Politics
Girlguiding is not for boys
With all the grace of a sulky teenager, Girlguiding finally issued a statement this week, announcing that it will comply with the law on single-sex spaces. ‘Trans girls’ (aka boys) will have to leave the organisation by 6 September. It might as well have read: ‘The nasty judges made us do it.’ Naturally, there was also a link to mental-health support for those upset by the discovery that boys aren’t allowed in.
Girlguides should always be prepared. But it seems the leadership have been shocked by the mess in which they now find themselves. For most of its existence, Girlguiding didn’t have any policies on trans members or volunteers. That’s because the concept of ‘trans children’ had not been invented. Kids who didn’t conform with sex stereotypes were not thought to have some sort of mismatch between their bodies and their minds, and adults knew better than to pander to childhood fantasies. Meanwhile, cross-dressing men weren’t so bold as to assume they’d be welcome in a role volunteering with teenage girls. In short, there was no ‘trans inclusion’ policy because institutional lying hadn’t been normalised.
Then, in 2017, Girlguiding met with Stonewall and Gendered Intelligence to develop policies to accommodate boys and men who identified as trans. Rank-and-file members were not consulted. Those who raised legitimate concerns were not simply silenced, but publicly smeared and shamed.
In 2018, long-serving guide leaders Katie Alcock and Helen Watts were forced out after being investigated for social-media posts in which they raised safeguarding concerns. Their crime was to have questioned the newly developed trans-inclusion policy, which admitted men and boys on the basis of a self-declared female identity. Watts, a volunteer of 15 years, saw her Rainbows Unit for girls aged five to seven closed. Alcock later reached a financial settlement, telling the Daily Mail that the process was akin to interrogation by ‘the secret police in some totalitarian state’. She claimed to have been ‘treated no differently from a child abuser. Yet all I’d done was say safeguarding should come before anything else.’
By 2022, what had been waved away as hypothetical risk had become embarrassingly concrete. Girlguiding was forced to investigate one of its commissioners, Nottinghamshire bus driver Monica Sulley, who oversaw multiple units, after he posted Instagram images in fetish gear, posing with what appeared to be a replica firearm, a holstered handgun and a sword, with captions including: ‘Now behave yourselves or Mistress will have to punish you #mistress.’
But Girlguiding’s disastrous trans-inclusion policies did more than open the tent flap to creepy men and confused boys: they effectively groomed girls to give up their rights. Last week, Janet Murray, writing in the Telegraph, uncovered a splinter group, Guiders Against Trans Exclusion (GATE), which has provided advice on how leaders can campaign for boys to remain, from lobbying politicians to attending protests. A publicly available briefing directs leaders to buy political badges and introduce ‘trans rights’ materials into their units.
This has been successful. A video from Thatcham Rangers shows girls holding placards reading ‘Trans girls are girls’ and ‘Our story includes trans girls’, while reciting the Girlguiding promise.
We are told children should get off their phones, join clubs and do something wholesome, away from adult concerns. Girlguiding is perfectly placed to offer that. But it is understandable that parents, and girls themselves, want the reassurance that they will be safe, that there will be no horny teenage boys pretending to be teenage girls who are tagging along on camping trips, and that their daughters won’t be accompanied to the loo by adult male volunteers. They also need to be sure that their children won’t be subjected to extremist ideological views, and this includes the fiction that boys are really girls if they say so.
The promise each Girlguiding member makes is schmaltzy but based on decent principles: Do your best, be true to yourself, develop your beliefs, serve the king, your community, and help other people. But in Girlguiding’s pitiful statement, there is no sign of these values. There is neither contrition nor shame from the leaders – not for the women they drove out, not for the families they alienated, and not for the girls they put at risk. They have not done their best, developed their beliefs or served anyone but themselves. It seems the professionals at the top of Girlguiding were too busy polishing their rainbow badges to remember their duty to the girls they were meant to protect.
Jo Bartosch is co-author of Pornocracy. Order it here.
Politics
Spectator front page is grotesque
The Israel lobby’s frantic attacks on the Green party continue, this time from the Spectator. The colony’s UK mouthpieces have been targeting the Greens and their leadership intensively since members tabled a motion to declare the party explicitly anti-Zionist.
The front page of the latest issue of the Spectator – edited by ultra-Zionist Islamophobe Michael Gove – is a naked attack on the party for, supposedly, ‘abandoning its roots’.
Spectator push slop
The cover image shows Green party leader, Zack Polanski, deputy leader Mothin Ali and new Green MP Hannah Spencer hacking away at trees as if they are now anti-nature. But in reality, the attack is all about Israel – the Greens’ environmental policies haven’t changed. And of course, it’s not long before the article’s author Angus Colwell gives that away.
Colwell’s support for Israel has long been on show, including in previous Spectator spew like the “The Ultras: meet Britain’s new Islamo-socialist alliance‘. But on the Greens’ “environmental” “betrayal” he soon exposes his real agenda, ranting about “Palestinian activism” and courageous pro-Palestinian author Sally Rooney [emphases added]:
Climate activism begets trans activism begets Palestinian activism. The author Sally Rooney gave a speech at a progressive conference this month that’s a good example of the sentiment. ‘The adversaries we confront in the Palestinian solidarity movement… are the same forces driving catastrophic climate change and destroying the very basis for our shared survival,’ she said. Each issue is yet more proof of a permanent crisis.
At this weekend’s online-only conference, party members will have an opportunity to vote on a motion declaring that ‘Zionism is racism’. Two similarly named splinter groups – Greens Anti-Zionist Alliance and Greens for Palestine – have been leading the effort, and Polanski (himself Jewish) hasn’t really condemned it: ‘If we’re talking about the definition [of Zionism] that this Israeli government are clearly perpetrating through a genocide in Gaza, then yes, absolutely. That’s racist.’
Backing the motion more vehemently is Mothin Ali, Polanski’s deputy. He’s a keen gardener, has been on a BBC show with Marcus Wareing and has a ‘My Family Garden’ YouTube page with 56,700 subscribers. The most recent video opens with him taking a chainsaw to a tree, then removing his headgear to reveal a Palestine beanie. ‘As-salamu alaykum,’ he says. ‘So today, what I’m going to do, is I’m going to show you how to cut down trees for profit’ – which is an interesting thing for a Green deputy leader to say. He then shows everyone how to prune fruit trees. He is genuinely liked on a personal level in the party: one senior figure tells me he’s a ‘gentle soul’.
A Palestine beanie. The horror. But clearly the motion is what has Colwell and the Israel lobby so rattled. Good. Polanski, for his part, showed his trademark lack of you-know-what-giving and used the whole nonsense as a vehicle to invite people to join the Greens, wondering aloud what was wrong with the poor souls at the Spectator:
The motion must pass. No political party that thinks building an apartheid ethno-state on land stolen from its people isn’t racist has any place in British politics – and you can tell from their pearl-clutching panic that the Israel lobby knows the British public is catching on.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Gaza medic seeking support for medical placement
Palestinian doctor Mohammed Hammad is looking for help to get from Gaza to Scotland to complete a research project at Edinburgh University.
The people’s doctor
Hammad completed his medical training in late 2025, during a brief lull in Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Since then, living in a tent in the Mawasi concentration camp, he has been treating sick and wounded Palestinians under Israel’s illegal blockade of food, fuel and medicines.
Now he has secured a year-long neuroscience research fellowship under consultant neurologist Prof Rustam al-Shahi Salman. The project will evaluate stroke care in Gaza to find improvements that can be implemented despite Israel’s occupation and genocide. However, the placement and travel costs are not funded. Hammad, who is from Rafah but was displaced to Mawasi in May 2024, is seeking financial support and has set up a crowdfund to raise cash for the placement.
Defying the odds
He told Edinburgh Live:
During the war, I volunteered for six months in the Neurology Department at Nasser Medical Complex – the only operating hospital in southern Gaza, serving 1.2 million Gazans. During my final year of medical school, I supported patient care, documentation, neurological emergency management, and CT interpretation under extremely high-pressure conditions.
Hospitals faced severe shortages of electricity, medications, imaging access, and basic medical supplies. There were periods of overcrowding, limited diagnostic capacity, and constant uncertainty.
Some of the most difficult situations involved managing acute stroke cases without access to thrombolysis or advanced stroke unit care, treating prolonged seizures with limited medication availability, and assessing traumatic brain injuries with restricted imaging capacity. There is currently no MRI available in Gaza, and in the south there has effectively been only one functioning CT scanner serving a population of around 1.2 million people.
Working under siege
On his experience working as a doctor under siege, he said:
The difficulty was not only the medical complexity, but having to make critical decisions in severely resource-constrained and high-pressure conditions. Despite this, healthcare workers continued to provide care with remarkable resilience.
My immediate family is safe at the moment, but we live under very difficult humanitarian conditions, displacement, limited access to consistent electricity, clean water, and stable infrastructure. For the wider population, daily life is defined by uncertainty and rebuilding from repeated disruption.
This opportunity to come to Edinburgh represents more than academic progression. It is a chance to gain structured research training, international mentorship, and exposure to advanced stroke systems of care — knowledge that I hope to bring back to strengthen neurological services and medical education in Gaza.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
The House Opinion Article | Clean water must be protected from aid cuts

4 min read
A mother gives birth in a health centre without clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene every two seconds. The government must bear this in mind before going ahead with planned cuts to aid spending.
For the first time since the UK government announced its drastic aid cuts – the steepest of any G7 country – we’ve heard how it plans to spend what’s left of the overseas aid budget. Amid sweeping changes, we’re hearing that the flagship global health and water programme, WASH FOR Health (HS4H), has been axed, cancelling work across multiple countries with only 3 months’ notice.
Last week, I had the privilege of being elected as the new Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Water, Sanitation and Hygiene in parliament. Water runs through every priority area in international development, from prioritising women and girls, to building resilience to the climate crisis, and reducing the spread of deadly diseases, yet we’re seeing critical programmes like WASH4Health being cut.
This sidelines one of the public’s top issues, with new polling showing that clean water tops the public’s priority for UK aid spending for the third year in a row. In a new More in Common poll, almost half of respondents (48 per cent) say access to clean water and sanitation is the most important area for investment in foreign aid, with health the second most selected option (35 per cent). Regardless of voting preferences, of geography or gender, across different viewpoints and core beliefs, water comes out on top.
Furthermore, the data shows that the public believes clean water to be the area which receives the most money from UK aid spend, second only to disaster relief, when in reality it’s one of the lowest areas of spend. Funding for water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) has been reduced by over 60 per cent since 2018. With nearly three-quarters of the public supporting increased investment into WASH in healthcare centres to support maternal and newborn health, cuts like WASH4Health clearly fly directly in the face of public support.
Looking at conflicts around the world, we’re increasingly seeing that water security is global security, elevating the risk of instability, the spread of diseases that don’t respect borders, and climate pressures that make us all more vulnerable, at home and abroad.
The sweep of global aid cuts calls for much sharper thinking on how to make the most of a scarce resource. If the UK wants to be an investor, it should be prioritising water – an overlooked tool that saves lives, creates long-term change and underpins global health, food, energy and national security.
And the public agrees. WASH is ranked as the best value for money intervention and the best way to build self-sufficiency in developing countries. If the government is serious about moving from paternalism to partnership, the answer is clear: change starts with water.
It’s not just about smart investment. It’s also about the lives of millions around the world.
Every two seconds, a mother gives birth in a health centre without clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene. That means wards or delivery rooms which are unclean, where midwives are unable to deliver babies with clean hands and new mothers are unable to clean themselves after giving birth. Over three-quarters of births in Sub-Saharan Africa take place in unsafe delivery rooms like this, contributing to 1 in 9 mothers developing sepsis each year.
WaterAid’s new Time to Deliver campaign joins the demands of women around the world, calling for every health centre to have clean water, decent toilets and good hygiene.
At the campaign launch in Parliament last week, I had the privilege of hearing from Patience Emmanuel, a former midwife now working as a WASH Manager for WaterAid Nigeria. When asked what having funding for water would mean for women giving birth in health centres right now, she became emotional. She told us that if governments took action this year, the difference that mothers would feel first is dignity. Their child would be born into a place that is safe.
It’s testimony like Patience’s that should be in the minds of decision makers at the moment. Water, sanitation and hygiene are simple, inexpensive tools that have the power to create long-term change for low- and middle-income countries, while transforming the lives of women and girls, protecting global health, and boosting economies.
Lee Pitcher is Labour MP for Doncaster East & the Isle of Axholme and Chair of the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene All-Party Parliamentary Group
Politics
Nicola Coughlan Auditioned To Play Robin In Stranger Things Season 3
As Penelope Featherington in Bridgerton, Nicola Coughlan has been a major part of one of Netflix’s biggest and most popular original series ever.
However, the Derry Girls star has revealed that she almost appeared in another of the streaming giant’s most iconic shows.
During a recent interview on the Capital breakfast show, the Bafta nominee was asked if there’d been any near-miss roles earlier in her career, before opening up about auditioning for Stranger Things in the lead-up to its third season.
“It would be generous to myself to say I narrowly missed out on it,” she claimed. “But I did a first-round audition for Stranger Things.”
Nicola then shared that the audition was “to play Robin”, the character eventually brought to life on screen by Maya Hawke in what proved to be her break-out role.

“You know when you watch a show and you go, ‘oh well, thank God I didn’t get that, because I would have been way worse!’,” she joked.
The Irish performer quickly added: “I don’t think I was anywhere close to being in Stranger Things, but I did audition.”
Since rising to fame as a cast member in Derry Girls, Nicola’s screen work has included a minor role in Greta Gerwig’s Barbie and a leading performance in the dark comedy Big Mood.
Big Mood will return for a second season on Channel 4 next month, with the inaugural run earning Nicola her first TV Bafta nomination in the Best Female Performance In A Comedy category last year.
Nicola also recently lent her voice to the animated sports comedy Goat, made a scene-stealing appearance in the 2024 Doctor Who Christmas special and plays Silky in the star-studded new adaptation of Enid Blyton’s The Magic Faraway Tree, alongside the likes of Claire Foy, Andrew Garfield, Rebecca Ferguson and Baby Reindeer’s Jessica Gunning.
Politics
Trump Awarded Participation Trophy
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Politics
LBC presenter grilled for Islamophobic retweet
On 25 March, LBC host Tom Swarbrick retweeted a clearly Islamophobic post:
Tom Swarbrick from LBC and now a guest on Good Morning Britain retweeted this tweet calling Muslims in the West dirty. pic.twitter.com/AV7mkJFe1d
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) March 25, 2026
To make matters worse, the post was from a known liar and propagandist.
“I hope you all cry forever”
As we reported in 2018, Swarbrick is an establishment hack with zero integrity. James Wright reported for us at the time:
Text messages leaked to BuzzFeed show that an LBC presenter tried to stage-manage an interview with a Conservative cabinet minister.
LBC‘s Tom Swarbrick was trying to bag an interview with the unnamed government figure. In the process, he sent the minister the interviewing questions and promised to be gentle. In the end, the interview didn’t go ahead.
The fact that he’s still at LBC shows they’ve got about as much integrity as him.
Here’s how people responded to his retweet:
Why is LBC presenter Tom Swarbrick endorsing a comment that Muslims are “smelly”? pic.twitter.com/eLZBMZs3LQ
— Lowkey (@Lowkey0nline) March 25, 2026
Tom Swarbrick will post about “dirty Muslims” before delivering a solemn monologue on LBC about why “from the river to the sea” is chilling antisemitism. https://t.co/O06W22fPcm
— Karl Hansen (@karl_fh) March 25, 2026
Swarbrick was retweeting a post from Nioh Berg.
Many are quoting @NiohBerg as the voice of the oppressed Iranian, the one we must free, the truth of their people, and what they want and need.
What they forget is Nioh isn’t Iranian.
He’s Chandresh. An Indian paid by Israel, to pretend, but who forgot to delete. pic.twitter.com/cSTy8ZeiDM
— Ewan MacKenna (@EwanMacKenna) March 1, 2026
Berg notoriously posted the following in early March, and was retweeted by every moron online as a result (we now know definitively that it was the Americans who bombed the school):
🔴 BREAKING:
The regime in Iran has now confessed that the IRGC mistakenly bombed an Iranian school yesterday, killing many children.
To all the legacy media and pro regime influencers who peddled your fake news:
RETRACT and DELETE. pic.twitter.com/MNBdIcmvkG
— 𝐍𝐢𝐨𝐡 𝐁𝐞𝐫𝐠 🇮🇷 ✡︎ (@NiohBerg) March 1, 2026
The above should have been a ‘fool me once’ moment for those who follow Berg. However, it looks like there’s no limit to how many times you can fool a guy like Swarbrick.
Following considerable backlash, Swarbrick has now deleted his retweet.
Establishment hacks
This is the last thing Swarbrick posted himself:
https://t.co/OGYJBjfpQ9 pic.twitter.com/VS9iyVwpbx
— Tom Swarbrick (@TomSwarbrick1) February 28, 2026
The image is from when the US announced the capture of Saddam Hussein in 2003. This was treated like a the final victory at the time, but of course the disastrous Invasion of Iraq raged on for another eight years, and still impact the country until today. This is fitting, given that the disastrous attack on Iran has gone very poorly for the Yanks since they assassinated the Supreme Leader.
Potentially this was the point Swarbrick was making—that history repeats itself in increasingly farcical ways—but given his other posts, it’s more likely he’s just another media ghoul with zero memory for how badly these things turn out.
Featured image via LBC
Politics
Everything Your Poop Schedule Says About Your Health
There is no single “normal” number of times to poop a week – it can range from three times a day to three times a week, says the NHS.
But a 2025 study, which involved 1,400 adults, found there is a “Goldilocks [or ‘just right’] zone” for poop frequency, which is once to twice a day.
What did the study involve?
The study authors divided participants into four poop frequency groups:
- Constipated (one or two bowel movements per week),
- Low-normal (between three and six bowel movements per week),
- High-normal (between one and three bowel movements per day), and
- Diarrhoea (more than three bowel movements a day).
Then, they looked at health markers in each group, including gut microbiomes and blood samples.
What does my poop frequency say about my health?
The scientists found that people whose gut microbiomes had more fibre-fermenting gut bacteria, which is often associated with good gut health, tended to poop once or twice a day.
But bacteria linked to protein-related gut fermentation were likely to be stronger in those with constipation or diarrhoea.
These, the researchers said, might release “toxins” into the body.
“If stool sticks around too long in the gut, microbes use up all of the available dietary fibre, which they ferment into beneficial short-chain fatty acids. After that, the ecosystem switches to fermentation of proteins, which produces several toxins that can make their way into the bloodstream,” the study’s lead author, Johnson-Martinez, said.
And a build-up of these “toxins,” including indoxyl sulphate or trimethylamine, may be linked to kidney disease and cardiovascular disease.
Meanwhile, those with diarrhoea had more C-reactive proteins, a sign of chronic inflammation, and chemicals that may be linked to liver damage.
“In a generally healthy population, we show that constipation, in particular, is associated with blood levels of microbially derived toxins known to cause organ damage, prior to any disease diagnosis,” study author Dr Sean Gibbons said.
How can I improve my poop schedule?
In this research, people who adhered to a “Goldilocks zone” schedule tended to eat a lot of fibre, exercise regularly, and stay hydrated.
Speaking to BBC Science Focus, Dr Gibbons added: “High-protein diets can also be kind of dangerous because of the protein fermentation by-products I mentioned.
“There’s a lot of evidence, especially in younger people, that they can be problematic for things like type-2 diabetes”.
Politics
Jonathan Guttentag: When soldiers guard synagogues, something has already gone deeply wrong
Rabbi Jonathan Guttentag is a UK representative of the Coalition for Jewish Values and a communal rabbi based in Manchester.
When a European government sends soldiers onto its streets to protect synagogues and Jewish schools, it is tempting to describe the move as a tough law-and-order response.
It is not.
It marks a more serious shift: from policing a society to defending it.
That distinction matters.
Police operate within a functioning civic order. Their presence assumes that public life, however imperfect, is broadly governed by law, consent, and deterrence.
Soldiers are different. Armies are not instruments of civic management; they are instruments of defence. They are deployed when the threat is no longer simply criminal, but organised, ideological, and resistant to the normal authority of the law.
When soldiers stand guard outside synagogues, a line has already been crossed.
I have seen this before.
In France, following the attacks on a kosher supermarket and the murders at a Jewish school in Toulouse, troops were deployed to protect Jewish institutions. I encountered this directly a year later, attending a gathering of the Conference of European Rabbis in Toulouse. The synagogue and community buildings were guarded by young soldiers, barely out of training, cradling automatic weapons.
It was, in one sense, reassuring.
But it also raised a more troubling question: how had things reached the point where even armed police were no longer sufficient, and the state had to reach for the army?
For decades, attending such gatherings across Europe, security had always been present — police outriders on motorcycles, flashing blue lights, traffic briefly halted, the visible choreography of the state in control. But that was policing. This is something else.
For years, rising antisemitism across Europe has been treated as a social problem to be managed rather than a threat to be confronted. The response has been familiar: statements of concern, educational initiatives, intermittent enforcement — accompanied by a marked reluctance to address the sources of hostility directly.
The result is a recognisable pattern: hesitation, escalation, and then emergency measures.
We are now seeing elements of this closer to home.
In recent days, even Hatzola ambulances — volunteer emergency responders whose sole purpose is to save life — have come under attack. When those providing medical assistance become targets, it is no longer credible to describe the problem as marginal.
Last Yom Kippur in Manchester, my colleague Rabbi Daniel Walker was forced to defend his synagogue from a violent attacker. The outer gates had already been rammed and breached before the confrontation reached the entrance itself. This was not a distant or abstract threat. It was immediate and physical.
In the days that followed, King Charles III visited the site and later became patron of the Community Security Trust — a welcome and important signal of national support.
But it also reflects a harder truth: that protection is increasingly required where once it was assumed.
The lesson for policymakers should be clear.
If threats of this kind are treated merely as issues of community relations or low-level disorder, the response will always lag behind reality. By the time soldiers are required, the failure has already occurred.
The task is not only to respond at the point of crisis, but to restore the conditions in which ordinary policing is sufficient.
That means:
- enforcing the law decisively
- confronting sources of incitement without hesitation
- and reasserting that public space in Britain is governed by law, not intimidation
A society in which people can worship freely without armed protection is not a luxury. It is a basic test of civic health.
Once that assumption begins to fail, restoring it is far harder than preserving it.
Politics
Britain’s energy nightmare is of our own elites’ making
For the second time in four years, Britain is staring down the barrel of a major energy crisis. Since America and Israel began bombarding Iran, the prices of oil and gas have soared across the world, and Britain is especially exposed. This week, even as talk of a potential ceasefire has calmed the markets somewhat, global oil prices remain 45 per cent higher than before the war began, and 60 per cent up on the start of the year. Whatever happens next between Trump and the ayatollahs, whether the US ‘unleashes hell’ or ceases fire, the UK is in for a very rough ride.
The outlook is beyond bleak. The typical household energy bill in the UK is expected to climb by 20 per cent in July, when a new energy price cap comes into effect. Industry is already feeling the strain, with input prices for British factories surging at the fastest pace since the Black Wednesday market crash in 1992 – thanks to the soaring costs of energy, transport and oil- and gas-derived products. Investment bank Morgan Stanley has warned of a ‘pronounced recession’ later in the year.
Of course, there is no scenario in which modern Britain could have been immune from such seismic events in the Middle East. Iran has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20 per cent of the world’s oil flows. For every day the strait is closed, more barrels of oil are being taken out of circulation than in the 1973 and 1979 oil crises combined. Added to that has been the Islamic Republic’s attacks on LNG (liquified natural gas) facilities across the Gulf. Iranian strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan gas facility have wiped out 17 per cent of Qatari LNG exports. All in all, the Iran War has prompted what the International Energy Agency considers to be the single ‘largest supply disruption’ to the world’s energy supplies in history.
So no, Britain was never going to escape the headwinds of this crisis. But it could have been far better prepared for weathering the storm. It could – and should – have learned at least some lessons from the last energy-price crisis in 2022, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent gas prices soaring. Not least as Britain is blessed with abundant oil and gas reserves of its own, in both the North Sea and as frackable shale gas beneath the ground. Yet unless Keir Starmer and his energy secretary, Ed Miliband, radically change course on decades of perverse policies, the UK is only set to become even more vulnerable to future external shocks beyond our control.
The Labour government insists the crisis underlines the need for Britain to ‘get off’ oil and gas, and switch to ‘clean power’. According to Miliband, fossil fuels cannot be produced domestically at scale. And even if they could, he claims, we would still be prisoners of a volatile global energy market.
The energy secretary is wrong on all fronts. Catastrophically so. As a new report by Offshore Energy UK (OEUK) confirms, North Sea oil and gas drilling has indeed fallen sharply in recent years. But this has been driven by government policy, not the supplies in reserve beneath the sea. Miliband’s ban on new North Sea oil exploration, and his continuation of the Tories’ windfall tax on the sector, are by far the greatest constraint on domestic drilling. As a result, according to OEUK, imports of LNG – which currently account for 14 per cent of the UK gas supply – are set to soar to 46 per cent by 2035. Under Miliband’s North Sea shutdown, Britain will become more dependent on suppliers like Qatar, and thus more vulnerable to external energy shocks.
And what might domestic protection mean for the price of energy? While nobody expects reopening the North Sea to instantly rescue the UK from the current price hikes, more domestic drilling could indeed lower costs in the long run. Miliband’s insistence that prices are set ‘internationally’, and so domestic production would ‘not take a penny off energy bills’, is straightforwardly untrue. If prices really were set globally, the UK would not be paying six times more for gas than energy-rich America.
It is, however, true that Britain buys and sells gas on a European market, but this doesn’t mean exploiting the North Sea would be a fruitless endeavour. For one thing, more domestic production would mean fewer LNG imports – avoiding the costs of liquefaction, shipping and regasification that shipping gas around the world entails. This is also why it is unlikely that all new oil and gas produced in the UK would simply be sold abroad, as foreign markets pay a premium for transport costs. In any case, as energy expert Dieter Helm explains, there is no reason why, with enough ‘imagination’, the UK government could not secure favourable treatment from North Sea firms as a condition for granting new drilling licences.
Even if Miliband were somehow correct, that any new oil and gas would immediately leave the country, keeping the North Sea alive would still be a no-brainer. It would provide billions in tax revenue at a time of fiscal crisis. It would vastly improve the balance of payments, at a time when Britain is importing far more goods and services than it exports. And it would keep alive an industry that supports hundreds of thousands of mostly well-paid, unionised jobs. There is simply no rational, let alone progressive, argument for throttling the North Sea.
For the past decade or so, the big bet made by the establishment has been that renewables can replace energy derived from fossil fuels. Wind and solar, they claim, are not only cheaper, but offer more security of supply, too. Again, these are sheer delusions. The only time British consumers have ever paid less for wind power than for gas was when the gas price went into the stratosphere at the start of the Ukraine war. After 2030, should Miliband hit his target for a ‘clean-powered’, renewables-heavy grid, energy supplier Centrica expects prices to be higher than at the peak of the Ukraine energy crisis. Britain is set to exit what Miliband calls the ‘rollercoaster of fossil fuels’, only to lock in crisis-level energy costs in the longer run.
As well as being exorbitantly expensive, renewables are inherently insecure. Wind and solar are intermittent sources, as they can only provide electricity when the wind blows and the Sun shines. When the weather is unfavourable, gas needs to be purchased (at an inflated price) as a backup, or there is a risk of blackouts. What’s more, renewables can’t even mitigate against geopolitical risks. Several large offshore wind projects are facing delays, as components made in the United Arab Emirates are also stuck behind the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.
Britain’s energy policies are nothing short of suicidal. Blinded by Net Zero zealotry, Miliband and his predecessors have made our energy supplies more costly, less secure and more reliant on foreign imports. The result is an almost permanent energy crisis that will long outlast the current conflict in the Middle East. If the economic pain of the next few months doesn’t change the establishment’s thinking then perhaps nothing ever will. It will confirm, beyond any shadow of a doubt, that our current trajectory of deindustrialisation and decline will have been actively chosen by our rulers.
Fraser Myers is deputy editor at spiked and host of the spiked podcast. Follow him on X: @FraserMyers.
Politics
The House Article | We cannot let the state be slowed by its own procedures

4 min read
Done well, consultations are vital. Done badly, however, which happens too much in Whitehall, they cease to be tools of democracy and instead become obstacles to it.
In 2018, there was a consultation on whether a handful of walkers could pass through a small ground in Lancashire for two hours every Sunday. In 2023, it was decided there was a need for the same consultation again.
The full machinery of government was marshalled in a similar way as it would for policies worth billions.
If you log on to GOV.UK right now, you will find a never-ending list of other government consultations. Many of these are a great way to gather feedback and the views of the public on important issues affecting them and their communities.
Some of them are more questionable.
Taken in the round, they tell a compelling but concerning story. Of good intentions, probably sound individual decisions, spiralling into something else. Layers of bureaucracy that successive governments have allowed to accumulate, each intended to safeguard fairness, yet have instead created a jungle of delay, confusion, and frustration.
And not just from ministers. The civil service is full of dynamic, committed people driven by a deep sense of public service. But they are being slowly suffocated by the system around them, causing stagnation. The previous government introduced an eyewatering number of new legal duties, regulations, and statutory requirements – ironically under the banner of deregulation.
That is absurd, but what is worse is that this absurdity has real consequences: ordinary people feeling that the state is distant, immovable, or worse, not serving their interests.
I came into law not because I thought its purpose was to preserve the status quo, but because I have seen how it can enable change. I came into government to drive forward that work. And I know the Prime Minister did so, too.
We cannot leave the defence of effective government to those who would dismantle it
That is why Nick Thomas Symonds and I have been tasked with helping create a more modern, agile state, working with the new Cabinet Secretary, Antonia Romeo, whom the Prime Minister has tasked with rewiring the state to turbocharge delivery.
Nick and I are lawyers by training, recognising that governing through the law does not mean blindly following endless procedures. Governing through the law means assessing these duties, asking whether they still serve us, and, where they don’t, changing them.
The reforms we are announcing today (Thursday) are about doing exactly that. About ensuring we properly rationalise how government works, and for whom.
We cannot leave the defence of effective government to those who would dismantle it. Those who have a vested interest in talking down the state’s ability to change people’s lives for the better, who want to tear away safeguards for working people.
Good governance is about delivering for the public because the public elected us on a mandate for change.
So, part of this is ending the culture of automatic consultations. Since the start of this year, 122 consultations have been launched – around two a day. Consultations are vital when they are genuine exercises in engagement: testing assumptions, gathering evidence, shaping policy. At their best, they save the public purse, but at their worst, deployed without thought or proportionality, they cease to be tools of democracy and instead become obstacles to it.
We have repeatedly seen the consequences; process overwhelms purpose, and momentum is lost. It’s like setting out to mow the lawn, only to find yourself hacking through a jungle.
We are using the latest advances in AI to assist with identifying and reviewing legal consultation requirements that clog up the system.
But there are many other areas where we will be taking this approach.
Decision-making will be modernised and reviewed to see where routine decisions can be made without excessively burdensome processes that take weeks. New accountability measures for Permanent Secretaries will be introduced to focus on delivering the PM’s priorities, hold civil servants to account for doing so, and ensure change is lasting.
Ultimately, the machinery of government should help ministers make good, effective decisions. Sometimes that means deliberation; sometimes it means acting quickly, within the law, to deliver what people need.
The state must not be slowed by its own procedures. Its purpose is to make decisions that matter for the public we serve.
If trust depends on delivery, and delivery depends on action, then our priority is clear:
cut through the unnecessary thickets, restore the capacity to act, and ensure the state can uphold principle without suffocating under its own processes.
This isn’t the sum of our ambition — it is barely base camp — but it is the first step in a radical climb to rewire the state.
Lord Hermer is the Attorney General
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