Arlene Foster repeated an apology for her "failings in the implementation" of the RHI scheme.

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  13. The week ahead in Parliamentpublished at 12:35 Greenwich Mean Time 13 March 2020

    Budget scrutiny and the coronavirus crisis are set dominate proceedings.

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  14. May elections 'should be postponed to autumn'published at 17:40 Greenwich Mean Time 12 March 2020

    The England and Wales polling watchdog wants to "mitigate" the impact of coronavirus on voters.

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  15. Coronavirus breeds uncertaintypublished at 15:21 Greenwich Mean Time 12 March 2020

    Overtly partisan politics appears to have entered suspension while the government makes plans to deal with the virus outbreak.

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  16. Unusually large infrastructure spendingpublished at 16:50 Greenwich Mean Time 11 March 2020

    Reality Check

    The government is going to raise infrastructure spending (which is money for things like building roads and hospitals) to unusually high levels, even after taking into account rising prices.

    There have been various numbers used, but this chart of public sector net investment, adjusted for inflation, shows the planned increase.

    Chart showing public sector net investment since 1955

    The only time we have got close to these levels was in 2008-09 and 2009-10, when the government brought forward spending to help boost the economy during the financial crisis.

    But governments have found it very difficult over the years to spend as much as they've planned to on infrastructure, as Reality Check explained in this piece.

  17. Big increase in borrowingpublished at 15:37 Greenwich Mean Time 11 March 2020

    Reality Check

    Chart showing borrowing forecasts

    The spending in this Budget is being largely paid for with a big increase in government borrowing.

    The government expects to borrow almost £100bn more in this Parliament (before mid-2024) than was expected the last time we had any forecasts.

    And that figure does not include £12bn to be spent on getting the economy through the coronavirus outbreak.

    The Treasury documents say that money will be accounted for in the next Budget in the autumn.

  18. Scottish Green MSP wins defamation casepublished at 14:28 Greenwich Mean Time 11 March 2020

    The action was brought against Andy Wightman over blogs he wrote about a business in 2015 and 2016.

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  19. How much is statutory sick pay?published at 12:50 Greenwich Mean Time 11 March 2020

    Reality Check

    The chancellor is talking about the use of statutory sick pay (SSP) to support people isolating themselves because of coronavirus.

    SSP is paid by employers, so self-employed workers are not eligible, but agency workers are. (There are other measures for the self-employed, who have to self-isolate, in this Budget).

    You have to be earning at least £118 a week to qualify for it.

    It is set at £94.25 a week, although of course employers may pay more if they want to.

    To put that into context, average weekly earnings , externalin December last year stood at £544 a week.

  20. Freeman responds to ex-NHS chief's 'lies' claimpublished at 16:39 Greenwich Mean Time 10 March 2020

    The health secretary hits back at criticism over her handling of the delayed opening of a children's hospital.

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