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ICJP submits sanctions recommendations of 62 Israeli lawmakers over death penalty bill

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Composite image of Itamar Ben Gvir in front of the name plaque on the Foreign Office ICJP sanctions recommendation

Composite image of Itamar Ben Gvir in front of the name plaque on the Foreign Office ICJP sanctions recommendation

The International Centre of Justice for Palestinians (ICJP) has submitted its recommendations for sanctions against sixty-two Israeli parliamentarians and lawmakers. It’s because of their responsibility for passing and adopting the death penalty bill. The ICJP has sent its list to the foreign secretary.

Pursuant to the Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Act 2018 and the Global Human Rights Sanctions Regulations 2020, the recommendation proposes that the individuals named are responsible for or engaging in serious violations of the rights of Palestinians in the West Bank, most notably the right to life, and the right not to be subjected to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. They should therefore be sanctioned in accordance with the current UK legislation.

The new penal law which exclusively and purposefully targets Palestinians, marks an extreme escalation in Israel’s genocidal policies against Palestinians and consolidates Israel’s apartheid judicial system, embedding racist discrimination against Palestinians into law and once again allowing Israel to violate international norms.

ICJP proposals

If the Foreign Office adopted ICJP’s sanctions recommendations, it would send a clear message to the Israeli government that the UK will not tolerate Israel’s apartheid regime and systematic discrimination of Palestinians within its legal system.

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In doing so, the government would be sending a strong message that lawmakers using the law to veil illegal practices and crimes committed against a protected population including the accelerated practice of killing Palestinians, will not be tolerated.

By adopting such sanctions, the UK would be affirming its strong condemnation of Israel’s use of the death penalty against Palestinians and ensuring its commitment to the UK’s obligations under international law, particularly positive obligations towards preventing practices amounting to torture or cruel treatment.

The submission argues that the UK government should take a leading stance and sanction the proposed individuals to set a precedent in tackling grave violations of human rights. The government should not wait for evidence of the application of the death penalty bill, but should take a preventative measure towards attempting to pressure the Israeli government into repealing this law.

The expressions of concern from many Western governments since the passing of the death penalty bill is a futile response and remains, at best, perfunctory. An urgent and comprehensive sanctions package is needed to combat the growing discrimination and violation of the right to life for Palestinians by Israel.

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The UK must make clear its opposition to Israel’s intentional and targeted killing of Palestinians, and its explicit apartheid legal system, that is further compounded by this death penalty law.

Órlaith Roe, ICJP’s public affairs and communications officer, said:

In apartheid South Africa, 95% of people sentenced to death were Black. Thanks to this law, in apartheid Israel, 100% of people who will be sentenced to death will be Palestinians.

Our recommendations for sanctions to the Foreign Office are crucial for the UK government to adopt if it wants to stand on the side of human rights, international norms, and equality before the law, as these are the priorities the UK government claims to care for.

The UK has both the responsibility and the leverage to act – sanctions can still serve as a preventative tool, applying real pressure before irreversible harm is done. The cost of inaction will, once again, be measured in Palestinian lives.

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By The Canary

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Government KC claims proscription doesn’t prevent showing support for Palestine Action

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Palestine Action

Palestine Action

The government’s barrister Sir James Eadie KC has this morning told the Court of Appeal that the government’s ‘proscription’ (terrorism ban) on Palestine Action does not mean that people are not free to show support for the group.

Palestine Action appeal

The Home Office is trying to overturn the High Court’s decision that the ban is unlawful:

This is untrue. The Terrorism Act 2000 makes support for a proscribed organisation a criminal offence with sentences of up to 14 years. Some 3,300 people have so far been arrested for showing support for Palestine Action, mostly older and disabled people. The Metropolitan Police recently re-started arrested people for showing support for the group, even though the High Court ruled the ban was unlawful.

The hearing continues. Let’s hope the judges know enough to ignore the false claim and look at what Keir Starmer’s police state is actually doing.

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Featured image via the Canary

By Skwawkbox

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Equity ballots West End workers in Pay Up! campaign

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Equity members hold placards supporting the union's Pay Up! campaign in London's West End

Equity members hold placards supporting the union's Pay Up! campaign in London's West End

Equity, the performing arts and entertainment trade union, is asking West End performers and stage management to vote in an indicative ballot on strike action. The intention is to move producers closer to a reasonable multi-year settlement on pay, terms, and conditions.

Negotiations for a new West End agreement covering performers and stage management have been going on since December 2025. So far, they’ve been constructive. Equity is pleased with tentative proposals around improvements to maternity and paternity pay, wigs, hair, and makeup, and other terms.

Society of London Theatre (SOLT) is an industry body for London theatre owners and operators. Many, though not all, of its member venues are in the West End. It leads negotiations with unions.

However, SOLT’s proposals don’t add up to a package which meets the union’s reasonable expectations. Outstanding issues include pay, holiday, rehearsal working time, injury, and stage management differentials.

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SOLT has also declined to offer payments for newly defined roles, like fight and social media captains, or resolve issues around stage management covering other roles.

Around 1,000 performers and stage management currently working across the West End come under the collective agreement. The overwhelming majority are Equity members. Members will take part in an online ballot to indicate their willingness to take strike action on Saturdays and implement an overtime ban.

First such ballot in West End since Thatcher

Additionally, members both currently working on a show and those who have worked on the West End in the past three years are being asked whether they back the union’s negotiating position. The union is balloting almost 3,000 members in total for their view. Equity is urging members to vote yes on both questions to help move talks forwards.

Equity has not conducted an indicative ballot of this type on the West End since Margaret Thatcher’s restrictions of trades union freedom in the 1980s.

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Paul W Fleming, Equity general secretary, said:

Despite a positive and constructive start to negotiations, SOLT have made it clear that they are unwilling to make significant changes to the packages they have proposed. Those packages offer only a small percent above inflation over four years, after a record breaking period for West End revenue.

We hope a strong message from the workforce backing the core elements of our revised claim will support SOLT negotiators in moving their members to an acceptable settlement. Members and producers alike should be in no doubt that if a strong result in these ballots do not result in serious movement from SOLT, then a summer of disruption awaits.

SOLT has repeatedly reported record revenue over the last three years, where our members’ pay has barely kept pace with inflation, and minima have not yet returned to their pre-pandemic value. Whilst record revenue will not mean record profit for all producers, it’s clear that when suppliers, some of whom have doubled their costs since the pandemic, refuse to service productions, money is found to pay them.

Our members have waited in line to see their wages rise, and to have a more modern work-life balance in a precarious industry. In the smallest theatres, performers on the minimum earn less than the UK median wage per week, and all artists receive 20% less holiday weeks than most workers. If SOLT is serious about a modern industry, these negotiations must be a meaningful step forward. Producers need to pay up.

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The ballot is online and is an indicative (ie consultative only, not statutory) ballot. It opened on Monday 27 April and will close on Monday 18 May.

Featured image via Equity

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Former Mossad boss compares West Bank violence to Holocaust

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Mossad

Mossad

The former head of Mossad, Tamir Pardo, has compared Israeli settler violence in the occupied West Bank to the Holocaust.

Former Mossad boss speaks out

Of course, if anyone in the West said that, Zionists would accuse them of antisemitism. But seen as though an Israeli said it…

Just wait for the headlines accusing left-wing activists of being antisemitic. Oh, wait, it was the former head of Mossad.

Eighty-two percent of Jewish Israelis support expelling Palestinians from Gaza. Meanwhile, 56% back the expulsion of Arab citizens of Israel. This means that the majority of Israelis have either directly taken part in the genocide because of conscription laws or support it, which means their feelings are irrelevant.

Meanwhile, the West refuses to call Israeli’s what they are – modern-day Nazi’s.

Increasing violence

The ex-Mossad boss’s intervention comes as settlers in the West Bank continue to be increasingly violent towards Arabs.

As the Canary previously reported:

According to the Colonisation and Wall Resistance Commission, as of 22 April, 49 Palestinians have been murdered by illegal settlers in the West Bank since 7 October, 2023. 14 of these Palestinians lost their lives in 2025, while since 1 January, 2026, 15 Palestinians have been murdered by these colonists as of 22 April.

Only this week, the Red Crescent announced that Israeli settlers wounded a 14-year-old Palestinian in the village of Jalud, south of Nablus.

Several dozen settlers were documented arriving at the outskirts of the village and throwing stones. They then attempted to set a house on fire.

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Settlers also demolished an EU-funded school.

On Saturday,  25 April, settlers carried out widespread attacks across the occupied West Bank. This included forced displacement, arson, and armed assaults.

It starts at the top

Importantly, though, the rot starts at the top. Israel’s Deputy Foreign Minister, Sharren Haskel, visited an illegal outpost in the village of Umm al-Khair, armed with a pistol.

This is the same place where illegal settlers put up a fence to cut off children from their school. When the children tried to go around the fence, IOF soldiers launched tear gas and sound grenades at them. The children were as young as five years old.

Then, Sharren Haskel showed up, armed, and in solidarity with settler terrorists, not with Palestinian victims.

The Israeli government has openly funded and built illegal settlements for Jews to live in.

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Several Israeli laws enable illegal settlers to steal Palestinian land.

Firstly,  Israel has declared about 26% of the West Bank’s territory as “state land”. This means settlements can be built on it.

Secondly, Israel has used legal means to expropriate Palestinian property for public needs such as roads, settlements and parks.

According to Al Jazeera,

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There are also Israeli “nongovernmental” organisations that work to evict Palestinians from their land using loopholes in the land laws.

Israeli authorities also regularly seize and demolish Palestinian properties citing the lack of Israeli-issued building permits and land documents.

But international rights groups say acquiring an Israeli building permit is nearly impossible.

Settler terrorism is literally Israeli government policy, funded by the state and protected by the IOF. Israel is operating exactly like Nazi Germany, through a system of apartheid, forced expulsion, violence and starvation, all because a man in the sky promised Jews the land 3000 years ago. Yet westerners are regularly called antisemitic for comparing Israel to Nazi Germany.

But who are we to argue with the former head of the Israeli secret service?

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Feature image via Times Originals/YouTube

By HG

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McSweeney just revealed a new secret Starmer meeting

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Morgan McSweeney at the Foreign Affairs Committee

Morgan McSweeney at the Foreign Affairs Committee

On Tuesday 28 April, Morgan McSweeney appeared before the Foreign Affairs Committee. In doing so, he no doubt hoped to weasel out of the recent scrutiny he’s faced for his role in making Peter Mandelson the ambassador to the US. Instead, he exposed the existence of a secret meeting between himself and the PM:

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Secrets upon secrets from McSweeney

Times political editor Steven Swinford reported the following:

Morgan McSweeney reveals that Sir Keir Starmer held a meeting in mid-December where a decision was made to appoint Lord Mandelson as US ambassador

To be clear, this was before Mandelson was vetted. This provides further evidence that Starmer and those around him were planning to appoint Mandelson regardless.

Swinford also said:

There is no record of this meeting. There is no minute of the discussions or the reasoning behind the appointment at the time. The Cabinet Office simply can’t find it. It does not appear to exist.

So a really significant meeting on the appointment of the US ambassador – one which has had huge ramifications for Starmer’s premiership – only appears to exist in the memory of those who were present.

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This is probably obvious, but government officials aren’t supposed to be having secret meetings; everything is supposed to be recorded.

This isn’t the only secret meeting Starmer is facing questions over either. As we reported, Starmer also secretly met with Palantir (with Peter Mandelson in tow no less). Starmer’s defence for this was that the meeting was not in fact a ‘meeting’; something he claimed despite personally referring to it as a “meeting” on at least one other occassion.

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Weasel words

McSweeney contradicted himself at points in the hearing. As Swinford reported:

Morgan McSweeney says that he was concerned that Lord Mandelson was not telling the ‘full truth’ in response to questions about his links to Jeffrey Epstein

But the appointment went ahead anyway.

This would have been a staggering revelation. The assumption up until now has been that McSweeney was the key driver behind the decision to make Mandelson the ambassador. If he’d been a Mandelson-doubter, that would have made Keir Starmer look even worse than he already does.

In his own words, McSweeney said:

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It was the prime minister’s decision

I certainly think it would have been much, much better if I’d asked PET to ask those follow-up questions. I guess my thinking at the time was I’d put follow up questions to him in writing, and that if a senior member of staff did that, that he would feel more obligated to give the truth and the full truth.

I didn’t feel that I got that back from him, but it wasn’t my decision. It was the prime minister’s decision, and he saw the DV as part of that decision.

As Swinford later noted, however:

Given this, you can see why McSweeney has avoided speaking in public before now.

The guy clearly has no ability to keep track of his own lies.

Epic

Paul Holden – author of The Fraud – noted that McSweeney and Labour Together worked together on an “epic campaign to destroy the left”:

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McSweeney was actually very successful in his mission to destroy the left…

…kind of.

He and Starmer managed to banish left-wingers from the Labour Party, but those people didn’t cease to exist. If you’re wondering what they’re doing now, the answer is ‘voting Green’.

This is how that’s predicted to shape up in the fast-approaching local elections:

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This is Morgan McSweeney’s legacy.

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He can pretend to be a moderate sensiblist in committee hearings all he likes, but this man’s rampant incompetence jump-started the terminal decline of one of the world’s longest-running labour parties.

Featured image via Foreign Affairs Committee

By Willem Moore

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War criminal Tony Blair is trying to turn the public against disabled people, again

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Tony Blair

Tony Blair

Tony Blair’s think tank has called for people with anxiety, depression and ADHD to be banned from claiming Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) disability benefits.

The latest in a long line of murky think tanks weighing in on benefits, the Tony Blair Institute says the government should pull the ’emergency handbrake’ on benefit claims. Whatever the fuck that means. The institute, founded by the former Prime Minister and war criminal, is claiming that the current system is ‘vulnerable to misuse’.

This is a ridiculous statement clearly made by someone who has never had to claim benefits. Anyone who knows how complex it is to navigate the system.

Warmonger attempts to make disabled people the enemy

The Tony Blair Institute wants to make what they call ‘non-working limiting conditions’ ineligible for benefits. This includes, instead, these people would be pointed towards treatment. Which is hilarious when you consider how much stress the NHS is already under and the backlog there already is for ADHD and mental health diagnosis and treatment.

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Speaking to the Telegraph the Tony Blair Institute said

The handbrake is based on a simple idea: there are certain conditions that in the vast majority of cases do not limit an individual’s ability to work, and the default presumption should be that these non-work-limiting conditions no longer attract cash benefits

This is yet another think tank that wants to cut benefits for people with mental health and neurodivergent conditions whilst at the same time the government is trying to prove they’re over-diagnosed. This is despite experts already coming out and saying otherwise

And once again, they rely on this false idea that you do not need medical proof to get disability benefits. The Telegraph article said:

While it stressed there would be no blanket ban on claims, the TBI said claimants would have to support them with medical evidence.

It’s absolutely absurd that we’re expected to believe that neither the Telegraph nor a think tank ran by Tony sodding Blair knows you need mountains of evidence to qualify for Personal Independence Payment or the health element of Universal Credit.

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But once again, they’re relying on the general public, who they’re attempting to turn against disabled people, not knowing.

They’re also relying on the public not knowing that PIP isn’t awarded based on what condition you have, but how the conditions affect your life and your ability to do things. During the 2025 PIP cut proposals, the DWP wanted to make mental health and neurodivergent conditions ineligible by changing the daily living criteria scoring system. They failed on that, so the Tony Blair Institute wants to bypass that completely.

There’s also the fact that it almost definitely won’t be medical professionals who decide which conditions are ‘work-limiting’ or not. It’ll be politicians and shadowy think tanks who want to do everything they can to cut benefits.

Tony Blair Institute policy quickly falls apart

In theory, it’s enough to get all the right wing disability haters rubbing their trousers, but practically it doesn’t work.

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Most disabled people don’t just have one health condition; I’ve got thirteen. In theory I’d be disqualified because I have mental health and neurodivergent conditions, but I’ve also got a whole host of other things. Would I only be able to claim for them? Or would I be blanket-banned?

And there’s the big elephant in the room here that the right wing shitrags and the think tanks started by fucking ghouls like Blair and Iain Duncan Smith want us to ignore. Say it loudly: PIP isn’t an out-of-work benefit. And that while UC Health element is at the minute, the DWP plans to move it over to PIP too.

I, and many others, claim PIP and work – and the DWP know this. It’s absurd to propose restricting benefits only to conditions that stop you from working, when many disabled people rely on PIP so that they can work in a way that is safest for them without having to worry about not earning enough.

It’s clear this is yet another ‘policy’ that has been created so the bullshit rags on the right have another excuse to turn the public against disabled people.

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Another way to turn the public against disabled people

And that’s exactly what this is designed to do, so that it’s easier for the DWP to cut benefits in the first place.

To back up this bullshit, the Tony Blair Institute also commissioned YouGov to ask a section of the UK public their thoughts on benefits claimants. One question, which shows you how vile their polling is was

Do you personally know anyone who you believe is receiving health-related welfare benefits, but you think does not genuinely need them?

This question doesn’t really do anything to further the Tony Blair Institute’s point except show that the DWP’s propaganda is working. These people have no proof, they just think they know someone who is gaming the system, based on what the media and government saturating them with constant stories of ‘lazy benefit skivers’.

In the current climate when working class people are spending every bloody hour working and still not being able to afford a good life, you can see why so many have been turned against those on benefits. But what this really speaks to is who holds all the power.

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At the end of the day, your wages aren’t going to increase if your neighbour who you think doesn’t deserve it loses their benefits. Food and bills will still continue to go up. And when they’ve turned us all against disabled people, immigrants and every other minority, they’ll come for you too.

Featured image via the Canary

By Rachel Charlton-Dailey

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Israel ignores ceasefire to bomb 27 locations in Southern Lebanon in one day

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Israel Lebanon

Israel Lebanon

On April 27, Israel bombed 27 different locations in Southern Lebanon in one day – in direct contravention of the supposed ‘ceasefire‘.

According to reporting from Courtney Bonneau, a war correspondent currently in Lebanon, Israel attacked 17 locations by air. Additionally, it launched three drone attacks and seven artillery shelling strikes.

At the same time, the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) destroyed civilian homes and infrastructure in at least 6 towns. This included the towns of Aita al-Shaab and Shamaa.

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Israel is a murderous regime

These attacks take the total number of people that Israel has murdered since it launched its illegal attack on Iran to 2,521. The attacks have injured an additional 7,804 people.

Importantly, Israel is purposefully targeting civilian infrastructure, which in itself is a war crime.

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As if it wasn’t clear enough that Israel was targeting civilian infrastructure, it has damaged at least 16 hospitals in Lebanon since the start of its attacks on Iran. This has forced four of them to close.

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The genocidal terrorist state has also murdered 100 healthcare workers and injured 233, including paramedics and hospital staff. Similarly, it has hit emergency service workers hard. A total of 130 attacks were recorded, resulting in damage to 117 vehicles.

Ceasefire?

Of course, the current ceasefire applies to everyone except Israel. But this is nothing new – Israel has a long track record of ignoring ceasefire agreements. 

Since October 2025 alone, Israel has committed 2,575 violations of the Gaza ceasefire. This equates to an average of 13.2 violations per day.

Israel has murdered 809 Palestinians, including 213 children, 89 women, and 23 older people. It has also wounded 2,267 people, more than half of whom were children, women or older people.

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Additionally, Israel continues to illegally hold approximately 34 square kilometres beyond the agreed withdrawal lines. It has also blocked repairs to electricity, water, and sewage infrastructure.

Similarly, the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) and the Lebanese government reported more than 15,400 ceasefire violations by Israel since the 2024 ceasefire. During this time, Israel killed more than 370 people.

On February 25, before Israel and the US launched their illegal and unprovoked attacks on Iran, Doctors Without Borders reported that:

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These attacks are driving repeated waves of displacement, damaging civilian infrastructure, including homes and essential services, and preventing thousands of people from returning to their villages to rebuild.

A pattern

But only soon after the settler-colonial state was created, it started violating the UN-brokered Armistice Agreement. In the process, it killed and expelled Arab civilians from their land.

Since its very creation, Israel has not played by the rules of international law.

Still, to this day, Israel is continuing to make a mockery of the supposed ‘ceasefire’ and international law as a whole, at the expense of thousands of civilian lives.

As soon as Hezbollah retaliates or tries to protect Lebanese land from illegal Israeli attacks, Western media parrot IOF lines, calling it a “violation of the ceasefire”. Of course, Hezbollah aims at Israeli soldiers while the IOF blows up homes, schools, and hospitals.

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Meanwhile, the whole world turns the other way while Israel ethnically cleanses Gaza, and now Lebanon, under the guise of ‘ceasefires’.

Feature image via Channel 4 News/YouTube

By HG

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A rare Mamdani-Menin alliance

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Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Council Speaker Julie Menin held a joint press conference on Tuesday urging for tax credit reforms.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Council Speaker Julie Menin held a joint press conference on Tuesday urging for tax credit reforms.

DAYS THE BUDGET IS LATE: 28

WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE: Mayor Zohran Mamdani and Council Speaker Julie Menin have been at loggerheads over how to close New York City’s multibillion-dollar budget gap.

Mamdani has maintained the deep deficit can only be plugged if the state raises taxes on millionaires and large corporations. Menin has countered that the gap can be addressed by trimming municipal bloat — a proposal Mamdani panned as “unrealistic” just weeks ago.

Today brought a major deescalation: The two leaders joined forces to call on Gov. Kathy Hochul and state lawmakers to scale back a tax credit largely benefitting millionaires. Doing so would generate $1 billion in new revenue for the city, a windfall that could go a long way in helping the city balance its books, Menin and Mamdani said at a joint press conference.

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“We are standing together today, we will stand together again,” Mamdani said, appearing alongside Menin in the City Hall Rotunda. “If we were to reduce this tax credit by just a quarter, as the speaker said, we would be talking about raising nearly $1 billion in additional revenue that would be critical in our city’s ability to balance this budget.”

Hochul, who’s still grappling with a state budget that’s now nearly a month late, immediately threw cold water on the new push from Mamdani and Menin, putting a dent in their unusual alliance.

“It’s not happening. We’re not changing the PTET,” Hochul told reporters in Albany later in the day, using an acronym for the Pass-Through Entity Tax credit eyed for reform by Mamdani and Menin.

In slamming the door on the proposal, Hochul is leaving Menin and Mamdani without a clear path forward on how to fill the city’s budget hole. The governor’s opposition to the tax credit push also creates an unusual new front in the negotiations on this year’s overdue state budget, with Mamdani and Menin on one side and Hochul on the other.

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The fraught dynamic comes at a politically delicate time for the Buffalo-born governor, who is gearing up for a reelection bid and will need deep blue New York City if she wants to cruise to a second full term. Being at odds with Mamdani, who draws support from a fervent left-leaning base, would complicate Hochul’s political standing with many Democratic voters.

Mamdani and Menin made the joint plea for the tax credit changes in tandem while announcing they had agreed to push back the release of the mayor’s executive budget proposal until May 12, a deal first reported by POLITICO on Monday night.

The executive spending plan, which forms the basis for the final stretch of negotiations before the mayor and the Council must finalize a city budget by July 1, is technically due this Friday.

But as the state budget is now nearly a month late with its own budget, Mamdani and Menin are agreeing to delay the executive plan’s release in hopes that Albany will have its fiscal outlay in order by May 12. Without knowing how much revenue will flow to the city from the state, Mamdani and Menin both said there will be holes in the city’s spending plan that would be hard to reconcile.

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Read the full story from Chris and Nick in POLITICO

FROM CITY HALL

Advocates warn closing the 30th Street intake shelter without careful coordination could pose serious health risks for homeless New Yorkers.

SHELTER MOVES: A man died by suicide after he was abruptly moved out of a shelter as part of Mayor Mamdani’s plan to close the long-decaying Bellevue intake center on East 30th Street in Manhattan.

Mamdani announced the closure plan on March 5, kicking off a weeks-long rush to clear out two East Village shelters and convert them into intake centers for homeless men and adult families requesting beds. Mamdani said the move was a proactive measure based on expert guidance, noting the Bellevue intake center’s state of “severe disrepair.”

Advocates who work with homeless New Yorkers warned that the relocations posed serious health risks if not done in a careful and coordinated way.

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Then Steven Rosa — who was moved from an East Village shelter with on-site behavioral health services to a hotel-turned-shelter in Brownsville, Brooklyn — seemingly fell through the cracks.

Rosa’s family told POLITICO his depression worsened after the move, and he started spending much of his time alone in his hotel room. He was found dead in early April.

“We are saddened by this tragic loss, and our hearts are with this individual’s family and loved ones during this difficult time,” a spokesperson for Comptroller Mark Levine’s office said in response to POLITICO’s reporting. “The deployment of care and support for vulnerable New Yorkers is extremely delicate and our office had raised concerns with the City about the effect changes may have on New Yorkers. We are seeking to better understand the circumstances surrounding this tragedy.”

A Department of Social Services spokesperson called Rosa’s death a “heartbreaking tragedy” but said the agency cannot comment specifically on his case due to client confidentiality.

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“We continue to build on our efforts to assess potential risk factors — which might not be evident based on self-reported information and case history available to the agency — while strengthening connections to healthcare for all clients,” DSS spokesperson Neha Sharma said in a statement.

The new intake sites were supposed to open on May 1, but the timeline is in flux due to pending litigation. Maya Kaufman

HIGH STAKES: There was a woman in candy stripes on a stilt. There was Assemblymember Stacey Pheffer Amato wearing her lucky shoes. There was Nas doing shoutouts to Resorts World during a rendition of his 1996 hit, “If I Ruled the World.”

All of this at 9:30 this morning for a ribbon cutting at New York City’s first full-fledged casino.

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Resorts World is the first of three newly licensed casinos to have live table games as it begins a massive expansion of its existing gambling facility at the Aqueduct racetrack in Queens.

Boosters hail the economic opportunity from the coming overhaul, which would add a new resort and make the casino among the largest in the world. The company has also promised $2 billion in community benefits that local leaders have high hopes for.

“I have to allude to the fact that we lost a 15-year-old, Jaden Pierre, in this community,” Borough President Donovan Richards said during his remarks at the ribbon cutting. “So these benefits are largely not just about benefits for this site, it’s about the lives that this site will save.”

Resorts World was a surprise winner of a casino license following a years-long process. Proposals from Bally’s in the Bronx and billionaire Mets owner Steve Cohen also were awarded licenses in December.

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Amato, who chaired a community advisory board that tested local support for the casino, began wearing a pair of shoes studded with baubles and fake diamonds during the process. She wore the same pair to the opening of the casino, which she already visits regularly.

Other speakers, like Richards and City Council Member Ty Hankerson, made a point of saying they don’t gamble, but that they want the casino to do well.

Former Council Speaker Adrienne Adams — who is running for lieutenant governor on Hochul’s ticket — said Resorts World first approached her about building a gaming facility at Aqueduct 15 years ago, when she was working for the NAACP. She said it took a while for the civil rights group to trust Resorts World but she now views the company as an “amazing” partner who has been held accountable to its community and its promises.

The head of Genting — Resorts World’s Malaysian parent company — came to do the ribbon cutting.

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“Our planned expansion will bring a world-class integrated resort to this site, and when it is complete, New York will have something no other city in America can match,” Genting chair KT Kim said.

From closer to home, Nasir Jones, the New York rapper known as Nas, wore a tuxedo to help roll the ceremonial first dice.

Resorts World’s parent company has a history of late or overbudget projects, which even the body that recommended it received a license warned about, but it has some advantages: It’s open now, years before the two others will be. It also has pledged an enormous share of its revenue to the state.

It also outlasted other bidders, most notably a trio of developers who wanted to put casinos in Manhattan, including Caesars’ plan to have a gaming emporium in Times Square. Ironically, one of the older slot machine rooms at Resorts World is called Time Square Casino – and it’s the only one in New York for the foreseeable future. – Ry Rivard

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From the Capitol

Gov. Kathy Hochul has pressed to weaken deadlines in current climate law to make state goals easier to achieve.

CLIMATE TANGO CONTINUES: The debate over changes to weaken New York’s 2019 climate law appears to be moving toward an end. Gov. Kathy Hochul’s latest proposal is for emissions reduction regulations by 2028 with an interim flexible target in 2040 and keeping the firm 2050 mandate.

“It is certainly better than it was,” said Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins on Tuesday. “We’re trying to work on an entire package. … It is a huge push to make sure that we do not lose ground that we should not cede while we are waiting for the promulgation” of the regulations.

Stewart-Cousins said that rebates to help New Yorkers with high energy bills and proposals to accelerate solar investments were on the table as part of the discussions.

Hochul’s proposal includes the controversial accounting change long sought by the governor that would essentially require less aggressive action to reduce fossil fuel use, particularly natural gas, according to four people familiar with the agreement.

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Some Democratic lawmakers remain dissatisfied with the proposal, and environmental groups like Food and Water Watch and New York Communities for Change are calling for them to vote no on any budget that includes changes to the climate law.

“I don’t really understand why we have to compromise so much when the entire environmental advocacy community is saying that’s a bad idea,” said Democratic Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal. “We passed the climate law. We don’t want to roll it back so dramatically.”

Hochul on Tuesday declined to commit to providing estimates of how much her proposal would cost businesses and households. She’s raised concerns about the cost of abruptly implementing a cap-and-trade program to meet the near term 2030 deadline in the climate law.

Her push to update the law would moot that target and the lawsuit over regulations to achieve it brought by environmental advocates. Hochul originally championed “cap and invest” in 2023 but has soured on the program.

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“I don’t know if there will be cap and invest,” the governor said. “If there’s cap and invest, is it capped cap and invest? Is it set at a certain number? All that is unknown right now. All I know is that to give some breathing room for New York families and business I have to have a longer runway.”

The governor’s proposal currently under discussion would specify cap and invest would be part of the regulations due in 2028, according to the people familiar with the discussions. Marie J. French

HOOD IN THE HOOD: Madison County Sheriff Todd Hood pledged to be an active lieutenant governor if elected on Republican Bruce Blakeman’s ticket this fall.

“I’m definitely not a sit-in-the-office kind of guy,” Hood said.

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There’s been a split in visions for the office in recent decades – with some candidates characterizing the role as a cheerleader for the governor, and others saying it should be an independent office. Hood falls in the former category, saying his job would be to help Blakeman succeed at lower taxes and heating costs.

The Republican was at the Capitol as part of the NY Sheriffs’ Association lobby day, where he railed against Hochul’s plan to ban 287-g cooperation agreements with ICE, saying that “cutting off communication between agencies makes everyone less safe and reverses post-9/11 progress.”

Like his ticket-mate, the sheriff took a tough-on-crime approach.

“There are tons of false allegations against police,” he said when asked about a Hochul-backed plan to let New Yorkers sue ICE agents who infringe on their rights. “That’s what I’ve seen the most of in my career, are lies.”

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Hood also downplayed the uproar over the recent killings of Renee Good — saying she was using her vehicle as “a deadly instrument” — and Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis.

“Yeah, you’re fighting with a police officer with a loaded firearm on you and that weapon is discovered – that’s bad things,” he said of Pretti. — Bill Mahoney

RFK JR. BEWARE: The state Assembly is pushing back against federal policy changes to vaccine recommendations with a package of six bills that would strengthen the state’s laws surrounding immunization.

Lawmaker says the package of bills is aimed at countering efforts by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to roll back immunization recommendations issued by the federal government.

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The package includes legislation that would allow the state Department of Health to recommend vaccine schedules for New Yorkers using longstanding medical standards and taking into consideration recommendations from the American Academy of Family Physicians, a private professional association not beholden to recommendations made at the federal level. The state previously relied on the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, a federal panel responsible for making vaccine recommendations that Kennedy attempted to overhaul in an effort to install his allies before a judge blocked the appointees.

“Vaccines are foundational to public health and have long been a trusted and effective bulwark against harmful and deadly diseases, especially for our most vulnerable populations,” Speaker Carl Heastie said in a statement. “New York will stand on the side of proven science as attacks on lifesaving immunizations continue from the federal administration place our residents at risk. This legislation puts the health and well-being of New Yorkers first and ensures that these vital resources remain accessible for our communities.”

The package also includes legislation that would require college students to be immunized for Hepatitis B, a bill that would set immunization mandates for children attending summer camps and a bill that would require health insurance coverage for vaccines without cost-sharing.

An additional measure was passed that would create liability protections for health care providers administering vaccines that follow state and local guidance, a protection that could become key if providers’ actions are alleged to contradict federal guidance. — Katelyn Cordero

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CAR WARS: Hochul wants to address how car insurance companies set rates for premiums — potentially a key provision that would help resolve a major sticking point in the ongoing state budget talks.

“Yes, we are looking closely at how insurance companies set their rates and what criteria they use,” Hochul told reporters Tuesday. “So there’s two sides of the equation. One is I want to make sure that some of the drivers of why we have such high insurance premiums in the state are addressed, but also the insurance companies, we’re taking a close look at their practices as well. “

POLITICO reported Monday that Hochul and state lawmakers have discussed addressing so-called flex increases that car insurance companies use to raise premiums.

Read more from POLITICO Pro’s Nick Reisman here. 

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IN OTHER NEWS

NEVER THE SAME: Timothy Brown, the man police beat in a Brooklyn liquor store, which went viral on social media, is suing New York City for $100 million in damages, saying he will never recover from the incident. (Gothamist)

NEW PROTOCOLS: The New York Police Department has stalled or rejected policy changes recommended by the Department of Investigations regarding its controversial gang-database, which critics argue is used to target Black and Hispanic youth. (THE CITY)

GETTING PERSONAL: Citadel CEO Ken Griffin will meet with Hochul to discuss New York City’s direction following a quarrel with Mamdani after the mayor announced a proposed new tax on pricey second-homes in front of the billionaire’s Manhattan penthouse. (Bloomberg)

Missed this morning’s New York Playbook? We forgive you. Read it here.

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London mayor may move to block a Met Police deal with Palantir

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Palantir deal with Met police hits a snag

Palantir deal with Met police hits a snag

London’s Labour mayor, Sadiq Khan, may reportedly try to block the Metropolitan police from buying an AI tool from authoritarian US tech firm Palantir. A spokesperson for the mayor’s office stated that Khan had:

concerns about using public money to support firms who act contrary to London’s values.

Back on 22 April, the Guardian reported that Palantir was in talks with the Met police to supply AI tools for use in criminal investigations. The talks sparked concerns within the force itself over allowing the shady tech company access to sensitive data.

‘We don’t need £100m AI’

As the Canary has previously reported, other police forces have already struck contracts with Palantir. However, the Met would be by far the largest and most prominent in the UK to do so. However, this potentially multimillion-pound deal has met opposition within the force itself.

In particular, the issues relate to allowing the deeply unethical company access to highly sensitive data. This could include otherwise-confidential intelligence on criminal activities, and even victims’ personal information. Other concerns relate to the potential waste of public money, with one anonymous source stating:

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We don’t need £100m AI. We would like the more basic systems we already have to work properly.

Beyond this, there are also massive issues with the use of AI for policing in general. Whilst AI decision-making is perceived as unbiased and emotionless, this couldn’t be further from the truth. Rather, it simply obscures—and replicates—the human biases present within its training dataset.

Mayoral scrutiny

However, the potential Met-Palantir contract isn’t a done deal just yet. Let’s assume—probably quite safely—the massive ethical issue with the tech company won’t put off the Met police. Even so, the deal would still need to make it past the mayor’s office.

This is because anything the Met wants to spend more than £500,000 on has to face the scrutiny of the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime. A spokesperson explained that the office would consider the data security of London’s populace in its decision, along with any potential technical, financial, legal issues.

It’s here that Khan could exert his influence — particularly if he refuses to grant approval. However, the mayor’s spokesperson didn’t volunteer any details:

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We can’t comment on live procurement processes. However, as a general point the mayor would have concerns about using public money to support firms who act contrary to London’s values.

Of course, whether Palantir is actually “contrary to London’s values” is another matter. The capital is by far the most-surveilled city in Europe, with some studies suggesting that for every 10 people, there is one CCTV camera.

Palantir – the genocidal choice

Still, we’d like to hope that Palantir is a step too far even for the UK’s panopticon-cum-capital.

The distinctly amoral tech giant has supplied AI tools to the Israeli military and Trump’s murderous anti-immigrant militia, ICE. As the Good Law Project previously reported:

Palantir has worked with US agencies accused of separating children from their parents, wrongfully detaining thousands of US citizens and forcibly sterilising women. The day after Israel was accused of genocide at the International Criminal Court, the company signed a deal with Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to provide “support for war-related missions”. And Palantir’s predictive policing project in LA was cancelled in 2019 after accusations that it entrenched racism and didn’t reduce crime.

The company also boasted that AI technology doubled the pace of attacks over the opening days of the war on Iran. This sparked fears among employees that they were responsible for the US bombing of an Iranian girls school, an attack which murdered at least 175 individuals.

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Almost inevitably, Palantir is also embroiled in the scandal surrounding disgraced ex-US ambassador Peter Mandelson’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein. Global Counsel, a lobbying firm which works for Palantir, just happened to be co-owned by Mandelson.

Despite the adverse media, the tech firm still holds £600m in contracts with UK public bodies. These extend from the Ministry of Defence to law enforcement, and even to the NHS — and they’re a growing scandal for the Labour government.

For his part, Khan has previously failed London on police failures. As such, we can only hope that the Labour mayor shows a shred of moral fibre and blocks the Met’s contract with Palantir.

Featured image via the Canary

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By Alex/Rose Cocker

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British minister stonewalls public questions on Diego Garcia bombers

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British defence minister remains tight-lipped on UK role in Iran

British defence minister remains tight-lipped on UK role in Iran

Defence minister Al Carns resorted to the tired old ‘security concerns’ excuse to deny the British public basic details about our involvement in the Iran War. Carns—a former Special Forces colonel—refused to answer Your Party leader Jeremy Corbyn’s question about US military bases.

Corbyn asked:

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence, how many times United States aircraft taking off from Diego Garcia have conducted strikes on Iran since 28 February 2026.

Diego Garcia is a colonial military outpost in the Indian Ocean, often used by the US for Middle East operations.

Carns answered:

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For operational security reasons, we do not offer comment or information relating to foreign nations’ military operations.

Permissions to utilise UK military bases by foreign partners are considered on a case-by-case basis. All UK operational support to allies and partners is considered in terms of legality.

Corbyn asked a similar question about US use of bases in the UK, and was given the same answer.

The official UK positions is that the UK only has a defensive role in the unprovoked US and Israeli attack on  Iran. This argument barely stands up to even the most basic scrutiny, as the Canary has reported.

Decolonisation cancelled

In May 2025, the UK signed an agreement to hand Diego Garcia to Mauritius while retaining significant basing rights. That is until US president Donald Trump complained about it. The deal is currently on hold.

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US outlet The Hill reported on 11 April 2026:

The agreement to transfer the islands to Mauritius, which would allow for continued use of the base, stemmed from a decades-long legal battle to address Britain’s colonial past.

Trump called the move a “great act of stupidity” in January 2026 — and ultimately the British said they were:

permanently abandoning the agreement with Mauritius, stating that it cannot go forward with the transfer without U.S. support.

The Hill reported:

But the government noted that ensuring the Diego Garcia base’s “long-term operational security is and will continue to be our priority –– it is the entire reason for the deal,” according to an official statement.

“We are continuing to engage with the U.S. and Mauritius,” the British government stated.

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US-Israel attacked Iran first on 28 February without provocation. Iran was offering unprecedented concessions in negotiations at the time. The Pentagon has since stated there was no imminent threat from Iran. And the UN’s atomic watchdog, the IAEA, has said there is no evidence Iran was developing a nuclear weapon.

The US has achieved none of its original war aims. Iran predictably closed the Straits of Hormuz, a vital oil channel, once attacked – creating a global energy crisis. Far from being defeated, Iran has said the war will continue until:

the enemy’s inevitable and permanent humiliation, disgrace, regret, and surrender.

Trump came to power on an anti-war ‘America First’ ticket but now faces spectacular humiliation.

Featured image via the Canary

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By Joe Glenton

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Starmer is an overflowing political diaper that desperately needs changing

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Starmer

Starmer

I’m pretty sure the Huckleberry Finn guy once said that politicians and nappies should be changed frequently, and for the same reasons. And folks, never has this been more painfully obvious than with Keir Starmer.

May I remind you, the man was elected on a platform of change — bold, principled, transformative change. Instead, we’ve got the same old rotten stench wafting from Downing Street: broken pledges on nationalising energy, U-turns on workers’ rights, grovelling to billionaires while the poor queue at food banks, and a foreign policy that makes Tony Blair look like a fucking pacifist.

Dirty diapers

We were promised a sunrise. We were promised “change.” We were promised a government that would finally put working people first after fourteen years of Tory chaos. Instead, what we got was a fresh budget-brand nappy slapped on the same old backside — and within months, it was already full, leaking from the sides, and making the entire country hold its nose.

This isn’t leadership. This is political incontinence on an epic scale.

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You wouldn’t leave a dirty nappy on a baby for five years hoping it magically sorts itself out, would you? Yet here we are, expected to tolerate Starmer’s rotting government as it spreads its rash of disappointment across the country.

Are you supposed to sit politely while this government marinates in its own broken pledges for another three years because the Labour Party hasn’t got the guts to get rid of Keir Starmer?

The Labour Party must face the mirror — preferably whilst holding its breath. No amount of slick relaunches, bodged reshuffles or relentless spin will scrub away the fundamental betrayal of the hopes invested in 2024.

Keir Starmer is taking them down with him whether they, who refuse to act, like it or not.

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Pressure must build – not for cosmetic change, but for a fundamental shift in Labour direction and a leadership that is prepared to deliver one.

Starmer: enough, already

Keir Starmer is a dead man walking in political terms. His wooden delivery, his endless “context matters” deflections, his instinct to placate the establishment while punishing the left – these are not quirks. They are the symptoms of a politics that has hollowed itself out.

The only question left is how many more months — or weeks — this embarrassing, principle-free spectacle can stagger on before the Labour movement finally does what any decent parent would do: rip off the soiled mess, bin it, and start again with something clean.

The country can smell it from coast to coast. The left is actively retching. Time is running out, and history will judge those who sat in the stench while pretending it smelled of oh-so-sweet progress with exactly the contempt it deserves.

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Keir Starmer didn’t just change the Labour Party — he changed sides. From pledging to scrap cruel Tory benefit rules to defending them, from bold green promises to fossil fuel dependency and fiscal caution that starves public services.

This is a government for the suited professionals, not the people who change actual nappies at 3am after a 12 hour shift for crap wages. Starmer’s Labour talks of working people while governing like the Oxbridge establishment it once railed against from the left.

The time has come to take that old nappy wisdom seriously.

Change the nappy, now

Keir Starmer and his inner circle have had their chance. They’ve soaked up the inheritance of Tory failure only to add layers of their own compromises, scandals, and treachery.

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The Mandelson scandal — complete with overruled vetting, parliamentary denials, and desperate sackings — stands as the final, foul proof that this is not Labour reborn, but the old Blairite corpse reeking under a fresh coat of paint.

I must admit, I didn’t plan to write about nappies and corpses today, but we are being stiffed by a government that is so utterly full of shit it makes a backed-up sewer look like a perfume counter.

The deeper tragedy here, at least for ordinary people like us, is that Starmer’s survival so far stems from the absence of an obvious successor ready to take Labour back to its natural home on the left.

Starmer’s brand of hollow centrism isn’t just disappointing, it’s actively toxic. If he doesn’t go voluntarily or get pushed after the looming Green-inspired local election drubbing, the Labour Party will complete its journey down the path of no return.

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I cannot see Keir Starmer clinging on for much longer without accelerating the very decline he’s overseeing.

All that is left to wonder is whether enough Labour MPs — who are facing a brutal anti-Starmer backlash at the next general election — can find the spine that so often escapes their leader, and ruthlessly flush away the toxic stench of Number 10, Downing Street.

Featured image via the Canary

By Rachael Swindon

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