Politics
The House Article | Burnham’s place-based government must save independent hospitality

Crewe (Alamy)
3 min read
In June, Andy Burnham set out his vision for the country. Bringing Manchesterism to Labour’s 2024 manifesto, he is putting “place before party” – building non-partisan consensus on local issues.
‘Place’ refers to the areas that make a community – where social ties are formed and strengthened.
Andy recognises that high streets should become “the new symbol of Britain’s renaissance”. Independent hospitality businesses are an essential part of that landscape.
They know their customer inside out, setting up shop to offer something new to their neighbours – without a financial model crunching the numbers, identifying your high street as the most lucrative option for the next branch.
Manchester has successfully supported a growing number of local bars and restaurants. The number of food and beverage spaces in the centre has doubled over the past 10 years.
Labour’s £20m Pride in Place strategy forms the building blocks for stronger communities. We’ve bolstered High Street Rental Auctions to give councils more powers to take over empty units. We’ve launched a £30m crackdown on rogue vendors taking advantage of deserted town centres, a dedicated High Street Organised Crime Unit and increased enforcement measures for trading standards.
These measures are welcome and necessary to turn our high streets around. However, as new sites become available, the government needs to support entrepreneurs to take them over and keep their doors open.
A quarter of pubs, bars and restaurants are losing money, according to new survey data. Without intervention, there will be fewer businesses left to revive the high streets at the centre of a place-based politics.
One of the levers available to provide immediate relief to the sector is VAT reform. The UK’s standard 20 per cent rate on food and beverages is the second highest in Europe – double that of Spain, France and Italy. There are growing calls from independent businesses to reduce VAT to 10 per cent.
There is a significant fiscal cost associated with this plan, which HMRC claim would create a deficit of £1bn. However, with 21 hospitality businesses closing each week, the Treasury must also consider the revenue losses happening in real time.
The industry is in a state of paralysis; businesses are unable to hire new staff or invest. Some have taken to limiting their opening hours just to stay afloat. They’re built up over decades but are closing down each week. That’s income tax, corporation tax and key youth employers lost to the Treasury.
Any intervention should also be ringfenced for independent hospitality. Currently, VAT applies equally to all businesses with an annual turnover of over £90,000. The scale of (and taxes levied against) many chains are fundamentally different to those set up by local people.
Beyond VAT, our business rates system disproportionately burdens bricks-and-mortar venues taxed on the rateable property value. Rateable values can be calculated using three different methods which have been known to generate different results. They often jump significantly between the three-year assessment periods and multipliers are set at a cliff-edge, meaning higher rates apply to the whole property once the threshold is reached.
The removal of Small Business Rate Relief and Retail Hospitality and Leisure Relief has left independents facing significantly higher charges than in previous years.
In our manifesto, we promised to replace business rates with something more progressive. We need a fairer system that allows small businesses to settle into our high streets and grows with them. Whether that means partial landlord liability or tapered rates similar to income tax, the case for reform is clear.
A place-based government means economic growth where it matters: in the areas which were decimated during austerity and for the people who care about their community. The unique struggles faced by independent hospitality businesses must be considered under this approach.
Connor Naismith is Labour MP for Crewe and Nantwich
Politics
MI5 lied to three courts in neo-Nazi agent case, inquiry finds
Senior figures at Britain’s internal security agency MI5 lied repeatedly in court over the case of an abusive neo-Nazi agent. Deputy investigatory powers commissioner Sir John Goldring has slammed a number of senior figures at MI5 over their behaviour.
As the Canary reported on 17 March 2026, the spy agency has been ordered to pay compensation to a woman:
coercively controlled, abused, and attacked with a machete by a neo-Nazi agent it employed.
The fascist agent also:
had fantasies about eating children.
Goldring’s new report is scathing, confirming BBC revelations that:
MI5 lied to the courts, something the security service vehemently denied.
Goldring, who was ordered to investigate allegations MI5 had lied in its testimony in the High Court, said:
MI5 recognises without hesitation the seriousness of our failings in these proceedings […]
I repeat my previous apologies to both courts for the incorrect evidence that was provided, and for our slowness in recognising what had happened.
The details beggar belief. The BBC said:
The investigation examined how MI5 gave false evidence to three courts about having kept to its core secrecy policy – known as ‘neither confirm nor deny’ (NCND) – about the agent status of the violent neo-Nazi informant.
MI5 claimed it had maintained NCND and, consequently, the courts allowed it to keep information secret from a woman who was abused by the informant.
The report found MI5’s claims to be untrue.
Senior figures at MI5 lied
The report found numerous senior figures deceived the courts. One senior MI5 officer, known as Officer 2 had:
repeatedly told “lies” and these “formed the foundation of MI5’s false account” to the three courts. He “put forward a wholly fictitious account” in which he denied ever telling me that X [the neo-Nazi agent] was an MI5 agent.
Another senior officer, known as Officer 3 had:
“misled” his own colleagues and did not act in good faith. The report concludes that he “bears considerable responsibility for the continuation of MI5’s falsehood” because he “misrepresented” what Officer 2 had said to him. He was not “truthful” about warnings he received from colleagues.
The spy agency’s lies could have had a serious negative effect on the case brought by the woman, named Beth, abused by their agent:
The courts accepted MI5’s arguments. This meant Beth and everyone else was banned from ever officially being told X was an agent and denied access to the key evidence. She was left at a serious disadvantage and may have lost the case.
The BBC reported:
A panel of senior high court judges, including the Lady Chief Justice, will now have to decide whether to initiate contempt of court proceedings against any MI5 officers or MI5 itself.
They added that:
Given the find that lies were told, there is also the potential for a criminal inquiry.
As the Canary has pointed out in regard to this case, MI5’s website claims its mission is:
to keep the country safe, both now and in the future.
How recruiting and retaining a far-right neo-Nazi sympathiser with a known fetish for violence squares with these aims is unclear. But it is clear that it is long past time the security services were subject to proper democratic scrutiny.
Featured image via the Canary
By Joe Glenton
Politics
Starmer dismissed Holocaust survivors’ anti-genocide letter. Will Burnham ignore this one?
In May 2026, Holocaust survivors and descendants wrote an open letter to Keir Starmer for his war on anti-genocide speech and protest. As with their earlier letters, Starmer ignored it. But how will Burnham act…
Now, the group has written to incoming PM Andy Burnham to demand the reversal of Starmer’s police-state policies targeting protest and speech against genocide and in support of Palestinians. And the Jewish activists are asking, “Will Burnham ignore us like Starmer did?”
The full letter, which points out the prominence of Jews in anti-genocide protest and the fact the only abuse they receive is from Israel fanatics, reads:
Andy Burnham MP
House of Commons
London
SW1A 0AADear Mr Burnham,
How the Labour Government responds to Jews who support Palestinian rights
We are Jewish and write as members of Holocaust Survivors and Descendants against Gaza Genocide (HSD), Jewish Voice for Liberation (JVL – formerly Jewish Voice for Labour) and Jews for Justice for Palestinians.
Since October 2023, when the Israeli Government’s retaliation to Hamas’s murderous attack on 7th October was brutal and indiscriminate, we have marched along with the large Jewish Bloc on the Palestine Marches in support of Palestinians in Gaza, calling out what we firmly believe has become a clear case of genocide. We eagerly await your premiership in the light of your recent call for stronger action against Israel along with your apology for the Labour Government’s slowness to call for a ceasefire.
Our immediate concern relates to the letter from Sarah Jones at the Home Office in response to a letter to the Prime Minister from 44 Holocaust survivors and descendants. The letter criticised statements by Keir Starmer and others that linked attacks on Jewish persons and property to pro-Palestine marches. Symptomatic of the dismissive, we would say insulting, letter to the survivors and descendants is Ms Jones’s attempt to reframe their experience of harassment on the Marches. As noted in the response on 10 July from the survivors and descendants:
“… you fail to mention that this [hostility] has come not from our fellow pro-Palestinian protesters, from whom we have received only goodwill and support but from the pro- Israel counter-demonstrators”.
There are several Jewish ‘communities’ and a wide diversity of views on Israel among Jewish people in the UK and we trust that you will meet with us and other members of the Jewish Bloc in the near future.
There has been an increasingly charged disagreement over the interpretation of antisemitism, since 2015 in particular. Supporters of Israel have found a useful tool in the definition of antisemitism by the IHRA, long discredited among most Jewish scholars – and its original author, Kenneth Stern, who has vociferously condemned its abuse as a weapon to curtail free speech. See this article for example here in the Guardian from 2019. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/dec/13/antisemitism-executive-order-trump-chilling-effect
In effect many of the examples in the IHRA encourage the conflation of antisemitism with criticism of Israel. The Labour Party’s treatment of allegations of antisemitism, guided by this conflation, was deeply flawed and resulted in around 70 Jewish members of the Party being accused in some way of antisemitism. Remarkably, even questioning the Labour Party’s interpretation or its processes was itself ammunition for a charge of antisemitism.
This false interpretation has been destructive in its effects. It has spoilt relations between all communities, has given Israel a protective cloak around the brutality of its actions, has undermined the right to freedom of speech and the right to protest and, we now believe, is contributing to an increase in antisemitism by appearing to privilege Jews above other ethnic groups.
We hope you will oppose any further attempts to muzzle the Palestine marches.
Yours sincerely,
Jenny Manson (Co Chair JVL)
Leah Levane (Co Chair JVL)
Stephen Kapos and Agnes Kory (both child survivors of the Hungarian Holocaust)
Richard Kuper (JVL and JJP)
So far the signs are not promising — Burnham has approved of Starmer’s war on UK freedoms for Israel and shows every sign of going even further.
Featured image via the Canary
By Skwawkbox
Politics
A Trump-backed Arizona candidate faces tough House primary after sex scandals
A self-funding businessman is seizing on messy scandals to try and topple President Donald Trump’s endorsed candidate for a deep-red House seat.
Republican Daniel Keenan is making a hard run at former Sheriff Mark Lamb in Arizona’s 5th District, pouring over $1.6 million of his own cash into the effort and raising questions about Lamb’s fitness for office following a string of sex scandals. The race will test whether GOP voters care more about the allegations — or whether Trump’s support is enough to get him across the finish line.
A multi-part Arizona Republic investigation found that Lamb allegedly engaged in a yearslong pattern of sending sexual images and instigating intimate encounters between him, his wife and others. One woman involved, Jillian Stannard, alleged Lamb encouraged her husband to have sex with other women, including Lamb’s wife. She also alleged that Lamb threatened her, saying there would be consequences, when Stannard raised concerns to leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, of which both Lamb and Stannard were members. Screenshots the Republic obtained of messages with another woman, Tammy Peacock, suggest Lamb — then a sitting county sheriff — threatened to leverage Arizona’s revenge porn law against her. In a statement, Lamb spokesperson Ed Morabito said “these allegations are false and come from long-discredited political opponents.”
Reached for comment on Wednesday, Stannard said her allegations reported by the Republic are “accurate and true.” Peacock passed away in 2021.
“A guy that goes around and says, ‘God, family freedom,’ is sending pictures of himself and nude pictures of his wife, encouraging his friends and his employees to have sexual relations with his wife,’” Keenan said in an interview this week of the allegations, repeating similar attacks he’s made in campaign advertising. “That’s not ‘God, family freedom.’ That shows you’re morally broke.”
Morabito, the Lamb spokesperson, noted the candidate has Trump’s endorsement and is “confident Republican voters will stand with him.”
“[Keenan] is spending millions attacking a Republican and not a dime attacking Democrats. His name ID is less than 30 percent and he is not a serious factor in this race,” Morabito said in a statement.
Janel Lamb, Mark Lamb’s wife, said in a May Facebook post that “a massive smear campaign is certainly not going to stop us from doing what we know is right.”
The race’s outcome will reveal the power of Trump’s endorsement in a deep-red Phoenix-area district. Already this year, GOP primary voters have been willing to accept scandal-ridden candidates favored by Trump. In Texas, Republican primary voters nominated scandal-plagued Attorney General Ken Paxton over incumbent GOP Sen. John Cornyn.
“I’ve never seen in Republican politics in my life a stronger endorsement than Trump’s,” said former Rep. Matt Salmon (R-Ariz.), who represented the 5th District. “And I think that the rank-and-file within the Republican party would rather do anything than cross Trump.”
Keenan has put more than $1.6 million of his own money into his campaign and is using that to make sure voters know all about the reporting. His campaign has spent more than $1.8 million on TV advertising listing the allegations in the Republic, is also hosting numerous town halls a week and has put significant cash into mail advertising as well. Meanwhile, Lamb’s campaign hasn’t put a penny onto the airwaves, according to the tracking service AdImpact.
Lamb has also faced scrutiny for spending much of his time on a ranch in Tennessee and not in the district he is seeking to represent. And Keenan is hitting him over another top issue for Arizona Republicans: Trump’s false claims that the 2020 election was stolen.
“[Lamb] betrayed our president after the 2020 election,” Keenan told POLITICO. “However he feels about election fraud, he testified for Democrats saying there was no fraud and that President Trump lost the election. I think all of that is disqualifying to represent this district.”
There is some evidence that the pitch to voters is landing. An internal poll from Keenan’s campaign obtained by POLITICO shows Keenan leading Lamb 42 percent to 40 percent, narrowly within the poll’s margin of error. The campaign’s earlier polling from late June had shown Lamb leading 43 percent to 35 percent.
Keenan said he has been in touch with the White House about his bid and made the case that he has always been a steadfast supporter of Trump. He also said Georgia businessman Rick Jackson’s recent gubernatorial primary win without Trump’s endorsement shows he can win without the president’s nod — even if it’s hard.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
Still, Lamb’s allies are taking notice of Keenan’s rise. The Washington-based Club For Growth poured $250,000 into pro-Lamb advertising in recent weeks, which Keenan says is a sign of Lamb’s vulnerability: “There’d be no reason for them to do that if he wasn’t in trouble,” Keenan said. Asked about the spending, a spokesperson for the Club pointed to their own internal poll from a few weeks ago showing Lamb up by a 34-point margin.
Lamb was never charged with a crime for his alleged actions. An investigation by the Pinal County attorney found no criminal wrongdoing, though it also concluded a previous county attorney failed to adequately investigate the accusations.
“I know him. I’ve seen him. I’ve seen him time and time again stand for the right things,” said Tyler Farnsworth, a Republican candidate for the Arizona House in Gilbert. “My belief is that the voters here in CD5 have seen who Mark Lamb is.”
“I tend to believe what I see out of the legal system, the justice system, much more than some reporting that may have some very intentional bias toward it,” he added.
The women in the Republic investigation said they also repeatedly raised concerns to Latter-day Saint church leaders. It is unclear what disciplinary action, if any, the church took: The church does not publicly disclose membership status or disciplinary proceedings. The church did not respond to a request for comment.
The stories sent waves through the district’s large Latter-day Saint community. Arizona’s 5th District — sometimes colloquially called the “Mormon district” — includes Gilbert, Queen Creek and parts of Mesa, all areas with significant Latter-day Saint populations.
“When you see the picture of him in a baptismal outfit, with the brother he baptized, and he’s having an open marriage with his wife and this man, it doesn’t seem to uphold our gospel standards,” Suzanne Lunt, an independent voter in Gilbert, said of the allegations. Lunt helped organize Latter-day Saints against Trump in 2024.
In late May, as the Republic’s reporting rocked the valley, a group of prominent Latter-day Saint politicians and strategists coalesced to try and force Lamb out of the race, noting Lamb could make the seat a vulnerability for Republicans in November, or drag down statewide Republicans in the crucial race for governor. But that push tapered off after it became clear Lamb — or his supporters — wouldn’t budge.
“More of an effort hasn’t been made because he doesn’t have a serious opponent well-funded enough to make the numbers close enough,” said Tyler Montague, a Mesa-based political operative who is a Latter-day Saint. “That’s why there isn’t any real movement elsewhere.”
Keenan begs to differ, arguing that Lamb’s scandals could put the district that went for Trump by 20 points “at risk.”
“I don’t actually like [Keenan],” said Amy Wudel, a Republican in Gilbert. “He’s sort of on the extreme side, from typically what I would vote for.” But Wudel, who worked for an independent challenger to Rep. Andy Biggs in the 5th District last cycle, will vote for Keenan because “I do not vote for candidates who do not display the character worthy of office.”
Keenan still faces an uphill battle. His own poll shows the huge name ID deficit he faces — when voters were asked their opinion of Keenan and Lamb, one-third said they were not sure about Keenan, while only 11 percent said the same of Lamb.
It’s unclear how much the mudslinging will land with voters. The Arizona legislature moved the primary date up from early August to late July, meaning thousands of voters already cast a ballot through mail-in balloting or early voting. And the timing of the primary could make it a low-turnout affair: Because many Phoenix-area public schools return in late July or early August, many families are trying to beat the heat by getting in late-summer travel.
“This time of year, any given week, the pews are empty on Sunday and everyone is in Show Low, Flagstaff or San Diego,” said Chad Heywood, a Republican strategist who is neutral in the race.
Meanwhile, Lamb’s supporters are bullish, especially after Trump reinforced his endorsement of Lamb in a social media post Sunday without addressing the scandals. To show his dominance in the 5th District, supporters point to the 2024 election. Lamb ran for Senate, and even as he was being trounced in the primary by Kari Lake, he still managed to win his home of Pinal County by 25 points. One ally also pointed out that Lamb received a standing ovation during a June gathering of Republican women, long after the allegations became public. And his allies in Congress are sticking by his side: Lamb’s campaign sent out fundraising solicitations from House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) in recent weeks.
Even Rep. David Schweikert (R-Ariz), who previously said Lamb’s activity “borders on immoral” and that Lamb should drop out of the race if he isn’t willing to address the accusations, is now keeping the race at arms length.
“I stay out of [District] 5, because it’s not my district,” Schweikert said in an interview at the U.S. Capitol on Tuesday. “If that’s good enough for his voters, I mean, they’re the ones in the district.”
Politics
UK’s sorest loser Matt Goodwin claims Gorton by-election ‘rigged’
In February, the Green Party’s Hannah Spencer wiped the floor with Reform UK’s Matt Goodwin in the Gorton & Denton by-election. Goodwin proved to be such a sore loser that people started calling him ‘Matt Badloss’. And now, Badloss has saddled up his loser pony to take another tour around the rodeo of humiliation:
Matt Goodwin now on a tear about how the Gorton and Denton by-election, which he lost, by a lot, was "rigged".
— Mikey Smith (@mikeysmith) July 16, 2026
Matt Goodwin: tears of a clown
As a reminder, here’s what the results looked like in the Gorton & Denton by-election:
The Green Party didn't just win in Gorton & Denton, they beat Reform and Labour into a distant second and third – congratulations Greens!
By @willem_moore_uk https://t.co/iba6aIoRZa
— Canary (@TheCanaryUK) February 27, 2026
In the aftermath of the by-election, Goodwin and his dirtbag colleagues began claiming there was some sort of fix:
Straight into TRUMP MODE, blame cheating.
You pathetic little sore loser. You lost because you're a prick, not because of cheating. Because enough good people saw through your bull shit. — OGDad (@OGDAD__) February 27, 2026
You’ll note Farage blames two things here:
- Sectarian voting (by which he means Muslims refusing to vote for an openly Islamophobic candidate).
- Cheating (by which he means the Green Party being better at politics).
Blaming Muslims was an interesting choice given that Gorton & Denton is majority Christian. Reform also spoke about ‘family voting’, which is when a husband escorts his wife into a booth to tell her how to vote. This was a convoluted conspiracy, because Reform had to argue that culturally conservative Muslims were forcing their wives to vote for the culturally progressive Greens – a party led by a gay man. It was insulting to everyone involved and nobody bought it.
In March, it was confirmed that this family voting conspiracy was what we said it was in February:
Later in March, Goodwin would publish a heavily-criticised book that was riddled with factual errors – a book clearly written by ChatGPT. This is why people call him ‘MattGPT’ in addition to Matt Badloss.
The MattGPT affair was so embarrassing that Goodwin’s GB News colleagues joined in making fun of him. All in all, then, it’s not been Goodwin’s year. So of course he’d resort to lies and conspiracies to make himself feel better.
Cry baby
Here are some other highlights from Badloss’s speech:
There was also a line in Matt Goodwin's speech about sending £11m worth of condoms to Iran, which as far as I can tell is entirely made up. Perhaps a hallucination. #CPACGB
— Mikey Smith (@mikeysmith) July 16, 2026
We assume he got this claim from the same AI tool that made up the nonsense in his book.
Goodwin also said:
Matt Goodwin channels Tony Blair, saying the only three words he cares about are "deport, deport , deport".
Says he wants illegal immigrants immediately detained, "ideally in Labour or Green Party areas".
— Mikey Smith (@mikeysmith) July 16, 2026
More politics of hate from a spiteful loser.
Thank God this man never won in Gorton & Denton!
And you can thank whichever god you like too, because it clearly wasn’t just Muslims who recognised this chump as the fraud that he is.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
Politics
Jess Phillips is saying the quiet part out loud on the ‘prison capacity crisis’
Former safeguarding minister Jess Phillips has landed in hot water regarding her support for Labour’s Sentencing Bill. The 2026 legislation is currently in the news because a clause allowing the earlier release of prisoners will come into effect in September.
The new clause would allow the release of some prisoners after the completion of half of their sentence. This is a marked contrast to the previous requirement of three-quarters fulfillment. However, the legislation has drawn criticism because it could see sexual offenders being released earlier.
Jess Phillips: hypocrisy on full display
Phillips resigned her safeguarding post on 12 May 2026, among calls for Starmer to step down. Four survivors of group-based child sexual exploitation had previously called for her to quit as a condition for their taking part in the National Grooming Gangs Inquiry.
In June, Phillips then urged the government to exclude child rapists from the early release scheme. However, her own previous actions undermined her position. When the Tories tabled an amendment to exclude sexual offenders back in October 2025, Phillips actually voted against it.
On 15 July 2026, the former safeguarding minister appeared on Channel 4 News to explain her seemingly-shifting position. Asked whether she was aware that sexual offenders would be released early when she voted for the bill, Phillips said:
Absolutely, some of these people would get out, so that is why I sought to have risk assessments put in place and fought back against the idea of just instant release.
However, her interviewer was quick to call out the minister’s hypocrisy, asking:
You say you fought back, but in October 2025 Conservatives laid an amendment which would exclude rapists, pedophiles and groomers. You voted against it – why?
And Phillips’ answer? Well:
Because there is a prisons crisis.
Fantastic – so they really are just saying the quiet part out loud now.
‘Capacity crisis’
Phillips’ position here mirrors that voiced repeatedly by floundering justice minister David Lammy. On 12 July, he told the Guardian that Labour needed to press on with the early release scheme as written, to avoid a capacity crisis in prisons:
We would get back to a situation where we were running, at 99, nearly 100% [capacity]. I was with a father whose daughter had been horribly groomed in my constituency just a few weeks ago. It is hugely important that when the perpetrators of this crime are arrested, they can be sent to prison.
We are building prisons, but it takes time – seven years – and in the meantime, we have got to ensure that there is good community punishment.
Both Phillips and Lammy have exposed, inadvertently, a lie at the heart of the carceral justice system. In the UK and around the world we imprison people, not according to some innate righteousness, but according to budget and public appetite.
If the state will suddenly say that prisons are too full and thousands of prisoners will be released early, what mandate did they have to hold them in the first place?
If jail time was about rehabilitation or public safety, what makes a prisoner more safe after half their term than, say, a quarter? Likewise, if prison sentences were motivated by the the innate justice of incarceration, is it not a moral violation to release prisoners earlier?
The theatre of justice
These contradictions can’t be resolved if we think about prisons as being about justice. However, they resolve themselves quite easily if we instead think of the prison system as being about a form of public display – one which gives the appearance of fairness, insofar as the budget at public will is available.
This becomes all the more obvious when we look at the ‘offenders’ whom Jess Phillips and Labour so desperately wants to make room for in our prisons. On social media, Saul Stanniforth commented on Phillips’ Channel 4 appearance, stating:
Got to free the rapists to make room for people who oppose genocide, I guess.
Here, Stanniforth alluded to the mass arrests of Palestine Action supporters under terrorism laws, following the group’s proscription. Many of the arrestees were pensioners who silently held placards stating “I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action”.
It’s difficult to imagine a world in which a rapist is less dangerous to the public than an octogenarian holding a sign. Fortunately, we don’t have to imagine such a thing. Instead, we simply have to acknowledge that prisons are about the theatre of justice, not justice itself.
Fortunately, alternatives to the carceral system exist – if you’d like to read more, follow the link here.
Featured image via the Canary
By Grace
Politics
Leaked documents show Corbyn rejected YP exec’s unanimous no-confidence vote
On 13 July, Skwawkbox revealed that members of Your Party’s elected executive (CEC) had voted no confidence in three leading CEC figures. The vote was driven by the CEC chair’s suspension of three well-known activists from the CEC for attending a socialist event. Early reports suggested the vote had fallen short of the required two-thirds to remove the officials. But Skwawkbox can now confirm that in fact they were near-unanimous. However, both chair Jenn Forbes and party leader Jeremy Corbyn have refused to implement it.
Procedural excuses
The CEC meeting was quorate — it had the numbers required to be official. The minutes of the meeting confirm that it was arranged in accordance with the rules and that Forbes and CEC secretary Dawn Aspinall had been asked to organise it but didn’t:
Forbes, Aspinall, Corbyn and Membership Officer Cassi Bellingham — also the subject of a no-confidence vote — were listed as ‘apologies’, that is, not present. CEC members present voted to waive a ‘standing order’ that no-confidence votes may be taken at annual meetings.
The minutes then record the discussion of the reasons for the lack of confidence:
And they show that the votes against Forbes and Aspinall were carried unanimously, and one less than unanimous in the vote against Bellingham. Under the rules, this should mean the effective, immediate resignation of those in the roles:
The results were communicated to all relevant parties. However, Forbes refused to accept the outcome — insisting that the meeting was not a CEC meeting at all, because she had not called it, even though she had been asked to do so and had not. In a dismissive email to CEC members, she wrote:
I want to be clear, however, that the gathering which took place on Sunday was not a meeting of the CEC, for the following reasons:
• The meeting was not convened by the Chair or Secretary, as is our responsibility under the Party’s Standing Orders (Clause 6) and under the paper agreed specifying CEC Officer Roles and Responsibilities;
• While meetings may be requested under the Standing Orders, they are for the Chair and Secretary to convene, under clause 5.2;
• Not all CEC members were invited to the meeting;
• Neither the Chair, nor the Secretary, nor the Parliamentary Leader were in attendance, nor the secretariat, leaving key roles such as minuting absent;
• The agenda breached previous votes of the CEC on, for example, the distribution of responsibilities within the organisation, and the holding of AGMs.Therefore, it is not recognised as a properly constituted meeting of the CEC. The fact that a number of CEC members were present does not of itself make a meeting constitutional. Numbers may be relevant to quorum or voting thresholds at a properly convened meeting, but they do not cure defects in convening, notice, agenda, authority or procedural fairness. A group of CEC members is not automatically the CEC acting as a constitutional body.
The Party can only take formal decisions through its Constitution, Standing Orders and agreed governance procedures. Any purported vote of no confidence in the Chair, Secretary or Membership Officer arising from an informal or improperly convened gathering has no formal standing. Those officers remain in post and continue to discharge their responsibilities…
…We inherited a party in extremely difficult circumstances. Moving forward requires cool heads, discipline, focus and a shared commitment to acting within the constitutional framework we were elected to uphold.
The full CEC meeting will provide the proper forum for these matters to be discussed with the relevant papers, advice and concerns before members. I ask comrades to approach that meeting with care, respect and political responsibility. I would ask for any feedback or suggestions for this meeting to come directly to Dawn and myself, so we can have that discussion collectively in the proper forum.
Where Forbes was dismissive, Corbyn was as close to furious as he ever gets. In a brusque email he accused the CEC members of “destructive behaviour”, being “addicted to infighting”. He claimed that “any sense of natural justice” had been denied to the rejected officers — who, remember, had just suspended three members for attending a socialist event:
Dear members of the CEC,
I am extremely disappointed by some of the destructive behaviour I have witnessed over the last few weeks.
It seems to me that many members of the CEC are not interested in developing Your Party, but are addicted to internal infighting. Rather than actively supporting the party, they undermine those doing the work. Fadel’s email yesterday threatening any member of staff who spoke to a member of the CEC is beyond comprehension.
At my request an email was sent to the CEC to consider contesting the Clacton by-election. Less than a third of CEC members even bothered to respond. Very few CEC members participated in the Trade Union Commission meeting on Friday night. We are a group of people who collectively have deep ties in the trade union movement, but the event seemed of less interest to many than internal politics.
I am very sorry that any sense of natural justice was denied to Jenn, Dawn and Cassi when they were subjected to an illegitimate vote of no confidence, without a right of reply, at a short-notice, ad-hoc meeting to which not all CEC members were even invited.
We need to end this infighting to have any chance of succeeding. We need to remember why we set up this party in the first place, and why we are involved in politics at all. It is about ordinary people and their right to live in a fairer society. It is not about us. Nobody benefits when we tear each other apart.
I suggest we focus on actual things that make a difference rather than on each other. Monday’s meeting of the CEC is the proper place to discuss how the CEC can work more collaboratively, and I suggest broad-based groups supporting the Party’s work on branch formation, housing campaigns and other priorities. Where there are genuine concerns over personal liability or anything else, address those through the proper channels and we can have external reviews and discussion, without all this toxicity.
We need a fundamental change of attitude.
I suggest that for the interests of the party, this correspondence be kept private and confidential to the CEC.
Yours,
Jeremy
Angry CEC members have said that the disinterest in the Clacton by-election was driven by a feeling that Your Party should not stand, to avoid dividing the anti-Farage vote. Also, they feel unwilling to engage with the CEC under its current management and that Corbyn is refusing to acknowledge just how serious the situation is.
Your Party had an opportunity, with hundreds of thousands of people initially signed up to support it, to become a mass socialist movement that the UK desperately needs. Instead, lust for control killed off that hope and what remains is in chaos.
Featured image via the Canary
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Politics Home Article | Sadiq Khan To Join The House Of Lords

Sadiq Khan has been nominated to join the House of Lords (Alamy)
4 min read
London mayor Sadiq Khan is one of 26 new peers to join the House of Lords as Keir Starmer’s premiership comes to an end.
As Starmer prepares to leave No 10, Downing Street has published a list of political peerages, including the soon-to-be-former Prime Minister’s ally Christina McAnea – the former general secretary of Unison, who will become a Labour peer.
Chris Wormald, the former cabinet secretary and head of the civil service, will become a crossbench peer.
Other notable figures nominated by the Labour Party include former MP and Economic Secretary to the Treasury Kitty Ussher and the former chief executive of the Food Standards Agency Tim J Smith.
Among those nominated by the Liberal Democrats include chief economist at Nesta and visiting professor at the London School of Economics Dr Tim Leunig, and Dave McCobb – Liberal Democrat director of field campaigns and former Hull City Councillor.
Co-Founder of Carphone Warehouse and sponsor and chair of the David Ross Education Trust David Ross will become a Conservative peer.
The 26 new peers to enter the House of Lords
Nominations from the Leader of the Labour Party:
Alison Garnham – Chief Executive, Child Poverty Action Group.
Alison Lowe OBE – Deputy Mayor for Policing and Crime in West Yorkshire.
Barbara Mills KC – Chair of the Bar Council of England and Wales (2025), family law barrister and Joint Head of Chambers at 4PB.
Cathy Ashley OBE – Chief Executive of Family Rights Group and former Chair of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust.
Christina McAnea – Former General Secretary of UNISON.
June Sarpong OBE – Broadcaster, charity campaigner and social equity advocate.
The Rt Hon Ken Macintosh DL – Former Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament.
Kitty Ussher – British economist, former Member of Parliament for Burnley and former Economic Secretary to the Treasury.
Marcus Davey CBE – Former CEO and Artistic Director of the Roundhouse.
Martin McTague OBE – National Chair of the Federation of Small Businesses.
Nick Stace OBE – Chief Global Impact Officer at Howden Group.
Parvais Jabbar MBE – Human rights expert, co-founder and Co-Executive Director of The Death Penalty Project.
Roberto Neri – CEO of The Ivors Academy and a Director of UK Music.
The Rt Hon Sir Sadiq Khan – Mayor of London and former Member of Parliament for Tooting.
Saul Lehrfreund MBE – Human rights expert, co-founder and Co-Executive Director of The Death Penalty Project.
Tim J Smith CBE – Former Chief Executive of the Food Standards Agency.
Nominations from the Leader of the Liberal Democrat Party:
Dave McCobb – Liberal Democrat Director of Field Campaigns. Former Hull City Councillor of 22 years.
Hannah Kitching – Chair of the Yorkshire Liberal Democrats and Town Mayor of Penistone. Former NHS physiotherapist and Barnsley councillor.
Julia Aglionby – Executive Director of the Foundation for Common Land. Agricultural valuer and former Liberal Democrat parliamentary candidate.
Mark Petterson – Director of Warwick Energy Limited. Pioneer of UK offshore wind and long-standing adviser to the Liberal Democrats.
Dr Tim Leunig – Chief Economist at Nesta and Visiting Professor at LSE. Former senior civil servant and economic adviser.
Nominations from the Leader of the Conservatives:
David Ross – Entrepreneur and Philanthropist. Co-Founder of Carphone Warehouse, Sponsor and Chair of David Ross Education Trust, Founder of the Nevill Holt Festival and former Chair of the National Portrait Gallery.
General Sir Patrick Sanders KCB CBE DSO – Lately Chief of the General Staff, British Army.
Professor Swaran Singh – Professor of Social and Community Psychiatry, University of Warwick; Consultant Psychiatrist, Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership NHS Trust and former Equality and Human Rights Commissioner.
Nominations for Crossbench Peerages:
The Rt Hon Sir Brian Leveson – Investigatory Powers Commissioner. Former President of the Queen’s Bench Division and Lord Justice of Appeal. Former Chair of the Sentencing Council and Chair of the Leveson Inquiry into the Culture, Practices and Ethics of the Press.
Sir Chris Wormald KCB – Former Cabinet Secretary and Head of the Civil Service.
Politics
A death certificate is not enough for Kashmir’s enforced disappearance victims
Abdul Rashid Wani, a timber trader from Kashmir, vanished from Indian military custody in 1997. While a certificate of his death has finally been granted after 29 years, his family is still searching for answers about what happened to him.
His son Junaid Rashid, who was five at the time of his father’s disappearance and is now 34, told Agence France-Presse (AFP):
The government has now, after 29 years, acknowledged in court that such an atrocity was done. If this had happened earlier, I think Kashmir would look different. Our lives would look different, and my mother’s health would be something else.
He still has haunting memories from the tragedy:
I remember my grandmother telling a colonel at our home, ‘Just give me my son back.’
Kashmir: enforced disappearances
Abdul Rashid Wani’s case is not an isolated tragedy. According to rights groups between 8,000 and 10,000 people have been “enforced disappeared” in Kashmir since the late 1980s.
The People’s Union for Democratic Rights, said in April following the issuance of Wani’s death certificate that his case “encapsulates the human rights story of the past 36 years in Jammu and Kashmir.”
They continued:
This case is just one of thousands in Jammu and Kashmir where not only has the disappearance been confirmed, but the State forces responsible have been identified and indicted by judicial enquiries, State Human Rights Commission findings and police investigations. Yet, the reality is that no one has been prosecuted till date for any of these crimes and the Central Government maintains a 100% record in rejecting any sanction for prosecution when approached.
The PUDR noted that the judicial inquiry confirmed the abduction and “stated that the agency involved was 2/8 Gorkha Rifles led by an officer named Yadav,” while the magistrate’s ruling later named Major V.P. Yadav as the officer who ordered Wani’s detention.
Half widows
In Kashmir, the wives of the missing men are known as “half-widows” – unable to mourn fully until they know their husbands are dead, AFP said.
They also interviewed Jana Begum. Her husband and their four children were awoken by soldiers hammering on their door at a midnight in 2002. They detained Manzoor Ahmed Dar and she has not seen or heard from her husband since. She said:
It felt like a bird of prey snatched him from us.
The family performed symbolic funeral rites in 2016 after police officers told them privately that Dar had died “during interrogation”, his daughter Bilkees Manzoor said.
Debate in UK Parliament
On July 7, 2026, MPs gathered in Westminster Hall for a debate on “Human rights in Kashmir,” led by Imran Hussain, Labour MP for Bradford East and chair of the all-party parliamentary group on Kashmir.
While the discussion was focused on the communications blackout currently in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, MPs also reminded the House that such abuses occur on the Indian side too.
Nadia Whittome, Labour MP for Nottingham East, said:
I have been contacted in recent weeks by many constituents who are desperately worried for their loved ones in Kashmir, and who are struggling to reach them because of the communications blockade. Does the Minister agree that such communication shutdowns, which have also been used by Indian-occupied Kashmir, are often an attempt by authorities to hide and cover up the crimes and human rights abuses they are committing?
Jeremy Corbyn reminded MPs of Britain’s colonial legacy in the region:
The way Kashmir was treated at the time of Indian independence is an overhanging colonial responsibility for Britain that has never been resolved.
The families of Abdul Rashid Wani and Manzoor Ahmed Dar continue to live with wounds that time has not healed. Theses are wounds inflicted not just by the soldiers who knocked on their doors, but by a colonial legacy that partitioned a land and left its people to bear the consequences.
Featured image via the Canary
By The Canary
Politics
UK is raising one of the unhealthiest generations of children in decades
The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health (RCPCH) has updated its landmark State of Child Health report, which looks at the health of children across 12 indicators.
Nearly a decade after its first publication, this latest analysis has found that children’s health in the UK across all areas is either in decline or has stalled completely.
Ranging from infant mortality and mental health to obesity, immunisation, and asthma, the report concludes that widening inequalities, gaps in data and chronic underinvestment are putting the health of a generation at risk.
The report found in England:
- Only 84% of children receive two doses of the MMR vaccine by age five, well below the WHO 95% target.
- More than one in three (36%) children aged 10–11 is overweight or severely overweight.
- One in five children aged 8–16 has a probable mental health disorder.
- Children in the most deprived areas are four times more likely to die from asthma.
- Infant mortality in the most deprived communities is more than double that seen in the least deprived areas.
Health of children not improving
Alongside its wider analysis, a recent YouGov poll commissioned by RCPCH found that only 12% of parents believe child health has improved over the last ten years, suggesting that progress has not been felt by families and that much more remains to be done.
RCPCH is calling on the UK government to make child health a national priority, not an afterthought.
The State of Child Health sets out a clear plan to improve children’s health and reduce inequalities:
- Invest fairly and consistently in children’s health services and the workforce.
- Improve the collection and sharing of child health data across the UK.
- Introduce binding national targets to improve child health outcomes and narrow the gap between the most and least deprived.
With a new prime minister soon taking office, RCPCH calls on the government to act before another generation of children gets let down.
RCPCH officer for health improvement, Dr Helen Stewart, said:
The UK’s record on children’s health should be a national embarrassment. Across Western Europe, many other countries are achieving better outcomes for children, yet too many children here are being left behind.
The State of Child Health report shows that we are categorically failing children in the UK, but especially those from ethnic minorities and poorer backgrounds.
When the Darzi Review was published in 2024, it laid bare the scale of children’s worsening health in England and was meant to mark a turning point. Instead, despite the warnings, little has changed.
Without action, more children will grow up in poor health, entering adulthood at a disadvantage and putting even greater pressure on families and public services.
In their first 100 days, the new prime minister should set out how they will make children’s health a priority through sustained investment, better use of data and clear national targets. Paediatricians have provided the blueprint, now policymakers must listen.
Rachel de Souza, children’s commissioner for England, said:
Children all over the country want to grow up healthy, happy, and able to fulfil their potential – yet too many children are being held back by circumstances beyond their control, and too many families are experiencing tragedy.
Factors such as where children live and family finances shouldn’t determine whether they can have a healthy start in life. But some of our poorest children are facing the greatest barriers to good health.
This important report shows that the country is not only overseeing a decline in children’s health but also failing to uphold their rights.
Improving children’s health and wellbeing must be at the heart of government decision making. We must ensure every child who can be is vaccinated, every mother and baby gets dedicated care, and that every area is held to account for doing so.
We have to tackle problems before they escalate and make sure every child can access the support they need, regardless of where they live.
Sebastian Rees, head of health at the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), said:
IPPR has long argued that the UK has become the sick man of Europe on health. This report from RCPCH shows that this starts at a very early age. For a government committed to giving every child the best start in life, that should be of huge concern and deserves far more attention than it currently receives.
Poor health in childhood doesn’t just have a huge impact on young people and their families in the here and now – it also casts a long shadow. IPPR’s own research shows that poor health in childhood carries through the entire life course, shaping people’s health and opportunities decades later.
This is a complex, multifaceted problem that requires action right across government, but a Children’s Health Investment Standard that protects spending on vital early years services would be a great place to start.
Dr Sunil Bhopal, director of child health research at Born in Bradford, said:
This solutions-focused report shows that many of the challenges facing children’s health are not inevitable.
By tracking the lives of thousands of children and families for over 20 years, our work at Born in Bradford shows that these challenges are often the product of inequalities and circumstances that policy has the power to change.
‘State of Child Health 2026’ combines robust data with the experiences of children, young people and clinicians.
It puts the evidence in front of the people with the power to act on it.
Featured image via the Canary
By The Canary
Politics
Are England football coaches all raving mad?
Correction: Thomas Tuchel really is the Andy Burnham of football after all. Overhyped as the harbinger of ‘change’, he has turned out to be as bad as his predecessor – and arguably even worse.
Long ago and far away (ie, last week), in that moment of hopeless hope for England in the World Cup, I wrote that, while dullard, safety-first-and-last England coach Gareth Southgate had been ‘the Keir Starmer of football’, his successor Tuchel was different.
Unlike Southgate, Tuchel appeared prepared to go for the kill and go down fighting; as he told the players before they went on the attack against Croatia in the first group game, if England lose, then ‘we lose playing our way’. Hence, I and others accepted that the German was something more than a Burnham-style cosmetic replacement.
A week is a long time in football, and we now know how wrong and naive we were. England did indeed lose the semi-final against Argentina ‘playing our way’. The problem is it was the same spineless, soul-crushing way that Southgate’s England lost the 2018 World Cup semi-final to Croatia, and the Euro 2020 final against Italy.
We go a goal up – and then just give up the ball to the opposition and hope we can hang on. Which we can’t. If the definition of insanity really is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result, then England football coaches must all be stark, raving mad.
When the bilingual Tuchel responded to Anthony Gordon’s 55th-minute goal by taking off attacking players – including the goalscorer – sending on defenders, and camping on the edge of our own penalty area, the writing was on the wall in whichever language you like.
Lionel Messi may not be the player he was; at 39 he seems to be playing the elderly gents’ game ‘walking football’ much of the time. But the little Argentinian maestro is still quite capable of unlocking a static defence, as if he was practising crossing over a line of training ground dummies. Tuchel sent on the big, lummox-like England defenders to deal with the crosses; Argentina scored the winner with a free header. Adios, Ingleses.
Professional pundits and fan TikTokers alike were understandably shocked and furious with Tuchel’s tactics. Yet in hindsight it all seems so predictable. As the brilliant Martin Samuel wrote in The Times: ‘The disease remains and is as contagious as ever. Different group, fancy new boss, same dispiriting outcome. When it matters, for all the character, for all the chemistry, there is still a lack of conviction.’ And experience teaches us that it is an English disease, not an alien German infection of the body football.
Yes the Argentinians were a bit dirty, though hardly in the league of their predecessors, whom Alf Ramsey dubbed ‘animals’ after the 1966 World Cup quarter final. (By coincidence, the Argie captain on that day, the talented but thuggish Antonio Rattín, who was sent off but famously refused to leave the pitch until a translator was brought on to explain, an incident which led to the introduction of red and yellow cards, died this week.)
Yet for all the Argentine fouls and insults, for all Messi’s residual magic tricks, the conviction remains that England could and probably should have won. But like Southgate before him, Tuchel bottled it and blew his historic opportunity.
This may well have been England’s best chance to get to and maybe even win a World Cup final. Instead the unspectacular Argentina will be there on Sunday; though Spain, excellent conquerors of France, must be favourites to spoil FIFA’s long-term wish to hand Messi the trophy as if it were a retirement gold clock.
The Argentina players caused more controversy at the end by parading a makeshift ‘Las Malvinas son Argentinas’ (‘The Falklands are Argentine’) banner on the pitch. Surely even the invertebrate Burnham wouldn’t swallow the global humiliation of surrendering sovereignty over the Falkland Islands, as Starmer did with the Chagos Islands sell-out. But then again, who knows? After all, their football equivalents have done their best to surrender any English claim to be a power in world football.
Mick Hume is a spiked columnist.
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