Politics
BBC Correspondent Gives Reality Check To Donald Trump Post Iran Ceasefire
A BBC correspondent has delivered a reality check to Donald Trump just hours after the US president announced a two-week ceasefire in the Iran war.
The US president confirmed a suspension of hostilities shortly before the deadline he had given Tehran to re-open the Strait of Hormuz, the key waterway through which one-fifth of the world’s oil supply is transported.
In a post on his Truth Social account, Trump said it was “a big day for world peace”.
“Iran wants it to happen, they’ve had enough,” the president declared.
The breakthrough came less than 24 hours after Trump had warned that “a civilisation will die tonight” unless the Iranian regime agreed to end the war.
However, it remains unclear whether Iran will now be able to control what traffic passes through the Strait of Hormuz, an advantage they did not enjoy before the war started.
On Radio 4′s Today programme, BBC US correspondent David Willis pointed out that Trump appeared to have achieved none of the objectives he had sought when the war began at the end of February.
They included the destruction of Iran’s nuclear capability and the overthrow of the country’s Islamic regime.
He said: “Despite this ceasefire, the fundamental differences with Iran remain and they are perhaps sharper than when the conflict began five weeks ago.
“Iran’s nuclear stockpile remains in place, the theocratic government which President Trump urged people to overthrow is there too, albeit under a different management, and four weeks after he demanded their unconditional surrender, the president is about to negotiate with that same government.
“Against that backdrop, he now faces the challenge of reaching a more permanent settlement within the space of the next two weeks. In comparison, it took the Obama administration two-and-a-half years to negotiate the 2015 nuclear accord – that’s the one that Donald Trump withdrew from.”
Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said it would negotiate with the US in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad, starting on Friday.
But while accepting a ceasefire, it said in a statement: “It is emphasised that this does not signify the termination of the war.
“Our hands remain upon the trigger, and should the slightest error be committed by the enemy, it shall be met with full force.”
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Politics
So Iran’s civilisation is safe. Now what about the West’s?
Imagine calling for the destruction of a civilisation. Imagine dreaming about violently scrubbing an ancient nation from the face of the Earth. Imagine flirting with the idea of obliterating a land with thousands of years of rich history. I am referring, of course, to the activist class and its annihilationist hatred for the Jewish State. For nearly three years, these people have beat the streets and swarmed the digital networks to agitate for the erasure of Israel, all the way ‘from the river to the sea’. President Trump’s juvenile bluster on Iran has nothing on their existential loathing for the Jewish homeland.
The frenzy of the past 48 hours, following Trump’s potty-mouthed and threatening social-media posts about Iran, has felt unhinged. The nukes are coming, influencers wailed. Trump must be ‘removed as president’ in order to ‘prevent a catastrophe that our species will never recover from’, said the Guardian’s Owen Jones. Within hours of this giddy apocalypticism, this huddled descent of the chattering classes into the pit of End Times prophesying, Trump had done what many of us expected he would: struck a kind of deal. The great detonation was not of a nuclear bomb but of the common sense of the cultural establishment. That’s the only thing that got vaporised yesterday.
Then there was the sheer cant. It was Trump’s ominous yelp that ‘A whole civilisation will die tonight’ that got leftists and liberals frothing. It’s genocidal lunacy, they said. Let’s leave to one side that the target of his digital ire appeared to be the Islamic Republic, not Persia. ‘Forty-seven years of extortion, corruption and death will finally end’, he said. The more striking thing is the industrial-level gall of a cultural elite that is devoted to the dismantling of Israel, puffing itself up in fury over Trump’s hyperbole on Iran.
I agree that ‘A whole civilisation will die tonight’ is a chilling thing to say. That’s why I’m so horrified by the frenzied anti-Zionism of our times. Our intellectual classes furiously deny Israel’s ‘right to exist’. Our activist classes openly call for Israel’s excision from the family of nations, by intifada (violence) if necessary. Our celebrity classes cheer the armies of anti-Semites (Hamas, Hezbollah) that were founded with the express intention of vaporising the Jewish nation. One minute the keffiyeh set is accusing the likes of Pete Hegseth of being in the grip of an anti-Iranian ‘bloodthirst’, the next it’s chanting for the death of the Jewish nation’s soldiers.
Future historians will marvel at the brass neck of an influencer class that took 24 hours off from calling for the destruction of Israel to bash Trump for posting about the destruction of Iran. I raise this not to be facetious but to draw attention to the moral disarray here on the home front that has been so spectacularly exposed by events in Iran. For it is undeniable now – we are surrounded by people who salivate over the violent disappearance of Israel but who fret over the withering of the Islamic Republic. They have taken sides – the side of the barbarous regime that dreams of ‘Death to America’ over the side of the democratic state rebuilt by Jews in the aftermath of the Holocaust. I’m delighted the Persian civilisation is safe – now what about the West’s?
The mistake the media elites made these past 48 hours was to forget that diplomacy is always done behind closed doors. You won’t find any justification here of Trump’s impolitic, unpresidential language, but if you are viewing the Iran War through the prism of his purple prose, then more fool you. For as long as politics has existed, there has been a bright line between backroom machination and public spectacle. So as Trump threatened mayhem online, he pursued a ceasefire offline. Everyone should have known this was the likely situation.
We now know a two-week ceasefire has been agreed. Trump says it is conditional on Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz. The remains of Tehran’s ruling class have issued a 10-point plan, which includes a commitment never to seek nuclear weapons and to end all conflict in the region, so long as US sanctions are lifted and Iranian assets held by America are released. The US and Israel are likely to agree to some of it, but not all. For instance, Iran has called for a cessation of hostilities against Hezbollah in Lebanon, but Israel says No.
The public discussion about this no doubt fragile half-deal feels unhinged, too. Perusing the press, you might be forgiven for thinking America has just suffered a Vietnam-level defeat while the Islamic Republic is buoyant from teaching the filthy West a lesson. That’s been the tenor of the coverage for weeks. ‘Advantage Iran’, said the front page of that bible of the boss class, The Economist. It’s beyond delusional. Yes, the regime survives, but vast layers of its leadership have been taken out and its weapons systems have been decimated. The mullahs’ capacity to rule has at the very least been diminished. The current tendency to exaggerate both the menace of Trump’s America and the stamina of the Islamic Republic strikes me as wholly ideological, even as wishful thinking. Some in the West seem to hope, possibly in spite of their better wisdom, that Tehran will help tame Trumpism.
That’s what has been confirmed by the past 48 hours of frantic anti-Americanism. That some are now so consumed by voguish wariness of the West that they have come to see even the murderous regime in Tehran as a possibly useful cudgel against our arrogant societies and wicked rulers. One feels as though one is in a Kafkaesque vortex of moral duplicity watching the media elites paint Trump as a singular threat to civilisation. For that is to be wilfully blind to the swarms of Westerners who have spent the past two-and-a-half years openly cheering the enemies of our civilisation.
This is why the Israelophobia of Trump’s hypocritical haters really matters. For nothing better sums up the anti-civilisational turn in our societies, the West’s revolt against itself, than these twisted dreams of Israel’s demise at the hands of the barbarous armies sponsored by the Islamic Republic. The media rage over Trump’s ill-advised invective acts as a distraction from this far more serious corrosion of our civilisational values. Here’s the thing: Trump clearly didn’t mean it when he said Iran would ‘die tonight’, but the virtuous and educated of our cultural elites do mean it when they say the world would be a better place if Israel didn’t exist. His intent was to deceive, theirs is to destroy. The genocidal imagination belongs less to Trump than to his noisy critics in the new moral clerisy.
I’ll tell you what alarmed me more than Trump’s posts – that large gathering outside Downing Street last night, where mobs waved the flag of Tehran’s anti-Semitic, homophobic, misogynistic regime and chanted ‘Allahu Akbar’. Any Brit who frets more over the oafish posts of a US president than he does over the presence in his own country of people who prefer Islamist tyranny to Western civilisation has entirely forfeited the right to be taken seriously. Let Iranians decide the future of their civilisation – we should focus on saving ours.
Brendan O’Neill is spiked’s chief political writer and host of the spiked podcast, The Brendan O’Neill Show. Subscribe to the podcast here. His latest book – After the Pogrom: 7 October, Israel and the Crisis of Civilisation – is available to order on Amazon UK and Amazon US now. And find Brendan on Instagram: @burntoakboy.
Politics
Israel unleashes barrage of attacks
Israel is refusing to include Lebanon in the US-Iran ‘ceasefire‘ agreement.
Instead, the Zionist entity is continuing to bomb Beirut, southern Lebanon, and the Bekaa Valley simultaneously.
Apocalyptic scenes in Lebanon’s capital right now.
Israel has launched 100 airstrikes on Lebanon in 10 minutes.
Striking South Lebanon, Beirut and the Bekaa Valley simultaneously.
This isn’t a ceasefire.
It’s mass bombardment of civilian areas. pic.twitter.com/ygTf2Pscrn
— sarah (@sahouraxo) April 8, 2026
Lebanon bombarded
Benjamin Netanyahu said that the ceasefire does not include Lebanon. This is despite Pakistan’s prime minister explicitly stating that the agreement covers “everywhere, including Lebanon”.
🚀🇮🇱🇱🇧 NOW: ISRAEL IS STILL BOMBING BEIRUT, LEBANON pic.twitter.com/tD12qLZWVB
— Jackson Hinkle 🇺🇸 (@jacksonhinklle) April 8, 2026
So it appears that once again, Israel and its war crimes are just magically exempt from international law. But we could have predicted this would happen, given that Israel is an illegal ethno-supremacist state.
There is approximately a zero percent chance Israel will abide by a ceasefire.
— Cenk Uygur (@cenkuygur) April 8, 2026
Lebanese politicians have urged the Pakistani ambassador to pressure Israel over its ceasefire violations.
BREAKING: Lebanon’s Parliament Speaker Berri urges Pakistani ambassador to press Israel over ceasefire violations
🔴 LIVE updates: https://t.co/zygwIgJdmZ pic.twitter.com/DvX7zqHDim
— Al Jazeera Breaking News (@AJENews) April 8, 2026
Additionally, the UK, France, Germany, and the European Union have issued a joint statement calling on “all parties” to implement a ceasefire, including in Lebanon.
Not the first time
Of course, this is far from the first time Israel has broken a ceasefire agreement.
100% agreed. There has never ever been a ceasefire that Israel have abide in their short history.
ایرانیهای عزیز بسیار محتاط باشید. https://t.co/wcAjKTwDYT— Sayed Wasi (@iamw786) April 8, 2026
In 2025, Israel violated various ceasefire agreements more times than we can count. In October alone, the total was 47. Israel murdered 38 Palestinian civilians and injured 143 others. Along with being a clear and explicit violation of the ceasefire, it is also yet another breach of international humanitarian law.
Israel has also repeatedly refused to let aid into Gaza, which is yet another violation of previous ceasefires.
In Lebanon, Israel has also repeatedly broken ceasefires.
In November 2024, after Israel’s thirteen-month-long attack on Hezbollah, a ceasefire was agreed. However, it seemed that the IOF didn’t get the memo. Within hours of the 4am ceasefire coming into force, the IOF opened fire on vehicles as tens of thousands of Lebanese people started to return to their homes.
But as far back as 1949, immediately after the UN-brokered Armistice Agreement between Israel and its neighbours went into effect, the newly created ethnostate started violating the truce. It invaded designated demilitarised zones its military attacked numerous civilians.
Then, in 1956, alongside Britain and France, Israel violated the agreement again by invading Egypt and occupying the Sinai Peninsula.
What is clear is that since Israel’s inception, it has held no regard for the rules of international law.
the ceasefire terms do not include the parasite zio state. https://t.co/jnyv3N3MgZ
— susan abulhawa | سوزان ابو الهوى (@susanabulhawa) April 8, 2026
Bullshit ‘ceasefire’
Israel wants to take a two-week break from being bombed by Iran so that it can get on with pummelling Lebanon.
All in an effort to pursue Israel’s ‘Greater Israel’ project, which it has been talking about since 1967.
He is determined to pursue his #GreaterIsrael project, and break international law, regardless of all the suffering and destruction! https://t.co/njFPi8hZSu
— Dr Philippa Whitford (@Dr_PhilippaW) April 8, 2026
Despite Israel’s continued attacks on Lebanon, Hezbollah has been abiding by the agreement.
UPDATE: Hezbollah abides by ceasefire despite Israel’s attacks on south Lebanon
🔴 LIVE updates: https://t.co/vdFpZ16DLB pic.twitter.com/rB94KvOPOo
— Al Jazeera Breaking News (@AJENews) April 8, 2026
This demonstrates once again that Israel is, in fact, the problem. Israel is an ethnostate, which means that annexation, war crimes, genocide, and murder are its bread and butter.
They will not halt the annexation. It is embedded in their nature. This constitutes a clear violation of the terms that were agreed upon. https://t.co/oyY7GJW8v2
— Ilias (@iliasazg) April 8, 2026
Israel’s definition of a ceasefire is one-sided bullshit. Iran stops bombing Israel so it can continue its illegal attacks on Lebanon. Does it think ceasefires are only for everyone else? Are white Jewish supremacists exempt from ceasefires under make-believe 3,000-year-old rules? Or do Israelis just think they are better than everyone else?
The international community needs to step up – and fast.
Featured image via CNN-News18/YouTube
Politics
1 in 3 terminally ill people don’t claim benefits
One in three people living with a terminal illness in the most deprived areas of England and Wales aren’t claiming the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) benefits they’re entitled to. This is despite the constant government and media narrative about the increase in benefit claimants.
DWP: many miss out on vital benefits
Terminally ill people with less than 12 months to live are eligible to receive fast-tracked benefits without a medical assessment. This is under the DWP Special Rules for End of Life (SREL). This applies to both non-means-tested and means-tested benefits, so it includes Personal Independence Payments, Disability Living Allowance, and Universal Credit.
However, new research shows that many are missing out
The Office for National Statistics has published a report with Marie Curie that explores the take-up of benefits from those living with a terminal illness. Although SREL applies to all benefits, the ONS specifically looked at means-tested benefits.
It found that over 350,000 people who were terminally ill did not claim the benefits they were entitled to in the last 12 months of their life. That’s around 34%. And the uptake is even worse in the more deprived areas of England and Wales. In Wokingham, the take-up was just 53%.
The claimant rate also varied significantly between different terminal conditions. 59% of people dying of HIV don’t claim. There’s also a huge portion of people living with liver disease (58%) and heart failure (46%) who didn’t claim. The highest conditions that were claimed for were dementia, with 85% claiming and neurological conditions, with 90% claiming.
Better access needed
The problem is that many don’t know that they are entitled to claim, so they miss out on vital support. The analysis was carried out as part of a broader study by King’s College London into the take-up of benefits by terminally ill people
Around 90,000 people die in poverty each year in the UK. Better access to benefits for people living with a terminal illness can help to lift people out of poverty and improve dignity.
The study aims to find out how they can best uncover “groups most at risk of underclaiming” in order to make policy recommendations to the DWP on how to better target people.
In 2024, the KCL researchers reviewed the campaigns put out by the government, local authorities, and the non-profit sector carry out to encourage “severely disabled people and those with serious health conditions to apply for benefits.”
A 2024 study the KCL researchers carried out reviewed the campaigns the government, local authorities, and non-profit sector have in place to encourage take-up among “severely disabled people and those with serious health conditions”.
This report found that the government needs to:
Develop and fund a comprehensive strategy for actively promoting and monitoring take-up of benefits by severely disabled people and people who have serious long-term health conditions (including those with life-limiting (terminal) illness), their families and carers.
DWP failing terminally ill people
Dr Joanna Davies, from the Cicely Saunders Institute of Palliative Care, Policy and Rehabilitation at King’s College London (KCL), told Hannah Sharland at Disability News Service that there needs to be a “wider awareness” around “access to benefits”, and suggested that applications “could be better integrated into other processes, such as advance care planning and hospital discharge”.
Dr Sam Royston, executive director of research and policy at end-of-life charity Marie Curie, also told Sharland:
Last year, Marie Curie’s Dying in Poverty report revealed that more than 280 people die in poverty every day across the UK.
A key step in addressing poverty at the end of life is to ensure the benefits system provides adequate protection to everyone who needs it. But this ONS research data, funded by Marie Curie, shows the extent to which people with a terminal illness are failing to be protected by our social security safety net
He continued:
Every dying person should be able to access the benefits they need, so they can spend their limited time focusing on what really matters: making memories with friends and family, and living their final months, weeks, and days as well as possible.
It’s clear that the government isn’t doing enough to ensure that sick people don’t die in poverty. At a time when all you hear about is the increased benefits bill, it’s almost like they’re banking on people not applying. At the rate it’s going, people will be offered assisted dying before support their final months.
I suppose it’s easier for the DWP if people die before they claim than for them to have to finish the job by cutting their benefits.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Vinicius joins forces with Lamine Yamal to combat racism in football
Brazilian national team and Real Madrid star Vinícius Junior has directly invited Barcelona striker Lamine Yamal to join forces against racism in football stadiums.
This initiative comes after an incident during a friendly match between Spain and Egypt at the end of March, where Yamal was subjected to anti-Muslim chants from Espanyol fans.
Personal experiences with racism
Vinícius Junior explained that this issue is personal for him, noting that he constantly experiences racist incidents during matches and tournaments.
He said in a press conference:
Racism exists everywhere, and I have faced it myself many times. That’s why it’s important that we join forces – me, Lamine, and all the players who have a strong voice – to protect others and confront this phenomenon.
Lamine Yamal was subjected to direct racist abuse from Spanish fans who chanted against Muslims during a friendly match against Egypt. This prompted him to speak out and condemn these practices, earning him widespread praise from his peers around the world.
The importance of solidarity among players
Vinícius emphasized that players with fame and resources have the power to influence public opinion and help those most affected by racism, such as those living in poverty and other marginalized groups.
He added:
If we resist these attitudes together, we will reduce the likelihood of players and fans being subjected to such practices in the future.
Support from global stars
French national team player Moussa Sissoko expressed his solidarity with Yamal after the incident of the anti-Muslim chants, stressing the need for unity among players in the face of racism.
This support demonstrates the growing awareness among football stars worldwide of the importance of protecting players and fans and working to create a safe and discrimination-free environment in stadiums.
Politics
Richard Tice is having a go at NHS workers
Reform stooge Richard Tice has taken to Twitter to complain about the number of NHS staff who called in sick over 2025. Apparently, health service workers took an average of 19 sick days last year.
And if that doesn’t get you all riled up and right-wingy, 5 of those days were for mental health reasons! The scandal!
Not that he’d want our advice, but Tice needs to be careful sharing anti-NHS-worker shit like that. After all, people might mistake him for a Labour MP.
Reform privatisation dogwhistle
Here’s some slop for you:
NHS staff took 28m sick days incl 8m for mental health in 2025:
Keen to hear from other businesses whose staff take:
Average 19 days sickness pa
Including:
5 days mental health issues pa
https://t.co/Q1Cild9fRE— Richard Tice MP 🇬🇧 (@TiceRichard) April 7, 2026
What a regrettably common treat – a Reform tweet with a Daily Mail source. You just know it’s going to contain some proper tripe.
First and foremost, why on earth are we framing the National Health Service as a business? Oh yeah, it’s because Tice and his Reform cronies desperately want to run it as a private business. The point is sustaining a healthy population, not turning a fucking profit – but of course, that’s lost on the likes of Tice.
Nobody mention the pay restoration
For the ‘context’ on Tice’s statistics, we can look to the Mail’s article itself:
Resident doctors will today cause more misery, cancellations and delays with another walkout in pursuit of a 26 per cent pay rise.
The number of sick days taken by NHS staff due to poor mental health has soared by 42 per cent since 2020 and comes amid wider concern about the nation’s approach to such issues.
The NHS in England lost 28million days to staff sickness in 2025, up from 21million in 2020 and higher than in any previous year, according to newly published data.
Of these, more than one in four – a record 7.9 million – were due to ‘anxiety/stress/depression/other psychiatric illnesses.’
Ah yeah, we’re having a bash at the British Medical Association (BMA) resident doctors’ strike. Cunning avoidance of mentioning the reason for that ‘26% raise’ goal, too.
The workers are striking in pursuit of pay restoration to match 2008 levels. Since then, they’ve suffered massive real-terms pay cuts – down to a low of -32% in 2022. Of course, they can’t let the government get away with that.
How do diseases spread again?
And then there’s the bit about all those lazy doctors taking sick days. I wonder why the people who work around sick people all the time are getting sick so often? Could it possibly be due to the communicable nature of disease? Someone should really start looking into this ‘germ theory’ I’ve been reading about.
Likewise, could the rising frequency of mental health leave have anything to do with the massive strain of NHS work?
Quite apart from the constant pressure of working with sick and dying people day-in and day-out, the NHS is also massively understaffed. As such, the workload of each individual NHS worker is massive – and it’s only getting worse. According to research from the BMA:
The average number of doctors per 1,000 people across the EU members of the OECD, for which data is available, is currently 3.9. Germany has 4.5. England, by comparison, has just 3.2 and would need an additional 40,000 doctors to reach the OECD EU average.
What’s more, those NHS staff are also working with lower resources compared to similar countries. Take hospital beds as an example – the BMA stated that:
Compared to other nations, the UK has a very low total number of hospital beds relative to its population. The average number of beds per 1,000 people in OECD EU nation js is 4.6, but the UK has just 2.4. Germany, by contrast, has 7.8.
Combined with staffing shortages, an insufficient core bed stock means that hospitals are less able to cope with large influxes of patients, for example during winter or periods of high demand.
Moral panic
The Mail goes on to make (or, at least, write) several points in quick succession – they may even be loosely related to one another:
The health service has lost 151.6million days to sickness since records began in their current form in mid-2019, meaning 6 per cent of all working days were lost to poor health – three times more than the average across all sectors.
Furthermore, the NHS lost 262,592 days to industrial action by resident doctors last year, with the British Medical Association marching its members out on strike in July, October and December.
From yesterday, new laws passed by the Government mean employees are entitled to sick pay from their first day in a job.
Only in the Daily Mail could you get what appears to be a staccato list of shit that sounds vaguely scary to right-wingers. Staff taking sick days! The unions are staging walkouts! Workers get sick pay! It’s like a fucking neo-Nazi Buzzfeed.
Not to beat a dead horse or anything, but again – NHS workers come into contact with sick people. Their absence rates are going to be higher than other sectors. Particularly, that is, given that we’re consistently cramming too many sick people into too little less space.
Sick leave – important, actually
On top of this, the NHS employment body also highlights that ‘presenteeism’ (turning up whilst sick) can negatively affect both the quality of your work, and the state of your mental health. Given that health workers often make life-or-death decisions, those negative impacts matter.
Likewise, NHS workers also have a duty to stay home if their illness could be transmitted to their patients. This is particularly true given that, by their nature, many of the patients in a hospital are at an increased risk of infection.
Of course, we can also expand that point out more broadly. If more workers across every in-person sector took sick leave to prevent the spread of infection, the workplace would be safer for everyone – and particularly for immunocompromised colleagues.
Oh would you look at that – we’ve reached the end of the article. I haven’t even made a single crack about Reform leader Nigel Farage never turning up to do his job, but you don’t hear Tice complaining. Never mind, I’m sure it won’t be long til Reform don’t bother turning up to work again.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Kanye is banned – but war criminals are welcome
Keir Starmer has ordered an entry ban on rapper Ye (formerly Kanye West) to please Israel lobby groups. Ye’s record of antisemitic speech doesn’t prevent the ban being the latest step in Starmer’s Israel-driven war on UK free speech rights.
The ban forced the cancellation of the entire Wireless festival, outraging many who oppose Israel’s genocide in Gaza and its war on Lebanon and Iran.
But while Starmer is eager to performatively ban Kanye as an easy win in his rush to create a police state, he is more than happy to roll out the red carpet for actual and alleged war criminals – as long as they come from Israel and its supporters.
Kanye – double standards
For example, just since 2024 under Starmer:
Herzi Halevi
Israeli army chief of staff Halevi came to Britain in December 2024. As the overseer of Israel’s horrific mass slaughter in Gaza, his arrest and delivery to the Hague, or his trial in the UK for war crimes under ‘universal jurisdiction’ should have been automatic. Instead, Starmer gave him ‘special immunity’ to protect him.
Basyuk, Goren
Israel’s ‘genocide general‘ Maj Gen Oded Basyuk arrived in the UK in January 2025 for ‘secret’ talks with various UK government departments. He was granted “special mission immunity” – “immunity from criminal jurisdiction and personal inviolability”.
With Basyuk was Brigadier General Elad Goren. Goren had recently become the subject of a lawsuit filed with the International Criminal Court (ICC) over his alleged involvement in the use of starvation as a weapon against the civilians of Gaza.
Gideon Sa’ar
The Global Legal Action Network (GLAN) on Gideon Sa’ar:
Gideon Sa’ar is a senior member of Israel’s security cabinet and alongside Benjamin Netanyahu — wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza—has played a central role in the decisions that have led to the mass killing of Palestinians and extreme suffering more generally. Today, Sa’ar continues to advocate for the halting of all humanitarian aid to Gaza where civilians are now enduring full-scale famine conditions.
But Sa’ar was not only allowed to enter the UK in April 2025, special measures were taken to protect him from arrest. As the Hind Rajab Foundation (HRF) sought action against Sa’ar for his part in Israel’s Gaza genocide, Starmer and his then-foreign secretary David Lammy gave Sa’ar immunity to ensure he could not be arrested.
Isaac Herzog
In September 2025, as Israel criminally bombed Gaza, Syria, Lebanon, Qatar and Yemen, Israeli president Isaac Herzog came to the UK for meetings with the UK government. The Green party and human rights groups demanded Herzog’s arrest. Instead, Starmer proudly welcomed him, posing for photos on the step of Number 10.
War criminals, names withheld
Also in September 2025, various unnamed members of Israel’s Directorate of Defense, its Research & Development (DDR&D) and its Israel Aerospace Industries entered the UK for an arms fair, where they rubbed shoulders with Israeli murder merchants Elbit Systems and others. All three organisations are at the heart of Israel’s genocide and war crimes. Thousands protested, but the government allowed them entry and did nothing.
Over 2,000 British-Israelis have served in the Israeli occupation military during the Gaza genocide. At least ten of them have been accused since May 2025 of serving in Israeli military units that have committed atrocities. While they still have dual citizenship including British nationality, the UK government has taken no action against them. When a former government wrongly stripped Shamima Begum of her British citizenship when she tried to return from ISIS territory, leaving her stateless despite her having committed no atrocities, no such action is apparently contemplated for Israeli war criminals who would still have Israeli citizenship. Nor have they been prosecuted in Britain despite UK police being aware for more than a year.
It seems that while a racist Black musician can be banned, Israeli war criminals will continue to get a warm welcome from the Zionist Starmer regime.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Over a quarter of UK drivers will use their car less due to fuel spikes
Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu’s attack on Iran has disrupted oil supplies and markets across the globe. And fuel companies have wasted no time in, shall we say, ‘responding’. UK forecourts over the Easter weekend were charging on average £1.57 a litre for petrol, and £1.89 for diesel.
Again, as with concern over UK jobs, fretting over fuel prices is nothing compared to the threat of genocide. But as with all aspects of the cost of living crisis, rising prices affect people’s lives.
Fuel prices all over the place
And with the cost of fuel being so volatile, some motorists are beginning to worry about their car usage. According to data from ChooseMyCar.com, 29% of drivers now say they will use their car less. Over a quarter (27%) say they will cut down the number of miles they usually drive in an effort to save money.
This ongoing issue adds to further difficulty for UK drivers, who were already having to deal with an increase in fuel duty, after it was cut by 5p in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Despite calls to reverse this decision, the government is still set to go ahead with the fuel duty hike, which will rise in three different stages, starting by 1p in September 2026.
The sudden spike in prices has also caused many drivers to panic buy. In some places, 90-car long queues have formed at petrol stations, resulting in fuel shortages in a number of stations.
Such is the anxiety caused by further potential increases, alongside the recent hikes, that a fifth (20%) of road users say they will keep their car more filled up than usual. Meanwhile, 17% say they drive more slowly and carefully to save on fuel consumption.
But perhaps more worryingly, 14% of UK drivers say they will have to cut back spending in other areas of life, such as entertainment or food, to cover fuel costs. The cost of living crisis has long been an issue for millions in the UK. Food and energy bills remain significantly higher than pre-2022 levels. And with fuel prices increasing once again, it appears that many more will suffer financial blows.
In response to the data, Nick Zapolski of ChooseMyCar.com has offered drivers several fuel-saving tips:
The Iran and US situation has got worse over the past month or so, and this has bumped up our fuel prices, which have reached higher than £1.57 per litre for petrol, and are approaching £2 for diesel, in many places.
Understandably, this is worrying news for a lot of drivers. Even though we’ve only seen initial price rises, 70% have said they’ve already been affected by the new increased costs. With various government laws and changes over recent years, drivers have suffered a number of financial setbacks – this is just the latest. As a result, it’s causing millions of drivers to panic buy.
But, before making any drastic decisions, I urge drivers not to do this. It’s understandable, but there’s not much point. Spikes in prices can lead to petrol shortages, but these issues are usually sorted very quickly. Supply is still flowing normally, so there’s no need to change your fuel-buying habits. At the moment, you’re just queuing up when you don’t need to, and it’s causing stations to run out of fuel!
If you’re worried that you’ll struggle to cover the cost of any increased prices, there are small bits you can do to help keep the cost down. While some of these tips may sound a bit unusual, they help regulate your car’s temperature, which can make a huge difference.
Here are ChooseMyCar.com’s tips to lower your fuel consumption:
Watch your accelerator and check your tyre pressure
As whacky as it sounds, a bowl of water on your passenger seat is a great deterrent for unnecessary acceleration and braking. It sounds a bit strange, but it’s a simple and brilliant reminder to drive gently. If you hit the accelerator too hard, you’ll see water pour over the sides. Likewise, if you’re driving too fast and braking hard, you’ll notice water on the seat. The best bowls to use for this are small cereal bowls, with water about an inch from the top.
[Note: this Canary writer, a trained professional driver, thinks driving around with an actual bowl of water is a terrible idea. It’s likely to result in dangerous distraction and a sopping wet passenger seat. However, visualising an imaginary bowl and driving accordingly does make sense. Smooth driving, using anticipation to avoid jerky movements, saves fuel and is safer.]
Under-inflated tyres aren’t just dangerous, they increase your car’s overall fuel consumption, too. When tyres are too soft, they bend more as they roll along the road. This creates more rolling resistance, which means your car has to work harder to move forward. To ensure your tyres aren’t causing you to use so much fuel, check their pressure at least once a month.
Reduce your speed and use cruise control when appropriate
Watching your speed isn’t just a legal requirement, it’s also a simple way to use less fuel. Your car will use more fuel if you drive at a higher speed, particularly when going over 70mph. And driving at 70mph instead of 80mph, which 17% said they would do, could save you up to 25% in fuel.
Your car will use up a lot of energy if it’s constantly speeding up or slowing down, so it’s best to maintain a consistent, steady speed when possible. Cruise control can be an effective fuel-saver on flat long surfaces, such as motorways, and may save your vehicle up to 14% more fuel in the process.
Empty your car out or, to save most fuel, don’t use it at all
Excess weight in your car can be a real fuel burner. It’s good practice to empty your car daily, especially if you have particularly heavy items in there. So make sure you don’t drive to work on Monday morning with a load of weekend clutter still in the boot.
Consider cycling to your destination if that’s practical. Not only will you save money on fuel, but you can also cancel your gym membership too. As a quick example, if your journey to work is two miles, it could take less than 15 minutes to bike and, most importantly, would save you money.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Tax havens used to hoard gigantic sums of wealth for elite
Research by Oxfam shows that globally the 0.1% have hidden more untaxed wealth offshore than the amount owned by half of humanity.
Offshore tax havens
The super rich 0.1% have £2.68trn hidden in accounts registered abroad, while the 0.01% hold half of that amount.
For context, the amount is almost the size of the entire UK economy and is more than twice the GDP of the 44 least developed countries.
Christian Hallum, Oxfam’s Tax Lead, said:
This isn’t just about clever accounting — it’s about power and impunity. When millionaires and billionaires stash trillions of dollars in offshore tax havens, they place themselves above the obligations that bind the rest of society. The consequences are as predictable as they are devastating: we see our public hospitals and schools starved of funds, our social fabric shredded by rising inequality, and ordinary people forced to shoulder the costs of a system rigged to enrich a tiny few.
One issue with this approach is that taxes do not fund public spending. The government has a flat currency that it can create and invest. Where taxes are important is to control any inflation through making the currency more scarce. This is an important distinction because it reverses the way fiscal policy is organised. Taxes are for if and when there’s too much inflation, they don’t come before spending.
What’s frustrating is that right-wing governments are willfully inept at ensuring efficiency in public spending. From infrastructure projects to outsourcing, the public purse is seen as a vehicle for wealth extraction. In its first report, think tank Verdant, headed by a former adviser to Labour shadow chancellor John McDonnell and a civil society campaigner, found at least £30.9bn in annual efficiency savings without any nationalisations. The fact that public finances are, at times, treated as a joke doesn’t mean the super rich should hide their wealth offshore, though.
Oxfam notes there has been progress on tax havens, but the amount hidden remains high at around 3.2% of the entire globe’s GDP.
Solutions
To tackle the issue of high economic disparity, the charity recommends introducing a wealth tax of 2% on assets worth £10 million or more.
Another solution is for countries to initiate a UN Tax Convention to end tax havens entirely.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
How would a war in Iran affect the 2026 World Cup?
The 2026 World Cup in the United States, Canada, and Mexico is approaching, scheduled to take place from June 11 to July 19. But an unprecedented challenge looms, threatening the tournament’s success: a war between the United States and Iran.
The war has sparked global concern about the participation of national teams, particularly the Iranian national team, and its direct impact on stadium preparations, the organization of friendly matches, and fan safety.
This comes amidst widespread public demonstrations in the United States protesting the war, and record-high oil prices that could further increase the tournament’s costs.
Doubts surround Iran’s participation
The Iranian national team was the sixth team to secure its place in the World Cup, following the three host nations, Japan, and New Zealand. However, the war has raised questions about the team’s ability to travel and participate in the tournament.
Iranian officials, including the head of the Iranian Football Federation, Mehdi Taj, and the Minister of Sports, Ahmad Doniamale, have emphasized the difficulty of participating in the United States. However, the Iranian position has softened somewhat in recent days, though no official announcement has yet been made.
Iran’s potential withdrawal posed a significant challenge for FIFA, headed by Gianni Infantino, who visited the Iranian national team’s final training camp in Turkey to emphasize that everything possible would be done to ensure the team’s participation in the tournament.
Impact of the War on Team Preparations
The war in Iran directly impacted team preparations, leading to the postponement or relocation of friendly matches during March.
Countries like Qatar and Jordan were preparing to host preparatory tournaments before they were moved to other countries, most notably Turkey, which hosted two friendly matches for the Iranian national team.
Protests in the United States
Weeks before the start of the World Cup, the streets of the United States witnessed widespread protests against President Donald Trump’s policies and his decision to wage war on Iran. This raised concerns within FIFA regarding security and the potential scale of the demonstrations during the tournament, especially given that the United States was the primary host nation.
Surge in Oil Prices
The conflict has led to an unprecedented rise in oil prices, which will impact preparations in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, and increase the tournament’s operational costs, including ticket prices and accommodation for fans.
Football and World Unity: A Slogan on Paper
Despite Gianni Infantino’s claims that football unites the world, a host nation waging war on a participating nation undermines this message in practice. While millions of fans will attend the World Cup, the political and economic realities weaken the sense of global unity that football champions.
This report highlights the unprecedented challenges facing the 2026 World Cup as a result of military and political tensions that could affect team participation and the preparations of host nations.
Politics
Your Party has a problem with left-wing bigots
Your Party has faced widespread criticism from its members for its dither and delay in the run up to the local elections on May 7. Meanwhile, Reform UK and the Green Party are set to make huge gains. This intense battle between the left and right comes as British voters increasingly abandon traditional establishment parties.
However, voters may find themselves confused about what they’re actually voting for if a Your Party candidate appears on the ballot. Your Party was originally billed to be a socialist party which champions socialist values. In light of that promise, members are rightfully concerned about the trend of endorsements for deselected Tories. They also worry that Corbyn is focusing on socially conservative groups while ignoring socialist grassroots organisations.
As a result, many are finding themselves feeling mis-sold and abandoned with little transparency on offer from the Your Party executive.
Your Party takes worrying direction
Furthermore, anger is growing as those given the seal of approval increasingly display bigoted views. Unsurprisingly, these endorsements have delivered a painful blow to the party’s progressive membership.
Over Easter weekend, Corbyn’s team clarified that he had not endorsed three deselected Tory candidates:
a leaflet emerged featuring three ex-Tory councillors who claimed to be “endorsed” by Jeremy Corbyn. Since then, Your Party and Corbyn have denied endorsing these men. Instead, the situation seems to be that they recently joined the Walsall Community Independents group which Corbyn has voiced support for.
However, a Corbyn appeared on a leaflet with the three candidates in question. And, as the Canary’s Willem Moore reported:
When Your Party got going, it included Jeremy Corbyn and his Independent Alliance. Corbyn and the other independent MPs did good work opposing the government’s support of Israel’s genocide. At the same time, there were some pretty big gaps between the politics of some of these men and the YP membership.
The two big issues that came up were:
Transphobia and landlordism were big reasons why left-leaning voters abandoned Labour. As such, the presence of these issues in Your Party served to turn away potential members.
Following the backlash, people who criticised the independent MPs were accused of being intolerant or racist.
This lack of clarity over the party’s values emboldens bigoted views. Most concerningly, that bigotry is particularly apparent in some of those who claim full allegiance to Jeremy Corbyn. A growing number of so-called ‘socially conservative’ groups have garnered Corbyn’s attention. But let’s be clear. These views – transphobia, racism, sexism – are not merely ‘socially conservative’; they are bigoted.
Socialism further out of reach
As a result, socialism seems to be being pushed further out of reach for its grassroots activists.
With patriarchal tones, condescending put downs, and offensive trolling on social media, it is hard to see much ‘change’ in what this party actually has to offer under Jeremy Corbyn. This is only reinforced by his ongoing silence in defending these targeted groups.
Secondly, it’s not difficult to imagine where these socially conservative influences and values originate. In an apparent effort to consolidate power in Parliament, Corbyn brought together an alliance of independent MPs. While they initially united over their stance on the war in Gaza, they have since turned into a dominant clique within the party.
As this post highlights, they are not socialist:
This fascinating article reveals that the foundation process for “Your Party” is now fully controlled by the Independent Alliance group of MPs, which is overwhelmingly socially conservative and includes 3 MPs who voted to keep abortion illegal.https://t.co/gaTAtDL654 pic.twitter.com/6JcsVDJjto
— Eleanora Ní Chualáın 🏳️⚧️🇮🇪 (@EleanoraStats) September 9, 2025
One account on X powerfully pointed out why this direction of travel is so confronting to socialist members:
It’s 2026 and Jeremy Corbyn is asking socialists to canvas for Tories.
— Matthew Walker (@matthewjswalker) April 7, 2026
Socialist Muslim members in the party were so enraged by this dominance of conservative values, forming their own group entirely.
Important to note, though, is the fact that Corbyn appears to have shown no interest in this group:
We are all part of the Ummah pic.twitter.com/VzcyOt2If6
— Muslim Socialists of Your Party (@MusSocialistsYP) March 31, 2026
Co-founder of Connections Anwarul Khan has been a formidable voice in challenging the decisions taken by leadership.
Questioning due diligence processes, Khan posted on X:
2/2. These former Tories were clear. They were deseleted not a change of heart. YP members voted unanimously to be a socialist party. This stinks! pic.twitter.com/SSl05Vto97
— Anwarul Khan (@TPleicester) April 7, 2026
This lack of principled intervention from leadership has undoubtedly opened the door to bigoted, transphobic attacks.
The Many: Superiority, not solidarity
The bigotry doesn’t stop at transphobia. Racism appears to be taking root, also.
“A vocal minority of supporters of The Many” deployed racist tropes towards opposing Grassroots Left candidates, which led to a call for a unifying condemnation of hateful behaviour which can only intimidate and silence underrepresented members.
A call that Corbyn and The Many are yet to respond to:
The Grassroots Left condemns racist bullying pic.twitter.com/349n8ljHDh
— Grassroots Left (@Grassroots_Left) February 17, 2026
The statement calls on The Many candidates to condemn perpetrators of racism and harassment in an effort to counter the “toxic atmosphere” they are creating.
This reality then begs the question: why is Jeremy Corbyn repeatedly allying himself with left-wing bigots under the guise of ‘social conservatism’?
A leader of a socialist party must act with conviction, not capitulation
Socialists have had enough of capitulating to harmful views. British society has long operated within a racist, sexist, and transphobic structure.
Time and again, this structure has created the conditions for bigotry to thrive. It isolates and marginalises vulnerable groups while fostering a toxic culture that diminishes those seen as “different.” To challenge this, we must dismantle that system and build one rooted in genuine solidarity. That can only begin by rejecting values which attack already marginalised communities.
Members joined Your Party on the promise of a socialist, grassroots movement. Yet top-down, opaque practices have repeatedly undermined that promise, ignoring the many socialist groups eager to contribute.
This raises a question we can no longer ignore: can Corbyn truly deliver socialism, or does he doubt it’s even possible?
After all, a meaningful transition to a socialist society can only begin with a leader who truly believes it can be achieved.
Featured image via the Canary
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