Politics
DWP don’t need any help attacking disabled people
Another day, another media shill doing the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) job of turning the public against PIP claimants for them. Most annoyingly, this time it’s a physically disabled person who is throwing people with mental health conditions under the bus. But then it is Julie Burchill.
DWP don’t need a hand denigrating mental health
Burchill is, by her own definition. a ‘Rad-fem, Christian Zionist’, she’s best known for her abhorrent views on immigration and transphobia. So it figures that she’s also horribly lateral ableist too. In a column in the i Paper Burchill wrote:
If you’re too anxious to work but go on holiday, you shouldn’t get PIP.
Siiiigh, same old bullshit. It doesn’t need pointing out (again!) that personal independence payments (PIP) isn’t an out-of-work benefit. The article actually barely mentions claimants going on holiday; it’s a throwaway comment. But that didn’t stop the editor from making it the most clickbait possible headline.
Thankfully, Burchill does correct herself on the employment fact in the piece, but she also adds:
Of course, you can work and still receive PIP – as I do – but I do think too many people are getting it when they could be supporting themselves.
Such as, for instance, a columnist who brags about squandering their wealth.
Punching down again
Burchill is of course, talking about people who she, and vast parts of the media, think don’t actually deserve PIP from the DWP – people with mental health conditions. This is just the latest in a long line of the government trying to de-legitimise people with mental health conditions, whilst planning to make it harder for those same people to claim PIP.
Burchill rightly points out how hard it is to get PIP, even if you have a very physically obvious disability. In her case, she’s a wheelchair user and can’t walk. She said it took her six months to be approved for PIP, however she also took the chance to shit on other disabled people:
I can’t help thinking that had I claimed the mental equivalent of a “bad back” – anxiety perhaps – I would have been awarded it a lot earlier
There’s more joys in life than work
Burchill’s ‘article’ is mostly a bizarre rant about how, if she’s worked nearly every day since becoming a wheelchair user, what’s stopping everyone else? Dunno babe, probably less understanding bosses and less flexibility because they’re not rich. Calling herself a ‘grafter’ not a ‘grifter’, she says:
I can’t think of anything worse for anyone’s mental health than not having a reason to get out of bed in the morning.
It’s really fucking sad that work is the only reason to get out of bed in the morning for many. My dog is my reason for getting out of bed. For some it’s simple joys like a good cup of coffee, their fave tv show to catch up on, or seeing friends. I love my job, but I’m also not some capitalist drone whose only joy is work.
The thing about the old ‘work is good for your mental health’ argument, though, is that it usually comes from people who are supported in their work. It doesn’t take into account just how soul-destroying and detrimental to your mental health an awful job with a horrible boss, can be.
Playing into the government’s hands
Instead of sympathising with this point, Burchill essentially implies that disabled people should be happy with any old menial job, whether or not it’s suited to their needs. Which, of course, fits the DWP’s narrative perfectly and helps them push disabled people into work
There’s also the point that apparently needs hammering home that PIP has fuck all to do with whether you can work or not. Because, despite stating this, she still spends the majority of the piece conflating anxiety with workshyness. Which, again, is something the government has done consistently.
Hilariously though, Burchill also thinks the government are on disabled people’s side here. She calls them ‘the chief sponsor of idleness’. It’s always those who think they’re sticking it to the establishment who are playing right into their hands.
The government and media are doing enough, we don’t need one of our own doing it too
At a time when the media and government are doing everything in their power to turn the public against people with mental health conditions, we don’t need one of our own on their side too. Though it’s made pretty clear that Burchill is one of those disabled people who thinks she will be spared from the hatred because she works hard and doesn’t complain:
During my year in a wheelchair, I’ve had to deal with all of these, alongside other emotions as varied as fear and fury; if I and other severely physically disabled people can learn to process these feelings, why can’t those with anxiety do the same
Let me tell you now, Julie, the hate mob doesn’t give a fuck if you’re on their side or not. They’ll come for us all in the end and won’t be happy until all disabled people are left to rot.
Deliberate choice to turn people against benefit claimants, again
Burchill’s piece was published alongside two others. The first by Carrie Grant who shares her own experience as a parent carer on how the SEND system failures feed into more people needing PIP. The second is by a former PIP assessor who points out how life-changing PIP can be for all claimants.
This could’ve and should’ve been an impactful and important series. However the i Paper couldn’t help themselves and had to ensure they included a hefty dose of the scrounger narrative too. There are so many campaigners who also claim PIP that they could’ve asked to write this.
This was a deliberate choice to de-legitimise mental health claimants. ‘Look, even REAL disabled people know they’re faking!” The fact that it’s a disabled person attacking other disabled people – and doing the DWP’s job for them – shows just how insidious the media narrative really is.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
‘The worst, ever’: MAGA rages about Bad Bunny’s halftime set
President Donald Trump’s MAGA movement furiously denounced Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show, denigrating the Puerto Rican superstar and claiming he does not truly represent America.
Trump, who previously called Bad Bunny a “terrible choice” to head up the NFL’s largest annual broadcast, chimed in with complaints about the show’s first-ever mostly-Spanish performance: “Nobody understands a word this guy is saying,” he wrote in a lengthy Truth Social post.
At Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, Bad Bunny delivered a 13-minute homage to his homeland, weaving through a sugarcane field studded with bodegas and a traditional casita. His show was lauded by fans as a vibrant celebration of Puerto Rican heritage — but Trump and MAGA faithfuls weren’t so convinced.
Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, the Puerto Rican-born singer better known as Bad Bunny, made his Super Bowl debut in 2020 alongside Shakira and Jennifer Lopez. But since the NFL announced him as the Super Bowl headliner in September, he became a focal point for conservative ire — thanks, in part, to his high-profile political activism.
An outspoken critic of the Trump administration’s hard-line immigration crackdown, he declared “ICE out” onstage at last week’s Grammy Awards — where his album “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” made history as the first all-Spanish record to snag the show’s coveted album of the year trophy — and left viewers wondering what message he might have for the millions of football fans tuning into his set.
But Bad Bunny did not directly call out any of the president’s policies or supporters during his Super Bowl show. The only English he spoke during Sunday’s show was him saying, “God bless America,” as he was marching off the field with a procession of Latin and South American flags — led by the U.S.’s flag. He then spiked a football that read: “together, we are America.”
His show also referenced the island’s long-struggling power grid.
In the hours after the performance, MAGA allies took issue with the show’s mostly-Spanish discography and Puerto Rican inspiration.
“Was a single word of English spoken during the Super Bowl Halftime Show?” Nick Adams, Trump’s pick to become ambassador to Malaysia, wrote on X. “Someone needs to tell Bad Bunny he’s in America. This is an abomination.”
Far-right influencer Laura Loomer railed against his set in a series of X posts, urging border czar Tom Homan to deploy an immigration raid on site.
“There’s nothing American about any of this,” she wrote. “This isn’t White enough for me. Cant even watch a Super Bowl anymore because immigrants have literally ruined everything.”
Meanwhile, MAGA-friendly influencer Jake Paul urged his X followers to “turn off this halftime,” decrying Bad Bunny as a “fake American citizen performing who publicly hates America.” Paul, who was recently seen with Vice President JD Vance at the Olympics in Milan, received swift blowback online, including from Paul’s own brother, Logan.
Many, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), pointed out that Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens — and that Paul himself has been living there since 2021.
Other figures within the president’s orbit echoed their disapproval. Former FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino reacted to Bad Bunny’s performance in a podcast episode on Rumble titled “Kid Rock > Sad Bunny,” telling viewers the show “sucked.” Meanwhile, Harmeet Dhillon, assistant attorney general for civil rights, wrote on X that she and her family “aren’t watching him.”
Conservatives did rally behind alternative programming. Turning Point USA, the conservative organizing group founded by Charlie Kirk, aired a rival halftime show headlined by longtime Trump ally Kid Rock, drawing support from Republican officials including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and House Speaker Mike Johnson, who praised the event.
Politics
The House Article | The Prime Minister needs to announce now that he will go in May

Keir Starmer delivers a speech at Horntye Park Sports Complex in St Leonards-on-Sea, East Sussex, England, February 2026 (Peter Nicholls/Pool Photo via AP)
3 min read
Come the May elections, Keir Starmer will be gone. I suspect even in No 10 there are few who doubt this now.
While Peter Mandelson will prove to be the final nail in his political coffin, I’m afraid that it is only a symptom of the real issue: poor political judgement. The public has seen this clearly in the form of regular U-turns and the constant ditching of policies first leaked to the press, while incoherent party management has alienated the Prime Minister’s natural supporters.
The situation has got so bad that last week No 10 was forced to pull their own amendment when they realised too few Labour MPs had sufficient trust in their own government to support it.
When the trust is gone, there can be no recovery for the Prime Minister. You cannot relaunch when the fundamental problem is one of judgement, and the longer this goes on the more the many fantastic things this government is delivering in office are being swamped out by psychodrama, with the party’s polling trending towards zero.
As is widely known, the one lifeline which has enabled the Prime Minister to survive so far has been the lack of a candidate willing to put themselves forward and until the May elections no one will want to step up and take the political hit the party will likely suffer at the polls. This leaves Mr Starmer with a choice.
He can wait until May and force the country to endure the chaos of removing a sitting Prime Minister, followed by months of the governing party focusing entirely inwards – or he can act now and announce his departure in May.
Doing so would provide continuity for the country, avoiding the need for an interim Prime Minister, and enable Mr Starmer and his team the opportunity to prepare for the end of his ministry. For candidates it would remove the one obstacle currently preventing them from setting out their stalls and giving them time to pull together the people and the ideas necessary to hit the ground running in office.
Unfortunately for the party, internal campaigning will inevitably prove a distraction from electioneering, but given the central role the Prime Minister plays in the party’s current unpopularity, a deadline on his departure would at least enable canvassers to honestly sell the belief that genuine change will follow after the May elections.
The decision is, for now, entirely up to the Prime Minister. Whatever his mistakes, I believe Keir Starmer is a good man, who has made considerable sacrifices to enter public office. The fact he has proven poorly suited to the role of Prime Minister is not his fault – the role suits almost no one. While he no longer has a choice when his ministry will end, he can still decide how it will end, offering the country the stable transition the Conservatives so regularly denied us.
Peter Lamb is Labour MP for Crawley
Politics
Politics Home Article | Survival Of ‘Your Party’ At Stake As Leadership Voting Opens

4 min read
A source close to Jeremy Corbyn has said ‘Your Party’ will not survive unless his supporters win power within it, as voting opens today for members to elect the party’s leadership.
Members of the new party being founded by Corbyn, Independent Alliance MPs Ayoub Khan and Shockat Adam, and Zarah Sultana voted narrowly for a ‘collective leadership’ over a ‘single leader’ model during its founding conference in November.
With MPs barred from leading the party, which has been deeply divided since it began, Your Party will instead be led formally by a 16-member committee, including a chair and deputy chair who must be lay members.
But the contest has become a proxy for the battle between Corbyn and Sultana, who have clashed ever since the latter quit the Labour Party and joined the project last year. Two slates are battling it out: ‘The Many’, associated with the former Labour leader, and ‘Grassroots Left’, linked to Sultana.
If successful, Grassroots Left intend to elect a ‘parliamentary convenor’, expected to be Sultana. If The Many win more seats, they will elect him as parliamentary leader.
“Members have a choice,” a source close to Corbyn told PoliticsHome.
“They can vote to build a popular, mass vehicle that looks outwards. Or they can hand the party over to splinter groups that have spent the past six months attacking the most influential figure on the British left.
“There is only one way this party can survive: a victory for The Many.”
A source close to Sultana said: “Support for the Grassroots Left is growing by the day. Members have responded overwhelmingly to our positive plan to immediately recognise branches, give access to their data and stand Your Party candidates in the upcoming elections this May.
“We were also delighted to have received an endorsement from Naomi Wimborne-Idrissi and Ken Loach’s ‘Platform for a Democratic Party’ over the weekend, as they too can see the stark difference in visions for the party. We urge everyone to vote early, and vote Grassroots Left.”
Internal elections for Your Party’s central executive committee will see voting start at 5pm today and close in two weeks.
Endorsements for candidates indicate that support for each slate among members is finely balanced, with Grassroots Left winning in some regions and The Many coming top in others.
“We see things as quite existential in terms of the survival and viability of the party as a relevant force in British politics,” one insider associated with the Corbyn wing of Your Party told PoliticsHome. “The outcome will be determined by turnout.”
Corbyn allies believe that if turnout is low in these elections, those who back Sultana – accused of representing a “federation of Trotskyist sects” – are more likely to win positions.
Those close to the former Labour leader say they are concerned that Muslim communities increasingly alienated by Labour, who represent a significant proportion of Your Party’s potential electoral base, would be put off from supporting the party if it comes under Sultana’s control. They say it would be left with little support as urban graduates are gravitating towards the Green Party.
It is also thought that the continued involvement of two MPs, Adam and Khan, could rest on the outcome of the elections, as Sultana and her supporters have been highly critical of the Independent Alliance MPs.
From the parliamentary grouping, Iqbal Mohamed and Adnan Hussain have both already quit Your Party over tensions between them and Sultana, including ill feeling after she described them as a “sexist boys’ club”.
Only Sultana has officially designated herself a Your Party MP. Corbyn, Adam and Khan are all still listed as Independents. A Your Party source said she made the change “unilaterally”, and the other MPs are understood to believe that, as the party is only currently being governed by an interim authority, they are not in a position to declare themselves as Your Party MPs.
Corbyn said: “A vote for The Many is a vote for a mass, inclusive, powerful campaigning force. We have an opportunity to build a genuinely mass party that unites our diverse communities on the issues that matter to us all.
“Remember why we are doing this: so that every child has enough food to eat, every person has a roof over their head, and everyone can live in peace. That has always been my absolute determination – and always will be.”
Politics
HuffPost Headlines For February 9
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Politics
Keir Starmer Lives To Fight Another Day After Anas Sarwar Ambush Backfires
Anas Sarwar has managed to achieve the seemingly impossible and united Keir Starmer’s cabinet behind him – at least for now.
The Scottish Labour leader decided to push the nuclear button by calling an emergency press conference and demanding the prime minister quit.
It led to feverish speculation that it would be the first salvo in a concerted attempt by senior Labour figures to unseat Starmer ahead of May’s elections in Scotland, Wales and across England.
Indeed, Sarwar himself made it clear that he wanted to see the PM replaced by someone more popular to at least give Scottish Labour half a chance as they try to defeat the SNP.
Specifically, he said Downing Street’s disastrous handling of the Peter Mandelson scandal meant Starmer had to go.
“The distraction needs to end and the leadership in Downing Street has to change,” the Scottish Labour leader said.
“We cannot allow the failures at the heart of Downing Street to mean the failures continue here in Scotland, because the election in May is not without consequence for the lives of Scots,” he declared.
But Sarwar’s battle cry went unheeded, with sources close to Welsh first minister Eluned Morgan denying suggestions that she would also be calling for Starmer to quit.
Significantly, it appeared that the Scottish Labour leader had little support from even his own countrymen and women.
One Scottish MP told HuffPost UK: “Who does Anas want to be prime minister? Does he even know? If he’s doing this with no idea of the end game, then frankly what’s the fucking point?
“The first rule of politics is never demand someone’s resignation unless you know you’re going to get it.”
Sarwar’s assault also had the unintended consequence of reigniting a seemingly extinct fighting spirit within Starmer’s Downing Street operation.
Cabinet ministers, previously reluctant to make clear their support for the PM, were strong-armed into going on social media and doing just that.
In what was clearly a co-ordinated operation, every member of the cabinet, as well as junior ministers, Labour mayors and potential leadership contenders, took to X to say now was not the time for the PM to go.
Whether their sentiments were sincere or not, it was an impressive display of raw political power, marginalising Sarwar while gaining buy-in from ministers whose backing for Starmer’s leadership has rarely been full-throated.
The PM was then greeted with loud roars of approval and enthusiastic applause when he attended a meeting of the Parliamentary Labour Party on Monday evening.
Far from fatally undermining Starmer, Sarwar’s act of sedition has, remarkably, bolstered the prime minister at a time when he appeared to be at his lowest ebb.
The prime minister is far from out of the woods, of course, and it is still far more likely than not that he will be forced out of No.10 by the summer.
But after days of unremittingly awful headlines, and against all the odds, Sarwar’s cack-handed attempts to unseat him have left Starmer stronger than he has been in months.
Politics
The House Opinion Article | “Build, baby, build” has an apprenticeship problem

3 min read
As we mark National Apprenticeships Week, it is worth asking whether our ambition to “build, baby, build” is matched by the systems meant to train the workforce that makes it possible.
“Build, baby, build” was plastered on hats across the Labour Party Conference floor. It wasn’t just a slogan; it summed up a mission running through much of the Government’s agenda: reforming the planning system, unlocking major infrastructure projects, and investing in skills and apprenticeships.
There has been welcome talk recently about new funding to train the next generation of tradespeople. But National Apprenticeships Week should also prompt a more uncomfortable question: why has the number of apprenticeships among tradespeople fallen so sharply?
As co-chair of the Apprenticeships APPG and Chair of the Environmental Audit Committee, I see these challenges first-hand. Our inquiry into environmental sustainability and housing growth repeatedly found that shortages in construction skills are a major barrier to delivering the homes we need. It’s been estimated that an additional 251,500 construction workers will be required by 2028 to meet demand and replace those leaving the sector. Yet apprenticeships are simply not keeping pace.
Checkatrade’s Trade Nation research, with data from over 850 tradespeople across the UK, confirms this. From builders to plumbers to roofers, more than seven in ten say skills shortages are a significant barrier holding them back from growth.
Most concerning, half of tradespeople say they have never hired an apprentice and have no plans to do so in the future.
For centuries, apprenticeships have been the backbone of skilled manual work. When people think of an apprentice, they picture someone learning on the job in building, carpentry, or as an electrician. Yet it seems that half of the UK’s nearly 1 million tradespeople have quietly turned their back on this tradition.
It would be easy to assume that young people are no longer interested, but the data says otherwise. Research from the Careers and Enterprise Company, the Government’s national body for careers education, shows that awareness of apprenticeships among young people is at an all-time high, now on par with A-Levels. Jobs in construction are now one of the most popular careers being considered by school leavers.
And there is no lack of ambition from business owners either. Over six in ten trade business owners say growing their business is their top priority.
So, what’s going wrong?
For many small trade businesses, taking on an apprentice has become too costly and bureaucratic. Checkatrade’s research shows that cost, complexity, and concerns about finding someone with the right skills and attitude are all key challenges. For firms already juggling jobs, cash flow, and paperwork, an apprentice can feel like a risk rather than an opportunity.
If we are serious about building Britain’s future, National Apprenticeships Week should be a time to recommit to stripping back red tape and making it as easy as possible for businesses to train the workforce they need.
There are encouraging signs. The Skills Minister, Jacqui Smith, is making real progress. Reforming the apprenticeship levy is long overdue, and the recent Budget announcement making apprenticeships free for SMEs hiring young people is an important step. But we cannot take our foot off the pedal.
There is a motivated cohort of young people eager to embark on apprenticeships. The task ahead is to ensure that trade businesses are aware of the support available and understand the value apprentices can bring — not just in the long term, but day to day.
By 2033, tradespeople are expected to contribute £24 billion to the UK economy. But unless we fix the broken pipeline of construction apprenticeships, we risk undermining both economic growth and the Government’s wider ambitions.
If we truly mean “build, baby, build”, then apprenticeships are not a side issue; they are mission-critical.
Politics
Law change against animal testing protest ‘draconian and almost certainly unlawful’
The criminalisation of peaceful protest against the use of animals in scientific testing and research is “draconian, unnecessary and almost certainly unlawful”. That’s the verdict of animal protection NGO Cruelty Free International, after the House of Lords voted to pass legislation.
Peers approved an amendment to the Public Order Act 2023. This now means that peaceful protest against animal testing facilities could lead to 12 months’ imprisonment and unlimited fines. The measure passed with no further debate after the defeat of Natalie Bennett’s fatal motion.
Parliament’s approval of these changes to protest laws wasn’t surprising, as the government used a ‘statutory instrument‘. But the debate by MPs in the lead up to the vote demonstrated a clear concern and opposition in parliament. This mirrors the vocal opposition that’s come from civil society and the public.
Bennett’s motion came after MPs passed the proposals to criminalise peaceful protest outside animal testing facilities by 301 to 110. The fatal motion went down by 295 votes to 62. But prior to that vote a number of peers had raised strong concerns about the appropriateness of the changes.
They sought clarity on the scope of activities intended to be criminalised and pressed the Minister for evidence that existing laws were not adequate. There were also several constitutional concerns that the measure was an overreach and an abuse of the statutory instrument procedure.
The amendments, which reclassify ”life sciences infrastructure” (including animal testing and breeding facilities) as ”key national infrastructure”, will now become law on Wednesday 11 February.
Animal testing protest law is an overreach
Cruelty Free International, along with other animal protection organisations, believes that this definition is a significant overreach. It says it’s not reasonable to regard such facilities as critical infrastructure.
The current list of key national infrastructure facilities includes those which support road, rail and air transport. Also harbours and the exploration, production and transportation of oil and gas. As well as onshore electricity generation and newspaper printing.
Set against this list, adding life sciences infrastructure is clearly inconsistent. The measures, therefore, will unreasonably restrict fundamental rights to protest which are protected under UK law and the European Convention on Human Rights.
The government had given two reasons for this change: pandemic preparedness and the need to protect life sciences companies. However, there does not appear to be any basis to the notion protesters would have interfered in any way with the development of coronavirus vaccines. And it’s notable that pharma companies which have threatened to relocate away from the UK have said their concerns stem from regulatory or economic pressures, not protests.
Existing police powers already address protest-related concerns. And there’s no evidence that these are inadequate. In developing these proposals, the government has failed to consult with animal protection or civil liberties organisations. That’s despite this being an area where polling data demonstrates strong public interest.
Cruelty Free International’s head of public affairs, Dylan Underhill, said:
We believe these regulations to be illiberal, draconian, unnecessary, and almost certainly unlawful. Criminalising peaceful protest against experiments on animals undermines fundamental freedoms and public accountability, and is an unjustified attack on democratic rights.
Whilst we appreciate the efforts of peers to stop these amendments becoming law and to scrutinise the detail of the measures, we remain deeply disappointed and angry that the government has pursued these highly consequential changes through a process which does not allow for substantive parliamentary debate or public scrutiny.
These amendments contravene fundamental rights to protest that are protected under UK law and the European Convention on Human Rights, and risk setting a dangerous precedent towards an ever-growing restriction of peaceful protest.
We now encourage parliamentarians to seek clarity on the scope of the activities which are being criminalised, and to question ministers on the lack of evidence, the discriminatory nature of the proposal, and its compatibility with the rights of the British people to carry out non-violent protest in relation to a topic on which opinion surveys have repeatedly demonstrated strong public concern.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Ghislaine Maxwell Pleads Fifth In Deposition And Holds Out For Trump Pardon
WASHINGTON — Jeffery Epstein’s former accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell sat for a video deposition with members of Congress on Monday but refused to talk.
Appearing from the prison camp where she’s serving a 20-year sentence, Maxwell invoked her Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate herself — and indicated she would only speak if President Donald Trump lets her out of prison.
“Ms Maxwell is prepared to speak fully and honestly if granted clemency by President Trump,” Maxwell’s attorney, David Markus, said in an opening statement he posted on social media.
Democrats expressed outrage that Maxwell appeared to be advertising favorable testimony in exchange for a pardon or commutation of her prison sentence. Trump has suggested he’s open to the idea.
“She is campaigning over and over again to get that pardon from President Trump, and this president has not ruled it out, and so that is why she’s continuing to not cooperate with our investigation,” Representative Suhas Subramanyam (D-Va.) told reporters. “The reality is that she is a monster. She should be behind bars.”
Maxwell was sentenced to 240 months in prison in 2022 for helping Epstein recruit, groom and eventually abuse girls as young as 14. When she was first charged in 2020, a year after Epstein died in prison while facing sex trafficking charges, Trump, a former friend of Epstein’s, said he wished her well.
Last year, the Bureau of Prisons transferred Maxwell to a minimum-security prison camp, contrary to protocols for a sex offender, after she sat for a transcribed interview with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. In that interview, Maxwell said she never witnessed inappropriate behavior by Trump or by former President Bill Clinton, who also socialized with Epstein and traveled on his private jet.
Bill and Hillary Clinton will sit for depositions with the House Oversight Committee later this month. The committee’s chair, Representative James Comer (R-Ky.), said he was disappointed that Maxwell invoked her Fifth Amendment right not to speak as a witness against herself.
“We had many questions to ask about the crimes she and Epstein committed, as well as questions about potential co-conspirators,” Comer said.
Through her attorney, Maxwell again volunteered that Trump and Clinton did nothing wrong.
“Only she can provide the complete account. Some may not like what they hear, but the truth matters,” Markus said. “For example, both President Trump and President Clinton are innocent of any wrongdoing. Ms. Maxwell alone can explain why, and the public is entitled to that explanation.”
Politics
James York: The Truth on Chagos? We need an off ramp, fast
James York is a member of the Beaconsfield Conservative Association and a policymaker in the insurance industry.
Nothing is more pressing in our national politics right now than the plight of the absurd, inconceivable, illogical, baffling and frankly suspicious Chagos Islands “deal”. We must find Sir Keir (Sucker?) Starmer an off ramp. A democracy that treats non-binding advice as binding, perpetuates the conversion of sovereignty into ritual.
Trumps acquiescence was caveated by the admission he’d use force to protect his interests. Did you catch the deep breath of irony? It was negating by its nature! Loathe, respect or love Trump – it’s pretty evident that he is playing the game of international relations poker as a realist.
He knows it’s all about power, but one fears our “regulation oriented” barristercrats don’t. They quietly rock, mumbling about “international law”, whilst power across the world does what it wants until it meets the equal and opposing force of other power. There’s really only two states that matter right now.
We all know, in Texas Holdem’ terms, this Chagos move is quit literally “a flop” of bad, bad cards, and very expensive “blinds”!
Let’s take a stock check of why we’re doing this Chagos deal. Firstly, there’s “legal” obligation. It doesn’t take a barristercratic Cambridge alum to spot that the “ruling” behind which Starmer hides is merely advisory.
If the police “advised” you to pay a fine, you might think it in your best interests to, thus avoiding future ire. But if your neighbour did because a bamboo plant had snuck under their fence. Would you? Well, only would if their demand was backed by, say, those police. But the world has no such police force. No state is bound by anything but power. It’s a long-standing thing we call sovereignty. It’s telling that so many on the left scoff at the word.
This ruling is the equivalent of a neighbour demanding compensation, with no police force to enforce it if you don’t comply. Just the dirty looks of other neighbours – many of whom have their skeletons in the windows and feral kids hacking your wifi.
Are you seriously going to change their future behaviour just by “doing the right thing”?
Equivalently, are we noticing British actions being ruled upon by a Chinese and a Russian judge? Something about it doesn’t track. Roughly 50 per cent of the ICJ advisory ruling’s judges could be considered as originating from democracies! This is not an outright accusation of bad faith. Rather, a recognition of the potential that legal cultures formed in non-democratic systems cannot help but interpret consent, legitimacy, and the actions of ideological counterparts differently.
There is the question of personal conflicts of interest, too. Whether or not any impropriety exists is not the point. The appearance of overlapping professional, ideological and reputational incentives would be unacceptable in most other public-decision making domains. Doesn’t Labour’s pursuit of Baroness Mone indicate their instincts on such appearances?
It could be understood, even empathised with that Sir Keir Starmer feels the unconscious tug of approval from a peer in the bar circles to which he cleaves (although, of course, his father was a toolmaker!). His own Attorney General, Lord Hermer was a close colleague of Sands’ at Matrix Chambers – that would suggests professional admiration by proxy, at least. Hermer’s Recusal, while procedurally proper, has the perverse effect here of removing precisely the institutional challenge that democratic accountability would require. A system in which proximity necessitates withdrawal rather than scrutiny is not neutral — it is structurally self-disarming. One wouldn’t wish to be the second in command, asked to approve this deal.
Before we risk the embrace of tin-foiled suspicion, let’s be logical.
When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth, said Holmes.
We have already established that it is impossible to insist the decision is beyond legal challenge, and those who made it beyond reproach. It is impossible that this deal is in our national interests. We also have a black hole, don’t we? You can’t spend £35bn when you’re in a black hole! It is impossible that the Chagos islands were threatened by force – Mauritius is all but unarmed. It is also impossible to argue there’s any kind of mandate for this. Starmer is using sovereignty, without even an indicative mandate.
So what is the off ramp? In this instance, democratic mandate has been voluntarily displaced for international law. For there can be no compulsion in an advisory decision. Parliament remains sovereign, even in light of international law. It comes to the root of the Chagos, and even Brexit debates. Just how much sovereignty can an executive spend without a direct mandate? We have neither a mandate from the Chagossians – who appear all but forgotten by the UN and our lawmakers – nor is there a mandate from the British people to give away this land and rent a slice back.
Consider that the “turn” on our little game of international relations poker. The card is the tactical insistence that Chagossians have franchise and agency – just as we did in the Falklands. Secondly, the strategic demand to give it suit. That no longer can any executive use the sovereignty credit card as if it has no limits.
Let’s lastly give this deal a strategic stress test? Hypothetically, two months following this deal, Mauritius (defenceless as it is), signs a security compact for a small but potent naval and air defence package. The natural destination would be China, of course. Mauritius is credit worthy, too! Flush with £35-47bn of British fun money. This deal includes training, a classic Western tactic. Mauritius, seeking to defend its new hundreds of thousands of square miles, contracts China to build it a new naval base in the Chagos. China is rather good at building atoll bases – see the Spratley islands for details – and it despatches a civilian fleet, as well as a non-threatening training contingent of under 500 PLA professionals.
Remember, it’s a political decision to follow the advisory ruling without an express mandate from Chagossians or the British people. How does the deal look through that hypothetical lens?
What of the truth, then? It must lie somewhere between personal bias, corruption and outright ideological capture. Whether that capture is the rules-based order or another more insidious possibility. This policy is quite literally marquee for Sucker Starmer, a man who u-turns more than a forklift truck cleaves to it like a winning lottery ticket. History indicates that when decisions repeatedly contradict interest, threat and mandate, analysts are forced to look beyond error.
Regardless, if we lay down the democratic card we may yet avoid folding. Why does it feel like we’re being sold down that river regardless?
Politics
Reaction to Sarwar suggests Labour isn’t ready to depose Starmer
The leader of the Scottish Labour Party, Anas Sarwar, has moved first.
Declaring that he had to do “what is right for my country”, Sarwar called on the prime minister to resign in a scathing statement.
In a press conference this afternoon, Sarwar proclaimed: “It is not easy and not without pain, but my first priority and first loyalty is to my country… The distraction has to end, and the leadership in Downing Street has to change.”
Sarwar’s sensational intervention marked a massive moment for the politics of the Labour Party and the nation.
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Sarwar has felt the blunt force of the Labour brand’s toxicity in his campaign for the upcoming Scottish Parliament elections. That he has chosen to strike now would suggest that the Scottish Labour leader’s estimation of his party’s chances in May is dismal. The intervention is an effective admission that the Scottish Labour Party cannot win an election with Starmer as prime minister.
In July 2022, Sajid Javid, the health secretary, was the first senior party figure to call for Boris Johnson to stand down as prime minister. His resignation was followed mere moments later by that of Rishi Sunak, the chancellor. Javid and Sunak sparked an all-consuming torrent of departures, accompanied by letters lambasting Johnson’s character, judgement and conduct.
In the 24 hours that followed Sunak and Javid’s resignations, 36 MPs stepped down from their roles in government. At the time, Starmer referred to Johnson as a “pathetic spectacle” and mocked those who remained on the frontbench as the “charge of the lightweight brigade”.
Sunak’s resignation was integral in triggering the ministerial stampede that ultimately trampled Johnson. When the herd moves, the outgoing prime minister observed, it moves.
In this regard, the news that Eluned Morgan, the first minister of Wales, would follow Sarwar in calling for Starmer’s resignation initially seemed significant. Like Sarwar north of the border, Welsh Labour is facing a possible routing on 7 May – courtesy of an insurgent Reform UK. But reports have since clarified that Morgan will not be commenting on Starmer’s future today.
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And so the spotlight now swings back to Westminster.
Sarwar’s statement, together with Tim Allan’s resignation this morning and Morgan McSweeney’s resignation on Sunday, strengthens the prevailing impression of a government in freefall.
But in a strictly processual sense, the Scottish Labour leader has no say in Starmer’s future – that is up to the prime minister himself and the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP). A leadership contender needs 81 MPs to trigger a contest; meanwhile, Starmer continues to insist that he will not resign.
Responding to Sarwar’s intervention, a Downing Street spokesperson said: “Keir Starmer is one of only four Labour leaders ever to have won a general election.
“He has a clear five-year mandate from the British people to deliver change, and that is what he will do.”
Even more significantly, Sarwar’s declaration has awoken the cabinet from its collective slumber. Downing Street, notwithstanding recent resignations, has been successful in securing public statements of support from secretaries of state.
Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, has insisted that with “Keir as our prime minister, we are turning the country around.”
Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the prime minister, has called on his colleagues to “get behind the prime minister”.
Steve Reed, the housing secretary, has said that Labour needs to “stay the course”.
Douglas Alexander, the secretary of state for Scotland, has said he “respects” Sarwar but that Starmer has his support.
Hilary Benn, the Northern Ireland secretary, has called for “calm heads and seriousness of purpose”.
Peter Kyle, the business and trade secretary, has said he backs Starmer as prime minister, adding: “The economy is growing, let’s focus on delivering for the British people.”
In his first tweet in almost a year, Alan Campbell, the leader of the House of Commons, stated: “The only change we need to be talking about is the change we were elected to deliver for the British people.”
And what of possible leadership contenders?
Ed Miliband, the energy and climate secretary, declared that Starmer has “earned the right to deliver the change he has promised and do what he cares about.”
Wes Streeting, the ambitious health secretary, has conceded that it has “not been the best week for the government.” But speaking to Sky News, he added: “Give Keir a chance.”
On top of this, Angela Rayner has issued a statement saying Starmer has her “full support.” The former deputy prime minister said that the worst possible response to the Peter Mandelson affair would be “to play party politics or factional games.”
These expressions of support, from the enthusiastic to the somewhat strained, matter. So far, Sarwar’s intervention has not provided a springboard to collective action at Westminster; no one has been willing to give a lead at Westminster to an anti-Starmer campaign.
The clean sweep of cabinet support is reminiscent of the reaction to previous Labour coup attempts. In June 2009, after James Purnell resigned as work and pensions secretary and called on Gordon Brown to step down, the rest of the cabinet swung to the prime minister’s defence. David Miliband, the foreign secretary, and Alan Johnson, the health secretary – Brown’s most likely heirs – rowed in behind the Downing Street incumbent.
Purnell’s putsch failed.
In January 2010, two former cabinet ministers, Patricia Hewitt and Geoff Hoon, called for a leadership contest to resolve Brown’s future. The Hewitt-Hoon coup was summarily dismissed by a chorus of cabinet ministers.
There is another possible parallel in recent political history. In January 2022 – some months before Javid and Sunak moved at Westminster – the leader of the Scottish Conservatives, Douglas Ross, called for Boris Johnson to resign as prime minister.
Jacob Rees-Mogg, the then leader of the House of Commons, responded that he did not think Ross was a “big figure”.
Less than two months later, Ross was forced to walk back his call for Johnson to resign.
Then as now, it would seem that the parliamentary party is not ready to depose the sitting prime minister – at least not like this.
Josh Self is editor of Politics.co.uk, follow him on Bluesky here and X here.
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