As the uproar grew about crumbling concrete at the start of the academic year, Education Secretary Gillian Keegan admitted that "hundreds more" sites may face problems as officials surveyed the extent of the crisis.
She said a full list would be published "this week" of 156 schools already identified - including 104 needing critical repairs as containing RAAC (reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete) once parents had been informed of planned remedial work.
The Prime Minister said it was "completely and utterly wrong" to suggest that he was to blame for failing to fully fund a programme to rebuild England's schools when he was chancellor.
Ms Keegan was also under pressure after it was reported that her department was spending £34 million on revamping its offices amid the scandal.
The work involves stripping out the Nineties' interior over four floors of the Department for Education's Westminster HQ.
"I wasn't part of that decision, to be honest," she told Sky News, although the report said she had signed off on a predecessor's contract for the works in April. "I know that when I was last in the department, I was on a different floor and I know they are refurbishing some of them," she added, promising to check the costs of such a makeover.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Only £65k a month to live like Boy George
The Karma Chameleon singer listed his house for £17m in 2022, turning down offers. Now, he's looking for a tenant
Welcome to London, unicorn capital of Europe
We're flying far ahead of anywhere outside US for tech investment
Arteta's Arsenal evolution The next phase
Malik Ouzia and Simon Collings assess how the Spaniard will try to bring down Man City after he signs up for another three years with the title in his sights
Title fight catches fire after Gunners embrace dark side
Arsenal-City clashes take on a welcome edge of animosity
Whack the hippy gong-boho's back
It happened in Paris one grey February day. Sienna Miller was in an oversized, black leather jacket, lace-trimmed silk slip and clumpy great wedges.
There's a Starlink waiting in the sky... 7,000 in fact.Can Elon Musk stop them crashing to Earth?
As he was preparing his fields for seeding this year, Barry Sawchuk came across a giant slab of space debris. It had come from a spacecraft belonging to Elon Musk’s company, SpaceX.
'Politicians are only into power-mongering, corruption and cronyism'
We speak to alt revolutionary DEEPAK CHOPRA about biomarkers, his digital twin and his work to save humanity from disease
I've been waiting for a production of Godotthis brilliant all my life
Ben Whishaw and Lucian Msamati bring a potent, tragicomic chemistry to James Macdonald’s rich revival of Samuel Beckett’s challenging play.
Trust me, the Ritz is London's bestrestaurant
To whom we turn in moments of gloom and glory can be instructive, a filter of our truest friends. I've fallen out with the Ritz a couple of times, including once after a visit to the bar which didn’t warrant a review (“But you said it was lovely!” they said.
'Healing is a dirty word'
After four traumatic years, FKA twigs is back with a new album -and a thrilling metamorphosis