Politics
Heythrop Hunt kills fox in garden
A pack of hounds from the Heythrop Hunt rampaged through a private garden and killed a fox on Wednesday 11 March 2026. Blood stains remained on a resident’s lawn in Condicote after approximately 30 hounds chased the terrified animal through the village.
Footage taken by Three Counties Hunt Saboteurs shows the pack running wild on driveways and through gardens in the scenic village. Hounds appear with blood on their coats whilst drinking from plant pots and buckets.
The hunt staff allegedly entered the property without permission to remove the poor creature’s body. Joint masters Ollie Dale and Vanessa Chanter were filmed attempting to remove a camerawoman from the garden. The hunt broke the garden fence during the altercation.
Another member of the hunt, Josh Tierney, was seen with bloodstains on his trousers after removing the body of the poor fox away from the crime scene. Whilst the homeowner allowed activists to film the site, the hunt forcibly escorted them out once the owner went inside.
Systematically wreaking havoc in the countryside
This incident is just part of a wider pattern of hunting-induced havoc across the UK. The League Against Cruel Sports recorded 1,117 reports of hunt havoc during the 2024/25 season. These reports include (PAGE 5):
- 319 incidents of trespass on private property.
- 423 incidents of out of control or lost hounds.
- 367 reports of road havoc caused by the hunt.
Rowan Hughes, a spokesperson for the Hunt Saboteurs Association said this shows why hunting needs a total ban. Hughes stated that hunts have no respect for private property and ‘shout trespass’ only when they are being exposed.

Broken fences, trashed properties, ruined lawns and injured animals are one side of the hunt that these ruthless riders are desperate to hide. The law is catching up with them, and public hostility toward the hunt has never been higher. At this critical moment, we must call them to account for every small infraction.
A history of the Heythrop Hunt controversy
The Heythrop Hunt are no strangers to controversy or press attention. In February 2026, Channel 4 News released footage of the hunt dumping dead chickens in woodlands. Activists claim this “feeding station” was used to lure foxes into areas so they can be hunted in the future. In the 24/25 season, monitors recorded 332 cases ((PAGE 8)) of hunt trespass nationally. So it isn’t just when these wankers are actively hunting, it’s also to lay the dirty groundwork to draw in their innocent prey.
The HSA reported that covert cameras captured the terrierman of the Heythrop Hunt. He was recorded dumping black bin-bags full of dead chickens between June and August 2025.

By October, the same cameras picked up the hunt pursuing the very foxes they had drawn in. This premeditated approach contradicts the claim that the hunts are simply following a pre-laid ‘trail. Unless these fucking dickheads are actively laying trails through peoples’ gardens, we can see the obvious lie.
Heythrop Hunt — Closing the trail hunting loopholes
Gloucestershire Police received a report of the kill but, as per usual, officers did not attend the scene. Police have not charged any members of the hunt at this stage.
In January 2025, this same hunt apologised after hounds ran through an industrial estate. The chairman previously told Bourton Parish Council that such incidents were “isolated”. But how can that be the case when once again we are seeing private property being used as the hunt’s personal playground?

Three Counties Hunt Sabs filmed this new footage after the Labour Party announced the plans to ban trail hunting. This reform was part of the Animal Welfare Strategy for England announcement on Monday 22 December 2025. A spokesperson for Three Counties Hunt Sabs noted that the kill happened whilst vixens are pregnant. And this is happening within half a mile of where staff dumped the chicken corpses.
The spokesperson urged the government to close the loopholes in the Hunting Act 2004. And urgently. This latest incident in Condicote suggests that trail hunting remains a smokescreen and is nothing but a thin veil to hide the hunt’s illegal activity.
The human cost of hunt trespass
The owner of the garden in Condicote was visibly shocked by the ruthless intrusion. He gave the hunt sabs permission to film the evidence before re-entering his property. Yet once the owner was out of sight, the hunt members used force against the activists. Despite them having no permission to be on the private land.
This lack of respect for residents is a common theme in rural communities. The League Against Cruel Sports reported that 76% of the public support strengthening the ban. Yet the current legislation allows hunts to claim they are following a scent trail. However, in a case like this when a fox is killed in a garden, that excuse becomes impossible to justify.
We reached out to Simon Russell, chair of the HSA who said:
“The current Hunting Act 2004 has so many holes, you could drive a van through it. Although Hunt Sabs have achieved more hunting convictions than any other organisation, the 99% of times we see illegal hunting, there is no chance of a conviction. The government needs to do a lot more than just ban trail hunting, which seems to be its only focus.”
So as the Labour Party moves towards a total ban, incidents like this should be increasing public pressure. The sight of blood-stained trousers and dead foxes in gardens is a stark reminder of the reality of a government and a police force that don’t give a fuck.
Featured Image via The Three Counties Hunt Sabs
Politics
Nazi salutes thrown by Reform supporters at Polanski’s Hastings rally
According to the grassroots community organisation — Hastings and Bexhill Stand Up to Racism (SUTR) — a small group of Reform supporters rocked up to a Green Party rally led by Zack Polanski on 30 April in Hastings to stir trouble. One of them performed three Nazi salutes while others did nothing to stop him.
View this post on Instagram
The SUTR branch said that Reform has repeatedly shown who they are and that people should believe them.
Hastings Green Party posted a picture of Polanski saying:
Zack smashed it despite a very small number of shouty Reform voters. Proud of our town
Right-wing media’s silence on the incident with Polanski
Britain’s hostile right-wing press, which went after Polanski when he was the target of Nazi salutes, is silent when it comes to this blatant expression of antisemitism by Reform fanboys.
Right-wing TalkTV host, Julia Hartley-Brewer and Telegraph columnist, Jake Wallis-Simons had nothing to say. Both incendiary media personalities claim to champion the rights of Jewish people and have repeatedly used their platform to denounce antisemitism — why the silence now — or is such reporting a quid-pro-quo arrangement.
As we head into local elections where the Green Party could gain as many as 555, Polanski’s rise threatens the two-party duopoly responsible for corporate state capture, austerity, warmongering, and neoliberal policies punishing the most vulnerable in society. Might this explain MSM’s silence?
If the tables were turned and a Green Party supporter had performed a Nazi salute, it would be headline news.
The same commentators would have elevated their voices and harnessed their platforms to condemn the act. This of course doesn’t apply to the Greens.
This silence sends a clear message. Reform Nazi thugs can “carry on” so long as it serves to punish the Greens and Zack Polanski.
Featured image via the Canary
By The Canary
Politics
Wales Party Leader Criticises Polanski Over Golders Green Row
Zack Polanski has been chided by the Green Party’s leader in Wales after he caused a row by sharing a tweet about the Golders Green terror attack.
Shilome Rand, 34, and Moshe Shine, 76, were left seriously injured in what police have described as a terrorist incident in Golders Green, north west London, on Wednesday.
Polanski, who is the Green Party leader in England and Wales, retweeted a post on X on Thursday questioning the way in which officers responded to the suspect.
The post read: “So essentially [Met commissioner Mark Rowley’s] officers were repeatedly and violently kicking a mentally ill man in the head when he was already incapacitated by taser.”
Polanski, who is himself Jewish, was then criticised by Labour MPs and the head of the Metropolitan Police, commissioner Sir Mark Rowley, for his “inaccurate and misinformed commentary”.
Asked to respond to the row, the Greens’ leader in Wales Anthony Slaughter said Polanski’s retweet was “inappropriate”.
Speaking to LBC, Slaughter said: “I was made aware of this on the way here, just shortly beforehand. I haven’t seen the tweet. I understand, as you say, Zack retweeted a tweet that it does seem, from what I’ve read, was inappropriate to retweet.
“I know that Zack and his other colleagues in the London Assembly do work closely with the Met Police, so there will be discussions afterwards to see what went wrong and how this can be better handled in future”.
Responding to Rowley’s letter, a Green Party spokesman said: “Zack has seen the video like everyone else, and doesn’t know the full picture and knows it was a very difficult situation for the authorities, but we do need to understand more about the response.”
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Politics
Politics Home | Train Teachers To Identify Antisemitism In Classrooms, Says Independent Advisor

The government’s antisemitism Lord John Mann told PoliticsHome all school teachers should have “basic” antisemitism training. (Alamy)
5 min read
The government’s independent advisor on antisemitism has called for teachers to be given basic training in how to identify antisemitism in classrooms, telling PoliticsHome that there must be a stronger state effort to tackle rising hate against Britain’s Jews.
Lord John Mann, a former Labour MP who has advised ministers on antisemitism since 2019, said he was not “satisfied” with how successive governments have responded to rising levels of antisemitism in the UK, saying “everyone needs to up their game”.
Mann spoke to PoliticsHome after two Jewish people were stabbed in a terrorist attack in Golders Green, north London, on Wednesday. The Met Police announced on Friday morning that Essa Suleima, 45, had been charged in connection with the attack.
There have also been arson attacks in the wider borough of Barnet, home to the UK’s largest Jewish community, in recent months, including the firebombing of ambulances run by a Jewish charity and several synagogues, and a lethal attack on a synagogue in Manchester last year.
Following the terrorist attack on Wednesday, the government has announced an additional £25m for community policing to protect Jewish communities and pledged to fast-track legislation banning state-linked terror groups.
In a press conference on Thursday, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said ministers were looking at “further measures we can take on protests”, amid calls for tougher action against antisemitism at pro-Palestine marches. Starmer said the phrase “globalise the intifada” was an example of “extreme racism” which should result in police prosecution.
Speaking to PoliticsHome, Mann said there should be a greater police presence in Barnet permanently, as well as more government funding for security measures to protect Jews across the country, like CCTV and alarm systems in shops.
But he stressed that tackling antisemitism must go further than greater security, calling for every secondary school teacher nationwide to be “taught the basics” of identifying it: “about how to recognise antisemitism, and how to deal with it in the classroom”.
“Very basic level training, nothing particularly expensive or fancy, a basic level for every secondary school teacher, starting with the new teachers. I think that is doable, and that it needs to happen. And I’m impatient on that happening,” the peer said.
He continued: “If a Jewish child at school, or a Jewish staff member, doesn’t have people at work who understand how to recognise antisemitism, they’re clearly not going to be able to deal with it properly… and the impact on children is far more important than anything…
“I put it to the last government, I put it to this government. It hasn’t happened yet.”
Mann said the recent creation of a cross-departmental group in government focusing on antisemitism was a “really significant” development, but warned that it “would take some time for that to have a real impact”. He added that he expects his report on antisemitism in the health service to be published by Health Secretary Wes Streeting in the coming weeks.
Speaking during a visit to Golders Green on Thursday, the Prime Minister said the government was looking at “what more needs to be done in health and education” to tackle antisemitism. “So there is a lot that is being done. Of course, we need to do everything we can,” he said.
However, Mann argued that the UK does not yet have a “comprehensive approach” to dealing with antisemitism, after charity Community Support Trust said in February that 2025 saw the second-highest annual number of anti-Jewish hate incidents on record.
“We don’t have a comprehensive approach, in my opinion, to extremism. What it is, how it manifests,” he said.
“The growth of Islamist extremism has been pronounced and is very dangerous, and we’re not on top of that. We have left-wing extremism and right-wing extremism to contend with… both have grown. Older problems and newer problems all converged together.”
Last month, the cross-party Home Affairs Committee concluded that Prevent, the government’s anti-terrorism programme, is “outdated and inadequately prepared”.
Committee chair Conservative MP Karen Bradley said Prevent “has the clear and explicit function of stopping people becoming radicalised into terrorism, but more and more it is having to support those with no ideological motivation, who may have complex needs and operate in digital spaces that are poorly understood”.
“There needs to be a comprehensive structure in place at a local level, but implemented nationwide, that triages referrals to where they can receive the right support.”
Mann believes that “very big numbers” of Jews will start to leave the UK “very quickly” if things do not change, telling PoliticsHome that “the freedom to be Jewish in this country has been significantly impaired”.
“That’s unacceptable, because people aren’t doing that willingly,” said Lord Mann.
“They’re doing it under duress.”
The independent adviser compared what he believes could happen in the UK in the coming months to what happened in France following rising levels of antisemitism in the 2010s, culminating in a lethal attack on a Jewish supermarket in Paris in 2015, when, according to the World Jewish Congress, around 8,000 Jews left the country.
“I would define the breaking point as when a significant number of people start to move,” he said.
Politics
BBC publishes misinformation about small boat crossings
The BBC, which has been accused of acting more like a spin doctor than an impartial broadcaster in its recent coverage, has not named Israel as the perpetrator in 50% of reported Israeli attacks on civilians in Gaza, and has also been getting things wrong on immigration.
Two recent immigration errors reveal a similar pattern of failing to correct misleading claims or of wrongly stating figures.
The BBC: propping up the colonialist system
The first involved unchallenged misinformation from Nigel Farage about why net migration is falling. The second involved wrongly stating small boat arrivals were 100,625 when the correct figure was 41,472, a staggering 143% error.
In the first instance, speaking to Nick Robinson on his Political Thinking Podcast back in February, racist-in-chief Nigel Farage claimed net migration had fallen due to an “exodus” of people leaving the UK.
BBC’s Nick Robinson did not correct or contextualise this. In fact, Office for National Statistics (ONS) data for the year to June 2025 shows that net migration fell by two-thirds, with 90% of that drop due to fewer people arriving. Immigration fell by 401,000. Farage’s framing was therefore misleading and went unchallenged.
The BBC has since added this episode to its official Corrections and Clarifications page, dated 17 April 2026.
The second instance took place on the BBC News website article (14 April 2026), where the BBC had initially reported that the number of small boat crossings had increased dramatically, when in fact the opposite was true. The story, which opened with the declining number of asylum hotels in the UK, did not appear on the Corrections and Clarifications page as of 30 April, although the news story itself includes a correction note.
That note, added on 21 April, acknowledges that the piece initially claimed 100,625 small boat arrivals in 2025 when the correct figure was 41,472.
The mistakes have been picked up by the media and commentators, though.
SNP criticises the error
Peter Wishart, MP of Perthshire for the Scottish National Party (SNP), shared the National’s coverage of the BBC’s second error and said:
This is totally shocking. The far right depend on disinformation to conduct their ugly business and promote their division. Now the BBC gets small boat crossings wrong by 140%. Do they not know how sensitive this debate is.
This is totally shocking. The far right depend on disinformation to conduct their ugly business and promote their division. Now the BBC gets small boat crossings wrong by 140%. Do they not know how sensitive this debate is. https://t.co/JQVGt0dzx3
— Pete Wishart (@PeteWishart) April 28, 2026
Sunder Katwala was the one who had pointed out the second mistake to the BBC.
He posted on X:
I have asked the BBC to correct this mistake: in trying to give context, it reports 100k small boat crossings in 2025 (There were 41,472, which is a lot, but not 100k, but different statistics have got garbled up here). https://t.co/ZDYptPCXUV pic.twitter.com/4OUPJQr2D8
— Sunder Katwala (@sundersays) April 18, 2026
Farage’s misleading claim about an “exodus” went unchallenged on air. The small boat figure was overstated by 143% on the website. Neither error would have overstated the case for lower immigration or reduced crossings.
This pattern of asymmetric inaccuracy becomes harder to dismiss as mere coincidence when set alongside the BBC’s coverage of Gaza. There, too, the corporation has failed to name Israel as the perpetrator in 50% of reported Israeli attacks on civilians.
In all cases, the BBC’s errors ran in one direction: inflating public concern. When a public service, publicly-funded broadcaster is behaving like a propagandist for the colonialist far-right, it is time to ask whether or not it can even be trusted.
Featured image via the Canary
By The Canary
Politics
DSV in Potsdam, Germany targeted by Palestine Action Global
DSV’s depot in Potsdam, Germany recently became the latest site to be targeted by Palestine Action’s global campaign. Actionists sent a clear message to DSV by smashing windows and using red paint to call on the company to “drop Elbit”.
This comes just days after Palestine Action Éire hit DSV and a previous coordinated action that saw Palestine Action target 5 DSV sites in one night.
Logistics, transport and warehouse multinational DSV ships weapons and military components for Israeli arms manufacturer Elbit and for its subsidiary UAV Tactical Systems on a weekly basis from European based factories to Ashdod.
Elbit Systems is Israel’s biggest weapons company, producing 85% of the military’s killer drone fleet, and land-based equipment. Its weapons, which it boasts of being “battle-tested” on Palestinians, have been used throughout the ongoing genocide in Gaza, in the Palestinian West Bank, against Syria, and Yemen, and currently, against Lebanon and Iran.
DSV took over the shipping of Elbit’s weapons after another shipping company, Kuehne + Nagel, one of the only six companies licensed to transport and handle weapons in Britain, was forced to cut ties with Elbit in 2024 following a series of actions by Palestine Action and broader public pressure.
A spokesperson for the action has said:
Elbit is making this mass murder possible. By working for Elbit DSV is just as complicit. DSV drop Elbit!
The group has threatened to keep targeting DSV sites until it drops its services for the Israeli arms manufacturer.
Featured image via the Canary
By The Canary
Politics
Fleur Butler: Why conservatives must sell resilience, not welfare
Fleur Butler OBE is Director of Development for Conservative Women’s Organisation
The row over the two-child benefit cap has become a predictable clash between left-wing moral outrage about “the poor” and right-wing arguments about cost, GDP and fairness to taxpayers. Conservatives rarely say they care; the Greens rarely say where the money will come from, beyond “the rich.” But the Conservative case on fiscal restraint simply does not land with younger voters. Their economic reality is different from their parents’, and their news comes through social media algorithms that reward emotion over economics. If we only speak the language of older voters, we have no future.
We also fail to explain that this debate is not just about welfare policy. It is about what kind of society we want, and whether capitalism can still offer young people, especially women with children, a safer, freer and more prosperous future. A basic economic truth is being ignored: partnership between two people is still the most effective form of wealth-sharing most people will ever experience, while the state will always be limited and often disappointing. Of the 1.5 million children in single-parent households, 41 per cent are in poverty, compared with 23 per cent in two-parent households. Stable partnerships reduce child poverty, women’s pension poverty, demand for social housing, loneliness, mental health strain and dependence on welfare. They reduce the tax burden on working families. On average, women and men get more financial support from a partnership than from the state.
Yet politicians are afraid to talk about this for fear of sounding moralistic. We should make the economic case instead. The state is increasingly being asked to take on functions once shared within families. But it is structurally incapable of providing emotional, practical and flexible support. It cannot read a bedtime story, collect a sick child from school, or share the daily load of care. It cannot even put the bins out badly. It can only redistribute money, inefficiently and at enormous cost. Attitudinal studies published this spring show young women in particular are increasingly distrustful of men and are delaying relationships and children. Yet no one points out that the state is an even worse partner: cold, bureaucratic and transactional. Even the most average man will often offer more support than the welfare system ever can. For those in abusive or broken relationships, the state must always be there. But it should never be sold as the first or better option, because it cannot be.
Polling from the 2024 election revealed a deeper divide. While attention focused on young men voting Reform, far less was said about the overwhelming number of young women voting Left or Green. There has been no Louis Theroux documentary on the femo-rage conspiracy theories on line, nor film of young women committing acts of violence against the police and state infrastructure. This invisible shift is not driven by understanding the details of welfare policy It reflects a broader belief that capitalism is failing them and that the state offers more security. This is where Conservatives are losing. We argue macroeconomics and statistics while the Left sells a vision.
Young women facing high rents, insecure work and a cost-of-living crisis do not feel “fiscal responsibility” in daily life. To them, the state feels safer than the market, safer than men and safer than family. But this misunderstands what the state can provide. Welfare can redistribute income, but it cannot create resilience, stability or shared resources in a household. It cannot insulate women from the economic realities of childbirth, caring responsibilities, healthcare needs and time out of the labour market. The state will always be a second-best partner. We need to make the case that capitalism is not just about growth, but about freedom, resilience and choice. It has done more than any welfare state to lift people out of poverty and has given women independence, opportunity and freedom. Yes, capitalism needs rules and reform to remain fair and resilient. But destroying it will not make young people safer, they need to work with us to make it function better for all. To join us, as we have the better vision for the future.
The two-child cap is a case study in this. Lifting it may help some families, but it also increases the burden on working people already struggling, many of them young themselves. Yet the debate is framed as compassion versus cruelty, rather than two competing visions of how society shares risk and responsibility. If Conservatives want to reach younger voters, we must stop speaking in abstract fiscal language and start speaking to everyday life. Explain how high taxes limit personal freedom. Explain that building a household, a business or a partnership is not a moral act, but a practical route to resilience when the state lets you down. Explain the limits of the state through lived experience, not ideology.
And yes, we must make the emotional case too. We need to challenge young women’s distrust of men while acknowledging it, and remind them that most men are not the online caricatures they see. Society works best through strong partnerships between men and women in the work place and in private lives, not dependence on bureaucracies. The message is not “get married.” The message is: don’t let the state be your only safety net, “build your own”. It is not an attack on single mothers or a call to dismantle welfare. Life goes wrong in ways the lucky often cannot imagine. The state should always be there for those who need it. But we must be honest about what it can and cannot do.
Young voters, both men and women, are not hearing this argument because we are not making it. Until we do, the generational divide will grow and the welfare state will keep being sold as the answer to every problem, expanding in ways that strain both public finances and the social fabric.
Politics
Danny Beales: ‘The case for regulation of animal rehoming organisations’
Earlier this year I had the pleasure of sponsoring a Dogs Trust event in parliament highlighting an important and overlooked issue concerning animal rehoming organisations. It is frankly shocking that rehoming organisations, rescues and shelters across England, Wales and Northern Ireland remain unlicensed and not subject to inspections, even when they are registered charities. Whilst most organisations do vital work in protecting vulnerable animals, the absence of a comprehensive regulatory framework has sadly left ample room for abuse.
This was unfortunately brought into sharp focus in Billericay last year when an Essex Police raid on an animal rehoming organisation led to the discovery of 41 dead dogs in squalid conditions. While it is important to recognise that this incident is an outlier and not representative of most rehoming organisations, it does highlight the risks that can arise in the absence of oversight.
Despite this, public awareness of the status of animal rehoming organisations is remarkably low. Polling data from Dogs Trust outlined that 79% of the population wrongly believe that these organisations are already subject to licensing and inspection. However, once informed of the current situation, 89% support the introduction of regulation. Whilst significant efforts by animal welfare organisations in recent years have sought to raise awareness, the contrast between widespread misunderstanding and strong public support for reform highlights that much more still needs to be done.
For those that are aware of the situation, there is a clear concern and a demand for change. A petition that was established in the aftermath of the Billericay case, gathered over 109,000 signatures and was subsequently debated in parliament earlier this year. This demonstrated a strong and shared desire across the House with the public to seek action and protect animal welfare.
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At the event, we heard compelling arguments for the introduction of a proportionate system of licensing and regulation. This would help ensure that rehoming organisations are supported by clear minimum standards and effective enforcement, ultimately strengthening the excellent work already happening across the sector. Scotland has already provided a framework for this, having in 2021 introduced legislation to regulate both rehoming organisations and rehoming activities under the Licensing of Activities Involving Animals (Scotland) Regulations Act.
The government’s recent Animal Welfare Strategy is a welcome and ambitious step forward in this space. Its commitment to consult on the regulation of rehoming organisations reflects a clear recognition of the issue and the need to address it. Whilst that ambition is to be commended, it is important that the government provides a clear timeline for the consultation to ensure that a resolution is not delayed as it has been by previous administrations.
With the absence of a clear licensing framework, there remains a clear risk that both bad actors and well-intentioned individuals who become overwhelmed may fall short of the standards that animals deserve. Introducing sensible regulation would help mitigate these risks, provided it was underpinned by appropriate enforcement to safeguard animal welfare and protect prospective adopters. By setting out a clear timetable and working collaboratively with welfare organisations, the government can deliver a system that protects animals, supports reputable rescues, and meets the expectations of the public.
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Politics
German embassy refuses London Irish Brigade’s letter for ‘Ulm 5’ anti-genocide prisoners
The London Irish Brigade and others gathered in the capital on 30 April to deliver a letter to the German embassy. The letter supported, and demanded the release of, the ‘Ulm 5‘ prisoners held for months without trial for action.
As with the ‘Filton 24‘, imprisoned for more than 18 months by the UK government, the Ulm 5 are imprisoned for damaging equipment belonging to Israel’s Elbit Systems, making weapons for Israel’s Gaza genocide.
The prisoners are an international mix: Irish, Spanish, British, and German. Unsurprisingly, Keir Starmer has said nothing against Germany’s imprisonment of two Britons, nor its brutal repression of protest. How could he, when he has done the same?
The Brigade’s Frank Glynn gave a speech. He pointed out Germany’s attempts to ‘wash its hands of the Holocaust in the blood of the Palestinians’ – and of its shameful record in other genocides:
Cowardly refusal
Disgracefully, the embassy refused to take the letter. Like the Starmer regime in the UK, the German government is deeply complicit in Israel’s genocide.
Read more about the Ulm 5 here.
By Skwawkbox
Politics
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Politics
Politics Home Article | Tony Blair Think Tank Calls For Scrapping The Triple Lock

(Alamy)
3 min read
The Tony Blair Institute (TBI) think tank has called for the government to scrap the “unaffordable” triple lock on state pensions.
In a new report published on Friday, the think tank said current pensions policy is unsustainable and outdated and should be replaced by a more flexible alternative.
“Britain’s state pension system was built for a different era. We can’t keep pouring money into a system that is increasingly unaffordable,” said Tom Smith, TBI Director of Economic Policy.
Under the existing policy, pensions are guaranteed to rise by the highest of inflation, average earnings and 2.5 per cent.
However, there have been growing warnings that factors like people living longer, a falling birth rate and high inflation levels mean that it is not sustainable in the long term.
The TBI report points to the number of pensioners in Britain being expected to rise from 12.6m this year to 19m in 2070, with spending on the state pension expected to increase from 5 per cent of GDP to 7.5 per cent, costing the Treasury an additional £85bn a year.
There is also an argument that to maintain the triple lock in its current form would worsen generational inequality, given the financial challenges faced by younger people.
Despite these warnings, the triple lock continues to enjoy broad cross-party support, partly because older people are seen as a key voter group. Chancellor Rachel Reeves said last week that the government was not changing its triple lock policy.
TBI’s Smith said it would take “political leadership” to reform the policy, but that doing so would create a system “fairer, more flexible, and designed for how people live today”.
The think tank has proposed what it calls a new ‘Lifespan Fund’, which would replace the fixed pension age with a system whereby one full year of contribution would add half a year of entitlement, up to a maximum of 20 years of support.
It would also allow people to use the fund earlier in life to support them in key moments like finding work, funding child care, and looking after a sick relative, with safeguards included to ensure people do not draw out too much too early.
Smith said the model “keeps the promise of a secure retirement while making the system more flexible and financially sustainable” and would be “the upgrade Britain needs”.
The TBI estimates that these reforms would keep long-term state pension spending at around 5.5 per cent of GDP, rather than allowing it to rise towards 7.8 per cent, avoiding roughly £66bn a year in additional costs by 2070.
The intervention was welcomed by the Labour MP for Dunfermline and Dollar, Graeme Downie, who, in a recent piece for The House, called for the triple lock to be reformed to help fund greater defence spending.
“This is the kind of conversation I called for a few weeks ago,” he told PoliticsHome.
Our welfare needs to be fit for the future, helping those who need it most and being a strong safety net, effectively supporting people to get them into work and keep them in work to drive economic growth, and to fund critical national priorities like defence, which are vital to protecting our people and our democracy.”
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