Reuters found the Trump administration backed sanctions against ICC officials in part to head off any future attempts to hold the Republican president or his officials accountable for U.S. military action overseas.
Politics
The House | From ‘Andy For Us’ To ‘Andy By Us’: Deliberative Democracy Supporters Raise Their Hopes

Illustration by Tracy Worrall
10 min read
The use of deliberative democracy in policymaking has been gaining traction of late. Matilda Martin finds its advocates hoping Andy Burnham embraces it in government
Andy Burnham’s first major policy speech after winning the Makerfield by-election was a full-throated battle cry for devolution. “Imagine what it would feel like to live in a country wired to work for local people instead of against them,” he asked of his audience.
The incoming prime minister well knows, however, that it will take more than a few more powers for metro mayors to restore trust in politics, which is at an all-time low. Some around him believe that, to make a reality of his dream of a “country wired to work for local people”, something altogether more radical will be needed.
Advocates of so-called ‘deliberative democracy’ hope Burnham may adopt at least some of their agenda.
“Deliberative democracy is a way of bringing people into the policy decisions that are being made that affect their lives,” explains Miriam Levin, director of participatory programmes at Demos.
Unlike a run-of-the-mill consultation, the process of deliberative democracy runs “all the way through to the end point, and the recommendations are acted on”, Levin adds. “Because that’s the thing that rebuilds trust between citizens and state, which is on the floor right now.”
Such an approach aims to rebuild trust between people and the state, with politicians and policymakers working with the public to tackle big policy areas, ensuring that their voices feed directly into the finished product. Its advocates see the current form of policymaking as too limited and partisan, calling for approaches such as citizens’ assemblies, citizens’ juries and citizens’ panels.
The idea of deliberative democracy and its various forms has been around for a long time, but interest in the process and what it can do for policymaking has been growing among MPs in recent years.
Some in the Burnham team are open to the idea, and the approach has already been embraced in some areas of Greater Manchester.
In November last year, Burnham was present at the launch of the Participation Playbook, a resource created by the Greater Manchester Integrated Care Partnership, “bringing together tools and examples of participatory methods from citizens’ assemblies and participatory budgeting to co-production and digital democracy”.
The document states that for too long, “decisions have been made about people, not with them” and a new approach in Greater Manchester will see a world in which “decisions are made by the people, for the people – where community power and participatory democracy thrive”.
Burnham ally Neal Lawson believes the use of deliberative democracy could be something that Burnham’s team is open to exploring. Reflecting on Burnham’s policy priorities, he points to a change in the voting system to proportional representation, highlighting that a citizens’ assembly-style approach could fit well within a national commission.
Wigan MP and Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy was a vice-chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Deliberative Democracy. She is a long-time key Burnham ally and was the first Cabinet minister to join Burnham in Makerfield on the campaign trail.
“There are people around him, like Josh Simons, who are quite pro-citizens’ assemblies as I understand it,” Lawson adds, referring to the former minister who stood down as an MP in May to pave the way for Burnham’s route back to Westminster. Simons is expected to play a key role in the new Makerfield MP’s government.
Simons told The House in 2024 – when he was director of Labour Together, before entering Parliament – that he favoured citizens’ assemblies for subjects concerning public health or other behaviour where the policy solution requires people to comply, such as a smoking ban.
“It can be a political way of making a decision that requires the consent of a certain group of people for the policy to actually work. The political opportunities that it opens up for the politicians are much more important than any enduring legitimacy it could get for that policy,” he said.
Simons’ track record shows an affinity for deliberative democracy when it comes to tricky policy areas. As a minister, he oversaw the government’s digital ID policy. First announced by Keir Starmer in September last year, the initiative prompted an immense backlash. Labour figures, including those in government, widely thought the initial bid to communicate the policy – rushed, and framed in terms of migration control rather than the fundamentals of a modern state – was flawed.
PoliticsHome revealed in December that ministers would tour the country in early 2026 to discuss the plan with voters, with the government later revealing shortly after Simons’ departure that 100 people would be randomly selected from across Britain to contribute to the government’s consultation on digital ID.
Ian Murray, the minister now responsible for the policy – and a Burnham ally – is positive about the impact of the approach.
Murray would like to see more uses of deliberative democracy such as the citizens’ assembly in government policymaking. Speaking to The House, he says that, in the past, the country has tended to have referenda for some of the biggest issues that people are most concerned about “with a binary choice on very complicated questions”.
The use of the citizens’ assembly in feeding into the digital ID policy allowed the government to work in partnership with the public, Murray said, and was a way to tackle the “anxiety and misinformation” that existed around the policy.
He adds that while those involved may still have disagreed at the end of the process, they “at least understood it and were able to feed back their anxieties to develop the policy”.
Lawson, who campaigned for a citizens’ assembly for Brexit, believes that a more collaborative approach could be used for immigration and welfare when it comes to finding “the balance between rights and responsibilities”.
“If his slogan for the by-election was ‘Andy for us’, his slogan for government should be ‘Andy by us’,” Lawson adds.
The former strategy adviser to Tony Blair believes that deliberative democracy, combined with proportional representation, devolving power down to the lowest possible levels and reinventing the House of Lords could take the heat out of politics and bring people back together.
A Burnham spokesperson says he “has been clear that Westminster politics is broken and that Britain needs a fundamental shift of power out of the centre and into the hands of the people and places best able to use it”.
If we are going to crack that unity issue and that cohesiveness, but also take away the polarisation of politics, we’ve got to go much more round a deliberative approach
They add that Burnham’s approach is “about giving people and communities greater agency over the decisions that affect their lives”, which would mean “place-based collaboration, a new operating principle for government, with power flowing to every region and nation of the UK, decisions taken closer to the people they affect, and a politics that is less about point scoring and more about problem solving”.
MPs across all parties are also warming to the approach. In early 2026, the Commons Home Affairs Select Committee travelled to Leicester, Renfrewshire and North Tyneside, bringing together locals to discuss and debate what is currently one of the most contentious and polarising topics in the UK: immigration. The citizens’ assembly-style events brought together 100 people from across the three locations in March and May to feed into the committee’s recommendations to the government on immigration.
Karen Bradley, Conservative MP and chair of the committee, tells The House that the motivation behind the process was to make a series of recommendations to government that took the public’s views on board. “The problem is that it’s such a contested area that getting to the nub of what people actually think is really tough, and it’s also so easy to merge and to confuse the different issues,” Bradley explains.
The idea of a citizens’ assembly was born. Bradley says it presented the opportunity to bring together a group of people “without shouting, without social media and the algorithms” to hear: “What do people think is important? What are they concerned about?” For Bradley, the approach would mean that the committee would hear from a truly representative portion of the public, not just those who are likely to engage in policymaking in the first place.
Labour MP Jo White, who sits on the Home Affairs Select Committee, is a recent convert to the use of deliberative democracy. White would like to see a Burnham government use this approach in policymaking but is wary of how the media “deals with it” as she believes some media outlets could “create cynicism” around it, meaning “people don’t participate”.
While it will need to be sold to the public, White is certain of its benefits: “[Burnham’s] biggest demand is to stop the boats and deal with illegal immigration, and yet his policies and his values have been socially liberal.” It will be important for him, she says, to bring those issues together and create “consensus within the country and he’s making the right choices for the whole country”.
She adds: “How he manages that may well be through bringing more people into that arena and giving people the opportunity to think through the ideas.”
Back in SW1, the impact on Westminster and party relations could also be positively impacted by a more deliberative approach. Rachael Maskell, who sat as a vice-chair on the past APPG for Deliberative Democracy alongside Nandy, thinks such an approach is essential: “If we are going to crack that unity issue and that cohesiveness, but also take away the polarisation of politics, we’ve got to go much more round a deliberative approach.”
She also points to party unity as well as country unity, claiming that in the two years under a Labour government, policy “hasn’t derived from that space of cohesive understanding and trying to get to what would be the right solution. People with polarised views, even within the party, have not been brought into that space of understanding”. Without that space being created, Maskell says one part of the party is segregated, alongside their constituents.
While this approach will be essential to building consensus when it comes to febrile and polarising topics at a national level, councils have also begun to get involved. Demos is currently trialling a project to build and test a new model for participatory local democracy. Under the approach, “thousands of people will have the opportunity to shape local government policy on an issue affecting their area”.
The House joined one such session on a Saturday over Zoom where residents in South Staffordshire were discussing the approach to an updated local planning strategy – one of many sessions they had attended. Over five hours, a group of local residents discussed the pros and cons of different approaches, mediated by the Demos team and with council staff on hand to answer queries. Such a mediated approach was starkly different from the often febrile and inflamed tensions that can exist online, especially when it comes to local planning.
Speaking at the end of the session, The House heard from residents who said the process had “opened my eyes and made me realise things about South Staffordshire and my whole community”, while another said it had been nice to be in a safe environment and voice opinions.
While such an approach across the board may be attractive, it is time-consuming. If he enters No 10 later this month, Burnham will inherit a country split at the seams and juggling the pressure of a looming general election in 2029. What he chooses to prioritise – and how he chooses to do it – is still up for debate.
Politics
The13 Best Wide-Legged And Cropped Trousers For Summer, From M&S To Uniqlo
We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.
If you’re anything like me, you’ll have been rocking skirts all summer.
I love having my legs loose and knowing that, even when the sweat gets unbearable, the air can reach my chafing thighs.
But even I know that there are some moments when you have to switch out your skirt for trousers.
Public transport isn’t exactly short skirt friendly, and when it’s windy outside, you don’t want to have to think about being upskirted by the wind.
Or maybe, you’re just a trousers person! But not all trousers are created equal for summertime. We all know the allure of a linen or wide-legged pair come summer, and this year cropped trousers are trending.
To make sure you stay bang on forecast, we’ve dug through our favourite sites to find 13 of the very best wide legged and cropped trousers to keep you breezing through the heatwave.
Politics
Here are the best disease-fighting foods according to science
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Politics
The Murdoch rags & the Mail are at war with Reform UK
The observant among you may have noticed that the mainstream media have recently rounded on Reform UK and Nigel Farage. Interestingly, the outlets ganging up on Reform include the Daily Mail and Rupert Murdoch’s the Times:
Pleased as I am to see the Murdoch and Rothermere press attacking Farage as stridently as they previously lavished praise on him, I can't help wondering what has brought on the recent U-turn
— David__Osland (@David__Osland) July 13, 2026
Reform: right-on-right violence
The broader strokes of what these outlets are reporting on are things independent journalists began covering years ago. The Times and others have certainly unveiled new information, but said information could have come out years ago had the will been there. As such, it’s understandable people are asking ‘why now?‘
The Times have broken a series of stories on Farage and Reform’s financial matters in recent months. With each new story comes fresh scrutiny for Reform, and with further scrutiny comes panic. As a result, Reform is looking less and less like the next party of government and more and more like the defendants in an upcoming legal proceeding.
Among those questioning the reality we find ourselves in is author of The Fraud Paul Holden, who said:
This is fascinating to watch. I’m not sure I understand the more subtle dynamics at play on the British right, but it does seem like Farage and Reform and the Murdoch press are openly at war.
It might be at least partially reactive, but it does also seem that Farage, Tice etc. have decided that they can win power without the Murdoch press: that a combination of social media and the support of the Paul Marshall stable (GB News/Spectator) is enough to get them over the line.
From the outside it looks like the clash of two fractions of the right-wing power structure and eco-system, similar to how Trump faced down (and then subdued) the Fox News/Republican eco-system, and how it is resolved will have massive implications for the viability of Reform and the make-up of the next government.
My strong hunch is that it’s not going to go well for Reform!
Holden was responding to the following tweet from Reform deputy Richard Tice:
The Times Group:
You are sick
Your contempt bordering on hatred of Nigel, myself & Reform means you stoop to any low to smear & discredit us. You lie, libel and make things up.
How many more Reform politicians do you want dead?
Shame on you https://t.co/LnCCZ4YEqi — Richard Tice MP
(@TiceRichard) July 13, 2026
As one commenter noted, Tice is making the above argument while simultaneously using the sort of language he’s complaining about being used against him:
In March 2026, Richard Tice said: “Starmer and Labour… are traitors to Britain.”
Tice knows better than most that being called a “traitor” carries severe social, psychological, and sometimes violent or even fatal consequences. Just hours after Nigel Farage launched the… https://t.co/bBJYZZTnFH pic.twitter.com/KSq709XdmW
— GET A GRIP (@docrussjackson) July 13, 2026
The Daily Mail
It’s not just the Times who are giving Reform UK a hard time; the Daily Mail is also putting the boot in:
Nigel has lost the daily mail. pic.twitter.com/MqIUI4gNxf
— Daniel Lismore (@daniellismore) July 12, 2026
This is despite a big recent donation from the establishment family behind this vilest of vile rags:
Only last year, the wife of Mail on Sunday owner Lord Rothermere donated £50,000 to Reform UK. I'm sure Nigel Farage can live with a bit of criticism from Dan Hodges, although that is not a lot of money by his standards.
— David__Osland (@David__Osland) July 13, 2026
End of the line
Providing a theory on the turn against Farage, the popular commentator known as the Flying Rodent said:
Times is bored of playing with Farage now, and it’s telling him to get back in his box pic.twitter.com/XpFmugEEYp
— Flying_Rodent (@flying_rodent) July 13, 2026
Couldn’t happen to a more deserving person of course, but it really is an abysmal way to manage national affairs: having the worst people in the country build up and tear down all kinds of very unpleasant right wing frauds, out of pure self-interest and expediency.
— Flying_Rodent (@flying_rodent) July 13, 2026
Clearly, Farage has failed to win the confidence of the billionaires who own the ‘free’ British press. As such, maybe it’s time that the right acknowledge what we did years ago; that for democracy to exist, we can’t have the majority of the media owned by a handful of major c*nts.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
Politics
MPs call for special administration of Thames Water
MPs gathered on the banks of the Thames on 13 July, calling for Thames Water to go into special administration.
They’re among the 112 MPs who have signed an open letter to the environment secretary and Ofwat. It calls for Thames Water to be placed into special administration without delay.
The company, which has a debt pile of nearly £20bn, is on the brink of collapse. Since June 2025, Thames Water’s creditors, a group of US hedge funds, have been negotiating with Ofwat to formally take over the utility.
As part of the proposed deal, the creditors want to waive fines until 2030. And they want to suspend or ‘significantly modify’ pollution and performance targets. The creditors also want to raise bills for households beyond the level currently set by Ofwat.
Thames Water deal is unfair
Last month, environment secretary Emma Reynolds wrote to Ofwat objecting to the current terms of the deal. She stated that it poses unfair costs to consumers. But the water regulator itself has yet to reject the deal.
This comes as the utility approaches the 16 July deadline for submitting its financial results. If the deal doesn’t happen, Thames Water’s precarious finances might trigger a ‘going concern’ warning from the auditor. This could place the utility in special administration.
Prime minister-in-waiting Andy Burnham has previously said that Thames Water ‘should’ be nationalised. And he has put forward a potential 10-year plan for public ownership of the water industry.
53 Liberal Democrats have signed the open letter, along with 46 Labour MPs, six independents (at the time of signing), all five Greens and one MP each from Plaid Cymru and the Conservative Party.
It argues that allowing Thames Water, which was responsible for a third of the worst pollution incidents in 2025, to set its own rules would create a dangerous precedent for all of England’s privatised water companies.
It also argues that special administration will allow the government to write off a greater proportion of Thames Water’s debts. And this would secure a better deal for the public purse.
Sophie Conquest, lead campaigner at We Own It, said:
Right now, this government and Ofwat are at a crossroads. They can choose to line the pockets of US hedge funds with our money. Or, they can put households and the environment first.
This is a decision which will affect every single household in England. Signing off on this deal would be to sign off on a whole new low in standards across the water sector.
That’s why 109 MPs, from across the country and from across political parties, have added their names to the open letter calling for special administration.
The environment secretary’s objection to the creditors’ proposal on the grounds of its unfairness for consumers is absolutely right.
The next logical step is to put Thames Water out of its misery, and place it in special administration, where we can slash the debts, and put households and the environment first.
Andy Burnham has promised to secure greater public control of life’s essentials. There is no clearer test of whether he will keep that promise than what happens next to Thames Water.
Featured image via We Own It
By The Canary
Politics
Big Brother’s Will Best Confirmed For Strictly Come Dancing 2026 Cast
TV personality Will Best has become the sixth star revealed to have signed up for Strictly Come Dancing this year.
Will is best known for fronting ITV’s current revival of Big Brother, as well as presenting Hits Radio’s breakfast show.
On Tuesday afternoon he confirmed: “I can’t quite believe it… I’m doing Strictly! What an absolute dream. Albeit a pretty terrifying one.”
“I’ve been lucky to do lots of live telly before, but absolutely nothing like this,” Will enthused. “And I cannot wait!”
He added: “I have no idea if I can actually dance, but bring on the sequins, bring on the quicksteps, bring on the dance floor! I’m going to try to enjoy every minute of it.”
More celebrities on the Strictly 2026 line-up are due to be announced in the coming weeks.
Politics
Rubio escalates Trump administration’s attack on sanctity of ICC
Marco Rubio is waging an all-out war against the International Criminal Court (ICC), threatening that the body will learn ‘the full meaning of American resolve‘:
The International Criminal Court seeks to become the unaccountable arbiter of a new global law — empowered to prosecute and arrest our citizens at will and existentially threaten American sovereignty.
We will teach the ICC the full meaning of American resolve. pic.twitter.com/2egHK1jA98
— Secretary Marco Rubio (@SecRubio) July 13, 2026
ICC under threat
CNN reported that the opinion piece by Rubio – which is hilariously behind a paywall – says that the US will:
use all the tools at our government’s disposal, working beside every ally with whom we can make common cause, we will dismantle the ICC—brick by brick, if necessary.
In his opinion piece, Rubio accused the ICC of being:
backed and run by a powerful network of leftist nongovernment organizations, smug globalists, and hostile Third World governments united by their enmity toward the U.S.
Rubio claimed that the court threatens US sovereignty through its ability to prosecute American soldiers and officials.
Those tools include possible travel bans, visa revocations, and increased sanctions, a State Department official told CNN.
Rubio continued:
We will watch with interest which nations join ranks with us against this threat to Americans who are willing to risk their lives to protect others.
Hague Invasion Act not a joke anymore
Meanwhile, the director of Democracy in the Arab World Now (DAWN), Raed Jarrar told TRT World that
Bush’s ‘Hague Invasion Act’ is not a joke anymore.
Jarrar noted that what was once dismissed as a joke in Washington is now being taken seriously under the Trump administration. And, Jarrar made it clear that he considered Rubio’s threats against the ICC as a signal of a dangerous escalation that makes the unthinkable seem all too real.
Further, Jarrar warned that the administration’s hostility toward international law has reached unprecedented levels, adding that the U.S. is using sanctions, threats, and pressure campaigns to go after the court.
The law in question, officially known as the American Service-Members’ Protection Act, was signed by George W. Bush in 2001 and authorises the U.S. president to protect American military forces against criminal prosecution from the ICC.
Of course, Jarrar also noted that the U.S. could itself face ICC prosecution for aiding and abetting genocide in Gaza, as well as for obstruction of justice under Article 70 of the Rome Statute.
Jarrar said:
The United States can and should be prosecuted by the ICC under two paths. … The United States aiding and abetting Israeli genocide in Gaza counts as a path. … The other track is Article 70 which actually gives the ICC jurisdiction to prosecute officials in countries even those countries who are not members of the Rome Statute in case they are engaged in acts of obstruction and threatening of the court itself. And that is exactly what this administration is doing.
ICC upheld by vassal states
Last month, three ICC judges sued Trump and his administration over sanctions imposed on them last year, arguing the measures were unlawful.
However, the court has taken no steps to investigate U.S. personnel in recent years, Reuters reported.
The UK is a founding member of the ICC, but as a vassal state of the US, it will likely just fall in line with whatever Rubio has planned.
Featured image via the Canary
Karim Khan
In fact, the UK is not so different than the USA.
The Middle East Eye revealed that former Prime Minister David Cameron privately threatened Karim Khan, the British chief prosecutor at the ICC, in April 2024, to defund and withdraw from the ICC if it issued arrest warrants for Israeli leaders.
Khan, who sought arrest warrants for Israeli officials over Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, lost an appeal on Tuesday to have his interim suspension lifted by the Bar Standards Board, which regulates British court lawyers.
The New Arab said:
His supporters have suggested that he has become a political target for seeking arrest warrants for Israeli officials over Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza.
Let’s never hear the “rules-based order” shit from our leaders who are actively dismantling it again.
By The Canary
Politics
Painfully slow decline in animal testing exposes a government dragging its feet
New Home Office statistics have laid bare the true extent of our government’s broken promises when it comes to animal testing and animal rights.
Researchers in UK laboratories carried out scientific procedures on animals 2.5 million times in 2025. This is a pathetic 4% decrease from 2024, revealing a government that is failing to meet the expectations of the public it supposedly serves.
Despite releasing the Replacing animals in Science strategy in November 2025, the state has still condemned millions of animals to suffer disgusting and painful procedures.
We need to transition to modern, humane scientific methods of testing. Now.
Animal testing per species
The data shows a horrifying trend for certain species, with the torture having increased for so many.
Use of animals by species in 2025, compared with 2024:
- Mice – 1,776,506 (-5%)
- Rats – 126,500 (-16%)
- Horses – 12,101 (+5%)
- Rabbits – 5,291 (-15%)
- Dogs – 2,889 (+ 9%)
- Monkeys – 2,236 (+15%)
- Guinea pigs – 1,676 (-38%)
- Cats – 91 (+11%)
Why the hell are we experimenting on any of these poor creatures?! And where has this 4% decrease you might ask?
The decline only happened because labs have reduced testing on the most common species such as mice and rats. This is alongside a 22% drop in regulatory testing.
Seems like a good thing doesn’t it? But these small creatures still remain the most abused as 1.8 million mice and 126,500 rats were tortured in 2025.
And to top it all off, needless, curiosity-driven research accounted for 54% of all experiments. Therefore, more hundreds of thousands of animals suffered just to satiate scientific curiosity, rather than to develop lifesaving treatments.
A nation of animal lovers? Far from it, based on the actions of our government.
Broken promises and more bull
Our country’s slow progress is totally and utterly unacceptable. Approved, non-animal replacements exist for a reason!
Cruelty Free International currently maintains a Replace Animal Tests (RAT) list that shines a light on tests still being performed in the UK which have validated, humane alternatives. That means no more sentient beings locked in cages and tortured to death. Ending these specific tests alone could save more than 80,000 animals a year.
Six months after the state published its transition strategy, this progress remains ridiculously slow. Dr Emma Grange, director of science and regulatory affairs at Cruelty Free international, said:
With 2.54 million uses of animals in British laboratories in 2025, a meagre 4% decrease from 2024, the rate of decline remains painfully slow. We ask that the government now starts to show the sort of bold leadership and ambition promised in its strategy…”
It’s a hard ask from Labour, let’s be honest. It’s not exactly known for following through with pretty much anything.
Whoever our new prime minister is, they need to show some spine and push forward the transition to only use non-animal specific methods.
The UK public wants animal testing to end. It’s time for the government to stop dragging its heels and finally ban these painful experiments.
We’re a nation of animal lovers and it’s way past time that the government reflected that.
Featured images via Pinterest
By Antifabot
Politics
Palestinian father attacked at son’s grave, one year after Israeli settlers murdered him
On 11 July 2025, Israeli occupation settlers brutally murdered Sayfullah “Saif” Musallet – a 23 year old Palestinian- American, and his friend, 23 year old Mohammed al-Shalabi, in al-Mazra’a ash-Sharqiya, near Sinjil in the occupied West Bank. Now, a year later, the father of Saif – Kamel Musallet – has been attacked by Israeli settlers when attempting to visit his son’s grave.
A group of journalists accompanying Kamel were also attacked by the unaccountable settlers.
Israeli settler attacks
Several months before the summer of 2025 Israeli settlers set up an outpost amongst Palestinian olive groves in the occupied West Bank. They began to prevent residents from accessing this stolen land. On 11 July 2025, these settlers beat Saif Musallet unconscious, left him for dead, and shot al-Shalabi in the chest. These illegal colonists then blocked the entry of emergency services for over three hours, resulting in the deaths of these two men. 58 Palestinians were also injured due to the violence.
A year after these two Palestinians were viciously attacked and murdered, Kamel Musallet wanted to visit the place where his son took his last breath, to pay tribute to him.
Journalist and human rights activist Andrey Khrzhanovskiy, better known as Andrey X, was among the group of independent journalists and CNN crew who accompanied him. Talking about the Palestinian land the settlers stole in 2025, he told the Canary:
The land has now been completely taken over by the settlers. According to the Oslo Accords, it is in Area A which should be solely controlled by the Palestinian Authority. Under Israeli military law, settlers are not allowed to enter here, but they have. And they have also taken over Palestinian farm houses. They now literally live in the homes of Palestinians from al-Mazra’a ash-Sharqiya.
The mayor of Sinjil briefed the group on safety and security before they left. He explained there are two known armed settlers in the area – one with an M16 and another with a pistol. He told the group he was concerned they may be targeted and attacked. This is because the settler with the M16 is known for shooting from a distance at anyone who enters the area.
Settlers armed with knives, rocks, and sticks
The group drove to the location where Saif Musallet was murdered to allow his grief-stricken father to spend some time there. But things took a turn for the worst. As Kamel Musallet and the journalists returned to their two cars, they noticed settlers had blocked their only way out of the area. From their outpost they must have seen the group enter the area. They immediately dispatched one car, then another. More settlers joined, and began to launch an attack.
Andrey X told the Canary:
There were several settlers who really looked like children, who were weilding sticks and held large rocks, ready to throw. They told us to stop the cars. At the beginning, we stopped. But one of the settlers started cutting the tyres of the CNN crew car {which was bullet proof} that was in front of us. At that point we decided to keep the cars moving. Then the settlers switched their attention to our car. They jumped on the hood of it, smashed our windshield with a stick, and started throwing rocks at us. We managed to speed away, but they pursued us. They then called another vehicle and group of settlers who blocked us off further down the road.
Yesterday I was ambushed and attacked by Israeli settlers in the West Bank, together with the CNN and independent journalists. Here is how it happened: pic.twitter.com/eA9FwNv8e6
— Andrey X (@the_andrey_x) July 12, 2026
Impunity
Luckily the group managed to break through the blockade, although not before the settlers attacked their vehicles once more. When the group made it to the town of Sinjil, there was then a stand off between the two sides, and the settlers began filming using a drone. Among the settlers stood a person dressed in full army uniform, carrying an assault rifle. But there were no military vehicles arriving at that point, and he seemed to appear from nowhere. It was likely that one of the settlers who attacked them had a uniform in his car.
Andrey X described:
Then the army arrived. They were very aggressive and told us we were not allowed to film, which was blatantly untrue.
But once they realised journalists were present, another group of Israeli occupation soldiers turned up, with their commander:
He was much friendlier, and said it was horrible what had happened to us, and he would pursue it. They did, in fact, arrest four of the settlers. But the only reason this happened is because there was a CNN crew involved, and it would be bad PR for Israel.
There has been no justice for the families of al-Shalabi and Musallet. Nor for others whose loved ones have been murdered by the occupation. Their killers remain free to continue terrorising and displacing Palestinian communities. In many cases, Palestinians know many of the local violent settlers who harass, intimidate, attack, and kill, by name. But as the Israeli occupation government, police, military, settlers, and justice system are all part of the same apartheid colonial project, there is no hope of justice or accountability.
Israeli settlers get away with murder
Andrey X realises luck was on their side. Had the settlers been armed, the situation would have ended very differently. He told me:
Luckily for us the settlers weren’t armed. Of course, we were scared for our lives. These are very, very dangerous people, who kill with complete impunity. They can do anything they want in the West Bank, there is no accountability. For Saif’s family, any hope for justice is very tenuous, as long as the regime that resulted in his murder is still standing.
Israeli human rights organisation Yesh Din says the occupation has enabled violence against Palestinians by equipping thousands of settlers with military firearms and uniforms. It claims settlers wear these uniforms to appear as though they belong to the military. They can then abuse the power that comes with these uniforms to commit offenses against Palestinians.
While enabling the violence, occupation authorities fail to hold perpetrators accountable. Complaints are routinely dismissed. The Military Advocate General’s Corps claims the incidents fall outside its jurisdiction because they are not part of military operations. While the Israel occupation police often close cases or argues it lacks jurisdiction because the perpetrators were in military uniform.
US has duty to protect US citizens and secure accountability for deaths
Many Palestinian Americans live in, or regularly travel to, the West Bank. Some were born in the US while others later became U.S. citizens and returned. In some villages, such as Turmus Ayya, Sinjil, and Mazra’a ash-Sharqiya, more than 80 percent of residents hold dual US citizenship. But they have received no help or protection from the US government, unlike American citizens in other countries.
Double standards are involved in the protection of Americans abroad. Its strong support for the Israeli occupation has taken precedence over seeking justice for its own citizens in the occupied territory. Where “Israel” is involved, there is little or no hope of credible, independent investigations, or any accountability. This is true even if the occupation has killed or injured US citizens in Palestine.
Saif Musallet was one of nine US citizens to be murdered in the West Bank by the Israeli occupation, since January 2022. US Senators have claimed that in each of these killings:
No one has yet been held accountable by the Netanyahu government, nor has the US government upheld its duty to protect Americans and secure justice and accountability for their deaths.
They say there is “a consistent pattern,” of Americans being killed in the West Bank by the occupation without justice or accountability, despite promises from US officials.
The latest events have only added to questions about the US response. Andrey X tells me:
It’s a funny coincidence that this all came at the same time as senator Ro Khanna’s visit to the West Bank, and the attack on an American CNN crew, which was covering the murder of two American citizens a year ago. It’s a very American story.
Featured image via the Canary
By Charlie Jaay
Politics
Spanish politicians demand Spain doesn’t extradite Fergie Chambers to US
Multiple Spanish political parties are calling on the Spanish government not to execute Fergie Chambers’ extradition to the US.
Representatives of several political forces have submitted a letter to interior minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska and Félix Bolaños García, minister for the presidency, justice and parliamentary relations, as well as to several government delegations.
The letter calls on the Spanish executive not to execute the extradition of James Cox “Fergie” Chambers Jr. to the US. And it warns that solidarity with Palestine, in a context of genocide, occupation and apartheid, cannot be criminalised or presented as terrorism.
The MPs come from the CUP, ERC, Comuns, Més per Mallorca, Compromís, EH Bildu, BNG, Somos Asturies, Convocatoria por Asturias, Adelante Andalucía, Izquierda Unida, Podemos and Sumar.
Fergie Chambers
According to published reports, Chambers was arrested in Eivissa [Ibiza] following a possible extradition request made by the US. It concerned allegations of money laundering and the alleged intention to provide material support to organisations designated as terrorist.
The signatories note that Chambers is known publicly as a donor and activist committed to the Palestinian cause and to humanitarian and social projects supporting the population of Gaza.
In the letter, the signatory forces, represented in various parliaments and in Congress, stress that passive extradition proceedings in the Spanish State are not automatic.
They recall that the law allows the government to refuse surrender even where a court has declared it admissible. This is especially so where there are substantial grounds for believing that the request is intended to prosecute or punish a person for their political opinions.
The text also recalls that the constitution excludes political offences from extradition. And it notes that the Extradition Treaty between Spain and the US provides for the possibility of refusing surrender where there are indications of political persecution.
In this regard, the signatories warn that the label of “terrorism” cannot be used expansively to criminalise the denunciation of genocide, humanitarian support, internationalist activism, contributions to media outlets or the defence of political campaigns against occupation and apartheid.
The letter states:
Solidarity with Palestine does not constitute any offence. Nor can it be equated, without concrete and individualised evidence of the financing of violent acts, with the financing of terrorism.
Political context
The document places the case in a broader institutional context. It recalls that the Spanish government officially recognised the State of Palestine on 28 May 2024 and that Royal Decree-Law 10/2025 adopted urgent measures against the genocide in Gaza and in support of the Palestinian population.
It also refers to positions adopted by multiple legislatures in defence of the rights of the Palestinian people, against genocide, against occupation and against the criminalisation of Palestinian civil society. These include:
- The Parliament of Catalonia.
- The Parliament of Navarre.
- The Basque Parliament.
- The Parliament of Galicia.
- The General Junta of the Principality of Asturias.
- The Parliament of the Balearic Islands.
- Les Corts Valencianes.
The signatories argue that these institutional positions show a clear line. Defending Palestine, cooperating with its civil society, denouncing the occupation and demanding respect for international law are part of the legitimate exercise of fundamental rights and cannot be treated as criminal activities.
The letter also invokes the international framework. It recalls, among other elements, South Africa’s case against Israel before the International Court of Justice for possible violation of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, as well as the arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Court against Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity.
For all these reasons, the signatories call on the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of the Interior to ensure that no administrative, police or governmental action contributes to an extradition based on the criminalisation of solidarity with Palestine. Therefore, they’re asking the Spanish government to refuse Chambers’ surrender to the US.
The text concludes:
The fight against terrorism cannot be used as an instrument to persecute the denunciation of genocide, solidarity with an occupied people or support for humanitarian and social initiatives.
Supporting the Palestinian people is not a crime; it is a legitimate expression of solidarity, the defence of human rights and commitment to international law.
Signatories:
- Laure Vega, CUP.
- Gabriel Rufián, ERC.
- Ana Balsera, ERC.
- Gerardo Pisarello, Comuns.
- Andrés García Berrio, Comuns.
- Diana Urrea Herrera, EH Bildu.
- Irati Jiménez Aragón, EH Bildu.
- Oskar Matute, EH Bildu.
- Montserrat Prado Cores, BNG.
- Néstor Rego, BNG.
- Covadonga Tomé, Somos Asturies.
- Delia Campomanes, IU / Convocatoria por Asturias.
- Lluís Apesteguia, Més per Mallorca.
- Vicenç Vidal, Més per Mallorca.
- Isaura Navarro Casillas, Compromís.
- Agueda Micó, Compromís.
- Jose Ignacio García, Adelante Andalucía.
- Enrique Santiago Romero, IU.
- Agustín Santos Maraver, Sumar.
- Tesh Sidi, Más Madrid.
- Ione Belarra, Podemos.
- Javier Sánchez Serna, Podemos.
- Martina Velarde, Podemos.
- Noemí Santana, Podemos
Featured image via the Canary
By The Canary
Politics
How Long Do Scientists Think Life On Earth Has Left?
We’ve got about five billion years ’til the Sun dies, which certainly wouldn’t spell good news for planet Earth.
But researchers have long thought we’d be gone way before that happens. The Sun is always expanding, and will probably swallow our little planet up like a whale does plankton one day. (At least, that’s according to some theoretical models).
Not only that, but it’s getting increasingly luminous and producing more and more energy.
Now, a paper published in the journal JGR Atmospheres has attempted to put a finer point on when we might all be (literally) cooked.
“The ultimate life span of Earth’s biosphere is limited due to the steady brightening of the sun as it progresses in age,” they wrote, but caveated it “could survive for much longer than indicated in most studies”.
How long does life have left on Earth?
The paper said that as the Sun ages, “Earth’s long-term carbon cycle may respond by drawing carbon dioxide [CO2] out of the atmosphere and into carbonate rocks, thereby reducing the greenhouse effect and offsetting the increased sunlight”.
Previous studies have argued that this would make CO2 levels too low to sustain life on Earth – it’s vital for supporting oxygen-giving trees, for instance. This idea led some scientists to estimate the end of plant life on our planet at about 100 million years into the future.
In this study, however, scientists used 29 different models to work out what might happen to Earth under different conditions.
They modelled two extremes: one in which the world was too hot for life but had enough CO2, and another in which the temperature was more livable but CO2 levels were shot. They also looked at the range of conditions between these.
And the study authors input data about various plants, like succulents and orchids, which can survive on very little carbon dioxide.
“We show that Earth’s biosphere could survive for much longer than indicated in most studies, noting that some photosynthetic life on Earth can thrive at very low carbon dioxide levels,” the paper reads.
Their models suggested Earth’s vegetative biosphere could survive up to roughly 1.8 billion years from now, “about the same time that Earth would lose its oceans to space”.
Earth may be more resilient than we thought
Speaking to Live Science, Robert Graham, a planetary science researcher at the University of Chicago (who wasn’t part of the research), said: “The Earth has stayed pretty hospitable in terms of surface temperature for most of the last 4 billion years because it has a built-in thermostat.”
That refers to the CO2-pulling strategy we mentioned earlier – in hotter weather, the world pulls carbon dioxide out of the environment and stores it underground. Therefore, less heat from the sun gets trapped, and the planet cools again (if at the previously-presumed expense of photosynthesis, and as a result, life on Earth).
But the researchers of this study “have used a sophisticated 3D climate model to show that Earth’s climate may remain hospitable to plant life significantly longer into the future than predicted,” Graham said.
“It’s an advance over previous work and suggests that complex biospheres like that of Earth are more resilient to environmental change from stellar brightening than previously suggested.”
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