Politics
Netflix’s Little House On The Prairie Cast: Where You’ve Seen The Stars Before
Fans have been anticipating the series since it was first announced to be in the works in 2020, before finally being ordered to series five years later.
Based on Laura Ingalls Wilder’s novels, which were inspired by the author’s own youth, Netflix’s show is the latest in a long line of small-screen adaptations of Little House On The Prairie, which details the lives of pioneer families in the American Midwest in the late 19th century.
If you have already settled down to watch the latest take on the stories and wondered where you recognise the key cast members from, we’ve got you covered.
Here’s our quick guide to everywhere you’ve seen the stars of Netflix’s Little House On The Prairie before…
Alice Halsey

Playing iconic literary character Laura Ingalls is Alice Halsey’s biggest role to date.
The 14-year-old made her screen debut in the Apple+ miniseries Lessons In Chemistry, in which she played the on-screen daughter of Brie Larson’s character, Madeline.
She also appeared in one episode of the recent reboot of Night Court with Melissa Rauch, before a year-long run in the American soap opera Days Of Our Lives.
Alice’s next project will be in the thriller film Ally Clark, which stars Viola Davis and Jason Clarke.
Luke Bracey

Like many Australian stars before him, Luke Bracey’s big break came when he landed the part of high school bad boy Trey Palmer in Home And Away.
After that, his first big-screen performance was in the 2010 Selena Gomez rom-com Monte Carlo, which he followed by replacing Joseph Gordon Levitt as Cobra Commander in the blockbuster sequel, G.I. Joe: Retaliation.
He also appeared in the 2015 Point Break remake, the Oscar-nominated war drama Hacksaw Ridge and in Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis, as the talent manager Jerry Schilling.
On TV, his roles have included Little Fires Everywhere and last year’s The Artful Dodger.
Crosby Fitzgerald

Crosby Fitzgerald is best known for playing Sylvia in the Apple TV+ comedy drama series Palm Royale, and Halle Berry’s younger colleague, Madeline, in Crime 101.
Before her star-making turn, Crosby appeared in small roles in numerous TV comedies, including Abbott Elementary and Awkwafina Is Nora From Queens.
She also played Madison, a friend of the titular character’s stepfather, in the 2025 true crime drama The Twisted Tale Of Amanda Knox.
Skywalker Hughes

Skywalker is still in her teens, but already has some impressive Hollywood credentials under her belt.
Before being cast in Little House On The Prairie, she starred alongside Hilary Swank in the film Ordinary Angels and Kate McKinnon in In The Blink Of An Eye
Her TV work has included the Western drama Joe Pickett and 2024’s Blue’s Clues & You!.
Skywalker will also soon appear in the family film, I, Object alongside Ethan Hawke and Karl Urban.
Jocko Sims

Jocko Sims started his career in 2004 with a one-off appearance in Cold Case, playing a leader of the Black Liberation Front organisation in Philadelphia.
He later had small roles in NYPD Blue, Grey’s Anatomy and NCIS, and has since become best known for playing Anthony Adams in the 2008 TV adaptation of Crash.
More recently, he has had recurring roles in the Michael Sheen drama Masters Of Sex, the action series The Last Ship and the medical show New Amsterdam.
As for Jocko’s film career, his credits include the Jake Gyllenhaal war film Jarhead, the musical Dreamgirls and the post-apocalyptic sequel Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes.
Warren Christie

NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via
You may recognise Warren Christie for his performances as construction mogul Ray Cataldo in October Road, firefighter Scott Rice in Chicago Fire or Bruce’s childhood friend Tommy Elliot in Batwoman.
Over the course of his two-decade career, Warren has also had minor roles in The L Word, Battlestar Galactica and Happy Town.
Meanwhile, if your guilty pleasure is a Hallmark movie, you may well know Warren from his many appearances in the network’s original films, including 2020′s If I Only Had Christmas, 2021′s Crashing Through the Snow and 2024′s Our Holiday Story.
Alyssa Wapanatâhk

Alyssa Wapanatâhk is probably most well-known for having played Tiger Lily in Disney’s 2023 live-action film Peter Pan & Wendy, which co-starred Jude Law as Captain Hook.
Last year, she also appeared in Cottonmouth, a Western starring Ron Perlman and Esai Morales.
Her biggest TV role, meanwhile, was appearing in the seventh season of Riverdale as Lizzo, a Southside Serpent in 1955.
Barrett Doss

Kelsey McNeal via ABC via Getty Images
Barrett Doss is most recognisable for her role as Victoria Hughes in both Grey’s Anatomy and its spin-off series Station 19.
Her other small-screen credits include playing a young Liz Lemon’s great-granddaughter in the 30 Rock finale, Megan, the personal assistant at Rand Enterprises in Iron Fist, and the recent Netflix rom-com The Noel Diary.
Mary Holland

If you regularly watch comedy, you will have likely seen Mary Holland in action, with some of her on-screen credits including Silicon Valley, Parks And Recreation and The Good Place.
Mary’s biggest role to date came when she was cast as Tanya Logan in the Rose Byrne dramedy Physical, followed by leading parts as Sloane in the Netflix comedy The Woman In The House Across The Street From The Girl In The Window and as Nat in Apple’s sci-fi dramedy The Big Door Prize.
More recently, Mary played Puritan Patience in the American remake of the BBC sitcom Ghosts.
Michael Hough

Since making his screen debut in 2011, Michael Hough is now probably best known for playing a sawmill employee in the Stephen King adaptation Chapelwaite.
He has also played an Orion pirate in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds and, more recently, appeared as Tom Quigley in the Irish black comedy Obituary.
Wren Zhawenim Gotts

Still just 12 years old, Little House On The Prairie marks the start of a promising career for young actor Wren Zhawnim Gotts.
Before the Netflix period drama came calling, she was best known for playing Young Bonnie in the MCU miniseries Echo.
Little House On The Prairie is now streaming on Netflix.
Politics
US Congressman Ro Khanna slams IOF after detention by armed Israeli settlers
Extremist Israeli settlers — is there any other kind? — detained US lawmaker Ro Khanna as he visited the occupied West Bank last week.
Khanna — one of the more critical of Israel among US politicians — was held for around 90 minutes by land-thieves armed with M4 assault rifles. He said that when Israeli troops finally turned up:
they sided with the settlers and continued our detention.
Khanna becomes the first US politician held by the apartheid colony. Surely his brown skin had nothing to do with it. The detention has been ignored by the White House and US Israel lobby. He is not, however, the first foreign politician held by Israel — mostly to either deafening silence or token expressions of disapproval from the victims’ home governments. Some have faced torture and/or sexual abuse for daring to try to take food to starving people in Gaza under Israel’s criminal siege.
Khanna was on a fact-finding visit to the West bank to examine the impact of Israeli occupation. He said:
We were at a village that Israeli settlers had destroyed, they had destroyed the school, they had destroyed that village, and we were just looking at it,” he said.
And these hoodlums come in with machine guns — M4, an American-made machine gun — and they detain us. They block off the road. And then they call the IDF and the IDF is on their side, not on the side of the Americans.
Khanna is said to be considering a bid to stand for the Democrats in the next US presidential election.
Ro Khanna vs murderous land-thieves
The euphemistic term ‘settlers’ comes nowhere near the brutal reality of the mostly-imported land thieves driving the indigenous Palestinians from their land. ‘Settlers’ burn homes with Palestinian families inside. They beat and shoot Palestinians, poison water — a tactic used since the inception of the colony — steal or destroy crops and livestock — all under the protection of the occupation military and with complete impunity.
They also hold the whip hand in Israel’s government, with fascist bigots like Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich free to demand mass murder and even more brutal repression of Palestine’s colonised, rightful inhabitants.
Featured image via House.gov
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Wings Over Scotland | Step One
Today’s Sunday Mail leads for the second week in a row on questions about the finances of Yes Scotland.
But there’s a paragraph in the online version of the story that doesn’t make the print edition, and it’s a shame, because it’s a very telling one.
This is it, from Yes Scotland’s former marketing director Ian Dommett:
And unfortunately, until the rest of the SNP’s voters join the 414,000 who walked away from the party between the 2021 and 2026 Holyrood elections and contrive to somehow get that key realisation into their thick heads, Scotland will never take a single step closer to independence.
The SNP’s entire reason for existence now is failing to win independence. Failure is what protects their wages and their power. No government as incompetent as this one wins elections on its record. The moment independence was achieved, the Scottish electorate would give someone else a chance at actually running the country after 20+ years of the same party in charge, and the SNP cannot allow that to happen.
Sadly, if even this sort of thing (from The National on Tuesday):
isn’t enough to wake up the loyal, tribal dunderheads, it’s likely that nothing will be.
And on we’ll limp, year after year, in ever-shrinking circles, going nowhere.
Politics
North Carolina Republicans are anxious for more money to beat Roy Cooper
North Carolina Republicans have a message for Washington: The cavalry needs to come.
Their Senate nominee, former Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley, is lagging far behind Roy Cooper, the prized Democratic recruit and popular former governor, in polls and cash.
Republicans believe Whatley still has time to turn around those steep deficits — but only if the national GOP opens its deep pockets sooner than later, according to interviews with nearly a dozen North Carolina Republicans and national strategists.
A massive infusion of cash ahead of the typical late summer and early fall spending spree, they say, would combat Whatley’s biggest problem: a lack of name ID.
In a typical midterm year, the state’s Senate race would be a marquee battle. But the Cooper-Whatley matchup has been drowned out by other more high-profile contests in Texas, Maine and Michigan, leaving some in North Carolina anxious for more money and ways to push the national party publicly further into the fight.
“He has an uphill climb,” said Tuesday Sauer, chair of the Bertie County GOP. “Even though he was the RNC chair, a lot of people who aren’t politically involved really don’t know who Michael Whatley is.”
So far the race has been sleepy, focused on bread-and-butter affordability issues that are defining contests across the country. But the low-key nature of the race is hiding just how critical North Carolina is in November. The state, which President Donald Trump carried three times, is a must-win for Democrats frothing at the possibility of flipping the Senate. And in Cooper, Democrats have found a strong candidate to give them a chance at their first Senate win in the state since 2008, thanks to his status as a household name from a political career spanning four decades.
Some Republicans think Whatley, a former state party chair and close Trump ally who is a first-time candidate in his own right, is running a generic campaign that won’t cut it given his blue-chip opponent and the tough national environment.
“Michael Whatley has to give them a reason to talk about North Carolina, and so far he hasn’t. That’s the challenge,” said one GOP state official, granted anonymity to speak freely about the race. “There’s a lot of other races right now that give solid headlines, and right now the headline in North Carolina is: ‘Republican Party plays possum.’”
Cooper raised $13.8 million to Whatley’s $5 million in the first quarter of the year, and the Democrat entered the second quarter with $18.5 million in cash on hand, while Whatley reported having more than $2.5 million in the bank. Some public polling shows Cooper with as much as a 14-point lead over Whatley.
“The strategy is simple. Remind North Carolinians that Roy Cooper is a pro-crime, pro-tax, career politician whose failed leadership made life less safe and less affordable,” Whatley campaign spokesperson DJ Griffin said in a statement. “The campaign is humming, our partners are aligned across the board, and every day from now until Election Day is about one thing: sending Roy Cooper into retirement.”
Republicans plan to continue hammering Cooper on two major issues: crime and pandemic restrictions. While serving as North Carolina’s top executive during the height of the pandemic, as the virus ripped through prisons, Cooper reached a settlement with civil rights groups to release about 3,500 inmates to reduce overcrowding and health risks. A number of those inmates went on to commit new crimes — and Republicans blame Cooper for being responsible.
Cooper’s team argues that Whatley holds blame for pushing for the prisoners to be released during the pandemic.
“Whatley and his allies have been caught lying time and again, but the truth is Roy Cooper spent his career locking up criminals while Whatley pushed for prisoners to be released during Covid,” said Cooper campaign spokesperson Kate Smart, in a statement.
The race will reveal how fresh those Covid-19 memories are in the minds of voters. Republicans remain angry at Cooper for his pandemic restrictions, like shutting down churches and restricting access to visitors of patients in hospitals.
“At the first chance during Covid, Roy Cooper shut down all the churches, that’s major, while he let the bars remain open,” said state GOP Sen. Steve Jarvis. “It’s been a while, so I think that’s being missed right now. We need to get that back in the news.”
While antsy for the cash to arrive, many Republicans are optimistic that Whatley’s relationships within the party will come in handy.
The GOP-aligned Senate Leadership Fund has committed $71 million to the race and so far has reserved more than $36 million in broadcast ads starting in early September, according to tracking service AdImpact. North Carolina, which contains several major media markets, is one of the more expensive states to run ads.
“If Dems think they have a layup in the only swing state that President Trump is 3-0, they’re out of their minds,” said a national Republican strategist working on the race, granted anonymity to speak candidly about the landscape.
Other PACs, like Old North Action have also reserved a large chunk of ad space this fall. Americans For Prosperity has already doled out more than $8 million this spring, the bulk of which was spent on digital and streaming ads for Whatley. North Carolina Republicans are also optimistic that Whatley will be a major beneficiary of the recent Supreme Court decision allowing political parties to freely coordinate with candidates and spend without constraint, given his stint as RNC chair. Republicans have a massive cash edge over Democrats: The RNC has more than $125 million in the bank, while the DNC has more debt than cash on hand, $18.3 million to $14.8 million.
“The fall of coordinated spending limits means the NRSC can discuss spending decisions directly with our candidates and their campaigns,” said Joanna Rodriguez, communications director at the National Republican Senatorial Committee. “The era of raising the curtain on strategy and press and the Democrats we’re looking to defeat is over.”
“President Trump and Republicans are united behind Michael Whatley, who will be North Carolina’s champion in the US Senate,” said RNC spokesperson Emma Hall, in a statement.
Cooper has his own national money in the pipeline, but so far it doesn’t match the Republican side. WinSenate PAC, affiliated with Schumer-backed Senate Majority PAC, has promised more than $27 million in fall reservations for him.
“The reality of all of it is that between Republican super PACs and the RNC, they just have way more money,” said Morgan Jackson, a longtime North Carolina Democratic strategist and a Cooper adviser. “There’s no white horse coming, the way that Republicans are waiting on their savior to come.”
Still, Republicans’ biggest asset — Trump’s PAC MAGA Inc. — remains tightlipped about its own plans to distribute its massive $350 million warchest.
“That money needs to be brought to North Carolina, so the people of North Carolina can be reminded of what a crappy Governor Roy Cooper was,” said GOP state Sen. Amy Galey.
“Getting his name, face recognition in 100 counties is tough, especially in North Carolina, with just plain geographics of going from Manteo to Murphy,” said GOP state Rep. Donnie Loftis, of Whatley. “It comes down to funding. That money drives your message, and if you don’t have the money, you can’t get your message out there.”
North Carolina Democrats have their own concerns about lagging investments from the national party. Some fear that Cooper’s strong current standing in the race at this juncture will cause party leaders to overlook the state in favor of other shiny objects — like Texas, where Democrat James Talarico appears competitive with Republican Ken Paxton.
“I believe in the Coach K theory,” said Democratic House Minority Leader Robert Rieves, referring to former Duke basketball coaching legend Mike Krzyzewski. “It doesn’t matter how far you are ahead, you keep playing just as hard as you did the first minute.”
Erin Doherty contributed reporting.
Politics
Farage speculates Ann Widdecombe death was ‘premeditated murder’
Nigel Farage has speculated that Ann Widdecombe was the victim of “premeditated murder”. He’s attracting controversy for the statement; especially because he also said ‘it doesn’t pay to speculate’ at this time:
Devon and Cornwall Police: “We would ask people not to speculate about what might have happened, particularly on social media.”
Nigel Farage: “From what I can see of it, from what I can make out, this was premeditated murder.”
— Ben Kentish (@BenKentish) July 11, 2026
Speculation
On 10 July, Joe Glenton reported the following of Widdecombe:
A 26-year-old white male suspect has been arrested after former Tory minister and Reform UK politician Ann Widdecombe was found dead. She was an MP for over two decades and was known for her far-right and homophobic views.
The police have since released the suspect. It wasn’t speculation to report on the above, though, because it was reported by the police that they’d made the arrest. The following from Farage, however, is most certainly speculation:
From what I make out, this was premeditated murder. Whether it was politically motivated, whether it was someone with a grudge. I don’t think it pays at this time to speculate
We understand the 24-hour news cycle encourages this sort of thing from media figures. Take this from Mike Graham, for instance, who was a presenter on TalkTV until they sacked him over a racist social media post:
All pointing towards a police cover-up right now… https://t.co/GvM4pwLHXJ
— Mike Graham
(@Iromg) July 11, 2026
Generally, it’s understood that politicians should hold themselves to a higher standard. We’re not sure anyone would expect this from Farage, of course, given his many ongoing scandals, but still.
Farage just can’t respect the wishes of the family and the request of the police : ie not to speculate
He’s feeding speculation for his own perceived political advantage
Just like he always does https://t.co/hjtIJLZsmk
— Bruce McD (@brucemcd23) July 11, 2026
As Ben Kentish noted in a tweet:
Devon and Cornwall Police: “We have made the active decision not to release further information…Releasing such information prematurely could compromise ongoing enquiries and may prejudice future investigative opportunities.”
Nigel Farage: “The car went onto the drive at approximately 12.30pm on Wednesday.”
Farage is openly just engaging in theorising too, saying:
One theory doing the rounds is that it was a burglary gone wrong. But a car went onto the drive at approximately 12.25-12.30 on Wednesday. She had done one interview in the morning… She was due to do another one at 1pm. So if you were a burglar, would you literally drive your car onto someone’s drive?
Farage and his big mouth
Farage is making it increasingly clear that he’s not fit to hold higher office. Whether it’s the many donation scandals or his loose lips, the man simply cannot behave himself. And while we’re often in favour of a little anarchic behaviour, that’s not the case when said behaviour solely benefits billionaire backers and dodgy donors.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
Politics
Deranged Israel-first senator Graham dies after visit to Ukraine arms factory
Rabidly Israel-first US senator Lindsey Graham has died aged 71. His office described his death as coming after a “brief and sudden” illness.
Graham was one of the more unhinged US politicians, even among Trump supporters. Irredeemably Israel-first, he even threatened a US invasion of the International Criminal Court over its arrest warrant for Benjamin Netanyahu.
Lindsey Graham — Shameless genocider
Graham was a shameless supporter of Israel’s genocide in Gaza, though he would never have admitted it is a genocide. His comments make clear he had no concern whatsoever for Israel’s hundreds of thousands of Palestinian victims:
“I am with Israel. Do whatever the hell you have to do.”
“Level the place.”
“Do in Gaza what we did in Tokyo and Berlin.”
Lindsey Graham had just visited a Ukrainian killer-drone factory, where he had toured weapons the manufacturer has developed to try to protect Israel from Iranian ‘Shahed’ drones and other retaliation.
Graham’s fellow Israel-firster, 84-year-old Senate leader Mitch McConnell, is also believed to have died. However, his office appears to be delaying confirming the death, potentially for political reasons. McConnell’s sheet-covered body was reportedly rolled “without urgency” into an ambulance late last week.
Muslim humanitarian Omar Suleiman responded to news of Graham’s death by wishing him an eternity of what he helped inflict on Gaza:
Bye Lindsey. May you live an eternity in ruins for the ruins you helped create in Gaza. Ameen
Featured image via the Canary
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Police Urge Caution Over Ann Widdecombe Alleged Murder Motive
Police have urged the public not to speculative on the “motive” behind Ann Widdecombe’s alleged murder.
The former Conservative minister, and later Reform UK spokeswoman, was found dead at her home in Haytor on Dartmoor at about 11.40am on Thursday after sustaining serious injuries.
A 28-year-old white British man was arrested on suspicion of murder in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, shortly after 9pm on Saturday.
At a police briefing on Sunday, assistant chief constable Matt Longman, of Devon and Cornwall Police, said: “At this point, there is still no information to suggest that this is a terrorism-related incident and at this point we are not looking for anyone else in connection with this murder.
“At this stage, there is nothing to suggest that it was politically-motivated.”
He said detectives “remain open-minded about the potential motive” and stressed it is not believed there is any threat to the wider public.
The officer added: “We are aware of online and public speculation, particularly with regards to motive.
“Again, I urge people not to share or engage with that speculation – it’s unhelpful, it doesn’t aid our investigation, and particularly, it’s distressing to the family and friends of Miss Widdecombe.”
Speaking as he laid a wreath outside Widdecombe’s home on Saturday, Reform leader Nigel Farage said: “From what I make out, this was premeditated murder.
“Whether it was politically motivated, whether it was someone with a grudge. I don’t think it pays at this time to speculate.”
It has also emerged that Reform MPs are being given round the clock security protection following Widdecombe’s death.
Meanwhile, Reform’s home affairs spokesman, Zia Yusuf, accused parliamentary authorities of not caring about the safety of the party’s MPs.
In a post on X, he said: “The state is providing no protection whatsoever.
“In fact, based on what I have seen in the last 48 hours, none of the government, the Speaker nor the police care at all about the security of Reform MPs.
“Several of our MPs have written to the above in recent months about distressing, escalating security concerns, asking for help. Their correspondence was not even replied to. I will let you draw your own conclusions from this.”
But independent MP Rosie Duffield replied: “Every single sitting MP is entitled to security provided by the House of Commons. This also covers our outside engagements.”
The Commons Speaker’s office has been approached for comment.
Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Fraudster made undeclared donations to Reform UK
Mainstream outlets have been shining a light on Reform UK and Nigel Farage’s finances over the past month. Last week, this saw the Times covering the criminal aristocrat ‘Posh George’ Cottrell, who was providing Farage with various benefits in the runup to the 2024 election. Now, the Times are reporting Cottrell may also have made undisclosed donations to Reform UK:
EXCL by @ManuMidolo ft me @venetiamenzies @GeorgeGreenwood
The criminal who funded Nigel Farage made undisclosed donations to Reform in apparent breach of electoral law
George Cottrell lawyers at Carter Ruck refuse to say when he became permissible donor https://t.co/yFEalCjDdr — Gabriel Pogrund (@Gabriel_Pogrund) July 12, 2026
Posh George
Farage has multiple ongoing scandals right now, including:
- Multiple investigations into a £5m gift he received from a crypto billionaire.
- Accusations he’s shilling for crypto on behalf of his donors.
- Questions over three houses he seemingly failed to declare.
The controversies for Farage multiplied over the past week, with the following hitting mainstream attention:
- Failure to declare financial support from convicted fraudster Posh George in the runup to the 2024 election.
- Revelation that Posh George had Reform UK business cards despite the claim he wasn’t involved with the party.
- Police probe into a £500k donation from Posh George’s mother to Reform UK (suspected to be from Posh George himself).
There’s also this:
I've been saying for nearly a year that this was money laundering. https://t.co/mEADwybqWI
— Mr Ethical
(@nw_nicholas) July 12, 2026
Oh, and this isn’t a scandal per se, but it came out that Posh George refers to Farage as ‘daddy’. Make of that what you will.
Reform UK — Undeclared
In the latest on the Posh George affair, the Times are reporting:
George Cottrell used his own money to cover office costs totalling thousands of pounds for Reform after the last election and as recently as last year, sources have told Insight.
The crypto-gambler repeatedly used his personal bank card to buy computer tools and software to be used by the party’s staff. However, none of the donations were declared to the Electoral Commission as required by legislation.
A party can be fined for failing to disclose such support under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000, which stipulates that a donation includes money, goods or services given free or at a discount exceeding £500 in value.
Posh George is a convicted fraudster, and may not have been a permissible donor at the time that he made some of the above donations. This is because Cottrell is a tax resident of Montenegro; the base of the crypto-gambling platform he’s involved with. While he is on the list of registered overseas voters, he’s only been on said since last December.
Reform UK describes Cottrell as a volunteer. Contrary to this, the Times are now reporting that Cottrell has been intimately involved with the party:
However, Insight can now reveal that as well as buying office equipment for the party, Cottrell has long had personal access to Farage’s party email and had his own desk next to the leader’s private office at party headquarters at Millbank, Westminster.
Additionally:
The insiders said he sat either with Farage in his personal office at headquarters or in a quad of desks in a room directly next to it, and claim he was involved in political and fundraising matters at the very highest level.
Mainstream attention
Because of how the right of reply process works, Reform UK knew this raft of stories were coming out. As such, this may explain Farage’s big by-election stunt. It’s unclear why the Reform leader felt a need to step down from his Clacton seat only to run in the race to reclaim it. Such a move could have worked as a distraction; it’s just failing to do so because there are too many scandals to distract from.
This, then, is why Farage panicked last week. He knew it was all about to unravel. This whole stunt was a desperate attempt to get ahead of it.
Remarkable. He's literally self-destructed. https://t.co/yyvUUURpt2
— Tom Bacon (@TomABacon) July 11, 2026
We should note we’re using phrases like ‘mainstream attention’ for a reason, and it’s that independent journalists have been covering this stuff for years. As Don McGowan of No Holds Barred Pod said:
So many people had this story for years before the Times picked it up.@BylineTimes and @carolecadwalla were writing about George Cottrell over five years ago.
The difference is that the Murdochs have made an executive decision that they've finally had enough of Farage. https://t.co/E21vc3i2G1 — Don McGowan (@donmcgowan) July 5, 2026
Carole Cadwalladr speculated that her reporting was ignored for the following reasons:
Reported while female.
Didn’t work for a right-wing newspaper.
Dismissed & ridiculed by men who did.
Gaslit for a decade.
Sued through the courts.
But I’m not the loser here.
This decade of denial has caused Britain irreparable harm.
This isn’t to say the establishment media and their considerable resources aren’t unearthing new information; it’s to say this stuff would have come out years ago if the will had been there.
Reform’s undisclosed money is piling up
If Nigel Farage had a penny for every ongoing scandal, he’d have enough money to stop taking undisclosed lump sums from foreign-based crypto billionaires. Well, maybe not that much, but only because the lump sums in question have been in the millions.
Things aren’t looking good for Reform UK, anyway, as even their voters are noticing the stench of corruption:
Nigel Farage named sleaziest politician in UK in new poll – and even Reform voters think ithttps://t.co/s41LFydTs9
— Reform UK Exposed
(@reformexposed) July 11, 2026
Nigel Farage's Approval Ratings Plummet Amid Row Over His Financeshttps://t.co/uWGZk9O7c6?
— Reform UK Exposed
(@reformexposed) July 12, 2026
We’re not sure how much longer this can go on for, but we doubt it’s all the way to 2029 electoral success.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
Politics
Messi turned walking into the deadliest weapon in modern football
A viewer watching Lionel Messi for the first time might think the Argentine captain has drifted out of the match. He avoids constant pressing and chasing.
Instead, he spends long periods walking or standing to watch his surroundings. This approach defies the high-tempo, continuous pressure demands of modern football.
But behind this image that suggests calmness lies one of the most complex tactical ideas in the game. Walking is no longer just about conserving energy.
It is now part of his philosophy for managing the game. He reads the play carefully before deciding when to act.
This economy of movement allows him to wait for the critical moment where he can make a decisive impact.
FIFA tracking data, featured in a report by The Athletic, shows that Messi walked for 64% of his time during the World Cup.
This was the highest percentage among all outfield players in the tournament. He spent roughly 25% of his time standing or moving very little.
He ran for only 8.6% of the time, compared to the 23% tournament average.
Despite these numbers, the Argentine captain was not far from impact. By the end of the Round of 16, he was a joint-top scorer with eight goals.
He created 15 clear scoring chances and ranked third in touches within the attacking third. He also received the ball 97 times between the opponent’s midfield and defensive lines.
This high rate confirms that low movement does not equate to low effectiveness.
The information gathering phase
In traditional football, walking is seen as being absent from the match events, but Messi deals with it in a completely different way.
When he appears detached from play, he is busy reading defender movements. He monitors gaps between lines to identify players out of position and spaces that will open up later.
Pep Guardiola once noted that Messi spends the match’s opening minutes observing everything. He draws a mental map of opponent movements before he begins exploiting their weaknesses.
Once the ball reaches him, he has already formed a complete picture of everyone’s locations, making the decision-making faster than the defenders’ own reactions.
This philosophy explains why he runs sparingly. He avoids wasting energy chasing the ball, saving it instead for moments when an attack becomes a genuine scoring opportunity.
Many used to explain Messi’s genius by his technical abilities or dribbling skills, but the experiences of the best defenders in the world reveal another side of his superiority.
Raphaël Varane has faced Messi over twenty times. He notes that the hardest part of marking him is not his dribbling, but his positioning where defenders are unsure who should cover him.
He moves calmly between lines into a “gray zone.” Center-backs hesitate to step out, midfielders don’t advance to mark him, and fullbacks refuse to leave their positions.
During these few seconds of hesitation, Messi has already received the ball and started the attack that is difficult to stop.
Former defender William Gallas believes man-to-man marking Messi is a gift. A defender leaving their position simply grants Messi’s teammates the space they need.
Conserving energy
At thirty-nine, Messi no longer has the explosive speed of his early Barcelona days. Instead, he manages his physical effort differently.
Tournament data shows that 71% of his sprints occur in the attacking third. Another 21% end inside the penalty area. He only runs when scoring chances are high.
Every sprint is a calculated decision rather than raw physical effort. Running has become his tool for finishing attacks, not for building them from the start.
This style imposes extra burdens on his teammates, especially during pressing and ball recovery. However, the team seems fully convinced of this trade-off.
Pablo Zabaleta, of the FIFA Technical Study Group, says teammates run more to preserve their captain’s energy. They know his genius can decide a match in a single moment.
That’s why his teammates do not see his lack of running as a burden, but rather as an investment in the player most capable of making the difference.
Messi — Redefining greatness
Modern football long associated the best player with running, pressing, and covering space. Messi presents a completely different model.
Greatness, in his case, is not measured by the number of kilometers he covers, but by the quality of the moment he chooses to move. He doesn’t win matches with a multitude of steps, but with the precision of the single step that changes everything.
Therefore, he might seem, in the eyes of many, outside the match atmosphere, while in reality, he is the player most occupied with the match.
He observes, analyzes, and redraws everyone’s positions in his mind, waiting for the moment to pounce on the appropriate space.
Lionel Messi has turned walking into a smart tactical weapon. This proves that speed of thought is more valuable than foot speed. The calmest player often has the greatest influence.
Featured image via the Canary
By Alaa Shamali
Politics
Sources allege Palestinian Authority hospitals are treating members of Israeli occupation backed anti-Hamas armed groups
According to Quds News Network, sources claim the Palestinian Authority (PA) has begun providing medical treatment for members of armed groups in Gaza accused of collaborating with “Israel” — admitting them to hospitals in the occupied West Bank.
Palestinian Authority treats collaborators with “Israel” in its hospitals
This follows the Zionist regime’s refusal to receive wounded members of these militia groups at hospitals inside “Israel.” Instead, the Palestinian sources claim the PA coordinated the collaborators’ transfer to hospitals under its administration, where they received medical care and logistical support.
One of the wounded fighters, who is identified only by the initials “S.D.,” was reportedly admitted to a hospital in Ramallah under the alias “Ahmed.” He suffered a severe head injury, including a fractured skull. The sources say he is affiliated with the militia group led by Ghassan al-Dahini. This operates in the Rafah area of the southern Gaza Strip. The individual is said to have been wounded during an ambush carried out by resistance security forces in Gaza. It resulted in multiple members of the group being killed or injured.
Anti-Hamas militia members use aliases in hospital but PA aware of this
A senior Palestinian Authority official is said to have coordinated the patient’s admission to the hospital. Dozens of wounded individuals linked to these anti-Hamas militias have been received by hospitals and hotels across the occupied West Bank. The sources claim that many of these have been registered under false identities rather than their legal names. And this practice has taken place with the prior knowledge of officials within the PA.
According to analysis by the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED), at least five “Israeli”-backed armed groups have become increasingly active since late 2025. They mainly operate from occupation-controlled areas near the “Yellow Line.”
These groups have taken part in armed confrontations with Hamas-affiliated security forces. They have also carried out targeted assassinations of Hamas police and senior security officials, and detained members of Hamas. Civilians known to have collaborated with the resistance have also been abducted and killed by these militias.
Israeli occupation supports these militias
The occupation’s wider strategy is to support local groups that can challenge Hamas. It also aims to reduce the need for Israeli occupation forces (IOF) on the ground. So “Israel” provides support for these anti-Hamas militias, by giving them weapons, intelligence, logistics, training, and operational protection.
The aim of the Zionist regime is to weaken Hamas’ control by backing rival groups. But ACLED argues “Israel’s” continued empowerment of anti-Hamas groups increases divisions among Palestinians. It also makes clashes between Palestinian groups more likely. This will make it much more difficult for a single, united Palestinian leadership to emerge in Gaza.
Featured image via leMonde
By Charlie Jaay
Politics
Mothin Ali calls Burnham a ‘coward’ over Gaza genocide stance
On 9 July, Andy Burnham issued a statement regarding ‘Labour’s stance on Gaza‘. In it, our incoming PM refused to call Israel’s actions a genocide, and did little to differentiate his position from that of Keir Starmer. Accordingly, Canary writer Joe Glenton described the statement as “milquetoast sop“. And he wasn’t the only one to notice Burnham is trying to pull the wool over our eyes:
@andyburnham is a coward.
He apologised for the position this Labour Government has taken on Palestine but He won’t call it a Genocide, he hides behind international law. — Mothin Ali (@MothinAli) July 12, 2026
He won’t commit to Sanctioning Israel.
He won’t commit the British government to stop sharing intelligence… pic.twitter.com/SCJyrSTkn1
The “coward” Burnham
His Gaza statement included the following line:
I have been absolutely appalled by what I’ve seen and read about the destruction of Gaza. There’s increasing evidence that war crimes appear to have been committed.
And also this:
There must be accountability for the depth of the suffering the people of Gaza have experienced. Ultimately, however, it must be for the international courts to determine, rather than politicians.
There’s clearly a double standard here; one which suggests Burnham will ultimately fail to deliver on opposing Israel:
Compare and contrast.
Andy Burnham says Russia has committed war crimes in Ukraine. But when it comes to Gaza, he only says war crimes appear to have been committed, and he doesn't name by who. He also says its up to the courts to determine, not politicians. pic.twitter.com/Rxt0mYSZ1h
— Saul Staniforth (@SaulStaniforth) July 11, 2026
This is no surprise, of course, as we’ve been reporting:
In recent days, Andy Burnham has been vocal about Ukraine, but quiet about Palestine. Like Hope not Hate, the double-standard is telling
by @jodymcintyre_https://t.co/MglnoM7J3X
— Canary (@TheCanaryUK) May 28, 2026
It’s also the case that Burnham and his key appointees are in the foreign influence operation known as ‘Labour Friends of Israel’. As Ranjan Balakumaran reported for the Canary:
Andy Burnham has spent years crafting a specific public myth. He is the ‘King of the North,’ the casual jacket-wearing, anti-Westminster populist who promised to smash the Whitehall bubble, reverse decades of devastating de-industrialization, and bring failing water utilities back under public control.
But as he prepares to enter Downing Street as Prime Minister, the mask has officially slipped. Burnham has handed the keys of Number 10 to his new Chief of Staff, James Purnell—the ex-chair of Labour Friends of Israel, a former BBC executive, and the CEO of Flint Global, an elite corporate lobbying outfit that protects private water companies from state takeovers and was recently sold to a private equity firm notorious for price-gouging the NHS.
Speaking out
In full, Mothin Ali said:
[Andy Burnham] is a coward.
He apologised for the position this Labour Government has taken on Palestine but He won’t call it a Genocide, he hides behind international law.
He won’t commit to Sanctioning Israel.He won’t commit the British government to stop sharing intelligence and resources with Israel and he won’t commit the RAF To stop doing spy flights over Gaza.
What he forgets is the minute you suspect a genocide we have an obligation to take steps and save lives.
Just like he forgets that Greater Manchester doesn’t just mean growth in the centre but for every community that feels left behind, like Wigan, like Rochdale, like Bolton. All our communities should to be protected.
That’s why we need [Greater Manchester mayor candidate Geraldine Coggins] and that’s the difference she will make.
Ali isn’t the only Green speaking out either:
Burnham talks as if the genocide in Gaza is in the past, but it's happening NOW. Britain is arming Israel NOW.
This UN report is from two weeks ago. Burnham must commit to fully ending UK complicity NOW. pic.twitter.com/NtbBdPu8Hl
— Zack Polanski (@ZackPolanski) July 11, 2026
Prepare to be disappointed
This isn’t the only instance of Burnham trying to dupe voters:
Like when he hinted at nationalisation despite having no intention to deliver on that front, this hollow statement is going to make everyone madder than if he just said nothing https://t.co/HGJUKJMaGv
— Willem Moore (@willem_moore_uk) July 10, 2026
When Andy Burnham unveiled his plan to run in the Makerfield by-election, the establishment media claimed he would renationalise utilities. Because we actually listened to what he was saying, we knew this wasn’t the case, and we pointed it out. Burnham himself disagreed with our assessment that he had no plan to end the privatisation nightmare. Now, Burnham has made it clear; his Labour government will not offer anything besides half measures:
Andy Burnham confirming he won't take our key infrastructure back into public ownership. pic.twitter.com/LjibtBuEdL
— Saul Staniforth (@SaulStaniforth) June 29, 2026
Under Keir Starmer, voters got little besides cold gruel. Andy Burnham has run Starmer’s slop through the microwave for 30 seconds, but it’s still not warm, and it’s still f*cking gruel.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
-
Fashion6 days agoOpen Thread: What Great Books Have You Read Recently?
-
News Videos5 days agoWhats Hidden Inside This Cash Register? #treasure #reselling #money
-
Fashion2 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Nutriplenish Leave-In Conditioner
-
Fashion3 days agoLoro Piana Fall 2026 Enters Houston’s Art Scene
-
Tech5 days agoAnthropic’s new “J-lens” reveals a silent workspace inside Claude that mirrors a leading theory of consciousness
-
Crypto World6 days ago$1,000 Credit Alert! BlockDAG X Exchange Pre-Registration Now Officially Open, Polkadot Dips & Zcash Rebounds
-
Business6 days agoAXT Shares Jump Nearly 14% as Semiconductor Materials Maker Rebounds on AI-Linked Indium Phosphide Demand
-
Sports5 days agoJoshua Pacio ‘more complete’ ahead of ONE rematch vs Malachiev
-
Sports3 days ago2026 Genesis Scottish Open Thursday TV coverage: Round 1
-
News Videos6 days agoBest Time to Enter Small Caps Right Now? Another Bull Run? | Financially Free
-
Crypto World6 days agoSK hynix (000660.KS) Stock Dips as $28B Nasdaq ADR Offering Drives AI Memory Expansion
-
Tech4 days agoAnthropic brings Claude Cowork to mobile and web as usage data shows most users aren’t coding
-
Sports2 days agoSuper Eagles star Moses Simon opens up on Liverpool transfer regret
-
News Videos6 days agoAvoid entering in FOMO #bitcoin #cryptocurrency #trading #scalping
-
Sports5 days ago
We have punished the disrespect
-
Crypto World5 days agoBinance lists Strategy’s STRC stock as company expands Bitcoin funding
-
Tech3 days agoCharacter.AI enters the microdrama arena with its own productions, but there’s a twist
-
Tech6 days ago9 Best Keyboards (2025), Tested and Reviewed
-
Business5 days agoEnbridge: AI Tailwind Priced In (Rating Downgrade)
-
News Videos5 days ago“What’s going on?!” Carl Froch discusses Floyd Mayweather Jr financial issues







You must be logged in to post a comment Login