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Georgia Gilholy: We should all shop at Gail’s. It’s a beverage and pastry based counter-protest

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Georgia Gilholy: We should all shop at Gail's. It's a beverage and pastry based counter-protest

Georgia L Gilholy is a journalist.

It is often said that “in a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act”.

Funnily enough, this quote itself is often falsely attributed to George Orwell. But regardless of who did or did not coin it, this memeified phrase strikes at something important. Indeed, sometimes as little as buying an overpriced iced matcha latte can feel revolutionary in deeply conformist London. This is especially true if one is doing so, not merely to lap up some delicious green caffeine, but to prove a point.

It is for this reason, I have henceforth decided to take a detour en route to my local tube station, in order to pick up something from Gail’s Bakery.

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Yes, this is indeed a divisive thing to do, given that the chain’s newest branch in Archway, North London, has been vandalised twice in the same week. Aside from the usual string of anti-Israel slogans scribbled across the cafe, one simply read “Support Local businesses”. Is it not presumably better to support such businesses by offering them your custom, rather than ordering graffiti spray off Amazon and dousing rival eateries with it?

That numerous of photographed placards and graffiti also omit a vital apostrophe of possession should tell you all you need to know about these charlatans.

Luke Johnson, who masterminded Gail’s expansion and sale to Boston-based Bain Capital, and remains an investor, was a Brexit supporter and high-profile critic of the government’s tyrannical COVID-19 policies. He has also slammed net-zero zealotry. This is unusually gutsy for today’s typical high-profile businessman, who generally seeks to keep their head down and succumb to the whinging bien pensant, who have increasingly directed their ire toward Israel.

Johnson has also courageously bucked the trend on the matter of the Middle East, praising the so-called “Start-Up Nation’s” entrepreneurial grit, and slamming “the deranged defence of Hamas” in academia. While Johnson is not Jewish or Israeli, Gail’s founder, the baker Yael Mejia is both. The chain is therefore named, not after Coronation Street’s chaotic matriarch, but using the anglicised version of Yael: Gail. Although Mejia is no longer financially linked to the chain which calls her its namesake, Bain Capital reportedly has some investments in private companies based in Israel.

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Is Israel committing a “genocide” as these anti-Gail’s goons claim in their messy graffiti? No, it is engaged in a war of self-defence.

Is Gail’s an Israeli company? No.

Even if it were an Israeli company, would that make it automatically complicit or approving of any and all actions ever taken by the Israeli government or military? No, especially given that Israel, unlike China, Russia, Iran and Qatar (who have far more business interests in London than the Jewish State) is a free market economy with a free press and free and fair elections.

The reality is that none of these obvious facts matter to those who have decided that any and all connection with Israel and its culture, however vague, is a grave moral offence.

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It is not only Gail’s that has been subject to these nonsensical attacks for years, but Marks and Spencer, Tesco, or indeed any company that the anti-Israel mob deem inadequately anti-Israel. Just this week, ‘activists’ tweeted photographs of themselves sticking fingers inside Israeli avocados, and moving them inside supermarket freezers to render them inedible. In 1985, one person was killed when suspected Palestinian terrorists detonated a bomb inside a Paris branch of Marks and Spencer.

No better is the brainrot of this set exemplified than by Rachida Benamar, who describes herself as a “qualified Career & Life Coach”.

Benamar posted a viral X post reading: “Boycott Gail’s bakery. Gail’s was founded by Israeli entrepreneur Gail Mejia and Ran Avidan. The current owner Luke Johnson’s stances are disgusting and what he said about Gaza is horrific. Please share widely” One response noted: “What did he say? Would be helpful to put it up if you can.” Naturally, she did not. Why? Because Johnson made no such “horrific” comments about Gaza. But to those of Benamar’s persuasion, any remarks about Israel or Gaza that do not include a complete surrender to those that would see the Jewish State wiped from the map, qualify as “horrific”.

The Gail’s fiasco was never about protesting injustice, but about ensuring that anything and everyone Jewish, Israeli (or perceived as such) is driven out of public life.

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We should all do our small part to avoid this evil coming to pass, one chilled beverage at a time!

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Reform Chairman schools Labour on losing Gorton and Denton

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Reform Chairman schools Labour on losing Gorton and Denton

Reform UK’s chairman, David Bull, stated on Newsnight last night, 26 February, that Labour would have won the Gorton and Denton by-election, if only they fielded Andy Burnham in the first place.

Now, that looks a little odd, doesn’t it? The second-place party is giving tips to the third-place party on how to beat them. The Canary has written a great deal about Labour being Reform-lite, but surely giving each other a leg-up is a bit much?

Only, if you were to consider it from Reform’s perspective, it makes complete sense. See, in order for the left vote to split, Labour would actually have to field someone, you know… on the left (yeah yeah, disclaimers to come).

Reform knows that; Reform needs that. It can’t survive the immigrant-bashing right vote being shared between itself, Labour, the Conservatives, and whatever the fuck Rupert Lowe is doing at the time. Or, to put it another way:

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Starmer can’t even gift a seat to the far-right on a silver platter without fucking it up.

‘You would have won’

After a by-election that even frothing lefty indie outlets thought was going to be a close-run thing, the Greens ended up taking it by a wide margin.

On Newsnight the night of the by-election, Reform UK’s David Bull said:

Having spoken to lots of Labour voters, if you had fielded Andy Burnham, you would have won. Full stop. But Kier Starmer didn’t want him on the pitch. This is all about the preservation of Kier Starmer. It was a very bad mistake by the Labour Party.

Burnham, the popular Labour mayor of Greater Manchester, announced his intention to run in Gorton and Denton back in January. However, he was swiftly blocked by his party’s ruling body.

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Burnham is frequently perceived as a viable left-wing alternative to Starmer for the head of the Labour Party. However, his road to the top would be much easier with a seat in the Commons, rather than the mayorship.

As such, Starmer couldn’t allow him the opportunity of a win. Even, that is, if it meant potentially handing the seat to Reform. Better the far-right than the near-left, ay?

Caveat time

I promised you caveats, and there are of course caveats. Burnham’s credentials as ‘actually left wing’ are severely questionable. Your Party’s Zarah Sultana recently pointed out that:

Andy Burnham played a key role in privatising our NHS while serving as Health Secretary.

Andy Burnham voted for the 2003 Iraq War — an illegal invasion that led to the deaths of over a million Iraqis.

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Andy Burnham was a member of Labour Friends of Israel, an apartheid state that has committed genocide against the Palestinian people.

Gorton and Denton deserves a genuinely socialist MP — one who doesn’t vote for illegal wars, stands in solidarity with Palestine and is proudly anti-Zionist.

It’s a mark of how far Labour has fallen that Burnham now represents the leftward section of the increasingly right-wing party. But hey ho.

By contrast, Starmer’s Gorton and Denton pick was councillor Angeliki Stogia. Stogia supports NHS privatisation through ‘Private Finance Initiatives’, and has acted as a corporate lobbyist. Plus, she had Starmer’s backing — basically the right-of-center’s kiss of death.

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Stogia won just 25.4% of the vote, in what was once a Labour safe-seat.

‘People are sick of them’

When Newsnight’s presenter Paddy O’Connell asked Zack Polanski if he agreed with Bull’s assessment, the Green leader replied:

No I don’t agree, actually. I think Andy Burnham is still a Labour Party politician, and I think people are sick of them.

Some polling has indeed suggested that Burnham would have won the seat, if he was permitted to run. We can never know precisely how that would have shaken out in real life, because Starmer would clearly rather cut off his own nose than allow the Labour right to lose its stranglehold on the party.

I wrote this piece somewhat tongue-in-cheek, talking about Starmer trying to gift the seat to Reform.

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However, on a more serious note, the Green’s Hannah Spencer ran a fantastic campaign, taking an incredible 40.7% of the vote. She deserved the win on her own merit, Burnham or no Burnham. And now, Gorton and Denton has the left-wing MP it deserves.

Meanwhile, as their chairman demonstrated, Reform has been left rattled by Labour’s competition on the right. Personally speaking, they can fucking eat each other as far as I care.

Featured image via the Canary

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Yerin Ha Opens Up About Filming Bridgerton Season 4 Bathtub Sex Scene

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Luke Thompson and Yerin Ha having a laugh at a Bridgerton season four launch event

Yerin Ha has explained why one of fans’ most-anticipated scenes in Bridgerton’s fourth season wasn’t nearly as sexy to film as it was to watch.

The moment in question sees Yerin’s character, Sophie, enjoying a steamy encounter with Benedict, played by Luke Thompson, in a bathtub.

However when it came to filming this sequence, it turns out that languishing in warm water for hours on end to achieve the perfect sex scene comes with occupational hazards.

“Basically I put baby powder all on me because I was told it would help dry my skin to put the intimacy wear on with the tape,” Yerin recently told Capital Breakfast.

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“And then basically the next day after the bathtub, I got hives all over my body, and I got folliculitis, so I needed steroid cream.”

She joked: “But I blame myself, because I think it was a combination of baby powder and the bath water. So it’s me, I’m a sensitive gal!”

Benedict chipped in to reveal that the scene took seven whole hours to film. Let it never be said that actors don’t suffer for their art…

Luke Thompson and Yerin Ha having a laugh at a Bridgerton season four launch event
Luke Thompson and Yerin Ha having a laugh at a Bridgerton season four launch event

The bathtub scene in question was included in the second batch of episodes for Bridgerton season four, which arrived on Netflix earlier this week to mixed reviews from the critics.

Part two follows the developing romance between second eldest Bridgerton son Benedict and maid Sophie, after a complicated road including a masquerade ball, a wicked stepmother, and an absolute misfire when Benedict asked Sophie to be his mistress during a pivotal cliffhanger.

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While that’s it for season four, there are at least a couple more series of Bridgerton in the pipeline, as we wait to see which of the remaining siblings’ love story is next.

Showrunner Jess Brownell previously teased who will step up to the plate in seasons five and six of the Netflix Regency drama, leaving fans to guess between Eloise and Francesca, played by Claudia Jessie and Hannah Dodd, respectively.

Bridgerton season four is streaming on Netflix now.

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Churchill statue painted red by Dutch activist group

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Churchill statue painted red by Dutch activist group

On the morning of 27 February, the statue of Winston Churchill at Parliament Square, London, was smeared with red paint:

Dutch group Free the Filton 24 NL claimed the action. It’s one of many international groups standing in solidarity with Palestine Action, especially with the 33 political prisoners. This is the first action this group has claimed on UK soil.

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Hiding from accountability

In a public statement, Dutch activist Olax Outis, spoke on behalf of the group. He openly expressed his opinion of the British and Dutch governments, calling them:

a bunch of cowards hiding from accountability.

The antisemite Winston Churchill, responsible for implementing the Balfour Declaration that handed Palestine over to the Israeli occupier, gets his fair share of insults as well. Although Outis noted that if it existed, he would rather demolish a statue of current Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

This is Free the Filton 24 NL’s first action outside its own borders. But the group has stood in solidarity with the British resistance to genocide since its founding. The Dutch activists have joined the British people in their recent series of celebrations, but remind the still oppressed UK citizens:

We aren’t done yet. This isn’t over.

Like thousands of activists in dozens of countries across the world, Free the Filton 24 NL targeted the British Embassy in its country. It used daily noise protests, vandalism, blockades, and an envelope containing baby poo delivered to the mailbox. Largely ignored, which seems to be a very good representation by the embassy, the group demands the UK government to “Clean up your shit!”

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Another target is the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, because the human rights violations in the UK also affect the human rights of Dutch citizens. Fifteen Dutch citizens have been arrested a total of 40 times on suspicion of terrorism. Thirty-nine of these allegedly terrorist acts involved silently holding a sign that read:

I oppose genocide – I support Palestine Action

Churchill statue a listed sculpture

Outis is currently under arrest, and the Metropolitan police are investigating. Whether the statue of Winston Churchill can be restored is currently unclear. The statue is a so-called listed sculpture and is part of a group of statues of politicians, some of them not complicit in genocide.

Churchill is now considered by many Britons to be the most popular politician ever. But after world war two, the British people voted the wartime prime minister out of office as quickly as possible, making way for a progressive counter-narrative.

Free the Filton 24 NL calls him out for Zionist war crimes. And compares him to current war criminal Keir Starmer and human rights violator Yvette Cooper.

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‘Actievoeren werkt!’ – ‘Action works!’

British activist groups and their international comrades have recently achieved several major victories. The ban on Palestine Action has been declared unlawful, the Filton 24 have all been acquited of aggravated burglary, and most of them have been released on bail.

The nearly 3,000 people arrested on terrorism charges since July have so overwhelmed the system that police seem to have given up the investigation entirely. Charges are met with mockery, suspects wear the terrorist label as a badge of honour.

The hunger strikes have been paused and the strikers appear to be largely recovering. All over the world, people are cheering for the victory of the British people over their deceitful rulers.

But in occupied Palestine, dozens of people are still being slaughtered by the Zionist occupier every day. Drones are still being manufactured in the UK, advertised at Dutch arms fairs as ‘field tested [on Palestinians]’.

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The Netherlands and the UK are still investing tens of billions of euros and pounds in Israel. Outis stated:

We’re still dealing with two governments that have made it clear they would rather let their own citizens die than stop genocide. That is why we must continue to take action. We are not done yet.

Featured image via the Canary

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Labour fall flat after ‘only we can beat Reform’ promise

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Labour fall flat after 'only we can beat Reform' promise

Labour had a clear message in the Gorton & Denton by-election, and that message was ‘only we can beat Reform‘. The problem, of course, is that they didn’t beat Reform.

Despite this, they’re still suggesting only they can can do what they just publicly did not:

Is it too much to ask that they offer voters something besides nonsensical slogans?

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Just nationalise utilities and tax the rich, for god’s sake; it’s not rocket science!

The Failure Party

In case you missed the results, here they are – a staggering defeat for Labour:

As you can see, Labour didn’t even beat Reform to second place.

As Stats for Lefties added:

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In the video at the top, Labour deputy leader Lucy Powell said:

I think what is really clear is that there is a big majority in this constituency that hasn’t voted for Reform, and on the day the Greens have managed to win that argument that they were best placed to do that.

But I’m not sure whether that would totally translate in a general election.

So Labour are transitioning from ‘only we can win in Gorton & Denton‘ to ‘only we can win in the general election‘. The more elections they lose, however, the harder it is to sell that message.

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Oh, and it doesn’t help that Labour used so many dirty tricks in this by-election (including faking a tactical voting campaign):

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Novara’s Aaron Bastani, meanwhile, suggested the following:

Historic loss

The Gorton and Denton constituency has only existed since 2024, but the areas covered by it have voted Labour for decades. In other words, Keir Starmer ended a streak which lasted for around half a century.

And it didn’t have to happen.

As we reported, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham wanted to run, and he’s incredibly popular. Starmer and his cronies blocked him, and now Labour have suffered a loss so great there will surely be a leadership challenge.

People pointed out that Starmer made a public show of banishing Labour progressives who wanted things like nationalisation and peace. Starmer referred to these people as “fleas”. Now, the fleas have come back to bite him in the Gorton & Dentons:

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Despite his record-breaking unpopularity, Starmer actually travelled to Gorton & Denton to support his candidate. Describing this as a “kiss of death”, we wrote:

If it was a “smart move”, it will be Starmer’s first since he took office.

If it was a bad move, it will be far from his worst move over the past week.

As it turned out, it was a bad move.

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Jokes

At this point, the idea that ‘only Labour can win‘ has literally become a joke:

The question is this: will Labour get some new material, or will they repeat the line until it’s not even funny anymore?

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Featured image via Stats for Lefties

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Bridgerton’s Season 4 Post-Credits Scene Included A Very Sweet Easter Egg

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Zoom into Benedict's tie and you just might spot a reference to one of season four's most memorable scenes

This article contains major spoilers for the Bridgerton season four finale.

After debuting four brand new episodes of Bridgerton earlier this week, Netflix had a surprise in store for fans with an unexpected post-credits sequence.

Those patient viewers who watched the latest season finale all the way to the end were treated to one last scene depicting the wedding between Luke Thompson and Yerin Ha’s characters, Benedict and Sophie, after their love story dominated the period drama’s latest run.

In the sequence, Benedict and Sophie’s low-key wedding day saw them surrounded by their families, both biological and chosen.

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“To watch the classes comingle like that, it felt so representative of the journey that these two have been on, and it really felt like the perfect mingling of fantasy and reality,” showrunner Jess Brownell told Tudum.

But eagle-eyed viewers may also have spotted a subtle detail in Benedict’s wedding outfit that nodded to his love story.

Zoom into Benedict's tie and you just might spot a reference to one of season four's most memorable scenes
Zoom into Benedict’s tie and you just might spot a reference to one of season four’s most memorable scenes

“I wear a little pin in my necktie, and it has a tiny kite painted on it,” Luke explained, referring to a scene earlier in the season that saw his and Yerin’s characters bonding.

He enthused: “It’s an amazing costume design, in terms of their story, because it feels like it really sums them up in a way.”

Benedict Bridgerton and Sophie Baek share a kiss on their wedding day
Benedict Bridgerton and Sophie Baek share a kiss on their wedding day

While Bridgerton is now over for another year, fans can at least breathe a sigh of relief that the show has been commissioned for at least two more seasons, with Jess previously claiming she wanted to adapt all eight instalments in Julia Quinn’s Bridgerton book series.

There’s still no confirmation over which Bridgerton sibling will be the focus of season five – expected to premiere in 2028 – but signs in the finale point to either Claudia Jessie’s Eloise or Hannah Dodd’s Francesca.

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All four seasons of Bridgerton are now streaming on Netflix.

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Gorton and Denton is now GREEN

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Gorton and Denton is now GREEN

It’s no secret that we here at the Canary believed the Green Party could win in Gorton & Denton:

While we thought they’d do well, however, we didn’t anticipate quite how well:

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It’s like Labour and Reform weren’t even trying.

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Victorious

The above results show the number of voters in comparison to the 2024 general; the following shows the percentile change. As you can see, this is an absolutely disastrous result for Labour in what should be a stronghold:

While ‘Gorton and Denton’ has only existed since 2024, it’s comprised of parts of constituencies which have voted Labour for decades, including Manchester Gorton, Manchester Withington, and Denton and Reddish.

Keir Starmer has ended a streak which lasted for around half a century.

Labour kept saying they were the only party which could beat Reform, but they didn’t even beat them to second place.

Labour have a new problem now too.

The seal has popped.

They can cry ‘only we can win‘ as much as they like, but people know that isn’t true now, and for many that was the last reason they had to vote Labour.

Excuses

The establishment said the Green Party couldn’t win, and look what happened.

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We told you what’s possible, meanwhile, and we’ll continue to do so.

Congratulations to Hannah Spencer MP and to all those who believed that something better can come.

Oh, and be ready to hold your nerve moving forwards:

Featured image via Barold 

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Newslinks for Friday 27th February 2026

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Newslinks for Friday 30th January 2026

Starmer on the brink as hard-Left Greens smash Labour in by-election – with Reform pushing them into third, sparking panic among MPs

“Keir Starmer was plunged deeper into crisis today after a disastrous by-election saw Labour routed by the Greens in one of its safest seats – and pushed into third place behind Reform. No10 is facing a fresh onslaught from the PM’s critics and massive pressure to lurch further Left following the worst possible result in Gorton & Denton. The Greens had never won a Parliamentary by-election – or a seat in the North – but Hannah Spencer romped home with a 4,400 majority. Jubilant leader Zack Polanski said it showed his party is on track to get 100 MPs at the general election. Despite flooding the area with ministers and 1,000 activists, Labour did not even have the consolation of second place with its candidate trailing in behind Reform’s Matt Goodwin. Nigel Farage complained of ‘cheating’ and Muslim ‘sectarianism’ after reports of so-called ‘family voting’ from independent observers – an illegal practice where people are escorted to polling booths. Downing Street is hoping Sir Keir can front up the catastrophic outcome by appearing in front of cameras later. Allies insisted he will survive at least until local elections in May, because rebels ‘don’t have anyone’ in a position to challenge. But there are already furious recriminations going on, after the premier blocked popular Manchester mayor Andy Burnham from being the candidate amid fears he would be a leadership rival in the Commons. Backbencher Karl Turner said it was the ‘worst result we could have expected’, insisting Mr Burnham would have won and calling for a more ‘socialist’ Labour. Brian Leishman said Sir Keir should ‘do the right thing… and go’.” – Daily Mail

  • Farage: By-election was ‘a victory for sectarian voting and cheating’ – Daily Telegraph
  • Pressure mounts on desperate Keir as Greens win by-election in ‘worst result ever’ with Labour slumping to third – The Sun
  • Greens Sweep To Historic Victory In Gorton And Denton By-Election – PoliticsHome
  • Labour calls on officials to examine ‘very concerning’ reports of illegal voting in crucial Gorton and Denton by-election – The Independent
  • Sir John Curtice says Tories have hit a new low with ‘worst ever’ result – GBNews

Comment:

  • This Green win should strike fear into the heart of the Right – Annabel Denham, Daily Telegraph
  • Gorton & Denton shows there’s no safe seats left for Keir Starmer – Patrick Maguire, The Times
  • Green leader’s communism-on-ketamine policies would destroy UK – but here’s why I’m glad they won Gorton by-election – Julia Hartley-Brewer, The Sun
  • Electoral fraud may have won the Greens a by-election, and it’s just the start – Paul Goodman, Daily Telegraph

> Today:

Mystery as Mandelson messages go missing

“The lobbying company founded by Lord Mandelson discovered during an internal investigation that a “significant” tranche of his business emails was missing. Global Counsel conducted an internal audit of Mandelson’s company emails after the government agreed this month to release tens of thousands of messages relating to his time as the British ambassador to the US. The company was concerned about what would be published about its own business interests under the mass disclosure, and conducted the audit as part of a due diligence process. The investigation was still going on when the company went into administration last week but an initial report said that significant numbers of emails were missing from Mandelson’s account. The company does not know how the emails came to be missing. The emails that have been kept include a series of exchanges with senior officials and ministers in government, relating directly to Mandelson’s appointment as ambassador. They are said to include messages to David Lammy, then the foreign secretary, and Morgan McSweeney, then Sir Keir Starmer’s chief of staff. The overall cache of emails, which dates back nearly a decade, includes 1.4 million messages. Mandelson did not respond to requests for comment but it is known that he stopped being able to access his Global Counsel email address in February 2025, when he formally took up his role as ambassador.” – The Times

  • No 10 cannot block release of Mandelson documents, officials say – ITV News
  • ‘No veto’ for Starmer over release of Mandelson files in Epstein scandal, says intelligence watchdog – The Standard
  • Mandelson faces EU inquiry into Brussels trade role over Epstein links – The Guardian
  • Mandelson could lose EU pension in Epstein investigation – Daily Telegraph
  • How Lindsay Hoyle’s lavish trip to the Caribbean led to Lord Mandelson ‘flight risk’ arrest – The Standard

Comment:

Assisted dying bill on brink of collapse after Lords ‘sabotage’

“The assisted dying bill is on the verge of collapse, forcing campaigners to hatch a plot to revive it. The Terminally Ill Adults Bill is stalled in the House of Lords and widely expected not to become law. Dame Esther Rantzen, a high-profile supporter of the plan, accused the Lords on Thursday of “blatant sabotage” to try to collapse the bill. Now The Telegraph can reveal that, if the law collapses before the summer, around 50 pro-assisted-dying MPs will attempt to force it into law by all putting their names forward for private member’s bills… Putting forward dozens of private member’s bills on the same topic will increase the chances that one on assisted dying will be chosen in the ballot and MPs will be forced to debate it again. If they succeed and a bill on assisted dying is passed identical to the one that went through the Commons last year, MPs will be able to use the Parliament Act to circumvent the House of Lords and ensure it becomes law. In a historic vote last year, MPs voted to allow terminally ill adults with less than six months to live to seek medical assistance to end their lives. Legalising assisted dying in England and Wales has been one of the most controversial issues of this Parliament, with emotive debates from MPs on both sides in the House of Commons. The legislation has since become stuck in the House of Lords, after peers tabled more than a thousand amendments to the bill. There are just six weeks left to pass the legislation and mounting anger among MPs who voted to legalise assisted dying.” – Daily Telegraph

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  • Controversial assisted dying legislation set to fail as peers accused of delaying ­tactics – The Sun
  • Esther Rantzen blames ‘religious lobbyists’ as assisted dying bill falters – The Times
  • Assisted Dying bill almost certain to fail due to lack of debate time – LBC News
  • Why have efforts to bring in assisted dying law been thwarted? – The Guardian

Comment:

  • The assisted suicide bill was doomed by its supporters’ arrogance – Toby Young, Daily Telegraph
  • The defective assisted dying bill deserved to be put out of its misery – The Times View

News in brief:

  • Is the Tory Boy dying out? – Becky Paton, The Critic
  • Met’s Lindsay Hoyle blunder makes it unfit to investigate Mandelson – Dominic Adler, UnHerd
  • Andy Burnham could have won Gorton and Denton – Neal Lawson, The New Statesman
  • When did Ofcom become the world’s morality police? – Andrew Tettenborn, CapX
  • Green by-election triumph is a sign of things to come – James Heale, The Spectator

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The House Opinion Article | Who’s Behind The Wheel Of Self-Driving Taxis?

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Who's Behind The Wheel Of Self-Driving Taxis?
Who's Behind The Wheel Of Self-Driving Taxis?


7 min read

A security check on a fleet of new electric buses in Oslo late last year uncovered features that caused international alarm.

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The 300 Yutong buses were sending data back to its manufacturers in China. The company insisted this flow was necessary to “optimise” their performance.

But Norway’s transport authorities moved to prevent access to data being sent to China. They also said they had mitigated any possibility of a ‘kill switch’ that could be activated by the manufacturer crippling the fleet from afar.

The incident brought into sharp relief the challenges the Chinese-dominated market in electric vehicles are posing western policymakers – made all the more acute with the advent of self-driving cars.

China dominates the global EV market, with its home-grown company BYD overtaking Tesla as the world’s largest electric carmaker last year. Amid reports that Chinese self-driving taxis could be trialled in the UK as soon as this year, MPs and peers from across the political spectrum are urging caution.

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The BBC reported in December that Uber and Lyft had unveiled partnerships with Chinese tech giant Baidu to pilot these taxis in London, which Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander called a “vote of confidence in our plans for self-driving vehicles”.

But Alex Sobel, Labour MP for Leeds Central and Headingley, tells The House he is worried these partnerships – and others with Chinese firms – could open the door to major data vulnerabilities. Under Chinese law, companies operating within its national borders are required to hand over any data requested by the authorities in Beijing.

“I am concerned that people’s personal information potentially can be shared with the Chinese state and used for a variety of purposes, if you are particularly concerned for certain communities – for instance, from Hong Kong, from Tibet, Uyghurs, or Chinese who have a dissenting view from the Chinese government,” Sobel says.

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Chinese activists defying their government don’t only face persecution at home. Beijing conducts an extensive campaign of transnational repression against dissidents and critics – such as posting bounties against high-profile Hong Kong democracy campaigners who fled to safety in the West.

“Transnational repression is becoming increasingly sophisticated,” Sobel says. “And I’m not just saying that about China or other countries as well, but other countries don’t have as much reach and penetration to the UK as China.”

Sobel adds that while he believes there should be a kill switch in any AI-powered devices as a failsafe mechanism, such switches should be in control of the country’s government in which the technology is operating.

“If the Chinese state decided, for whatever reason, they want to act in a hostile way towards the UK and kill all of these off at a point in time when there’s a deep penetration in the UK, obviously that would have a massive effect.”

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North Durham Labour MP Luke Akehurst is another with concerns. He posed a written question to the Transport Secretary in January, asking her to assess the risk “that electric buses operating in the UK could be remotely rendered inoperable via their internet-connected systems by hostile state actors”.

Dr Alessandro Arduino, an affiliate lecturer at King’s College London, tells The House that robo-taxis and other self-driving vehicles offer a “revealing case study” in how new technology can sit on a fine line between fresh innovation and national security dangers.

He notes that these cars generate reams of data as they drive – from location information to citizen movement and urban layout. “Such data is invaluable not only for training artificial intelligence systems but also for forecasting and strategic analysis,” he says. “China’s own policy framework is explicit in treating data and AI as matters of state sovereignty and national security, and I do believe that context matters.”

Such a dramatic threat as a kill switch would not be the first order concern, he adds, saying that the most urgent consideration is whether operating companies can keep their data secure from malicious actors.

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A Transport for London (TfL) spokesperson says: “Safety is our top priority, and we are interested in learning more about technologies that could potentially help deliver safety benefits for all road users.

“TfL recognises the challenge of legislating in response to changes in automated vehicle technology in a timely manner to ensure benefits are delivered and risks are mitigated.”

It is not the first time the use of Chinese tech in Britain’s infrastructure has faced fierce opposition over national security fears. In 2020, the government halted the use of Huawei equipment in Britain’s 5G network and ordered that existing tech be removed by the end of 2027.

But it comes at a time when Downing Street is seeking a reset in relations with China after a frosty few years. In January, the controversial Chinese new ‘mega-embassy’ in London was granted planning permission – despite repeated concerns over its proximity to crucial fibre-optic cables and potential for heightened espionage.

Keir Starmer has also now become the first British prime minister to visit Beijing in eight years, travelling along with a cohort of business leaders in a drive to reap the vaunted benefits of dealing with the world’s second-largest economy.

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The Prime Minister’s visit saw the announcement of plans to allow British citizens visa-free travel to China and the lifting of sanctions on MPs who had blasted Beijing’s repression of Uyghur Muslims.

Former Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith MP, a persistent China ‘hawk’, says he would like to see a pilot of self-driving taxis in the UK blocked if it uses Chinese technology. “They all basically data-harvest those who use them. It goes all the way down the line.”

Chinese companies such as Baidu have also long been criticised for their role in online censorship in the country, where the government maintains fiercely tight control over the information space.

Sam Goodman of China Strategic Risks Institute tells The House: “Given the integral role Baidu plays in internet censorship in China, and its legal requirement to share users’ data with China’s Ministry of State Security, it is hard to see how it can be trusted with the data security and personal safety of the British public.”

As AI technology, including that used in self-driving vehicles, continues to advance at breakneck pace, governments across the world have been left scrambling to find a policy answer on how best to regulate the sector and mitigate its risks without suffocating innovation.

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Professor James Davenport of the University of Bath tells The House that lawmakers face grappling with both the novelty and broad range of AI technologies as they figure out effective regulation. “For example,” he explains, “the EU AI Act will impose the same requirements on self-driving taxis as on chatbots offering psychiatric advice. The alternative would be an enormous mass of detailed legislation and incredible turf wars.”

Liberal Democrat MP Wera Hobhouse, who was refused entry to Hong Kong last year, says the proposed pilot “fits a worrying pattern of the government growing far too cosy with Beijing”. Hobhouse is among the voices who believe the pilot should not go ahead until the government can categorically prove there would be no risk posed to national security or public safety.

She tells The House: “From approving a Chinese super-embassy in London to pushing ahead with closer economic ties despite repeated security warnings, the government are sending the wrong signal: that trade is being prioritised over security, human rights and the safety of those who have fled repression to build new lives in the UK.”

A government spokesperson tells The House: “Safety is central to our plans for automated-vehicle pilots. All proposed deployments will be subjected to rigorous safety and cyber-security assessments.”

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Baidu did not respond to a request for comment. It has previously denied allegations of links to the Chinese state and military. An Uber spokesperson said: “No matter which country an AV partner is from, we only work with them if they can both meet Uber’s own high standards and fully comply with all applicable laws on safety, security, and privacy.” Lyft did not reply to requests for comment. 

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Brit Awards 2026: Robbie Williams To Lead Ozzy Osbourne Tribute

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Robbie Williams performing live last year

Brit Awards organisers have announced plans to honour Ozzy Osbourne’s legacy at this year’s ceremony.

On Thursday evening, it was revealed that the awards show will end with a star-studded musical tribute to the Prince Of Darkness, who died in July at the age of 76.

As well as Ozzy posthumously receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award on Saturday night, the show will also conclude with a rendition of his track No More Tears, curated by his wife Sharon Osbourne.

Robbie Williams will lend his voice to the performance, which will also feature several musicians who worked with Ozzy over the years, including Adam Wakeman, Robert Trujillo, Tommy Clufetos and Zakk Wylde.

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Robbie Williams performing live last year
Robbie Williams performing live last year

Ozzy and Sharon previously hosted the Brit Awards back in 2008, alongside their two youngest children, Kelly and Jack Osbourne.

Brit Awards committee chair Stacey Tang said: “Ozzy Osbourne has been a mighty force in modern music. Possessing an unmistakable voice and unique presence, he reshaped the sound and spirit of rock, inspiring generations of artists who followed.

“This Lifetime Achievement Award recognises a remarkable legacy built on originality and enduring influence, that continues to connect with fans worldwide.”

This year’s Brits will also feature performances from British stars like Harry Styles, Raye, Olivia Dean and Wolf Alice, as well as international talent including Rosalía, Alex Warren and Sombr.

Ejae, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami – better known as the singing voices of KPop Demon Hunters’ Huntr/x – have also pre-recorded a performance as part of the night’s proceedings, with Mark Ronson set to perform a medley to celebrate his Outstanding Contribution win.

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Noel Gallagher is also set to be honoured with the Songwriter Of The Year title in a controversial move given he’s not actually released any new music in the last 12 months.

The 2026 Brit Awards will air live on Saturday 28 February at 8.15pm on ITV1.

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Gorton and Denton: welcome to Balkanised Britain

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Gorton and Denton: welcome to Balkanised Britain

So the race everyone said was too close to call wasn’t so close after all. The Green Party’s Hannah Spencer has won the Gorton and Denton by-election with 14,980 votes, nearly 41 per cent of all those cast in the Greater Manchester seat. Meanwhile, Reform UK has pushed a flailing Labour Party into third place, taking 10,578 votes to Labour’s 9,364. That noise you can hear in the background is blood vessels bursting in Downing Street.

This was Labour’s race to lose, and it has done so spectacularly. Keir Starmer’s reverse-midas touch has proven even more formidable than anyone dared think. This race began with the prime minister blocking popular Manchester mayor Andy Burnham from standing, to avoid giving his rival a place in Westminster, leaving Manchester councillor Angeliki Stogia holding the bag. It has finished with a 26.4 per cent swing from Labour to Greens. The Zack Polanski clown car is now officially the go-to vehicle for disaffected ‘progressive’ revolt.

If Labour can be humiliated here, it can be humiliated anywhere. At the General Election just 19 months ago, Labour won more than 50 per cent of the vote in the constituency. Gorton and Denton was its 38th safest seat. It had held it for generations. Now it has become a neat demonstration of this Labour Party’s ability to haemorrhage votes in all directions. Graduates and Muslims seem to have broken to the Greens, while white working-class voters plumped more for Reform. Once-coveted voter blocs are abandoning Starmer left and right. The Labour coalition has disintegrated.

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This is a stunning win for the Greens. No one can take that away from them. But the manner in which they won bodes ill not just for Labour, but for our fractious nation, too. Spencer effectively rode Britain’s crisis of integration to victory – campaigning on Gaza, TikToking in Urdu and leaning into the Islamic sectarianism that has metastasised since October 7. It proved a potent combination in the inner-city wards, where as much as 40 per cent of residents are Muslim. Rather than appeal to voters on the basis of shared interests and a shared civic identity, the Greens didn’t even assume their voters spoke the same language. The Muslim Vote group endorsed them. George ‘Gaza’ Galloway stood down his Workers Party to give the Greens a clear run. In the future, we can expect more and more elections to come down to this depressing demographic headcount.

The Green Party has been shameless in ginning up anti-Israel grievances, even before Polanski hypnotised the membership. At the last election, 20 of its candidates were exposed in the press over their pondscum Israelophobia. One of them praised a ‘pro-Palestine’ march that disrupted a Holocaust remembrance march… at Auschwitz. Naturally, he was also the party’s diversity coordinator. Mothin Ali, the Greens’ new co-deputy leader, fond of chanting ‘Allahu Akbar’, posted a video on 8 October 2023, the day after Hamas’s pogrom in southern Israel, saying ‘Palestinians have the right to resist occupying forces’. The Greens are now Britain’s preeminent Islamo-left party, the party of choice for those who think Labour isn’t Jew-baity enough.

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But in this the Greens are only screaming out loud what was previously whispered. Labour has long practised this kind of pork-barrel identity politics, quietly pushing leaflets through doors appealing to minority voters off the back of faraway conflicts and intra-ethnic tensions. (The Tories’ hands haven’t been totally clean on this front, either.) Now Labour has been bitten by its own divisive, multicultural politicking – first by the ‘Gaza independents’ in 2024, now by the Polanski-ites.

For all the talk of Reform UK creating ‘division’, candidate Matt Goodwin’s mildly controversial comments about Britishness pale into insignificance when set against the Greens’ unabashed grievance politics. While everyone knew Reform’s best hopes lay in the white working-class Denton end of the seat, Goodwin ran on putting all of Gorton and Denton first, telling me in an interview for spiked last week he could peel off at least some voters in the more multiracial, inner-city Gorton. While this campaign has proven to be a tough lesson in expectation management, Reform’s second-place finish still puts down a significant marker, in a place that should never really have been in play for it. (Reform-friendly Denton makes up just a third of the seat.) Still, in my brief time there I detected something of an enthusiasm gap, between Reform-curious voters tempted to give Goodwin a go and Reform-deranged voters desperate to keep the supposed ‘far right’ out.

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Gorton and Denton is hardly a typical constituency – an L-shaped seat, created in 2024, linking wildly different groups and areas together. But in its way, the campaign has been a grim little microcosm of Balkanised Britain. Demographics pitted against one another. A fractious, multiparty politics to fit our fraying, multicultural age. We desperately need to put the pieces back together again.

Tom Slater is editor of spiked. Follow him on X: @Tom_Slater_.

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