Politics
Antony Davies: Badenoch is finding her stride, and Reform’s theatre is a gift to the Conservatives
Antony David Davies FRSA is a historian and commentator whose work explores identity, governance, and the politics of trust.
I have been openly critical of Kemi Badenoch, not in the casual, factional way that passes for comment in Westminster, but on the only question that matters, whether she could project the discipline and seriousness required of a Prime Minister in waiting.
In recent weeks, I have found myself revising that judgement. Not because she has performed a sudden ideological pirouette, but because her tone is tightening into something rarer than it should be in British politics, a preference for grown-up argument over viral commotion. That matters, because the country is exhausted, and the centre right cannot rebuild itself on theatrics. It must rebuild on credibility.
I wrote last year that Reform UK’s rise was driven less by a coherent programme than by voter despair, by the sense that everyday Britain is being managed badly and spoken to worse. That diagnosis still holds. But I am increasingly hearing something else too, voters who flirted with Reform are becoming more open-eyed about what it actually is, a shallow razzmatazz show, satisfying as protest, thin as a proposition for government.
The most revealing political conversations rarely happen at conferences. They happen in ordinary places where people speak without trying to win points, in queue-side grumbles, in family group chats, in that resigned national tone of “What’s the point?” Reform is still invoked, but increasingly as a mood rather than a plan. People mention it as a warning shot, a way of saying, “Do not take me for granted.” But the moment you ask the follow-up question, the one adults ask, the conversation changes.
“Alright then, what would they actually do?” Who runs departments, who negotiates budgets, who carries policy through the civil service machine, who stands at the Despatch Box when slogans collide with arithmetic? When voters start asking those questions, protest politics begins to lose its magic. That is what I am hearing more often now, not admiration, but doubt, not worship, but impatience with a politics that performs anger rather than resolves it. If Badenoch is finding her stride, Conservatives should not chase Reform. They should outgrow it.
Reform benefits from a structural fact.
Voters will tolerate almost anything from a party that does not have to govern. It can promise without pricing, provoke without repairing, posture without consequence. That is not a moral condemnation. It is the advantage of permanent opposition. It is why Reform can run on vibes and indignation while never having to convert slogans into systems. This is also where Conservatives lost their footing.
Too often they behaved as if they could borrow insurgent language and still retain governing authority. They cannot. The centre right does not recover by becoming angrier. It recovers by becoming more credible, and that is why the Conservative defections to Reform, painful as they were in the short term, may yet prove a blessing in disguise.
Recent months have seen a steady trickle of high-profile Conservative figures moving to Reform, underlining that a portion of the right is choosing insurgency over the burdens of office. In that sense, the defections are not merely a threat. They are a clarifying force.
Politics occasionally requires sorting. A party cannot be both a governing force and an outlet for permanent grievance. That arrangement produces incoherence, because every difficult decision becomes a betrayal and every compromise becomes corruption. Defections have helped draw a clearer boundary between two political cultures, one that accepts the burden of government, and one that thrives on the thrill of opposition. Badenoch does not need to chase every defector. She needs to define the party that remains, as the party that intends to govern again, seriously.
My scepticism about Badenoch has not been about ideology. Conservatives are a broad church. My concern has been whether she would be tempted into the easy rhythms of modern politics, permanent confrontation, permanent provocation, applause as a substitute for persuasion. What has impressed me recently is not gaffe-free performance, which is a low bar, but a tightening in her message and a seriousness that does not feel performative. She sounds more like someone preparing to carry responsibility, not simply land blows.
If the Conservative Party is to recover, it will not do so through endless micro-arguments about who said what on which channel. It will do so by offering something Reform cannot offer, a plausible route from frustration to a functioning state.
If Badenoch wants to convert momentum into trust, she should make competence the organising principle. Competence is what respect looks like in practice. That means choosing a small number of priorities and pursuing them with clarity. Public service delivery, spend honestly, fix procurement, stabilise workforces, and be accountable for outcomes. Law and order, visible policing and swifter justice are not nostalgia, they are the foundations of social confidence. Borders and migration, competence not theatre, control, lawfulness, speed, and enforcement that actually happens. If Conservatives focus on these, they do not merely argue with Reform. They make Reform look unserious, because they remind voters that anger is not an administrative plan.
There is also a constitutional seriousness the party must recover, and it begins with the Union. A Conservative Party that wishes to govern the United Kingdom cannot speak as though the UK is simply England with administrative add-ons. In Wales and Scotland in particular, unionism has too often been reduced to a badge rather than a programme. A serious centre right must speak to devolved realities with respect. It must show that the Union is about shared standards and shared institutional strength, not occasional visits and predictable slogans.
Reform will remain a pressure valve for public anger as long as the established parties look incapable of competence. But the public is not permanently captive to razzmatazz. When the costs of dysfunction bite, voters return to first principles. Can you run the country? I am increasingly hearing voters move from permission, “I might vote Reform to send a message”, to doubt, “But what would they actually do?” That is the moment when protest politics shrinks back towards its natural size.
Badenoch’s task is not to compete with Reform’s theatre. It is to make the Conservative Party the obvious home for those who want change without chaos, discipline without dullness, and a state that works again. If she continues to find her stride, and if the party around her matches that seriousness, then the defections to Reform will look, in hindsight, like a necessary clearing of the fog, not a defeat, but a sharpening, and in politics, sharpening is the beginning of recovery.
Politics
Simon’s Sketch: Punch the Monkey Tries on a Gorilla Suit for PMQs
What a sight the Treasury bench made. The lost souls sat in a particular purgatory, not actually dead but lacking any vital signs. Rusty Reeves was possibly on the edge of another melting moment (it was too much to hope for). Lisa Nandy, setting the theme, stared into Ed Miliband’s abyss. Who knows what horrors they…
Politics
Chagos Surrender Paused
Later in Hamish Falconer’s statements to the Commons, the crucial line, that US concerns are “very significant“: “We are now discussing those concerns with the United States directly. We have a process going through Parliament in relation to the treaty. We will bring that back to Parliament at the appropriate time. We are pausing for…
Politics
Jerome Mayhew: The Government’s Railways Bill is coming down, and potentially off, the tracks
Jerome Mayhew is Shadow Rail Minister and MP for Broadland and Fakenham.
Labour are botching the rollout of their Railways Bill, no matter whichever way you come at it.
Instead of siding with passengers to break down barriers to competition, they have backed their union paymasters with wholesale nationalisation. Labour should be reshaping rail to encourage private investment into improved infrastructure and rolling stock in order to refine competition and improve services for passengers.
Sadly for Labour, it doesn’t matter that there isn’t a single nationalised industry that is known for management dynamism (you try it); it doesn’t matter that privatisation has increased passenger numbers from 735m journeys a year to 1.75bn and counting; it doesn’t matter that privatisation has poured £6 billion since 2015 into upgraded rolling stock and improved services. What matters to this Labour government is the triumph of socialist dogma and union backscratching over passengers, and we will all pay the price.
The problems don’t stop with nationalisation. The Railways Bill creates Great British Railways, lumping Network Rail and nationalised train operating companies together. As a part of this Great British Railways will also take on much of the role of the independent regulator as well, marking its own homework and creating a massive conflict of interest.
GBR will be the decision maker for all applications for access to the network – from rail freight companies or other Open Access operators. In effect, GBR will be asked to decide if it wants competition. And get this, there will be no right of appeal against its decision. A blatant conflict of interest.
It’s the same with independent retailers, like Trainline, GBR is planning to go head-to-head with ticketing services, but Labour are set to prevent a level playing field for competition by restricting access to service data.
The wider rail industry is, rightly, deeply concerned about the government’s approach. Freight operators have stated, “We are really concerned about the scope and definition of the appeals function as proposed in the Bill”. Trainline has told the Government, “There is a need to be certain that the retail part of GBR will compete in the market in the same way as everybody else”.
And what about passengers? The government is making a song and dance about a new Passenger Council, which will monitor the performance of GBR. You might ask, so what? If it finds fault in GBR this Passenger Council has no enforcement powers. All it can do is provide a report to the, much diminished, Office of Rail and Road, which can ignore it or start another investigation of its own, creating confusion and delay – trademarks of this Government, this time by design. The Transport Select Committee has published a report listing its concerns about the Bill, recommending several amendments including increasing the bite of the Passenger Council.
Even disadvantaged groups are being ignored.
Whilst fare discounts for children, the elderly and the disabled are protected, Labour voted ten times against Conservative proposals for similar protection for Veterans’ and Armed Forces Family railcards as well as the Young Persons’ railcard. The minister said they have ‘no plans’ to reduce the discounts, and yet that is what they said about raising taxes before the general election. It’s what they said about the family farm tax and business property relief. It’s what they said about winter fuel payments.
Amendments to rectify these glaring errors? All voted down by Labour. In fact, the Conservative team tabled more than 180 amendments to the Bill to stand up for passengers, to give the Passenger Council proper enforcement powers, to protect the independence of the economic regulator, to give a genuine right of appeal against self-service GBR decisions, and many, many more.
The government is paralysed by chaos at the top, with a Prime Minister without the backbone to stand up to the rail unions and fight for consumers rather than the producer interest. Nationalisation is already making things worse, with discount fares already being removed in the name of “ticket simplification” and delay-repay compensation mooted to be reduced in the name of “standardisation”. Passengers get what they’re given with nationalisation, whilst train drivers get 15 per cent pay rises with no strings attached.
There is still time for genuine change to this bill, both in the Commons and then in the Lords. But the Government needs to stop and listen to the concerns of the industry. So far, we have seen no sign that they are listening at all.
Politics
Rochelle Blakeman: The populist right likes lecturing about fertility and childlessness. Conservatives should avoid it
Rochelle Blakeman is a public affairs professional, a writer and Conservative supporter.
In 2023, the global fertility rate (GFR) fell to 2.2 children per woman, below the replacement rate of 2.3. In England and Wales that same year, the TRF was at the lowest value on record – 1.44 children per woman.
In contrast to 20th century scaremongering about there being “too many people” on the planet, demographers are now concerned about a population implosion. Whilst politicians of all colours are grappling with this, the populist-right has been particularly broody.
Notably, The Independent recently unearthed a 2023 Substack article by Reform’s Matt Goodwin in which he explored ideas influenced by demographer Paul Morland on how to solve Britain’s falling birth rates. These included a “negative child benefit tax” on “those without offspring”, removing personal income tax for women with two or more children and establishing a “pro-family culture” by having a national day to celebrate families and parenthood. The paper later spotlighted a YouTube video in which Matt Goodwin said that “many women in Britain are having children far too late in life” and called on young women to be given a “biological reality check.”
Social conservatives may agree with Matt Goodwin’s sentiment, but I believe that the Conservative Party must resist the temptation to emulate a top-down, state-knows-best approach to fertility in the UK. This impulse would not only be ineffective at increasing historically low birthrates, but at odds with everything the Conservative party should stand for. Whilst the ideas in Goodwin’s Substack piece are not official Reform policy, the ideas should be challenged for the sake of argument to reiterate the importance of limiting state involvement in anyone’s personal business.
Kemi Badenoch has been effective in highlighting the Labour Government’s overreach and overspend, and so too should Conservatives be wary of the overreach and economic fantasy flirted with by Goodwin.
The prospect of a tax on the childless and scrapping income tax for those with two or more children would be inherently unfair, as the childless already contribute more to the public purse than they take out. In addition to not claiming child benefits, childless households have fewer members to use public services such as the NHS and state education. The working childless do, however, pay taxes, thereby supporting the public services that those with children likely utilise to a greater extent.
Far from creating a “pro-family culture” in Britain, Goodwin’s proposals would breed justified resentment among those with the misfortune to have such a tax imposed on them. Hard working people would be less able to enjoy their childfree years, with less disposable income to spend on holidays, hobbies or whatever else they pleased. And those aspiring to have children would have less to save up to achieve this goal, whilst watching their hard-earned money enable people who happen to already be parents reap the benefits of a disproportionate tax cut.
Aside from indulging in economic fantasy, pro-natalist populists make moralistic assumptions about having offspring which have no bearing in the messy, unpredictable real world. They imply that having or not having a child is a “choice”, as if akin to deciding which route to take on a morning walk.
It may be convenient to caricature the childless as having made a series of deliberate “choices” that enable them to live a “carefree” life. But many singletons have not consciously “chosen” to be without a partner. Many young professionals have not “chosen” to be trapped in high-pressured corporate careers with limited work life balance. People are not “choosing” to struggle to get on the housing ladder. Most poignantly, nobody “chooses” to be afflicted with a medical condition or fertility problems which may prevent them from having children.
And conversely, common knowledge reminds us that many people with children will not necessarily have planned to become parents at all.
These complex and deeply human factors highlight how flawed a reward-and-punishment approach to encouraging more births would be. It reveals the clumsiness of the populist tendency to blame low birthrates on lifestyle “choices” – usually gunning for women’s “choices” – disregarding the sheer element of luck that is involved in the panning out of anyone’s personal, romantic or family life.
The state has no place in the most personal and visceral aspects of our lives. Whilst low fertility rates do pose social and demographic challenges, these problems are surmountable without dictating to the public how we should live, and without making moral judgements about anyone’s reproductive proclivity.
Indeed, an IEA paper by family economist Clara E. Piano presents research which indicates that government intervention through financial incentives makes little to no difference to birthrates. However, there is evidence to suggest, in the context of the United States, that in areas of lower regulatory burdens in labour and childcare markets, smaller “fertility gaps” exist (the gap between the number of children a woman has and the number she would like to have) implying that in more flexible market conditions, people are more likely to achieve their family goals. This may explain the cases of Italy and Japan – two countries with strictly regulated labour markets and historically low birthrates.
The cost of housing too is a significant factor pushing couples to have children later in life than would be ideal. The Conservative party has long been divided between liberalising the planning system and protecting our green and pleasant land. But if the party is serious about helping young people to gain more control over their aspirations, it needs to reject the populist-right’s impulse to deliver biology lectures and instead offer material solutions that would make acquiring a family home more achievable. Pledging to simplify the planning system and cut red tape would be a step in the right direction.
Anyone who believes in economic and personal freedom should be concerned with the growing populist obsession with childbearing. It demonstrates an instinct to lecture the public and entertain centralist measures that would significantly interfere in personal freedom.
Conservatives who still believe in a small state, in freedom under the law and in allowing for personal choice and aspiration should resist the populist approach; they should focus on improving economic outlooks and accept that overbearing political tools are often too blunt an instrument for the nuanced, sensitive matter of fertility, children and family life.
Politics
Labour Pauses Chagos Handover Deal For More Talks With US After Trump Outburst
The government has paused its plans to hand the Chagos Islands over to Mauritius after criticism of the deal by Donald Trump.
Labour announced last year that it intended to cede sovereignty of the archipelago while paying £99 billion to lease back the UK-US military base on the largest island, Diego Garcia, for the next 99 years.
Trump initially backed the agreement but rowed back on his support in January amid a wider spat with European allies over Greenland’s sovereignty.
A phone call from Keir Starmer then convinced the president this was the “best deal” available.
But last week, Trump U-turned again, calling the plan a “blight” on the UK in an explosive social media post.
He wrote on TruthSocial that he had told the UK PM “leases are no good when it comes to countries” and that Britain was “making a big mistake by entering a 100 year lease”.
He added: “Prime minister Starmer is losing control of this important Island by claims of entities never known of before. In our opinion, they are fictitious in nature.”
The president also claimed the US might need the islands if Iran does not agree to a new nuclear deal.
Foreign office minister Hamish Falconer admitted to MPs on Wednesday that the statement from Trump was “very significant”.
He added that the government is “now discussing those concerns with the United States directly”.
“We have a process going through parliament in relation to the treaty,” the minister said. “We will bring that back to parliament at the appropriate time. We are pausing for discussions with our American counterparts.”
But a Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office spokesperson later said: “There is no pause.
“We have never set a deadline. Timings will be announced in the usual way.
“We are continuing discussions with the US, and we have been clear we will not proceed without their support.”
The government has always insisted that this Chagos agreement is the “only way to guarantee the long-term future of this vital military base”.
The Conservatives’ shadow foreign secretary Priti Patel said: “The Chagos Surrender deal is an appalling act of betrayal. It undermines our national security and that of our allies, including the United States.
“I am in Washington lobbying senior administration figures on this issue and I am pleased the UK government has been forced to pause the legislation.
“But ministers must go further: now it is time for Keir Starmer to face reality and kill this shameful surrender once and for all before it does any more damage.”
Politics
The House | “Gripping”: Baroness Bryan reviews ‘Troublemaker: The Fierce, Unruly Life of Jessica Mitford’

The Mitford sisters, 1935: (l-r) Jessica, Nancy, Diana, Unity and Pamela | Image by: Pictorial Press Ltd / Alamy
4 min read
An engaging account of the life of the most adventurous of the six Mitford sisters, this may be a weighty tome but is well worth the effort
There were six Mitford sisters. Nancy achieved fame as a chronicler of the upper classes. Pamela lived for many years in Switzerland with her female partner. Diana married the most notorious British fascist, Oswald Mosley, and served time with him in prison. Unity was a dear friend of Adolf Hitler and tried to kill herself in despair as the war swung towards the allies. Deborah married into one of England’s most influential families, becoming Duchess of Devonshire. It was, however, Jessica – the subject of this book – who had the most adventurous life of them all.
It is said of the Mitford family that you couldn’t have made them up. They were beyond fiction. Carla Kaplan gives a real sense of this and helps the reader follow the confusions of the various names they used, both in their own secret language and in their dealings with others. Throughout the book, Jessica is Decca.
Out of the six, it was Decca who caused the most dismay. First by running away with her second cousin Esmond Romilly to fight in the Spanish civil war, returning to live in the Rotherhithe docks in London; and then going to the USA and becoming an active member of the Communist Party. Her antisemitic family could tolerate almost anything but her second marriage to a Jewish fellow-communist caused the greatest rift.
She had hoped her first marriage would be “terrific fun”. She and Esmond went to the USA with several letters of introduction and cadged off these acquaintances – borrowing their homes, their clothes and giving nothing back but delightful company.
Her closest friend in the US was probably Maya Angelou
Their short married life had two tragedies: the death of their daughter due to measles, and the death of Esmond, who went missing-in-action in the Second World War after enlisting in the Canadian Royal Air Force. When Winston Churchill came to Washington to meet president Roosevelt, he sent for Decca so he could commiserate on her loss: she was a distant cousin and Esmond was his nephew. At the time she had no money and was struggling to keep herself and their second daughter, but was entertained at the White House. This was typical of the contradiction between her two worlds.
Decca had existed on the goodwill of her friends, but once America entered the war, she was able to find work in one of the wartime regulators – the Office of Price Administration – where she became an expert in exposing bad practice. She was an active trade unionist and member of the Communist Party. She moved to San Francisco where she married civil rights lawyer Bob Treuhaft and started the second part of her adventurous life.
After the awful death of their young son, she got to see the hideous side of the “death industry” in the US. Writing The American Way of Death allowed her to vent her anger about the way funeral homes used unscrupulous practices to take advantage of grieving families. This began her career as a “muckraking” writer. She and Bob survived the McCarthy period and stayed active in the Communist Party and campaigns for civil rights.
The list of Decca’s friends in both the UK and the USA reads like a Who’s Who of the best-known names in politics and culture. Her closest friend in the US was probably Maya Angelou. The two would sing a duet of her favourite song, Right Said Fred.
The biography is over 400 pages but with an additional 150 pages of acknowledgements, notes, bibliography, an index and many pages of delightful photographs, it is a weighty tome. But it is well worth the effort as Kaplan manages to immediately engage the reader in this gripping life story.
Baroness Bryan is a former Labour peer
Troublemaker: The Fierce, Unruly Life of Jessica Mitford
By: Carla Kaplan
Publisher: Hurst & Co
Politics
BBC accused of fuelling BAFTAs furore
In respect to John Davidson’s request to Variety, we have referred to Tourette’s as a ‘condition’ rather than a ‘disability’
Speaking to Variety, John Davidson has been able to speak to the recent controversy at the BAFTAs which was televised on the BBC. He’s done so in the hope it will foster more understanding and awareness about Tourette’s. The BBC’s apparent editorial choice to broadcast this involuntary racist slur has unsurprisingly resulted in widespread upset. Concerningly, it has sparked heated animosity between our Black and disabled communities in the UK.
We have since learned the BBC seemingly reassured executives from Warner Bros it would not broadcast the slur.
Now, Davidson’s own words have raised further questions around the BBC’s intentions. Going further, it sparks fresh concerns that the BBC may have deliberately left this offensive incident in the cut. This carries considerable weight given the absence of other inappropriate slurs that came as a result of Davidson’s tics.
As a result, the hole the BBC has dug for itself is getting deeper by the day.
The BBC has a lot to answer for. pic.twitter.com/0dNBGMkptj
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) February 24, 2026
Davidson: “Please don’t judge me. Please understand this isn’t who I am.”
Scottish campaigner Davidson is the real-life inspiration for I Swear, a film highlighting the challenges for people with Tourette’s. Davidson had reached out to the Sinners team after the incident to offer his apology to Michael B. Jordan, Delroy Lindo, and production designer Hannah Beachler.
During his interview, he was asked how it feels to have Tourette’s. In response, Davidson gave a glimpse into how these involuntary tics have put his safety at risk as a result of the offence caused:
Very often, the media focuses on my particular type of Tourette’s, which is called coprolalia — the involuntary use of obscene or offensive language. This symptom affects 10% to 30% of people with the condition and is not a criterion for diagnosis. However, it is one of the hardest tics to manage and can be very distressing for those living with it. Many individuals report discrimination and isolation as a result.
I have been physically beaten to within an inch of my life with an iron bar after tic-ing a comment to a young woman whose boyfriend and accomplice ambushed me one evening.
Adding:
The real challenge isn’t the tics themselves, but the misconceptions surrounding them. Understanding the full range of Tourette’s helps reduce stigma and supports everyone living with the condition.
When socially unacceptable words come out, the guilt and shame on the part of the person with the condition is often unbearable and causes enormous distress. I can’t begin to explain how upset and distraught I have been as the impact from Sunday sinks in.
Davidson made clear that he has no forewarning of these tics, saying that whilst some can suppress them briefly, the very act of suppression resembles a coke bottle being shaken. Informing that the tics come like an explosion of fizzy pop, he added:
For me personally, my brain works so fast and the tics have always been so aggressive that I have no idea when they are coming or what they will be. I have almost no ability to suppress, and when the situation is stressful, I have absolutely no choice but to tic — it simply bursts out of me like a gunshot.
“I ticked perhaps 10 different offensive words on the night”
The awareness campaigner highlighted that those with the condition find these tics show up in ways that are deeply offensive for themselves. This makes the condition feel ‘spiteful’ for those living with it. Stating that it is the ‘last thing he believes’, Davidson gave examples of other tics on the night that didn’t make the BBC cut.
Of particular concern is the knowledge that apparently of 10 offensive outbursts on the night, the BBC kept just one:
For example, when the chair of BAFTA started speaking on Sunday, I shouted, “Boring.” On Sunday, Alan Cumming joked about his own sexuality and, when referencing Paddington Bear, said, “Maybe you would like to come home with me, Paddington. It wouldn’t be the first time I have taken a hairy Peruvian bear home with me.” This resulted in homophobic tics from me and led to a shout of “pedophile” that was likely triggered because Paddington Bear is a children’s character.
I would appreciate reports of the event explaining that I ticked perhaps 10 different offensive words on the night of the awards. The N-word was one of these, and I completely understand its significance in history and in the modern world, but most articles are giving the impression I shouted one single slur on Sunday.
Davidson also speaks about the poignant moment this should have been for the campaigner before effectively being sold out by the BBC. Despite all he had to overcome to be there, he positively referred to the acceptance he felt at the BAFTAs:
After living with Tourette’s for almost 40 years, I was aware of how physically and mentally difficult it would be for me to attend. I also had a serious heart operation only five weeks ago. I put every ounce of energy and concentration into being able to attend.
I was thrilled to see that on the night, everyone — including some of the most well-respected and famous people from the film world — cheered at my name and applauded. I stood and waved to show my appreciation and acknowledged that this was a significant moment in my life, finally being accepted. It started as one of the most memorable experiences of my life.
Serious questions for the BBC
This should have been a watershed moment where British society was able to learn more about the condition of Tourette’s, whilst finally reducing unwelcome stigma on those powerless to the harm it can cause. In reality, the BBC’s decision has directly worsened that deeply painful stigma. On top of the absence of other involuntary tics in the final cut, a quote from Davidson’s interview strengthens calls for intense scrutiny of the BBC. It also reinforces Labour MP Dawn Butler’s demands for transparency in its decision-making process.
Davidson stated:
StudioCanal were working closely with BAFTA, and BAFTA had made us all aware that any swearing would be edited out of the broadcast. I have made four documentaries with the BBC in the past, and feel that they should have been aware of what to expect from Tourette’s and worked harder to prevent anything that I said — which, after all, was some 40 rows back from the stage — from being included in the broadcast.
Arguably suggesting the BBC saw some advantageous content to come from someone living with such a debilitating condition, he added:
As I reflect on the auditorium, I remember there was a microphone just in front of me, and with hindsight I have to question whether this was wise, so close to where I was seated, knowing I would tic.
We wrote yesterday about Butler’s call for the BBC to explain itself, saying:
Labour MP Dawn Butler has written to the BBC following its recent decision to air an involuntary racist slur. Tourette’s campaigner John Davidson shouted the N-word at the BAFTAs, and both Black actors visibly shuddered when they heard it before composing themselves and continuing. Butler has now asked for an “urgent explanation” from the broadcaster. Their choice to air the slur led to widespread hurt against both the Black and disabled community.
The BBC successfully, and conveniently, cut any mention of Palestine from the broadcast. This demonstrates it’s ability to axe or censor content, so why the double standard? This BAFTA incident would suggest they simply didn’t want to, raising questions once again about whose interests the broadcaster serves.
Willful negligence?
Understanding that the lion’s share of Davidson’s tics had been removed signals the selective approach the BBC appears to have operated in. After all, it’s ironic that they chose to cut the reference to ‘paedophiles’ amidst a couple of high-profile arrests connected to a convicted paedo Jeffrey Epstein.
As Butler also reminded, they cut reference to Akinola Davies Jr’s call for achieving justice and recognition for the ongoing oppression of Palestinians, Sudanese and Congolese. Furthermore, those in charge can’t even deny awareness of the concern, with the request from Warner Bros to censor the n-word.
Therefore, arguments that bosses at the BBC saw value in its selective choice to keep the ‘n-word’ in the cut are harder to deny. Consequently, all responsible for such a scandalous decision must be held to account for the harm it has negligently caused.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Labour’s SEND Reforms Overlook Key Issue, Campaigner Warns
The government has just announced £4billion towards SEND reform in England – a sum which is desperately needed and one that couldn’t come soon enough for families who have children with Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) in the UK.
More than 1.7 million pupils are identified as having Special Educational Needs, including over 400,000 children with an Education, Health and Care Plan.
These are big numbers and the pressure of diagnosing and properly supporting them hits families hard.
Many have been unsupported and their children have suffered as a result. Others have taken their children out of education and into home schooling.
Families’ stories of being failed by the system have been getting louder and reform of SEND is clearly needed.
However, it’s crucial that we do not redesign structures while carrying forward existing disparities.
Department for Education data shows that Black pupils represent around 3% of the school population, yet account for approximately 6% of children with an Education, Health and Care Plan.
They are represented at roughly twice their population share within EHCP provision.
But disproportionality alone does not tell the full story.
Evidence shows that Black pupils with SEND are also heavily affected by exclusion practices and are more likely to have behavioural needs interpreted punitively rather than supportively.
We know from our Black Child SEND research that Black children and their families suffer from delays in recognition, diagnosis and inconsistent access to appropriate support.
As the White Paper detail is published, clear commitments will be needed on intersectional equity, ethnicity-disaggregated data, protection of statutory rights and accountable implementation.
SEND is very tricky, as there is no one-size-fits all mould.
But, as complicated as it might be, we need to overlay intersectionality into the system.
We need to learn from the research which highlights the holes families have to jump over due to individual factors.
Investment alone will not determine success. Whether disparities are narrowed in practice will depend on how reform is delivered.
Nobody fits into neat boxes, we will need to understand the use of the word “complexity” to understand how complexity works in the case of SEND diagnosis and analysis.
Families everywhere are worrying about what this white paper will mean for their children, and hoping that it will bring some positive change.
There is a huge opportunity for a real step change to happen here, but it will only truly work if we understand that all SEND support is not equal, and that who you are can determine the access and support that you get today.
If we address these complexities within new determined support from the government it will be a huge win for our children.
Politics
Manchester City Council accused of security breach
Manchester City Council is accused of covering up a 2024 security breach, in which a former Labour Councillor was reportedly able to gain access to council offices using a security pass issued in Angeliki Stogia’s name.
This is the same Angeliki Stogia, who is now the Labour Party’s candidate in the Gorton and Denton by-election.
The accusations concern Luthfur Rahman, a former Labour councillor who served as Deputy Leader of Manchester City Council until May 2024. He reportedly used Angeliki Stogia’s security pass to enter the building.
Allegations abound
Of course, if true, this shows a huge lapse in security and raises questions about the lack of transparency. Why are we only just finding out about this now?
Angeliki Stogia has served on Manchester City Council for the Whalley Range ward since 2012.
Manchester City Council’s code of conduct states:
5.13.2. If you have access to Council assets, including property, buildings, vehicles, cash, and equipment, you must take responsibility for the security of such assets. You must also ensure they are managed securely and protected against accidental loss or damage and unauthorised use. Any loss or theft should be reported immediately to your line manager.
Additionally, it says:
5.5.4. When you are in the office, you must wear your Council security pass and ensure it is always visible. It is not to be shared with anyone else, and any lost or misplaced security passes should be reported to Facilities Management immediately
The code of conduct applies to “all staff employed by Manchester City Council”, regardless of rank or title. This means the same rules apply to frontline council workers as elected officials.
It goes on to say:
17 CONSEQUENCES OF BREACHING THE CODE
1.7. Failure to comply with the Employee Code of Conduct, service or professional standards may result in disciplinary action in accordance with the Disciplinary Policy, and actions taken could include dismissal…
A serious breach of this code would include, theft, fraud, or misuse of Council property, which are offences classed as gross misconduct. Depending on the circumstances several steps will be taken, which are outlined in the policy, including a full investigation by an appropriate manager.
Now, the same man who allegedly used Angeliki’s pass, Luthfur Rahman, is out canvassing for her in Gorton and Denton:
Out on the doors in Levenshulme tonight because this Gorton & Denton by‑election isn’t just a contest, it’s a crossroads, choosing an MP who’ll stand up for our communities, not stoke division. #VoteLabour pic.twitter.com/AcVmygX6Jx
— Luthfur Rahman OBE (@LRahmanOBE) January 27, 2026
Of course, if the allegations are true, the silence from Manchester City Council is unacceptable. It also raises serious questions about Angeliki Stogia’s suitability for public office, given that she has already breached security protocols at the council level. Why would we trust her in Westminster?
The Canary approached both Angeliki Stogia’s press team and Manchester City Council for comment on the allegations, but neither responded by the time of publication.
Featured image via HG
Politics
Tourette’s Campaigner Questions Why Baftas Organisers Sat Him Next To Microphone
Tourette’s campaigner John Davidson has admitted the way that things played out at this year’s Baftas left him with some questions.
John attended Sunday’s ceremony alongside the cast and crew of I Swear, the award-winning film based on his life story.
He has since said he experienced as many as 10 involuntary tics during the ceremony, resulting in him shouting several offensive terms, including the N-word while Sinners actors Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting on stage.
In his first interview since the Baftas, John claimed that he “made the decision to leave” early to avoid causing “upset” with any further tics.
“As I reflect on the auditorium, I remember there was a microphone just in front of me,” he explained. “And with hindsight I have to question whether this was wise, so close to where I was seated, knowing I would tic.”
HuffPost UK has contacted Bafta for comment.
Since the ceremony, Delroy Lindo has admitted he was disappointed with the way Bafta handled the incident, with the awards body having since issued an apology to both the Oscar nominee and his co-star Michael B Jordan, accepting “full responsibility” for what transpired.

Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
A Bafta rep told HuffPost UK: “At the Bafta Film Awards last night our guests heard very offensive language that carries incomparable trauma and pain for so many. We want to acknowledge the harm this has caused, address what happened and apologise to all.
“One of our guests, John Davidson MBE, has Tourette Syndrome and has devoted his life to educating and campaigning for better understanding of this condition. Tourette Syndrome causes involuntary verbal tics, that the individual has no control over.
“Such tics are in no way a reflection of an individual’s beliefs and are not intentional. John Davidson is an executive producer of the Bafta-nominated film, I Swear, which is based on his life experience.”
“We take the duty of care to all our guests very seriously and start from a position of inclusion,” the statement continued. “We took measures to make those in attendance aware of the tics, announcing to the audience before the ceremony began, and throughout, that John was in the room and that they may hear strong language, involuntary noises or movements during the ceremony.
“Early in the ceremony a loud tic in the form of a profoundly offensive term was heard by many people in the room. Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were on stage at the time, and we apologise unreservedly to them, and to all those impacted. We would like to thank Michael and Delroy for their incredible dignity and professionalism.
“During the ceremony, John chose to leave the auditorium and watch the rest of the ceremony from a screen, and we would like to thank him for his dignity and consideration of others, on what should have been a night of celebration for him.
“We take full responsibility for putting our guests in a very difficult situation and we apologise to all. We will learn from this, and keep inclusion at the core of all we do, maintaining our belief in film and storytelling as a critical conduit for compassion and empathy.”
Elsewhere in Variety’s piece, John’s team made it clear that he has already reached out to the production company behind Sinners in order to apologise “directly” to Michael and Delroy, as well as production designer Hannah Beachler, who shared after the event that he had used the same slur while experiencing an involuntary tic in her presence.
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