Politics
Breaking video: Israel beats, sexually assaults flotilla abductees
Lawyers acting for the Global Sumud Flotilla, whose humanitarian volunteers Israel criminally abducted this week, say that Israel has subjected the captives to “extreme violence”. Some have been sexually assaulted, several have suffered broken bones and internal injuries. Israeli thugs have used ‘rubber bullet’ projectiles at close range:
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Israeli mouthpieces have boasted of the mistreatment of the flotilla activists. ‘Security’ minister Itamar Ben-Gvir posted footage of himself humiliating the abductees. Ethnofascist barbarity that has been perpetrated on Palestinians for years is now being dealt out to international humanitarians.
Israel is a terror state. Will the UK government ever admit the truth? Don’t hold your breath.
Featured image via Syamsul Bahri Muhammad/Getty Images
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Former Starmer Aide Predicts Burnhams Labour Leadership
Andy Burnham is likely to become Labour leader and prime minister without a contest if he wins next week’s Makerfield by-election, a former aide to Keir Starmer has said.
James Lyons told the HuffPost UK podcast Commons People that “we will see a significant number of MPs nominating Andy in a way that makes it very difficult for the prime minister to fight on”.
In those circumstances, Lyons said Starmer could agree to “some sort of stable and orderly transition” to Burnham.
The prime minister has told ministers that he will stand in a Labour leadership contest if one is triggered.
But Lyons, who was No.10 director of communications between 2024 and 2025, said that once his former boss is confronted with the reality of the situation he faces, he will be forced to think again.
He said: “The prime minister can survive, the question is ‘will he’, and I think if Andy Burnham is elected next Thursday, I don’t think he will.
“I think there’s every chance that what we will see is a coronation and we will see a significant number of MPs nominating Andy in a way that makes it very difficult for the prime minister to fight on.
“I know in his heart he will want to [fight on], he definitely feels he is the best person to be leading the country during this omni-crisis that has been created by the conflict in the Middle East and the conflict in Europe.
“Under those circumstances, if a sizeable proportion of the parliamentary party don’t want you, I think it’s very hard to carry on.”
Lyons added: “All things are possible on this earth, but if an overwhelming majority of the parliamentary party have said they’re backing somebody else I think it’s very, very hard to carry on.
“Of course he’s going to say that he’s going to fight, you saw that with Boris Johnson and Liz Truss. Right until the last they said they were going to fight, and that’s the right thing to do.
“But come the early hours of next Friday morning, if it looks like Andy’s there, then I think that’s the time to start having some conversations about whether’s it’s in his interests or the country’s interests to have some sort of stable and orderly transition.”

Burnham is currently the clear favourite to see off the challenge of Reform UK’s Robert Kenyon and win next Thursday’s by-election.
He has confirmed that he will join any Labour leadership contest, with former health secretary Wes Streeting also saying he will throw his hat into the ring.
But Lyons said that even if Burnham loses, Starmer could still be replaced without the need for a leadership election.
He said: “I still think there’s a chance that people think the stakes are so high that they coalesce around another candidate.
“One of the names that’s been doing the rounds is Ed Miliband. I think Yvette Cooper is also underpriced. A lot of people in the Parliamentary Labour Party think it’s time that Labour had a woman prime minister.
“Anything could happen, but perhaps the bigger question is whether the Labour Party is a viable political vehicle if Andy Burnham can’t win Makerfield. It’s not obvious to me that the answer is yes.”
To listen to the full interview with James Lyons, as well as our report from Makerfield, download Commons People from wherever you get your podcasts
Politics
Why Are Beavers Back In The UK? Benefits And History
The animals of Ealing’s Paradise Fields have some unexpected new neighbours.
For the last couple of years, beavers have been making an enclosed 10-hectare site their watery home – and since more or less their 2023 arrival, a London Underground ticket office that used to be plagued by flooding has remained dry.
The city’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, has praised Ealing’s beavers for putting an end to soggy conditions in parts of nearby Greenford Tube station on Instagram.
“Beavers are nature’s engineers – we just didn’t realise how efficient they could be,” Khan said in his post, adding, “These incredible creatures have already stepped up to stop flooding at a Tube station and restore local habitats”.
We spoke to Elliot Newton, the director of rewilding at Citizen Zoo, which worked with the Ealing Beaver Project to reintroduce the animals, about why they were brought back to the West London site and how they might help us humans.
Where have beavers been reintroduced to the UK?
It’s not just London. In recent years, beavers have been released across the UK, including other parts of England like Somerset and Cornwall. Scotland has kept the wild beavers spotted as early as the 2000s, the Natural History Museum said, with planned releases in the Glen Affric Nature Reserve and River Beauty set for 2026.
Wales seems keen on bringing beavers back, too. Northern Ireland hasn’t expressed interest yet, but the animals were probably never native there, unlike the rest of the UK.
“The Eurasian beaver is a native British species that was hunted to extinction around 400 years ago (and likely disappeared from London much earlier),” Newton told us.
“Over the past two decades, there has been a growing movement to restore beavers across Great Britain.”
And while the expert argued there’s a strong case for bringing all kinds of native species back to boost our ecosystem – including those we might not love the idea of, like the rat-sized, fish-eating fen raft spider – “beavers also deliver significant practical benefits”.
He continued, “As ecosystem engineers, they create and maintain wetlands that can reduce flood risk, improve water quality, increase drought resilience, and support a huge range of wildlife”.
Why might beavers help to prevent flooding in the UK?
Newton said that flood mitigation was one of the main reasons they secured funding for this project.
That’s because beavers (famously) build dams which stop the rapid flow of water down rivers during, e.g., periods of extreme rainfall. They also form ponds and mini “canals” that can create absorbent wetlands.
“Through building dams and creating wetland habitat, the beavers have increased the site’s capacity to store water and slow flows during heavy rainfall events, helping reduce downstream flood pressure. Interestingly, since the beavers arrived, the local train station ticket hall, which had previously experienced flooding, has not flooded,” Newton said.
“While more research is needed, this is an encouraging example of the potential for nature-based solutions to support climate resilience in urban areas.”
Other benefits people involved in the Ealing Beaver Project have noted include increased biodiversity, better community engagement (leading to a reduction in antisocial behaviour), and a more climate-change-resistant environment.
Politics
George Clooney Backs Callum Turner To Play James Bond
Callum Turner has addressed the speculation suggesting he’s a hot favourite to take over as James Bond.
The British actor was first mentioned in the press as a serious contender to play 007 in December 2025, with the Daily Mail subsequently suggesting he could be leading the next Bond movie while his now-wife Dua Lipa soundtracking the film.
Since then, Callum’s name has continued to crop up in connection with the James Bond franchise, alongside fellow rumoured frontrunners Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Jacob Elordi.
While the man himself has been reluctant to give the rumours oxygen in the last few months, he was asked about them directly in a new interview with The Hollywood Reporter.
“I know as much as you do,” he insisted, while claiming he was “not going to comment” on whether or not he’d be up for playing the part.
Callum added: “I’ll tell you what’s so funny about the Bond thing: Even your best friends ask you, people text you that you haven’t spoken to for 10 years – and you know nothing!
“It’s such a weird thing of something happening and nothing happening at all. I genuinely know nothing. I just find it quite amusing.”
Last month, producers behind the Bond franchise confirmed that casting had only just officially begun, revealing: “The search for the next James Bond is underway.
“While we don’t plan to comment on specific details during the casting process, we’re excited to share more news with 007 fans as soon as the time is right.”
Dune director Denis Villeneuve will helm the next film, which will be written by Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight.
And while Callum is doing his best to keep schtum on the speculation for the time being, he does have the seal of approval from one major Hollywood A-lister.
George Clooney, who directed Callum in 2024’s The Boys In The Boat, enthused: “I hope Callum ends up being the next Bond. I think he would be a great Bond.
“He’s tall and handsome and charming and British, so he’s the perfect guy to do it.”
Politics
This ‘Takeaway’ Quality Meal Kit Made Me Excited For Weeknight Meals Again
We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.
Is it just me, or are weeknight meals the bane of our existence? Call me lazy, but the last thing I want to do after a long day of work is to think, really critically, about what I want to feed myself.
Thus, I end up eating the same four meals on repeat. They’re so dull, I don’t even want to tell you what they are. The point is, I’m sick of them.
Although I make a point to eat healthily, as an occasional pescatarian (but mostly veggie) finding a way to eat as much protein as I’m supposed to and meet my five a day often feels unreachable. Okay, it always feels unreachable.
So when I heard about Grubby, a plant-based meal kit that prioritises fibre and protein, I was hooked to say the least.
I’ll do pretty much anything at this point to not have to think about dinner (okay, late-stage capitalism vibes) so the thought of having the ingredients for a selection of high-quality, and most importantly healthy, meals waiting for me at home was almost like Christmas Day.
I have to admit, I have been pretty sceptical about meal kits as a whole. Because I consider myself a good cook, I fall into the fatal error of thinking I can make that better. But when it came to Grubby, I am humbled (and pleasantly surprised) to admit that I couldn’t.
An honest review of Grubby plant-based meal kits and ready meals
First impressions
First up, I’m quite sickened by the amount of rubbish I produce as an individual (I am a Shopping Writer, so I get a lot of packages). So it was an immediate plus that the meal kit and ready meal selection I chose showed up in completely recyclable and compostable packaging.
Having tested a few meal kits before, I don’t like that some of the ingredients come in tiny 5ml or 2g sachets – but there was none of that with Grubby.
It’s not just environmental good Grubby prides itself on – for each meal kit purchased, it donates a meal to a child living in poverty through 1morechild.org.
As well as making you feel like you’re giving back, Grubby claims that each recipe uses an average of six varieties of fresh veg. I have to say, I was immediately impressed by the variety of recipes available.
I received a creamy cashew carbonara, beetroot hummus bowl, and red shakshuka, as well as a selection of five freezer-safe ready meals.
Taste test
I’m a busy gal, so I was excited by the prospect of chucking a ready meal in the microwave on my lunch break (words I never thought I’d say). The first one I tried was a tofu buddha bowl, which despite sitting in my freezer overnight felt extremely fresh and filling.
Of course, I then had to give one of the meal kits a whirl. Considering I used to dream about carbonara when I first became a vegetarian, I was thrilled at the prospect of a meal kit that nailed a vegan take on the (so far) unbeaten meaty alternative.
Because I was feeling brave, I decided to cook the mushroom cashew version for myself and a meat-loving friend, who was naturally sceptical at first. “How can it be a carbonara, doesn’t that have eggs in it?” I believe were her exact words.
But as soon as the creamy cashew sauce was simmering on the stove (in my new Hexclad pan, I might add) even she had to admit it smelled good.
By the time we tucked in (less than 30 minutes later), she was eating her words and a delicious, salty, mushroom pasta.
Final verdict
I’ve tried other meal kits, but the final result is never quite as good as I imagine it’s going to be.
It’s safe to say that Grubby is the best one I’ve tried yet – and it’s plant-based. Not only does the fact I’m not using hundreds of tiny plastic sachets leave me feeling smug, but the meals themselves are truly restaurant (or rather, takeaway) quality that I can see myself coming back to time and time again.
Plus, now I have a whole load of recipe inspiration, thanks to the free Grubby recipe book you’ll get with your first order. Obsessed.
Politics
Russell T Davies Says Tip Toe’s HIV+ Character Was An ‘Honour’ To Portray
Since Tip Toe came to an end, much has been made of its dark depiction of the modern world and its hard-hitting and unflinching commentary on the impact the rise of anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric is having on our society.
However, the show’s creator Russell T Davies has shared that there’s one way he’s proud that the show was also able to send a positive message.
During a recent interview with Magic to promote the show, the Bafta winner opened up about how his latest show gave him the opportunity to do something he “never got to do” in another of his most popular shows about the queer community, It’s A Sin.
It’s A Sin was released in 2021, and focussed on the AIDS crisis, and its impact on a close-knit group of young, predominantly-queer friends.
Russell said: “The nice thing about Tip Toe [is that] Alan Cumming is the lead [and his character is] HIV+. He’s the one thing I could never show in It’s A Sin because it ended in 1991, which is before the medications, before there was any treatment, before people started surviving properly.
“So now, I’ve got the chance to show off a man living for 30+ years with HIV. He takes one pill a day, he’s completely fine, it’s undetectable, it’s untransmittable in him. And that’s a nice pay-off – that I never got to do [in It’s A Sin].”
Russell previously said it was an “honour” to be able to depict a leading character who was living with HIV.
“It feels like the natural legacy of It’s A Sin,” he enthused (via Scene magazine). “There wasn’t the time in that show to tell the long‑term story – that medications were found which saved so many lives – so this feels like a right and proper continuation.”
The screenwriter – who is a patron of George House Trust and a vocal supporter of Terrence Higgins Trust, two HIV charities – added that he’d “often been asked by people in both organisations to show modern‑day characters who are HIV+ and living straightforward, happy lives”.
“It’s an honour to do so in Tip Toe,” he concluded.

Russell has revealed in the past that he’d originally hoped to have an episode of It’s A Sin set in the present day, which would explore how HIV treatment has changed over time.
However, when the series was cut down down from eight episodes to five, he made the decision not to include this part of the story.
Both Tip Toe and It’s A Sin are now streaming on Channel 4.
Politics
The Most Common But Unexpected Ways People Get Skin Cancer
“I only had one bad sunburn there once.”
Dr. Aubriana McEvoy, a Mohs surgeon at Siteman Cancer Center and a dermatology professor at WashU Medicine, hears versions of that line all the time. “And that’s exactly where we end up treating a skin cancer,” she said.
When she examines those same patients, the rest of their skin tells a different story. “We commonly see more sun damage and skin cancers on the left hand and forearm from years of incidental exposure through the car window,” McEvoy said.
The sunburn the patient remembers is the one they blame. The years of “normal” exposure that actually built the skin cancer are the years no one thinks about.
That asymmetry, with the left side worse than the right, is one Dr. James Chao sees constantly. Dr Chao is a board-certified facial plastic surgeon in San Diego, and one-sided damage from driving is common enough to have its own name.
“Unilateral dermatoheliosis is something we see as facial plastic surgeons,” Chao said.
Standard side car windows block only 55 to 75% of UVA rays.
“Your left cheek, temple and ear can take in years of sun damage while driving to and from work every day. What happens down the road is patients come in with uneven sun damage or photoaging. The left side of the face may have more sun spots and nasolabial folds that are just deeper.”
In Australia or the United Kingdom, it’s the right side. The asymmetry is the giveaway.

Maria Korneeva via Getty Images
Dr. Amy Bandy, a board-certified plastic and reconstructive surgeon, said the bigger misunderstanding is what counts as sun exposure in the first place.
“It’s easy to be exposed to a peak window of ultraviolet radiation from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. while watching your child play soccer on Saturday,” Bandy said.
“It doesn’t matter how cool it may feel or what the wind speed is. You’re still getting some of your highest levels of UV radiation. The same goes when you run errands between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., walk your dog down the street every day or stand outside waiting for your kids to get off the bus without any protective covering from the sun.”
She tells patients to do the math. Fifteen unprotected minutes a day adds up to roughly 90 hours a year. “Multiply that by 10 or 20 years, and you’ve accumulated thousands of hours of unprotected UV radiation exposure.”
Cloudy days don’t reset the count, either. “UVA light is prevalent year-round and penetrates through glass surfaces,” said Dr. Rosanne Paul, an assistant professor of dermatology at Case Western Reserve University. “Even in the spring and summer when there is cloud cover, UV light still penetrates and you should still wear sunscreen.”
Some of the most exposed skin is the skin nobody thinks to protect. The top of the head is one.
“Skin cancers are very common in the part lines of people,” said Dr. Purvisha Patel, a board-certified dermatologist and Mohs surgeon in Memphis, Tennessee. Parting your hair in the same place year after year leaves the same strip of scalp exposed to cumulative damage most people never notice, she said. Patel tells patients to rotate the part and wear a hat outdoors. Creams can’t get through hair, she said, making the scalp the one place where spray sunscreen earns its keep.
The skin around the eyes is another blind spot, and the source of the damage is one almost no patient suspects.
“We spend a lot of time with our heads tilted downward so our phones sit just below our line of sight,” said Dr. Gregg Feinerman, a board-certified ophthalmologist in Newport Beach, California. “This position perfectly angles our upper eyelids, eyebrows and temples directly at UV rays shining down from the sun. Most sunglasses don’t cover this area, which means you could have two to three unprotected square inches of the most delicate skin on your entire body exposed to UV rays every time you’re outside between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.”
Years later, Feinerman said, those patients arrive with thickened upper-eyelid skin and basal cell carcinomas in places they “can’t quite remember getting”.
Bandy can map the damage by decade. “After 10 years of exposure, I have begun to notice small amounts of uneven pigmentation starting to appear, along with freckles lasting longer, new sun spots forming, and my patients’ overall skin colour is slightly duller due to slower cell turnover,” she said.
By 20 years, Bandy said, established sun spots set in, along with permanent wrinkles that don’t smooth out when the face relaxes. After 30 years, the changes are no longer cosmetic. Collagen and elastin break down, and precancerous lesions appear.
Much of that damage is preventable. The trouble is, many patients have been doing the prevention wrong.

Patel said the most common mistake is incorrect sunscreen application. “Sunscreen is meant to be applied on clean, dry skin to be effective,” she said. “We cannot control for the efficacy and longevity of a product when it is put on top of or under makeup or moisturisers.”
Most adults under-apply, she added, recommending a nickel-sized amount for the face. Bandy adds that even correctly applied sunscreen needs reapplying after two hours outside.
For anyone weighing the cost of doing more, Chao has advice. Fixing a 1-centimeter defect on the nasal tip or eyelid can take up to three hours of surgery and leave permanent changes to the face. “We simply cannot recreate some of these structures,” he said. Prevention, by his reckoning, runs around $30 a month in sunscreen, plus $5 to $20 per window for UV-blocking film. “It could prevent you from ever needing Mohs surgery.”
McEvoy’s advice is shorter than the list of exposures. “Make sun protection part of your routine, not something you only think about at the beach,” she said. That means sunscreen on ordinary days, and covering the scalp part, ears, hands and eyelids. It also means knowing your own skin, because most skin cancers are first spotted by patients themselves. “Look for the ugly duckling, a spot that stands out, or anything that’s changing, bleeding, or not healing,” she said.
The line she repeats most often is the one she wishes patients heard first.
“There’s no such thing as a healthy tan. A tan is a visible sign of DNA damage in the skin.”
Politics
Helen Mirren Addresses ‘Zionist B***h’ Viral Video
Dame Helen Mirren has spoken for the first time about a viral video depicting her being met with verbal abuse in the street due to her past support of Israel.
Last month, footage was widely shared online depicting the Oscar winner being branded an “an evil Zionist bitch” by an unseen man.
In the clip, he also told her husband, the Oscar-winning filmmaker Taylor Hackford: “You as well, fuck you and all.”
Earlier this week, the British performer accepted the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Taormina Film Festival, where she said of the video in question that she had been “attacked by mistake by a man who was maybe a little over passionate or maybe mentally not quite stable”.
The Metropolitan Police previously said of the viral clip: “We are aware of a video circulating online, showing a man and a woman being subjected to antisemitic verbal abuse in Tower Hill. It is believed that the incident took place at the end of last year.”
Clarifying her stance on Israel at the event, Dame Helen said (via Variety): “Evil forces are rising everywhere, even in a country like Israel. How could you possibly repeat the actions of what was done to you as people to other people?”
She continued: “I was born at the end of the Second World War, I grew up in Europe post Second World War and the realisation in my parents’ generation of what had happened in the Holocaust was so profound, so important.
“Therefore, the creation of Israel was a very important moment, although maybe it was done in completely the wrong way, in the wrong place, I don’t know. But something had to happen after the horror.””

Dame Helen said in 2023: “I believe in Israel, in the existence of Israel, and I believe Israel has to go forward into the future, for the rest of eternity. I believe in Israel because of the Holocaust.”
She has since spoken out in support of Israel numerous times, having twice signed open letters in support of its inclusion at the Eurovision Song Contest, despite controversy over its involvement amid the ongoing conflict in Gaza.
In 2023, she also played the fourth prime minister of Israel, Golda Meir, in a biopic.
At the Taormina Film Festival, Dame Helen observed: “When you play Catherine the Great, why was Catherine called the Great? Because she took land. Why was Alexander the Great? Because he took land. He invaded, he killed people, he destroyed cities and he took land. Why is he remembered in history? Because with incredible brutality and unbelievable cruelty, he took land.
“So it devastates me. That’s what I mean. The evil is always lurking, waiting to take over, even in a place like Israel.
“I played Golda Meir and worked in a country that was the idealistic Israel, and I always thought it was a country that would never do wrong, but of course they were doing wrong, even then.”
Politics
After Dublin: What the EU’s new asylum pact means for Britain?
Ali Ahmadi, Catherine Barnard and Fiona Costello look at the impact of changes to the EU’s Pact on Migration and Asylum that enters into force on 12 June.
The European Union’s (EU) Pact on Migration and Asylum (consisting of ten legislative measures) will apply from 12 June 2026. What changes will the Pact make and what impact (if any) will the changes have on UK asylum claims and irregular arrivals?
We shall focus on the replacement of the most well-known rule, the Dublin Regulation (in its most recent form, Dublin III), that has governed asylum responsibility in EU since 1990. The general rule under the Dublin Regulation was that the EU country where an asylum seeker first arrived was responsible for processing their asylum claim (although family reunion was given priority over the first country of entry principle). The Dublin system relied on Eurodac, a biometric database that stored fingerprints of asylum seekers and irregular arrivals across Europe, allowing EU states to identify whether someone had previously entered the EU irregularly or had claimed asylum elsewhere. They could then be transferred back to the responsible state.
While Dublin appeared to place disproportionate pressure on frontline states like Greece and Italy, transfers were slow and sometimes didn’t happen. For instance, between 2013 and 2022 only 11% of transfer requests (35,000 out of 310,000) were received back by Italy. As a result, some countries (e.g. Germany and France) received far more asylum claims via secondary movements (when asylum seekers move from the country in which they first arrive, to seek protection elsewhere).
To address this, the new Pact keeps the first-country-of-entry principle but introduces broader reforms including:
- Mandatory solidarity mechanism: Each year, at least 30,000 asylum seekers will be placed in a shared EU ‘Solidarity Pool’ and redistributed from countries under greater pressure to those receiving fewer asylum applications. Member states can either accept their allocated share of asylum seekers, pay €20,000 for each person they decline to relocate, or provide equivalent operational support.
- Mandatory border screening: All irregular arrivals at EU external borders must undergo identity, health, security, and vulnerability checks within seven days.
- Asylum border procedure: Some asylum seekers will have their claims processed through a fast-track border procedure under a ‘legal fiction of non-entry’ (i.e. they are treated as though they have not formally entered the EU, even while physically present). This allows authorities to restrict certain rights and detain individuals for up to 12 weeks while their claims are assessed. The procedure may be applied to any unauthorised arrival, but is mandatory for those unlikely to qualify for protection and/or pose a security risk.
- Border return procedure: Those who have been refused protection at the border procedure will be detained for an additional 12 weeks pending return.
- Expanded Eurodac: Eurodac will be expanded to include more people such as children aged 6 to 14, unauthorised migrants, those on temporary protection (except Ukrainians), and resettled refugees. It will also collect more data points such as facial images, IDs, and personal data, allowing it to track individual applicants rather than just applications.
Researchers argue that the Pact prioritises deterrence and border control over protection rights, particularly the asylum border procedure that involves detention (including families and children). Accelerated procedures in asylum are often associated with inaccurate decision making with consequences for asylum seekers, and potential knock-on effects on the appeal process. Crucially, the border procedure operates under a ‘legal fiction of non-entry’ that further limits asylum seekers’ rights. They may also struggle to access legal advice or gather evidence within short timeframes.
The impact of the Pact on irregular arrivals in EU remains contested. The new measures may discourage some irregular migrants and reduce secondary movement across Europe. However, deterrence-based asylum policies have historically produced mixed results. Research consistently suggests that the push of escaping conflict and persecution, and the pull of social networks, and historical/colonial ties are far stronger drivers of migration.
How might the Pact affect the UK?
Following Brexit, the UK ceased to be a party to the Dublin system and lost access to Eurodac, meaning that it can no longer check whether an asylum seeker has previously applied for asylum (or been refused) in another EU country. Under Dublin, the UK was able to transfer some asylum seekers back to EU states responsible for their claims while also receiving some asylum seekers from EU. Some asylum seekers have cited the UK’s non-participation in Dublin as a reason for attempting the Channel crossing in small boats.
Home Office officials want to have access back to Eurodac, describing it as a potential ‘gamechanger’. In 2020 (the final year that UK had access to the database), half of the 8,466 people who arrived by small boats had been flagged on Eurodac for irregular entry into the EU.
There is uncertainty as to how the new Pact may indirectly affect the UK. If asylum claims are rejected more quickly in Europe, some rejected applicants may attempt onward movement toward the UK. Conversely, stronger registration systems and increased border enforcement may reduce movement towards the north. The impact is likely to be uneven and shaped by external factors. At present, there is little evidence that the Pact will significantly reduce migratory pressures across Europe or at Calais.
The UK has signed some bilateral deals with France to reduce and return irregular arrivals. The ‘one in, one out’ (2025) pilot allows the return of some small boat arrivals to France in exchange for the UK accepting a similar number of pre-vetted individuals from France via a legal route. As of February 2026, 305 people were returned to France and 367 people arrived in the UK under the scheme.
A new agreement (2026) focuses on enhanced patrols, intelligence, and resources to prevent crossings. According to the Home Office, the UK-France joint cooperation has prevented 42,000 crossing attempts and facilitated some returns since 2024. However, these agreements are limited in scope and scale, and unable to manage rising irregular arrivals. In 2025, a total of 52,452 people arrived irregularly.
So, the new Pact is unlikely to significantly reduce irregular arrivals in Europe and the UK. Access to Eurodac would reduce the UK’s attractiveness for those seeking to avoid the EU’s asylum system. This, combined with safe legal routes, and enforcement against smugglers, would offer a better path to managing irregular migration while upholding international obligations.
By Ali Ahmadi, Research Associate, University of Cambridge and PhD student at Anglia Ruskin University, Catherine Barnard, Senior Fellow, UK in a Changing Europe & Professor of EU Law and Employment Law, University of Cambridge and Fiona Costello, Assistant Professor, University of Birmingham.
Politics
Dan Jarvis Appointed Defence Secretary
Dan Jarvis has been appointed the new defence secretary following John Healey’s resignation.
The former Parachute Regiment officer has been security minister since the general election in 2024.
Healey dramatically quit on Thursday morning in protest at the amount of money being provided by No.10 and the Treasury in the Defence Investment Plan (DIP).
In a blistering letter to the prime minister, he said he had been left with “no other option” after learning that defence spending will go up from 2.6% of gross domestic product (GDP) next year to just 2.68% in 2030.
It is understood that amounted to an extra £13.5 billion, less than half of the £28bn army chiefs said they needed.
Healey said the funding settlement would force him “to make decisions that would reduce the readiness of our Forces and increase the risk to personnel on operations, and could make the country less safe”.
But in his reply, Starmer said he was “proud of our record on funding”.
The PM insisted the DIP “will provide the resources our military needs to keep us safe and the clarity the British defence industry needs to plan”.
“It will make the big strategic investments we need for the long term and give the certainty which private finance needs to invest,” he added.
“It will allow our armed forces to transform and modernise and back them with the tools they need to change the way we fight – and to deter our enemies.”
Jarvis served in Northern Ireland, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan during his time in the Army.
He was elected MP for Barnsley Central in 2011, and has represented Barnsley North since 2024 following changes to constituency boundaries.
He was promoted to the cabinet less than an hour after junior defence minister Al Carns also quit in protest at the Defence Investment Plan.
In a coruscating resignation letter to the PM, he said he could not defend “a level of investment I know to be inadequate to the task”.
Carns said: “I have sat in the rooms, seen the assessments, and spoken to the commanders who will be asked to do more with less, and I cannot in good conscience stand at the dispatch box and defend a level of investment I know to be inadequate to the task.
“A serious country funds its defence to meet the threat it actually faces, not the threat it wishes it faced.”
Earlier, Labour MP Pamela Nash, who was John Healey’s parliamentary aide, also resigned.
She said: “The defence of our nation is the most important responsibility for any government. The delays and difficulties with securing the necessary funding to progress the defence investment plan has been the latest issue that is damaging to the trust of the public in us.
“We saw this laid bare in last month’s election results. Our Government’s successes are consistently drowned out by mistakes and the failure to be bold when it matters most.
“Our country is more divided now than it has ever been in my lifetime, and our political opponents are both the provokers and the beneficiaries.
“If we cannot provide a strong vision for the UK’s future, and enact a clear, progressive route to get there, then we are allowing the unthinkable: for those opponents to take power. We must do better.”
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Gozney Dome XL Review: Bigger Capacity, Better Pizza
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If there’s one thing I’ve learned about most modern-day pizza ovens, it’s that they’re never quite big enough to cook multiple pizzas in one go – and that’s a travesty.
Often, it means the chef of the household – usually my partner – is left prepping one pizza at a time, then cooking it, then prepping another and cooking that, while everyone else tucks in to his efforts.
By the time he’s bringing the third or fourth pizza to the table, the rest of us are stick-a-fork-in-me stuffed, while he’s just about managed to shovel a single slice into his mouth.
Thankfully, he loves cooking for our family (especially pizza), so he doesn’t really mind. But when the opportunity came knocking to try Gozney’s Dome XL (Gen 2) – a bigger version of the Arc, which we’ve been using for the past few years – I was curious to see whether this would mean he’d finally be able to sit down and eat with us as a family.
Dear reader: he did! And as for the pizza… it was the best yet.

How big is the Gozney Dome XL?
It’s large enough to cook two 12″ (14″ at a push) pizzas – so, certainly living up to its moniker.
The pizza oven is 946mm wide, 997mm high and 697mm deep. If space is at a premium in your back garden, you might want to give this one a miss, and I’d instead recommend the slightly smaller Arc or even the OG Roccbox (great for camping/very small gardens) – we’ve bought and used both on repeat over the years.
How easy is the Gozney Dome XL to set up?
The Dome XL turned up on a pallet and required four of us to carry it through our house to the back garden, where we screwed it to the stand (sold separately), attached the chimney, adjusted the stones (there are two which sit next to each other), got it hooked up to the gas bottle and turned it on in about 10 minutes.
You need to cure the stone for about 30 minutes before first use. The oven’s digital display comes charged, so you can use it straight away.
How well does the Gozney Dome XL cook?
My first impression of the oven, even before we’ve started cooking, is that it’s really well-made. This is a professional bit of kit – and it looks the part, too. Considering it’s pretty large, it’s certainly not overbearing.
But while it’s clearly made by the pros who know what they’re doing, it’s not pretentious or complex. The Dome XL – just like Gozney’s other pizza ovens we’ve used over the years – is extremely user-friendly.
Beginners would have no issues getting this set up and cooking pizza or any other dishes they’d fancy giving a try. (Gozney’s YouTube has long been a firm favourite of ours to find recipe inspo).
The oven heats up quickly – it takes about 30 minutes to get to 300-degree+ temperatures, and then you can start cooking pizzas or sizzling steaks. The digital screen on the front of the oven gives you insights into the temperature of the oven, the temperature of the stone and even allows you to set a timer for cooking.
It also comes with two meat probes you can use for precision cooking – we cooked steaks on it in a cast iron pan, as well as chips (yes, you can even cook fries in a pizza oven!).

Once you’ve prepped your pizza and shuffled it onto the stone, it could be cooked in as little as 90 seconds – or longer if you prefer a low-and-slow cook.
Nowadays, we tend to opt for the latter so we can prep more to fill the table with pizza, pizza and more pizza.
We’ve cooked lots of different types of pizza on it, from crispier American styles to Neopolitan versions. Toppings have ranged from garlic prawns, Margherita, ’Nduja and honey, to tuna and red onion, pepperoni, chicken tikka and mango chutney, mushrooms and truffle oil and marinara.
The flame licks up the side and across the top of the oven for even heat distribution – cheese melts instantly, while the dough crust expands like a fluffed up pillow protecting the sizzling toppings. The end product is always restaurant-quality food.
Because it’s so big, you can create two large pizzas with half-and-half toppings so you’re essentially getting four pizzas made in one sitting – ideal for feeding hungry kids or having mates over for a pizza party (the new and improved BBQ gathering, if you ask me).

What about the accessories?
One thing it doesn’t come with, as standard, is a cover or a stand. And in my opinion, you need both (unless you’ve got an outdoor kitchen area or sturdy worktop).
The stand is metal and takes a bit of time to build, however it comes with everything you need to build it – and once it’s up, you’re good to go. It also comes with wheels, which is pretty handy if you want to be moving the oven around your patio.
If you buy the stand, I’d 100% recommend getting the cover that fits over the oven and stand to keep it protected from the elements. You can also get a cover that just sits over the oven.
The cover is one of the best garden furniture covers I’ve seen (we’ve had quite a few varieties over the years) – it’s stormproof and fits over the oven, chimney and stand easily. The toggles at the bottom help to keep it from blowing away, which has been very useful given the blustery storms we’ve been having of late.
We’re also keen to buy the Wood-Fire Control Kit in the coming months to see how cooking with wood (you can also use charcoal in it) alters the taste.
Any downsides?
We really had to mull this one over. I think the biggest downside is the cost at £2,499.99. It’s a premium pick, but if you’re serious about outdoor cooking, it’s worth the investment.
Who would love the Gozney Dome XL?
Pizza-lovers, of course! It’s definitely a great shout for those who love hosting, throwing parties in their back yard, or have more mouths to feed (ie. families).
The Dome XL doesn’t come cheap, but if you spend a lot of time outdoors, love to experiment with your cooking and/or have kids who are just as pizza-obsessed as you are, it’s certainly worth splashing the cash.
And if you’re after something smaller and a little more budget-friendly, you really can’t go wrong with the Arc XL (£799.99).
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