Politics
Independents ‘making breakthrough’ in Ealing as Labour support tanks
Independents in the London borough of Ealing have been “making a breakthrough” as support for the Labour Party there is tanking. Labour currently dominates in Ealing, but Ealing Community Independents (ECI) leader, Craig Smith, told the Canary:
The number of people who are willing to admit on the doorstep that they’re voting Labour is breathtakingly low. Single percentage figures… So I know that things are going to look very different on May 8th.
Building “a credible alternative to Ealing Labour”
He compared the credentials of these independent and Labour councillors and what they stand for, saying:
None of the people that are going to be candidates for Ealing Community Independents are career politicians. None of them have been councillors before […] Essentially, all of our members are part of local residents’ associations. We have people who lead litter picking campaigns. We have people who are recognised community champions.
So they all do something as community organisers above and beyond just wanting to become councillors. Because, honestly, that’s been part of the problem with Ealing Labour Council over the years – 16 years now of councillors just doing it because they enjoy the status but they don’t want to get their hands dirty. They don’t actually want to be seen between the elections.
In waging an campaign led by independents to remove Labour’s majority on Ealing Council, he insisted that:
It’s the largest ever attempt by a new party or a grouping of independents to do this.
Their efforts to offer local voters “a credible alternative to Ealing Labour” include a key promise not to cut public services.
Labour has consistently “cut back on crucial services,” Smith lamented, with numerous children’s centres “up for the chop” last year. He stressed that independents would “reverse” that policy.
In short, ECI’s position is that, if their candidates are in charge:
you won’t see any cuts or closures or privatisations to frontline vital services [adding that] more than 20% of the working population is earning below the London Living Wage.
And to fight back against that, ECI councillors would work:
to make sure that all of the local employers are paying at least the London Living Wage to their employees
Holding housing developers to account
Smith also highlighted the need for more “affordable housing” which ECI is pushing for.
He explained why the current situation needs to end, and what ECI would do to deal with it:
As with many councils, Ealing Labour Council makes promises every year that it consistently breaks in terms of new house building and the number of affordable units that go into the developments that they’ve given planning approval to…
Essentially, planning approval is given for a major developer to throw up a block of flats. They agree to a certain ratio of affordable housing and then, almost inevitably, by the time that development is finished, they renege on the promise and say ‘it’s no longer affordable, costs have gone up, we can’t afford to do that’, and they reduce the number of units.
So literally every year, Ealing Council come back and say ‘oh, we haven’t hit our target’. And they don’t seem to be at all embarrassed about it.
So one of the things that we are sort of committing to do is to hold the developers to their initial obligation… I think the public and the developers need to know that we are serious when they make a commitment and they get an approval in the first place, that we expect affordable and social housing to go into those developments.
You can see all of ECI’s policies and positions here.
Ealing deserves better
Labour’s tanking support in Ealing is, in part, due to councillors being so disconnected from residents. As Smith asserted:
The thing that we hear most consistently is how angry they are at the lack of responsiveness from their councillors.
These independents have been making it clear to residents that unlike Labour, they put the voices of ordinary people at the heart of what they do. One key question when canvassing is whether people have heard of ECI. And though it’s a new party, Smith notes that:
Increasingly, people are saying yes. So it’s definitely working. We’re making a breakthrough.
ECI has also received the endorsement of Your Party. And it has been strategic too, having positive conversations with the local Green Party. As Smith clarified:
We agreed not to stand in three of their highest priority wards.
However, the green part, as he noted:
have pressure from above, from the central party, to field candidates, as many as possible, across all of the wards… So they are fielding candidates in our wards.
Greens have not been actively campaigning in ECI target wards, though.
Cooperative efforts between independents and Greens are entirely possible, as the Hackney campaign this year has shown. But as numerous independents around the country have told us, the national Green Party seems to be gauging where it can get significant support with minimal effort, and where it struggles — ahead of local elections.
Because of our highly problematic, anti-democratic voting system and obscenely wealthy individuals force-feeding Reform’s racist elitism — now is the time for change. To stop far-right Reform and an increasingly authoritarian Labour, Greens must work more collaboratively with independents.
Smith hopes this will happen after the local election, with parties to the left of Labour coming together to hold it to account.
Featured image via the Canary
By Ed Sykes
Politics
Inquest finds children gunned down by British soldiers ‘posed no risk at all’
An inquest at Belfast Coroner’s Court has ruled that two British soldiers “overreacted” and “lost control” when killing five innocent people who posed no threat. The troops gunned down their victims on 9 July 1972, in what became known as the Springhill Massacre, after the area in West Belfast where the brutal violence occurred.
Three of the victims were in their teens. One of them was thirteen year old Margaret Gargan, who one of the soldiers shot in the face as she sat on a wall talking to friends.
David McCafferty was fourteen, while John Dougal sixteen when he was shot in the back as he fled. The two King’s Regiment troops, identified only as Soldier A and Soldier E, also gunned down Catholic priest Noel Fitzpatrick and Patrick Butler. The latter man left behind six children. The army men also seriously wounded two other men.
Earlier that evening, two members of the 1st King’s Regiment C Company operating in the area had sustained bullet wounds. 1972 was the bloodiest year of ‘The Troubles’, with at least 479 people losing their lives. Exchanges of fire between republican paramilitaries and British soldiers were commonplace. The King’s Regiment often killed civilians in the aftermath of attacks on its own members.
Soldiers invented narrative to conceal unjustified killings
Soldiers A and E were stationed on an elevated position at Corry’s timber yard, and were only around 100 metres away from those they killed. The British army attempted to concoct a narrative in which the yard came under sustained organised attack, but Justice Scoffield rejected this version of events.
He said radio logs from the brigade “hugely undermine” those claims, and there was not “a coordinated attack by a mass of gunmen”. Scoffield, acting as presiding coroner, said their stories may amount to:
…a cynical attempt to justify shootings which were unjustified.
British soldiers were known to use binoculars and scopes when set up in sniping positions in Belfast. The coroner determined that the murderers would have been able to determine who they were firing at. Soldier E killed thirteen year old Gargan with an “aimed shot” while there was “no firing at her location”, and she posed “no risk at all”.
John Dougal was a member of the IRA’s youth wing, but Scoffield said:
With John Dougal shot in the back as he ran from the area and taking into account the requirements of the yellow card, the force used by Soldier A was not reasonable.
The yellow card was a guidance document the army gave to its soldiers to convey rules of engagement. It had no basis in law and was simply a general means to aid soldiers in determining when they could open fire.
Margaret’s brother Harry said in response to the inquest’s findings:
The verdict of unjust killing will never end the decades of grief and trauma inflicted on our family. The truth of what happened to our beautiful sister Margaret was always what our late mother and father desired in search of a new inquest.
Justice in Belfast again impeded by delays and cover-up
John Dougal’s brother Jimmy called for the soldiers involved to be held accountable:
We want justice and those soldiers to be brought to book for what they did.
Much like the case of the Bloody Sunday Soldier F case, who was accused of illegal killings in a Derry massacre by British soldiers also in 1972, the length of time the British state has delayed proceedings makes this justice far harder to obtain. Not only that, Scoffield drew attention to the possibility that there was an intentional cover up regarding Springhill, saying the scale of missing documentation may have been for “improper” reasons. He may yet recommend criminal proceedings are opened.
The inquest was close to collapsing, following the Conservative government’s introduction of the Legacy Act designed as a further means of preventing investigation into historic Troubles era crimes. All cases had to be reach a verdict stage by 1 May 2024, and the Springhill inquest did so with only hours to spare. The Act is currently being restructured by the current Labour government.
The charity Relatives for Justice, which supports families bereaved from Six Counties’ state and paramilitary violence, concluded by paying tribute to the long struggle of the Springhill families:
…it is only fitting to conclude by recognising the victims’ family members, who have fought almost 54 years for truth, to write the state’s false history and who have shown nothing but dignity and fortitude in their fight for truth, justice, and vindication.
Featured image via the IrishRepublicanNews
Politics
Labour Zionist disgrace Ellman attacks Polanski for condemning police brutality
The Labour friends of genocide axis’s attacks on Jewish Green party leader Zack Polanski continue. In the latest example, well-known pro-Israel horror Louise Ellman has made a sinister attack on Polanski that has undertones of threat.
Ellman is a former Liverpool MP who quit rather than face a vote of disgusted local members whether to retain her as a candidate. She claimed to have been “appalled” that then-leader Jeremy Corbyn was at an event she also attended. She seemed more concerned with blocking help to Palestinian children. And now, she says that Polanski needs to be “very, very careful in what he is peddling”:
Ellman, the bad joke who tried to sell us Corbyn’s ‘antisemitic thoughts’, attacks the Jewish leader of the Greens.
It’d be clownish were it not so sinister.
Our media must stop pretending the Israel lobby are good-faith actors.#ItWasAScam https://t.co/RqRt5r4Y7z— simon maginn (@simonmaginn) April 30, 2026
Elllman was at the heart of the ‘Labour antisemitism’ scam when Jeremy Corbyn was party leader. That scam particularly targeted Jews who opposed Israel’s crimes. She doesn’t seem ready to realise that two and a half years of genocide in Gaza means the scam won’t work again — unless the Greens enable it — but seems just as ready to target Jews who get in the way of the Israel lobby’s plans as her fellow smearers ever were.
Featured image via LFI
By Skwawkbox
Politics
We must save Sebastia from Israeli occupation, before it is too late
The historic Palestinian town of Sebastia, not far from Nablus in the Northern West Bank, is believed to be one of the oldest continuously inhabited places in the occupied territory. The town is an important destination for Christian and Muslim pilgrims, as St John the Baptist – known as the Prophet Yahya in Islam – is buried here.
Sebastia – an extremely important ancient Palestinian site the Israeli occupation intends to steal
Sebastia’s nearby archaeological site is also impressive. Excavations have taken place here for more than a century, and have revealed that its earliest remains date to the Bronze Age, 3000 years ago.
Ruled by multiple civilizations – including the Assyrians, Persians and Romans – it was named Sebaste, which means Augustus, by Herod the Great in honour of the Roman emperor Augustus Caesar. Its ancient ruins include a Roman amphitheatre, a Hellenistic tower, a Byzantine Church, and the remains of a colonnaded street.
For these reasons, Sebastia has been on the UNESCO Tentative List of World Heritage Sites for the State of Palestine since 2012.
To the local community of around 3500 Palestinians, the archaeological site and the town are inseparable. Both are part of the same important cultural and historical landscape, which not only plays an essential role in their rich heritage, but provides an economic lifeline to the population.
More than 2000 visitors arrived daily to the archaeological site, known as the acropolis. It was a favourite spot not only for foreign tourists, but Palestinians from the surrounding area, and the rest of the West Bank. But this is not the case any more.
In November 2025, the Israeli occupation’s ‘Civil Administration’ issued a confiscation order stating its intention to seize the entire acropolis of Sebastia, in Israeli occupation controlled Area C, along with around 1400 dunums, or approximately 350 acres, of surrounding land. This is the largest area confiscated by the Israeli occupation from an archaeological site in the occupied West Bank since 1967. The reason given was
the preservation and development of the site as a visitor-accessible site for the general public.
The Israeli occupation’s confiscation order will mean residents lose their ancient heritage and their source of income
Fascist Israeli occupation Heritage Minister and illegal settler Amichai EliyahuIn – who is part of Ben-Gvir’s Jewish Power party and openly supports full Israeli annexation of the West Bank – announced Sebastia’s land confiscation in a social media post.
Referring to the large Palestinian flag flying at archaeological site, he also declared that “the flag of the invented people” will be replaced by the “flag of the Jewish people.”
Sebastia’s mayor, Mohammad Azem, tells the Canary:
It’s empty here now. Nobody is coming to Sebastia, as all the people are afraid to come here and visit the site, since the decision in November.
The Israelis are stealing our land. Around 97 percent of this confiscation order is for private Palestinian land, mainly olive groves that belong to families from Sebastia and the nearby town of Burqa. And there are ownership documents from 1958 to prove this.
6000 olive trees will be lost, and 10 touristic facilities will be forced to close as a result of the Israeli occupation’s land theft. This will spell disaster for the community, who will not only lose their ancient heritage, but their two main sources of income – olives and tourism.
Azem says:
Then people will leave because they have no money. This is the plan of Israel, to emmigrate the people from their land. But it is not only about wanting to control the land. They also want to make the Palestinians feel scared, so they can expel them from Sebastia town as well.
Residents of Sebastia town – Palestinian administered and in Area B – endure constant raids, with Israeli occupation forces (IOF) storming the place day and night.
Because no one is stopping them, the IOF have become more and more aggressive. Residents are afraid, while most tourists have now decided against even visiting the town, as they also have to navigate their way through Israeli occupation checkpoints located close to the nearby illegal settlements.
The occupation is weaponising archaeology in the occupied territory in an attempt to erase Palestinian heritage, history and identity
In May 2023, the occupation approved a budget of 32 NIS, equivalent to almost £8 million, which came mainly from the Environmental Protection and Tourism ministries, to:
restore and develop Sebastia for public access.
These “development plans” for Sebastia include the confiscation of all open archaeological zones and historic remains, for the creation of a new “Israeli” park called “Shomron National Park”.
Of course, only the area’s Jewish roots will be highlighted in this park, while all other eras that form the site’s true identity will be completely erased by the Israeli occupation.
This is an attempt to rewrite history and erase Palestinian identity, something that has already happened in several places, including the Palestinian neighbourhood of Silwan, in East Jerusalem. Here, illegal settlers run the City of David Archaeological Park tourist attraction, in an attempt to forcibly displace the local Palestinian residents and judaise the neighbourhood.
The Israeli occupation is weaponising archaeology. It is using the false narrative of preservation and development to justify cultural erasure and dispossession of Palestinians from their land. At the same time, illegal settlers and the occupation’s military are tightening their control over the lives of Palestinians, expanding settlements, and are another step closer to annexation.
The “development” of Sebastia includes fencing off the site, charging for entry, and establishing a visitor’s centre. Unsurprisingly, the occupation sees these plans as yet another way to enforce their control over Palestinians, so increased law enforcement to “prevent vandalism” will also be a feature.
“Development plans” include a Jewish only access road that will cut off Sebastia town from its archaeological site
A new settler only access road is also currently being constructed to the archaeological site, which will completely bypass the town of Sebastia, severing the ancient site from the historic centre. If these measures are carried out, Sebastia’s residents will be cut off from their land and their heritage.
Azem says:
They say they want our land to make conservation and preservation for the archaeological site, for the public benefit. But we know this is an annexation plan – one that is not only for Sebastia, but all of the West Bank.
Israel is now making a road from the settlements in the North of Nablus – Shavei Shomron and Homesh – to Sebastia, which will get linked to Route 60, so settlers feel more comfortable, and it is easy for them to come here. Then it will be a closed area, only for these illegal settlers and Israelis.
This is stealing. Israel is stealing our land. They want to make settler controlled tourism projects, so Sebastia and other West Bank archaeological sites will be under full Israeli control and Palestinians will be excluded.
Emek Shaveh is an Israeli NGO that monitors and campaigns against the use of archaeology as a political tool for strengthening Israeli occupation control in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. It too believes the occupation’s focus is not on preserving heritage or encouraging tourism, but on ethnically cleansing the West Bank of Palestinians.
In a statement, it says:
Israel is taking weaponisation of archaeology to new heights. In this cynical move, Israel is fragrant violating international law, turning archaeology into a tool for settlement and annexation, while depriving the Palestinian residents of Sebastia and Burqa of their land and cultural heritage.
False claims that Palestinians neglect and destroy archaeological sites have increased Israeli occupation control over them
In recent years, there has been a noticeable increase in Israeli occupation control over archaeological sites in the occupied West Bank.
This has been aided by a settler led campaign that claims Palestinians are neglecting and deliberately destroying “Jewish heritage sites.” But nothing is further from the truth.
Palestinians treasure their heritage and do not practice selective archaeology, as zionists do. They try their hardest to maintain their heritage sites as best they can, although maintenance and restoration is made almost impossible by the Israeli occupation, who constantly invade the sites and prevent Palestinians from carrying out any necessary work.
Azem tells us that, several years ago, staff from the Palestinian Ministry of Antiquities wanted to do maintenance work on the loose stone from the Basilica inside the archaeological site. But the IOF and settlers turned up and stopped them working. They were arrested and detained for more than five hours.
Then, in 2023, when Palestinian archaeologists were working in Area B, in Sebastia town, they discovered a Roman cemetery. The Palestinian Antiquities department started working on the site, until the IOF arrested them again.
The Israeli occupation Antiquities Authority later came to work on the site, and stole a large number of artifacts from inside the cemetery.
According to reports, between 2013 and 2025, Israeli occupation authorities issued 63 military orders, concerning archaeological sites in the occupied West Bank. These resulted in more than 7000 dunums – equivalent to around 1730 acres – of land either being confiscated or placed under the exclusive control of the Israeli occupation.
These measures have been accompanied by new laws and government decisions expanding the authority of bodies like the Israel Antiquities Authority into areas previously administered by Palestinians. This includes parts of Areas A and B – which, under the Oslo Accords, fall under the control of the Palestinian Authority.
The purpose of this is to extend the Israeli occupation’s control under the guise of environmental and archaeological protection, and to use cultural heritage as a means of land theft and forced displacement.
#SaveSebastia before it is too late
Despite all the harassment and violence, the majority of Sebastia’s residents are going nowhere. They say they will never leave.
Although Sebastia’s municipality presented an objection to the courts – which are controlled by war criminals Ben Gvir, Smotrich, and Netanyahu – it was refused. But they are not giving up. A new objection to the confiscation is currently being prepared after the courts rejected the first.
Azem tells the Canary that everyone around the world should join the Save Sebastia Campaign. The residents of Sebastia are calling for archaeologists, historians, human rights activists, and every free voice around the world to stand with them, visit Sebastia and Palestine, and speak out against the Israeli occupation’s assaults and violence, and its decision to annex Sebastia, before it is too late.
Featured image via the Canary
By Charlie Jaay
Politics
OnlyFans Models Weigh In On Euphoria’s Controversial Sydney Sweeney Scenes
OnlyFans creators have been weighing in on the storyline involving Sydney Sweeney’s character in the new season of Euphoria.
In the first two instalments of the current season, viewers discovered that Cassie, played by the Emmy nominee, had turned to modelling on the adults-only website OnlyFans to help fund her lavish wedding to Jacob Elordi’s Nate.
As the storyline progressed, Cassie began taking part in increasingly extreme photo-shoots, which has so far generated a lot of debate among critics and Euphoria fans.
Off the back of the controversy, many real-life OnlyFans performers have been sharing their takes on Cassie’s story arc, with a range of different opinions.
Alex Paige Moore has suggested that Euphoria oversimplifies how easy it is to become successful on OnlyFans.
“It’s not as simple as ‘send a message and make $50’ – if it was, everyone would be doing it,” Alex claimed.
“Most creators start on $1–2k (around £750–£1480) a month. It takes serious strategy, social media presence and consistency to build it up.”
She pointed out: “Cassie’s already rich – she’s just doing it because she wants more money, and for Nate to spend more money, which I think is a negative representation of the sort of girl that does only OnlyFans.”

Alex started her OnlyFans to help earn financial independence to leave a toxic relationship while still being able to spend time with her young daughter.
“I feel like for a lot of people, joining OnlyFans is more of a last resort,” she added. “They’re not spoiled brats. They’re not mean people that’re giving their partners ultimatums.”
She also took issue with the portrayal of OnlyFans modelling as “easy”, noting: “The idea that it’s easy work, easy money – that you don’t have to do much – makes it sound like a lazy job, which it really isn’t.”
Fellow performer Amira Evans agreed: “OnlyFans is NOT a get rich quick scheme. People need to understand the stigma and risks. The internet is forever.”
Others were more enthusiastic about OnlyFans modelling being represented on a show like Euphoria.
“I actually think it’s a positive step,” Bonnie Locket claimed. “For a long time, there’s been a lot of stigma, and shows like this open up the conversation.”
Alix Lynx went on to say: “The reality is that people are on OnlyFans and so I love that it’s being shown on such a big show.”
Meanwhile, Taila Maddison noted: “I think it’s actually a really good thing that OnlyFans is being represented in Euphoria. It might boost its popularity a bit and remind people of what it is.
“A lot of people already subscribe, but this could catch some viewers by surprise and spark new interest.”
Looking ahead, Taila suggested: “I do think Euphoria might initially portray joining OnlyFans as something a bit humiliating, because that’s often the reality when people first find out – especially friends and family. There’s usually shock, like, ‘Oh my God, I can’t believe they’re doing that’.
“But I’m hoping the narrative shifts over the season and people start to admire her for it. It feels like they’re trying to reflect real reactions first, and then maybe challenge them later.”
Euphoria star Chloe Cherry was also a pornographic performer and OnlyFans model before landing her role in the hit US drama.
Asked for her take on the OnlyFans storyline last week, Chloe told Refinery29: “People have the weirdest ideas and like fantasies of sex work being so empowering and we’ve seen all these news stories where they’re like, oh, OnlyFans models makes $700 billion in a month, and everyone’s like, ‘whoa’. I literally just think that these things are a bit of smoke and mirrors, actually.”
Chloe claimed: “It’s really hard to say if it would give [Cassie] any power. Obviously, Cassie is extremely attractive, so it probably would lead to her making a lot of money. But it just feels crazy as fuck to see somebody living like Cassie turn to sex work. It’s like, ‘holy shit, that’s where we’re at in society?’.”
Euphoria creator Sam Levison previously shared his intention with the portrayal of OnlyFans work in his show before season three began.
Euphoria is available to stream in the UK on Now, Sky and HBO Max.
Politics
Polanski capitulating and apologising for police brutality is a critical mistake
Green Party leader Zack Polanski has let himself down and millions of Israel’s victims, those who advocate against genocide, and the millions in this country who need the reversal of decades of Thatcherism under successive blue and red governments. The situation is not yet irredeemable after he apologised for sharing a post condemning police brutality against an unconscious, immobilised and mentally unwell man. But it is very dangerous – both for the Greens electorally and for the nation that is looking to them to halt the drive into fascism.
Polanski capitulates
Polanski has capitulated to pressure from the Israel lobby and Israel’s enablers in government, who are busy turning the UK into a police state to protect the apartheid colony, and apologised for not ‘lowering the temperature’:
Full contact bullshit
Met Police commissioner Mark Rowley tried to excuse the brutal assault on an immobilised, sick man by quipping that policing is a “full contact and messy task”. This contemptible excuse makes it sound like they went in a bit hard in a rugby match. In reality, they had the Golders Green knife attacker immobilised, and stunned after being tased and kicked.
And then they kicked him in the head. Again and again and again. After he was helpless:
The law does not say it’s ok to risk kicking a suspect to death because you don’t like what he allegedly did. Polanski sharing an X post that condemned that brutality was not ‘raising the temperature’ of a ‘both sides’ debate. It was the least that right-thinking people expect from someone who is in a position to stand up for what’s right.
The lessons of abdication
Apologising is abdicating that responsibility, in order to try to appease people who won’t be appeased – because they want Polanski gone or neutralised and this is just one step toward that goal.
If there was any lesson from the Corbyn era of Labour, it’s that. Corbyn, terminally optimistic about finding common ground, thought he could meet the Israel lobby in the middle by apologising for ‘Labour antisemitism’. There was no Labour antisemitism. It was a scam. Now, after two and a half years of Israel’s genocide in Gaza, the ‘Green antisemitism’ scam is even more transparent.
The people pushing the Labour scam didn’t really care about Jewish feelings, or even about antisemitism. They wanted him gone and any concession short of his resignation was going to be pocketed and then more demanded, never taking yes for an answer. And demanding more still, until the end goal was achieved. If someone wants your head, offering them an apology is only strengthening them. And Corbyn – encouraged by his advisers – strengthened his attackers until they had what they really wanted – his political head.
The Brexit Syndrome
What makes it even more dangerous for Polanski – and therefore millions of the rest of us – is the Brexit syndrome.
In 2017, Corbyn was seen by millions of voters as the genuine article – which he was – and he presented a ‘Labour Brexit’ that he genuinely believed in as an alternative to the Tories’ racist recklessness. And he stunned the establishment and came within a few thousand votes of winning a general election.
But in 2019, after allowing saboteur Keir Starmer to drag him and the party into a nonsensical ‘second referendum’ position, conman Boris Johnson was able to fool voters that he was the anti-establishment candidate, while Corbyn was one more politician who wanted to ignore their 2016 vote. It was a deadly combination and a huge scam – but it worked, and what happened to Corbyn is now history.
Now the same UK-Zionist establishment is terrified of Polanski and his party’s electoral surge. That surge is, in large part, because Polanski comes across as the real thing. Voters are impressed that he has not danced to the tune of the Labour-Reform-Tory uniparty and its Israel lobby. They like his irreverence and his refusal to lie down and take the smears against him.
So they are trying to manoeuvre him into a position where he loses that authenticity and edge; where he sounds and acts like one more politician – and if ‘they’re all the same’, what’s the point in choosing? And capitulating to attacks for doing the right thing in the face of police brutality and police-state collusion is what ‘one more politician’ does.
Polanski, please don’t fall for it
Polanski seemed to show he had understood what was done to Corbyn when he apologised to Corbyn for being fooled by it. But the lesson hasn’t gone deep enough. If Polanski wants to continue his surge, thwart the fascists, and rescue the UK, he has to learn it fast.
No, not fast. Right the hell now. No more apologies. No more falling for the scam or even flirting with it. Back to being the version of himself that scoffs at, and then wipes the floor with, his smearers.
Featured image via the Canary
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Meryl Streep Turned Down Devil Wears Prada Until Bosses ‘Doubled’ Their Offer
Meryl Streep has admitted that she came close to turning down one of her most iconic roles in The Devil Wears Prada.
Appearing on The Today Show to promote the sequel, Meryl recalled how as soon as she read the script for the original film, she knew immediately that it was “going to be a hit”, so seized an opportunity.
“I thought, it’s a great script. And they called me up and made an offer and I said, ‘No, I’m not gonna do it’,” Meryl recalled.
She continued: “I knew it was gonna be a hit, and I wanted to see if I doubled my ask, and they went right away and said, ‘Sure’.”

Meryl went on to share that it took her a long time to “understand that I could do that” and that “you can ask for what you want”.
“I was sure it would be a hit, and they needed me,” she added. “I wanted it, but if they didn’t want to do that, I was OK because I’m old. I was ready to retire.
“But that was a lesson. That was a great way to start, so I was in a good mood when we began.”
Alongside the returning faces from the original Devil Wears Prada film, Meryl is joined in the new follow-up by the likes of Bridgerton’s Simone Ashley, Justin Theroux, Lucy Liu and a wave of celebrity cameos.
The Devil Wears Prada 2 arrives in cinemas on Friday 1 May. Check out HuffPost UK’s review of the film here.
Correction: A previous version of this article erroneously stated that Meryl Streep initially turned down The Devil Wears Prada 2, rather than the first film. This has now been corrected.
Politics
Ted, Gone Fishing Dog, Dies As Bob Mortimer And Paul Whitehouse Pay Tribute
Comedians Bob Mortimer and Paul Whitehouse have paid tribute to the canine companion with whom they shared the screen numerous times over the years in their hit series Gone Fishing.
The pair first encountered the Patterdale Terrier mix Ted in season three of Gone Fishing, back in 2020, and he went on to make numerous on-screen appearances alongside the presenters.
On Monday morning, the BBC announced that Ted had died, with both of Gone Fishing’s hosts sharing touching tributes.
“So very, very sad,” Bob lamented, remembering “lovely Ted” as “the best companion and the greatest little chum”.
“Going to miss him so much.,. and away boss,” he added.
Paul agreed: “He wasn’t a dog, he was a species all of his own. He’s gone to the great briefcase emporium in the sky. We will really miss you mate.”

Louise Meager/BBC/Owl Power/Louise Meager
After his first introduction in 2020, Ted became a fan-favourite with Gone Fishing viewers, and in the 2025 Christmas special, he was awarded an honorary Lifetime Achievement Award.
The BBC explained that when Ted was around six months old, he was rescued from a dog’s home and went to live with Gone Fishing’s executive producer Lisa Clark, who was his owner until he died.
In her own statement, the producer: “Ted was a much-loved family pet as well as a treasured companion to Paul and Bob on Gone Fishing. He took fame in his little stride and loved nothing better than messing around on the riverbanks, nicking jammy dodgers from Bob and bait from Paul.
“He will be sorely missed both at home and on screen. We’ll never forget him. He is survived at home by Bo the Briard.”
Ted is due to make one final posthumous appearance in Gone Fishing in its upcoming ninth season, which is expected to air on the BBC later this year.
Politics
Beef Creator Says He’s ‘Perfectly Happy’ If Season 3 Doesn’t Happen
Beef creator Lee Jung Sin is weighing in about what’s next for the award-winning show.
After Beef’s inaugural series proved to be a huge success with both critics and viewers, Netflix made the decision to turn it into an anthology series, focussing on a different set of characters – and, indeed, a different central feud – each time.
Season two premiered earlier this month, with Lee previously sharing his hopes to conclude after a third run.
However, in a candid new interview with The Hollywood Reporter, the three-time Emmy winner made it clear that he’s at peace if Beef were to come to an end without a third iteration.
“I’d be perfectly happy if this were the last season,” he claimed. “I think it’s really emotionally taxing, the making of it and the rollout of it.”
He continued: “I feel like I’ve said it through two seasons of Beef. But I do remain open if the universe shows me something in the future and it feels right for Beef. I’m definitely open.”
The first season of Beef featured Ali Wong and Steven Yeun as a pair of strangers who become engrossed in each other’s lives when a chance road range encounter bubbles over into an all-encompassing vendetta.
In the follow-up, the stakes were raised even higher, with Carey Mulligan, Oscar Isaac, Charles Melton and Cailee Spaeny playing two feuding couples on opposing sides of a generational and class divide that leads both pairs to ask big questions about their partners, and themselves.

Back in 2023, while promoting season one, Lee told Rolling Stone that he’d always envisaged Beef telling three separate stories.
“I have one really big general idea that I can’t really say yet, but I have three seasons mapped out in my head currently,” he claimed.
Seasons one and two of Beef are now streaming on Netflix.
Politics
Damson Madder Just Launched Homeware That Will Transport You To Rural Italy
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Let’s take a moment to wish we could spend the entire summer stashed away at our grandma’s houses. A season marked by delicious food served on delicate platters, by a woman with exquisite taste.
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If you’re planning on getting your hosting on in the heat, Damson Madder has just released its spring lifestyle collection, which takes a heavy dose of inspiration from your grandma’s kitchen and dining table.
From tomato-printed serving platters, to frilly aprons, it has everything you need to serve lashings of saucy salads soaked up by piles of perfectly crunchy bread to your loved ones.
Sound like a life you want to be living? Here are our shopping writer’s favourite picks from the collection.
Politics
Is The ‘Special Relationship’ Between The UK And The US Dead?
Donald Trump has never been bothered about maintaining tradition.
Despite decades of work on both sides of the Atlantic to build and maintain the so-called “special relationship” between the UK and America, the president’s second term has put it under almost unbearable strain.
Prime minister Keir Starmer initially bent over backwards to woo Trump in a bid to secure a trade deal and keep the maverick Republic on side.
But then Trump began threatening to annex Greenland, undermining Nato, withdrawing support for Ukraine, tearing into British military capabilities and U-turning over the Chagos deal.
The scandal around Starmer’s decision to appoint, then sack, Peter Mandelson – a friend of convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein – as the UK’s ambassador to Washington, did not help either.
But the final straw came when Trump, together with Israel, bombed Iran.
Starmer rejected the US’s requests for UK support, leading to fresh verbal abuse from the president.
Trump said Starmer was “no Winston Churchill” and compared him to Neville Chamberlain who championed the Nazi appeasement policy before World War 2.
He’s even threatened to withdraw the US recognition of the Falkland Islands as a British overseas territory.
It’s unsurprising, then, that the UK’s ambassador to the US Christian Turner suggested the relationship between the two countries was not that special after all.
In comments dating back to February, leaked to the Financial Times this week, he said while there is a “deep history and affinity” there, the special relationship phrase was “nostalgic, it’s quite backwards-looking, and it has a lot of baggage to it”.
He’s not alone in this thinking. Less than half of Americans (43%) polled by Public First for Channel 4 News agree that the UK is one of their greatest allies.

So why do we still call it a “special relationship”?
The phrase has been bandied around British and American politics for years.
First coined by Winston Churchill in 1944 after America joined the Allies’ efforts to defeat the Nazis during the Second World War, the term has played a pivotal role in trans-Atlantic politics for decades.
Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan were seen as ideological soulmates in the 1980s, while Tony Blair and George W Bush took the “special relationship” to new heights following the 9/11 terror attacks and Iraq war.
Over the decades, the lower rungs of government started working together on intelligence, defence and security too, encouraged by the bond between leaders.
That’s not to say it’s always been plain-sailing. Lyndon Johnson and Harold Wilson, for example, repeatedly clashed over the Vietnam war.
But Trump’s recent behaviour threatens to take the “special relationship” to new lows.
So Starmer deployed one of the UK’s most powerful diplomatic weapons this week: the royal family.
King Charles III and his wife Queen Camilla headed to the US for a state visit in a bid to try to amend the fraying bond between Downing Street and the White House.
The King definitely won over his American audience with an extraordinary speech to US Congress, and a later one at the State dinner, where he made a series of tacit digs towards Trump.
He stressed the need for “executive power” to be kept in check and subtly reminded Trump that Nato allies jumped to America’s defence after the 9/11 terror attacks.
Charles even gave the president a golden bell from a World War 2 submarine, HMS Trump (the jokes write themselves).

His trip marks a significant moment in the international relationship, especially as no British monarch has addressed Congress since 1991.
Trump, known for his infatuation with the royal family and their grandeur, told Charles this week: “Americans have no closer friends than the British.”
He previously told the BBC that Charles could “absolutely” fix the fraying relationship.
But any hopes that this Trump vs Starmer episode was just a blip seem to be short-lived.
Just after the monarch left Washington, Trump tried to create a fresh diplomatic row with Starmer by claiming the King agrees with him on Iran – though the Palace is yet to confirm or deny that allegation.
Considering the monarch is meant to be completely apolitical representative for Britain, their private conversations are highly confidential.
This revelation was a huge breach of diplomatic protocol.
The move suggests not only does Trump not grasp the nature of British politics, but he is clearly not be willing to “forgive” Starmer for not joining in with the Iran war.
Further tensions could come down the line, too, with so many of their initial grievances yet to be resolved.
The Ukraine war and the conflict in the Middle East rumble on, while the Trump adminstration could renew its ambitions to seize Greenland.
The UK-US trade deal still hangs in the balance too, as does the agreement to hand over the Chagos islands to Mauritius.
Former Nato secretary-general and UK defence secretary, Lord Robertson, told Chatham House pointed out that the States no longer tells Britain about its plans ahead of time.
Trump did not warn Downing Street about his air strikes on Iran, his plan to implement widespread tariffs or his threats to launch military aggression against Greenland.
Robertson said this demonstrated a “growing divergence” between the countries.
“All the while Washington’s diplomatic tone towards the United Kingdom has reached a historic low point,” he added.
While, acknowledging that the Trump administration does not represent the whole of the US, he warned that America is expected to become “more transactional” in its foreign policy – including in its approach to the UK.
British ministers have repeatedly claimed that frictions at the top were not too unusual, and that the lower levels of government would still continue to operate in sync.
But is that cooperation at threat if the leaders are at loggerheads?
Listen to this week’s Commons People as we unpack the origins of the “special relationship”, why it looks more precarious than ever and what that trans-Atlantic bond could look like in the future.
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
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