Today in News History
On June 17, several notable moments in the history of News stand out. In 1858, Eben Sumner Draper, American businessman and politician, 44th Governor of Massachusetts (died 1914) was born. In 1904, Patrice Tardif, Canadian farmer and politician (died 1989) was born. In 1923, Arnold S. Relman, American physician and academic (died 2014) was born. In 1947, Linda Chavez, American journalist and author was born. In 1952, Estelle Morris, Baroness Morris of Yardley, English educator and politician, Secretary of State for Education was born. In 1966, Diane Modahl, English runner was born. In 1966, Ken Clark, American football player (died 2013) was born. In 2009, Ralf Dahrendorf, German-English sociologist and politician (born 1929) passed away. In 2014, Arnold S. Relman, American physician and academic (born 1923) passed away. In 2015, Ron Clarke, Australian runner and politician, Mayor of the Gold Coast (born 1937) passed away. Together, these milestones provide historical context for today's news news and ongoing narratives.
Welfare has spiralled out of control but Rachel Reeves is too spineless to fix it
Narrative Analysis: Plain Folks

As a former secretary of state for Work and Pensions, I watched last summer’s catastrophic U-turn on welfare reform, as the Labour Government caved in to its own back benches on welfare reform leading to a spiralling welfare cost.Labour was elected with the stated ambition to get welfare spending under control. However, despite that, its first bizarre act was to scrap the reforms planned by the previous Government to legislate to tighten the gateway onto runaway sickness benefits. Yet this failure to tighten up on welfare coupled with a flawed tax policy has led to a significant rise in welfare spending.The flawed tax policy is the Chancellor’s National Insurance tax hike, which makes the cost of hiring, for particularly small and medium business’s too high. As such, the tax agenda and the welfare agenda are completely at odds. Now young people and taxpayers are paying the price. Tax policy and welfare policy must go hand in hand, for if, as the Chancellor has done, tax policy makes it more difficult for businesses to employ young and old, this in turn leaves too many languishing on benefits as a result. TRENDING Stories Videos Your Say Yet welfare reform is possible if the Government is determined enough. As secretary for Work and Pensions reforms I introduced showed what can be done. A more dynamic system, a hard cap on benefits, tougher conditionality rules: together they saved over £25billion from the bill, cut workless households to a record low, and gave half a million children a parent who went out to work each morning. The principle was simple: work must pay, and welfare reform can transform lives by realising individual potential, without penalising business.Sadly, during the Covid pandemic, assessments were relaxed, sanctions softened, and meetings shifted online. This led to Claims for long-term sickness rising dramatically. The bill for health-related benefits is now set to hit £100billion by the end of the decade, fuelled by almost 3,000 new claims made every day.In particular, disability benefit claims for anxiety and depression have soared, more than doubling since 2019, while seven in ten Universal Credit assessments involve a mental health condition. This is despite all the evidence showing, even by the NHS, that work is good for mental health and can protect against conditions like depression and anxiety.The layering of unreformed entitlements is now also causing serious problems. Analysis by the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) shows that an inactive claimant, topped up with health and housing payments, can now receive the equivalent of a pre-tax salary of over £30,000. More than six million full-time workers take home less. That is not fair nor right.Meanwhile, much of this is now undermined by low skilled migration. There is no doubt that the challenge to get young people into work has also been held back by significant numbers of low-skilled migration.The CSJ revealed last week that for every additional young British national added to payrolls since 2020, there have been 27 additional young non-EU migrants in work. The hospitality and retail sectors, also hit disproportionally by the Chancellor’s tax raids, are vanishing as stepping stones into work for young people.The first task of welfare reform is creating jobs in the first place. Furthermore, as a priority we must get serious about recognising the challenges young British nationals face in the labour market from low skilled migration and prioritising getting migration back under control and helping young people to get there feet on that first rung of employment by prioritising and reforming broken mental health benefits, and slashing the many taxes holding back growth. Our Standards: The GB News Editorial Charter
Narrative Intelligence Brief
This article was published by GB News, a source frequently categorized with a lean right bias based in United States of America. Our narrative intelligence engine continuously monitors coverage from this outlet to track framing, bias, and rhetorical patterns. In this specific piece, our systems detected the potential use of the "Plain Folks" technique. This narrative approach is often used to shape reader perception by highlighting specific emotional or rhetorical angles. By understanding the editorial perspective of GB News, readers can better contextualize the information presented and compare it across our broader media matrix to find the real narrative.
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Technique: Plain Folks
System analysis detected use of specific narrative techniques in this piece.Analysis Methodology
This narrative analysis was generated using the CoDataLab Global Intelligence Engine. Our proprietary AI scans thousands of cross-border sources to identify sentiment patterns, framing techniques, and potential media bias. While AI provides the data-driven foundation, our objective is to empower readers with additional context beyond the standard headline.The content displayed above is a structured summary designed for rapid information processing. For the full original report, please visit the source outlet.More Coverage
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