Politics
B’Tselem report exposes routine killings by “Israel” against Palestinian children
A new B’Tselem report examines the Israeli occupation’s killing of Palestinian children in the occupied West Bank, with special emphasis on 2025. The report provides a stark overview of the brute force Israel uses to maim and kill Palestine’s youth.
Titled — Unshielded Childhood: Palestinian children and teenagers killed by Israel in the West Bank — reveals the scale of the killings, and the circumstances in which children have been shot and killed by Israeli occupation forces (IOF). It also discusses the policies and practices enabling these violations to continue with total impunity.
“Israel” attacks all aspects of Palestinian life
Since the start of “Israel’s” genocide in Gaza, for want of revenge, the occupation has attacked all aspects of Palestinian existence in the territory. This includes the right to life.
Lethal violence carried out by the occupation’s military and settler militias has led to an unprecedented increase in the number of Palestinians killed by the occupation. This includes children. Between 7 October 2023 and 7 June 2026, the IOF killed 1,086 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank. Almost one in every four, or 235, of those killed was a Palestinian child. But, since October 2023, no charges have been filed in any of these cases.
The report also documents how the violence extends beyond the moment children are shot. In nearly a quarter of the cases involving children killed in 2025, the IOF deliberately delayed or prevented critically wounded children from receiving life-saving medical treatment.
These findings expose a consistent pattern. Palestinian children are killed by “Israel”, intentionally denied urgent medical care. They are also denied dignity even after death, with 18 of the 54 bodies still being withheld by the occupation, as of 6 June 2026.
54 Palestinian children in the occupied West Bank killed in 2025
120 Palestinian children were killed by “Israel” in 2023. 80 of them in under three months after 7 October, 2023. In 2024, 89 children were killed. These two years saw a record number of Palestinian children killed.
54 children, who were 17 years old and younger, were killed by the Israeli occupation in 2025. Five of these were between the ages of just two and 10 years old. This figure is lower than 2023 and 2024. But it is still four times the number of children killed by the occupation between 2005 and 2021. During this time, an average of 19 Palestinians were killed by the IOF and illegal colonial settlers each year. Israeli occupation authorities are withholding the bodies of 18 of these 54 children. So they deny their families the opportunity to bury them, and prolong their suffering.
Of these 54 children killed by “Israel” in 2025, thirteen were shot while throwing stones at roads or armoured tanks. Even though no injuries were reported from the stone-throwing. And at least 21 were not involved in any clashes, even when they were taking place nearby.
“The widespread, unprecedented killing of Palestinian children and teenagers in the West Bank is the result of a broader Israeli policy. The policy enables the killing of Palestinians with virtually no accountability. When the military commander of the area boasts that Israel is killing Palestinians ‘like we haven’t killed since 1967,’ he is confirming exactly that: the system does not merely back those who pull the trigger – it effectively grants them a license to kill.”
Shoot-to-kill directives
Novak is referring to major general Avi Bluth, head of the army’s central command in the West Bank, who also claimed 96 percent of those killed were involved in “terrorism”. This allegation has been proven to be a “blatant lie” by B’Tselem documentation.
The report explains that the increase in child fatalities started in 2022. New regulations brought in during that year, allow occupation soldiers to use lethal fire against any Palestinian throwing stones. This also applies to those who supposedly throw stones, but who flee the scene, and so pose no danger.
47 of the 54 children were killed by the Israeli occupation gunfire, in a range of military operations and confrontations, although B’Tselem says it was unable to verify many of these claims. The other seven were killed by Israeli occupation airstrikes.
B’Tselem’s report details each of the 54 children killed by “Israel” in 2025. In most of these cases, testimonies are also given by eyewitnesses and family members.
Nidal Shaghnubi, 16, was killed on 17 May 2025, in Burqah, Nablus district.
Along with two other teens, Shaghnubi was throwing stones at Route 60. This is the main road running North to South of the occupied West Bank, and is used by both settlers and Palestinians. Israeli occupation soldiers opened fire at them. Shaghnubi was critically wounded, but his two friends, who were also injured, managed to flee and were taken to hospital in an ambulance. No residents or ambulance was able to reach Shaghnubi, as the soldiers continued firing into the air. He died as a result of his wounds and “Israel” is still withholding his body.
“We weren’t given the chance to say goodbye, or bury him.”
According to B’Tselem, in cases where the IOF have removed the wounded from the scene themselves, it is often unknown whether they made any attempt to save the victim’s life before they died.
As part of a testimony he gave to B’Tselem on 28 March 2026, Nidal’s father Wael Shaghnubi, 54, says:
“I still haven’t seen my son. They wouldn’t let me see him after he was wounded, or after he died. When he was lying there in the grove, they didn’t let me go near him or look at him. And I don’t know where on his body he was wounded. His body hasn’t been returned to us, and we weren’t given the chance to say goodbye to him, or bury him.”
Amru Ali Ahmad Qabha, 13, was shot and killed on 18 July, 2025, in Ya’bad, Jenin district.
The IOF were raiding the town of Ya’bad, and Qabha happened to pass by the soldiers. At the same time they ordered him to stop, they also fired at him. The ambulance was only allowed to enter once Qabha had died of his wounds. In a press report, the occupation claimed he had thrown an IED at the military and another one had been found at the scene.
As part of a testimony she gave to B’Tselem on 28 March 2026, Amru’s mother Ayidah Qabha, 42 says of her only son:
“I can’t forget the moment I saw my son’s body, with deep wounds in his neck and legs, and nine bullets that pierced his body.”
Muhammad Bahajat al-Halaq, 9, was killed on 16 October 2025, in a- Rihiya village, South of Hebron.
Two military jeeps stopped next to the school in the centre of the village, so the children ran away and hid. Some threw stones at the armoured jeeps as they passed. An occupation soldier fired live bullets, and one hit al-Halaq in the pelvis. He collapsed, bleeding. Then the soldiers fired tear gas at him, and fired live bullets at a young man who tried to reach him. He was pronounced dead at 6pm that evening.
“Israel” prevents medical personnel reaching critically injured
According to the report, at least nine out of the 54 cases of children killed by “Israel” in 2025, involved soldiers firing live shots in the air or at residents and medical personnel to keep them away from the wounded persons.
As part of a testimony she gave to B’Tselem on 27 October 2025, Muhammad’s mother Aliyah al-Halaq, 32, says:
On 22 October, some military vehicles arrived at the place where Muhammad was shot, accompanied by some Israeli journalists. At first I thought they were going to conduct a real investigation into the incident. But I lost hope when I heard the soldiers threatening the residents over loudspeakers, saying Muhammad’s name and that they had no regrets over his death, and would not hesitate to shoot anyone who threw stones, even such a young child. They threatened to do to us what they did in Gaza, and to destroy our village’s streets, like they did in Jenin and Tulkarm.
The occupation’s killing of Palestinian children has become “routine.” Even the killing of 21,000 children during the occupation’s genocide in Gaza has failed to lead to demands for change. This shows, according to the report, the “Israeli” public’s indifference to, and dehumanisation of, Palestinians.
The sharp rise in the killing of children in the occupied West Bank cannot be viewed in isolation from Israel’s genocide in Gaza. More than 21,000 Palestinian children have been killed here since October 2023. But such an unprecedented death toll has not brought about widespread public demands for a change in policy. B’Tselem argues this is because Palestinians have been dehumanised to such an extent in “Israeli” society.
This climate of impunity and indifference, it says, has helped normalise the “routine” killing of Palestinian children.
Featured image via B’Tselem / the Canary
By Charlie Jaay
Politics
After beating England, Messi sets five new World Cup records
Argentina booked their place in the 2026 World Cup final with a dramatic 2–1 comeback win over England on 15 July at Atlanta Stadium, keeping their hopes of defending the title alive. They will now face Spain in Sunday’s final in what promises to be a blockbuster showdown.
It was another unforgettable night for football fans, with Lionel Messi once again proving why he’s one of the greatest players of all time. The Argentina captain inspired his side to a second consecutive World Cup final, playing a decisive role as they turned the match around in the closing stages of one of the tournament’s most gripping semi-finals.
Argentina fight back to reach the final
England looked on course for a place in the final after taking the lead, but Messi stepped up when it mattered most. The veteran playmaker produced two brilliant assists to complete Argentina’s comeback.
His first pass found Enzo Fernández, who fired home the equaliser, before Lautaro Martínez finished off another Messi setup to score the winner and send Argentina into the final. The dramatic victory sparked huge celebrations among the Argentine players and supporters.
The reigning champions are now just one win away from defending their crown as they prepare for a mouth-watering final against Spain.
Messi adds more records to his incredible legacy
As if leading Argentina to another World Cup final wasn’t enough, Messi also added several more milestones to his remarkable career.
His two assists against England took his total to 12 World Cup assists, extending his record as the tournament’s all-time leading assist provider.
The Argentine superstar also became the player with the most goal contributions in World Cup knockout matches, adding yet another record to his already extraordinary legacy.
Featured image via the Canary
By Alaa Shamali
Politics
Open letter: the use of unlicensed products for perioperative skin preparation
Throughout the NHS, there has been increasing concern raised by clinicians over recent years that due to budgetary pressures, clinicians are having to use unlicensed products when preparing skin for surgery putting patient safety at risk. As a result, a group of senior clinicians have written to the Department of Health and Social Care and MHRA to push them to provide greater clarity and leadership on the topic to help improve patient outcomes.
Preet Kaur Gill MP
The use of unlicensed products for perioperative skin preparation
14th July
MDU warns Chancellor clinical negligence system ‘not fit for purpose’
Northern Ireland RE curriculum is ‘indoctrination’ – Supreme Court
Dear Minister,
As clinicians working across the NHS, we are writing to express concern about the continued use of unlicensed products for perioperative skin preparation within some NHS organisations.
Preventing surgical site infections (SSIs) is a fundamental component of safe surgical care. Patients should be able to have confidence that products used before surgery have been appropriately assessed, authorised, and regulated for their intended purpose. However, we understand that some NHS Trusts are procuring unlicensed biocidal products in place of licensed medicinal products specifically approved for perioperative use.
While such decisions may be driven by short-term cost pressures, they risk creating unintended consequences for both patients and the wider NHS. The use of unlicensed products raises important questions regarding patient safety, clinical governance, informed consent, and accountability. It also introduces variation in practice across the health service at a time when consistency and quality of care are key priorities.
The implications extend beyond patient outcomes. Surgical site infections can lead to prolonged hospital stays, delayed recovery, and increased demand on NHS services. Any procurement savings must therefore be weighed against the potentially significant costs associated with avoidable complications, additional treatment, and litigation.
We are therefore calling on the MHRA and the Department of Health and Social Care to provide greater clarity and leadership in this area, including:
- Clear national guidance on the use of licensed and unlicensed products for perioperative skin preparation;
- Greater transparency regarding regulatory oversight and enforcement;
- Improved monitoring of patient outcomes and adverse events associated with unlicensed products; and
- Support for procurement decisions that properly reflect patient safety, clinical effectiveness, and whole-system costs.
At a time when the NHS is seeking to improve productivity, reduce waiting lists, and enhance patient safety, it is essential that procurement decisions support these objectives. Patients deserve confidence that the products used in their care meet the highest standards of safety, quality, and regulatory scrutiny.
Yours sincerely,
Mr Andrea Bille
Thoracic Surgeon
Guy’s Hospital
Mr Aziz Momin
Consultant Cardiac Surgeon
St George’s Hospital
Mr Giles Bond-Smith MBBS BSc FRCS
Consultant HPB, AWR & Emergency Surgeon
Clinical Director for Surgery, Women’s and Oncology (SUWON)
Lindsay Keeley RN BSc Hons
Clinical, Patient Safety & Quality Lead
The Association for Perioperative Practice
Oliver Tierney
President and Director
The Association for Perioperative Practice
Politics
Polanski slams climate inaction as heatwaves cost us billions
Climate denying politicians love to moan about the cost of ‘Net Zero’; what they hate discussing is the cost of not solving climate change. And as we’re seeing, the costs are in the billions already:
Once again – the cost of inaction.
Investing in tackling the climate crisis is vital for our national security and an important opportunity to invest in our communities.
At the very least, the Government should stop making things worse! https://t.co/Kpe9JEadle — Zack Polanski (@ZackPolanski) July 16, 2026
Heating up
Polanski was drawing attention to a study from the Verdant thinktank, which describes itself as follows:
To address these new times requires new thinking and a new approach. We will work collaboratively, bringing citizens and experts together to design the next chapter of progressive politics in the UK. We will draw on expertise across the environment, social, and economic justice movements, conducting deep, future-facing research to develop practical and ambitious policy proposals. …
Our aim is to make bold, inclusive policy the foundation of a fair, flourishing and sustainable Britain.
The co-directors of Verdant include Deborah Doane and James Meadway, who we’ve interviewed before:
There are plans to build a data centre in Brick Lane, we hear from economist James Meadway
— Canary (@TheCanaryUK) June 4, 2026
@financialeyes Ranjan Balakumaran pic.twitter.com/kht5bFQaOx
The cost
In the intro to their latest report, Verdant write:
June 2026’s record-breaking heatwave, which saw temperatures top 37 degrees in parts of the country, has had an estimated, direct economic cost of at least £2.36bn. This is the result of reduced productivity due to the well-documented effect of all work becoming harder at higher temperatures, and that infrastructure and equipment overheat and fail. For each one degree Celsius temperature increase above 30 degrees in Europe, a 3% reduction in average output per hour has been observed. In a prolonged heatwave, these impacts add up to become significant economic losses. This is only the direct economic cost from productivity losses, and excludes the knock-on effects of increased energy demand, for example.
If heatwaves continue to worsen at the same pace as the previous decade, we should expect cumulative losses from each summers’ heatwaves of at least £25bn by 2030. This is likely to be an underestimate of their true cost, since it is recording only the direct impact on productivity. Further impacts on the costs and supplies of electricity, and the wider macroeconomic effects will add to this baseline cost. We are, in addition, not counting the dreadful human cost in health and mortality.
To reduce the economic losses of heatwaves, and to better protect those in work, we recommend a national maximum working temperature; the introduction of national heat insurance to protect incomes of those unable to work during heatwaves; and investment in active cooling and urban redesign, including greening urban spaces, to reduce the impact of extreme heat itself.
We’ve also reported on the call for the national maximum working temperature; most recently when Green MP Hannah Spencer discussed introducing a bill on the topic in parliament.
"From bus and train drivers sweltering in their cabins to bakers working in over 40 degrees, and builders whose workplaces offer no respite from the heat – the government has a duty to protect all of us."
Today Hannah Spencer is tabling a maximum workplace temperature bill. pic.twitter.com/0ofCXCDx4M
— The Green Party (@TheGreenParty) July 13, 2026
Denial
It’s important to be aware of the costs of not solving climate change — especially because the deniers only focus on the costs of switching to renewables. And this isn’t the only trick they pull.
In a video titled, You’ve been lied to about Net Zero, documentarian Simon Clark explains that deniers create misinformation around Net Zero as follows:
So these are the five steps of the anti-Net Zero playbook. Inflate the costs, ignore the cost of business as usual, ignore the operational savings, ignore the co-benefits, and most egregiously, ignore the costs of inaction. Not getting to Net Zero is going to cost the world much, much more
Clark also highlights that when people target the ‘cost’ of switching to Net Zero, they ignore the costs of not switching.
The second step often is to pretend that we can just carry on with business as usual and it won’t cost us anything. Let’s say we’re talking about decarbonising transport. And then people say, “Oh, but you know, an EV that’s going to cost like £40,000. You know, that’s a huge investment. That’s expensive, right?” You know, and you add that up over all of the cars in the country and you suddenly get a big scary number.
Again, let’s say we just carry on with petrol cars. Petrol cars aren’t free, right? Okay, maybe you own a petrol car now, so you don’t have to buy a new one, but that won’t last forever. So, that’s step two is you basically pretend that the existing system, which we’ve already built and paid for, can just carry on forever and won’t ever need replacing.
Follow the money
It’s obvious why many climate-denying politicians talk down the impacts of climate change; it’s because they’re in the pocket of the fossil fuel industry.
Decades of inaction have already cost us billions, and further dawdling will cost us trillions. In other words, it’s time to treat this issue as the crisis it so obviously is.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
Politics
Lessons from the local elections: what can Labour learn from the result in Birmingham?
Matthew Lloyd analyses the recent local election results in Birmingham and the lessons they hold for Andy Burnham as Prime Minister.
Birmingham is the largest local authority in Europe. Like many local authorities, it struggled financially and by 2023 it had joined the list of local authorities which had been declared bankrupt. Before the local elections the city was seen as a Labour stronghold, but after heavy Labour loses, Birmingham has its first ever Liberal Democrat council leader who is supported by a cross-party coalition.
Labour faced multiple electoral threats from pro-Gaza independents, Reform and the Greens, who all threatened different parts of its electoral coalition. Though local politics did have an impact on Birmingham’s local election results, they also offer a snapshot of the electoral dilemma Labour faces across the UK.
If the Labour Party is to rebuild its electoral coalition for the next set of local elections, and ultimately the general election, then lessons must be learnt from what happened in Birmingham.
Labour had run the council since 2012, but at this election the party lost 48 seats, relegating it to the third-largest party. Labour suffered two defections a month after the local elections reducing it to the fourth largest party.

Source: Author generated using electoral data – Changes in number of Birmingham City Council seats between political parties 2010-2026
Reform UK came in as the largest party, gaining 23 seats. The Greens gained 17 seats, becoming the second largest party. The Lib Dems remained even at 12 seats. The Conservatives declined from 22 to 16 seats and the independents, among whom many campaigned specifically on the issue of Gaza, gained 13 seats. The Workers’ Party of Birmingham gained 1 seat.

Source: Author generated using electoral data – Changes in number of Birmingham City Council seats in the 2022 and 2026 local elections.
Reform UK’s growing strength in Birmingham did not emerge overnight. It reflected a combination of local and national factors. Birmingham’s financial crisis, declining public services and the prolonged bin strikes created a sense that the city was no longer working. Reform was able to channel that frustration.
At the same time, national debates around immigration, identity and patriotism became increasingly prominent. It was no coincidence that last summer’s flag flying campaign originated in Birmingham. The campaign reflected a growing confidence among Reform supporters and demonstrated that questions of identity had become politically salient well before the local elections. Rather than creating Reform’s success, it revealed a political mood that the party would later convert into votes.
At the other end of the political spectrum, Starmer’s initial handling of the party’s response to Israel’s war in Gaza was used in the Green Party’s and Birmingham independents’ literature, with both opposing the government’s stance (see leaflet graphics below). These local elections revealed Labour’s worst nightmare, as residents in areas such as Kings Heath and Stirchley who had resisted the ‘flaggers’ turned to the Greens as progressive alternative to Reform UK.
Supporters of both Reform UK and the Green Party appeared united around their dislike for Starmer, even if this opinion is grounded in different reasons. Both parties battled to be seen as the party that could ‘stop Labour’ or ‘defeat Starmer’ (see leaflet graphics below).
Nigel Farage claimed that this same anti-Starmer tactic was used in the recent Makerfield by-election, but was less effective as Labour’s candidate and potential future leader, Andy Burnham, was also able to claim he would seek to remove Starmer from Number 10. This provides hope for Labour that a new leader could somewhat recover its electoral appeal.

Source: Author generated and collected from leaflets handed out to Birmingham residents during the 2026 Birmingham council elections
Local factors also meant Birmingham Labour always faced a difficult fight. Birmingham’s equal pay crisis arose because successive administrations failed to resolve longstanding pay disparities and bonus arrangements across the workforce. Some local agreements in male-dominated services, including refuse collection, contributed to those liabilities. The council also faced equal pay claims triggered in 2021 partly due to alleged inflated pay, the creation of new roles and new practices such as ‘task and finish’, which were part of settlements to avoid strikes by refuge workers.

Source: Facebook Ad by ‘Unite for a Workers’ Economy’ Group during the Birmingham Local Elections
Equal pay claims coupled with the costs of a botched implementation of a new IT system contributed towards the council being declared bankrupt and the now infamous bin worker strikes that have meant Birmingham residents have not had their recycling collected since Christmas 2024.
Birmingham’s local elections should be seen as a warning for Labour rather than an exception. The party is losing different parts of its electoral coalition for different reasons. Reform appealed to voters frustrated by economic decline and declining public services. The Greens and pro-Gaza independents appealed to progressive voters who felt Labour no longer represented them.
While local factors made Labour’s position worse, the underlying trends are national. One lesson is that Andy Burnham’s argument for deeper English devolution deserves renewed attention. Giving mayors and local leaders greater powers over economic development, transport, housing and public services would allow places like Birmingham to respond more directly to local challenges and rebuild trust in politics. If Labour is serious about renewing its electoral coalition, it will need to combine a national vision with a stronger model of local government.
By Matthew Lloyd, PhD candidate, Queen Mary University of London and political strategy consultant.
Politics
Climate change missing from most UK media reports on June heatwave
The reality of climate change went unmentioned in most UK media reports on the June 2026 heatwave. An analysis of 2,500 articles on the soaring temperatures showed that three-quarters of press reports made no mention of the critical issue.
Professor Ed Hawkins, a climate scientist from the University of Reading, warned:
When extreme heatwaves occur, it is critical that the British public are made aware in the media they consume that greenhouse gas emissions, primarily from burning fossil fuels, have made those heatwaves hotter than they would otherwise have been.
The heatwave was the second of 2026 and topped 37°C, and an estimated 2,700 people are reported to have died from heat-related illnesses a result of the May and June heatwaves.
Extreme heat and climate change
Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU) thinktank international lead Gareth Redmond-King said:
The link between all three recent periods of extreme heat and climate change is indisputable.
If recent heatwaves are the symptom, then climate change is the illness, and net zero is the medicine. When public understanding of this link is so low, it’s vital that the dots are joined between these three concepts to help make us all better.
The Guardian reported:
The FT scored highest on relating extreme heat stories to the climate, with nearly two thirds making the link – that is, 50 out of its 78 stories over the period.
The Guardian came next, with roughly half of its heat-related stories drawing the link to the climate crisis – 64 out of 131 articles.
The Independent newspaper did better with: It has published:
783 heatwave stories over the period, of which 304 – roughly 39% – mentioned the climate.
And, according to the Guardian:
About a fifth of the Mail’s more than 300 heatwave stories referred to global heating, and about one in eight of the 400-plus stories in the Express.
In a rapidly heating world, the legacy media seem to be failing the public. This is no surprise, given the dying mainstream press, whether conservative or liberal, is deeply tied to corporate interests. The Canary will continue to make the links so many outlets skip over.
Featured image via Mammuth / Unsplash
By Joe Glenton
Politics
The House Article | How Parliament rediscovered the power of the humble address

Erskine May
8 min read
It failed to break the Brexit deadlock but helped hasten the exit of Keir Starmer. Lord Lisvane explains how Parliament rediscovered the power of an humble address
That an humble address be presented to His Majesty, that he will be graciously pleased to give directions to require the government to lay before this House all papers relating to Lord Mandelson’s appointment as His Majesty’s ambassador to the United States of America, including but not confined to…
So begins the lengthy resolution come to by the House of Commons on 4 February 2026. In response, the government provided 1,000 pages of documents in two tranches, in March and June 2026. As a result of a manuscript amendment to the original motion, documents thought to raise issues of national security were first seen by the Intelligence and Security Committee.
These events can be seen as a welcome assertion of the power of Parliament over the executive. Certainly they have deep historical roots; but do they have quite the magical powers that many would wish to see?
The principle set out in Erskine May is that each House has the power to call for the production of papers by the government of the day, by a “motion for a return”. A return from the Privy Council or from a department headed by a secretary of state is called for by an humble (always “an” humble, not “a” humble) address to the sovereign; papers from any other body are sought simply by means of an Order of the House. The somewhat artificial distinction is based on the theory that secretaries of state are created by the King, and that the departments which they head are his property.
The power of each House to call for papers is in effect delegated to select committees, whose parent House has given them the power “to call for persons, papers and records” (known as PPR). This is of greater practical importance in the often adversarial surroundings of the House of Commons than in the calmer waters of the House of Lords. A select committee with PPR cannot exercise that power directly, as if it were the House itself. Rather, a select committee whose request is refused can report the matter to the House to take action (at which point, of course, the committee loses control of the process). It is sometimes suggested (but not by me) that such requests should be backed by a penal power, which would no doubt risk bringing the courts into the picture. In my experience, as a tussle over information is essentially a political struggle, witnesses come to realise quite quickly that continuing to refuse a select committee’s request may be much more damaging than giving in gracefully.
There remains a category of proceeding which is entirely at the initiative of ministers: “Motions for Unopposed Returns”. Some of these have become traditional: the Financial Statement and Budget Report and the accounts of the Contingencies Fund are two examples. The unopposed return is also used as a means of conferring the protection of privilege upon a document – typically the report of an inquiry – which otherwise might be the subject of legal proceedings.
Because a motion for an unopposed return (moved by a minister) is an indication that the document is about to be provided to the House, it is not in order to seek to oppose it (unlike a motion for an humble address, as we shall see).
The relationship between Crown and Parliament has proceeded in parallel since the very earliest days. Even after the Reform Act 1832 the procedure of the House of Commons, and the standing orders which regulated it, would have been easily recognisable to a Member in the Long Parliament of 1640. But the rapid development of the corporate state and government in the middle to late 19th century brought profound procedural change. Business became more complicated, and the standing orders proliferated to match it. Most important, the government took control of the agenda and the time of the House of Commons, a process completed – for the time being – by the ‘Balfour Reforms’ of 1902.
One type of proceeding that was profoundly changed by these developments was calling for papers. In earlier centuries, seeking the production of papers for the information of the House was fairly frequent, and often had a charming informality (as it were, “we’d like to know more about this, so we had better see some papers”). The establishment of co-ordinated machinery of government in the latter half of the 19th century meant that a great deal of information began to be routinely provided to Parliament, both in Command Papers (presented to Parliament “by command” of the sovereign) and Act Papers (where statutes required the submission of reports to Parliament). This meant that there was much less need to call for papers by motions for returns or humble addresses.
But the power of both Houses to call for papers remained unchanged, and as the Commons Procedure Committee noted in 2019, has never been challenged. There are no limits upon it in common law or statute.
The House of Commons must be able to instruct His Majesty’s ministers, and refusal to comply must in turn be an issue of privilege, and ultimately of confidence
Humble addresses went into near-hibernation for some years (although at the start of every parliamentary session each House has agreed a motion for an humble address to the sovereign for the Queen’s or King’s Speech from the throne). Motions for humble addresses are still frequently seen, as any attempt to have a statutory instrument annulled takes the form of a “prayer”; whereby an address would be presented to the sovereign, praying that the such-and-such statutory instrument be annulled. It is extremely rare for a motion of this sort to be agreed, so they are essentially vehicles for debate.
In the 2017-19 session, the issue emerged from hibernation, with 10 motions in the name of the leader of the opposition put down on opposition days. Four (seeking the submission of papers to a select committee) were agreed, and the others were negatived.
The profile of humble addresses seeking information was raised sharply in November 2018 when the House agreed a motion calling for legal advice given to ministers (contrary to the convention in the Ministerial Code). The government responded in general terms, only for the House, in December 2018, to find ministers in contempt for not providing the Attorney General’s advice as given. This prompted the inquiry by the Commons Procedure Committee
So, how effective is the humble address of the type relating to Lord Mandelson? The answer must, I think, be “fairly effective”. First, you need time on the floor of the House. If the government of the day is not going to provide this (and there may well be political reasons why any government might be reluctant to do so) then the obvious vehicle will be an opposition day.
Second, will an agreed motion be binding on the government? On 1 November 2017 the then-opposition tabled a motion for an humble address seeking impact assessments for a number of sectors following Brexit. The motion was agreed to, and the then-shadow secretary of state for exiting the European Union, Keir Starmer, asked the Speaker if the decision of the House would be binding on the government. In a somewhat rambling ruling, the Speaker said that “motions of this kind have been traditionally regarded as binding or effective”.
From first principles, this must be right. The House of Commons must be able to instruct His Majesty’s ministers, and refusal to comply must in turn be an issue of privilege, and ultimately of confidence.
Third, will you get what you asked for? The government response to the humble address relating to Lord Mandelson very helpfully sets out the process followed in assembling the material sought. It quotes the resolutions on ministerial accountability to Parliament, allowing non-disclosure when disclosure “would not be in the public interest”. Redactions were made to protect national security, international relations, junior staff or people peripherally involved, or to protect legal professional privilege.
Within these constraints, the humble address provided what was expected – although it must be remembered that in this case the government was a willing player.
There has been some unease about possible prodigal use of these motions. In 2019, the Commons Procedure Committee was pretty unsympathetic. It pointed out the options available to the government: simply vote against the motion (or amend it); negotiate over the material to be provided; or have the material submitted to a select committee for analysis and report.
So, two (or even two-and-a-half) cheers for the humble address. Like any procedural device, it should not be used too often; but in Parliament’s dealings with over-mighty executives (and executives are always over-mighty) it remains a weapon in the armoury.
Lord Lisvane is a crossbench peer and former clerk of the Commons
Politics
The House | Heathrow, HS2, Homes: How Britain’s Infrastructure Projects Will Fare Under Burnham

8 min read
Keir Starmer promised to ‘get Britain building again’ but leaves No 10 with many projects still on the drawing board. Noah Vickers reports on how Andy Burnham might pick up the pace
Andy Burnham inherits a raft of government-backed projects, from a controversial third runway at Heathrow to the massively expensive High Speed 2 rail line, and an ambitious programme of new towns as part of a pledge to build 1.5 million homes before the next election.
As Labour MPs are only too aware, the Makerfield MP’s promise to put “good growth in every postcode” presents an opportunity to change direction on each of those schemes, particularly as he seeks to draw a contrast with his predecessor, Keir Starmer.
On High Speed 2, Burnham has been clear he wants to reverse Rishi Sunak’s decision to axe the line’s ‘northern leg’ to Manchester – though precisely what combination of levers he would pull to pay for it remains unclear.
Ahead of his election in Makerfield, Burnham told the i Paper there is a “cleverer way” of funding the route north of Birmingham, drawing on his experience as the minister who signed off on the funding for London’s Elizabeth line. According to a 2024 report commissioned by Burnham, that could involve money raised from business rates.
“A portion of the net-increase in business rates that is directly attributable to the project (i.e. which would not have been ‘generated’ if the project was not delivered) could be ringfenced over time, and used to repay upfront financing to support the capital works,” said the report, overseen by former HS2 Ltd chairman Sir David Higgins and the engineering consultants Arup.
Henri Murison, chief executive of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership, which contributed to the report, points out that the most expensive parts of the route have already been allocated funding.
“The most expensive bit, which is Manchester Piccadilly underground station through to Manchester Airport, has just been re-branded as part of Northern Powerhouse Rail,” he says.
“So, when we talk about HS2, the thing you’ve got to remember is that the most expensive bit at the bottom and top is still being built. It’s just the relatively cheap bit in the middle that we’re not doing.”
Given that extending the line north of Birmingham would generate a significant increase in passengers, Murison argues that future fare income could be key in helping to pay for the full route.
Burnham has also talked about land value capture as a way of raising funds for it, which Murison believes has been a missed opportunity in the project’s first phase.
“Planning permissions have gone sky-high in Birmingham, the same thing’s happened at Old Oak Common [in west London], but all that uplift in the value of land around the stations and the depots on the route of phase one has been given away by the UK government – and I think that’s scandalous.”
The stage has only been set for restoring the route, he adds, as the land has been carefully safeguarded against attempts to sell it.
“Fundamentally, between the then-chancellor Jeremy Hunt, Andy Burnham, Andy Street, a load of us in the private sector, we have managed to avoid the government and the country doing something really stupid, which was making decisions it couldn’t reconsider…
“That is the real victory. The fact that Andy is one of the people who has been on that side of the debate is obviously a huge help to us when trying to finish the job.”
When it comes to Labour’s housing mission, Burnham inherits a programme of new towns which remains at a relatively early stage. Between March and May this year, ministers consulted on seven proposed sites, with the outcome of that exercise yet to be published.
Sir Michael Lyons, who chaired the taskforce which recommended a shortlist of 12 locations from which the seven have been drawn, is encouraged by what Burnham has said on housing so far.
“Everything that he says points to a further concentration on the housing shortfall in this country and a proper role for government and the public sector in making sure that we move faster towards homes for all,” Lyons tells The House.
“We’ve got a massive task there, years of work ahead of us. It’s not helped by setting targets which you can’t meet. Frankly, the 1.5 [million homes] figure was hope against experience.”
While he acknowledges that the target has prompted “a lot of action” in difficult circumstances, he believes the next PM should replace it with a new 10-year goal, stretching beyond the current Parliament and focused on ensuring authorities meet local quotas.
Burnham’s boosterism, Lyons argues, will itself have a positive impact on confidence in the housebuilding sector.
“We have managed to avoid the government and the country doing something really stupid”
“I do think it makes a difference if the country’s led by somebody who emphasises that you can do things, rather than that ‘it’s all complicated’. That is not to be underestimated, in releasing energy, in releasing innovation and basically building a coalition of people willing to find ways of progressing things faster.”
He also believes Burnham will bring new ways of thinking about funding major developments.
“There’s quite a lot of people talking about the fact that while we are severely limited in terms of public expenditure, that does not necessarily go for long-term investment and that there is scope for government to do more in that area.
“I think we will see Burnham coming forward with sound proposals for patient capital to be invested in housing and infrastructure – I’m fully expecting that.”
While Burnham has promised to devolve new decision making powers to local communities, Lyons warns that this cannot mean allowing councils to “pull up the drawbridge” on new homes.
One of the seven new towns consulted on is at Crews Hill and Chase Park on the northern edge of London. But there, Enfield council’s new Conservative administration has “formally withdrawn” support for the scheme, saying it “reflects the democratic will of the residents we have been chosen to represent”.
As far as Lyons is concerned, Burnham’s government should firmly push back against such resistance, arguing that housing should be viewed through the same prism as defence.
“Defence is an issue of national interest,” he says. “We don’t start debating with local communities whether they want a submarine base on their doorstep. You can’t run the country that way.”
During his taskforce’s work identifying sites, Lyons says that in some cases, he saw “people opposing development in the most offensive terms, really, about keeping out others”.
He adds: “For many more people, it’s about not wanting their quality of life to be damaged by development.
“I think the answer to that is investment in economic and social infrastructure – so that your doctor’s surgery isn’t all of a sudden flooded, your local schools do have enough places to accommodate the homes being built. But this isn’t beyond us, actually. These are things that can be planned for.”
Perhaps most fascinating will be the approach Burnham takes on Heathrow expansion. The scheme, touted by Chancellor Rachel Reeves as a critical growth project, continues to divide Labour MPs, particularly in London, where mayor Sir Sadiq Khan is opposed on environmental grounds.
MPs trying to prevent a third runway are reassured by comments made by Burnham following Reeves’ announcement about the scheme in January 2025, when he told Times Radio that expansion “diverts infrastructure investment away from the North and traps it in London and the South East”.
Burnham called it “a model for an ever-overheating UK economy, rather than a more balanced, levelled-up economy, which is what we would argue for”.
One London Labour MP tells The House those comments “have not passed us by” and that Burnham’s ascendency brings “an opportunity for a change of conversation” about the project.
“It doesn’t make economic sense – it’s just a financially unviable scheme. I cannot see how it can meet our climate targets, but also I think it would be much better for regional growth [not to build it],” they say.
“If there’s going to be growth in air transport, it’s better to share that out with the regional airports, and I hope to get a good hearing on that from Andy.”
Another London Labour MP argues that if Heathrow expands: “Manchester Airport loses out, currently Birmingham Airport loses out even more and therefore the hinterlands, the economies of those regions around those airports… I wouldn’t put any money on runway three getting any further.”
But Steve Race, the Exeter MP who co-convenes the Labour Growth Group, believes the next PM should press ahead with the work started by Reeves.
“As long as we can do it within our carbon budget, as long as we’re forcing airlines and airports to get to [improved] sustainability as quickly as they possibly can, then I think connectivity, trade and infrastructure development is absolutely key to this economy,” he says.
One well-connected source says that as much as Khan and Burnham “don’t particularly get on” with one another, the new PM will not want to “go to war” with London’s mayor “unnecessarily about something he doesn’t really care about”.
But Burnham, they add, may still “take a more economically minded view of this than people might first assume”.
One option would be to back the rival expansion proposal by the hotel tycoon Surinder Arora. Unlike the airport’s own proposal, Arora’s plan would avoid the M25 motorway needing to be tunnelled under Heathrow, as it would mean building a shorter third runway on the airport’s existing footprint.
“That would be a compromise,” says the source. “Andy is pretty into compromises.”
Politics
Dems have a big cash advantage in key Senate races
Democrats continue to rake in cash across some of the nation’s most pivotal Senate races, outpacing their Republican counterparts several times over.
In Georgia, Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff has 20 times as much cash on hand as his Republican challenger, Rep. Mike Collins. In North Carolina, perhaps Democrats’ best pickup opportunity, former Gov. Roy Cooper outraised former RNC Chair Michael Whatley $8.2 million to $2.9 million. And in Texas, Democratic state Rep. James Talarico ended June with $21.5 million in the bank compared to $1.8 million for his GOP opponent, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.
But Republicans have a leg up in a handful of states that have gotten messy for Democrats, including Michigan and Maine, where the GOP has built up a cash advantage while primaries have prevented Democrats from sending their resources to a single candidate. That could challenge Democrats’ narrow path back to Senate control heading into the fall.
The Senate battle map is nearly solidified with a handful of critical states left on the primary calendar. Democrats face a steep climb against Republicans, who benefit from a more favorable map and campaign-arm cash advantage. But Democrats’ pipe dream to seize the upper chamber has become more realistic as the party fields a slate of star recruits with proven fundraising prowess — and as Republicans continue to grapple with high costs and an ongoing war in Iran.
Democrats’ hopes were further buoyed Wednesday by their candidates’ second-quarter campaign finance reports, filed with the Federal Election Commission.
“In key battleground races, Democrats are out-raising and out-polling many of their Republican counterparts,” said Adrienne Elrod, a national Democratic strategist who has advised numerous Senate and presidential campaigns. “All of this bodes well for a strong midterm for Democrats.”
Republicans shrugged off the disparities, pointing to the recent Supreme Court decision relaxing rules around coordination between candidates and party campaign arms that will allow the GOP to flex its committee-level cash advantage. The National Republican Senatorial Committee had just shy of $49 million in the bank at the end of May compared to just under $39 million for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.
“Republicans have a massive advantage on the party committee level and were ready to hit the ground running following the Supreme Court decision on Super PACs,” said GOP strategist Doug Heye. “As the fundraising ground has shifted over the past several years, all of this gives reason for Republicans to be hopeful about holding the Senate.”
Republicans are also building sizable cash advantages in some critical swing states where Democrats are slogging through contentious primaries. In Maine, Graham Platner’s exit — after POLITICO reported a woman accused him of sexually assaulting her years ago — has set off a scramble to succeed him on the ballot. Platner denied the allegations, but ended his bid after he hemorrhaged support.
Democrats now stand at a massive financial disadvantage against GOP Sen. Susan Collins, who ended the second quarter with $11 million in the bank.
Platner had raised a whopping $9 million in the second quarter, though his high burn rate meant he ended up with only $1.7 million cash on hand at the end of June.
Democrats are racing to bankroll their next standard-bearer. The DSCC launched a fund for the eventual new nominee as soon as Platner dropped out. Another Democratic group, the grassroots organization Swing Left, said it plans to raise roughly $500,000 for the eventual nominee.
Candidates running against Collins have generally been able to raise a lot of money in the past, but it’s not clear yet whether Platner’s successor will be able to recapture the small-dollar donor base that was electrified by his populist candidacy, especially with just a few months until Election Day.
And in Michigan, Democrats Abdul El-Sayed and Rep. Haley Stevens are burning through cash ahead of their Aug. 4 face-off — allowing the presumptive GOP nominee, former Rep. Mike Rogers, to build a sizable cash advantage heading into the general election.
Rogers had stockpiled nearly $5.7 million heading into July, compared to Stevens’ $3.4 million and El-Sayed’s $2.7 million.
Politics
Cardiff Uni student assaulted by security staff for holding Palestine flag
Security staff have twice assaulted a Cardiff University student — for holding a Palestine flag and then for trying to take a photo of them. The Caerdydd Students for Palestine (CS4P) group described what happened:
As a student was on the way OUT of graduation she was physically assaulted and had the Palestinian flag ripped out of her hands with such violence it ripped her acrylic nails off.
She was simply carrying the flag in her hands on her way out of the building. She was then assaulted AGAIN when trying to get photos of the staff after they refused to give their names as seen on this video.
The blonde woman also mocked the word genocide and said graduation “isn’t political.” The arena supervisor said there’s nothing they could do!
Please share this everywhere and say SHAME on @utilitaarenacardiff and their violent staff. This was the actions of SUPERVISORS.
@cardiffuni this is who you trust to manage your graduations?
The group posted footage of the two staff involved:
View this post on Instagram
Cardiff University — a shameful record
This is not Cardiff University’s first rodeo when it comes to suppression of Palestine solidarity — nor the Utilita Arena’s. In July 2025, the university threatened to remove students for a display of solidarity, while Utilita staff harassed and intimidated students wearing keffiyehs:
View this post on Instagram
At the beginning of 2025, the university was accused of spying on pro-Palestine staff and students. A month earlier, it had suspended two students for taking part in an anti-genocide protest. In May 2025, it set police on students holding an anti-genocide picket and in June went to court for an injunction against them.
CS4P has asked opponents of genocide to share news of the latest incident widely.
Featured image via Cardiff.ac
By Skwawkbox
Politics
14yo charged with terror offence for alleged plan to attack mosques
A 14-year-old boy has been charged with a terrorism offence over an alleged plan to attack two mosques in the Sutton area of south London. The plan, the latest in a flood of Islamophobic violence, was linked to “extreme right-wing terrorism”.
The youth was originally arrested on suspicion of criminal damage, but a subsequent search of the address revealed “a number of documents of concern” according to the Met Police. He is in custody and will appear at Westminster Magistrates’ court tomorrow ,16 July 2026.
“Very serious terrorism”
For once, after months of the establishment ignoring Islamophobic violence, police officers responded appropriately to the planned attack. Detective Chief Superintendent Nick Blackburn said:
These charges come just days after 12 people were arrested for a suspected threat to an Islamic festival in Suffolk and a man was arrested for an alleged assault outside a mosque in Leyton.
We should not underestimate the cumulative impact of incidents of this nature on the Muslim community.
His colleague counter-terror Commander Helen Flanagan added that this is a “very serious terrorism charge against a young boy” that is “particularly concerning” to the Muslim community.
Featured image via MiddleEastMonitor
By Skwawkbox
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