Fading are the days in which a cohort of towering power stations ran the game (and captured all the profits).

We need to block dirty diesels getting public money - no question there.

For expectant mothers there's so much to think about - and so much to prepare for. In amongst those many thoughts and all the excitement are also some concerns, not least the serious worries for many about what will happen at work.

When threats become unspeakable, unshareable and even unreadable, their power over us only grows.

I stand alongside everyone campaigning for better pay and conditions - they are paving the way for a fairer society.

As more and more people demand fair pay, the Government and big corporations are going to have to take notice.

Continuing down a path where profit is king is unsustainable for our society, our health and our planet.

The people who serve your fast food lunch or your after-work drinks deserve dignity - and if big companies don't start paying them enough for a decent standard of living, they have the power to close these businesses. But no one goes on strike lightly.

It's going to take everyone to rebuild a fairer, more sustainable, more beautiful Britain.

The Government needs to recognise that we live on a planet with finite resources - and start measuring our progress as a society by the quality of our lives, not the expansion of our GDP.

Labour needs to end its support for expensive nuclear power and vanity projects like HS2, and take a firm stance against the ecologically impossible expansion of airports.

Our economy is failing far too many - forcing parents to use foodbanks to feed their children, demonising migrants and condemning all of us to climate breakdown.

We know that Brexit would make our poorest communities poorer still. That it would make the powerless even less able to effect change.

Banks and investors have poured money into dirty energy and high-carbon for decades. While no single policy is a magic bullet for the climate crisis, there is also no way of solving it that doesn't involve a fundamental reimagining of the role of our financial system.

Everything from the infrastructure we build to the products we use must now be aimed squarely at building a zero-carbon world.

We must instil our future leaders with the expertise, knowledge and skills to prevent climate breakdown and restore nature to health.

We should entrust our young people with a voice to express their views on what their futures should look like.

If we genuinely believe in a bigger future for our country, we have to redistribute both wealth and power - so people can take back control for good, not just for one vote.

The billions being spent on Trident replacement would be much better spent on investing in developing the infrastructure we need for a zero-carbon economy, as well as in protecting public services. To use the money on a project that makes Britain and the world a far more dangerous place is politically irresponsible and economically obscene.

Nuclear weapons remain a costly distraction from the real security threats we face, like climate change.

We can no longer allow special corporate interests to shape our political and financial decisions, while our citizens and communities cry for real climate action.

Many are outspoken about the climate crisis, but conveniently ignore the fact that support for fossil fuels is not just incompatible with curbing emissions but dangerously counterproductive.

Actions speak louder than Climate Emergency declarations.

We promote new fossil fuel infrastructure, from airport expansion and coal mines in the U.K. to oil pipelines in the U.S. Investments are meant to build and secure our shared future - but all these fossil fuel investments are directly fuelling the climate crisis that threatens to undermine that future.