Politics
Sewage scandal drama Dirty Business shows how horrific DWP PIP assessments are
A Channel 4 docudrama about the sewage scandal has unexpectedly shown how horrific Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) Personal Independence Payment (PIP) assessments are.
Dirty business exposes heartache water companies caused
The three-part series Dirty Business lays bare how the water industry pumped raw sewage into Britain’s rivers and coastline. It’s an unflinching, stark look at how corporate greed led to the destruction of our ecosystem. Moreover, it led to avoidable deaths and life-changing disabilities.
There were many, many moments showing just how much these decisions by the rich destroyed the lives of those who were already struggling to survive under austerity. The scenes of a young girl who swam in infested water, becoming sicker and sicker until she dies of E. coli are heartbreaking.
Dirty Business also showed how much it made people sick. People who’d swum in polluted waters reported problems with their lungs and long-term illnesses. Furthermore, it even led to chronic and neurological conditions. In some cases, it can lead to illnesses which cause attacks of paralysis.
DWP PIP, of course, had a part to play
One scene in particular shows not just how debilitating the sewage crisis has been, but how uncaring and vile DWP assessments are for anyone with a chronic condition.
Episode three opens with a man, Reuben Santer, surfing in the sea off the coast of Devon in 2022. As he surfs, his partner looks at a graphic on her phone about sewage levels in that area.
Later in the show, we see Santer having a PIP assessment in 2023. Santer explains that he regularly has “attacks” leaving him unable to move. Despite this, he is asked the standard questions from the PIP playbook. These include whether he can prepare a meal for himself or get dressed
Santer replies:
Yeah but again, not when I’m having an attack. Then I can’t move. I’ve been getting the attacks every few days for the past six months
Reuben has Meniere’s, a chronic condition which causes debilitating vertigo and can result in sudden loss of consciousness. Instead of having any understanding of fluctuating conditions and the impact these have on someone’s life, the assessor instead pushes him by saying:
But if you’re not having one of your attacks
When he tries to argue his case, she dismissively says:
Yes or no is fine.
This erases his experience of disability and asks him to only answer the assessment for days when his disabilities aren’t affecting him. He tries to reiterate throughout that he can do everything asked, unless he is having an attack. But this isn’t listened to.
Erasure of disabled people’s lived experience
There’s a tiny moment where Santer realises that his disability is being completely ignored and he’s being set up to fail. That no matter what he says or does now, he will not be listened to. So he gives up. It’s a feeling disabled people know very well. That when they are seeking support for their disability, those in power will do anything they can to minimise the issue.
He keeps repeating throughout the assessment, “not when I’m having an attack”. He clearly became increasingly distressed by someone ignoring him and engaging in a tick-box exercise address the screen for than Santer. This, of course, means that the assessor scores him zero.
The assessor is seen rattling through his results and dismissing it because he can do all of the activities when he’s not having an attack
He attempts to stop her, upset with:
No, no, no that’s the thing with my condition that sometimes I can do these things and other times I can’t and when I can’t, I can’t do anything.
The assessor talks over him throughout. When she says that she can’t award him the benefit, he finally breaks down:
I don’t know what to do.
As the assessor tells him that if he needs guidance on how to appeal, he can do so online, we see him later in his house. The man is clearly very unwell and collapses on the floor, having a seizure.
We later see Santer struggling to hold down a job and fighting to stop himself from having attacks, but collapsing anyway. Later in 2025, we see his partner walking in on him recovering from an attack with his baby daughter lying on the floor. He heartbreakingly admits:
I know I can’t be left alone with her.
DWP PIP assessments aren’t fit for purpose
This is the reality for so many disabled people who live with fluctuating conditions. When the DWP refuses to support us, we have no choice but to get on with our lives. No matter how detrimental to our health.
The PIP assessment scene in Dirt Business shows what disabled people have known for a long time. PIP assessments are too rigid to actually take someone’s daily life into account. If you’re chronically ill or have a fluctuating condition, the questions don’t have room for “well, sometimes”.
They only work in absolutes. And the absolutes are never in our favour.
If someone told you, “some days I can carry on as usual, but others I have to spend hours on the floor,” the part you remembered wouldn’t be the days where they DON’T have debilitating attacks. And this is where the DWP is purposefully failing disabled people.
This isn’t something the DWP are doing by accident, they surely know by now that if they made the criteria more flexible, more people would apply. And that’s the opposite of what they want.
Thankfully, Reuben appealed his PIP assessment decision and won. But so many others won’t even get to that stage. If the DWP actually cared about reforming PIP, they would make it more compassionate, not harder to get.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
How To Break A Doomscrolling Habit In 1 Hour
Natalie Alzate is author of the best-selling Offline Humans (DK, October 2025).
We touch our phones 2,617 times a day on average. The endless swiping isn’t random, it’s the same brain loop that makes slot machines addictive. Scientists call it the ventral tegmental area, a dopamine hub that craves novelty.
Put simply: scrolling is the new gambling. And while the house always wins in Vegas, you can beat the odds with a simple 60-minute reset. The better news? You don’t need to move to a cabin or delete every app to feel better. In just one hour, you can reset your brain from doomscrolling to feeling in control of your focus.
As someone who spent a decade online as a creator, I’ve felt both the perks and pull of social media. Millennials were the first to grow up with phones and the last to remember life without them, which makes our attention feel especially precious. At some point I had to wonder: was I numbing myself with technology? I kept thinking, this cannot be good for my brain.
Eventually, my body made the point for me. It was shouting: stop scrolling. drink water. blink. move. So I ran an experiment – 24 hours offline.
The good news? You don’t need a full day to feel different. Start smaller. Here are a handful of quick resets you can plug into your evenings, then I’ll show you how to habit stack them into one hour that works every time.
Three Offline Resets To Try Today
Logging off often leaves us asking, now what? A dopamine menu solves that. It’s a pre-made list of offline things you genuinely enjoy, easy for moments you’d normally scroll. Spend 20 minutes drafting yours. Here are a few of mine:
- Solo karaoke
- Bath with substack read and tea
- Crisp early-morning workouts
- Late night baking just for fun
- Cozy TV in pyjamas with permission to rest
Having options at hand makes logging off feel less like deprivation and more like choice.
Try A Seasonal Curriculum
Brainrot thrives on passive scrolling…consuming without creating. Self-education flips that script. When you give your brain something to chew on, you trade endless novelty for focused curiosity. That’s why learning, on your own terms, can be an antidote to brainrot.
Each season, pick one theme to explore: a craft, a recipe, a topic that sparks you. I keep a commonplace book and jot down ideas as they pop up. This autumn my list looks like:
- how to make friends in your 30’s
- how to speak more eloquently
- how to actually stay still and pray.
The key is excitement. When learning isn’t forced on you, it feels like play, and that’s what makes it stick.
Clock Off Your Online 9-5
Most of us treat social media like an always-on shift. The notifications never end, the feed is bottomless, and before you know it you’ve worked a second job…for free.
What if you clocked out at 5pm, the way you would from a real office? Treating the internet like a job puts a clear boundary in place. Suddenly those evening hours belong to you again. You’ll notice how much you can get done, calling a friend, actually trying one of those restaurants you saved on instagram, or pulling out that half-finished project. Even boredom becomes productive when it has space to breathe.
Quick try: Scroll through your “saved” folder – look at all those cafes, recipes, day trips you never made time for, and make a real-life bucket list. Close your eyes, point to one, and make it happen tonight. (In my book, I break down how to turn these lists into seasonal challenges you’ll actually enjoy)
The One-Hour Log-Off Plan
We’ve covered quick resets but what if you stacked them into a single routine? Think of it as a mini digital detox, no cabin in the woods required. Here’s how to spend one hour offline and actually feel it.
0-10 minutes: make your phone hard to reach
Put it on charge in another room or in its “bed” as I like to say. Yes, my phone has a bedtime (10 pm sharp). Switch on Do Not Disturb and place it face down. If you need peace of mind, tell one person you’re offline for the next 60.
10-25 minutes: reset your space and body
Tidy one small zone: a desk, that chaotic bathroom sink, bedside table or even a junk drawer. Drink water, put the kettle on, crack a window. If you can, steep outside to a nearby park, a library, or cafe, what sociologists call a third space, a place beyond home or work that naturally slows you down.
25-45 minutes: pick an anchor ritual
Choose a single offline activity and sink into it.
- One sentence journal: one line about today, no pressure.
- Movement: stretch or a short walk.
- Craft or soak: bake something simple, run a bath, or do a puzzle.
45-60 minutes: prep tomorrow
Note three priorities for tomorrow, not ten. Lay out one thing you’ll need whether it’s a gym kit, a notebook, or a lunch). Do a quick 15-minute room reset so in the future you wake up to calm, not chaos
Many of us feel a little disembodied after years of living in our heads and on our phones. But one hour, repeated, can bring you back into your body and back to other people.
Politics
Students hit by ‘graduate tax’ and Derbyshire misses the point
On BBC, Victoria Derbyshire interviewed a university graduate who shared his experience with lofty student finance repayments. Pointing out how much he has paid in ‘a few years’ of working, Derbyshire asked if comfort is found in the knowledge that the public fleecing ends after 30 years.
The privileged elder misses the point that 30 years of accumulating interest will drive repayments far beyond the original loan, generating a significant profit for the state.
This incident exposes how the establishment is perfectly willing to squeeze more money out of young people to boost public coffers, all while claiming that there are ‘too many options’ available to prospective students. At the same time, they refuse to consider measures like a wealth tax, arguing that the richest would simply leave.
When quality education leads to better jobs, stronger economic growth, and ultimately higher tax revenues, the double standard becomes clear. The state targets those trapped within the system for profit, while avoiding any serious effort to make the rich and powerful contribute more.
A country that does this to its smart, ambitious young people deserves to fail. It’s no deeper than that.
The grim truth is large parts of the political and media class have hated young people for a long time now. Generation PAYE-pig.
— Aaron Bastani (@AaronBastani) February 25, 2026
Captive students: Low-hanging fruit
Recently on Good Morning Britain, Martin Lewis successfully challenged Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch on her attempt to revise student loan repayment Plan 2 as a solution to the student debt crisis. The money-saving expert rightfully pointed out it would be easing things slightly for one group, whilst ignoring all others. This prompted widespread debate with graduates across the country supporting Lewis’ calls to wipe student debt that is creating a deadweight effect on workers in the economy.
A highly lucrative deadweight that was clearly pointed out by Max in the interview, which went as follows:
Victoria Derbyshire: Let me ask you then, Max, how much did you borrow in total?
Max: So, I borrowed £84,000 in total, and that’s about half tuition fee, and the rest maintenance loans that you need to live on and pay your rent whilst you’re there and so on.
Derbyshire: And how much have you paid back so far?
Max: I’ve paid back about £8,000 over the past few years that I’ve been working.
Derbyshire: And how much do you owe now?
Max: £110,000.
Derbyshire: Oh, my God.
Max: Yeah.
Derbyshire: What does that feel like?
Max: Well, I mean, it feels ridiculous because I know I’m never going to be able to pay that back. So for me, this is no longer a student loan. It’s a lifelong graduate tax.
Derbyshire: Right. Do you take any comfort in the fact that after 30 years, if you haven’t paid it back, it’s wiped out?
Max: Well, I feel like that’s a bit of a misconception because the fact that people end up not clearing their debt within 30 years actually means they end up paying for longer because the interest rates are so high and they’re often going to end up paying more than they actually borrowed. So you’re trapped.
Derbyshire: Right. That’s how it feels.
Max: Yeah.
Derbyshire appears to ignore the fact that if Max continues at his current repayment rate, without any future pay rises increasing his contributions, his repayment would be at least £88k. This shows he will still repay the full cost of his original loans and then some over 30 years. Therefore, the expiration date of this unavoidable “student tax” offers no comfort when it only signals the conclusion of exploitative interest charges.
After all, education is an investment in the future of the economy. Seeing it as a source of profit instead is counterproductive and just works to undervalue graduates.
Our youth are not the ‘magic money tree’
Since Lewis’ principled and informed intervention, others with specialised insight into university education have spoken out. Historian and former university head Sir Anthony Seldon even argued that Lewis should take on a four-week role to fix the mess former Labour and Conservative governments created.
We wrote:
Contrary to the Conservatives’ policy being dangled like a carrot to voters, historian Anthony Seldon has called for all student debt to be wiped. He went further, urging the government to accept that it must stop treating students as a source of profit. Instead, Seldon argued that they already contribute to the economy through the skills and expertise they develop at university.
Furthermore, Seldon emphasised that higher education is about far more than achieving high grades or obtaining a certificate. After all, it is a formative experience where young people develop vital life and social skills. Also, it’s essential for improving critical analysis skills with young people engaging in progressive, informed debate.
The neoliberal state will likely continue to insist there is ‘no magic money tree’ to address the scale of underfunding across society. Yet at the same time, the wealth of the richest has soared at record-breaking rates. Therefore, those who once benefited from free education now resist asking the wealthiest to contribute their fair share in taxes. Instead, they continue to target the easy pickings — students striving for opportunity and a better life.
The government have stated they will ‘look at ways to make it fairer’. Easy. Deploy wealth taxes to ease the burdens facing graduates and students across the country.
Featured image via Green Country
Politics
Liam Gallagher Swerves Brit Awards To Avoid ‘ITV C**ts’
On Wednesday, one fan asked the Oasis frontman whether he’d be putting in an appearance at the Brits this weekend, to which he responded: “I’m not.”
Candid as ever, the singer remarked: “I can’t be around those ITV cunts.”
In more X posts, Liam claimed that he was “just not feeling this [Rock And Roll] hall of fame thing”, but conceded he would attend the ceremony all the same, mainly to “collect it”, “tell the panel of judges how lovely they all look”, “thank all the fans that voted for us” and then “wreck the gaff”.
In 2010, he even got on the wrong side of Peter Kay, when he accepted the award for Best British Album Of The Last 30 Years, completely snubbed his brother in his speech, then tossed his award into the crowd.
“What a knobhead,” the comedian – who was hosting the Brits that year – remarked.
Oasis certainly saw a chart resurgence in 2025 thanks to their much-hyped reunion, but Noel’s award has proved to be a controversial one given that he didn’t actually release any new music at any point in the last year.
Politics
Instagram To Alert Parents If Teens Search Suicide Or Self-Harm Content
Instagram has unveiled a new feature which will alert parents if their teenager repeatedly tries to search for terms related to suicide or self-harm.
The feature is being rolled out in the coming weeks and will provide caregivers with information to help support their teen and talk to them about it.
Currently, if someone tries to search for suicide and self-harm content on Instagram, the social media platform’s policy is to block these searches and direct them to resources and helplines that can offer support.
How will the new alert work?
Now, in addition to the blocked content feature, if someone using a Teen Account repeatedly tries to search for terms related to suicide or self-harm within a short period of time, their parent will receive a notification.
The alerts will be sent via email, text, or WhatsApp – depending on the contact information available – as well as through an in-app notification.
Tapping on the notification will open a full-screen message explaining that their teen has repeatedly tried to search Instagram for terms associated with suicide or self-harm within a short period of time.
Parents will also have the option to view expert resources designed to help them approach potentially sensitive conversations with their child.
Attempted searches that would prompt the alert include phrases promoting suicide or self-harm, phrases that suggest a teen wants to harm themselves, and the actual terms ‘suicide’ or ‘self-harm’.
These alerts will roll out to parents who use Instagram’s parental supervision tools in the US, UK, Australia, and Canada next week, and will become available in other regions later this year.
Why is it needed?
The rollout comes one week before the release of Channel 4 documentary Molly Vs The Machines, which revisits the death of 14-year-old Molly Russell, who took her own life in 2017 after months of seeing content relating to self-harm and suicide online.
The Standard notes that Molly had saved, liked and shared 16,300 pieces of content on Instagram in the six months leading to her death – of these, 2,100 were about self-harm, depression and suicide. She had also searched for similar content on Pinterest.
Both social media platforms now block this type of content from searches. In cases where content encourages suicide, self-injury or eating disorders, it is removed.
In 2023, The Online Safety Act came into force with a new set of laws to protect children and adults online. As part of the act, social media companies and search services have a duty to protect users – especially young people.
Platforms have to prevent children from accessing harmful and age-inappropriate content, and provide parents and children with clear and accessible ways to report problems when they do arise.
Companies which don’t meet these requirements can be fined up to £18 million or 10% of their qualifying worldwide revenue (whichever is greater).
Vicki Shotbolt, CEO of Parent Zone, said of the latest announcement: “It’s vital that parents have the information they need to support their teens.
“This is a really important step that should help give parents greater peace of mind – if their teen is actively trying to look for this type of harmful content on Instagram, they’ll know about it.”
Meta, which owns Instagram, said it is now working on building similar parental notifications for teens’ conversations with AI.
Help and support:
- Mind, open Monday to Friday, 9am-6pm on 0300 123 3393.
- Samaritans offers a listening service which is open 24 hours a day, on 116 123 (UK and ROI – this number is FREE to call and will not appear on your phone bill).
- CALM (the Campaign Against Living Miserably) offer a helpline open 5pm-midnight, 365 days a year, on 0800 58 58 58, and a webchat service.
- The Mix is a free support service for people under 25. Call 0808 808 4994 or email help@themix.org.uk
- Rethink Mental Illness offers practical help through its advice line which can be reached on 0808 801 0525 (Monday to Friday 10am-4pm). More info can be found on rethink.org.
Politics
Oliver Dean: Never mind the Davey stunts, it’s Daisy’s stunt that makes the Lib Dems an unserious party
Oliver Dean is the digital editor of Mace Magazine and a political commentator with Young Voices. He studies History and Politics at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
Recently the Liberal Democrat economic spokesperson, Daisy Cooper, set out her party’s economic framework.
She did so at a press conference hosted by UK Finance, and the announcement marked the first major policy proposal the party has put forward since the 2024 election. But, whilst many Liberal Democrats were likely overjoyed by their party’s announcement, Cooper’s words left many scratching their heads and wondering how anyone could take her party seriously.
Perhaps the most peculiar announcement Cooper put forth was her idea to scrap the Treasury and, in its place, create a new Department for Growth. Her defence of such a radical idea came from the fact that, “in other countries” the bodies that cover “fiscal policy, economic policy and controlling government spending” are “split up.”
It may sound like a good idea on paper. After all, if other countries are doing it, why should Britain not join them?
But joking aside, such an idea is a prime example of a sweet nothing.
The evidence for this is overwhelming. For one, they would move this new Department to Birmingham. The reasoning behind this move is to reduce the inequality gap between London and the rest of the country. However, what no one seems to have told the Liberal Democrats is that simply moving a government building to a different city is not a means to produce economic growth. It is not as though the Treasury is some major economic force that drives up the country’s GDP. Moving this supposed ‘Department for Growth’ outside of London will not solve the countries’ economic issues in the way Cooper expects it to.
What is most telling, however, was the Party’s insistence that they “do not anticipate any cuts” to come with these new policies. True, the Liberal Democrat ethos appears to be spend, spend and spend some more and just hope that something works. At current rates, for instance, the government is expecting the welfare bill to rise by £20 billion more per year until the end of the Parliament. How, then, can the Liberal Democrats sit there with a straight face and not consider cutting any level of public spending? Total public spending is ballooning out of proportion, and yet Daisy Cooper and her allies appear to be blind to this economic reality. The truth is that if they are not to cut spending, they are left with just two options.
Either they would be forced to increase borrowing. Or, if they wished to take the other route, they would need to raise taxes. Both of these options would hinder the opportunities of future generations. The crux of the matter is that the Liberal Democrats are in a position to say such niceties – that cuts are not necessary, that they will mend the country’s woes – because they are, thankfully, never going to be near a position of power.
They can promise voters the world, and never be forced to deliver. They push policies in an attempt to grab headlines, and whilst it may work for a day or two, the votes they bleed as a result will far outweigh any positive media reception they may receive.
Indeed, such fiscally irresponsible nonsense comes at a time when their party leader is viewed by many as a joke. If he is not falling off a kayak, or partaking in some type of cringe-inducing photo opportunity, he is likely running his party’s credibility into the ground.
Daisy Cooper’s announcement has thus reinforced what many have known for a long time. That the Liberal Democrats are not a serious contender for government, and should not be allowed anywhere near the reins of power. The idea is radical, and unrealistic, but that is exactly what the Liberal Democrats can offer voters. They will never be held accountable for their undeliverable promises, and so do not care as to whether their plans are possible or not.
Perhaps we should all be thanking Daisy Cooper, for shining a light on the real Liberal Democrats.
Politics
Sharon Graham beats the drums of war
Sharon Graham, the head of Unite Union, was to beef-up military defence spending. This hawkish stance has not gone unrecognised.
Sending workers into the “meat grinder of war”
Sharon Graham made demands for a meatier military budget during a rally outside Westminster on 25 February – effectively panhandling for the government. She gave Labour a verbal slap on the wrist for slashing defence spending. In doing so, she overlooked budgetary constraints caused by protracted austerity. Thousands of defence and aerospace workers, fearful of more job cuts, gathered in support of Graham.
These comments have angered many of the left. They argue that feeding the war machine at home is an attack on the workers Sharon Graham supposedly represents.
Shabbir Lakha, from Stop the War, said that, like the Second International, Graham would rather feed workers into the “meat grinder of war.”
Shabbir Lakha, from Stop the War, said that like the Second International, Graham is feeding workers into the “meat grinder of war.”
Formed in 1889, the Second International was a coalition of international socialist groups, with the German Social Democratic Party (SPD) being the most prominent. After WWI erupted in 1914, SPD-aligned MPs voted for war. This was the beginning of the end for SPD. Might Sharon Graham treading a similar path?
Sharon Graham cementing her position as the heir of the Second International in utterly betraying workers to the meat grinder of war. Disgraceful. https://t.co/rVbqOkLEHi
— Shabbir Lakha (@ShabbirLakha) February 26, 2026
Sharon Graham cementing her position as the heir of the Second International in utterly betraying workers to the meat grinder of war. Disgraceful. https://t.co/rVbqOkLEHi
— Shabbir Lakha (@ShabbirLakha) February 26, 2026
Author Carlos Martinez called Sharon’s stance social chauvinism.
Social chauvinism: the abandoning of international solidarity and the support of imperialist aggression, in the hope of getting a few miserable crumbs from the table. https://t.co/dhUILZIoFy
— Carlos (@agent_of_change) February 25, 2026
Selective sympathy
Other have pointed to Unite’s delayed opposition to British-Israel arms deals.
Unite, as reported by Red Pepper, only passed a motion against arms sales to Israel in 2025. The outlet added that it was no easy victory. It called it a “hard fought” battle. At the time, the New Socialist accused Sharon Graham of hiding behind “workers”. According to them, this was an “alibi” justifying her own inaction on Israel’s genocide in Gaza and the flow of weapons enabling it.
That same year, 2025, Graham was heard beating the same war drums, urging the UK to boost arms spending and not to acquiesce to Donald Trump.
Any thought of wooing Donald Trump by selling our defence jobs abroad and replacing the RAF fleet with US made F35s will be resisted and would be an act of self-harm.
There are other, seemingly easier ways to ward off Trump.
Jewish Voices for Liberation criticised Graham and Unite’s position, saying:
How is it possible for a supposedly left-wing trade union leader to ignore where that money is coming from – slashing the foreign aid budget which delivers a modicum of relief to people in poor countries – and how it will be spent – on lucrative contracts for merchants of death trading in weapons to be used in war and genocide?
It’s hard to know where to start commenting on the statement from Unite the Union, reproduced below, welcoming Keir Starmer’s decision to increase defence spending to 2.5 per cent.
It quotes general secretary Sharon Graham saying: “‘The government has made the hard decision, the…
— JewishVoiceForLiberation (@JVoiceLiberatio) February 28, 2025
British Trade Union Complicity
Unite has come under fire for learning the wrong lesson from history. They’ll wave the Ukrainian flag and call it internationalism, but when it comes to Palestine, suddenly the workers need to focus on “pay and conditions.”
Tom Gann, editor of New Socialist, has called Sharon Graham’s posturing national syndicalism. That is, a politics that wraps itself in the flag of workers while serving the interests of the imperial war machine.
This was echoed by a group of Unite members who wrote an open letter to Graham in 2023. They accused her of abandoning Palestinians amid Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
National syndicalism: the role of the trade union is to bargain hard with bosses over the blood soaked profits of imperialism, but never in any way that would put those profits at risk. https://t.co/TvzB88c7Xc
— Tom Gann (@Tom_Gann) October 22, 2025
Real solidarity with workers of the global proletariat would mean more than flag-waving and supporting the imperial war machine.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
How data centers became the new midterms bogeyman
Data centers, once popular with elected officials in both parties, are fast becoming a midterms bogeyman.
Democratic governors are racing to rein in new warehouse projects they once offered up millions of dollars in tax incentives to secure as they face voters furious over soaring electric bills. And President Donald Trump, who has slashed red tape around the industry he’s lauded as a job engine, used his Tuesday State of the Union address to announce he’s told major tech companies to build their own power plants to shield ratepayers from further hikes.
It’s a remarkable pivot by leaders of both parties. And it reflects the rapidly shifting politics around data centers they had hailed as economic generators but are now retreating from as voters blame their proliferation for rising utility costs — part of an overall frustration with high prices that is dominating the midterms.
“The fact that everyone is talking about this all of a sudden shows how quickly this issue is moving and that politicians are reflecting the frustration that people are feeling over paying so much on their energy bills while data centers get tax breaks,” said Jared Leopold, a Democratic strategist and co-founder of climate advocacy group Evergreen Action.
These recent contortions also show both parties are still grappling with the way forward on an increasingly potent political issue.
Democrats harnessed voters’ frustrations over rising utility bills — and their fears that power-hungry data centers could push them higher — to win governor’s offices in New Jersey and Virginia and oust two Republicans on Georgia’s utility regulating commission last fall.
Voters’ worries haven’t ebbed. The POLITICO Poll found in mid-January that voters’ chief concerns about data centers involved household costs. Asked about the drawbacks to building data centers in the U.S., 29 percent of Americans said it would mean higher electricity bills, 24 percent said an increased risk of blackouts and 23 percent said the projects would cost taxpayer money.
Both parties have seized on making tech companies pay for their power as a salve.
Just six months ago, Trump declared he was accelerating federal permitting for data centers and headed to western Pennsylvania to praise companies for investing tens of billions of dollars in energy infrastructure as part of his push to be the “world’s No. 1 superpower in artificial intelligence.”
But on Tuesday, the president said he was negotiating with the companies behind data centers to build their own power plants to secure their power supply “while at the same time lowering prices of electricity” for Americans.
Trump was light on the details about what his “ratepayer protection pledge” actually meant in practice, though the White House said tech companies are expected to head to Washington next week to sign the agreements. But the president has been signaling such a step since at least January, when he said he was working with Microsoft to “ensure that Americans don’t ‘pick up the tab’” for data centers’ power consumption. He also banded together with Democratic governors to push grid operator PJM to control energy prices and tech companies to shoulder the burden of power costs.
Brendan Steinhauser, a Texas-based GOP strategist, said the shift shows Trump and his team “don’t want to be on the wrong side of this.”
“This is smart by the administration to recognize that there are concerns about energy prices and water usage,” said Steinhauser, who serves as CEO of The Alliance for Secure AI, a group that backs more AI industry regulation. “They don’t want to be seen as allowing the companies to accelerate without any input from the community, they don’t want to be seen as on the side of allowing energy prices to go up.”
Democrats don’t, either.
At least half a dozen Democratic governors — several of whom are potential 2028 presidential contenders — used their annual state-of-the-state addresses to pitch regulations or call to retract old sweeteners for an industry they had previously championed.
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker is pushing to hit pause on tax incentives he’s long touted to lure data centers to his state. Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs is seeking to eliminate the tax breaks for tech companies she previously backed as a state lawmaker a decade ago, while looking to impose new water-use fees.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, who was positioning her state as a “national leader in AI research and innovation,” has rolled out plans to make data center operators pay more for energy or supply their own. Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont signaled his state would look to “slow down new data centers,” unless they add more power generation.
And Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, who streamlined permitting to help his state be “all in on AI,” is now calling on his legislature to codify a set of “responsible infrastructure development” standards for data center developers — including hiring locally and bringing their own power generation — as he looks to mitigate voters’ concerns. A survey released Wednesday from Pennsylvania pollster Quinnipiac University showed 68 percent of registered voters would oppose a data center being built in their community, including 81 percent of Democrats, 67 percent of independents and 53 percent of Republicans.
Shapiro insisted his new guardrails were “not a shift” when asked last week about the policy rollout. Instead, he cast them as part of his ongoing efforts to balance creating jobs with “holding down energy costs.”
“I’ve always been for the end-users having to bring their own power or generate new power and pay for it so we’re not burdening the local community,” Shapiro told POLITICO on the sidelines of the National Governors Association winter meeting in Washington last week. “We just are more open about it, so anyone thinking about doing business in Pennsylvania now knows what those standards are going to be.”
The proliferation of data centers across battleground states has similarly pushed energy costs to the forefront of key congressional campaigns. Imposing guardrails on the artificial intelligence industry has become a rallying cry for insurgent candidates in primaries and an attack line in competitive districts. Calls are growing on both sides of the aisle for a moratorium on new projects.
Politicians are “beginning to catch up with where their constituents are” in opposing unregulated data center growth, said Mitch Jones, the managing director of policy and litigation for environmental firm Food & Water Watch, which is pushing for a construction pause.
But Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, who has sketched out a similar set of rules for new projects in his state, argued that a “binary” approach to data centers was misguided.
“Oftentimes, when people talk about data centers, it’s either like what they’ve done in Northern Virginia, which is kind of like, ‘let them just run wild and do whatever they want to do.’ Or it’s like trying to put a ban on them. I don’t think either is the right answer,” Moore said in a brief interview at NGA. “I understand how this critical infrastructure is necessary for economic growth. … But industry cannot determine the rules.”
Politics
605 Small Boat Migrants Arrive in One Day
New figures from the Home Office confirm that 605 migrants arrived to Britain on ten small boats yesterday. The highest single-day figure of 2026 so far in the sunshine and low winds…
Politics
3-3-30 Walking Method vs. 10,000 Steps: Which Is More Effective?
Though the 10,000 steps a day “rule” is actually a marketing gimmick, there is some merit to getting a few thousand paces under your belt (or should that be soles?) daily.
Some research suggests that 7,000 steps a day can help to lower heart disease, cancer, type 2 diabetes, depression, and falls risk, and can even reduce your likelihood of all-cause mortality by 47%.
But since I gave up my sleep tracker, I’ve grown a little weary of step-counting devices too. So, I tried a 3-3-30 walk on my lunch break instead (experts say a midday stroll can help to boost our mood and health in winter and early spring).
That’s because some research says the half-hour activity could improve your blood pressure, aerobic capacity, and strength even more than “regular” walking,
What is 3-3-30 walking?
It’s a type of interval training, a bit like the “Jeffing” or “run walk run” method is for runners.
It involves walking briskly for three minutes, then more slowly for another three minutes, on repeat for half an hour.
A study into the technique concluded that “High-intensity interval walking may protect against age-associated increases in blood pressure and decreases in thigh muscle strength and peak aerobic capacity”.
These results were stronger for the interval walking group than the steady-pace walkers.
Speaking to HuffPost UK previously, doctor and consultant practitioner, Dr Hussain Ahmad, said: “If you’re aiming to maintain general health, brisk walking for at least 150 minutes a week (about 30 minutes a day, five days a week) can help reduce the risk of heart disease, improve mood, and support weight management”.
Brisker walking is associated with a 20% lower risk of early death compared to 4% for slower walkers.
Just to add the vitamin D-boosting cherry on top, doing the surprisingly efficient workout when the sun is at its highest – from 11am to 3pm – can boost your mood, sleep, and energy in the cooler months.

So, how did it go?
I don’t know if it was because I tried 3-3-30 walking on the same day this year’s endless barrage of storms gave way to sunshine, but I couldn’t believe how much it boosted my mood.
It’s also way more practical than my noble, but unrealistic, step count goals, which sometimes required either an earlier wakeup than I can usually manage or a dark, depressing post-work stroll.
A plus: because I wasn’t checking my step count during the walk, I was able to concentrate more on the nature around me (including some impossibly cute fluffy gislings, pictured above).
That meant the walk was more sustainable, more enjoyable, and (probably) more efficient. No wonder I’ve been trying to get friends and family on board.
Politics
Maternity care in the NHS in shocking failure
A damning interim report has revealed widespread failures in NHS maternity care due to discriminatory attitudes and staffing issues. These issues are then compounded by a lack of accountability for those same failures.
On 23 June 2025, health secretary Wes Streeting announced an independent, national investigation into NHS maternity and neonatal services. Valerie Amos, a Labour member and baroness of the House of Lords, is chairing the inquiry.
NHS maternity care failings
In an interview on BBC Breakfast this morning Amos stated that:
I have seen bad, poor, good and excellent care co-existing side by side.
Families have described to me good experiences, terrible experiences. It is patchy, it is inconsistent and what this investigation is about, is trying to find out the things that move us from poor and bad to good and excellent.
I am able to say categorically that there is safe care. There is good care, I have seen examples of it. But, I have also seen way too many examples of poor care.
What I have heard from families it is so traumatic and distressing. I have seen Trusts that have changed their practices as a result of what has happened in those trusts. It is a very mixed picture. It is not consistent.
Amos structured her findings around six key areas:
- Capacity pressures
- Culture and leadership
- The quality of estates
- The workforce itself
- Racism and discrimination
- Poor responses and lack of accountability when things go wrong
Capacity, culture, and quality
A lack of capacity on the wards meant that important services were delayed or stopped altogether. Practitioners had to rush through antenatal appointments, leaving inadequate time for meaningful discussion.
Likewise, there were also long delays for medical assessment, admission onto delivery wards, and even planned caesarean sections.
Beyond this, issues in organisational culture also led to striking shortcomings in experiences of pregnancy, childbirth, and postnatal care.
The report detailed instances of a lack of teamwork and cooperation between maternity and neonatal teams, with disastrous effects. Similarly, Amos also described instances of poor behaviour – bullying, racism, and failing to do their jobs – from senior clinicians not being dealt with.
Further, the increasing complexity of maternity and neonatal services has also created staffing issues, even in spite of recent staffing increases and decreasing birth rates.
The interim report noted that this was particularly noticeable with services like bereavement and breastfeeding support, which were sometimes cancelled due to being out-of-hours.
With regard to the estates, some maternity and neonatal services were delivered on outdated and dilapidated premises. This, in turn, compromised the quality of clinical care. Issues included cold wards, leaking roofs and a severe lack of space.
However, Amos also stated that even some modern estates were misaligned with clinical needs, including a lack of bereavement areas or space for non-birthing partners.
Racism and discrimination
The interim report was damning in terms of structural racism, discrimination, and inequalities causing a “notably higher risk of adverse outcomes” for Black and Asian parents, as well as people from deprived areas. Similarly, it also detailed discrimination against disabled people, Muslims, refugees, asylum seekers, and LGBT individuals.
This discrimination against racialised parents is hardly new information. However, Amos has shed light on just how little improvement there has been in this regard, reporting that:
Babies of Black ethnicity are more than twice as likely to be stillborn, and are at increased risk of preterm birth and neonatal admission at term when compared with White babies. Neonatal mortality rates are also higher for Black and Asian babies compared with White babies, and there is variation in neonatal care delivery between ethnic groups.
Similarly, both maternal and neonatal mortality rates for families from the most-deprived areas in England were more than double those of their least-deprived counterparts.
Stereotyping from clinical staff was also a frequent issue. Black patients reported being treated as though they were tolerant to pain due to their “tough skin”. Meanwhile, Asians were stereotyped as “princesses” who were too demanding and unable to handle pain.
Disappointingly, Amos also showcases the very discrimination she’s highlighting. The interim report states that:
LGBTQ+ families reported a lack of inclusivity, with some reporting that services focus narrowly on “mothers” and “fathers” and fail to reflect diverse family structures. One family member said “I almost died in birth, as I had my baby – I was then asked questions like ‘who was the real mum?”
In spite of this cursory acknowledgement, Amos nevertheless frequently refers to birthing parents solely as ‘women’ throughout the report. This attitude serves to further alienate trans people who are already experiencing discrimination during pregnancy.
Accountability and cover-ups
Along with this litany of failings in NHS maternity and neonatal services, Amos also called out a lack of accountability in the aftermath of incidents of harm.
This included reports of a lack of transparency around what had actually occurred in the instance of birth trauma and baby loss. Families reported being kept out of investigations, and that the inquiries were often arbitrary and unfair when they did happen.
In the event of a bereavement, families also reported that staff were reluctant to talk about what actually happened. This perceived refusal to admit wrongdoing meant that families thought a coverup was taking place. One patient reported that:
I’d initially requested my medical notes on paper format. What I have on paper doesn’t also match what they sent electronically. So I can see the amendments made. There is a lot that are redacted.
Some parents also reported ambiguity as to whether their baby had been born alive before being recorded as stillborn. Again, this led to accusations of staff trying to bury evidence of failures. One bereaved family member stated for the report that:
you register a baby as stillborn, you have no investigation, an independent investigation. […] The bereavement midwife came with [name]’s stillbirth paperwork and gave them to me. I said, “[name] was not stillborn, he was neonatal”. And she said, “Well, this is what he’ll be registered as, and if you don’t register him as stillbirth, you won’t be able to have a funeral and you won’t be registered anywhere”.
Next steps
This interim report comes ahead of the full review, which Amos will publish at a later date. Before then, you can still contribute to the evidence until 17 March 2026. Follow this link to the National Maternity and Neonatal Investigation Call for Evidence.
This includes two different surveys. One for people who have been pregnant to share their experiences. The other is for other people – non-birthing partners, friends, family or caregivers – to share their experiences supporting someone through pregnancy.
After Amos makes her recommendations, the health secretary will chair a National Maternity and Neonatal Taskforce to put them into action.
However, given that Streeting has demonstrated his commitment to gutting health spending at the expense of patient care – as well as being dedicated to the same bigotry that the interim report called out – we’re not going to hold out breath for improvements in NHS maternity and neonatal care.
Featured image via the Canary
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