Ruth Perry, who was the head teacher of Caversham Primary School in Berkshire, took her own life in January 2023.
“White, non-college voters, manual workers, lots of people who are traditionally affiliated with unions… have been moving towards Republicans,” says Michigan State University professor of political science Matt Grossmann.Both sides are focused on Michigan’s swing voters, a group that is frustrated by inflation and is typically made up of “lower middle-class or working-class voters who just don't really pay attention to politics on a daily basis,” says University of Michigan political scientist Jonathan Hanson.
People will "no matter what, find a way" to access inappropriate and harmful content online even after a new crackdown comes into force, teenagers have said.From 25 July, websites will have tos or face fines as part of the Online Safety Act.
The group of young students at King's Oak Academy, near Bristol, also told the BBC the content was "easy" to receive and "hard" to get rid of.Media regulator Ofcom said the rules will prevent young people from encountering the most harmful content relating to suicide, self-harm, eating disorders and pornography.
Ofcom's own research found 59% of 13 to 17-year olds surveyed had seen "potentially harmful content" online in the previous month.
The teenagers told the BBC they receive inappropriate content on group chats, which are ordinarily about making plans with each other.Details of the public information events, the first of which is on 27 February, can be found
Speed bumps that a councillor complains are too high and are "scraping" vehicles will not be fixed, highways bosses have said.Essex Highways had said work to adjust the series of humps in Hawthorn Avenue, Colchester, and a discrepancy of 2cm (0.8in), were scheduled for April.
But after a reinspection, the Conservative-run highways authority said there was "no intent to alter" as they met the "standard height"."They're clearly too high," local Labour councillor Tim Young said.