Politics
Israel and the US’ illegal war on Iran must be opposed
UN experts have slammed the illegal US-Israel war on Iran. And as the UK government fails to reflect public opposition to British involvement, one newspaper is putting others to shame with its firm and honest coverage.
US-Israel war is “entirely illegal” and the media must stop covering for it
Most establishment media outlets have either been putting out war propaganda or sidestepping key context like:
The National, however, has been representing the public interest and amplifying public opposition. And it has put this sentiment front and centre:
Tomorrow’s front page 📰
Poll finds majority oppose use of Scottish airports by US to wage war on Iran pic.twitter.com/W1JEWgnX14
— The National (@ScotNational) March 12, 2026
And they’re right to highlight this. Because although the UK and other Western governments have tried to get us to ignore international experts since 2023, the UN has been clear that the US-Israeli aggression against Iran and Lebanon is “entirely illegal”, insisting that:
U.S. and Israel should stop waging and expanding wars, and considering themselves as above international legality.
I have issued this press release with fellow UN experts about the aggression against Iran and Lebanon and the need to end the impunity of powerful States that consider themselves above the law. https://t.co/9pYqyWaWAU
— UN Special Rapporteur on the right to housing (@adequatehousing) March 12, 2026
The experts also called for an end to the “total impunity” the US and Israel have had. And they’ve said that no behaviour within Iran justifies waging a potentially “catastrophic” war of aggression:
Independent human rights experts condemn the ongoing military assaults on Iran & Lebanon as “flagrant violations of international law.”
“The conflict risks engulfing the wider region in catastrophic armed violence, threatens to set yet another precedent of total impunity.” 1/3 pic.twitter.com/tWZchA0qZw
— United Nations Geneva (@UNGeneva) March 13, 2026
“The orders issued to the inhabitants of South Lebanon & southern Beirut to leave their homes are blatantly illegal. Combined with heavy and indiscriminate bombardment, these orders have resulted in the forced displacement of at least 700,000 people.” 3/3https://t.co/ANOMFnMtzL
— United Nations Geneva (@UNGeneva) March 13, 2026
Amnesty International, meanwhile, has asserted that:
All states, including the UK, must refrain from any conduct that could fuel further violations.
States have a clear obligation not to aid or assist internationally wrongful acts and a duty to bring such breaches to an end.
International humanitarian law is clear: military actions must not cause disproportionate harm to civilians or damage civilian objects.
The protection of civilians must be at the centre of all military decisions.
Attacks on energy infrastructure risk devastating civilian… pic.twitter.com/IpOCJ7KA6g
— Amnesty UK (@AmnestyUK) March 12, 2026
The UK government, however, continues to ignore its duties in service of the US and Israel:
This is what British complicity in an illegal war looks like. https://t.co/avM4sdZuZ2
— Jeremy Corbyn (@jeremycorbyn) March 12, 2026
It is absolutely possible to take a stand for international law and peace, as Spain has shown. And to push our own government to act in this way, we desperately need more media outlets like the National which are willing to represent the public interest rather than the interests of US-Israeli war criminals.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
South East Water greed shines through
South East Water has said it cannot provide water for new homes planned in the area it’s supposed to provide for. Yet in 2024 it wasted more than 100 million litres of water every day through its creaking pipes.
South East Water put profit over infrastructure
The water company has spent significantly more servicing its debt and paying shareholder dividends than it has on upgrading infrastructure. In the two years to March 2022, South East Water paid £156 million in dividends and £72.8 million in interest. Yet it spent just £179.8 million on infrastructure improvements.
This highlights that water privatisation is the key issue preventing new homes from having water in the area.
If the water company were nationalised, it could be funded by government issued, debt-free flat currency with increased taxes on extreme wealth to control any inflation from the central money creation. Even if the infrastructure were funded by the current system of government borrowing, that has a lower interest rate than the private sector takes on. So debt would be zero or lower under public ownership – offering tens of millions in funding for infrastructure improvements in those two years. And the £156 million in dividends could also have gone on infrastructure improvements.
“Cannot accommodate” housing
A spokesperson for South East Water said:
From our review of the latest housing forecast figures, we have identified that we cannot accommodate additional growth beyond what was assumed in our Water Resources Management Plan 2024 in areas where we do not have a supply-demand surplus… Specifically, in the Tonbridge and Malling area, where we currently lack available headroom in our supplies, we would be unable to accommodate any growth exceeding our 2024 forecast assumptions throughout the entire planning period.
Perhaps there would be enough water supply if the company had invested in infrastructure such as pipe maintenance and reservoirs.
Shambles
On top of being unable to provide new homes with water, the company left 30,000 homes without water in Kent and Sussex in January. And that’s not the first time. In 2023, South East Water left thousands of homes without running water.
It’s clear the profit motive is incompatible with the essential of water.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Trump Aide’s Bizarre Theory Why Allies Should Help The US Over Iran
Donald Trump’s press secretary has claimed other countries should help the US in the Iran crisis because they are “benefitting greatly” from the war.
The US president urged international partners including the UK to help keep the Strait of Hormuz open by sending warships to the region at the weekend amid Iranian attempts to effectively close the major oil shipping lane.
But, when allies resisted Trump’s pleas, the president sent a chilling warning about the future of Nato – and vowed to “remember” which countries did not assist him.
A reporter asked Trump’s press secretary Karoline Leavitt why nations who were not informed of the US-Israel strikes on Iran in advance should risk their own militaries to help the war.
She replied: “These other countries are benefitting greatly from the United States military taking out the threat of Iran.”
The Iran war has actually sent crude Brent oil prices sky high, exceeding $100 a barrel as Tehran disrupts oil exports from the Gulf region.
This has sparked wider fears about the cost of living as the global markets express great unease about the current conflict.
But Leavitt said: “The rogue Iranian regime has long not just posed a threat to the United States of America but of course to our Gulf and Arab partners in the region.
“As you see, Iran has struck more than 300 civilian targets in the Gulf region.”
Tehran has escalated its aggression against the US military bases in the Middle East with widespread drone and missile attacks.
Leavitt added: “Their ballistic missile capability that the United States military is currently wiping out was a direct and imminent threat to our European allies as well as our bases in the region, which is why President Trump took this action in the first place.”
The White House’s reasoning behind its strikes against Iran have varied significantly, from claims about limiting Tehran’s abilities to make nuclear weapons to pushing for regime change.
Senior figures in the British government have also been unable to explain exactly why the US decided to bomb Iran.
Leavitt also said: “This is something that not the United States but the entire western world has agreed with for many many years, so I think the president is absolutely right to call on these countries to do more, to work with the United States to strengthen the Strait of Hormuz so we can stop this terrorist regime from restricting the free flow of energy.
“The fact they are doing so just underscores why President Trump needed to take this action in the first place.”
Politics
River Island closing stores is an opportunity
In 2026, High Street chains are continuing to close due to a lack of consumer spending power and the move to online shopping. River Island plans to shut 32 of its stores this year. And there were 30% less High Street stores in 2024 then there were in 2014.
But maybe that’s a good thing? Arts venues, independent outlets and community spaces could replace Big Brand consumerism, turning the centrepiece of towns from dull shopping centres to vibrant creative development.
The number of grassroots music venues (GMVs) is still shrinking, but they are making a comeback – unlike High Street chains. That perhaps shows an appetite for the move away from such consumerism and towards creative nourishment. In 2025, the number of GMVs shrank by just nine, the lowest since 2018. Half of GMVs make no profit.
Questionable losses
The thing is, charity shops and stores like Poundland are also closing. Low income people rely on these places for basic goods. While the existence of charity is a sign the system isn’t working, it’s better than nothing. Cancer Research UK plans to close around 90 of its shops by May. At the same time, the government can always take a stake in such necessary outfits, lowering prices and reducing inflation. It can also provide more funding towards cancer research, a disease responsible for over a quarter of all deaths in the UK.
Your town, your choice?
The direction of the town centre could be delivered through people’s engagement with the city council, making each town different rather than endless boring chains in every part of the UK. While Neighbourhood Planning is already a thing, big capital often takes priority under the current system. Another issue is people are too busy working long hours on low salaries.
We can do better than our town centres consisting of people working retail hours on the minimum wage in grey, lifeless buildings. They should be places of excitement, varied education and community, but spaces that still recognise the individual. Pubs and cafes, definitely – but also arts venues, independent stores, and grassroots spaces.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Quakers take silent protest from Scotland Yard to parliament
On Tuesday 17 March, Quakers will hold a silent Meeting for Worship outside New Scotland Yard. They’ll then join a mass lobby of parliament to defend the right to protest.
The meeting follows two police raids on Quaker premises. On 5 March the Metropolitan Police raided Westminster Meeting House, arresting 15 people attending a nonviolent direct action training session.
No one has yet been charged. No one from the first raid, less than a year ago, was ever charged either.
The Quaker meeting takes place at 11.45am at the southern end of Embankment Gardens, with supporters invited to meet from 11.15am. There will also be a livestream.
Quakers – 350 years of resisting oppression
Caroline Nursey, clerk of Westminster Quaker Meeting, said:
Quakers have been accustomed to oppression by the state for over 350 years. We will continue to hire space to explicitly nonviolent groups, just as we always have.
After the meeting for worship, participants will join a mass lobby of parliament from 2pm. Amnesty International UK, Greenpeace, Liberty, the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Quakers in Britain, and major trade unions have organised the lobby.
At meetings in Westminster Hall, they will urge MPs to reject the “cumulative disruption” clause in the Crime and Policing Bill. This clause is dangerously broad and undermines human rights. In particular it threatens the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression.
Though its primary target is Palestine marches, it could sweep up campaigns on peace, climate justice, and much more.
Police could ban an anti-racist march from Whitehall because of a previous farmers’ protest. Or they could restrict a pride march because a far-right demonstration recently happened in the same town.
The Crime and Policing Bill is part of a broader trend in the UK of cracking down on those who disagree with the government.
The UK is already the only western European country which Civicus has rated “obstructed” for civic freedoms. And a United Nations Special Rapporteur has criticised the UK’s approach.
Gina Romero, UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights to Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and of Association, will attend the mass lobby and hold separate meetings with MPs.
Find full details of the Quakers’ event here.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Bob Vylan and the rise of ayatollah chic
We’ve all been there. You rock up to speak at a demonstration, intending to lend your voice to the oppressed and the downtrodden, only to realise you are surrounded by Islamists celebrating an anti-Semitic tyrant, who oppressed and butchered his own people. Welcome to the world of Bob Vylan, the punk-rapping affront to our eardrums and basic moral decency.
Bob Vylan frontman Bobby Vylan – real name Pascal Robinson-Foster – was one of the star speakers at the Al-Quds Day demonstration in London on Sunday. Because of course he was. What ‘progressive’ pin-up wouldn’t want to be seen at this despicable annual shindig with a well-earned reputation for descending into a carnival of Islamist apologism and open Jew hatred?
You’d think anyone with a truly anti-racist bone in their body would give Al-Quds Day a swerve. It all began in 1979, when the Islamic Republic of Iran’s freshly installed Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khomeini, declared the final Friday of Ramadan to be a day for Muslims worldwide to stand in ‘solidarity’ with the Palestinians. Unsurprisingly, the keenest supporters of the late Khomeini and the anti-Semitic terror state he founded have been taking it as an opportunity to air blood libels and support for Islamist terror groups ever since.
Don’t believe me? Sunday’s festivities in London were downgraded to a static protest after the Metropolitan Police requested the traditional full march be banned. This came after a memo circulated in the Home Office, warning that Al-Quds Day is a magnet for ‘racial hatred’, ‘anti-Semitic rhetoric’ and ‘open displays of support for proscribed groups’. Jeremy Corbyn, the world’s unluckiest anti-racist, was once snapped speaking from the platform in front of the flag of Hezbollah – the Jew-killing jihadi army set up in Lebanon by the Islamic Republic in the 1980s and banned under British law.
Despite its diminished presence this year, the Al-Quds attendees made up for in vim what they lacked in plain old numbers. One was arrested for showing support for a proscribed group, another for dangerous driving, a third for threatening and abusive behaviour. spiked’s Brendan O’Neill was surrounded by a mob and had to be escorted away by police for his own safety, after he questioned a woman about her anti-Semitic placard.
Any pretence that this was all about the benighted people of Palestine was dropped this year, replaced by tear-drenched mourning for the recently despatched Ayatollah Khamenei, Khomeini’s successor as Supreme Leader, who was assassinated in the opening salvos of the US and Israel’s war with the Islamic Republic. One speaker – reportedly from the Islamic Human Rights Commission, a troll of a name given this organisation’s well-documented links to the brutal, rights-crushing mullahs – called Khamenei a ‘great martyr’. This is the same Khamenei who is believed to have killed as many as 30,000 of his own people this year because they dared to demand their freedom, and who threw money and resources at every anti-Semitic militia going.
Among all this was that prick Bobby, addressing the crowd in front of a banner depicting Khamenei and claiming this murderous theocrat was on ‘the right side of history’. Bobby finished his speech with a reprisal of his favourite chant, ‘Death, death to the IDF’. It was this blood-curdling cry to kill the soldiers of the Jewish State – the army almost all Israelis are required to serve in, charged with protecting Jews from the genocidal, Tehran-backed forces on Israel’s borders – that first sealed Bob Vylan’s infamy when they debuted it to thousands during their Glastonbury set last summer. (Avon and Somerset Police eventually concluded the chant didn’t meet the criminal threshold. The Met are currently investigating Robinson-Foster once again.)
Bobby luxuriated in the Glasto backlash. He didn’t so much refute claims the chant was anti-Semitic as casually brush them off. He even told a credulous Louis Theroux on a podcast that the only reason he chose the word ‘death’ is because it rhymed with ‘IDF’. He was only speaking up for the innocents of Gaza, of course. Is anyone seriously still buying this? Here’s an idea: if you don’t want to be accused of being anti-Semitic and calling for the murder of Jews, maybe don’t address a demonstration glorifying an anti-Semite who commissioned the murder of Jews. It’s not hard.
The Bob Vylan debacle has shown the Israelophobes are truly beyond shaming. Or saving. They clearly get off on the notoriety, on the shudders they send through our already embattled Jewish communities, on the frisson of the Islamist company they now keep. It’s been tempting to call the ‘progressive’ wing of the ‘pro-Palestine’ movement useful idiots, marching in lockstep with 7th-century nostalgists who would happily hang them from a lamppost. But they clearly know exactly what they’re doing. They just don’t care. They are lost to this bigotry, to this cocky nihilism, to this barbarian chic.
I don’t want them censored, or locked up. It only fuels their grift. But I do want everyone to stop pretending that this is anything other than old poison in a new bottle.
Tom Slater is editor of spiked. Follow him on X: @Tom_Slater_.
Politics
How Hard Should You Push Yourself In Interval Runs?
If you’re a runner, it can feel tempting to go above your limits to improve your pace, duration, VO2 max, and other metrics.
But lots of research suggests that going easy is beneficial. Elite athletes only spend about 20% of their time intensively training, for instance – they’re mostly “zone 2” running.
You might think the exception to that is the speedy part of interval training, which sees runners switch between jogs and sprints.
But even in those, researchers think we should only be giving it a seven out of 10 effort.
Why might “7/10 effort” help runners?
Researchers wanted to see how running at different intensities affected people’s VO2 max, or their ability to use oxygen efficiently, and their heart rates.
They asked participants to run three times. Each run was three minutes each, with two minutes’ rest in between.
Runners were asked to run at three different levels of perceived intensity: 6/10, 7/10, and 8/10 effort. That was measured by how hard the participants felt they were pushing themselves in their run (they were told to keep the level of difficulty the same throughout).
The longer you spend close to your maximum VO2 and heart rate during exercise, the more your aerobic capacity will increase.
The scientists noticed that people who ran with 6/10 effort in interval training spent less time at 90% of their VO2 max and heart rate levels.
But for those giving it a 7/10 or 8/10, the results were about the same; they spent roughly as long in the 0% or higher zone. And training at 7/10 provided less “ventilatory stress,” or difficulty breathing, than doing so at 8/10.
In other words, 6/10 seemed not to benefit interval runners as much as running at a 7/10 or 8/10. Both of those had the same potential to improve participants’ fitness, but the harder workout was more stressful with no added benefits.
Does the 7/10 rule always help runners?
Probably not. Different runs, and even walks, have their own benefits for runners; this test was only done on interval runs, which involve shorter sprints.
The runners only spent nine minutes in total at this higher level of effort, too. Training your aerobic capacity is helpful for more efficient running, but running slowly and long can train your endurance.
But for short bursts of interval training, the study suggests that forcing yourself too far beyond your limit might not necessarily be better. And as anyone who’s struggled with exhausting sprints will know, any mercy is welcome.
Politics
Lebanon faces brutal attacks from Israel
Israel’s assault on Lebanon saw the settler-colonial state hit 30 locations across the country’s south and in the Beqaa valley. Israel said on 16 March ‘limited’ ground operations were underway.
In theory, Hezbollah breached a US-brokered ‘ceasefire’ with Israel which had held since their last war in 2024. In practice, the US had given Israel carte blanche to strike Lebanon ever since. Israel has done so constantly since the deal was struck.
You can read about the secretive Israel-US ‘side letter’ pact here. And our extensive coverage of Israel’s ceasefire breaches here.
Lebanon hammered
Journalist Courtney Bonneau reported on 15 March:
🔴Summary of Israeli attacks on Lebanese territory on 15/3/2026:
🟠Airstrikes:
🔅South:
Zebdine
Hanin
Yatir
Toul
Haniyah
Mifdoun
Qalila
Taybeh
Wadi al-Hujair
Majdal Selm
Touline
Nabatieh al-Fouqa
Khiam
Sinai
Ali al-Taher
Naqoura
Jabour
Aitat
Sharqiyah
Adchit Nabatieh
Kfar… https://t.co/3z9cxWuq55— courtneybonneauimages (@cbonneauimages) March 16, 2026
Drop Site News said Israel used a mix of airstrikes, drones, and artillery. On 16 March, Bonneau and her cameraman showed fighting between the Israeli and resistance forces underway – alleging Israel was using chemical weapons:
Americans, your tax dollars are paying for illegal chemical warfare.
Cameraman: @aliezzedine7 pic.twitter.com/E25Pb6VT7C
— courtneybonneauimages (@cbonneauimages) March 16, 2026
Smoke was visible over the town of Khaim, roughly 6km north the the Israeli border.
Intense fighting now in Khiam, Lebanon pic.twitter.com/dHqlBQP7vy
— courtneybonneauimages (@cbonneauimages) March 16, 2026
Analysts told Al Jazeera on 16 March that Israel was using military occupation as a tool to enforce potential ceasefire terms:
By holding Lebanese territory, Israel is forcing Lebanon to negotiate over its sovereignty, with a question mark over whether Israeli troops will eventually withdraw or if currently occupied areas will be permanently transformed into an unpopulated buffer zone.
The Guardian’s Will Cristou reported Israel had killed three first responders on 16 March, bringing the total to 35 in the last two weeks:
An Israeli strike killed 3 first responders in Kafr Seer, south Lebanon this morning.
At least 35 medical workers have been killed by Israel in Lebanon in under two weeks. pic.twitter.com/YVO6bRiW37
— Will Christou (@will_christou) March 16, 2026
Death and defiance in the south
Sky News reported that mourners in the south have defied Israeli evacuation orders to bury their dead. And France 24 reported that Israel was still hitting densely populated areas of the capital Beirut with airstrikes:
On 12 March Israel bombed the tents of displaced people who’d fled rom the south to Beirut. One observer described the scenes as:
An outrageous war crime reminiscent of the massacres carried out in Gaza.
Israel also bombed a university, killing two academics:
BREAKING:
Israel just bombed the Lebanese National Public University in Beirut.
They murdered the Director of the Faculty of Science, Dr. Hussein Bazzi, and Dr. Murtada Srour.
They are not just killing people — they are erasing knowledge and attacking the future of Lebanon. pic.twitter.com/OoSSow5zJ3
— sarah (@sahouraxo) March 12, 2026
Reuters reported on 15 March:
Israel and Lebanon are expected to hold talks in the coming days aimed at securing a durable ceasefire that would see Hezbollah disarmed, two Israeli officials said on Sunday, though the timing and terms have yet to be agreed.
The outlet said three sources had claimed:
Beirut is forming a delegation for talks but no date has been set. Lebanon needed clarity on whether Israel would abide by President Joseph Aoun’s first point — a demand for a full ceasefire to allow negotiations to take place.
Israel’s aggression is taking place in the context of its ongoing genocide in Gaza and now a regional war with Iran. Its ambitions in Lebanon are deeply linked with the Greater Israel project, an ethnonationalist fever-dream which subjects the region and its indigenous people to a decades-old cycle of war, occupation and extermination.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
DWP make flashy announcement with little substance
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has announced that employers will receive £3,000 for every 18-24-year-old they employ. They will also give small and medium businesses £2,000 for every apprentice they take on.
But, as usual, the approach they’re taking is totally wrong.
DWP pushing kids into shit jobs
Pat McFadden, the Secretary of State for the DWP, has announced the Youth Jobs Grant. This will work alongside the Youth Guarantee. As the Canary has reported, this will push young people into low paid and low skilled work, regardless of whether they’re well enough to work.
These measures will give life-changing opportunities to young people and significantly reverse the increase we inherited in those not in education, employment or training.
We are focusing funding where it’s needed most and giving employers the flexibility and support they’ve asked for.
The press release, bizarrely, includes a staggering thirty-two quotes ranging everyone from the prime minister to the CEO of B&M.
This gives us a flavour of the sort of employers who will be involved in the scheme. It includes Lloyds Banking Group, Severn Trent, B&M and Amazon. As the Canary previously reported, McFadden’s first Youth Guarantee jobs fair was packed to the teeth with military and weapons companies.
The grant is being touted as incredible reforms, but nobody is looking at the big picture. Yes, it’s great that more jobs are being created for young people, but why do big conglomerates like Amazon need a financial incentive to employ someone? While no doubt some of them will be good jobs, it’s looking more like it will just trap working-class kids in crap jobs with no way out.
Apprenticeships instead of fully paid work
The DWP has also announced £2.5 billion in funding for training and apprenticeships. But then you have to look at what the apprenticeships are. As part of the scheme, the DWP will introduce short apprentice units in:
- AI Leadership – developing AI strategy
- Electric vehicle charging point installation and maintenance
- Electrical fitting and assembly
- Mechanical fitting and assembly
- Permanent modular building assembly
- Solar PV installation and maintenance welding
While some of these are useful and practical, a lot seem like babysitting the robots, don’t they?
The department is also ‘streamlining’ many ‘apprenticeship standards’. But again, looking at the list, these are low-skilled jobs for which people will be paid even less than usual. The jobs involve ‘cleaning hygiene operative’, which lets be honest, is a cleaning job. And “custody and detention professional’, which is a prison officer.
What support for work?
While this grand announcement was made, there were, of course, no specifics published. So we don’t know who will be able to apply for the grants and how many they will be able to claim. It goes without saying that this will be wide open to abuse from greedy companies. It’s ironic that the DWP are going to seemingly allow this after accusing employers of abusing the Access to Work scheme just last week.
With each announcement, it becomes clearer just how little the DWP actually cares about supporting young people into work. It’s time the DWP stopped pretending and instead owned up to the fact that they only care about how much money they can exploit from people.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Polanski speaks to Prof Keon West on psychology of racism
Academic and author Professor Keon West is a social scientist and expert in the psychology of racism – and, he appeared on Green party leader Zack Polanski’s Bold Politics podcast to discuss the UK’s burgeoning racism problem.
Professor West was asked why the phrase “unconscious bias” has become so common.
West’s answer will challenge many. West told Polanski that the phrase is a way of spreading and universalising guilt and responsibility as a way of avoiding taking responsibility ourselves for our own attitudes. And he said that it is helping racists excuse their racism while simultaneously spouting and touting it:
It’s incredibly comfortable. In the UK it’s so hard to have a conversation about racism or sexism.
You won’t hear people say: I did that and that was a racist thing to do. You can go on TV and say you hate seeing a bunch of black and brown faces – like Reform UK’s Sarah Pochin – and say you cannot be racist, it must be a misunderstanding.
Similarly men will say all sorts of things but not say that was sexist.
Instead, West explained how added buffers make those making racist or sexist statements feel better:
I think that it is considered so impolite and so hurtful, to own up to that bias, that we sneak in a word in front of that, ‘unconscious’, and suddenly we don’t have to feel quite so bad. And everybody has it.That focus that makes us calmer about the bias, that’s really for the benefit of the people being biased. It’s not at all for the benefit of the people on the receiving end of the bias.
Featured image via X
Politics
Farage Mocked As He Starts English Tourism Week In Clacton
Nigel Farage has incurred the internet’s wrath after promoting English Tourism Week with a trip to his own constituency of Clacton-on-Sea.
The Reform UK leader posted a video on Sunday evening showing hims out and about in the coastal town, mingling with his constituents.
In the short clip, the politician says: “This week marks English Tourism Week, and where better to come for a day out, rain or shine, than Clacton.
“Miles of sandy beaches and this six and a half acres, the biggest pier space in the whole of Europe. Things for people of all ages to do.
“I promise you, come to Clacton, it’s a great day out – and there’s lots of hospitality, too.”
Since winning his seat at the eighth attempt at the last election, Farage has been accused of rarely visiting his constituency, although he insists he spends a “couple of days a week” there.
Farage’s clip may prove that he is definitely visiting his own town – but doing so to promote tourism seemed to take the biscuit among many of his online critics…
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