A 2-day bootcamp for 18-24 year olds who want to work in politics

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Thinking about a job in politics? 

Aged between 18 and 24? 

Come and develop your skills for future involvement in public service and campaigns.

  • Build an understanding of the role of an MP in Westminster and the constituency
  • Top tips on how to write a great political CV
  • Learn the basics of casework, policy research and media from experienced staffers
  • Discover the links between trade unions and the Labour Party 
  • Tour of Parliament to see how it operates

The two day bootcamp will run on Thursday 16 and Friday 17 July. The first day will be held in Westminster and the second in Leighton Buzzard.

To apply, please fill in this application form by Friday 12th June

https://forms.gle/XZQbJ7W318fXkMgF6

A look into ParliREACH’s latest report into racism in Westminster

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Workplace racism and discrimination are more talked about now than they have ever been in recent memory. There exists a plethora of organisations and institutions whose purpose it is to draw our attention to racism at work, often shining light to reveal discrimination in places we did not expect. One place that we may not expect to find racism is in the civilised chambers of Whitehall.

2019 saw the highest number of Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) MPs elected to parliament. This means that Westminster now has 65 BME MPs. However, despite this historically diverse field many BME MPs and parliamentary workers still feel as though they suffer from racial discrimination.

In an interview for ITV Layla Moran, the Liberal Democrat MP for Oxford West, recounted an incident where she was told whilst working in parliament that she should “go home”. In a similar and equally disturbing event, Afzal Khan, the Labour MP for Manchester Gorton, was told to “go back to Pakistan”. In the same ITV interview Tullip Siddiq, the Labour MP for Hampstead and Kilburn, recalled an exchange she had with a colleague in which her fellow member of parliament had implied that Asian families are more likely to kill their female children than families of other ethnicities.

A recent report commissioned by ParliREACH, a workplace equality network that was set up to provide a forum for BME people who work in parliament, found numerous examples of racial discrimination within Westminster’s halls.

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