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Today’s daily politics briefing
The government’s race commission has suggested in a landmark report that Britain is not an institutionally racist country.
Commissioned in the wake of Black Lives Matter protests last year, the report, which will be published on Wednesday, says the UK has become a “more open society”.
It celebrates education as “the single most emphatic success story of the British ethnic minority experience” and claims issues around race and racism are growing “less important”.
While admitting that racism persists, the report sees the UK “as a model for other white-majority countries” regarding race equality in education and the workplace.
In Brexit news, a three year inquiry is being launched to assess what economic change the UK will experience over the next decade.
The Economy Inquiry 2030 will be run by the Resolution Foundation and the Centre for Economic Performance at the London School of Economics (LSE).
Torsten Bell, chief executive of the Resolution Foundation, said: “The UK is poised for a decade of unprecedented economic change as it not only emerges from the pandemic, but also finds its post-Brexit place in the world, and ramps up its zero-carbon transition.”
Britain not institutionally racist, government report claims
The government’s highly anticipated race report has suggested that the country is not institutionally racist.
Ahead of the report’s release on Wednesday, a government summary states: “The landmark report challenges the view that Britain has failed to make progress in tackling racial inequality, suggesting the well-meaning ‘idealism’ of many young people who claim the country is still institutionally racist is not borne out by the evidence.”
Nadine White and Ashley Cowburn have the details:
Rory Sullivan31 March 2021 08:00
Morning, and welcome toThe Independent’s rolling UK politics coverage.
Rory Sullivan31 March 2021 07:57
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