Politics
27 MPs submit letter of complaint to equalities watchdog over Reform UK’s Islamophobia
A group of 26 Labour MPs — along with Diane Abbott, now an independent — have reported Reform UK for breaching the 2010 Equality Act through their repeated Islamophobia.
Predictably, Islamophobic Reform chief whip Lee Anderson, whom the complaint named specifically, responded with:
Guess what? There is no such thing as Islamaphobia. [sic]
Reform have a ‘growing Islamophobia problem’
Afzal Khan, the MP leading the complaint, said that:
Reform UK have consistently failed to tackle their growing Islamophobia problem.
The 26 politicians who joined Khan in his letter to the Equalities and Human Rights Council (EHRC) included Clive Lewis, Ian Byrne, and Bell Ribeiro-Addy. The complaint stated that:
Over the last few years, we have seen a number of Reform UK politicians and members make comments that are clearly racist and discriminate against ethnic minorities, and in particular, Muslims.
Of course, the group also had plenty of examples to choose from in order to back up their claim. In particular, they cited party leader Nigel Farage’s nakedly Islamophobic call to ban groups of Muslims from praying in public. His comments followed London mayor Sadiq Khan attending an Iftar event in Trafalgar Square.
The letter also added that:
The prevalence of racism within Reform UK does not exist in a vacuum and has real-world consequences for the millions of British Muslims in our country.
Farage & co.
Along with Farage, the letter also mentioned Reform MPs Sarah Pochin, Suella Braverman, and Lee Anderson. For a start, Pochin used parliamentary questions to call for a ban on the burqa. Meanwhile, in an article for the Telegraph, Braverman claimed that:
The truth is that the Islamists, the extremists and the antisemites are in charge now.
Reacting to that same article on GB News, Anderson said:
I don’t actually believe that the Islamists have got control of our country, but what I do believe is they’ve got control of Khan and they’ve got control of London, and they’ve got control of Starmer as well.
Anderson also added that:
People are just turning up in their thousands, and doing anything they want, and they are laughing at our police. This stems with Khan, he’s actually given our capital city away to his mates.
So yes, those three seem pretty unambiguously Islamophobic to us — and that’s naming just one example each.
‘It’s a made up word’
Of course, you can never point out a right-winger’s racism without them doubling down. In response to the complaint, Anderson posted:
I’m named in this letter.
I stand by every word.
Guess what? There is no such thing as Islamaphobia. [sic]
It’s a made up word spouted out by educated idiots in Parliament who are scared of losing their seats.
Which is odd, because just two years ago, following his suspension from the Tory party for his Islamophobic comments on GB News, Anderson posted:
I will continue to support the Government’s efforts to call out extremism in all its forms – be that anti-semitism or islamophobia. [sic]
So, just about the only consistent things about Anderson are his refusal to learn how to spell ‘Islamophobia,’ and his bigotry. You see, the Reform chief whip is a rare and remarkable figure. He’s actually been suspended for racism from not just the Tories but also Labour.
Anderson started his political career as a Labour councillor for the Ashfield district in 2015. However, in 2018 he was suspended by the local Labour branch for using boulders to block a Traveller group from setting up a camp.
He then defected to the Tories, before being kicked out of the party for his Islamophobia. However, following his defection to Reform, Anderson has maintained the line that “Islamophobia is a made-up word”.
Discrimination? Never heard of it…
Responding to the Khan and co’s complaint, a Reform UK spokesperson said:
We stand by our comments. We will not be intimidated.
Of course they won’t be intimidated. These bigots fully believe that they have the right to say whatever vile thing they want – and especially about Muslims.
Anderson demonstrated, in perfect microcosm, his party’s attitude towards all forms of discrimination. Islamophobia, racism, sexism, transphobia, ableism etc. are the far-right party’s raison d’etre – because those words help to call them out on their bigotry, they instead attempt to define and censor them away.
In fact, Braverman’s first act as Reform’s play-pretend ‘shadow cabinet’ education, skills and equalities spokesperson was to announce that she’d rip up the 2010 Equality Act. The Tory dropout claimed that she wanted to get rid of the:
divisive notion of protected characteristics.
Ingenious – Reform can’t be punished for its naked discrimination if it eliminates the laws against discrimination. These people are dangers to Muslims, they’re dangers to any minoritised individual, and they’re dangers to the very concept of our shared human rights.
Best of luck and more power to Afzal Khan and his complaint. It’s long past time Reform MPs faced any consequence for their hate speech.
Featured image via Getty/Leon Neal
Politics
Israel has killed 910 people in Gaza during ‘ceasefire’
Content warning: this article features video footage of graphic injuries to children, and depicts video footage of dead children. Please exercise caution before reading ahead.
The so-called ceasefire in Gaza has been in place for 227 days, as of 27 May 2026, but the humanitarian catastrophe is worsening every day. Attacks and killings continue to devastate civilian life while the Israeli occupation evades its obligations regarding entry of humanitarian aid.
Martyrs and injured civilians arrive daily to under-resourced hospitals across the Strip. The Ministry of Health and the Palestinian Red Crescent Society report that bodies remain trapped under the rubble and on the roads, as ambulance and civil defence crews are still unable to reach most of them. As of 26 May, 785 bodies have been recovered.
Gaza men tried to defend community against IOF
Meanwhile, on Tuesday, five Palestinians were targeted and killed by the IOF in al Maghazi refugee camp in central Gaza.
They had confronted Israeli occupation backed armed militia members, who were attempting to advance in the Eastern area of the camp towards homes and a UN school, where displaced families were sheltering.

Later that same day, in a separate incident, a vehicle in Khan Younis was targeted by an Israeli occupation airstrike. Two Palestinians were killed and several wounded.
Hamas spokesperson, Hazem Qassem, called the massacre in the al Maghazi refugee camp “a continuation of the genocide and ceasefire violations”. In a statement, Qassem blamed the “Board of Peace” of inaction, silence, and adoption of the Zionist position.
He stressed:
The escalation of genocidal operations in Gaza underscores the extent of Zionist contempt for all efforts by mediators and guarantor states.
Two of the latest targets of the terrorist Israeli state have been children. These included Mennah Nabil Kamel Abu Libda, age six. She was killed and five others injured when an Israeli occupation airstrike targeted a tent sheltering displaced civilians. This was in the al Mawasi area of Khan Younis, in the south of the Strip.
The following day Mohammad Al-Khatib, who was just one month old, was being fed by his mother inside their displacement tent. They were both struck by a missile fired from an Israeli occupation helicopter. Mohammad’s leg was so badly injured that it had to be amputated. His mother was killed instantly.
Ceasefire violations exceed 3,000 since 11 October 2025
According to the Government Media Office, 3,005 violations and serious breaches of the agreement have been carried out by the Israeli occupation between 11 October 2025 and 27 May 2026.
These violations have killed 910 civilians and injured 2,747 others. It brings the total number of Palestinians killed and injured since the start of the genocide to 72,803 and 172,827 respectively.
The violations include bombings, direct attacks targeting civilians and the complete destruction of residential blocks. Repeated live fire incidents, and incursions into residential areas were also carried out. In addition, 82 civilians have been abducted and detained by the IOF during this time period.
Despite Trump’s “Peace Plan” promise of immediate and unhindered access to aid, the Israeli occupation continues its obstructions. Aid is systematically blocked or delayed, and restrictions remain on what can enter Gaza.
Border crossings continue to be closed while many of the most experienced and largest aid organisations are being deregistered. The result is that the amount of essential food supplies in Gaza is not enough to meet the minimum humanitarian needs of the population.
According to figures from the Government Media Office, between 11 October 2025 and 27 May 2026, just over 49,970 of the 135,600 trucks supposed to enter the Strip did so. This reflects a compliance rate of around only 35%.
The problem is made worse due to rising levels of poverty and displacement as well as income sources and local production being destroyed. The entry of fuel, food, and essential materials needed to build durable shelters, repair generators, water and sewage infrastructure also continue to be restricted.
No hospital in Gaza is fully functional
Severe restrictions have also caused a critical shortage of medicines. Therefore, there is still not a single hospital in Gaza which is fully operational. Thousands of amputees are in need of prosthetic limbs, but these too have been prohibited entry to the Strip by “Israel”.
UN agencies warn that Gaza’s health system is on the verge of total collapse. The devastating situation is compounded by shortages of fuel, electricity and medical personnel, and a lack of sanitation.
A total of 1.9 million of the 2.1 million population of Gaza has been displaced. They live in overcrowded, unhygienic conditions worsened by the hot weather. Together with the lack of basic services and nutritious food, these conditions are causing the spread of disease.
Save the Children, says that two out of three children in Gaza are now at risk of infection due to plagues of vermin and insects.
By obstructing the entry of aid, the occupation not only violates the ceasefire deal, but also, yet again, violates its obligations under international humanitarian law. Starving civilians as a method of warfare is illegal under international law. Restricting essential items, such as food and medicine, can constitute collective punishment. This is a recognised war crime under the Fourth Geneva Convention.
It is time for the world to take action to end the Israeli occupation’s culture of impunity.
Featured image via Palestine Chronicle
By Charlie Jaay
Politics
Politics Home Article | Making Money Shouldn’t Be Universities’ Priority, Says Zack Polanski

Zack Polanski is set to speak to UCU members tonight (Alamy)
3 min read
Exclusive: The UK should stop treating university students like customers, Green Party leader Zack Polanski will say on Thursday.
Addressing members of the University and College Union (UCU) this evening, Polanski, who wants to abolish tuition fees, will accuse successive Westminster governments of seeing higher education as a “commodity”, rather than “a public good”.
In remarks shared with PoliticsHome ahead of his speech, Polanski is expected to warn that “tens of thousands” of academics nationwide are facing redundancies and job insecurity, while those who stay in the sector are suffering “shattered morale, crushing workloads, and stifled innovation – often while employed on exploitative, short-term contracts”.
“We all lose out when learning is treated as a commodity, when skills are seen as something to be sold at the highest cost possible, when curiosity and creativity are dismissed because they can’t be measured by exams,” he is set to say.
His speech comes as the higher education sector continues to face severe financial strain.
Earlier this month, a report by MPs on the House of Commons education select committee warned that dozens of universities are at risk of insolvency due to “unprecedented” economic pressure and that the Labour government has no clear plan to prevent it.
Many institutions have already cut courses and staff in a bid to save money.
The UCU’s general secretary, Jo Grady, told PoliticsHome late last year that universities face a financial calamity similar to the 2008 banking crisis, and accused ministers of being “asleep at the wheel”.
Restrictions on student visas brought in by the previous Conservative government are seen as a major reason for the financial pressure facing universities, with overseas students having become a key source of funding for British universities in recent years. The current Labour government has brought in further restrictions since entering office in a bid to reduce net migration.
Polanski is set to say that while countries like Finland have historically invested in universities, the UK has put “all its bets on financial services”.
“Look where that’s left us: A stagnating economy, poor productivity, and an education sector stretched to breaking point.
“Instead of education being prized as the public good it is, our universities have been forced to turn students into customers and focus on making money above all else, just to survive,” the London Assembly Member is expected to tell UCU members.
His speech is also the latest example of Polanski’s bid to develop ties with unions, some of which are unhappy with the performance of Keir Starmer’s Labour government.
Earlier this year, Polanski became the first Green leader to address the National Education Union, claiming that schools had been “pushed to the brink by the toxic twin pressures of ideologically driven reorganisation, and an unforgivable squeeze in budgets”.
Polanski is looking to maintain the Green Party’s momentum after this month’s local elections demonstrated the electoral threat it poses to Labour. The Greens won five councils and two mayoralities on 7 May, with its success coming largely at the expense of Starmer’s party.
At the same time, the Green leader is under pressure to improve the party’s vetting process amid reports of past inflammatory comments made by candidates. Chris Kennedy withdrew as the Green candidate in the Makerfield by-election after describing an attack on ambulances run by a north London Jewish charity as a “false flag”. He was replaced by local councillor Sarah Wakefield.
Tony Dyer, the Green deputy mayor in the West of England, last week admitted to PoliticsHome that his party’s vetting process “needs improvement”.
Politics
Reform’s Kenyon doubles down on disgusting Carol Vorderman comment
Robert Kenyon is Reform UK’s candidate in the Makerfield by-election. Kenyon recently experienced criticism for comments he made about Carol Vorderman. Now, after several days of hiding from media scrutiny, Kenyon has decided to double down:
“It was a crude attempt at a joke to probably about 50 followers… if you go into any building site, I think you’d hear a hundred times worse said” pic.twitter.com/vHA33K0ez5
— Politics UK (@PolitlcsUK) May 28, 2026
NEW: Reform UK Makerfield candidate Robert Kenyon has refused to apologise for his comment about Carol Vorderman
Reform candidate doubles down
People have argued Kenyon could move past this controversy by simply saying sorry. After all, we live in a time in which most people have said something online they later came to regret. Many would understandably see his comments as a red line, of course, but an apology would at least demonstrate that he understands the rules of society; that he’s not just some sort of freak.
Instead of apologising, however, Kenyon said the following in conversation with the Manchester Evening News (MEN):
I’m not a polished politician.
I am rough around the edges. I have made mistakes in my life. I’m not perfect. Nobody is. Not a single person in the world is perfect.
I think everybody does say things that eventually they regret. It was a crude attempt at a joke to probably about 50 followers.
No offence was meant, and it’s not something I’d do now.
Is it really so hard to say ‘sorry’?
He wouldn’t even have to mean it; it’s not like we can read the guy’s mind.
Clearly, Kenyon is copying the ‘never apologise’ mentality of Donald Trump. The issue Kenyon will have is that he lacks the force of personality which allowed Trump to get away with it (not to mention the billions of dollars in the bank).
You’ll note Kenyon said “no offence was meant” too. This might work in some cases, but not when the comment was “I’d love to smell and lick your ars*hole”. If he doesn’t understand such a comment might cause offence, then the guy has the emotional intelligence of a tin opener.
Oh, and the comments from Kenyon got worse too.
On the attack
Kenyon also said:
There’s been a lot of noise about this indirect, sort of vulgar tweet that I’ve made, but I’ve not heard much about Carol’s thoughts on Labour not having the grooming gangs inquiry last year or what she thinks about biological males being allowed into single sex spaces.
Sorry, but does he expect Carol Vorderman to apologise to him? Over things she may or may not have even said?
Is this guy for real?
When the MEN asked if he’d like to apologise, Kenyon responded:
I think I’ve addressed the issue.
“Think” might be a strong description for what’s going on here, honestly.
Offence taken
Kenyon added:
I think that no offence was meant and it wasn’t a direct comment to her. If you go into any building site in the area or any public barracks, I think you’d hear a hundred times worse said.
It was just, like I said, a crass attempt at a joke and it’s not something I’d make now.
Why would he not make the joke now?
Does he think it was out of order?
And if so, isn’t an apology is in order?
This issue isn’t the only one Kenyon and Reform should apologise for either, as we’ve reported:
- Reform deploys ‘suspended’ antisemite to Makerfield by-election campaign.
- Reform’s Kenyon said ‘Russia within rights to invade Ukraine’.
- Reform’s Robert Kenyon: ‘Women get abortions for vanity’.
- Reform’s Makerfield candidate was a Remainer.
- Reform is pretending its Makerfield candidate was Action Man.
We’re not sure where Reform found this guy, but hopefully they drop him back there once he’s done losing this by-election.
Featured image via Jeff Spicer (Getty Images)
By Willem Moore
Politics
Communities face forced displacement as Israel opens West Bank settlement tenders
On 1 June, Israeli authorities will invite bids from private companies to construct 3,400 new settlement units in the occupied West Bank.
This would effectively cut off occupied East Jerusalem from the rest of the occupied West Bank. It would further fragment Palestinian territory, forcibly displace communities including Khan al-Ahmar and restrict access to essential healthcare.
This step would consolidate Israeli control over the corridor linking East Jerusalem to the Ma’ale Adumim settlement bloc. Governments have widely recognised this outcome as undermining the viability of a contiguous Palestinian state and violating international law.
Some pushback from UK
In a joint statement on 22 May, the UK and partner governments warned that companies involved in such settlement activity may face “legal and reputational consequences.”
Palestinian families in Khan Al-Ahmar now face imminent forced displacement after Israeli authorities moved last week to revive long-standing demolition orders against the community.
Khan Al-Ahmar is one of 18 Bedouin and herding communities in the path of the plan. Around 4,000 Palestinians across the 18 communities could lose their homes and land.
Abu Khamees, a community leader in Khan Al-Ahmar, has lived under the shadow of demolition orders for years. Nothing, he says, prepared him for this:
Families here are not prepared to leave. We had been living in limbo for years given a temporary halt on the demolition order.
The decision for imminent forced displacement was like an electric shock to us. People are anxious about where to go with their children as well as how to access essential services like health and education.
People here have already been suffering because reaching healthcare has been extremely difficult, with interrupted services due to movement restrictions and checkpoints.
This is a nail in the coffin of the so-called two-state solution; with the forced displacement of our community Khan Al-Ahmar, and the completion of the E1 settlement project, which has been considered a redline by Western governments for decades.
This also jeopardises regional peace and stability. What is the international community willing to do after all these empty promises?
Medical Aid For Palestinians’ (MAP) mobile clinics have delivered essential healthcare to over 33,000 Palestinians across 22 communities since 2025. Many of these communities are in “Area C”, which covers approximately 60% of the West Bank and is under full Israeli military control.
Access to permanent health services here is denied due to Israel’s apartheid policies. In these areas, mobile care is often the only lifeline, reaching isolated communities that are cut off from hospitals and clinics due to movement restrictions and settlement expansion.
Israel’s illegal settlement expansion across the West Bank has systematically fragmented Palestinian communities, severing patients from hospitals and clinics through settler-only roads, checkpoints and the separation wall.
Settler violence has further deterred patients and healthcare workers from travelling. The result is a population denied timely, consistent access to the healthcare they urgently need.
West Bank settlement expansion and violence
Khan al-Ahmar is not an isolated case. A parallel E2 project south of Bethlehem would see around 2,500 new settlement units built in a corridor designed to sever the southern West Bank in half. Israeli authorities have already approved 3,401 new settlement units in the E1 area alone.
Israeli settlement expansion is compounded by escalating settler violence, which forms part of a broader coercive environment driving the displacement of Palestinians and entrenching de facto annexation.
In a single week (12-18 May 2026), settlers carried out more than 50 attacks, including arson targeting homes, farmland and a mosque.
According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) , 870 attacks have been recorded across more than 220 communities so far this year – an average of six per day.
Since January 2025, settler violence and related access restrictions have displaced thousands of Palestinians across the West Bank, with at least 38-45 rural and herding communities fully or largely emptied.
Aseel Baidoun, MAP’s deputy director of advocacy and communications based in the West Bank, said:
The threatened destruction of Khan al-Ahmar exposes the hollowness of years of international handwringing over illegal settlements. Governments have spent decades calling E1 a red line, warning it would shatter any prospects of a viable Palestinian state, while doing virtually nothing to curb Israel’s impunity.
If Khan al-Ahmar is erased from the map, it will not happen quietly or accidentally. It will happen after years of empty statements, diplomatic theatre, and deliberate political cowardice from governments that claim to support international law while allowing Israel to carve apart the West Bank piece by piece.
Empty condemnation while illegal settlements expand in plain sight is not diplomacy – it’s complicity in the ethnic cleansing.
MAP calls on the UK government to follow in the footsteps of the Netherlands, Spain, Slovenia, and Ireland and end trade with illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank.
This move, which 119 MPs have backed, is consistent with the International Court of Justice’s July 2024 ruling that Israel’s decades-long occupation of the West Bank is unlawful.
Nearly two years on from the ICJ’s advisory opinion, the UK government has still not published its legal review or set out any concrete steps to implement it.
Featured image via Tamir Kalifa / Getty Images
By The Canary
Politics
DWP hypes youth unemployment panic ahead of Milburn Review
The long-awaited interim report into the Milburn Review on youth unemployment is expected today. In typical style, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) are already steering the corporate media in its benefits-hating direction.
DWP Milburn review out today
In November 2025, the department announced an independent review into why so many young people were Not in Employment, Education of Training (NEETs). The review is run by Alan Milburn. He has been prolific in wanting to strip disabled people of unemployment benefits. Additionally, the review will focus heavily on why kids aren’t working or in education. However, this is Labour so it will no doubt be blaming them all for faking mental health issues. They are doing this without drilling into the causes.
Today’s publication is just an interim report. This means it won’t provide a full picture or offer any practical recommendations. Furthermore, it also won’t hold the government to account for supporting young people. Not that it would’ve anyway.
But that hasn’t stopped the MSM from having an absolute field day. They’re using everything in their arsenal to demonise young people. I’d say we don’t yet know what’s in the report. However, judging from the sheer amount of coverage on a ‘lost generation’ and youth mental health, it’s clear the press has already been briefed.
Despite the report not being published until 11am, every outlet seemed to had read it before then – or at least the DWP press release.
Live coverage of a report? Really?
As the BBC live coverage states:
The number of 16 to 24-year-olds not in employment, education or training — known as Neets – has risen above one million, new figures show — the key points at a glance
The number stands at its highest level in 12 years and is driven by more young people no longer looking for work, the Office for National Statistics says
Yes, that’s right, the BBC is running live bloody coverage of a report. It’s been going since 8 am this morning, and there are already two pages worth of stories. So far, it’s included separate ‘updates’ on different parts of the report, that the report is coming, what NEET means, a breakdown of how the morning will pan out and various interviews Milburn has done.
Most bizarrely, they also included live up-to-the-minute coverage of Milburn being interviewed… by the BBC.
And they’re not the only ones. The supposedly left-wing Guardian also has rolling coverage. They also include a ‘newsflash’. Yes, they really used the word:
Newsflash: The number of young people in the UK not in education, employment or training (Neets) has risen over one million, for the first time in over a decade.
This level of coverage is usually reserved for if a pope dies or another massive paedophile has been uncovered. However, it is not just another report to demonise young unemployed people.
And that’s exactly the point, the government is clearly guiding the media to push so much coverage of this report to engineer hysteria about youth unemployment before we’ve actually been able to read the report.
DWP is controlling the narrative
Let’s be honest, the government and media know the common man isn’t going to spend their time reading a DWP report on youth unemployment. So they will only be informed by what they read in the rags. Therefore, the DWP is painting the narrative they want.
Despite the focus being on youth unemployment, there’s been nothing on poverty. There’s also been nothing on how much the cost-of-living crisis has affected young people.
There are plenty of accusations of kids faking mental health. However, there’s nothing on why they’re all struggling so much. It ignores the state of the world they’ve had to grow up in.
There’s not a bloody jot in the press about how neurodivergent kids are being forced out of education. They then struggle to get into work. This is because the system wasn’t built for them.
And of course, there are absolutely zero practical solutions that will actually support kids.
Report not worth the paper it’s written on
It’s highly likely that, much like Streeting’s interim report into whether ADHD is overdiagnosed, the review is not going as the DWP hoped, so they’re in crisis mode to handle the narrative.
What’s clear here, with the tightly controlled way the DWP has steered the press, is that the report will not be worth the paper it’s written on — and that’s why it’s being turned into a media circus.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
HMRC’s toffs and trannies helpline
As a rule, I oppose assisted dying. That is, until the time of year arrives when I have to ring His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs. As the calming hold music and passive-aggressive messages reminding me to ‘be kind to staff’ drone on, the will to live slowly leaks out of my ears. The only grain of comfort is that this is a grisly ritual millions of British citizens are forced to endure, and no one is able to jump the queue.
Which is why it came as something of a surprise to learn that there is, in fact, a fast lane through Britain’s tax bureaucracy. Not for the vulnerable. Not for the terminally ill. Not even for the small-business owners keeping the Treasury afloat. No, HMRC’s premium hotline, officially known as Public Department 1 (PD1), is reserved for MPs, royals, celebrities and anyone equipped with a Gender Recognition Certificate.
This toffs and trannies service is, apparently, reserved for ‘taxpayers whose records require greater protection’. Calls are answered roughly twice as fast as those from the pleb queue. HMRC insists the privilege is necessary because users of the PD1 service have restricted access to some digital systems owing to the sensitivity of their records. One might expect this to apply to stalking victims, or those under witness protection – but clearly these groups are not considered as vulnerable as people who claim special gender feelings. Holders of Gender Recognition Certificates have reportedly enjoyed access to the scheme since 2005, when Britain imported a European Court of Human Rights ruling on transgender rights into domestic law.
As the Telegraph reports, some users on the trans discussion boards on the social-media site Reddit have raved about the service. One stated:
‘My co-worker needed to call HMRC about some simple query. Spent two hours waiting, then their phone dropped out mid-conversation and they had to spend another two hours waiting before they resolved the issue… The next day I had to ring Special Section D to fix my tax code [with] maybe 30 seconds on hold, and it was done within three minutes of calling. Bliss.’
This is social engineering by a government department staffed by the sort of people one imagines eat paper clips and shit decimal points. HMRC is not exactly the vanguard of fashionable radicalism. That even the taxman (he/him) ended up absorbing the activist lie that trans-identifying people are somehow sacred is peculiarly chilling.
This matters. Because once the state elevates a group into a protected caste, the normal rules stop applying. For years, these institutions have been taught that the feelings of trans-identifying people outweigh everyone else’s rights, discomfort or safety concerns. No wonder so many activists now behave as though the law on single-sex spaces is optional. In a way, who can blame them? Trans loons have been told they are above the law for the best part of a decade.
In modern Britain, victimhood has become currency, and the trans movement mastered the exchange rate years ago, co-opting the clout of organisations like Stonewall when they were at their zenith. And once the sluggish machinery of the state absorbs an idea, it clings to it long after the public mood has shifted. Even after the Supreme Court clarified that sex matters in law, public institutions have failed to catch up, still taking their cues from internal staff networks and discredited trans lobby groups.
Today, government bodies that cannot answer phones, process passports or fill potholes still somehow find the time to maintain bespoke systems for gender identity.
Britain is no longer merely a country of two-tier policing. It is becoming a country of two-tier citizenship, where toffs and trannies glide past the crowds, while the rest of us are left on hold.
Jo Bartosch is co-author of Pornocracy. Order it here.
Politics
Hannah Spencer demands Reeves caps energy prices to end ‘rip-off Britain’
Energy regulator Ofgem has announced a 13% rise to the energy price cap. Since then, politicians like Richard Burgon have spoken out, with the latest dissenting voice coming from Green Party MP Hannah Spencer:
On July 1st, energy bills are set to rise by an average of £221 per household.
With millions already struggling while corporations profit from rip-off Britain, Hannah Spencer MP has written to the Chancellor calling for urgent action. pic.twitter.com/NA5Pg8728m
— The Green Party (@TheGreenParty) May 28, 2026
Energy price cap not fit for purpose
Hannah Spencer is the Manchester MP who won the Gorton & Denton by-election. In her victory speech, Spencer said:
I am no different to every single person here in this constituency. I work hard. That is what we do. Except things have changed a lot over the last few decades.
Because working hard used to get you something. It got you a house, a nice life, holidays. It got you somewhere. But now, working hard, what does that get you? Because talk to anyone here and they will tell you – the people who work hard but can’t put food on the table, can’t get their kids school uniforms, can’t put their heating on, can’t live off the pension they worked hard to save for, can’t even begin to dream about ever having a holiday.
Ever.
Because life has changed.
“Rip-off Britain”
In her letter to the chancellor Rachel Reeves, Spencer wrote:
I am writing to you to raise concerns at yesterday’s announcement that the Ofgem energy price cap – the mechanism by which the average household’s fuel bill is calculated – is increasing by around £221 to an average of £1,862 from the 1st July. In the three months I’ve been an MP, so many constituents have reached out to me to express their worry about unaffordable and rapidly increasing energy bills.
Our energy market is a hugely unfair and obvious example of rip-off Britain at its worst. Fossil fuel giants line their pockets while working people have to swallow the impact of wars of aggression overseas. Analysis from Greenpeace UK showed that just five companies drilling oil and gas in the North Sea received a staggering £73 billion boost to the value of their shares in the first month following Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu’s initial strikes on Iran. £73 billion pounds.
Shell actually experienced a profit surge of 115% in the first quarter this year. It seems that every crisis now results in pain for consumers but profit for shareholders, with another key example being the British supermarkets.
Spencer continued:
I urge you to intervene to stop the bills of millions of households across the country from increasing in just over a months time. The constituents I represent in Gorton and Denton are already struggling to make ends meet, with one in three households living in fuel poverty. Taking an even bigger chunk of their already insufficient hard-earned wages risks pushing many in my constituency and across the country into dire circumstances.
There is a clear and fast way to fund this intervention, and there are also long-term solutions. Your government must be bold in the face of this urgency, and tax every penny of the profits fossil fuel giants have extracted from the crisis in the Gulf. This is the morally right thing to do, and to so many people will seem common sense – why should these companies be profiteering while they struggle to make ends meet?
Why indeed?
Renewable revolution
Spencer went on to say:
To protect people from future price rises, which are likely to happen more often as climate change and global instability get worse, we need to invest much more in renewable energy. Renewables are clean, cheap, sustainable, and, crucially, not reliable on unstable international markets. And if we want to cut energy bills for good, we really need a properly funded and properly regulated national home insulation scheme.
Green Party leader Zack Polanski also spoke out about insulation this week:
We could have seen a nationwide programme of home insulation, going door to door, making sure every home can keep in the heat, so no-one would risk getting sick or dying because they can’t afford heating in the winter.
Why is this Government running from crisis to crisis? https://t.co/YqJSz4Kiqj
— Zack Polanski (@ZackPolanski) May 27, 2026
Insulation keeps homes cooler too!
— Zack Polanski (@ZackPolanski) May 27, 2026
Spencer finished:
Will you consider this with urgency, and if you are unwilling to stop bills rising in July, would you please answer this question for my constituents: why do you refuse to take the side of people who are struggling, and continue to defend the interests of corporate shareholders?
Destabilisation
We live in a moment in which companies are increasingly taking the piss despite growing public awareness. Clearly, this cannot go on forever. The question is whether Labour ministers understand that not fixing the problem will doom them to the rubbish bin of history.
Featured image via Ryan Jenkinson (Getty Images) / Jack Taylor (Getty Images)
By Willem Moore
Politics
Is this the real reason “Hope not Hate” are backing Burnham?
Hope not Hate have come under fire in recent days for their intervention in the hotly-contested Makerfield by-election, with some interpreting their leaflets in the area as a direct endorsement of Labour candidate Andy Burnham.
Burnham may be packaged as an anti-establishment “saviour” today, but he is also the man who voted to invade Iraq and lauded the Israeli state as a:
democracy that has a long history of protecting minorities and promoting civil rights.
Perhaps it is no surprise, then, that Nick Lowles’ operation is so keen to see him back in Parliament.
On the surface, Hope not Hate is a charitable organisation opposing far-right extremism, but they also have a political wing with direct connections to Labour Party grandees and pro-Israeli lobbyists.
The ‘Hope not Hate’ lobby
The Hope not Hate Charitable Trust’s total income in 2024 was £984,868. Of this, £787,858 was given to Hope not Hate Ltd., the vehicle used for political campaigning. Indeed, the two organisations were considered so similar, the Charity Commission had to get involved. In January, they concluded their investigation, and the Hope not Hate Charitable Trust changed their name to HOPE Unlimited.
Over at Hope not Hate Limited, the links to the Labour Party are numerous and undeniable. The board of directors includes Alison Philips, the current CEO of Labour Together (now re-branded as “Think Labour”), and Jon Cruddas, a former Labour MP and “Friend of Israel”.
Cruddas was part of the Morgan McSweeney-assisted 2008-10 campaign to get Margaret Hodge elected for Labour in Barking & Dagenham. That campaign was also backed by Hope not Hate.
Labour peer Ruth Anderson, formerly known as Ruth Smeeth, was a director of Hope not Hate from 2010-15. She has previously worked for a string of pro-Israeli organisations including Labour Friends of Israel, the Jewish Labour Movement, BICOM, CST, and the Board of Deputies. But from 2011-15, Smeet was also a director of the Hope not Hate Charitable Trust.
Hope with some Hate (and child abuse)
When it comes to pro-Israeli lobbying efforts in the UK, Hope not Hate has a major blind spot. In their 2019 annual report, Hope not Hate included the following tweet as an example of left-wing antisemitism:
We need to stand up against the Zionist lobby in the UK. They are not putting Britain first but Israel first. Why are we allowing them to dictate British politics when they put Israel’s interests above any other interests. Their agenda is making other nations’ sons die for Israel.
As Rusere Shoniwa, a former supporter of the charity, noted at the time:
This tweet, directed expressly at the Zionist lobby (and therefore possibly, by extension, Zionism) and the state of Israel, its main promoter, is political speech which cannot, prima facie, be imbued with hostility to Jews as Jews. Zionism is a political ideology whose proponents are not all Jewish. Indeed, some Jews are strongly opposed to it.
Another Labour peer who has been consistently praised by Hope not Hate is Margaret Hodge. Hodge calls herself “a committed Zionist” and is another long-time supporter of Labour Friends of Israel.
In 2019, with Margaret Hodge as vice-president and Ruth Smeeth as national parliamentary chair, the Jewish Labour Movement elected Liron Velleman as their Policy Officer. Velleman later served as a Political Organiser for Hope not Hate. In March, Velleman was sentenced for child sex offences after sending videos of his penis to what he thought was a 13 year old girl. The judge condemned his:
reckless, vile and frankly devious interest in children.
In 2017, Jewish News named Liron Velleman on their list of “30 under 30”:
His style of Israel advocacy is sensitive and effective. Professional but always able to put others at ease, Liron is best known for his ability to do everything he says he will, and more besides.
More friends of Israel and Labour Together
The same day Smeeth stepped down from Hope not Hate Ltd, Jemma Levene was appointed as a director. Levene, a blogger for the Times of Israel, is currently the Chief Operating Officer of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, the propaganda outfit set up by Morgan McSweeney and Imran Ahmed with Labour Together money.
In 2024, Imran Ahmed e-mailed Efrat Hochstetler, an official at the Israeli Embassy in Washington, thanking her for her “continued support”. Days earlier, he had met with Sawsan Hasson, the Israeli Embassy Minister of Public Diplomacy. Hasson promised to find funders for CCDH.
Hope not Hate Limited’s list of current and previous directors also includes Simon Tuttle, a funder of McSweeney’s Labour Together project, and Labour Party MP and chair Anna Turley, another supporter of Labour Friends of Israel and the Jewish Labour Movement.
Burnham “will never change”
In recent days, Andy Burnham has been vocal about his record on Ukraine, but quiet about his documented support for the genocidal settler state. Like Hope not Hate, the double-standard is telling.
In 2015, leadership favourite Burnham said:
I’ve always been a friend of Israel … that will never change.
There is no reason not to believe him.
Featured image via Chomoi Picho-Owiny
Politics
Labour chair to Farage: report your so-called Russian hack to the authorities, or I will
Labour chair Anna Turley has issued an ultimatum to Nigel Farage: he has 24 hours to report his claim to have been a victim of a Russian hack to security services. If not, Turley plans to do it for him.
It’s “in the public and national interest” to make sure that a possible attack by a foreign state is investigated properly, according to the letter Turley sent to the Reform leader.
Farage needs to sound the espionage alarms
On 23 May, Farage claimed that counter-espionage experts employed by Reform had found proof that Russian hackers used spear phishing to break into his bank accounts, phone, and email. In the Mail, a Reform source stated that the alleged cyber-attack:
bore all the sophisticated hallmarks of a nation state actor using destabilisation techniques in the run-up to this month’s local elections.
However, Farage’s ‘haters’ mused that the ‘Russian hack’ could in fact be a clever ruse to distract public attention from the Reform leaders £5m ‘gift’ from crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne. According to Farage, only four people were actually aware of generous non-donation – so obviously, it must have been a hack.
The parliamentary standards commissioner has since stated that he’s investigating Farage for a potential breach of the members’ code of conduct in failing to declare the £5m when he re-entered politics a couple of months later.
However, on 25 May, the Guardian published comments for ex-national cybersecurity chief Ciaran Martin, who held that Farage’s wild claims could have massive repercussions for the UK’s policies on Russia. If, that is, they weren’t a load of old rubbish. Martin explained that:
It is a very, very serious thing to allege. It would be a national security issue. If it is true, the government should be in emergency session in COBR [Cabinet Office Briefing Rooms] right now considering their response to the most serious Russian intervention in internal British affairs for years.
He also highlighted that Moscow-linked agents don’t exactly leave a little Russian flag to announce that they’d committed international cyber-crimes.
‘Wider implications for Britain’s national security’
Following Martin’s line, Turley wrote to Farage that the alleged phishing attack:
would constitute a serious cybercrime and a potential hostile-state operation directed at the leader of a British political party.
The Labour chair also told Farage to explain why exactly Harborne ‘gifted’ him the £5m. The Reform leader has spent weeks ducking interviews, avoiding hard questions about the oh-so-generous donation. Sorry, sorry – it was a non-political present, wasn’t it?
Previously, however, he claimed the gift was for ‘security’. Harborne, you see, had witnessed someone throw a milkshake at Farage, and clearly thought £5m was a proportionate response. Later, the party leader changed his story, calling the money a ‘reward’ for all of his Brexit campaigning.
In her letter, Turley stated that:
Quite apart from the implications for you personally, the alleged crime is an incredibly serious one with potential wider implications for Britain’s national security, the integrity of our politics and public confidence in our democratic system.
It is therefore essential that any evidence of hostile-state hacking or foreign interference is placed in the hands of the proper authorities, so that it can be fully and independently investigated.
With that in mind, please can you urgently confirm whether you have reported the alleged hacking of your phone, email and bank accounts to the police and/or to the relevant security services, including the National Cyber Security Centre?
On 25 May, the Guardian reported its understanding that Farage had failed to notify the NCSC about the supposed Moscow-linked cyber attack.
‘It has been reported,’ honest
Turley finished up with her ultimatum:
If we do not receive confirmation within 24 hours that this matter has been reported to the police, the Labour party will, in the public and national interest, report the matter ourselves to the police and the relevant national security authorities, on the basis of your public statements and the published reports.
However, Reform was quick to reassure the Labour chair that her assistance wasn’t needed. A spokesperson for the far-right party said:
It has been reported to the relevant authorities. It would be inappropriate to comment further while investigations are ongoing.
That’s terribly convenient, isn’t it? All it took was somebody reminding Farage that his failure to report the non-fictional hack made him look like he was lying through his teeth, and hey presto – report submitted.
Of course, we’re sure that Reform will be able to provide proof of their reporting, should Turley ask for it. The party for far-right incompetents and Tory rejects definitely wouldn’t just double down on an obvious lie, now would they?
Featured image via Getty/Ryan Jenkinson
Politics
Labour’s plans to limit judicial reviews of nuclear projects would ‘harm democracy’
Plans by the Labour Government to make it harder for communities to oppose infrastructure projects near them, such as nuclear power plants, have been criticised by campaigners and a legal expert.
The Treasury announced on 20 May that the chancellor was expected to:
use Parliament to drive through power plants and infrastructure [by giving] Parliament the authority to approve critical energy schemes and better protect infrastructure projects from judicial review.
People with concerns about major infrastructure projects – sometimes called nationally significant infrastructure projects (NSIPs), which includes nuclear power plants – are able to request that judges review applications for building NSIPs.
Those judicial reviews have the potential to bring an end to projects if judges agree with arguments put forward by people pursuing the reviews.
Now, the government is proposing to give government proposals for some major projects “the same status as laws passed by elected decision makers,” according to one legal expert who spoke to the Canary, which appears to “have significant constitutional implications”.
Treasury announcement
The announcement by the Treasury said:
The headline proposal would allow Parliament to designate and approve the most important clean energy projects as being of ‘Critical National Importance’ (CNI), reducing the exposure from judicial review on all but human rights grounds.
This would help deliver the government’s commitment to accelerate new infrastructure development and drive growth, including much-needed projects like new power stations and offshore wind farms.
For all other nationally significant infrastructure – including transport and water projects – the government will introduce a fixed legal challenge window, at the end of which the planning consent could be updated to address any legitimate issues.
Plans to give government proposals same status as acts of parliament ‘concerning’ – lawyer
Leigh Day is a law firm “established to combat injustice,” its website says.
The firm has represented a variety of clients who have used judicial reviews to oppose major infrastructure projects.
Leigh Day partner Ricardo Gama told the Canary:
The government appears to be introducing further limits on communities’ ability to have large infrastructure decisions examined by the courts.
The suggestion that projects with political backing should enjoy the same status as acts of parliament, but be spared parliamentary scrutiny, is concerning.
It appears to have significant constitutional implications because it would alter the relationship between government, parliament and judges, giving government proposals the same status as laws passed by elected decision makers.
Limiting legal challenges ‘harms democracy’ and reduces ‘oversight of the nuclear industry’
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament general secretary Sophie Bolt told the Canary:
The government is cynically using the crisis in the Middle East to justify limiting transparency and the ability of local communities and campaign groups to appeal the railroading of costly and dirty nuclear power projects.
Limiting the appeals process harms democracy and much needed oversight of the nuclear industry – but will not change the fact that nuclear power relies on the dirty process of extracting and processing uranium for fuel and leaves a legacy of toxic waste that lasts for generations.
The government’s plan to cut regulations and limit the scope for judicial reviews essentially means this industry will be more dangerous.
This is disturbingly similar to what Donald Trump did earlier this year when he gutted the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the US Environmental Protection Agency.
Anti-Sizewell C campaigners rail against notion that Sizewell C was delayed by judicial reviews
A Stop Sizewell C spokesperson told the Canary:
If Sizewell C was genuinely delayed by judicial reviews, why did the National Audit Office (NAO), who would have spoken at length to the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) and Sizewell C during their enquiries, not say so?
In October 2025, the Treasury put out a statement saying:
Backing the builders not the blockers, the government will work with the judiciary to cut the amount of time it takes for a judicial review to move through the court system for nationally critical infrastructure projects by around half a year, like Sizewell C.
Then, in May 2026, a National Audit Office (NAO) report about Sizewell C poured cold water on the idea that judicial reviews had delayed the project. It explained reasons for delays and judicial reviews were notably absent from the list.
The NAO report said:
DESNZ started formal negotiations with EDF for SZC in 2021 and initially expected to reach ’financial close’, when contracts take effect, by the end of March 2023. DESNZ and HM Treasury made a final investment decision (FID) in July 2025, having agreed terms with EDF and other private investors.
This was 4.5 years after negotiations started and at least 28 months later than originally planned. The project was delayed several times, including by the 2024 General Election; responding to feedback from potential investors and the government’s internal assurance processes; and longer than expected negotiations with EDF and the other investors. Financial close was reached in November 2025.
The Stop Sizewell C spokesperson continued:
If the Chancellor is going to persist in using such offensive language, she really ought to get her facts right.
A Together Against Sizewell C spokesperson echoed Stop Sizewell C’s perspective, telling the Canary:
Labour still doesn’t get it – we cannot build a sustainable future by weakening our environmental safeguards and legal rights.
Reeves’ draconian policy change is built on the false premise promoted by the nuclear industry and right wing lobbyists that Sizewell C was excessively delayed by judicial review challenges – this does not stand up to scrutiny.
Reeves’ plans will need to be scrutinised by MPs and peers, and the challenge to the Prime Minister’s leadership means it is unclear whether the government will be able to command the confidence of the House of Commons to enable the Chancellor’s plans to make it harder to judicially review some major projects.
Featured image via Chris Radburn – WPA Pool/Getty Images
By Tom Pashby
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