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Anneliese Dodds Calls For Action As Sudan War Enters Fourth Year

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Anneliese Dodds Calls For Action As Sudan War Enters Fourth Year
The fall of El Fasher in late October 2025 has been described as
“probably the most explicitly anticipated mass atrocity event ever”. It was indeed clear to anyone watching the 18 month-long siege of the city that it was going to end in appalling violence.

But when the RSF (Rapid Support Forces) took the city, the eyes of the world were largely elsewhere, as crimes that UN reporters said bore “the hallmarks of genocide” took place. Tens of thousands – including countless children – were massacred in a matter of days.

This has been the story of the conflict in Sudan, which enters its third year this week, its grim anniversary overshadowed by events in the Middle East. Between 1989 and 2019, Sudan was ruled by President Omar al-Bashir, who among other things oversaw the devastating war in Darfur which blighted the country in the 2000s. After his overthrow at the hands of a popular uprising in 2019, the country’s military-civilian government was replaced in a military coup in 2021.

“Sudan has become the site of the worst humanitarian crisis in the world today – and of the 21st century, full stop.”

Tensions between the forces of the Sudanese Army (SAF) and the paramilitary group the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) erupted into violence, with fighting beginning on the 15th of April 2023. Since then, the UN refugee agency estimates that more than 12 million people have been displaced. Millions have faced famine. There has been widespread use of sexual violence as a weapon of war. Hundreds of thousands have been killed. Since the first shots were fired three years ago, Sudan has become the site of the worst humanitarian crisis in the world today – and of the 21st century, full stop.

You would be hard pressed to learn this studying the international community’s responses. The attitude of looking away implies that the conflict is detached from our concerns, our politics, here in the UK. It suggests that Sudan is so far away, so foreign, as to be essentially sealed from us. This is wrong morally, and practically too.

Some of the many millions displaced by this conflict have sought refuge on our shores, and those of our nearer neighbours. As well as people, commerce also flows through Sudan. Chains of exchange – money, arms, gold – bring the conflict from the killing fields of El Fasher to the malls of the UAE and back home to the UK. Several of those sanctioned by the government for providing military hardware or mercenary support had business based in the UK. Online, too, the conflict comes home: both belligerents use TikToks of child soldiers for recruitment and promotion. The Sudanese diaspora and their supporters also face violence here in the UK, including one incident at the end of last year when an expert on Sudan was assaulted at a public event by pro-SAF audience members.

The UK cannot lapse into a passive acceptance of the situation in Sudan that borders on complicity. There is a renewed energy in the Foreign Office, and this week international leaders – including the foreign secretary Yvette Cooper – will meet in Berlin. Their relentless focus must be on civilian protection. As things stand on this anniversary, there will be more atrocities like those that took place in El Fasher and Zamzam: slow-motion Srebrenicas in front of our eyes should we choose to look.

The next anniversary of this conflict must be different to the last two – a moment of remembrance and reflection, not yet another snapshot of the horrors of war. In April 2027, I hope we will be looking backwards in commemoration of the many thousands who have died – and not forwards, as we do today, to the many whose lives this conflict may yet claim.

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Anneliese Dodds served as the development minister and minister for women and equalities between July 2024 and February 2025, before quitting government over Keir Starmer’s cuts to foreign aid. She also sat as the shadow chancellor for a year when Labour was in opposition.

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Sinister moves made to criminalise defence of international law

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Keir Starmer speech at Labour Friends of Israel

Keir Starmer speech at Labour Friends of Israel

Labour want to make defending international law a criminal offence, as they appear set to criminalise any criticism of Israel’s actions. Bearing in mind that Zionist Israel has long been conducting a genocide of Palestinians, escalated further since October 7th 2023, the continuation of this blatant politicisation of the UK’s criminal justice system should terrify us all.

Frankly, this move by Labour would be pretty similar to making criticism of the Nazi regime in 1930s Germany a criminal offence in the UK. Nevertheless, it would hardly be surprising if people at the time made efforts to push exactly that outcome, given that the Daily Mail openly aligned itself with Hitler’s camp and has been an enthusiastic supporter of antisemitism generally.

But the Holocaust showed the world where that path leads, and the thought of British leaders enforcing this kind of draconian authoritarianism back then should send shivers down the spine.

As a result, no one should play naive to lawfare at the behest of a hostile state committing genocide against Palestinian men, women and children.

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Ignoring international law has consequences

Alex Hearn, member of the campaign group ‘Labour against Antisemitism’, has seen fit to push the electoral commission to investigate alleged antisemitism in campaign material from the local elections. The offending material is a flyer quoting Keir Starmer’s enabling, and legally ignorant, statement, which he made when Israel was escalating its military aggression and illegal siege on Gaza.

During this siege, Israel cut off access to food, water and medicine to Palestinians, leaving them bombarded, deprived, displaced, and completely without the resources they desperately needed to survive.

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However, according to ‘Labour against Antisemitism’, exposing this complicity in the actions and words of the UK PM amounts to antisemitism. Once again, we are watching Zionists continue their attempt to criminalise the defence of international law.

In response, Owen Jones has posted on X:

Deranged.

The claim here is that it’s antisemitic to accuse Labour of complicity in genocide.

It’s clear where this is heading:

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They want to make it illegal to criticise Israel’s crimes.

Protecting Zionist Israel is what the British government do

This isn’t the first time that the UK government has sought to shield Israel from legal accountability.

Discussing the intimidation and threats made by then-foreign secretary David Cameron, our own Skwawkbox wrote:

A Freedom of Information Act (FOI) request has forced the Foreign Office (FCDO) to admit – finally – that then-foreign secretary David Cameron called International Criminal Court (ICC) chief prosecutor Karim Khan to threaten him and the ICC, and demand the withdrawal of an arrest warrant for Israeli war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu.

The FOI was filed last month by ‘Unredacted’ a University of Westminster research unit focusing on national security.

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Unredacted asked the FCDO to confirm who was present on the 23 April 2024 call to Khan. It confirmed that David Cameron was the only one. Karim Khan confirmed last month that a “senior British official” had threatened to withdraw the UK from the ICC if Khan’s application for warrants for Netanyahu and former defence minister Yoav Gallant was not withdrawn.

Furthermore, the next Foreign Secretary then worked to construct pro-Israel propaganda to seek to ‘justify’ the genocide of Palestinians.

Foreign Secretary David Lammy awarded 90% of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office’s (FCDO) entire annual budget to the Dinah Report. The authors of this highly questionable report were explicitly instructed to conclude that Hamas used sexual violence as a weapon of war on October 7th, 2023.

We wrote at the time:

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This blatant bias and conflict of interest should come as little to no surprise. Ever since October 7th, we have seen a concerted push by Israel and its lobby groups to manipulate data, grief and material facts in their own interest. All whilst conveniently and simultaneously demonising Palestinian resistance. If we have learned anything through this horrific 2.5 years, it is the reminder that every life matters and civilians should not pay the price for the sins of the powerful.

Going further, we have also learned in the most disgusting way that the saying ‘lies, damn lies and statistics’ applies all the more in times of conflict. Especially when we consider Israeli and western tactics to manufacture consent for what has been one of the most brutal bombing campaigns the world has ever seen. On the backs of the lack of condemnation afforded by the UK government for crimes against Palestinians, our governments complicity in Israel’s crimes cannot be ignored.

No evidence, no crime – apparently

Recently, we also learned that the FCDO was closing its ‘war crime monitoring unit’, a move which conveniently enables the British government to avoid documenting evidence of the egregious crimes being inflicted on Palestinian civilians.

Exposing this serious threat to international law and the rule of law itself, we wrote:

The closure also means the government is losing access to a database of at least 26,000 verified incidents involving Israel and its military in occupied Palestine and Lebanon, committed since the start of Israel’s Gaza genocide in October 2023. The ‘lost’ evidence includes videos, photographs, satellite imagery and other media – all mapped to the locations in which the atrocities were perpetrated.

‘Losing’, of course, may not be the correct word. The Starmer government has shown less than zero interest in holding Israel to account for its crimes. Starmer’s previous gig as head of the Crown Prosecution Service was also marked by conveniently disappearing evidence relating to notorious crimes and his involvement in decisions not to prosecute.

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Certainly this ‘loss’ is very convenient for a UK police state all too eager to continue collaborating in Israel’s genocide, crimes against humanity, land theft and illegal wars of aggression. Human Rights Watch director Yasmine Ahmed described the decision to throw away evidence of Israel’s crimes as “damning”.

Lawfare at play to protect Zionists

Zionist and pro-Israel groups have long been using lawfare to shut down dissent against the genocidal state. The European Legal Support Center has catalogued these sinister attempts to subvert law in their database, suitably named ‘Britain’s Index of Repression’.

Subsequently, this apparent move to make ‘calling a spade a spade’ a criminal offence, whilst speeding up the prosecution of hate crimes, is deeply terrifying. After all, authorities will clearly use it to shut down and criminalise anti-Zionists, while continuing to ignore genuine antisemitism among Reform UK councillors and Nigel Farage himself.

British people must wake up sharpish and stop this before it is too late.

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Featured image via the Canary

By Maddison Wheeldon

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Politics Home | Labour Mayor Says Andy Burnham’s Return To Government Should Not Be Blocked

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Labour Mayor Says Andy Burnham's Return To Government Should Not Be Blocked
Labour Mayor Says Andy Burnham's Return To Government Should Not Be Blocked

Andy Burnham is reportedly meeting with MPs today (Alamy)


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Exclusive: Labour mayor Helen Godwin has told PoliticsHome that Manchester mayor Andy Burnham “should not be blocked” from returning to Westminster and that she “wouldn’t dislike the idea” of Burnham being Prime Minister.

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Speaking to PoliticsHome, Godwin, who was elected mayor for the West of England last year, said that she “does not know” if Keir Stamer can deliver the reset government needs. 

She added that she did not know if Starmer would lead Labour into the next election.

PoliticsHome has reported that Labour leadership hopeful Burnham is to meet Labour MPs in London today in the hope of ensuring there is a timetable for a leadership change that would allow him a run.

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Burnham is one of the candidates favoured among Labour MPs to replace Starmer, but he would first have to return to Parliament as an MP.

On Tuesday afternoon, pressure was growing on Starmer to resign. Two ministers have so far resigned, and four junior aides quit on Monday evening. 

Starmer attempted another reset on Monday at a speech in London, where he set out plans for the nationalisation of British steel and for closer ties to the European Union. 

Speaking to PoliticsHome on Tuesday afternoon as resignations continued, Godwin said: “The reset, if it’s coming, needs to mean something to people. And I don’t think, as yet, we’ve been able to get that.”

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Helen Godwin
Helen Godwin was elected Mayor of the West of England in 2025 (Alamy)

Asked if Starmer can deliver that reset, Godwin replied: “I don’t know.”

PoliticsHome also asked Godwin if Starmer would lead Labour into the next election, to which she also responded: “I don’t know.”

On Burnham, Godwin said: “He would be great if he was an MP again. I feel he gets us. He speaks really well. He connects with people down here,  he’s obviously mayor of Manchester, and does a brilliant job at that. But people down here seem to connect with him as well. We should have all our best people in government.

“If that’s where he wants to be, I don’t think he should be blocked.”

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Burnham put himself forward for candidate selection for the Gorton and Denton by-election this year but was blocked by the NEC.

Godwin said she “wouldn’t dislike the idea of Burnham as Prime Minister,” if Starmer were to step down.

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What Did Emma Willis Host Before Strictly Come Dancing? 7 Forgotten Shows

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Emma Willis with the cast of Girlfri3nds

Emma Willis has now been a staple on British TV for more than 20 years.

The presenter is best known for hosting shows like Big Brother, The Voice and The Circle, and was recently introduced to a more international audience when she and her husband Matt Willis began presenting Netflix’s British iteration of the dating series Love Is Blind.

If rumours are to be believed, she’s since landed the biggest gig of her career, as she’s set to take over as the new host of Strictly Come Dancing, taking over from Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman.

But while you’ve probably watched Emma on some of the UK’s biggest reality shows over the years, there are plenty of other presenting gigs throughout her extensive resume you might have completely forgotten about.

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Here are the ones we dug through the archives to find…

The Hot Desk (2008)

Emma got her start on music TV in the early 2000s, presenting segments for MTV as well as the UK version of the iconic TRL.

In 2008, Emma joined another British music show called The Hot Desk, whose other hosts included the likes of All Saints’ Nicole Appleton and Melanie Blatt, Laura Whitmore, Sarah Jane Crawford and Alice Levine.

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At the end of each interview, the host would ask their celebrity guest to sign the “Hot Desk” with a pen (isn’t that just oh-so 2010s?).

One of Emma’s biggest interviews from that era was with a young and bright-eyed One Direction on The Hot Desk in 2011, a year after they came third on The X Factor.

Live From Studio Five (2010)

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In the peak of 2000s gossip mags and celebrity interview panels, there were plenty of shows out there like Live From Studio Five.

Emma joined a line-up of co-presenters – including Brian Dowling and Ian Wright – who would conduct interviews and discuss topical issues, celebrity gossip and big news stories.

However it didn’t do too well with ratings, and ultimately came off the air after around a year and a half.

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Girlfri3nds (2012)

Even as far back as 2012, Emma was clearly discovering that she had a bit of a knack when it came to reality TV.

Emma Willis with the cast of Girlfri3nds
Emma Willis with the cast of Girlfri3nds

She presented two seasons of this British show about single women looking for love, which saw three pals searching for their ideal guy out of 100 auditioning men.

Prize Island (2013)

Emma co-presented this sunny series alongside Alexander Armstrong back in 2013.

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Prize Island placed four pairs on an Island (obv) off the coast of Mozambique, with each team participating in rounds of games to uncover prizes, ranging from a TV to a luxury holiday.

At the time, there were reports that it might not air at all, after it looked set to rival (ironically) The Voice. The show ultimately only last six episodes across one season.

Prized Apart (2015)

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Another oft-overlooked game show from Emma’s TV past was the ambitious Prized Apart.

Prized Apart saw two groups of adventurous hopefuls trying out assorted physical tasks in Morocco (overseen by Emma’s former The Voice co-host Reggie Yates), putting their teamwork to the test in the hope of landing a hefty cash prize of £100K.

After facing criticism due to its convoluted gameplay (not to mention its carbon footprint, as contestants were repeatedly flown backwards and forwards depending on how they’d performed in tasks) it was axed after one season.

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The Brit Awards (2017)

Do you remember that time Emma hosted a whole Brit Awards? Honestly, we’d forgotten too.

Back in 2017 she took to the stage for the UK’s biggest night in music alongside co-host Dermot O’Leary.

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Dermot and Emma were brought in as somewhat last-minute replacements when the night’s original host, Michael Bublé, was forced to back out due to his son’s illness.

That year’s Brits saw One Direction, Little Mix, The 1975 and more take home awards.

Emma Willis: Delivering Babies (2019)

This one marked a huge change for the presenter as she swapped reality TV and game shows for a hospital maternity unit.

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Across the course of four seasons, she worked on a labour ward working NHS hours while training to be a maternity care assistant.

Whether she was making beds, cleaning floors or offering support during births, it made for pretty emotional viewing.

Strictly Come Dancing returns to our screens in the autumn.

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Which Ministers Have Resigned Amid Calls For Starmer To Quit?

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Which Ministers Have Resigned Amid Calls For Starmer To Quit?

A growing list of ministers have resigned from government and urged Keir Starmer to quit as discontent towards the prime minister grows.

Labour is in turmoil after voters gave the party a beating at the elections in England, Wales and Scotland last week.

More than 80 MPs have publicly called for the prime minister to resign as a result – along with multiple ministers.

None of his rivals have publicly challenged Starmer yet and 20% of the Parliamentary Labour Party (81 MPs) need to rally behind one replacement candidate to formally trigger a leadership contest.

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However, ministerial resignations make it much harder for the PM to run a government as it undermines his authority.

Cabinet ministers have reportedly been urging the PM to resign behind the scenes, too.

Even so, Starmer has dug in so far and has insisted he is getting on with the job of governing.

Here’s a breakdown of all the ministerial resignations so far…

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1. Miatta Fahnbulleh

The junior minister for devolution, faith and communities, Fahnbulleh was the first minister out the block on Tuesday.

She told Starmer: “The public does not believe that you can lead this change – and nor do I.”

In a letter to the prime minister shared on social media, she said: “We have not acted with the vision, pace and ambition that our mandate for change demands of us. Nor have we governed as Labour Party clear about our values and strong in our convictions.”

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She added: “Therefore I urge you to do the right thing for the country and the Party and set a timetable for an orderly transition so that a new team can deliver the change we promised the country.”

According to the BBC, she has already backed Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham to take over No.10 – even though he needs to win a seat in parliament first.

2. Jess Phillips

Phillips quit as safeguarding minister with a brutal letter of resignation to Starmer.

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An ally to Wes Streeting, the health secretary widely expected to challenge Starmer, she wrote: “I think you are a good man fundamentally, who cares about the right things however I have seen first-hand how that is not enough.

“The desire not to have an argument means we rarely make an argument, leaving opportunities for progress stalled and delayed.”

She continued: “Labour governments come around rarely is the constant refrain at the moment. It’s true they are precious.

“Every Labour government in my and my family’s lifetime has forged progress that changed our country and the world for the better. I know you care deeply, but deeds, not words are what matter.

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“I’m not sure we are grasping this rare opportunity with the gusto that’s needed and I cannot keep waiting around for a crisis to push for faster progress.”

She added: “Politics is as much about feelings as policy, especially at the moment.

“I want a Labour government to work and I will strive as I always have for its success and popularity, but I’m not seeing the change I think I, and the country expect, and so cannot continue to serve as a minister under the current leadership.”

3. Alex Davies-Jones

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The minister for victims and violence against women and girls handed in her resignation letter on Tuesday afternoon.

Davies-Jones said the scale of losses in the Senedd and across the UK have been “catastrophic”.

“The country has spoken and we must listen,” she said. “We waited fourteen years to get into power and change the lives of those we represent.

“The time now is for bold, radical action. I know you to be a good and honest man. But in my heart are my constituents, the victims I have had the honour of working with every day, including the Hillsborough victims and their families, and all those who demand better of us.

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“I implore you to act in the country’s interest and set out a timetable for your departure.”

Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.

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Politics Home Article | Jess Phillips Resigns As Home Office Minister

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Jess Phillips Resigns As Home Office Minister
Jess Phillips Resigns As Home Office Minister

(Alamy)


2 min read

Jess Phillips has resigned as a minister, claiming she has “given up” believing the prime minister was doing enough to clamp down on violence against women and girls.

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Phillips, the safeguarding minister, wrote that she believed Starmer was a “decent man” but no longer had confidence in him.

She is the most senior minister to date to resign from the government so far. The former minister is also a close ally of Wes Streeting, who is expected to run for the Labour leadership if Starmer steps down and a contest takes place. 

Phillips’s resignation plunges the prime minister into further chaos after 86 MPs have called for him to resign and set out a timetable for his departure.

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The letter, first published by SkyNews, claimed the prime minister had no “desire to have an argument”, which left opportunities for progress on clamping down on violence against women and girls “stalled and delayed.”

It read: “I think you are a good man fundamentally, who cares about the right things. However I have seen first-hand how that is not enough. The desire not to have an argument means we rarely make an argument, leaving opportunities for progress stalled and delayed.

“Over a year ago I presented solutions, long worked on by brilliant civil servants that would end the ability for children in the UK to take naked images of themselves. 91 per cent of online child sex abuse is self-generated by children groomed, tricked and exploited into abuse.

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“The technology exists to stop children being able to take naked images of themselves.

“We could make this possible on every phone and device in the country. We could stop this abuse. It has taken me a year to get you to agree to even threaten to legislate in this space. Not legislate, just threaten. This is the definition of incremental change. Nothing bold about it.”

Phillips added: The announcement was meant to be in March, I’m still on a promise this will happen in June, I’ve given up believing it. How many children were left without a safety net in the time we dully dallied and worried about tech bosses?

“This is just one example.”

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Phillips said she wanted a Labour government to work but she could not see the change the country expected and could not serve as a minister under the present leadership.

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WATCH: Netanyahu begs then tries to con China into ending support for Iran

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sits across from CBS News reporter Major Garrett in a living room setting with the standing lights shining on them

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sits across from CBS News reporter Major Garrett in a living room setting with the standing lights shining on them

Wanted Israeli war criminal, Benjamin Netanyahu, has been given yet another soft-soap interview by Zionist-run CBS.

In it, Netanyahu railed about the US public’s supposed hate for Israel but then became ‘panicked’, first begging and then tried to con Israel into ending its support for Iran.

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China has supplied Iran with high-grade satellite intel on the positions of US and Israeli aggressors. It has reportedly agreed the sale of new, modern warplanes, is buying Iranian oil and has moved its ships into position to impede illegal US operations.

And that support is proving highly effective. Iran is reported to have damaged and forced down two more of the US and Israel’s advanced F-35 strike aircraft, and three US warships. Hence, presumably, Netanyahu’s desperation.

And desperate it was.

Netanyahu and his feeble display

The genocider tried to claim that China’s access to energy resources would be more secure with Iran defeated and the US/Israel in charge of the region. But it’s an open secret, admitted even by alleged western proxies, that China, and strangling its supply of resources, is the ultimate target of the US-Israel war of aggression on Iran.

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It was a feeble display from the usually arrogant criminal:

Featured image via CBS News

By Skwawkbox

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Politics Home | Andy Burnham Meets MPs In London As Manchester Mayor Sets Sights On Number 10

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Andy Burnham Meets MPs In London As Manchester Mayor Sets Sights On Number 10
Andy Burnham Meets MPs In London As Manchester Mayor Sets Sights On Number 10

Manchester mayor and Labour leadership hopeful Andy Burnham is meeting with MPs in London to plan a route to Number 10. (Alamy)


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Exclusive: Manchester mayor and Labour leadership hopeful Andy Burnham will meet Labour MPs in London today ahead of plans to announce a potential seat that will give him a route to Number 10.

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PoliticsHome understands Burnham, who was sighted in London on Tuesday, is meeting with MPs to get out ahead of Health Secretary and leadership hopeful Wes Streeting – as well as ensuring there is a timetable that allows Burnham to stand. 

It comes as pressure grows on Prime Minister Keir Starmer to resign following a disastrous set of local election results which saw the party lose around 1,500 councillors and lose control of the Welsh Senedd for the first time. 

Almost 100 Labour MPs have now called for the Prime Minister’s departure, with Streeting and Burnham among Labour MPs favoured candidates to replace Starmer. 

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However Burnham, who currently serves as Manchester’s mayor and was blocked from standing from an MP several months ago, is not a sitting MP – making his route to Number 10 more drawn out. 

PoliticsHome understands Burnham’s camp is set to make an announcement later today on a potential seat for the mayor to stand in, paving a route for him to Number 10. 

Additional reporting by Harriet Symonds. 

 

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Labour Leadership Contenders To Replace Keir Starmer

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Andy Burnham the Mayor of Manchester arrives a fringe meeting during the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool, England, Sept. 29, 2025.

Keir Starmer may have vowed to fight on this morning – but the smart money is still on him having to leave 10 Downing Street sooner rather than later.

The prime minister told his cabinet to get on with running the country as he called on his leadership rivals to put up or shut up.

Starmer loyalists Peter Kyle, Pat McFadden, Liz Kendall and Steve Reed than took the highly unusual step of speaking to the media in support of the PM after the cabinet meeting ended.

Nevertheless, the number of Labour MPs calling on the prime minister to quit in the wake of last week’s local election drubbing now stands at over 80, while junior minister Miatta Fahnbulleh has also resigned.

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Under Labour Party rules, a challenger to the party leader must get the support of one-fifth of its MPs to trigger a contest, meaning they would currently need the backing of 81 of their colleagues.

Here, HuffPost UK looks at the likely runners and riders in the race to replace the PM.

Andy Burnham

Burnham was an MP until 2017, and during his 16 years in parliament served as a junior minister under Tony Blair and in Gordon Brown’s cabinet. He also tries and failed on two occasions to be elected Labour leader.

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In the nine years since he quit Westminster, he has been the mayor of Greater Manchester, during which time his stock has continued to rise.

He is undoubtedly the most popular Labour politician in the country, which is confirmed by the fact he was re-elected in 2021 and 2024.

However, he cannot challenge the Labour leadership until he is an MP again.

He tried to come back earlier this year but was blocked by Labour’s national executive committee (NEC) from standing as the party’s candidate in the Gorton and Denton by-election, which was won by the Green Party.

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Burnham needs to find a Labour MP in a safe seat, most likely in the north-west, who will agree to trigger a by-election by standing down, and then persuade the NEC to let him run this time.

And despite his popularity, it’s by no means certain that he would even be re-elected, given Labour’s current standing in the opinion polls.

Bookies’ odds of being next leader: 11/5

 Andy Burnham the Mayor of Manchester arrives a fringe meeting during the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool, England, Sept. 29, 2025.
Andy Burnham the Mayor of Manchester arrives a fringe meeting during the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool, England, Sept. 29, 2025.

Wes Streeting

It is no secret that the Streeting covets Starmer’s job, but he does not want to be the one who wields the dagger that brings him down.

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The hugely ambitious health secretary, who became an MP on the same day as Starmer in 2015, is Labour’s best communicator, something which has won him an army of admirers in the party.

However, his Blairite credentials have made him something of a hate figure on the left of the party, while Starmer loyalists have accused him of continually working to undermine the PM.

If he is to become leader, he needs to strike before Burnham returns to parliament, as he is unlikely to defeat him in a contest which would ultimately be decided by Labour members.

One MP told HuffPost UK: “If he doesn’t go this time, he’s done as a political force.”

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Wes Streeting, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care of the United Kingdom, arrives for a cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street in London, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026.
Wes Streeting, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care of the United Kingdom, arrives for a cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street in London, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026.

Angela Rayner

`The former deputy prime minister was forced to resign from the cabinet last year for failing to pay the correct amount of stamp duty when she bought a flat in Brighton.

His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs is still conducting its own investigation into the scandal, and most observers believe she cannot mount a leadership challenge until that is resolved.

She has been far more visible recently, however, and cannot be ruled out at this stage – especially if a contest takes place before Burnham returns and the Labour left are in need of a candidate to take on Streeting.

Angela Rayner, The UK's former Deputy Prime Minister
Angela Rayner, The UK’s former Deputy Prime Minister

Ed Miliband

The Labour leader between 2010 and 2015, Miliband led the party to a shattering general election defeat to David Cameron’s Tories that year and was forced to resign.

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After five years in the political wilderness, during which time he established a cult following online, he returned to the Labour frontbench when Starmer became leader in 2020.

Seen as a Net Zero zealot, he is bitterly opposed to issuing any new licences for oil and gas exploration in the North Sea. Starmer did try to move from the energy brief in a reshuffle last September, but Miliband refused to go and kept his job.

He is one of five cabinet ministers who have privately told Starmer to consider his position, and like Rayner could throw his hat into the ring as the soft-left candidate in any leadership contest.

Ed Miliband, Britain's Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero leaves 10 Downing Street after a cabinet meeting in London, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026
Ed Miliband, Britain’s Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero leaves 10 Downing Street after a cabinet meeting in London, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026

Yvette Cooper

Like Burnham, she also ran for the Labour leadership in 2015, but came in a distant third place as Jeremy Corbyn swept to victory.

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Another to have served in the Blair and Brown governments, she is currently foreign secretary and had been seen as a Miliband loyalist.

However, she notably did not give the PM her support in the wake of last week’s disastrous local elections, and Labour insiders say she has been on leadership manoeuvres in recent months. Could be persuaded to challenge Streeting.

Britain's Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper speaks during a news conference with Japan's Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi, after their talk in Monday, April 20, 2026, in Tokyo.
Britain’s Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper speaks during a news conference with Japan’s Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi, after their talk in Monday, April 20, 2026, in Tokyo.

Shabana Mahmood

The hardline home secretary if firmly on the Labour right, and has angered many on the party with her strict immigration policies.

Known as a straight-talker and good communicator, but her chances of being elected leader by the party’s more left-of-centre membership are slim.

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She has also told Starmer that his time in No.10 is up.

FILE - Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer, left, is reflected as Britain's Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood speaks to members of the Jewish community at the Community Security Trust (CST) in north west London, Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Carlos Jasso, Pool Photo via AP, file)
FILE – Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer, left, is reflected as Britain’s Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood speaks to members of the Jewish community at the Community Security Trust (CST) in north west London, Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025. (Carlos Jasso, Pool Photo via AP, file)

John Healey

The defence secretary also told Starmer that his time was up, but has since urged his colleagues not to bring him down.

In a post on X on Tuesday, Healey said: “More instability is not in Britain’s interest. Our full focus now must be on dealing with immediate economic & security challenges.”

Another on the soft-left of the party, he is seen as a leadership dark horse, but could be persuaded to run as a unity candidate who could help heal the party after months of bitter infighting.

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Britain's Defence Secretary John Healey speaks during the joint multinational Strait of Hormuz planning conference at Permanent Joint Headquarters in Northwood, London, Thursday, April 23, 2026.(AP Photo/Alastair Grant, Pool)
Britain’s Defence Secretary John Healey speaks during the joint multinational Strait of Hormuz planning conference at Permanent Joint Headquarters in Northwood, London, Thursday, April 23, 2026.(AP Photo/Alastair Grant, Pool)

Other names in the frame

MPs who could also be tempted to challenge for the leadership, if a contest is triggered, include defence minister Al Carns, Labour deputy leader Lucy Powell, chief secretary to the prime minister Darren Jones and education secretary Bridget Phillipson.

Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.

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Sydney Sweeney Praises ‘Cool’ Euphoria Season 3 ‘Cassie-Zilla’ Scene

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Sydney Sweeney said what she described as the "Cassie-zilla" sequence was among the "coolest" things she's ever done

As critics remain split down the middle about Sydney Sweeney’s Euphoria character’s season three journey, the actor who plays her has heaped praise on one scene showcased in the drama’s latest episode.

In Monday’s instalment, viewers saw Cassie continuing on her ascent to fame, culminating in a scene in which Sydney was seen destroying a miniature city in the style of Godzilla or Attack Of The 50 Foot Woman.

“The Cassie-zilla sequence was probably the coolest thing I’ve ever done,” the Emmy winner enthused in a behind-the-scenes video.

Sydney Sweeney said what she described as the "Cassie-zilla" sequence was among the "coolest" things she's ever done
Sydney Sweeney said what she described as the “Cassie-zilla” sequence was among the “coolest” things she’s ever done

As Euphoria creator Sam Levinson opened up about how it took around a year to accurately recreate Los Angeles in miniature form, Sydney added: “The details were unbelievable. There were trees and cars and the buildings were my size.”

She added: “I think, for Cassie, she knows what she’s chasing and what she’s going to sacrifice to give herself over to Hollywood.”

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After a time-jump since season two, Euphoria fans were reintroduced to Cassie earlier this year at a very different stage of her life, having turned to OnlyFans modelling to pay for her wedding to Jacob Elordi’s Nate.

Over the course of the season so far, Cassie’s OnlyFans shoots have become increasingly more extreme, which has been met with alarm from some critics, who have branded them “degrading”, “horrible” and comparable to a “humiliation ritual” for the former White Lotus star.

Sydney herself has long defended Euphoria’s on-screen nudity and sex scenes, calling out the “double standard” around the way male and female actors who have appeared naked on screen are treated.

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“I don’t think as many people took me seriously in Euphoria because I took my shirt off,” she told Cosmopolitan in 2022. “There’s such a double standard. I really hope I can have a little part in changing that.”

During another interview with The Independent, she noted: “When a guy has a sex scene or shows his body, he still wins awards and gets praise. But the moment a girl does it, it’s completely different.”

“I’ve never felt like Sam has pushed it on me or was trying to get a nude scene into an HBO show,” she also insisted. “When I didn’t want to do it, he didn’t make me.”

Euphoria continues on Mondays on Sky, Now and HBO Max in the UK.

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How Labour lost London – spiked

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How Labour lost London

While the embattled UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, has vowed to stay on in post, there is no doubt that much of the capital has turned its back on him and the Labour Party he leads.

The elections across London last week ushered in a new era for the capital. Labour’s traditional electoral dominance in the city has been replaced by a fragmented political landscape – six parties control at least one London borough for the first time in the capital’s history. Labour’s loss of a remarkable 459 councillors in London wasn’t a bloody nose as much as it was a bloodbath. But who were the main beneficiaries of this spectacular anti-Labour revolt in the capital?

There is no doubt that in multicultural and cosmopolitan London, the Green Party is on the march. Lewisham is now the Green capital of urban England, with the party taking control of the council in spectacular fashion by gaining 40 councillors. In addition, the Green Party’s Liam Shrivastava won the mayoral election in the borough, finishing 5,000 votes ahead of Labour rival Amanda De Ryk. For the first time, Lewisham has a non-Labour mayor.

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Labour’s once-loyal municipalities fell like dominoes. It also lost control of Lambeth, losing 32 councillors (with the Greens gaining 27 in the process), with no party now having an overall majority. It was a similar story in Southwark. Following the last general election, south London emerged as Labour’s modern British heartland – the Greens, however, clearly had other ideas.

The Green Party also won control of other London boroughs, such as Hackney, where it matched its performance in Lewisham by gaining 38 councillors. It also won the mayoralty in Hackney, with Green Party candidate Zoë Garbett defeating her Labour challenger, Caroline Woodley, by nearly 9,000 votes. The Greens wrestled control of Waltham Forest from Labour, gaining 31 councillors (with Labour losing 32).

There was also a Green surge in Haringey, with Labour losing control of the council as a result. Labour could once rely on urban inner-city London areas with relatively high black populations – but in a modern era where traditional loyalties are fraying, this is no longer the case.

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Speaking of the fraying of traditional loyalties, like many other parts of the country, a significant portion of London’s Muslim voters have clearly decided to reject Labour. In Newham, Labour lost control of the council and 38 councillors in the process, while the Islamopopulist Newham Independents gained 24, and the Greens 14. Muslim independent candidates had a field day in wards such as Boleyn, East Ham and Little Ilford. Labour’s Forhad Hussain only won the mayoral election in Newham because the Newham Independents and Green Party essentially split the anti-Labour vote.

In neighbouring Tower Hamlets, which has the highest concentration of Muslims by local authority in the whole of England, Aspire strengthened its grip on the council while Labour lost 14 councillors. The well-known Lutfur Rahman, who founded Aspire, won 16,000 more votes than Labour’s Sirajul Islam, who finished a very distant second. In east London, there was quite the Islamopopulist surge.

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One of the major takeaways from the London elections is the fact that Labour can no longer depend on old-fashioned modes of political engagement, and use traditional faith-based authority to secure minority votes. The collapse of patronage networks means Labour is being left behind by more dynamic rivals who are better able to mobilise and organise on the ground.

In some parts of the capital, Labour is being pushed to the margins of local civic life. If the Green Party and independent Islamopopulists decide to join forces, it could get even worse for Labour in London – and beyond.

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Rakib Ehsan is the author of Beyond Grievance: What the Left Gets Wrong about Ethnic Minorities, which is available to order on Amazon.

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