Politics
Reeves Urges Andrew Mountbatten Windsor To Speak Out About Epstein
Rachel Reeves has added to the growing political pressure on Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor to speak out about his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein.
US Congress released more than three million files on Epstein, the convicted sex offender who died in 2019, on January 30.
It revealed the disgraced financier’s extensive contact with the global elite, including Andrew.
The former prince is now facing fresh calls from some US officials – and the family of his prominent accuser Virginia Giuffre – to testify before the Oversight Committee about Epstein.
Andrew previously denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein and appearing in the files is not an indication of wrongdoing.
He reached an out-of-court settlement with Giuffre four years ago, with no admission of liability. Giuffre died by suicide in 2025.
The former royal is yet to respond directly to the new claims.
Separately, the UK police are now reviewing some of the information from the dossier as part of a series of probes.
The chancellor joined in with the mounting political pressure on Andrew on Wednesday.
“The former prince has got a lot of questions to answer on a whole range of issues,” the chancellor told reporters in south-east London.
“I think he owes it to the victims of Epstein and his associates to come forward and give much more information about what he knew about the treatment of young women and girls.”
Essex Police announced on Tuesday it was looking at the information about private flights to and from Stansted Airport.
It came after former prime minister Gordon Brown claimed last week that the files showed “in graphic detail” how Epstein used the airport to “fly in girls from Latvia, Lithuania and Russia”.
A representative from Stansted Airport said the airport “does not manage or have any visibility of passenger arrangements on privately-operated aircraft”.
Surrey Police are also looking into a claim from a 2020 FBI report related to a child abuse claim against Andrew and convicted sex trafficker, Epstein’s friend Ghislaine Maxwell.
Norfolk Police are looking into various documents which have been flagged to them, but say they have not received any allegations and are not currently investigating any probes.
Thames Valley Police are looking into claims Andrew shared confidential information with Epstein when the then-prince was the UK’s trade envoy.
The National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) have confirmed a national group has been set up to support UK forces that are “assessing allegations” related to file drop.
Reeves’ words come after prime minister Keir Starmer urged Andrew to give evidence before a US congressional committee which first asked for his testimony in November, saying the victims must be “first priority”.
The prime minister had previously said it would be a decision for Andrew to testify.
The US congress committee does not have the power to compel Andrew to appear in front of them.
Meanwhile, former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton told the BBC: “I think everybody should testify who is asked to testify.”
Clinton and her husband former US president Bill Clinton will appear before Congress over Epstein at the end of this month.
There is no indication either of them are guilty of wrongdoing.
Politics
Should You Use The ‘777 Rule’ In Your Relationship?
“Don’t go to bed angry.” “Love means never having to say you’re sorry.” “Men are from Mars, women are from Venus.”
There are many relationship adages and “rules” that have become part of our cultural vocabulary, but not all are meant to be followed. So when I first learned about the “777 rule” – a concept to help partners find time to connect – on social media, I brought a healthy level of skepticism to the guidance.
“The 777 rule is a viral framework that encourages couples to spend consistent, intentional time together,” said Julie Nguyen, a dating coach with the dating app Hily.
“The guideline suggests couples to go on a date every seven days, take a weekend trip every seven weeks, and go on a longer vacation every seven months.”
She noted that this method isn’t rooted in formal research or relationship science but is “more of a catchy formula” that makes it easy to remember how to have special shared experiences with your partner. Of course, there’s room for flexibility as well.
“Every seven days, have a date or spend some intentional time together – this can be a meal at home without any screens or kids, something simple,” said Tracy Ross, a licensed clinical social worker specialising in couples and family therapy.
“The important part is focusing on one another without distractions and trying to tune in to your relationship.”
Try something that requires a bit more effort every seven weeks.
“Go on a road trip, spend a day going on a hike, go away for the weekend – again it’s intentional time together with the goal of connecting and not being distracted by screens, work, friends or family,” Ross noted.
And then make an extra special, out of the ordinary plan every seven months.
“Go on a trip, conquer a challenge together,” Ross said. “Take time away from your life to do something that you both look forward to, want to experience together, and requires you to spend time and effort on being together – and of course again, without distractions.”

MoMo Productions via Getty Images
The 777 rule made the viral social media rounds last year, and it also wound up in headlines in 2023 thanks to reports about English actor Amy Nuttall following her husband’s alleged affair. The underlying idea goes back even further, however.
“While the name feels sparkly and new, this really is a traditional relational concept under a new name,” said clinical psychologist Sabrina Romanoff.
“The foundation of this concept is rooted in the idea that our relationships require novelty, quality time, intentionality and investment of emotional, financial and time resources to feel full and satisfying. I think this took off so easily because of the simplicity and clean packaging around it which gives couples a clear way to think about planning and how they prioritize the relationship.”
What are the potential benefits to following this ‘rule’?
“Over time, it can be easy for couples to take the relationship for granted and drift apart,” Nguyen said. “The 777 rule is a reminder to protect your time together so the connection won’t get deprioritised by work, routine, parenting or daily life. Making space for shared closeness gives couples opportunities to experience something new together.”
The 777 rule provides a simple, concrete structure to help strengthen connections without overcomplicating things.
“This creates intentionality around planning and activities without having to reinvent the wheel and guessing about what the ‘norm’ should be,” Romanoff said. “Shared expectations are one of the most important predictors of relational harmony, and this rule helps to get both people on the same page.”
A little can go a long way in relationships, and this easy structure is actionable and impactful.
“It’s a myth that a good relationship will just remain good – a relationship needs to be nurtured and tended to,” Ross said. “If you neglect your relationship, it will deteriorate and get worse – it won’t stay the same.”
She emphasised that the 777 rule builds in new things and experiences to bond over. For couples with a strong foundation but recent issues with life stress and lack of time, this framework could kick-start their journey to reconnect after a period of neglect.
“When I work with couples, I talk a lot about how our brains respond to novelty and attention,” said Sarah Barukh, a therapist with Kindman & Co.
“Early in relationships, everything feels new, and we’re naturally very attuned to each other. Over time, the brain gets efficient and goes on autopilot, and we start assuming we know what our partner needs instead of staying curious about them. Intentional time together can help interrupt that autopilot and bring people back into connection.”
What are the possible downsides?
“I appreciate the spirit behind the 777 rule because it’s trying to solve a real problem – couples often let quality time fall to the bottom of the to-do list,” Logan Ury, a dating coach and the lead relationship scientist at Hinge. “But I don’t love rigid formulas for relationships because they can create unnecessary pressure or guilt when life doesn’t cooperate.”
Couples who feel like they’re failing to meet a prescribed formula can feel added stress and engage in unhealthy comparison.
“The downside is when connection becomes treated like a checklist,” Nguyen said. “Presence and engagement matter far more than going through the motions with a half-hearted vacation.”
The 777 approach may also remove the natural joy and spark of trying new things together.
“It could take away the spontaneity and ‘specialness’ of these events, especially when they can become rigid, routine and taken-for-granted,” Romanoff said.
Plus, this kind of rule isn’t necessarily accessible to every couple, at least not in all life phases.
“It assumes a certain amount of time, money and flexibility that many couples don’t have,” Barukh said. “I’m also mindful that sometimes big or novel experiences can become distractions. Couples may be spending plenty of time together, but not necessarily in ways that deepen their understanding of each other or help them feel more supported and known.”

Yana Iskayeva via Getty Images
What strengthens relationships the most is not the scale of the plan, she added, but whether both people feel emotionally present, open and curious about each other.
“The 777 rule doesn’t address deeper problems,” Ross said. “It’s not a substitute for difficult conversations or resolving differences. You have to follow the spirit of the exercise. If you don’t really engage with the activity, the planning, the time together, it can be empty and not connecting. Don’t dial it in!”
Although this approach might be “good maintenance” for some relationships, she warned that it can’t tackle unresolved issues, distance betrayal or mistrust. So don’t use the 777 rule as a substitute for emotional work or excuse to ignore those challenges.
“I don’t recommend it for couples who are struggling with serious issues or are in a crisis,” Ross said. “And it’s not appropriate for couples who have been brushing things under the rug and need to address layers of unresolved issues.”
What do relationship experts recommend?
“I recommend this rule in theory, not in practice,” Romanoff said. “In other words, it’s a good guideline to open up conversations for couples to talk about what they want and expect from the relationship to reduce disappointment, resentment and guesswork. It shouldn’t be defaulted to as a black-and-white rigid rule.”
Rather than treating the 777 approach as a hard-and-fast rule, use it as a jumping off point to reach shared understanding and agreement with your partner.
“Many couples forget to prioritise their relationship once life gets busy,” Barukh said. “New experiences together can be great, but closeness doesn’t only come from trips or big plans. It usually comes from moments of vulnerability, attention and curiosity about each other.”
The goal is to feel connected and prioritised. And there are many ways for couples to reach that mutual appreciation and fulfillment.
“For some people, it’s regular date nights,” Ury said. “For others, it’s small daily rituals – like always eating breakfast together or a 10-minute check-in before bed. The research on relationship maintenance shows that consistency matters more than grand gestures.”
She suggested asking each other, “What’s one small thing we could do daily, one medium thing weekly and one bigger thing monthly that would make you feel loved?” Personalising a framework makes it more realistic and sustainable.
“Another variation is one meal together a week, one night out a month and one overnight a year,” Ross said. “This is less than 777, but for some couples it’s easier to commit to and follow up on – and still has an impact.”
Remember there’s no one-size-fits-all solution, so figure out whatever works for your schedule.
“Think about how you can fold in more consistent attention and shared presence, which can be supported through some type of ritual that works for you and your partner,” Nguyen said. “For example, my boyfriend and I usually have a relationship check-in every three months where we take time to deeply listen to each other.”
Instead of fixating on completing a scheduled task, the focus is making the space to be curious about each other.
“The important part isn’t the number of hours spent together,” Barukh said. “It’s whether both people feel seen, connected and willing to keep choosing each other over time.”
Politics
Russia and Israel protected by Olympics committee
A Ukrainian athlete was disqualified from the Winter Olympics for a helmet which depicted fellow athletes whom Russia had murdered.
The BBC labelled it:
The Games’ biggest controversy so far.
The Ukrainian athlete, Vladyslav Heraskevych, was wearing a helmet that displayed images of more than 20 fellow Ukrainian athletes, all of whom Russia has murdered since the start of its invasion.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) made the decision due to Heraskevych’s:
refusal to comply with the IOC’s Guidelines on Athlete Expression. It was taken by the jury of the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF) because the helmet he intended to wear was not compliant with the rules.
The IOC Rule 50 states:
No kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas.
However, nowhere on his helmet did it mention war, Russia, or how Russia killed these people.
Astounding hypocrisy over Russia
At the very same Winter Olympics, Maxim Naumov, an American figure skater, held up a photo of his dead parents as he received his final score.
His parents were world champion figure skaters – but they competed in two Olympics for Russia.
So, athletes are allowed to celebrate dead Russians, but not dead Ukrainians?
Since then, Heraskevych has accused the IOC of fuelling Russia’s propaganda. He added:
it does not look good. I believe it’s a terrible mistake that was made by the IOC.
But the IOC’s hypocrisy doesn’t end there.
Israel is allowed to compete in the event – a literal genocidal terrorist state, with team members who served in the genocidal Israeli Defence Forces who have committed atrocities against Palestinians. Meanwhile, the IOC banned a Ukrainian athlete for wearing a helmet that might upset Putin.
One Swiss commentator called out the Israeli team during a bobsled race. As the Canary previously reported:
Stefan Renna, who works for Swiss Radio and Television (RTS), pointed out that bobsled racer Adam Edelman calls himself “Zionist to the core“. Edelman has also made numerous social media posts supporting Israel’s Gaza genocide. Renna even used the g-word – genocide – that terrifies UK corporate ‘journalists’, referring to the findings of the UN International Commission of Inquiry.
The IOC has maintained that both Israel and Palestine should have equal opportunity to compete at the Games. However, Israel has a team at the Winter Olympics, whilst Palestine does not.
Whilst Palestine has never entered the Winter Olympics, only the summer games, we can put that down to the lack of infrastructure and the continued system of apartheid, which means the country lacks the funding to support its athletes’ development to an elite level. Perhaps Palestine could put a Winter Olympics team together if Israel stopped razing them to the ground every few years.
Israel has murdered over 800 athletes and sporting officials since October 2023. That figure includes more than 100 child athletes. The terrorist state has also destroyed 273 sports facilities – meaning Palestinian athletes who survived have nowhere to train.
Make your mind up
The IOC has banned both Russian and Belarusian athletes from competing under their own flags. Meanwhile, there has, of course, been no equivalent ban for Israeli athletes.
However, in September, the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) lifted its ban on athletes from both countries competing at the games, which doesn’t make sense when Russia’s attacks on Ukraine are still ongoing.
The IOC needs to make up its mind.
Either athletes cannot remember and dedicate their victories or performances to the dead, or they can. And the answer to that should not depend on where they come from.
Similarly, can murderous regimes compete under their state’s flag, or not? Of course, they unequivocally should not. But the IOC cannot have one rule for one and one rule for another.
Obviously, we know why this is. Israel is funding politicians left, right and centre who can put pressure on sporting bodies to have countries banned as and when they see fit, as Lisa Nandy did only this week.
Moreover, the West, the mainstream media, the majority of our politicians, and apparently the IOC, seem to care more about dead white people than they do about dead brown people. The hypocrisy stinks – and Israel should not be allowed to compete whilst simultaneously murdering Palestinians. The double standards are strewn everywhere.
Featured image via ABC News (Australia) & Euro Media News / YouTube
Politics
The House Article | Forensic science in England and Wales is failing the public

4 min read
Forensic science in England and Wales is not working.
Not for the police, not for forensic scientists, or lawyers and ultimately, it is not working for the public and the criminal justice system.
That’s what our recent House of Lords Science and Technology Committee inquiry heard from Professor Angela Gallop, a renowned forensic scientist. Our report, Rebuilding forensic science for criminal justice: an urgent need, found little to contradict this. The criminal justice system relies on good, solid forensic science to convict the guilty and exonerate the innocent. But we have grave concerns about the forensic science system in England and Wales on the basis of our inquiry.
Prior to 2012, forensic science was provided by the Forensic Science Service, which was at arms length from the Home Office. It was shut down and replaced by a mix of a private forensic science market and in-house provision by the police. Witnesses to our inquiry, including Government ministers responsible for overseeing the system, were almost unanimous in saying that this system needs urgent reform. Let me outline why.
When the Forensic Science Service was closed, the responsibility for storing new evidence fell to the 43 police forces, who were apparently not resourced to undertake it properly. Some rose to the challenge. But national guidance was not consistently followed, and many criminal cases are collapsing, often due to lost and damaged evidence. Overstretched police forces are struggling to keep up. This is true in digital forensics as well. It’s increasingly important for fighting crime, but a backlog of over 20,000 digital devices to be analysed has not shrunk in years.
Police provision is patchy, inconsistent, and lacking in oversight. There are 43 police forces in England and Wales, so the quality of in-house forensic provision varies in a ‘postcode lottery’ – some is excellent and some is quite badly underresourced. Our committee believes that forensic science should be at arm’s length from the police to avoid unconscious bias.
There is no equality of arms between prosecution and defence. Defence experts are needed to challenge the claims made by the prosecution, but rely on limited legal aid funding which is often painful to obtain. The defence expert community is being allowed to wither away, which risks leaving claims from the prosecution unchallenged.
The market meant to provide many forensic services has collapsed. Market competition was supposed to provide better forensics at a lower cost. But the market is dysfunctional, with one buyer – the police – resulting in very thin profit margins; and there are very high barriers to entry for new companies to set up, get accredited, and compete. The result is that now one company provides more than 80% of forensic science to the police. This puts the market in a very perilous position.
The market is also not supporting specialist forensic disciplines like fibres, marks and traces because they don’t make money – but we’ve heard from witnesses about high profile cases that would never have been solved without these specialist disciplines. Without more funding, we will lose these areas of expertise forever, and some cases may become impossible to solve.
Nor are these problems new – this inquiry is a follow-up to one I participated in back in 2019. Many of the problems we identified then have got worse in the intervening years.
Ministers accept that this system has to change. They have launched proposals for large-scale police reforms that will consolidate the number of forces and deliver forensics on a national basis. This is a good first step to finally address some of these problems and hopefully provide consistent and reliable forensic science across the country.
I was struck throughout our inquiry that there was widespread agreement on the issues. No one wants to risk miscarriages of justice when forensic science is used incorrectly. No one wants the guilty to walk free or the innocent to be convicted because of a lack of quality, independent forensic analysis. The forensic science community is full of hard-working, dedicated professionals: in the police, in forensic science providers, in the law, in academia, who do what they do out of a desire to see that justice is done. They are constrained by a failing system.
These deeper-rooted issues of structural underfunding, market failure, inequality of arms between prosecution and defence, and independence—capacity, resilience, quality, and fairness—must be addressed. We have urged the government to take action now, and not to wait for the end of this lengthy and uncertain policing reform process. Otherwise, there is a very real risk of more miscarriages of justice, which could take years or decades to be put right. These reforms, and the sense of crisis around the sector, provide a real opportunity to address these long standing problems. Will the Government finally seize it?
Lord Mair CBE, Chair of the House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology
Politics
Alexandra Vivona: The fear and loathing in Gorton and Denton
Alexandra Vivona is a family lawyer based in London. She is a grassroots activist and comments on US and British politics.
The Westminster bubble has spent their time gnawing on its own scandals, but the real story, the genuine barometer of where British campaigning is heading, lay hundreds of miles away in the rain‑soaked streets of Gorton and Denton. This is a constituency split down the middle, a place where two political climates exist side by side: Manchester’s youthful, diverse wards on one hand, and Tameside’s older, more traditional communities on the other.
Electoral Calculus claims this seat might even fall to Reform, projecting them at 32 per cent to Labour’s 22.6 per cent and the Greens not far behind on 23.3 per cent. The predicted probability of victory is Reform 61 per cent, Labour 21 per cent and Greens 18 per cent, turning what was once a Labour stronghold into a three‑cornered brawl.
The seat itself contains eight distinct wards: Burnage, Denton North East, Denton South, Denton West, Gorton and Abbey Hey, Levenshulme, Longsight and Audenshaw. Each one brings its own electoral flavour, its own backstory, its own tensions. Manchester’s wards are young, mobile and diverse, with significant population under 35, while the Tameside side skews older and more rooted. You can feel the difference physically when you cross from one into the other.
This was a by‑election I wanted to see firsthand. Not through the usual sanitised tranquilliser of party press releases, but through the raw weather of it: doorstep arguments, half‑lit streets, volunteers stomping through puddles. Politics is only ever truly understood when it’s blowing sideways in the rain.
It was raining steadily when I checked into the hotel, the sort of constant Mancunian drizzle that dulls the edges of everything except political ambition.
The Industrial Estate Odyssey
Reform HQ sits on a Denton industrial estate which has all the glamour of a tax return. The car park was alive with activists. I leaned out of my window, asked if they were Reform, and was directed toward an office thrumming with energy.
Security on the door nodded as if I were entering a private members’ club for the permanently aggrieved. Inside, it felt more like a campaign start‑up than a fringe insurgency: banners, posters, stacks of literature, a photo wall ready for digital consumption.
Matt Goodwin moved past with the steady confidence of a man who has done the work and knows it shows. Zia Yusuf watched everything with quiet precision. An ex–Mumford & Sons guitarist appeared with the kind of unexplained surrealism you eventually stop questioning in politics.
The activists were friendly, brisk, and thrust a clipboard into my hand. Paper, not apps. Ink, not pixels. The old ways. Data is king, and the disciples know it.
Before long, my London polish dissolved and the Mancunian accent came roaring back.
Into Levenshulme, the Forbidden Zone
I stared at the route sheet in disbelief when I saw our destination. Levenshulme. I asked George Hollyhead, the activist I was assigned to, whether this was a joke. He explained that Reform insisted on canvassing everywhere, arguing it was undemocratic to allow whole areas to become no‑go zones. Noble, brave or slightly naive depending on your point of view.
Rain lashed the windows as we drove. Light dimmed. The atmosphere took on the feel of a social science field trip conducted under hostile conditions.
The first door hadn’t even slammed shut behind us when a woman threw open her downstairs window and unleashed a torrent of abuse that could have stripped varnish. She kept going long after we’d moved on, screaming as if we’d stolen something from her, sanity, perhaps.
Every door on the street glowed with Green Party signage. Thousands of tiny, fluorescent reminders that this was not friendly terrain. It felt less like canvassing and more like walking through a theme park designed by George Orwell.
Then, out of the mist, a man with a camera. Eyebrows raised to the heavens. A glint of disbelief. And then the recognition hit: Aaron Bastani, co‑founder and public face of Novara Media, eyebrows raised in amused astonishment.
He looked at our group and asked, with visible disbelief, whether Reform were truly canvassing this side of the constituency. His expression suggested the answer ought to have been no.
“Reform? Here? Really?”
Yes. Really. And the astonishment on his face was the most British thing I’d seen all day.
At this point, the Reform group decided my five‑foot‑three frame and blonde bob did not make me ideally suited to the rising street hostility and ushered me back toward HQ. Chivalry is not dead in British politics; it simply wears waterproofs.
A Darkening Contest
Constituency Chairman, Rob Barrowcliffe, radiated optimism despite the political storm. Three canvassing sessions a day. Volunteers flat out. The classic battle cry of campaigners running on determination and too little sleep. If we lose, he said, there was nothing more we could have done.
If this by‑election is a preview of the general, then Britain is in for three years of political trench warfare conducted in drizzle. Hostility. Suspicion. Demographic territories defended like fiefdoms.
Electoral Calculus’ projections show why emotions here run so high. Labour may have won 50.8 per cent of the vote in 2024, but their predicted share has collapsed. And the Manchester wards, younger and more Green‑inclined, drag the race leftward while the Tameside wards pull hard in the opposite direction. A seat cracked down generational and ideological lines is now expected to produce one of the most volatile results in the country.
Hotel Bar Seminary
Later, at the hotel bar, I met the future of British politics in the form of young activists, everyone seemed to be called Adam. They were polite, Mancunian, and entirely free of the red‑pill nonsense the commentariat claims is consuming all young men.
I had a slight exchange of words with a young female councillor who complained that she wasn’t allowed to run her own TikTok account.
That’s Gen Z: Politics is increasingly just branding with a ballot box attached.
Sunday Surge
Despite my commitment to the previous night’s wine list, I arrived bright‑eyed for the 10 a.m. session, baffling the HQ lads who had assumed I was dead.
Lee Anderson appeared to declare that if Reform could win here, they could win anywhere. Gawain Towler stalked the streets in red scarf and tweed.
Residents were weary. One woman swore everyone had knocked on her door this week, and the numbers backed her up. Labour fielded around a hundred activists on Sunday, and the previous day the area had already been heaving with hundreds more.
Tactical voters spoke cryptically about “doing what’s best for the community,” which invariably means “voting against the people we dislike.”
A regional campaign manager (also named Adam) summarised the battlefield like a general marking trenches. Levenshulme is Green. Longsight is Labour-ish. Burnage, Gorton and Abbey Hey are the pivotal swing wards.
Interesting, it appears the Greens are focusing on leafleting rather than canvassing. Tameside Council candidate, Raymond Dunning, declared that the Greens “aren’t knocking because they’ve nothing to say to the people here,” He further dismissed their rhetoric as merely: “Greyhound dogs and a load of bollocks.”
What Triggered the Contest
The by‑election was precipitated not by policy failure or political fatigue, but by the fallout from a vile and deeply damaging WhatsApp scandal centred on former MP Andrew Gwynne. Messages leaked from the Labour WhatsApp group Trigger Me Timbers revealed Gwynne making offensive remarks about the very residents he was elected to represent, including saying he hoped a 72‑year‑old constituent “croaks” before the next general election, after she complained about bin collections.
The messages also showed him joining conversations laced with racist, sexist and derogatory slurs, contributing to what investigators later described as “complete disregard” for standards in public life among group participants. Gwynne was suspended from the Labour Party in 2025 and ultimately resigned in January 2026, forcing the by‑election.
His downfall has become a symbol of something larger and far more corrosive: a Labour hierarchy seen as insulated, coarse, and contemptuous of ordinary people. The revelations sparked genuine anger in Gorton and Denton, where residents already felt politically overlooked.
Seeing their own MP joking about their deaths, mocking vulnerable individuals, and disparaging local communities confirmed a suspicion long whispered on doorsteps, that the party’s local machine had grown detached from the lives and dignity of those it claimed to champion. The scandal has created a vacuum of trust, and every candidate now must contend with the shadow of a party exposed as out of touch with its own electorate.
Welcome to Gorton
I’m frustrated that this by-election hasn’t had more coverage and that the news cycle is once again dominated by scandals amongst the elite, all taking place within the Westminster village. This only feeds into the problem of an electorate increasingly suspicious and apathetic towards politicians.
Looking closer, it feels like a warning, a premonition of what the next general election will look like. Hostility, demographic silos, tactical voting dressed up as moral superiority, activists marching through hostile terrain with clipboards held like shields.
Gorton and Denton is modern Britain in miniature. Fractured. Suspicious. Bristling. And utterly unpredictable.
And if the Electoral Calculus projections are right, the chaos has only just begun.
Politics
New Hampshire’s GOP Gov. Kelly Ayotte draws her first major challenger
Cinde Warmington launched a repeat bid for governor of New Hampshire on Wednesday, giving Democrats their first major challenger to GOP Gov. Kelly Ayotte in the purple state.
Warmington, a former state executive councilor, ran unsuccessfully for governor in 2024, losing the Democratic nomination to former Manchester Mayor Joyce Craig who then went on to lose to Ayotte. She now enters a relatively open Democratic field, with just one other declared candidate.
In a launch video posted to her campaign website, Warmington attacked Ayotte for “making your life more expensive.” She also accused the Republican of not standing up to President Donald Trump’s attempts to open an ICE detention facility in the state.
“I’ll stand up to Trump when he jacks up health care costs and tariffs. I’ll say ‘no’ to ICE’s warehouse. I’ll work for our small businesses and I’ll make sure we don’t have a sales or income tax,” Warmington said in the video. WMUR first reported her launch.
Ayotte, for her part, has clashed with Trump. She has criticized the lack of transparency around the ICE warehouse and forced the resignation of a state official who had been communicating with the Trump administration without alerting the governor. Her refusal to redistrict last year led the White House to weigh putting up a primary challenger against her.
Ayotte spokesperson John Corbett blasted Warmington in a statement, saying the former health care lobbyist “chose to make money off big pharmaceutical companies who hurt Granite Staters, and she is absolutely disqualified from serving as our Governor.”
Democrats are bullish they can block Ayotte from a second term, emboldened by their party’s wins in the off-year elections. But they face an uphill battle in a blue-leaning battleground state that routinely elects Republican governors while sending all-Democratic delegations to Congress.
Recent history is not on Democrats’ side: The party thrice failed to unseat Ayotte’s predecessor, Republican Gov. Chris Sununu. And prognosticators rate the seat as “likely Republican” this year.
Democrats may also face another messy primary just two years after Warmington and Craig waged a bruising battle to be their party’s nominee. For now, just Warmington and Democrat Jon Kiper, who finished a distant third in the 2024 race, have declared their candidacies. But Democratic Portsmouth Mayor Deaglan McEachern has been publicly weighing a bid for governor as recently as this month.
A University of New Hampshire survey from January showed Ayotte leading both men in hypothetical general-election matchups; it did not test her against Warmington. Ayotte notched a 50-percent approval rating in the poll, though 44 percent of likely voters said she did not deserve to be reelected compared to 42 percent who did.
Politics
Wings Over Scotland | The Future Is Yesterday
So on the one hand there’s obviously very little point paying attention to the SNP’s regional list candidates for May’s Holyrood election, because as this website has comprehensively demonstrated over recent months, the chances of the SNP having any list MSPs elected are remote.
However, nothing is impossible, so let’s take a look at the B team, which also serves as a guide to the party’s upcoming talent taking its first steps towards the gravy bus.
Well, that was even grimmer than expected.
We should probably start at the very bottom of the barrel.
Because the SNP seem absolutely hell-bent on inflicting the utterly loathsome Fatima Joji on the people of Scotland by hook or by crook.
Not only is she the constituency candidate for Aberdeenshire West – currently held by Alexander Burnett for the Tories on a slim majority of under 3,400 and looking very vulnerable given their collapse in national polling from 22% to 11% – but she’s also been voted third on the SNP’s regional list, which sounds like no chance until you realise that the top two (Stephen Flynn and Gillian Martin) will very likely win their constituency seats, which are both currently SNP with the Tories in second.
So in the event that the SNP do fail to win a few constituency seats in the North-East, Joji will effectively be first in line to pick up a list seat even if she hasn’t won Aberdeenshire West. And even in a region currently represented by both Karen Adam and Maggie Chapman, that is a pretty catastrophic degradation in member quality.
But Joji isn’t the only one being offered a belt-and-braces double ticket. Most of the regional lists are being topped by people also standing for (and likely to win) constituency seats, so the electorate’s chances of rejecting them are almost nil. Let’s redline those and see what’s left.
An incredible 45 of the full slate of 71 list candidates (63%) are also contesting constituency seats, which means that some of the very worst of the party’s absolute dregs – including serial carpetbagger Graham Campbell, the hideous Declan Blench and his fellow “Out For Independence” stalwart Michael Gibbons – are actually in pole position to get list seats should the SNP manage to secure any, despite finishing as low as NINTH on the party’s internal ballot.
There’s also a generous smattering of FILTH – Failed In London, Try Holyrood – trying to get back to the trough after being unceremoniously binned at the 2024 UK election.
(bold entry indicates a double ticket, both constituency and list)
John Beare
Steven Bonnar
Deidre Brock
Alan Brown
Allan Dorans
Patricia Gibson
David Linden
Kirsten Oswald
Tommy Sheppard
Alyn Smith
Alison Thewliss
(You can be forgiven if you’ve never heard of some of those names despite them being MPs for years, we hadn’t either. But it’s nice to see serial failure Toni “independence is off the agenda” Giugliano getting yet another swing at it. Poor old Katy Loudon must be gutted.)
Basically, as long as you really really hate women’s rights and represent no danger whatsoever of dissenting from the leadership, the SNP will bust a gut to make sure you get into Parliament somehow, no matter what the voters think.
What all that tells us, of course, is that the SNP’s talent pool has the depth of a soggy tissue, and that its next generation makes the useless current one look like a team of geniuses. Readers, if there were still any of you contemplating a list SNP vote despite everything, we simply invite you to picture Fatima Joji, Graham Campbell and Declan Blench trousering £75,000 a year for the next half-decade and shaping the laws of Scotland while they do it.
There is no rescuing the party. Only its destruction will do.
Politics
Trump accused of censorship over Colbert
Donald Trump is accused of censorship in an escalating row over Stephen Colbert’s interview of Democratic Texas Senate candidate James Talarico.
US journalist Joshua Eakle explained that Trump threatened the US broadcaster CBS over Talarico’s segment. And CBS caved!
It’s important that you understand what happened last night.
Last night, Stephen Colbert interviewed Democratic Texas Senate candidate James Talarico, a candidate who, by all accounts, is on track in the polls to flip Texas blue.
In response, Trump’s FCC reportedly threatened… pic.twitter.com/IEyWg7KnuW
— Joshua Reed Eakle 🗽 (@JoshEakle) February 17, 2026
Eakle posted the segment, which was still published online, adding:
In modern American history, no president has been more hostile to free speech than Donald Trump. But censorship always backfires.
Colbert himself said:
He was supposed to be here, but we were told in no uncertain terms by our network’s lawyers, who called us directly, that we could not have him on the broadcast
Cancel Kid Trump for the loss
Now Talarico’s team is making hay with the cancellation – OBVIOUSLY.
.@JamesTalarico: The reason the Trump administration and their billionaire friends are trying to silence me and this movement is because they’re worried that we are going to flip Texas in November.
We have traveled every corner of this state, recruited more than 22,000… pic.twitter.com/kCvQiDrfGu
— Team Talarico (@TeamTalaricoHQ) February 18, 2026
But here is the thing. The young candidate is a liberal Christian with some mild criticisms of US-Israel relations and who has slammed Christian Nationalism:
.@JamesTalarico: For 50 years, the religious right convinced our fellow Christians that the most important issues were abortion and gay marriage—two issues that aren’t mentioned in the Bible.
Jesus tells us exactly how we’re going to be judged: by feeding the hungry, by healing… pic.twitter.com/FapsoUzZwB
— Team Talarico (@TeamTalaricoHQ) February 17, 2026
As you can see, he’s hardly the second coming of Lenin.
Yet the cancellation has seen a spike in interest in what this guy is saying:
Try to censor @JamesTalarico at your own risk. pic.twitter.com/RkDt95PFHa
— JT Ennis (@jt_ennis) February 17, 2026
LOL.
And the Youtube video of the Colbert interview is in 2.7m view after 24 hours:
As the Guardian reported, CBS’ lawyers allegedly pulled the interview:
stemming from a concern that it would trigger a legal requirement to provide equal access to Talarico’s campaign rivals.
As YouTube is not subject to restrictions from the Federal Communications Commission, the interview is freely available online.
Texas can whup your ass
Texas is a volatile state and one which some argue is a bellwether for US politics. The idea of a left-ish Democrat taking a seat there is obviously terrifying to the Trump regime.
Texas is often viewed by ignorant outsiders as innately right-wing. The state is no stranger to reactionary ideas, but as liberal Texan and Pulitzer Prize winner Lawrence Wright has pointed out, the truth is far more complicated. Up until the 1970s, Texas was “an entirely Democratic state”.
And what Texas does can shift US politics entirely:
What happens in Texas doesn’t stay in Texas. …Texas is a behemoth and it has an outsize influence on the direction of America and we have a responsibility, I think as Texans, to make sure that we take care of our state in a way that would enable us to be the proper custodians of the future of America.
It’s hard to say how it will all play out in a place like Texas. But the truth is if Trump isn’t careful the Lone Star state which gave us Megan Thee Stallion, weed-smoking, bio-fuel selling country star Willie Nelson and the Alamo might just whup his orange ass. It’s also a state which has felt the brunt of Trump’s paramilitary thugs in recent months.
Here is Nelson with honorary Texan Johnny Cash and actual Texans Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson speaking out against war, poverty, fascism and the sniveling state of US media 30 years ago:
So there’s only one thing Donald trump needs to do now. And that’s quit his damned hollerin’.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Epstein survivor rejects Starmer apology
Anouska de Georgiou is a British survivor of the crimes of serial child-rapist Jeffrey Epstein and his sick circle of powerful men and their enablers. She has published a TikTok video rejecting Keir Starmer’s weasel non-apology for knowingly appointing Epstein fanboy Peter Mandelson as ambassador and his senior adviser.
De Georgiou has spoken of receiving death threats, threats to her family, and sinister packages from Epstein’s clients and enablers who want to remain hidden. And she says that Starmer is part of the structure that is protecting perpetrators and betraying victims.
Epstein: Starmer is complicit
Starmer knew Mandelson had continued his friendship with, even ardour for, Epstein long after the latter’s first paedophile conviction. In fact, such a fact was freely known amongst the British media.
Starmer’s ‘apology’ was in fact all about Starmer – an attempt to exonerate himself for his decision. He ‘apologised’ for “believing Mandelson’s lies”, yet clearly signalled he will block as much as he can get away with from becoming public. ‘National security’ and ‘foreign relations’ concerns, don’t you know.
But de Georgiou didn’t just reject it for herself. She said she was speaking on behalf of all those who survived Epstein’s evil – and the victims of his UK-based fellow paedophiles in the al Fayed/Harrods empire. To all of them, she said, Starmer and his regime are a barrier to justice and his ‘apology’ does nothing to change that at all:
@anouska_de_georgiou #jeffreyepstein #keirstarmer #harrods #alfayad #trafficking ♬ original sound – Anouska de Georgiou
Starmer and his “paedo lover” party are more than a passive barrier. Starmer is accused of:
Whistleblower
De Georgiou made her feelings on Starmer clear:
You [Starmer] said Epstein victims face barriers to justice for trafficking and abuse they suffered and you said you would do everything in your power to ensure victims get justice and there’s a big lie that causes me to reject your apology. At the dismissal hearing of Jeffrey Epstein’s charges my statement was I am every girl this happened to and every one of them is me.
De Georgiou is right. Starmer is a huge barrier to justice and transparency – and the ‘mainstream’ media are not telling the British people even a fraction of it.
What has he done to ensure justice for Epstein’s British victims, like Anouska? Nothing.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
After SAFE: Consequences for EU-UK defence industrial cooperation and potential ways forward
Nicolai von Ondarza explores the possible avenues for UK-EU defence cooperation following the breakdown of talks on UK participation in the EU’s SAFE programme.
Deeper cooperation in security and defence policy is one of the main aims of the current Renewed Agenda between the EU and the UK. Given the breakdown of the liberal rules-based international order and the geostrategic pressures facing the UK, the EU and its member states, this seemed the most obvious starting point of the ‘reset’. In this spirit, as part of the May 2025 EU-UK summit, both sides signed their first ever ‘Security and Defence Partnership’ (SDP).
However, in November 2025, talks broke down on one of the key aims of the SDP, UK participation in the EU’s “Security Action for Europe” (SAFE) programme. Three months later, amid further transatlantic turbulence, the European Parliament has called for a resumption of talks on UK participation in SAFE, whereas UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer also signalled an openness to return to the question of EU-UK cooperation on defence financing. But can the breakdown easily be reversed?
SAFE was setup to enable third county participation
SAFE matters because it was set up by the EU in the first half of 2025 as one element of a push to strengthen European defence spending. It is a €150bn loan facility, where the EU provides loans to EU member states for defence investments, preferably based on joint procurement and/or cooperation with Ukraine. This sits alongside the decision to exempt defence spending from EU fiscal rules, which makes it easier for EU member states to ramp up their defence spending. So far, it is shaping up to be one of the most successful EU instruments for defence cooperation, with all the money already accounted for. Out of 27 member states, 19 applied for EU-backed loans and about half of their spending plans are already approved.
From its design, the SAFE instrument was meant to be open to third countries like the UK. For this, SAFE changed the EU’s model for external cooperation. Whereas most previous EU defence industrial initiatives were only open to its member states or those integrated into the single market via the European Economic Area (essentially Norway), SAFE explicitly allowed procurement from industry in third countries with whom the EU has signed an SDP. This turns cooperation into a political choice rather than resting on the legal requirement to be integrated into the single market. Yet, whereas the EU came to an agreement with Canada on SAFE-participation, similar talks with London broke down over the design and size of what would constitute a ‘fair and proportionate’ UK financial contribution to SAFE.
The direct effects of this failure are clear. The SAFE regulation stipulates that at least 65% of the value of a contract should go to suppliers from inside the EU, the EEA, Ukraine or partner countries. While UK defence companies may still play a part, their contribution to any orders is limited. And as the spending plans for using the €150bn loans have already been put forward and largely been approved, that ship has now sailed.
The danger of cascading effects
There are, however, reasons to restart talks. The first is the risk of cascading effects. The SAFE instrument sets a precedent for how the EU will design a ‘European preference’ in future EU defence initiatives. As SAFE is seen as a success, there are already conversations for a follow-up. The EU’s next multi-annual financial framework is also set to include the largest budget for defence related spending at EU level ever.
These cascading effects can already be seen in the design of the €90bn loan for Ukraine, of which €60bn are targeted at strengthening Ukraine’s defence capabilities and military procurement. As the servicing costs from the loan are covered by the EU budget, the EU institutions modelled the conditions for how Ukraine can spend the €60bn on SAFE, meaning with a ‘European preference’ of at least 65% for EU/EEA/Ukrainian companies, except in special circumstances where EU alternatives are not available such as Patriots air defence missiles.
This would have again locked out UK defence companies. For instance, the Franco-British storm shadow missiles could, from this loan, only be acquired from their French and not their UK production site. In the final decision, to avoid this fragmentation, the EU decided in early February to leave a door open: The loan would also be open to purchases from third countries that have a participation agreement with SAFE – so far only Canada – or those who are ‘providing significant financial and military support to Ukraine’ and agree to share ‘fair and proportionate financial contribution to the costs arising from borrowing’. The latter could provide the basis for full UK participation at least on the Ukraine loan, on which EU-UK talks have already started.
Beyond the impact on industry, the failure to agree on SAFE is the wrong political signal at the worst possible moment. As the foundations of the European security architecture are under threat, like-minded Europeans should take every opportunity to reduce barriers between the EU and NATO and work together. In this context, London and Brussels can’t afford to be held back by old Brexit wounds.
The way forward
Taken together, it is in the mutual interest of both the UK and the EU to resolve the impasse on SAFE sooner rather than later. Legally speaking, even though the first SAFE projects are now under way, talks can be resumed at any time. Politically, both sides should pre-coordinate a resumption to such an extent that this time success is all but guaranteed. It might be wise to aim for an agreement on the Ukraine loan first to set the scene for a revisiting of the SAFE question at the 2026 EU-UK summit. For the UK, this would help prevent a gradual structural decoupling from EU defence finance; for the EU it would reduce the risk of fragmenting European defence industry and strengthen Europe’s capacity to deliver capabilities at scale.
By Dr. Nicolai von Ondarza, Head of the EU/Europe Research Division at SWP and an Associate Fellow at Chatham House.
Politics
DWP ‘honesty’ isn’t what it seems
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) decided yesterday to share why the number of people claiming Universal Credit (UC) has risen. This came as a surprise to disabled campaigners, who have been fighting against the waves of disability hatred coming from the DWP for years.
The DWP being honest? Nahhh
While hatred against benefit claimants has always been bad, it seems to have ramped up overwhelmingly in the last couple of years. Not just from the media, which is of course fed the stories by the DWP, but also from ministers and MPs themselves.
But, after months of pushing that too many on Universal Credit are unemployed layabouts, Labour are apparently telling the truth. That the main reason there’s a huge influx is UC claims is that the DWP are making people switch over to UC.
On Twitter, they declared:
Here’s what’s actually happening with the increase in the Universal Credit caseload
Nearly 80% of the increase is people being moved from old benefits onto Universal Credit
Not new claims
A transition we inherited
Data source https://t.co/mnxKOZS3fP pic.twitter.com/SgzDOjuu7s
— Department for Work and Pensions (@DWPgovuk) February 17, 2026
The chart attached showed that in the last year, 1 million new people claimed Universal Credit. However, 800,000 of those are people who’d been forced to move over.
They quickly followed this up with sharing how many claimants couldn’t work and how forced migration inflated those figures too. Though it wasn’t reported by the DWP in that way:
And it’s the same story for those with no work requirements – at least 72% of that increase is legacy benefit claimants moving across
It’s felt very odd that they just out of the blue shared this, seemingly completely off their own backs, on a random afternoon. Especially considering that just a few months ago, they were feeding the rags ffigures on how it’d “shot up”.
There’s always a reason
For many, it was jarring to see them be so honest, but the reason why is there for everyone to see. And as usual, it’s in their sly wording.
The DWP should surely have used their own classification when reporting this second dataset- “people with limited capability for work”. Instead, they chose to say “those with no work requirements”. This implies that they’re choosing not to work, when they’ve actually already gone through a gross assessment process and been judged as not fit for work.
This subtle change in language has fueled the rags in their hatred of disabled people, because instead of it being clearly understood, this lets people draw their own conclusions. And that’s exactly what they want.
This display of “transparency” also says nothing of the 400,000 people who lost their benefits because they found the migration process too complex. But hey the DWP don’t give a fuck about them, so why should the public?
We also can’t gloss over the fact that they’re still blaming the Tories, despite having been in power for almost two years. And in that time, they’ve only made the culture worse for disabled claimants.
Disabled unemployed people screwed again
It’s no coincidence that while they’re just casually throwing out figures, DWP bigwig Pat McFadden is trying any way possible to force disabled people into work. As of April, new claimants who can’t work will get £200 less a month.
When announcing this change, the DWP said they were tackling “perverse incentives” that make people “choose” benefits over finding work. I’m not sure you can call supporting people too sick to work “perverse”, but then I don’t hate disabled people.
This is, of course, more propaganda so they can continue forcing disabled people into work. Pushing ahead with his disgusting Get Britain Working plan, McFadden is now introducing Mobile Jobcentres. Finally, an even grosser pop-up than when Embarrassing Bodies would arrive in town to tell young women their acne made them ugly!
DWP not fit for purpose
More than anything though, this just feels like another desperate attempt by the DWP to show that they are actually in any way fit for purpose. When countless committees, from Work and Pensions to Public Accounts are proving otherwise.
While this sharing of information seemed pretty inconspicuous, we must remember that the DWP always has an agenda. This wasn’t them finally being honest, they were further embedding that disabled unemployed people are the problem. And scarily one they plan to fix by any means necessary.
Featured image via the Canary
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