Politics
Bob Seely: ‘Mr Bean’s trip to China’ ignored a vital rule – sell, but don’t sell us out
Dr Robert Seely MBE is author of ‘The New Total War’, ConservativeHome foreign affairs columnist and a former Conservative MP.
When I look at the decline of the Foreign Office and Whitehall as well as the parochialisation of our political leadership over the past two decades – China will stand as a testament to our leader’s inability to grasp new ideas and great new trends.
Prime Minister Kier Starmer’s visit to China (and Japan) was not a success.
Appearing more Mr Bean than Mr Statesman, he came back with little and was only allowed to visit once he had agreed to the planned Chinese embassy in London, sitting adjacent to highly sensitive cables. Whilst there, he was gently demeaned in a number of different ways, described by Luke de Pulford from the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China.
Starmer continues a depressing tradition. For years our nation’s decision-makers – along with many others in Europe – has failed to see what China is and where the true dangers are. We have no coherent attitude of outlook.
There is no pot of gold at the end of the Chinese economic rainbow. There is no gain in turning a blind eye to its modern slavery or the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) creation of an AI-driven police state, because there is no economic El Dorado. It is a myth peddled by our Treasury and which has been slavishly followed by managerialist politicians.
First, China’s Made in China 2025 policy is designed to wean itself of imports. Prior to Covid, Chinese investment in the UK represents just 0.2 per cent of foreign investment anyway, and that is overwhelmingly focused on high technology, somewhere frankly we should not be welcoming the CCP. Third, jobs created and maintained by Chinese investment amounted to just 3,000 a year, whilst our exports made up just 3.3 per cent of our total. Few firms make durable profits. Their Intellectual Property is taken. Contracts are not enforced. There is a reason we sell less to China than to Ireland or Holland.
By all means, sell to China is you want, but they are far more interested in selling to us. Chinese exports to us were £67 billion. Our imports to them were less than half that.
The reality is that China doesn’t want open and free trade. It wants to use its economic export power to create dependency. It does that by dominating technologies and supply chains. This is not a conspiracy theory, it’s fact, just some of us don’t want to listen. This is trade and economics as a form of warfare.
Here’s China’s dictator Xi Jinping speaking in April 2020: China will “aim to form a ‘counterattack and deterrence’ against other countries by fostering killer technologies and strengthening the global supply chain’s dependence on China.”
Elsewhere, the Chinese Communist Party has made clear that Western nations are ‘hostile foreign forces’, democracy a ‘false ideological trend’ whilst free speech and human rights have long been denounced.
The CPP builds up domination through mercantilism – the practice of using economies to build state power at others’ expense. It offers super-cheap bank loans to its own firms which then take, steal or buy Intellectual property from Western companies, speeding R&D and cutting costs further. They flood Western markets and undercut Western firms, forcing them out of business. This is not fair trade, nor even free trade, it is trade as a proxy for conflict and domination.
Occasional victories, such as our guerrilla victory in the last Parliament to get Huawei banned, were small victories in a bigger struggle that we are losing.
There are also direct, technical threats, dangerously underestimated. For example, China has been quietly dominating the CIMs – Cellular Modules – industry. About the size of fat credit cards, CIMs contain processors, memory, and a SIM to the Internet. Pretty much everything runs on them or will do; from cars to logistical supply chains, manufacturing and telecoms. China aims to dominate this industry. In future, if China doesn’t like your policy, expect restricted CIM supply, or malware to be transmitted to your CIMS at times of global tensions. Expect your industry, your logistics, your healthcare, to glitch or cease working – along with your weapons. This is conflict preparation on a scale that our political masters do not comprehend.
The purpose of this domination is, in general, to make us supplicants, and specifically, leave us so dependent that, if/when conflict breaks out between China and Taiwan/the US, the UK – and Europe which is in much the same boat – would be too weak to support the US. It would break the Transatlantic alliance. This would be a Pearl Harbour, and not just of military power, but of economic and technical power too. It would be the end of the West, overnight, as well as the order that we, the US and NATO created after World War II.
China is not a ‘challenge’, it is a threat to our entire world order. It wishes to replace our system with its system.
There are of other important elements we could talk about; the appalling human rights abuses of the Uighurs – immediately forgotten by Labour as soon as they got to power – the illegal extension of Chinese territory into the South China Sea, the United Front influence and espionage networks in the UK, the theft of our data, so that when AI and quantum computing becomes powerful enough, it will allow China’s security agencies to understand who it needs to support, oppress or suppress.
So, as Lenin said, what is to be done?
First, no one is suggesting we shouldn’t engage or that we pick arguments for the sake of them. I despair of ministers who bizarrely proclaim that the only choice is either to kow-tow or to stick our head in the sand and two fingers in the air. Let’s engage, but please let’s stop grovelling.
Above all, the immediate priority is to defend ourselves so we can support our alliance system, and defend our economy from China’s mercantilist domination.
We need to understand dependency and economic warfare and to start to wean ourselves off Chinese rare earth, raw material and manufacturing and tech supply chains. It won’t happen overnight, but we need to start. Let’s work with US, Ukraine, Australia, Japan, South Korea and others to produce parallel supply systems and China-free, or China-lite, tech. If European nations want to join, even better.
For consumers, Govt needs to ensure that firms like Amazon are clearer about which products come from China; make it easier to opt for non-Chinese alternatives; put warning labels on goods that may have slave or forced labour components, such as the solar panels that the net-zero druid Ed Miliband wants to import in vast amounts.
Second, let’s start to onshore our industry and drive down energy prices by radically changing the aforementioned net-zero. Our economic and energy policy is suicidally useless. We are destroying our industrial base to slavishly worship net-zero targets which the rest of the world ignores. Our industry ends up in China where two coal-fired power stations a week are built to sell us back the manufacturing that we’ve shut down. This policy impoverishes us, enriches our adversary and makes the world even more polluted. If Xi actively controlled our politicians, he could not come up with a better policy to damage Britain.
If the US slaps tariffs on China because they dump cars, steel, etc on us, then we should join the US. China has long abused its developing nation status at the WTO. They need our markets more than we theirs.
These are just a start. There are many more ideas in a report that Rob Clarke and I edited for the Civitas think tank.
Above all we need coherence, which we still lack. China is a threat. It is trying to subvert the international system. Our best chance to avoid both dependency and war is to stand up for ourselves now, minimise our dependency and strengthen our alliances. Let’s sell, but let’s not sell ourselves out.
Under Labour it won’t happen. They are unwilling and unable to understand the threat, managing to be both irresolute and incompetent – a unique Starmeresque quality; but maybe the next Government will have learned the lessons of the past two decades of failure.
One can but hope.
Politics
Air Frying Is The Superior Way To Bake Cookies
I am pretty fussy about cookies. I like them to have that bakery-level softness while maintaining a satisfyingly crisp exterior; I want thick, gooey cookies, ideally eaten warm with melted chocolate and sea flakes.
There are, of course, steps you can take to ensure these features. Resting cookie dough overnight helps to prevent the biscuits from spreading in the oven, which I find leaves them too thin.
And adding some inverted sugars, like golden or maple syrup, alongside granulated kinds goes a long way to keeping them sumptuously soft.
Personally, I swear by the New York Times’ recipe, though I replace about 10g of the brown sugar with maple syrup.
I’ve been making a batch on the weekend, freezing the dough, and baking one in the oven nightly for the past couple of weeks. But recently, partly because baking takes so long and partly because I hated using that much energy on a single biscuit, I switched appliances.
The results were gooier, crisper, faster, and easier to make; I haven’t gone back since.
An air fryer gave me much better results

Though I was happy with the results from my oven, I found that the air fryer left a much crisper top layer on the brownies with a truly gooey underneath. It makes them a little like a very good brownie.
When I bake them in the oven, meanwhile, they often end up getting a little caught and chewy on the ends. My oven probably heats up too slowly, which would explain the thin, lacy edges, where sugar melts into a slightly too hard layer, and the heat doesn’t blast the fat quickly enough to prevent spreading.
Not so with the air fryer, which cooks the cookie much faster (I put a frozen cookie in at 150°C for about 11 minutes, vs the oven’s 20 minutes plus preheating time).
And because air circulates in a much smaller area in my air fryer than it does in the oven, I feel it makes the craggy parts of my cookie crunchier and more golden while still maintaining a fudgy middle.
Perhaps it’s no wonder that baking legend Jane’s Patisserie likes the trick, too.
Are air fryers always a better choice?
I wouldn’t go that far. I’m in a specific situation here: I cook one or two cookies at a time, and I much prefer warm cookies to cooled ones. I also make taller cookies, and I think a thinner one could run a little too crisp quite quickly.
If you’re less interested in gooeiness and/or are cooking a lot of cookies at once, an oven will almost certainly be your best bet. I would not, for instance, use this for a bake sale.
But I probably would lob a huge scoop of cookie dough into my air fryer for something like a movie night dessert or a post-dinner cookie cake for friends (just be sure to carefully line your basket with baking paper: this is mandatory, of course, no matter what size cookie you’re making).
And I have stuck to the appliance every night since I first tried it. It’s faster, easier to clean, makes it much easier to check the doneness of your cookies, and makes mine taller, gooier, crisper, and more delicious.
Politics
Politics Home Article | Starmer Says Sorry To Epstein Victims For Appointing Mandelson

3 min read
Keir Starmer has apologised to the victims of Jeffrey Epstein for appointing Peter Mandelson as UK ambassador to the US.
“I am sorry,” the Prime Minister said at a press conference on Thursday morning.
Starmer is under severe political pressure over his decision to bring Mandelson into government despite being made aware of his links to the paedophile financier.
There was widespread anger and dismay over the scandal among Labour MPs on Wednesday night, with many calling on Starmer to remove his chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, who was instrumental in the decision to appoint Mandelson as the UK ambassador in Washington.
The Prime Minister has said that Mandelson, who was a key figure in the New Labour administrations of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, and has remained influential in the Labour Party ever since, lied to his team about the extent of his relationship with Epstein.
Speaking in Hastings, Starmer said he wanted to address Epstein’s victims.
“I am sorry,” he said.
“Sorry for what was done to you. Sorry that so many people with power failed you. Sorry for having believed Mandelson’s lies and appointed him. And sorry that even now, you’re forced to watch this story unfold in public once again.”
He added: “But I also want to say this: in this country, we will not look away.
“We will not shrug our shoulders, and we will not allow the powerful to treat justice as optional. We will pursue the truth. We will uphold the integrity of public life. And we will do everything within our power, and in the interests of justice, to ensure accountability is delivered.
“That is what the public expects. That is what the victims deserve. And it is what I will do.”
The Prime Minister said he was personally frustrated that he is not able to immediately publish all material related to Mandelson’s appointment after the Metropolitan Police asked the government to withold information that could undermine its own criminal investigation.
However, he stressed that he would not do anything that risked collapsing that police investigation because justice for the victims must take priority.
Mandelson, a former cabinet minister, resigned from the House of Lords earlier this week amid growing outrage over his links to Epstein.
It came after millions of court documents relating to Epstein were published by the US Department of Justice, revealing that Mandelson had shared confidential and high-level UK government information with him, including that the euro bailout was coming.
He was sacked as UK ambassador to the US in September after more details about his relationship with Epstein emerged.
Politics
Starmer Apologises For Appointing Mandelson Amid Epstein Furore
Keir Starmer has apologised to the victims of Jeffrey Epstein for ever appointing Peter Mandelson as the UK’s ambassador to Washington despite his links to the convicted paedophile.
Pressure has been growing on the prime minister after he admitted to MPs on Wednesday that he knew of Mandelson’s friendship with the convicted sex offender – and still appointed him to the plum diplomatic role.
Mandelson remained in the post until September, when new information about the extent of his ties to Epstein was revealed and he was promptly sacked by the PM.
But fury over the government’s decision to appoint Mandelson in the first place has continued growing, triggering the most perilous moment in Starmer’s career yet.
Addressing Epstein’s victims on Thursday, Starmer said: “I am sorry. Sorry for what was done to you. Sorry for having believing Mandelson’s lies and appointed him.
“And sorry that even now you are forced to watch this story unfold in public once again.
“But I also want to say this: in this country we will not look away. We will not shrug our shoulders. And we will not allow the powerful to treat justice as optional.
“We will pursue the truth. We will uphold the integrity of public life and we will do everything within our power and in the interest of justice to ensure accountability is delivered.
“This is what the public expects. This is what victims expect and it is what I will do.”
Speaking at his pre-planned speech about the values in a “decent and tolerant Britain”, the prime minister admitted: “It had been publicly known for some time that Mandelson knew Epstein, but none of us knew the depth or the darkness of that relationship.”
He also claimed he wanted to release the vetting documents from before Mandelson was appointment as US ambassador on Wednesday but was limited by the ongoing police investigation into the ex-Labour peer.
He said: “I wanted to release them yesterday, in fact, and to talk about them at pime minister’s questions. But the police have advised that releasing certain information now could risk prejudicing a future investigation or legal process.”
He said any papers release must not prejudice a legal investigation which “risks justice for victims”.
Starmer’s comments come after the government backed down over its attempts to block the release of the files after a backlash from Labour MPs.
Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee will now decide what information will be revealed, excluding any files which could impact the ongoing police investigation.
Mandelson has not responded to the allegations against him but he previously apologised to Epstein’s victims for his ongoing friendship with the disgraced financier.
The former cabinet minister also quit the Labour Party on Sunday after the US Congress released a tranche of documents exposing Epstein’s elite network – including his exchanges with Mandelson.
He subsequently stepped down from the House of Lords on Wednesday, and Starmer said the government is looking into removing his title altogether and kicking him out of the Privy Council.
Politics
Caroline Elsom: Hidden benefits are breaking our welfare system and proving there’s ‘no such thing as a free lunch’
Caroline Elsom is Head of Government Reform at Onward.
The catastrophic cost of Britain’s benefits bill is no secret. But the already eyewatering sums are usually missing a crucial part of the welfare system – all of the extra payments, discounts and freebies that claimants can receive on top of their regular benefits.
Many of these schemes, known as passported benefits, will be familiar to readers, like free school meals, free prescriptions or council tax reduction for those on certain benefits. Few will be aware of just how many different extras are now on offer, covering everything from broadband contracts to court fee remission. At least 20 different schemes are topping up the incomes of those already receiving tens of thousands each year from the state in benefit payments that are intended to have already covered their essential living costs.
In my new report for Onward think tank, The Hidden Benefits Bill, I reveal the true cost of all these passported benefits: over £10 billion. The rollout of Universal Credit, which was meant to do away with the need for all these piecemeal legacy schemes, has dragged on so long that new schemes have now been added and existing ones enlarged.
It is no coincidence that the two major passported benefits that the Labour Government has decided to expand this year are free school meals and the Warm Home Discount. They are some of the only passported schemes that are measured in poverty statistics as additional effective income, while almost all others go uncounted. By bringing more people into these schemes, they can claim to have lowered poverty despite the changes poorly targeting those most in need.
From this year, the Warm Home Discount will automatically apply a flat £150 rebate to the energy bills of all households on Universal Credit, regardless of how energy efficient or low usage their home is. Likewise, expanding free school is set to cause chaos for school and local authority funding which uses free school meals as a marker of deprivation for the National Funding Formula, the Pupil Premium, eligibility for the Holiday Activities and Food Programme and extended rights to free home-to-school transport.
With the end of the rollout of Universal Credit finally in sight this Parliament, now is precisely the time that the Government should be looking to rationalise these schemes, not adding to them further. Instead, the Labour Government has ruled out any new welfare legislation for at least the next year following the disability benefit reform debacle. The bill to taxpayers and consumers will only grow further as a result.
Some would argue that £10 billion is a price worth paying for targeted support schemes – that it’s the cost of a civilised society that takes care of its most vulnerable. If only it were actually the case that these fragmented schemes were improving outcomes. Broadband social tariffs are often giving claimants worse deals than regular switching. Bursary cash for disadvantaged teens that makes them worse off in the long run, missing out on vital early experiences of the workplace. Special savings accounts that are driving claimants to hold out for top-ups while falling further into debt. Online forums that discuss using Healthy Start grocery cards to buy alcohol and vapes.
Worse still, the cumulative effect on some families of being able to claim thousands, sometimes more than £10,000 in additional support while on Universal Credit, is that they face a steep cliff edge if they try to come off benefits. The impact of already high marginal effective tax rates for many claimants due to the taper rate and income tax is compounded by the withdrawal of passported benefits, leaving claimants questioning whether they are really better off working more – or working at all.
In the clamour to look caring by carving out all these special schemes, it has become harder for claimants to manage their finances as a whole, with an entirely different set of household budgeting dynamics to those just beyond the benefits system. At the same time, many are left missing out on extra support they may be eligible for because they are simply unaware or unable to navigate the associated bureaucracy.
There is no easy way out of this mess without politically difficult trade-offs to radically rationalise the system. My report goes through each scheme in turn to propose an alternative way to deliver support, consolidating most into Universal Credit payments, alongside a single scheme for one-off unavoidable or unforeseeable costs and a lower taper rate for those working their way to financial independence from the state.
These changes are not about ripping up the Conservative record on welfare reform. Quite the opposite, in fact. They deliver on the reforms as originally intended – making Universal Credit the simpler, smoother system it was always meant to be. It’s time for a hard reset of working-age welfare, to peel back the layers of extra benefits and to return to the principle that work should always pay.
Politics
Israel accused of ‘Jewish supremacy’ by retired IDF general
Academic Shaiel Ben-Ephraim describes himself as a “Jew from occupied Palestine”. He has posted what he describes as “probably the most important Hebrew tweet I’ve ever seen”. Ben-Ephraim introduces and translates the Hebrew words of Israeli general Moshe ‘Bogie’ Ya’alon, one of Israel’s most senior military and establishment figures.
Ben-Ephraim’s words – and the explosive words of Ya’alon – need little elaboration, except to flag to readers that Ya’alon describes Israel as ethno-supremacist “Judeo-Nazis” for their crimes against Palestinian people. And he mocks the common Zionist tactic of complaining that we must never compare Israel to the Nazis. Read in full below – emphases added:
This is probably the most important Hebrew Tweet I’ve ever seen. Moshe Ya’alon is a former chief of staff and defense minister. The absolute cream of the Israeli defense establishment. In this text he admits that the Israeli government and settlers have become Judeo-Nazis and their policy is based on Jewish supremacy. Here is a full translation:
“On the last Tuesday evening, I attended an event marking the International Holocaust Remembrance Day. When I got home, I received a message about Jewish pogromists attacking Palestinians in the south of Hebron, stealing their livestock, and burning their property. “We can’t compare!…”
After ambulances, which tried to reach the scene, were delayed by the Jewish terrorists, three Palestinians were evacuated to the hospital, one of them with skull fractures. “No event can ever compare to the Holocaust, which we endured!” …
I turned, of course, immediately to the security authorities in the area, and I was assured that the incident was being handled by the IDF. To this day not a single Jewish terrorist has been stopped (as in many other cases), because … the Israel Police is controlled by a convicted criminal, a fascist racist Nazi, the Shin Bet is controlled by a representative of “Jewish supremacy” from the schools of the rabbis Tao, Lior, Ginzburg, and Zini (Dodo), the defense minister prevents administrative detentions of Jewish terrorists, and the other minister in the Ministry of Defense encourages illegal outposts and equips them with off-road vehicles, to torment the lives of Palestinians, to evict them from their land, and to settle the land with Jews (you’ll ask again why I blamed the government for “ethnic cleansing”!?). The ideology of “Jewish supremacy,” which has become dominant in the Israeli government, resembles Nazi racial theory, “but we must not compare!” …
When I commanded the Jerusalem and Samaria Division, the Central Command, and the IDF, I was acquainted with the warnings of Professor Yeshayahu Leibowitz, regarding the process of dehumanization to the point of turning us into “Judeo-Nazis” (as he put it), under our control of another people. I did my best, even as defense minister, “so that we may know how to defeat terrorism and remain human.”
I never deceived myself into thinking that only through concessions would we achieve “peace now,” and I also understood the danger of “Jewish supremacy” over our future and our existence. Therefore I advocated separation according to the proto-programmatic speech of Yitzhak Rabin of October 5, 1995, and therefore I named my book is “A Long Short Way.” As of now, Professor Yeshayahu Leibowitz was right and I was wrong.
The task of the next Israeli government is to prove that Professor Leibowitz was wrong, and not to bring ruin upon our state. The government of “Jewish Supremacy” — the government of lies and betrayal — the government of messianism, the traitors and the corrupt — must be replaced before ruin.”
Israelis of conscience see that it is adopting the policies of Judeo-Nazism and Jewish supremacy. They have known it for a long time. But most do not have the courage to say so. This is an earthquake.
Unsurprisingly, the silence of ‘mainstream’ media and pro-Israel groups on Ya’alon’s words is deafening.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Front Pages: Adults Are Back in the Room Edition
It’s nice, isn’t it? The quiet…
Politics
Labour MPs Demand Keir Starmer Sack Morgan McSweeney
Labour MPs have publicly called on Keir Starmer to sack his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney in order to save his premiership.
In a major challenge to the prime minister’s authority, they said the Irishman should lose his job for advising Starmer to appoint Peter Mandelson as the UK’s ambassador to Washington.
That was despite it being known that Mandelson had continued his friendship with the financier Jeffrey Epstein even after his conviction for soliciting a child for prostitution.
At prime minister’s questions on Wednesday, Starmer said McSweeney was “an essential part of my team”.
He said: “He helped me change the Labour Party and win the election. Of course I have confidence in him.”
One Labour MP told HuffPost UK: “It seemed like being present at the political death of the prime minister, whether or not Morgan McSweeney goes first.”
Two of Starmer’s backbenchers broke ranks on Thursday to publicly call for Starmer to sack McSweeney.
Karl Turner, a supporter of the PM, told Times Radio: “If the prime minister decides that he has to be surrounded by advisors who give him shoddy advice, I think that will end in the prime minister having to be making a decision about his future at some point soon.
“If McSweeney continues in No 10 Downing Street, I think the PM is up against it in a way that he doesn’t need to be.”
Alloa and Grangemouth MP Brian Leishman told Radio Scotland: “When we look at the historic mis-steps and misjudgments we’ve made, Morgan McSweeney is at the heart of that and it’s time he was removed from power.”
But housing secretary Steve Reed, a close ally of McSweeney insisted that he is going nowhere.
Asked on Sky News if he was safe in his job, he replied: “Of course he is.”
Politics
Don’t let the particulars of the Starmer crisis distract from its deeper causes
Well if nothing else, Sir Keir Starmer has partly falsified my analysis of his government. I have previously argued that Labour’s travails, cathartic as they might be, are simply a product of the doom spiral in the public finances, and that any future government is likely to end up almost as unpopular, almost as quickly.
But say what you like about Kemi Badenoch or Nigel Farage, I think – and I don’t want to jinx it – they would both manage to resist the temptation to somehow give Peter Mandelson a fourth opportunity to leave government in disgrace. So that’s something.
Nonetheless, we shouldn’t fall into the trap of assuming such things are the root of the problem. It is always tempting for people trying to avoid confronting big, systemic problems to latch on to relatively trivial particular ones as explanations instead. Yet as the last ten years have had ample opportunity to demonstrate, a government that the public broadly supports can actually endure quite a lot of particular scandal.
The real problems remain, and two stories this morning highlight them. First, the ongoing row over student loans, with one former director of the Office for Students cropping up in the Times to suggest they should be replaced with a graduate tax. Second, the increasingly acute crisis in local government finances, with dozens of councils warning they face bankruptcy over SEND obligations and Reform UK’s discovery that they can’t cut anything.
Both of these issues are manifestations of the same root problem, which is politicians hiding the spending implications of their policy preferences with creative accounting. Shifting statutory obligations onto councils allows Westminster to set welfare policy but hide the cost implications on local government books, whilst selling mortgages to teenagers (‘student loans’) has allowed successive governments to postpone a reckoning with the unsustainable bloat in tertiary education.
Solving either of these means making difficult decisions. In the case of SEND and other statutory responsibilities, it means either actually devolving policy to councils, so they can decide for themselves what resources to commit to it, or bringing direct financial responsibility back to Westminster. In other words, either creating a postcode lottery in special needs support or blowing a multi-billion pound hole in a new government’s budget.
Student loans are even thornier. A ‘graduate tax’ is popular with sector apologists and other supporters of the status quo because it is essentially the same system – i.e. shaking down people for life for a decision they made at 18 – but dressed up, they hope, more presentably. It would still leave younger workers facing usurious marginal tax rates and a higher overall tax rate than many of their older, higher-earning colleagues.
But any move towards a more sensible system of public support for higher education would involve there being much less of it, and it being offered far more selectively. The great merit of the student loan system, politically, is that it has spared politicians the need to make decisions about which degrees, at which universities, and for which prospective students are actually a ‘public good’ deserving taxpayer support; sector apologists know this is a powerful argument against spending restraint, and are quick to punch the bruise of “Who doesn’t deserve education?” if anyone tries it.
Yet if there were easy and popular solutions to Britain’s problems, they would have been solved by now. Government in this country has been boiling down for some time to a collection of very painful choices. What’s changed is that the accumulated costs of putting those choices off have now reached the point of unbearable pain themselves.
In a way, it isn’t fair. Starmer, Rachel Reeves, and those mutinous Labour backbenchers are only really trying to do what all their predecessors have been doing: patch up something that gets you through the next couple of years and hope for the best. It is simply their misfortune that the future eventually arrives, and the tomorrow into which previous governments shunted all these problems is the today they – and perhaps, at some point, we – have to govern.
Faced with that grim prospect, we must take our pleasures where we can. So pass the popcorn, please – I think Morgan McSweeney’s on.
Politics
Zarah Sultana knows how to defeat Reform
Zarah Sultana has thrown her support behind the Green Party’s Gorton and Denton candidate, Hannah Spencer. In doing so, she’s demonstrated exactly how solidarity on the left should work. In a statement, Sultana said:
The candidate list is now published and it is clear that Hannah Spencer, a local plumber and trade unionist, is the strongest challenger to Labour and Reform. I am, therefore, giving my personal critical support to her and the Green Party in this by-election, and I urge others to do the same.
I have always been clear that the left is strongest when it is united. Our real opponents are not one another. They are Reform and the far-right.
However, Sultana’s comments are unfortunately at odds with a statement from the Grassroots Left slate for Your Party – who she backs.
Zarah Sultana at odds with the Grassroots Left
Your Party (YP) had already issued a statement outlining that after deliberation with local members, it had decided that a YP candidacy would not serve their ‘collective goals’ of defeating Reform. But, the Grassroots Left (GL) slate subsequently stated that:
Grassroots Left will not lend unconditional support to the Green Party candidate, because the Greens are a pro-capitalist, pro-Nato party and have been enforcing cuts in councils all over the country.
Many people from across the leftist spectrum have, rightly, been pointing out this is an immature and short-sighted approach in the face of rising fascism.
Zarah Sultana’s statement came after the GL left one, and is interesting for outlining exactly why, on that statement, GL got it wrong:
My statement on the Gorton & Denton by-election: pic.twitter.com/HSrgDf70h2
— Zarah Sultana MP (@zarahsultana) February 3, 2026
In particular, it’s worth looking at one passage from Sultana:
As a young Muslim woman, I understand viscerally what it would mean for the far-right to gain power in this country. This is not an abstract debate for me, nor the millions of people across the country whose safety would be directly affected.
Ultimately, this is what the Gorton and Denton by-election has turned into: a testing ground that is an opportunity for the Green party to show that people are coming together to reject the fascism of Reform. And, Sultana’s comments show exactly what happens when a socialist who has lived experience of racism can do when understanding the very real cost of parties like Reform. This isn’t an abstract political debate for many people in this country.
It is a reality that has material consequences. In choosing to focus on other policy issues, rather than the much more immediate threat of Reform, GL have shown naive judgement that is disappointing to see.
No more ‘whip’: Pluralism strengthens movements – it doesn’t weaken them
However, this rather public disagreement is not a dramatic sign of a ‘rift.’ Instead, it is another sign that Sultana is well practiced at productive disagreements that make the movement stronger. Unity does not require uniformity. Leftists are not required to agree on every single point. Instead, we must be able to unite when necessary to resist racism and fascism.
In what many onlookers will probably view with understandable frustration, a heated battle of the factions will soon be underway with the Central Executive Elections (CEC) of Your Party due to take place on the 26th February. Apparent differences in mission have driven a divergence among members, signaling an existential moment for the movement. Namely, Jeremy Corbyn has endorsed the For the Many slate, while Sultana has endorsed the Grassroots Left slate.
Unity does not mean compliance
It is worth noting, the GL statement has faced pushback from within the group itself, with some members expressing dissatisfaction with the tone it adopted.
Chloe Walker, CEC Northwest candidate standing on the Grassroots Left slate shared her views on the difference in views amongst members in the community-grounded movement. She told the Canary:
Personally as I’ve stated previously, I think that the most prevalent sentiment amongst local members is correct – it would have been nice to back a candidate, Tony Wilson, but the party’s not in a place to be able to fight a campaign like this at present, because of how slow and disempowering the founding process has been. I don’t think we should be going out of our way to criticise the Greens or their candidate in this instance – she’s a strong candidate in any case and I’d obviously rather see them than Labour or Reform win here. But we don’t have to come out and back the Greens to the hilt, either. Individual YP members might choose to help out with their campaign, and that’s their prerogative. But we shouldn’t use party infrastructure to support them; we have to retain some independence while we try to carve out a political identity that is visibly distinct from that of GPEW. Our intervention should be limited to criticising the Labour and Reform candidates, if we feel inclined to make any statement on an election we’re not involved with.
Walker added:
specific views towards this by-election do vary amongst GL candidates, reflecting our commitment to a pluralistic and open party where members have the autonomy and mutual respect to disagree while still remaining committed to broader shared political goals.
Ashley Walker, a Grassroots Left member from Stockport also stated:
Despite what some people think the Grassroots Left does not belong to any one person alone, it belongs to every member of every group who is a part of it. And if we win this election the CEC we form, and the party it will help build, will belong not to us but to every member of this party. Because without true democracy there will never be socialism.
No more top-down control: Left unity in action
We published a piece on Monday on Palestinian journalist Ahmed Alnaouq’s plea to factions on the left to unite against the billionaire-funded fascist threats facing all of us. Alnaouq pleaded:
My friends, fascism is not at the doorsteps in the UK. It is here. And unless we join forces with each other, unless we hold hands, we will not be able to defeat it. And we don’t have the luxury for trial and waiting. We do not have time. We have to act. My friends, we have the numbers. We have the resources. We have the support of the people. What we don’t have is organisation. We need to learn how to work with each other in order to defeat fascism, in order to defeat far-right, in order to defeat Zionism. And we must never shy away from calling ourselves anti-Zionists because we are anti-Zionists.
Sultana has shown that unity does not require spoon-feeding members the statements they are permitted to make. Grassroots Left has demonstrated that it will not submit to control by powerful figures and will instead maintain autonomy over its messaging. They have also worked collaboratively and supportively with independent candidates to advance a shared mission for a transparent, democratic, and accountable political party.
While work remains to build robust democratic processes that ensure such statements genuinely reflect the will of its membership, a powerful movement is clearly emerging: one that challenges the dominance of privileged public figures and meaningfully empowers its members.
Featured image via the Canary
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