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Politics

Christopher Nolan Admits Using Actors’ Real Seasickness In The Odyssey

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Matt Damon in The Odyssey

The cast and crew of The Odyssey have made no secret of the fact that shooting Christopher Nolan’s new epic was an especially grueling experience.

And in a new interview with The Telegraph, the Oscar-winning filmmaker has shared just how much his actors were put through their paces on set.

While making The Odyssey, Nolan opted to shoot on location using practical effects as much as possible, rather than relying on sound stages and CGI.

As a result, the shoot took the director and his troupe of actors to Scotland’s Moray Coast, where they shot a scene on board a recreation of a 115-foot Norse warship in the middle of a storm.

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The conditions led to many of the shoot’s extras experiencing seasickness, which gave the Oppenheimer filmmaker an idea.

“Excuse me,” the outlet quoted him as saying. “But would you mind if we get the vomiting on camera?”

“Credit to them, they said, ‘Absolutely, bring it on’,” he recalled. “They were really game for it.

“And that day ended up being fabulous as well as miserable; it yielded some of my favourite shots in the film.”

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Matt Damon in The Odyssey
Matt Damon in The Odyssey

Matt Damon leads The Odyssey as its central hero, Odysseus, with the film follows his journey home to Ithaca at the end of the Trojan War.

Last month, the Ocean’s Eleven star opened up about just how gruelling the shooting could get, telling GQ: “The joke on the crew was we didn’t have a single easy location. Every time we’d go somewhere, we’d be like, ‘Well, Iceland will be easier’. And then it’s raining sideways and it’s fucking freezing. Iceland was like, ‘Yeah, easy? Hey, hold my beer.’”

Even though the last days of filming took place on a lot in Los Angeles, Matt admitted that even this came with its problems.

“Sure enough, we showed up [to the set in LA] and Chris has two jet engines blowing so much water at us,” he explained. “So it was kind of a fitting end.

“Even the controlled environment was cold, wet, and a little bit miserable.”

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Meanwhile, his co-star Robert Pattinson agreed that he had “never seen people look so exhausted” before beginning his work on The Odyssey, which finally sales into cinemas on Friday 17 July.

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Labour’s ‘equal pay’ push will be catastrophic for the working class

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Labour’s ‘equal pay’ push will be catastrophic for the working class

Beware a prime minister in search of a legacy. Fresh off imposing a social-media ban on British teenagers, Keir Starmer appears determined to inflict another dreadful parting gift on the nation.

This week, the Labour government announced plans to end ‘pay discrimination’ by ensuring all work that is of ‘equal value’ receives equal pay. On the surface, this might sound harmless or even progressive. In practice, it is anything but.

Listening to equalities minister Seema Malhotra announcing the reforms, you might get the impression that workplace discrimination in 21st-century Britain is on a par with segregation in 19th-century Mississippi. Apparently, racist employers – both in the public and private sectors – are paying some people less, purely on the basis of their skin colour or because they have a disability.

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If you’d not heard before that such evil practices were happening in the UK, that’s because they are not. Indeed, it has long been illegal to pay people differently on the basis of race, sex, disability or any other protected characteristic. Certainly, any major employer would risk catastrophic fines and penalties if it were found guilty of racial discrimination. Nevertheless, to combat this allegedly rampant unfairness, the government has floated the idea of creating an Equal Pay Regulation and Enforcement Unit and expanding ‘equal pay’ rules that currently apply to sex to cover ‘race and disability’, too.

A clue as to what this really means is buried in a consultation document, published on Tuesday. New legislation, it says, will ‘enable claims for pay discrimination where work is not materially similar but is “rated as equivalent” or of “equal value”, for race and disability’. The jargon can’t disguise what is very bad news indeed.

We need only look at the unhappy state of affairs at Birmingham City Council to see how damaging the equal-pay regime has already been when applied only to sex. In 2012, 175 workers – predominantly women – took the council to court over claims that they were being paid less than male employees. The basis of this claim was that female-dominated jobs, like cleaners, were paid less than male-dominated jobs, like refuse workers. They didn’t argue the work was actually the same, only that it was of ‘equal value’, and that they had therefore been subjected to sex-based discrimination. The Supreme Court, citing the Equality Act 2010, agreed with the claimants. This landed Birmingham with a £750million bill.

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Finally, unable to cover the costs of the payouts, Birmingham declared bankruptcy in 2023. One of the most notorious consequences of this was the rolling bin strikes, which began last year and are still ongoing. For months on end, hundreds of tonnes of rubbish were left uncollected to rot on the streets of the UK’s second city.

The concept of ‘equivalent work’ could soon do to Brighton and Coventry what it has done to Birmingham. As of December 2025, the GMB union claimed it had won over £1 billion on behalf of its members from settling equal-pay cases with six local councils, including Glasgow, Leeds and Sheffield.

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The private sector is not immune, either. Leigh Day, the same law firm that successfully bankrupted Birmingham, was also partly successful in suing Asda and is now taking legal action against Tesco. In both cases, the supermarket giants stood accused of illegally paying warehouse workers (mainly men) more than workers stacking shelves or working at checkouts (mainly women). Asda could be forced to pay £1.2 billion should the equal-pay claims succeed fully, while Tesco could be on the hook for as much as £4 billion.

It ought to go without saying that neither Birmingham nor Tesco is alleged to have paid men more than women for performing the same work. What they have done is pay higher wages for certain jobs that are less desirable and more demanding. Refuse work and warehouse work both require employees to work unsociable hours – often very early in the morning or through the night – and are more physically intensive. The fact that more men have taken up these posts than women is not a sign of sexism or discrimination. It merely reflects those employees’ choices and personal circumstances.

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You might now be thinking, why should I shed a tear for Tesco or Asda, or for Birmingham’s bureaucrats? But it shouldn’t surprise you to learn that these equal-pay claims quickly rebound on workers. Birmingham’s refuse workers, for instance, were forced to take a pay cut, partly to ‘equalise’ their pay with female staff and to cover the staggering costs of the backpay from the successful equal-pay claims. This then prompted them to go on strike, causing the entire city to suffer. The refuse workers clearly felt their reduced pay package no longer reflected the value of their work.

Expanding these equal-pay provisions to race and disability would undoubtedly lead to an explosion in employment-tribunal claims. Worse, it could set off a bomb under the economy, as firms go bust and councils declare themselves bankrupt. And it could even prove damaging to race relations, encouraging employees to view themselves as members of competing identity blocs, rather than as workers with shared interests.

Keir Starmer, whether he cares or not, is playing with fire with this parting equal-pay shot. It marks yet another contribution to the disastrous legacy of this most useless of prime ministers.

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Hugo Timms is a staff writer at spiked.

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Farage v Count Binface is now a global phenomenon

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Count Binface and Nigel Farage of Reform UK

Count Binface and Nigel Farage of Reform UK

On 7 July, Nigel Farage stepped down as the MP for Clacton. Skipping forwards, Farage is now running to reclaim the seat he just gave up, and his only real opponent is a man who pretends to be an intergalactic dustbin.

As you’d expect, the rest of the world is now obsessed with this story:

Farage big in Japan

The clip above features the following subtitles:

This is Face, whose trademark is a trash can mask and a cape. The number of people hoping for his election is greater than that for Man Farage.

As we reported, this is true when you look at the national polling, in which “Man Farage” trails behind “White Lord Binface”:

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We do think the Greens should have run in this by-election. It would have given them weeks of national attention, and allowed them to further prove that they’re the true anti-establishment party (something the public largely already believes). At the same time, though, the above situation is very funny.

Farage clearly hoped this by-election would reaffirm the idea that he’s the prime minister in waiting. Instead, he’s proven that the public prefer Binface to him.

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Binface is making waves beyond Japan too. In the following video, Turkish-American streamer Hasan Piker silently watches Binface’s ITV interview:

Following the video’s conclusion, a stony-faced Piker says he’s now glad the UK banned him from entry. Which is fair enough, honestly.

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As we reported, Piker believes he was barred from the UK due to his opposition to Israel’s genocide. So the UK isn’t just an international laughing stock; it’s also the forerunner of Western authoritarianism.

Other international coverage of the Farage VS Binface bin fight includes:

The list goes on and on, because Farage has made himself an international joke. We’ve potentially got weeks of this left too; i.e. things could get even funnier.

Victory conditions

If Farage wins in Clacton, all he’ll have proven is that he can beat a bin an election. This should have been a given. And as such, it won’t do anything to diminish the humiliation he’s heaped upon himself.

Featured image via the Canary

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By Willem Moore

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Thames Water shareholders desperate to keep hands on cash cow monopoly

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Thames Water protestors outside with megaphones and one placard that reads: 'Don't force water users to bail out bad business. Take water back'.

Thames Water protestors outside with megaphones and one placard that reads: 'Don't force water users to bail out bad business. Take water back'.

Thames Water’s shareholders are panicking as the prospect of public ownership threatens to bring their gravy train to an end.

The company is now sitting on £18.5 billion of debt, up from £16.8 billion a year ago. Instead of accepting responsibility for years of failure, the profiteers at the top are desperately trying to recapitalise the business to retain their cash cow.

Thames Water is the UK’s biggest water company, charging 16 million customers for access to water whilst failing to invest in crumbling infrastructure which has resulted in sewage leaks polluting rivers and waterways.

Signalling just how much money these greedy shareholders are reluctant to part with, the company increased its underlying profits by £191 million in a single year.

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However, the company’s mountain of debt and years of underinvestment show exactly how badly British consumers have been short-changed. It only strengthens the case for nationalisation, and Thames Water is where that process should begin.

Thames Water and privatisation

The private ownership of the country’s water companies has meant higher bills for consumers, with profits going to shareholders rather than being reinvested into maintaining pipes and infrastructure to ensure people get good quality water.

Moreover, Thames Water’s flagrant breaches of sewage regulations have polluted our waterways, rivers and even oceans with sewage.

This has led to resounding calls to take it back into public ownership, with Thames Water being a prime example of how badly the privatised model has failed.

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However, now it is getting closer to nationalisation being a sure thing, those who have been reaping the profits are doing whatever they can to keep their hands on the purse strings.

For instance, it was only in recent weeks that Environment Secretary, Emma Reynolds, rejected a plea from 100 investors to Ofwat for a £10 billion bailout to rescue the failing company. Had it been granted, the bailout would once again have forced taxpayers and consumers — who are, in large part, the same people — to foot the bill.

You can’t polish a turd, as they say

Those who have been making pretty decent money despite its abysmal management insist that Thames Water’s performance is improving. They point to an 18% reduction in pollution compared to a year prior and a 17% improvement in meeting Ofwat’s common performance commitment targets.

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However, the company still hits just 55% of the targets it should meet, proving these improvements remain nowhere near good enough.

The future where targets are finally met becomes far more achievable when an essential service serves the public, not shareholders chasing profits.

Thames Water claims to be doing better

Thames Water’s chief executive, Chris Weston, has insisted that these improvements show the company is “turning around”.

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He told the Guardian:

While we have a lot more to achieve, the progress we have made in turning the company around has meant we are now performing better and are in a strong position to accelerate the delivery of the biggest upgrade of our infrastructure in 150 years.

This upgrade will, over time, address asset resilience issues and translate into sustained improvements in the services we provide for our customers and impact on the environment.

But fixing problems of its own making doesn’t prove Thames Water has turned a corner. It is only starting to address a failure to meet even half of its responsibilities.

After all, it is hardly like there has been any public show of humility or public apology. Instead, the company treats these problems like they were inevitable. (But hey, look at how its leadership is making it better.)

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Like they say, you cannot polish a turd. It remains, no matter what you do to make it look more appealing. The same is true for the privatisation of our water companies.

Privatisation has hurt ordinary people and reduced our access to clean water. These environmental and health issues will only grow worse with water-hungry AI data centers cropping up across the UK.

After his recent victory in Makerfield, Andy Burnham has talked about “greater public control”. But as long as private shareholders remain, the ultra-wealthy will continue to rip us off.

Years of chronic neglect and corporate mismanagement have already done enormous damage. The government should take the industry into public hands now, before things get even worse.

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Set an example of Thames Water

Thames Water is not the only offending privatised water company. They are all guilty of failing in their responsibilities to consumers and in maintaining the critical infrastructure.

If the state brings Thames Water into public ownership, it will do more than hold the biggest player to account. It would send a message to every other water company: deliver value for money or risk losing your monopoly.

If they wish to continue being work-shy, then they lose out, which is fair enough, frankly. Shareholders do not have a permanent claim over these lucrative monopolies. The state can and should step in and take them back.

At least then, those astronomical profits could benefit everyone, rather than the handful of people who have had their hands in our pockets for far too long.

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Featured image via the Canary

By Maddison Wheeldon

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Green candidate for Grays Riverside by-election Pauline Weir states priority

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Green Party candidate for Grays Riverside by-election Pauline Weir

Green Party candidate for Grays Riverside by-election Pauline Weir

The Green Party candidate for the upcoming Grays Riverside by-election, Pauline Weir, has made her priority clear: securing a seat on the Corporate Oversight and Scrutiny Committee to hold the current administration accountable.

Weir stated:

If I am elected, I shall insist that this mandate from the Riverside electorate means I replace one of the Reform UK councillors on the Corporate Oversight and Scrutiny Committee.

When Reform UK took control of the council in May, it took the chair and control of all of Thurrock’s Oversight and Scrutiny committees. But as Weir points out, given the history of Thurrock, the one that concerns her most is the Corporate Scrutiny committee:

This committee has nine Reform UK councillors, and the only two Conservatives on the council. How is this scrutiny?

Since 2025, the Serious Fraud Office has been investigating a scheme by which the Conservative-led Thurrock Council invested millions into solar farms between 2016 and 2020. It used a bond scheme sold by the UK-based Rockfire Investment Finance Plc.

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Says Weir:

The residents are still paying the price. The council voted to increase council tax by 9.99% in 2023, after the reckless gambling of the council with our residents’ money.

Council Tax has continued to rise since, with external auditors unwilling to sign off the council’s books.

The by-election in Grays Riverside on 23 July resulted from the resignation of a Reform Councillor elected in May this year. Weir says:

We got within 17 votes of taking a seat in Riverside in May. We are the only party that stands a realistic chance of providing at least some scrutiny for the residents of this ward.

Featured image via South West Essex Green Party

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By The Canary

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Baruipur rape case shows India’s unrelenting violence against Muslims and oppressed castes

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An activist holds a cut-out of the prime minister of India, Narendra Modi, at a protest over another gang-rape and murder of a young woman in Uttar Pradesh state in 2020

An activist holds a cut-out of the prime minister of India, Narendra Modi, at a protest over another gang-rape and murder of a young woman in Uttar Pradesh state in 2020

Since the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power in the state of West Bengal two months ago promising women’s safety, the state has witnessed at least eight serious incidents of violence against women and girls. 

One of the latest was the horrific murder and gang rape in Baruipur. An 11-year-old Muslim girl was abducted while out buying a friend’s birthday present, and subjected to the most inhuman torture, including a group rape. While still alive, she was tied up in a sack and thrown into a pond to drown.

One of the suspects, who was also a key witness and had pointed to the role of a BJP leader in the crime, has already been killed in an ‘encounter’ (extra-judicial killing by the police).

Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari, well known for his anti-Muslim hate speech, has shockingly likened protests in the aftermath of the crime to the “anti-CAA agitations”. These were in fact peaceful campaigns against an Islamophobic citizenship law but were criminalised and attacked by state-sponsored mobs, leading to the arrests and incarceration of Muslims.  

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India: Sexual violence sweeps the country

The South Asia Solidarity Group is outraged and deeply disturbed at the Indian government’s silence and inaction about sexual violence and attacks on women and girls across the country.

In the same week as the Baruipur gang rape, three dozen men in several hotels over several days sexually assaulted a 13-year-old girl in Sri Ganganagar, Rajasthan. These are only two cases which have been publicised in the news media or on social media. Many more go unreported.      

At the same time, the internet is awash with AI-generated sexualised images of Muslim women, while rapists are praised and felicitated.    

Hindu supremacy

The skyrocketing violence against women and girls, particularly those who are Muslim and oppressed caste, is a sign of the creeping imposition of the Manusmriti. This is an ancient Sanskrit legal text known for its misogyny and violence against women and oppressed castes, with which Hindu supremacists want to replace India’s Constitution.      

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Meanwhile, in a bitter irony, one can still read the BJP’s slogan popularised by Modi, Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao (Save Daughters, Educate Daughters) on the back of buses and trucks on India’s highways.     

What we demand

We stand in solidarity with the survivors and the families of the girls and women who have been murdered, and demand accountability, transparency and justice. This can never be replaced by mob lynchings and ‘encounter’ killings.

In relation to the Baruipur murder and rape, we fully support the demands of feminist organisations in West  Bengal, including:  

  • A time-bound, impartial investigation into the rape and murder of the minor girl from Baruipur      
  • An independent investigation into the state murder of a prime witness of the case and the circumstances surrounding it
  • An investigation into the role of the police, which includes possible negligence and undue advantage given to the criminals    
  • An independent investigation into the role of all politically influential persons involved in this case      
  • Withdrawal of all cases against activists speaking out for justice in the case, and the protection of the right to protest democratically      
  • Security, legal aid and a speedy and transparent process of justice for the family of the victim

Our demands are cosigned by the following feminist and diaspora organisations in the UK, US and Canada:

  • Million Women Rise
  • Imkaan
  • Sikh Women’s Aid
  • Women from OWAAD (Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent)
  • பொழில்|Poḻil: Lankan Feminist Grove
  • Birmingham Black Sisters
  • Network of Eritrean Women
  • Congolese Women of UK
  • African Rainbow Family, Manchester
  • Centre for Women’s Justice
  • Healing Justice London
  • Project Salama
  • DEWA (Deaf Ethnic Women’s Association)
  • Women Together
  • Samba Sisters Collective
  • Black and Brown Rainbow
  • Biographies for Education
  • Hindus for Human Rights UK
  • South Asia AHEAD
  • UK Indian Muslim Council
  • South Asian Liberation Movement
  • Periyar Ambedkar Study Circle
  • Stop JCB Campaign
  • SALAM (US)
  • Canadian Forum for Human Rights and Democracy in India (CFHRDI)
  • Canadians Against Oppression and Persecution (CAOP)
  • CERAS (Centre sur l’asie du sud) (Canada)

Featured image via Indranil Mukherjee/ AFP/ Getty 

By South Asia Solidarity Group

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Nadia Sawalha and Mark Adderley win defamation case against Mail and Metro

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Adderley

Mark Adderley and Nadia Sawalha pictured smiling

Right-wing rags the Daily Mail and Metro have been forced to issue “full apologies” and pay “substantial damages” to actress Nadia Sawalha and her filmmaker husband, Mark Adderley.

The papers had smeared the couple with atrocious and completely false smears claiming they had made antisemitic statements.

The pair announced their court victory in a joint video statement this morning.

Sawalha and Adderley ‘push back’

The couple said their victory showed that the smears had put them and their family in danger, but the win showed that it is possible and vital to “push back against a legacy media that will go to any lengths to try and destroy lives and reputations with false allegations”.

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Their lawyer, Zillur Rahman, of Rahman Lowe law firm, said the pair had triumphed over “serious and damaging allegations”.

These were serious and damaging allegations which falsely suggested that our clients supported terrorism and promoted antisemitic conspiracy theories for simply calling out Israeli war crimes, and opposing Zionism.

Our clients have consistently opposed racism in all its forms. We are pleased that both publishers have now accepted the falsity of these claims, issued public apologies, and agreed to pay substantial damages.

Newspapers backtrack

The Daily Mail’s apology reads:

An article “Loose Women star Nadia Sawalha claims ‘dark forces’ are at work after husband suspended from the Green Party over ‘antisemitic’ YouTube rant” (30 April) said that Mark Adderley had shared videos celebrating the ‘courage’ of Hamas as well as conspiracy theories blaming Jews for the September 11 and Bondi Beach attacks.

While Mr Adderley does have strong views about Israel and Zionism, he did not make these statements suggesting support for terrorism or hatred of Jews.

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The article also said that Mr Adderley and his wife, Ms Sawalha, run a YouTube channel, and that Ms Sawalha fully supported her husband, which may have suggested that she endorsed the statements and videos wrongly said to have been shared by him.

These allegations were false and we apologise to Mr Adderley and Ms Sawalha for the error and distress caused.

The Metro’s statement is essentially identical:

An article “Nadia Sawalha hits back at ‘lies’ after Loose Women axe claims” (8 May) said that Mark Adderley had shared videos celebrating the ‘courage’ of Hamas as well as conspiracy theories blaming Jews for the September 11 and Bondi Beach attacks.

While Mr Adderley does have strong views about Israel and Zionism, he did not make these statements suggesting support for terrorism or hatred of Jews.

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The article also said that Mr Adderley and his wife, Ms Sawalha, run a YouTube channel, and that Ms Sawalha fully supported her husband, which may have suggested that she endorsed the statements and videos wrongly said to have been shared by him.

These allegations were false and we apologise to Mr Adderley and Ms Sawalha for the error and distress caused

This is not the end…

The win is reminiscent of the repeated wins by Labour party left-wingers over right-wing rags during Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the party. Those lies had the same aim — remove or silence those who speak out against Israel, its crimes and its land theft.

Adderley and Sawalha said that they have other cases still ongoing and issued a warning to lying hacks.

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We have a number of other cases pending. If you lie about us we will NOT take it lying down.

Featured image via the Canary

By Skwawkbox

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The House | The pardon for Ruth Ellis is welcome but domestic violence law needs further reform

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The pardon for Ruth Ellis is welcome but domestic violence law needs further reform
The pardon for Ruth Ellis is welcome but domestic violence law needs further reform


3 min read

The family of Ruth Ellis, the last woman to be executed in Britain, has received a measure of justice from this government.

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Members of her family petitioned Justice Secretary David Lammy to recognise that had she been tried now, rather than in 1955, she would not have been convicted of murder, let alone executed. Last week, on Lammy’s recommendation, she was granted a conditional pardon by the King. I was pleased to have played a small part in the process by asking about her case in the Commons.

Ruth’s pardon asks that we reflect on what has changed in the past 71 years – but also what hasn’t. Women still face an unequal situation in the courts, and the law on homicide is currently under review. Ruth’s case offers insight into what needs to change.

My interest in her case goes back to my previous career as a crime historian. My research demonstrated the unfairness of certain ostensibly neutral standards of legal defences. Men who killed women were more likely to be successful in arguing that they had been ‘provoked’ than women who had killed men.

There is no doubt that Ruth shot and killed David Blakely on 10 April 1955. Arrested immediately, her trial took place two months later and lasted just over a day. She was hanged within three weeks. Her trial did not hear the reasons why she killed Blakely nor about the circumstances leading up to that night.

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Ruth was 28 and mother to two children. She had worked as a model and as a nightclub hostess. The media made much of her ‘scandalous’ past. Blakely, by contrast, was the public-school educated son of a doctor.

After the verdict, however, it became clear that Blakely had been violent towards Ruth. While pregnant, he punched her so hard that she miscarried. On another occasion, her brother said she was “hobbling on two sticks” after Blakely beat her up. She was, in short, a victim of domestic violence.

Since 1955, the law has changed for the better. Only two years after Ruth’s hanging, Parliament passed a law allowing the defence of ‘diminished responsibility’. In 2009, it was made easier for someone in a similar position to Ruth to claim the defence of ‘loss of control’. This allows a murder charge to be reduced to manslaughter when someone kills while in fear of serious violence. This informed Ruth’s conditional pardon and posthumous life sentence.

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Ruth’s pardon matters for two reasons. Most immediately, it lifts a weight from her family’s shoulders. They now have affirmation that their grandmother was not a callous murderer but a woman pushed beyond her limits.

More widely, it sends a strong message about the need to better understand the causes and consequences of abuse. We know more about coercive and controlling behaviour and abusers are being prosecuted. However, there is still more to do.

In June, the Law Commission launched a consultation on possible changes to the homicide law. Evidence of the need for change comes from an independent review by Clare Wade KC, and recent academic research that examined 110 homicide cases heard between 2010 and 2024 involving ‘loss of control’ defences.

The research suggests that the need to prove an ‘explosive’ loss of control is at odds with the experiences of women suffering domestic violence and that men are better able to make use of the defence than women. There are parallels with the situation that Ruth faced in 1955. Ostensibly neutral guidelines have given greater advantages to men than to women. The Law Commission’s review addresses this.

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I hope it will lead to greater fairness in the courts and better outcomes for today’s victims of domestic violence.

 

Pam Cox is Labour MP for Colchester and was co-author of ‘Victims and Criminal Justice: A History’

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Young campaigners urge incoming PM to act on outdoor junk food ads

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Bite Back campaigners in front of anti junk food ad on billboard

Bite Back campaigners in front of anti junk food ad on billboard

The Health and Social Care Committee has just delivered one of parliament’s strongest calls yet for action to protect children from junk food marketing. And Bite Back’s young campaigners are urging the incoming government to seize the moment.

After a year-long inquiry, MPs have concluded that children’s health has been undermined by unhealthy food environments and decades of industry influence. They’re recommending stronger protections including action on outdoor junk food advertising.

The report echoes the evidence given directly to the Committee by Bite Back campaigners Jayda and Alice. They told MPs how children and young people are surrounded by junk food marketing every day.

With a new prime minister taking office shortly, Bite Back says the Committee has handed the new government a ready-made roadmap for improving children’s health. The charity is calling on ministers to move quickly. And it wants them to begin with a national ban on junk food advertising in outdoor spaces.

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Bite Back campaigner Jayda said:

Children and young people are surrounded by junk food marketing every single day. Whether it’s on billboards, at bus stops or on the journey to school or even online, it’s almost impossible to avoid.

In 2025 I had the opportunity to give evidence to this Committee, so I’m really pleased to see MPs recognising what young people are experiencing.

We also saw first-hand how coordinated the food and advertising industries can be when they pushed back against Bite Back’s Commercial Break campaign. The campaign simply called for children to get a break from junk food adverts. Young people are becoming increasingly aware of these commercial pressures and deserve better.

This report is an important step towards creating healthier environments for children and young people. Now the government must act quickly rather than delay. Children’s health should always come first, ahead of industry lobbying.

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Bite Back campaigner Alice said:

The government needs to put children’s health ahead of industry lobbying, and a really important first step would be banning junk food advertising in outdoor spaces.

We need to make it easier for children and young people to grow up in places where healthier food is supported instead of unhealthy food being promoted everywhere.

In 2025 we had the opportunity to give evidence to this Committee, and it’s encouraging to see MPs recognising what young people shared with them. They listened. Now the new prime minister needs to listen too.

D’Arcy Williams, chief executive of Bite Back, said:

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The Health and Social Care Committee has sent one of the clearest messages parliament has delivered in years: if we want healthier generations, we must create healthier environments for children and young people.

For too long, we’ve expected children to navigate a food environment stacked against them. Our young campaigners have shown how junk food advertising dominates bus stops, billboards and high streets, while our research has highlighted the concentration of unhealthy food marketing and fast-food outlets around schools.

That is not an accident, it is the result of a system that has consistently put commercial interests ahead of children’s health.

In 2025, through our award-winning Commercial Break campaign, young people reclaimed outdoor advertising space to show what our streets could look like without junk food adverts.

The response from the advertising industry demonstrated just how difficult it can be to challenge the status quo. That’s why government leadership matters.

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The Committee has now laid out a clear roadmap – one that also urges the government to protect the policy process from further food industry interference tactics.

The incoming government has an opportunity to show real leadership by introducing a national ban on outdoor junk food advertising, strengthening protections for children in and around schools, and ensuring that every child grows up in an environment that supports their health rather than undermines it.

Young people have done their part. Parliament has listened. Now it’s time for the government to deliver.

Featured image via Bite Back / David Madden

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By The Canary

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The House Article | Burnham’s place-based government must save independent hospitality

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Burnham's place-based government must save independent hospitality
Burnham's place-based government must save independent hospitality

Crewe (Alamy)


3 min read

In June, Andy Burnham set out his vision for the country. Bringing Manchesterism to Labour’s 2024 manifesto, he is putting “place before party” – building non-partisan consensus on local issues.

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‘Place’ refers to the areas that make a community – where social ties are formed and strengthened.

Andy recognises that high streets should become “the new symbol of Britain’s renaissance”. Independent hospitality businesses are an essential part of that landscape.

They know their customer inside out, setting up shop to offer something new to their neighbours – without a financial model crunching the numbers, identifying your high street as the most lucrative option for the next branch.

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Manchester has successfully supported a growing number of local bars and restaurants. The number of food and beverage spaces in the centre has doubled over the past 10 years.

Labour’s £20m Pride in Place strategy forms the building blocks for stronger communities. We’ve bolstered High Street Rental Auctions to give councils more powers to take over empty units. We’ve launched a £30m crackdown on rogue vendors taking advantage of deserted town centres, a dedicated High Street Organised Crime Unit and increased enforcement measures for trading standards.

These measures are welcome and necessary to turn our high streets around. However, as new sites become available, the government needs to support entrepreneurs to take them over and keep their doors open.

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A quarter of pubs, bars and restaurants are losing money, according to new survey data. Without intervention, there will be fewer businesses left to revive the high streets at the centre of a place-based politics.

One of the levers available to provide immediate relief to the sector is VAT reform. The UK’s standard 20 per cent rate on food and beverages is the second highest in Europe – double that of Spain, France and Italy. There are growing calls from independent businesses to reduce VAT to 10 per cent.

There is a significant fiscal cost associated with this plan, which HMRC claim would create a deficit of £1bn. However, with 21 hospitality businesses closing each week, the Treasury must also consider the revenue losses happening in real time.

The industry is in a state of paralysis; businesses are unable to hire new staff or invest. Some have taken to limiting their opening hours just to stay afloat. They’re built up over decades but are closing down each week. That’s income tax, corporation tax and key youth employers lost to the Treasury.

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Any intervention should also be ringfenced for independent hospitality. Currently, VAT applies equally to all businesses with an annual turnover of over £90,000. The scale of (and taxes levied against) many chains are fundamentally different to those set up by local people.

Beyond VAT, our business rates system disproportionately burdens bricks-and-mortar venues taxed on the rateable property value. Rateable values can be calculated using three different methods which have been known to generate different results. They often jump significantly between the three-year assessment periods and multipliers are set at a cliff-edge, meaning higher rates apply to the whole property once the threshold is reached.

The removal of Small Business Rate Relief and Retail Hospitality and Leisure Relief has left independents facing significantly higher charges than in previous years.

In our manifesto, we promised to replace business rates with something more progressive. We need a fairer system that allows small businesses to settle into our high streets and grows with them. Whether that means partial landlord liability or tapered rates similar to income tax, the case for reform is clear.

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A place-based government means economic growth where it matters: in the areas which were decimated during austerity and for the people who care about their community. The unique struggles faced by independent hospitality businesses must be considered under this approach.

Connor Naismith is Labour MP for Crewe and Nantwich

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French far right and loyalists team up for pro-rape hate message

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Misogynistic Gisèle Pelicot graffiti on a wall in Belfast

Misogynistic Gisèle Pelicot graffiti on a wall in Belfast

Content warning: This article contains terms of misogynistic and racial abuse, alongside descriptions of sexual violence

The “protectors of women and children” are at it again, proving their credentials once more with a vile pro-rape message daubed on a wall in the loyalist Sandy Row area of Belfast.

The message reads:

Gisèle Pelicot
Salope
Free Dominique

‘Salope’ is a French misogynistic term of abuse that translates as ‘whore’ or ‘slut’.

'Gisele Pelicot, Salope, Free Dominique' in graffiti on a wall in Belfast

The revolting vandalism targets Gisèle Pelicot, a French woman whose husband Dominique drugged and repeatedly raped her over a period of 10 years. He invited other men to the couple’s home, who also raped her while she was unconscious.

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Gisèle bravely waived her right to anonymity as part of her husband’s trial. In December 2024, a French court sentenced Dominique Pelicot to 24 years in jail for his crimes.

Nearby, racist graffiti had also been sprayed. Without the asterixes, it read:

N*ggers out
P*kis fuck off

Alongside it there also appears to be a crudely drawn star and crescent with a stop sign drawn over it, indicating Islamophobic hate.

Belfast: French racists given VIP treatment in city

The racist and Islamophobic graffiti are sadly par for the course at this point, in a region where overt racism, bleeding into ethnic cleansing, is rapidly becoming the norm. In contrast, the attack on a heroic French feminist icon seems a little incongruous and inexplicable.

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However, sources have told the Canary that a group of French racists have recently been given the VIP treatment by local loyalist bigots.

The Ainsworth Drive Facebook account are another group of frauds who tout their eagerness to “protect women and children”, merely as an excuse to vomit out racist, anti-migrant bile. On 9 July, they posted the following:

I have a group of French patriots/activists coming into the area over the 12th period, some are part of the Turning Point movement, the legacy Charlie Kirk left behind.

They wish to speak to local people/parents concerned about the mass enforced movement of immigration being forced into deprived working class areas like Ainsworth/Woodvale.

If anyone wishes to be interviewed, can be off camera and can academically speak well then please drop this page a private message, thank you.

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The Canary has previously covered the US-based Turning Point’s intention to make inroads in the north of Ireland. That French racists are now also drawn to the region proves a point we’ve previously made. That is, the extreme chauvinism of loyalism, like that of Zionism, is a huge lure to reactionaries the world over.

The capacity of these two twin settler-colonial ideologies to deploy violence as a means of achieving their supremacist goals also has obvious attraction to would-be ethnic cleansers.

An Ainsworth Drive post on 12 July describes the:

…good company of around 20 french [sic] patriots from Normandy and other surrounding towns in southern France.

Leaving aside the geographic impossibility of the northern French region of Normandy having surrounding towns situated in southern France, the post goes on to boast of a joint mural effort between the groups.

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The weird ideology of ‘The Normal Ones’

Activists monitoring the far right identified the French group as attending the Sandy Row bonfire marking the 12 July Battle of the Boyne commemoration. They are believed to be linked to an outfit called Les Normaux, translating as ‘The Normals’ or ‘The Normal Ones’.

According to StreetPress, a French investigative team that track the far right, Les Normaux are:

…a small far-right identitarian group based in Rouen, established in the spring of 2021.

The group fixate on Norman identity specifically and hold a March of the Normans event each year, despite authorities banning it. Far-right actors from across Europe are known to attend.

StreetPress also report Les Normaux are active within “traditionalist Catholic circles”, so it would be interesting to know what they made of the torrent of sectarianism loyalists produced over the 12 July hate carnival.

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The French group has previous in terms of hatred directed at women, with StreetPress saying in June 2021 the group:

…disrupted a lecture by elected official Alice Coffin, directing misogynistic remarks at her.

The foolishness of identitarian politics

Many of the group members have taken down their social media accounts since news of the Sandy Row graffiti emerged. However, sources who spoke to the Canary got a look at some of them beforehand.

They told us many previously displayed an enthusiasm for Irish republicanism, presumably mistakenly believing it would embrace the prejudices often found in nationalist ideologies elsewhere. That is rarely the case in republican circles, so the racists seemingly switched to loyalism.

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That absurd trajectory, of stumbling hopelessly around for some purist notion of identity, underscores the folly of identitarian politics more broadly.

All human culture, and the movement of peoples that form it, is a process of constant transition. Chauvinists insist on freezing time at an arbitrary point, around an arbitrary group of people, and rule that all who exist outside those bounds must be excluded.

To see the degeneracy that mode of thought produces, one need only look at what was scrawled on the walls of Sandy Row.

Featured image via the Canary

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By Robert Freeman

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