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Miles Ahead

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Initial release United Kingdom
Directors Don Cheadle
Box office5. 1 million USD
Production company IM Global
Producers Don Cheadle
Vince Wilburn, Jr.
Pamela Hirsch
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Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID767819
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About Miles Ahead


The true story of jazz music legend Miles Davis. After disappearing for a period of five years in the 1970s, Miles and a music reporter set out to recover a stolen sessions tape.

Parthenon Sculptures: Row about politics as much as history

Parthenon Sculptures: Row about politics as much as history
Nov 27,2023 10:51 pm

... And with Labour consistently Miles Ahead in the opinion polls, meetings like this are likely to become more frequent...

Rutherglen and Hamilton West: Should SNP's Humza Yousaf be worried?

Rutherglen and Hamilton West: Should SNP's Humza Yousaf be worried?
Oct 6,2023 4:30 pm

... The electoral map has not changed overnight - the SNP is still the dominant force in Scottish politics, comfortable in power at Holyrood and Miles Ahead of its rivals in terms of seats at Westminster...

Leaders grapple with the politics of Rosebank oil field

Leaders grapple with the politics of Rosebank oil field
Sep 27,2023 6:40 pm

... But, a year-ish from the general election, with Labour Miles Ahead in the opinion polls, their view on this does matter to whether it happens...

Chris Mason: The week UK politics changed gear

Chris Mason: The week UK politics changed gear
Sep 23,2023 5:11 am

... Not only was the man who is Miles Ahead in the polls glad-handing the president of France...

Laura Kuenssberg: Labour - damned if they dare, damned if they don't?

Laura Kuenssberg: Labour - damned if they dare, damned if they don't?
Sep 16,2023 11:11 am

...By Laura KuenssbergPresenter, Sunday with Laura KuenssbergToo boring? Too serious? Too left wing? Too right wing? Too much of a mystery still? For a long time, Keir Starmer s Labour has been Miles Ahead in the opinion polls...

Laura Kuenssberg: Why you should not expect a cheque book election

Laura Kuenssberg: Why you should not expect a cheque book election
Jul 8,2023 11:20 am

... Labour has been Miles Ahead in the polls for many months, but can the party, and its shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves - who is on our show this Sunday - persuade you their answers add up? Labour are not short of slogans about the state of the economy...

Pakistan shut down the internet - but that didn't stop the protests

Pakistan shut down the internet - but that didn't stop the protests
May 12,2023 9:40 pm

... Its social media machine - credited with delivering the 2018 election - is Miles Ahead of the competition...

Laura Kuenssberg: Is Keir Starmer a prime minister in waiting?

Laura Kuenssberg: Is Keir Starmer a prime minister in waiting?
Jan 14,2023 2:01 pm

...By Laura KuenssbergPresenter, Sunday with Laura KuenssbergHe is Miles Ahead in the polls...

Chris Mason: The week UK politics changed gear

Nov 1,2022 10:30 pm

By Chris MasonPolitical editor, Bbc News

The pace is quickening. The Collective heart rate of Westminster is notching up.

The Summit - a general Election - is in sight, even if The Time it'll take to reach it is still guesswork.

There has to be an Election by The End of January 2025 at the absolute latest.

" I think it's going to be May! " one former cabinet minister confided to me, suggesting The Broad Westminster consensus that the Election is most likely to be in autumn 2024 might be wrong.

In truth, the precise timing will be decided by the Prime Minister and a tiny group of people around him; His Best man turned political secretary James Forsyth , his chief of staff Liam Booth Smith and Election strategist Issac Levido perhaps among a very limited few.

And they have no reason to have decided for certain yet anyway.

Stuff that is yet to happen could still play a big part in when polling day actually is.

But the gradient is steepening, the air is increasingly rarefied.

You can smell it, feel it, see it around Westminster.

'Flashing lights wherever you look'

And the same will be true at The Party conferences, starting with The Gathering of Liberal Democrats in Bournemouth this weekend.

- Felt like a beacon marking out this change.

Conservative campaign headquarters had been primed in advance and had their Social Media messaging ready to go, even if the leak to The Bbc played havoc with their plans for 24 hours.

But there are other flashing lights wherever you look.

Not only was The Man who is Miles Ahead in the polls glad-handing The President of France.

But when from the European Union if he becomes Prime Minister , cabinet minister Michael Gove was out in front of a camera having a pop at him within an hour or so.

Where a secretary of state instantly pounced on arguably rather loose language from Sir Keir, other cabinet ministers quickly followed suit.

The speed of the reaction was another illustration of campaign machines cranking up a gear.

So What happens next?

Three sentences from Rishi Sunak The Other day sketch out a map for him for the months ahead.

He Said : " The Real choice confronting us is do we really want to change Our Country and build a better future for Our Children , or do we want to carry on as We Are ? I have made my decision: We Are going to change. And over The Coming months, I will set out a series of long-term decisions to deliver that change. "

The context is this: the Prime Minister has steadied things, the government isn't about to collapse, but the Conservative Party is in a massive hole in the opinion polls, and so is Mr Sunak himself.

A suggests he is personally More unpopular than at any time since he became Prime Minister .

And No10 has concluded it is time to be More aggressive. As, that has involved beefing up The Team at The Top .

'Education shake-up'

So What could we hear from them this autumn?

An. One idea is A-levels are scrapped and replaced with a baccalaureate in which English and maths become compulsory elements of post-16 education.

What about transport? Ministers are studiously ducking questions on whether HS2, the high-speed rail line between Manchester and London, is actually going to be built in full.

One idea being discussed privately in government, I Hear , is that the new line joins the existing West Coast Mainline at Handsacre in Staffordshire, 20 miles north of Birmingham.

In this scenario, trains to and from Manchester, for instance, could use the HS2 line but be on the existing line from the West Midlands to the North West of England.

That would amount to a significant junking of a big chunk of the planned project.

Another option would be for the government to push back The Time frame for delivering the northern leg of HS2.

Both could free up money for east-west rail improvements in the north of England and, depending on the option chosen, probably leave money to spare.

Next, the European Convention on Human Rights .

Some senior Conservatives, including cabinet ministers, want the Tories to advocate leaving The Convention if the is rejected next month by the Supreme Court .

" Nothing is off The Table , " immigration minister Robert Jenrick told The Bbc This Week .

There is frustration at The Role of the European Court of Human Rights in stopping flights for asylum seekers Taking Off Last Year .

But even those keen on withdrawal acknowledge privately " it'd be like Brexit 2. 0" - complicated and controversial.

Labour 'hesitant'

Where does all of this leave Labour?

It leaves them forced to take a position.

And so determined are they to Project A sense of being economically credible, when the Conservatives advocate or imply a policy shift, the Opposition has been hesitant to instantly reject it.

Take HS2, where shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves is very cautious - and so, like government ministers, won't unequivocally back the full project, as you can.

Why? Labour argue if they inherit projects in a mess, that will inform what they can do.

But they also don't want big gaps opening up between their spending promises and those of the Tories, when The Public finances are so squeezed.

As for Labour's own policy ideas, they have to Work Out a timeframe for unveiling them without knowing when the Election will happen.

And that isn't easy.

But neither, for The Moment , is Rishi Sunak 's situation.

The Conservatives' great Knack - over The Last 13 years in government but also, arguably, over The Last century and More - has been a shapeshifting sensibility to mould to The Moment .

It can and has proven very successful, but there is evidence too that there are diminishing returns to Reinvention .

, James Frayne argues The Change in green policies might only register for many as something the Tories have changed their mind on.

Some of The Challenges for the fifth Prime Minister of a party's Long Run in power are simply inescapable.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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