Politics
Israel’s Moataz Tower attack targeted Gaza wedding, murders/maims woman, children
As Skwawkbox reported last night, the Israeli occupation bombed the Moataz Tower, one of its few surviving tall buildings in Gaza. But more details have emerged of the cynical, murderous attack — which targeted a wedding.
Israel followed its usual pattern of claiming it had aimed to kill a “senior Hamas” figure. The UK ‘mainstream’ media, if they bother reporting the atrocity at all, will parrot this line as though it’s not a war crime to slaughter hundreds of civilians to kill one man.
Gaza — life and limb
But they will not report the true aftermath of the crime, which robbed the wedding party and their guests of life and limb. Survivors fled the wrecked building, recounting the horrors of the attack as they came:
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Palestinian journalist Wadih Abu Al-Saud reported from the scene as rescuers spoke of severed limbs and heads, and of women and children trapped as the building burned:
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Israel perpetrated the attack on Nakba Day, when Palestinians remember the violent, colonial seizure of their lands and homes. The terror state remains able to function with impunity, in large part, because of the collaboration of western media and politicians.
Featured image via Omar Ashtawy/Getty Images
By Skwawkbox
Politics
What is a General? | Iain Dale
On Thursday, my new book, THE GENERALS was published. It seeks to give the reader an introduction to 69 of the most significan Generals in world history, through the eyes of 69 different authors. As a taster, I thought I would reproduce my introduction to the book here.
If you like what you see, do feel free to order a signed copy from Politicos.co.uk HERE, or an unsigned one from Amazon HERE. It’s also available as an Audiobook HERE.
The one theme that runs through the history of virtually every country in the world, right from the dawn of time, is war. Military history continues to be one of the most thriving genres in our non-fiction literature. Military strategy continues to fascinate, and yet for many it remains a mystery.
This aim of this book is to introduce 69 of the most important practitioners of the art of ‘generalship’ to an audience which may be familiar with many of the names and may know something of the wars and conflicts they took part in, but that is extent of their knowledge.
We may think we know what the world ‘General’ means and what a General actually does. But do we really?
The word General is defined in the Cambridge English Dictionary as
Noun: “an officer of very high rank, especially in the army”
This seems overly simplistic. Clearly it denotes the title and rank of a senior army officer, usually one who commands units larger than a regiment. However, a General can also be a staff officer who does not command troops but who plans their operations in the field.
Wikipedia tells us “that in the United States the rank of general ranks above a three-star lieutant-general and below the special wartime five-star ranks of General of the Army or General of the Air Force. Since the higher ranks of General of the Army and General of the Air Force have been reserved for significant wartime use only (in modern times were recreated for World War II), the rank of general is usually the highest general officer rank in the modern forces.”
Since General Bradley died in 1981 the United States hasn’t appointed any five-star generals.
Different countries’ armies have different ranks below General, and it is rare for someone to reach the rank with less than twenty years’ service. In the United States and the United Kingdom you must become a brigadier general then a major general then a lieutenant general before reaching the ultimate rank.
In the British Army the supreme rank is that of Field Marshal. The last Field Marshall to be appointed to the rank was Sir Michael Walker in 2003.
This is the eleventh book in the series, which started when I was at Biteback with THE HONOURABLE LADIES, two volumes of biographies of all the women elected to the House of Commons between 1918 and 2017. These were followed by THE PRIME MINISTERS, THE PRESIDENTS and KINGS & QUEENS, THE DICTATORS, BRITISH GENERAL ELECTION CAMPAIGNS 1830-2019 (Biteback), BRITISH BY-ELECTIONS (Biteback), THE TAOISEACH (Swift Press) and US PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGNS 1789-2024 (Biteback).
In the end you judge a book by its contents and I think every single one of the 70 contributors to this book has done a brilliant job. There is a consistency of style among the vast majority of essays, but I did give some latitude to those who had had some personal experience of the particular General they were writing about.
The 69 Geners featured in this book do not comprise a list of the 69 greatest Generals of all time. Such a list is almost impossible to compile. How do you compare the achievements of a commander in ancient Rome to those of a Second World War General? I venture to suggest it is impossible. That doesn’t mean people haven’t tried.
If you base the list purely on battles won, this would be the Top Ten General of All Time
1. Napoleon Bonaparte 56
2. Duke of Wellington 29
3. Khalid ibn al-Walid 26
4. Julius Caesar 23
5. Alexander the Great 23
6. Takeda Shingen 22
7. Oda Nobunaga 21
8. Maurice of Nassau 21
9. Cao Cao 20
10. Bernard Montgomery 19
Blake Stillwell published a Top Ten list based on statistical analysis on the WE ARE THE MIGHTY website in 2024,
1. Alexander the Great
2. Georgy Zhukov
3. Frederick the Great
4. Ulsysses S Grant
5. Hannibal Barca
6. Khalid ibn Walid
7. Takeda Shingen
8. Duke of Wellington
9. Julius Caesar
10. Napoleon Bonaparte
Within these pages you will find Generals from all around the world, although I do not pretend it is representative. Fourteen are from the World War II era, eight from World War I. Thirteen are from the United States, with 15 hailing from Britain. Four lived before the birth of Christ, with a further five living in the first millennium. Eight are from Asia, three from Africa. Eleven are from Prussia/Germany, with four each from Italy and France.
I started by compiling a shortlist of around 130 Generals, and intended to cut it down to fifty. This proved impossible, hence we end up with a list of 69. The selection was certainly more of an art than a science. I took advice from several expert military historians and some living Generals. I fully appreciate that I could have picked any number of other Generals, or left out some of those I did end up choosing. The selection is mine alone.
I selected the 69 Generals included in this book nearly four years before its publication. Are there Generals I now regret not including? Of course. Khalid abn Walid and Takeda Shingen, certainly. Although Alexander the Great was in THE DICTATORS, in hindsight I should have included him here too.
I won’t presume to impart my views on what makes a ‘good General’ as I am not qualified to do so.
Politics
Britain’s addiction to borrowing is a recipe for disaster
Is Britain about to be plunged into even greater economic chaos? Pundits have highlighted a remark made by the supposed prime minister in-waiting, Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham, in an interview he gave to the New Statesman last year. The government, he said, had to ‘get beyond this thing of being in hock to the bond markets’. Understandably, the worry is that a Burnham – who, if successful in the upcoming Makerfield by-election, will likely replace Keir Starmer as prime minister – would water down Labour’s ‘non-negotiable’ fiscal rules to finance even more public borrowing.
Given that Britain is already paying significantly higher interest rates on long-term bonds than its peers, Burnham’s one-liner is easy to ridicule as infantile and financially illiterate. But it must be taken seriously, not least because a hostility to bond markets – a view also championed by Green Party leader Zack Polanski – is fast becoming the orthodox position on the political left.
This argument needs to be defeated once and for all. Our addiction to borrowing – a permanent feature of British politics since the Second World War – is at the root of three issues that have led us to the financial and social abyss we find ourselves in. Borrowing has become financially destructive, created a class of weak and dishonest politicians, and has entrenched a culture that has become increasingly dependent on handouts and subsidies. It must be ended.
Let’s start with our grim financial position. Britain’s national debt has grown from the equivalent of about one quarter of national output in the late 1980s, to two-thirds shortly after the 2008-09 financial-crisis bailouts, to around 100 per cent today. The interest on existing public debt now costs over £100 billion a year. This makes servicing the national debt the third largest source of government spending, after social security and health. About one in every £30 of new wealth being generated is used up servicing past profligacy. In the latest financial year, 2025-26, about six out of every seven pounds of new government borrowing went to paying the interest costs on existing debt. We are now borrowing to fund borrowing.
This profligacy has been as damaging politically as it has been financially. The ability to borrow at reasonable – though now rising – interest rates has been a boon for our new class of political managers, whose technocratic impulse is to avoid making hard choices. Rather than having to cut here in order to prioritise there, they have been able to spend more on everything – on education, health, welfare benefits and pensions, on public-sector employment and on private-sector subsidies. This attitude within the ruling echelons has shielded the voters from the hard truth that no society can live beyond its means forever.
The magic-money-tree approach to public spending underpins the third, and most debilitating, consequence of endemic public borrowing: the ubiquitous handout culture. This enfeebling form of modern-day alms has sapped incentives for people and businesses. It has dulled the traditional belief that progress and prosperity require a persistent effort to overcome challenges.
As the Stoic philosopher Seneca wrote, ‘difficulties strengthen the mind, as labour does the body’. But that notion that what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger has faded from contemporary life. Instead, the infantilising assumption has spread that in times of difficulty a state handout is always available, financed by borrowing.
Following decades of creeping welfarism, the extensive package of handouts during the Covid-19 lockdowns consolidated the practice of state dependence. Today, more than 24million adults – getting on for half the 55 million adult population – receive some form of welfare. Thirteen million are state pensioners, while 10million working-age people are claimants – nearly one in every four.
All these emergency rescues, public subsidies and handouts aren’t cheap. Sovereign borrowing has been a tremendous enabler of the ‘state can pay’ presumption. In contrast, a government courageous enough to eschew further state borrowing, and which argues that we need to live within our means again, would demonstrate its capacity to lead Britain’s national revival.
Critics of government borrowing generally run up against three words – John Maynard Keynes – which supposedly render their arguments obsolete. If the greatest economist of the 20th century championed government borrowing, they insist, who are you to contradict it? But this misrepresents Keynes.
Keynes’s theory was that governments should borrow temporarily during periods of economic contraction. Critically, he argued that they should run surpluses during the subsequent recoveries to pay off the debts previously incurred. The practice since the Second World War has been deficits financed by borrowing, even during times of economic expansion. In the four decades from 1945 to 1985, British governments ran budget surpluses in only seven years. Indeed, Margaret Thatcher’s single surplus year, in 1988-89, might not have happened without the wheeze of treating privatisation proceeds not as exceptional one-off revenues but as ‘negative expenditure’. Keynes would have viewed this addiction to borrowing as mad – as indeed it is.
There is one glimmer of reason in Burnham’s criticism of the bond market, although he almost certainly didn’t intend it. Contemporary politicians and commentators have become preoccupied by the ‘behaviour’ of financial markets, and modern political decision-making has become subordinate to what the markets will ‘tolerate’. This subservience explains why governments, going back to New Labour in the 1990s, have followed ‘fiscal rules’ to keep on the right side of the markets.
The tendency to anthropomorphise markets – to attribute them with human characteristics, emotions or intentions – has a long history. The original South Sea Company Bubble of 1720 was interpreted as a sign of undue market ‘optimism’ which was then shattered by a market ‘panic’. Ever since, people have resorted to attributing human feelings and characteristics to markets as a way of trying to make sense of economic and financial crises. Unable to fathom the underlying drivers of these events, viewing markets through the lens of human behaviour provides a language to describe what is happening. Markets are now regularly described as ‘exuberant’, ‘nervous’ or ‘gloomy’.
Talking about markets in human terms has become pervasive – even in times of relative economic stability. We hear it said that markets are ‘ignoring bad news’, or are ‘anticipating’ an AI-productivity revolution. This language can offer some assurance that an unpredictable world is not quite so incomprehensible. At least the ‘markets’ know what is happening.
All of this plays into the belief that markets control British politics. Burnham is right in saying that they shouldn’t. But he is wrong in his implication that they should, therefore, be ignored. If he doesn’t want the country to be ‘in hock’ to markets, then his first objective should be to stop borrowing from them.
That’s the challenge that any political leader needs to confront if they are to break free of managed decline. On their track record, neither Burnham nor any of the other existing Labour leadership candidates are up to this task.
Britain doesn’t need ever more borrowing to grow and prosper. What it needs most is a cultural shift to build personal and corporate self-reliance. Bond markets don’t create wealth or destroy it – our destiny is in our own hands.
Politics
The House Article | To honour D-Day’s heroes, we must keep our promise to today’s veterans

Keir Starmer at a D-Day national commemoration event in 2024 (Alamy)
4 min read
On the anniversary of D-Day, remembering the sacrifices of the past must go hand in hand with renewing our commitment to those who serve today.
Thirteen years ago, I was standing on a beach in Normandy, with my back to the sea, looking across the broad sands to the low hills and fields that lie near the city of Caen. I was there with my fellow officer cadets from the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst on a battlefield tour. Even to us at the start of our military careers, we could see just how hard a task it would be to land in the cold, knee-deep water, wade onto the soft sand, and assault up the beach towards the pitiless, ceaseless machine-gun positions of the Germans.
And yet, 82 years ago, on 6 June 1944, that is exactly what more than 156,000 Allied troops did to liberate Western Europe from Nazi occupation.
Many were still in their teens. Yet they faced danger with remarkable courage and, in doing so, helped to secure the freedoms we continue to enjoy today.
Days like today remind us not to take that freedom for granted. It was hard won by a generation who made extraordinary sacrifices, and we owe it to them to remember that.
Every anniversary of D-Day is a moment for remembrance. We remember those who never came home. We honour those who carried the scars of war for the rest of their lives. And we give thanks to a generation whose service changed the course of history forever.
But D-Day also reminds us that remembrance alone is not enough. If we are serious about honouring those who serve, then we must prove it in the way we treat today’s armed forces community.
From my own experience, I know that the transition back into civilian life is not always straightforward
As I experienced during my own years of service, I know that military life asks a great deal not just of military personnel, but of the families who stand behind them. I also know that while service brings a sense of belonging and purpose, it also demands sacrifices that can be felt long after a military career is over.
That is why the Armed Forces Covenant matters. It is built on a simple principle: that those who serve, or have served, and their families should face no disadvantage because of their service to our country.
At the general election just under two years ago, Labour promised to strengthen that Covenant and extend it across government. And through the Armed Forces Bill, we are delivering on that promise.
For the first time, the Covenant will apply across central government, devolved governments and local authorities. This matters because the challenges faced by military personnel, veterans and their families do not fit neatly into one department. They can involve housing, healthcare, children’s education, employment support and much more.
From my own experience, I know that the transition back into civilian life is not always straightforward, and I, alongside my colleagues, am steadfast in the belief that no veteran who has served our country should be left to navigate those challenges alone.
This change will mean public services are legally required to consider the unique circumstances of the armed forces community.
It will help deliver better support for tens of thousands of serving personnel, veterans and their families across the country, and I am proud to support it.
On D-Day, those who fought trusted that the country they served would prove worthy of their sacrifice. Today, our duty is to honour that trust – not only on anniversaries, but all year round.
So today, we pay tribute to the heroes of the past by renewing our commitment to the Armed Forces Covenant and to the armed forces community itself: a promise that your country will never forget the sacrifices you make, and that your service will never be taken for granted.
Louise Sandher-Jones MP is Labour MP for North East Derbyshire and Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Veterans and People
Politics
Politics Home Article | Inside The Lib Dem Strategy Rethink

Ed Davey has served as leader of the Liberal Democrats since 2020 (Alamy)
8 min read
The Liberal Democrats are under pressure to remain relevant, with their own MPs publicly admitting there is frustration about the party’s lack of progress since the last general election. PoliticsHome can reveal that a strategy “rethink” is now underway at the top of the party.
In 2024, the Lib Dems achieved a record result with 72 MPs elected. It was a triumph for leader Ed Davey. Since then, however, there has been growing restlessness over what many of his MPs feel has been a failure to capitalise on that performance, and fears that the party risks being squeezed out of the political picture.
The local elections in May produced mixed results for the Lib Dems. The party made a net gain of 224 councillors and took three councils from other parties. It was able to fend off Reform UK challenges in areas like Portsmouth, where it seized control of the city council, and made gains outside its traditional strongholds in areas such as Rugby and Ealing.
However, the results also showed that on average, the Lib Dems’ support was down by three points compared to 2022 and 2024, and they largely failed to make inroads in urban areas such as London, where a surge in support for the Green Party ate into Lib Dem votes.
While the party leadership hailed the 7 May results as an overall success, PoliticsHome can reveal that there is an acceptance among senior Lib Dems that it is time to look at changing the approach. To that end, the party is undergoing a strategy and policy overhaul, with key areas of discussion including the economy, welfare, and, as the 10th anniversary of the Brexit referendum approaches, a bolder stance on the European Union.
Speaking to PoliticsHome, Lib Dem MP Tom Gordon said that while the results last month were generally positive for his party, losses in the North that weren’t seen during the coalition years rang “alarm bells” for him.
For Gordon, the results were a “warning sign” that the Lib Dems have been operating in “a very cautious way” so far.
“I don’t think it was necessarily the wrong approach, but just given the nature and the timeline of where we’re at in this parliament and the political events and that fragmentation, I think there is now a rethinking of what we do, what we offer, how we’re more punchy, how we’re bolder, and what the offer from us is,” he told PoliticsHome.
The Lib Dems have tried to be bold before. The party’s adoption of the slogan “Bollocks to Brexit” in 2019 was an attempt to harness the anti-Brexit vote. But it fell flat. Seven years on, in a UK that is no longer a part of the EU, one senior Lib Dem MP told PoliticsHome, “the economy is stagnating, the trend is mediocre.”
There’s definitely a frustration that it feels like we’ve been talking about the same things – social care and rivers – and that just felt like we weren’t really moving forward
They felt that the party would need to announce EU policies that would be “eye-catching and bold”, with all options being considered. One senior MP said the outcome of those discussions would likely come before conference season.
The MP said the party is “starting to think about the economy in a much more structural manner”, and the frontbench team had been “set a task of properly scrutinising departmental budgets, [looking at] where money is being spent”.
They added that the party needs to “make sure we are economically credible”, with there being more appetite from figures at the top of the party towards thinking about what the Lib Dem offering would be in a potential future coalition.
Lib Dem MP and chair of the Commons Health and Social Care Committee, Layla Moran, told PoliticsHome: “There’s definitely a frustration that it feels like we’ve been talking about the same things – social care and rivers – and that just felt like we weren’t really moving forward.
“So us evolving the position and being quite mindful about how we do that now is really important.”
She added: “There are a lot of Lib Dem MPs geeking out on how we fix the deep issues that the country’s got, and we are going to come up with something that is quite bold and exciting and coherent.”
While Lib Dems like Gordon describe the process as a “rethink”, others are more reluctant to adopt that label, instead suggesting it is a natural evolution.
Daisy Cooper, Lib Dem deputy leader and Treasury spokesperson, told PoliticsHome the party was now looking at seats to target beyond just the so-called ‘Blue Wall’ – historically Conservative constituencies that have switched to the Lib Dems in recent years.
“Now that we have consolidated our existing seats, really our plan is very much to go out and to win more, but it’s not a change in direction, it’s just the next step.”
Whatever the official label of the process inside the party, the question of how the Lib Dems can cut through and make an impact in an increasingly fractured party system is a key concern. “It’s a massive challenge”, one senior party member told PoliticsHome, explaining it is often hard to achieve cut through with the Lib Dems’ characteristically “nuanced” policies.
As populist parties garner support, Gordon said the party cannot stand still. “There are people who are really cheesed off who are looking for alternatives, and we can’t miss the boat on that.
“We will be doing ourselves a disservice as a party unless we look to try and build that big tent that has an overarching strategy for the entirety of the country.”
The Liberal Democrats are also planning to prioritise championing environmentalism, in order to move into a space they say Zack Polanski’s Green Party is starting to abandon, according to The Telegraph.
Moran put it frankly: “We need to respond. We recognise that the strategy that we went into the general election with in 2024 is not the right strategy for now. And there’s a broad understanding of that across the party.”
Ed could easily have chosen the very tempting option to go full Polanski and become the populist Farage of the left
One senior Lib Dem told PoliticsHome that there is also an acceptance that they will need to be more “radical” in their policy making and “thinking more about what people wouldn’t expect us to do”. There is a broad consensus too that how these policies are then communicated to the public is key, with multiple sources telling PoliticsHome that the party is growing its social media teams in a bid to boost its digital operation.
Moran admitted that the party needs to be “better at selling [policy]”.
“That’s not just Ed – it’s all of us. We all need to get literate on social media; we all need to make this sexy again. We all need to understand how to sell this stuff in 30 seconds.”
Gordon, along with other Lib Dems, emphasised the need for his party to be “bold” and “popular” – but that while they wanted to “offer an alternative”, they want to find a “way to frame that in a way like we don’t want to burn the system down”. For many Lib Dem MPs, this means they want to see Davey continue as leader up until the next general election, despite criticisms that he could have done more to cut through with the public.
Lib Dem MP and former party leader Tim Farron told PoliticsHome: “Ed could easily have chosen the very tempting option to go full Polanski and become the populist Farage of the left.
“But [he] wisely and morally opted to be the party for sensible people. That’s a harder sell, but it’s the right move, so it involves a lot more work on the ground. But we are really good at that, and getting even better.”
One Lib Dem MP from the 2024 intake who wished to remain anonymous said: “We’ve been quieter than many would want us to be so far.
“If we get bolder and louder now, particularly on the economy, that opportunity to break through is still there for us.”
Newer MPs told PoliticsHome that they felt the party leadership had been engaging on how to move the party forward by meeting with backbench MPs, and carrying out extensive research via polling and data analysis.
Gordon told PoliticsHome: “I can understand why some colleagues have been frustrated that they don’t feel that’s happened so far. I am cautiously optimistic that that has been heard, and there will be some efforts to try and make sure that we do better, quite frankly, on that front.”
While calling for the party to consider how it might be involved in a future Westminster coalition was once a sign of rebellion, that line of thinking is now becoming more commonplace.
Gordon told PoliticsHome it was “absolutely” important to start thinking about policies for a coalition, and that the party would have that conversation going forward while also involving its members and affiliated organisations.
However, there is seemingly still a divide on this point, with senior party figures telling PoliticsHome that laying out options for a future coalition would be “indulgent naval gazing” when a general election is potentially still three years away, and that they should instead be focused on “the issues that really matter to people right now”.
Politics
Corbyn: Filton activists must not be sentenced as terrorists
Your Party leader Jeremy Corbyn has told the Canary that the Filton 24 activists convicted of criminal damage must not be sentenced as terrorists.
The Starmer regime insisted on retrying six activists. The jury had refused at the first trial to convict them on any of the state’s charges relating to damage to an Israeli-owned weapons factory, after police and security guards’ claims didn’t match CCTV evidence. At the retrial, security service-linked judge Jeremy Johnson banned any mention of the fact that the activists carried out their action to prevent the slaughter of Palestinian civilians. He also banned even the media from reporting that the defendants might be sentenced under terror legislation, despite no terror charges being brought against them.
Despite the attempts to stack the trial in the state’s favour, two of the activists were acquitted on all charges. None were convicted of any violent intent. Yet at the sentencing hearing next Friday, 12 June, the government is pressing for terror-related sentencing. This would mean much longer prison time and draconian conditions imposed on the young activists for decades even after release. These could include having to register their phones with the authorities, report on any relationships and obtain permission to travel.
Corbyn condemns attack on democracy and justice
Starmer is waging war on UK citizens’ rights to protect Israel and its interests. Corbyn, like a handful of other MPs, has condemned this attack on democracy and justice:
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Sentences will be passed at Woolwich Crown Court and the group’s supporters have asked well-wishers to attend a protest outside the court to increase public awareness, and pressure on the authorities to do the right thing.
Featured image via Jordan Peck/Getty Images for SXSW London
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Thousands sign complaint ahead of hearing to remove ‘biased’ Filton judge
More than 3,000 people, including legal experts, have signed a formal complaint accusing the security service-linked presiding judge in the trial of six ‘Filton 24’ Palestine Action activists of bias and discriminatory conduct. The complaint comes in advance of a hearing on Monday 8 June on an application by the defendants for Jeremy Johnson’s removal from the case. Justice Jeremy Johnson on the grounds of apparent bias and abuses of process.
The jury had refused at the first trial to convict them on any of the state’s charges relating to damage to an Israeli-owned weapons factory, after police and security guards’ claims didn’t match CCTV evidence. At the retrial, security service-linked judge Jeremy Johnson banned any mention of the fact that the activists carried out their action to prevent the slaughter of Palestinian civilians. He banned lawyers from telling jurors of their legal right to acquit. Johnson even banned the media from reporting that the defendants might be sentenced under terror legislation — despite no terror charges being brought against them.
Despite the attempts to stack the trial in the state’s favour, two of the activists were acquitted on all charges. None were convicted of any violent intent. Yet at the sentencing hearing next Friday, 12 June, the government is pressing for terror-related sentencing. This would mean much longer prison time and draconian conditions imposed on the young activists for decades even after release. These could include having to register their phones with the authorities, report on any relationships and obtain permission to travel.
Filton 24 — “Manipulating the law”
The complaint signatories say the terror sentencing plan treats the defendants like Ahmed Hassan, the so-called “Parsons Green bomber”. Hassan is the only other person ever to be sentenced under UK law. Not charged with a terrorism offence yet sentenced as a terrorist. Hassan has received a life sentence in 2018 for a London Underground bombing that injured 51 people. The jury acquitted all the Filton defendants of any violent intent. The plan to sentence non-violent activists as terrorists “reveals [Johnson’s] loss of judgment and a discriminatory mindset towards the defendants”.
The complaint adds that by (unsuccessfully) prosecuting defence lawyer Rajiv Menon for contempt of court — Menon had defied Johnson’s restriction on what he could tell the jury — Johnson “had a prejudicial impact on the defendants”. Johnson also failed to deal with prejudicial statements by government ministers. Maud Dromgoole, who served as a juror in the first trial, said that the state was “manipulating the law” to make examples of the defendants.
The experts conclude that, added to Johnson’s “cruel and vindictive” treatment of the accused, his actions:
amount to a pattern of exceptional, biased and discriminatory conduct on the part of the judge.
Featured image via FiltonActionists
By Skwawkbox
Politics
“Ethics more important”: Polish football club rejects Maccabi Tel Aviv transfer offer
The owner of Polish football club Pogoń Szczecin has refused to discuss the sale of players to Israeli club Maccabi Tel Aviv. Alex Haditaghi went further, comparing the idea of doing business with the club to trading with nazi Germany.
In a post on X, Haditaghi said he had told the Israeli club he would not be talking to them about potential transfers for defenders Dmitri Keramitsis and Leo Borges. He said that football should represent “hope, respect, unity and humanity” and that:
money, business, and opportunity must come second to conscience.
Haditaghi made clear that he was referring to Israel’s genocide in Gaza and its attacks on Lebanon and Iran — the “violent, genocidal and inhuman actions of the Israeli state”. His full statement reads:
My Official Response to Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C.
Dear Chairman,
Thank you for your interest in doing business with Pogoń Szczecin and for your interest in our players, Léo Borges and Dimitrios Keramitsis.
I have always believed that sport should bring people together. Football should be bigger than politics, bigger than borders, and bigger than division. It should represent hope, respect, unity, and humanity.
However, there are moments in history when silence becomes complicity, and when money, business, and opportunity must come second to conscience.
Considering the ongoing suffering of innocent civilians in Gaza, Lebanon, Iran, and across the region, and considering the violent, genocidal and inhuman actions of the Israeli state, I do not believe it would be morally right for our club to proceed with any business transaction with a club representing Israel at this time.
My responsibility as Chairman & Owner is not only to protect the financial interests of our club. It is also to protect the values, principles, and humanity that our club must stand for.
Had I been alive during the times of Nazi Germany, one of the darkest chapters of history, I would not have done business with any sports club representing Nazi Germany, a regime that was responsible for mass murder and crimes against millions of innocent people.
Today, I must apply the same moral standard.
There are moments when ethics must be stronger than profit and money. There are moments when humanity must be more important than business and money. This is one of those moments.
For that reason, with respect, we will not proceed with negotiations at this time.
I hope one day football & sports can again be only about football. But until innocent people are protected, until humanity is respected, and until the world stops accepting the unacceptable, we must stand on the side of conscience.
Sincerely,
Alex Haditaghi
Chairman
Pogoń Szczecin
Pogoń Szczecin vs Thugs and terrorists
Maccabi Tel Aviv fans are notorious thugs who rampage through rival cities in Israel and Europe chanting about the rape and murder of Palestinians and Arabs generally. The UK government has shamed itself by defending the thugs and attacking those who condemn them. Dutch authorities have classified Israel as a security risk after the racist mob destroyed parts of Amsterdam and attacked innocent bystanders. UEFA and even Israeli authorities have banned the club from key fixtures.
Israel is a terror state. Pogoń Szczecin is now Skwawkbox’s Polish club.
Featured image via Sport1
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Indy-Green relationship boosted Sefton’s left-wing election surge
The 2026 local election in the Merseyside borough of Sefton saw a left-wing surge against Labour. And the positive relationship between community independents and the Green Party made a meaningful difference, with both increasing their voice on the council as a result.
Community independents went from one councillor to five, and the Greens from one to three. And the Canary spoke to Lydiate and Maghull Community Independents to hear more about how they became the third biggest political grouping on Sefton Council.
Common-sense relationships on the left can make a big difference
There are places in the UK where local independents are more likely to win than the Greens, and vice versa. But in some places, vote splitting between them has allowed Labour to keep a hold.
Sefton, however, largely bucked that trend. Because while some polls predicted Reform would make big advances in Sefton, it didn’t. And one reason for that was coordination between left-wing independents and Greens.
New Lydiate and Maghull Community Independents councillor Joanne McCall described how the local Greens “stepped aside for us”. She said she has “a lot of respect” for Neil Doolin, previously Sefton’s lone Green councillor and now its group leader on the council. And she explained that, following conversations between the parties:
They stepped aside for community independents in three wards, which was ours [Maghull East], Lydiate and Maghull West, and Aintree and Maghull South.
Both McCall and current group leader David Leatherbarrow won in Maghull East. In a close race, Labour won the other seat.
In Lydiate and Maghull West, meanwhile, all three independents won fairly comfortably.
The three candidates for Aintree and Maghull South Community Independents didn’t win, but were serious challengers to second-place Reform.
McCall said she felt “eternally grateful” for the Green decision to step aside, as it avoided any potential vote splitting between Lydiate and Maghull Community Independents and the Greens. This decision, she suggested, was a sensible acknowledgement that:
the two-party system, I think, is well and truly out the window now
She added:
I’m truly pleased that they recognised our potential
Leatherbarrow agreed, telling us:
For them to step aside was unbelievable – to see that they did run in every single area, and then when there was a community-independent group they stepped aside. It just showed that it was more important for grassroots activists to get into power, rather than to allow Reform to get in or to stick with the same old from Labour.
With trust in Labour collapsing, accountable community power is a real alternative
McCall described how politics has changed locally in recent years, saying:
I’ve been involved for the last three years with the Lydiate and Maghull Community Independents, and this is the third election that I’ve run in… There has been a real shift in the support for independents, and I think that there’s a few factors that contribute to that. The first one would be loss of faith in Labour nationally… Also, obviously, the surge of Reform… You’ve got that portion of the community who absolutely does not want Reform to get in, because they don’t agree with their policies.
But also the fact that we’ve worked for the last three years, locally. Everybody knows us because we’re visible. We’re invested in the community, so we do a lot of volunteering work. We’ve done a lot of initiatives to bring things to the area.
Leatherbarrow, meanwhile, captured the essence of the community independent message, explaining how local interactions work. He said:
We’ve tried to bring the residents with us – to say ‘right, we live here. This is what we think. What do you think?’
We put on a few community meetings… We just asked people, ‘what do you think, and how would you solve the problem?’ And the community came up with the solutions. It wasn’t us. It was the community that came up with the solutions. It’s then our job to go away and solve the problems.
McCall summed the message up as:
Local people know what local people want.
And these people have “had enough” of representatives of mainstream parties either ignoring them or just disappearing when they win:
It just seems to be a recurring pattern right across the country that candidates go into these elections and then literally just disappear once they’ve got in. We will never do that. We’re active and visible in the community.
It’s important that people can see what you’re doing.
People have actually realised that they prefer a local person to represent them rather than the line of a national party.
The pledges that seemed to resonate most with people locally were:
Visibility, transparency, protecting our green spaces, and accountability.
Leatherbarrow also mentioned the key issue of unfair planning, asserting that:
Overdevelopment in the area has outpaced the infrastructure. So the infrastructure’s been the same for about 30-40 years, but the number of houses being built is just exponential.
Not just in Sefton — We need to see more of this nationally
In the Waterloo ward of Sefton, meanwhile, the Green Party had a comfortable clean sweep (at least 500 votes ahead of Labour). That’s where their first councillor, Doolin, had won previously. And they built on his record there. Upon winning, the new Green group promised to be “community-led”, with Doolin insisting:
We’re determined to be visible, hardworking councillors who listen to residents
No community independents challenged the Greens in Waterloo.
Overall, Sefton’s local election offered some hope. It showed that, where community independents, Greens, and other left-wingers can get along and coordinate, they can organise more efficiently to defeat national right-wing parties like Labour and Reform. And they can make real advances.
We need to see a lot more of this across the whole country.
Featured image viaTheGuideLiverpool
By Ed Sykes
Politics
US spy agency using Anthropic AI tech for cyberwar against China and Iran
The US National Security Agency (NSA) is allegedly using Anthropic software to wage cyberwar against Iran and China. The AI war firm is currently locked in a legal battle with the Trump administration to stop certain military uses. Anthropic bosses previously complained when their tech was used in the 3 January Venezuela raid.
The NSA is the US equivalent of the UK’s Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ). Its remit includes surveillance and cyberwarfare.
The Financial Times (FT) reported on 4 June:
Anthropic is helping the US National Security Agency deploy its powerful Mythos AI model for offensive cyber operations, embedding engineers inside the agency despite an ongoing legal battle with the Pentagon.
The San Francisco-based company had installed about half a dozen staff within the NSA as so-called forward-deployed engineers to guide the use of the technology and customise models for specific applications, two people familiar with the arrangement said.
But the embedding suggests that Anthropic is contravening its own rules. As the Canary reported in February 2026:
Anthropic has strict rules on military usage… usage guidelines prohibit Claude [an Anthropic software] from being used to facilitate violence, develop weapons or conduct surveillance.
Mythos is Anthropic’s most advanced AI system. The firm has said:
Mythos is too dangerous to release publicly.
The FT said:
It remains unclear whether Anthropic’s engineers are assisting the NSA in active operations. However, one person close to the situation said Mythos would be useful for infiltrating the networks of nations such as China or Iran.
A source close to the firm said:
The best way to build a good defence is to build a good attack.
If [Mythos] is not used to build attack agents, adversaries will find a way to do it.
Anthropic’s row with Trump and Hegseth
The row between Anthropic and the Trump administration has been so intense that defence secretary Pete Hegseth threatened to take over the technology by diktat. He even pledged to designate the firm as a ‘supply chain risk’ in February 2026 if bosses did not comply with a demand to:
give the military unfettered access to its Claude AI model by Friday evening or else have the government label it a “risk” to the supply chain.
The designation is:
typically reserved for foreign firms with ties to U.S. adversaries, could ban companies that work with the government from partnering with Anthropic.
Anthropic responded:
No amount of intimidation or punishment from the Department of War will change our position on mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons. We will challenge any supply chain risk designation in court.
Beijing is clearly a target for US AI operations. The FT said that in February 2026:
the Pentagon was seeking to create AI-powered cyber tools to identify infrastructure targets in China as part of an effort to improve US capabilities in any future military conflict with Beijing.
And on 2 June:
President Donald Trump signed an executive order outlining a voluntary framework in which AI companies can submit their new models for security reviews before they are publicly released.
Anthropic software also meshes with Palantir technology in some US uses. The Canary reported with regard to the January 2026 US attack on Venezuela:
The deployment of Claude occurred through Anthropic’s partnership with data company Palantir Technologies, whose tools are commonly used by the Defense Department and federal law enforcement.
Anthropic’s programs can be used:
for everything from summarizing documents to controlling autonomous drones.
The UK is deeply and dangerously enmeshed with Palantir. The Commons technology committee warned on 3 June that the UK should divest from Palantir, which has taken over swathes of British national infrastructure.
Anthropic (at least rhetorically) subscribes to a form of corporate ethics. Palantir’s vision is openly far-right. That said, there should be no place for AI firms in intelligence, warfare, surveillance or policing — whatever the ideology their CEO claims to follow.
Featured image via Chance Yeh/Getty Images for HubSpot
By Joe Glenton
Politics
Supreme Court disability ruling “biggest rollback of disability rights in a generation”
Campaign groups have voiced shock and outrage at the “biggest rollback of disability rights in a generation” following a Supreme Court ruling concerning individuals who lack the capacity to consent to their living arrangements.
In a joint statement, the charities Mencap, Mind, and the National Autistic Society warned that the regressive ruling could see hundreds of thousands of severely disabled people lose fundamental human rights protections. They added that:
By removing independent checks, advocacy, and automatic access to legal aid, the Court has closed the gateway to justice and support for many who need it most. Stripping away these safeguards makes it easier for abuse and neglect to go unnoticed behind closed doors.
A litany of previous wrongdoings demonstrates how closed cultures, lack of independent oversight and restrictive care can lead to abuse scandals and decisions like this fly in the face of everything we’ve learnt.
Supreme Court — Dismantling Cheshire West
The court’s verdict, delivered on 2 June, dismantles a landmark legal framework known as ‘Cheshire West’. The framework was established by another legal ruling back in 2014. The common understanding of Cheshire West held that:
an individual without such mental capacity is treated as unable to give valid consent to confinement.
As such, community care confinement would only be legal with a court protection order. Alternatively, the state could provide permission under the ‘Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards’ (DoLS) scheme. This necessitated a special “acid test” which, as the Mencap statement explained, meant that:
if someone lacks the mental capacity to consent to their care and living arrangements, is under continuous supervision and control, and is not free to leave, they were legally ‘deprived of their liberty’.
This triggered vital legal safeguards requiring an independent assessor to regularly inspect care homes, supported living arrangements, and locked units to ensure the placement is safe, justified, and in the person’s best interests.
Those vital legal guardrails were known as ‘Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards’ (DoLS). However, Tuesday’s decision “tears up those protections”.
Northern Ireland’s case
The attorney general for Northern Ireland, Tony McGleenan KC, brought the case which triggered the new UK-wide ruling.
Led byMinister of Health Mike Nesbitt, the NI government questioned the definition of “deprivation of liberty” under article 5(1) of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) for adults lacking the capacity to consent to their living situation.
The attorney general submitted arguments claiming both that the original Cheshire West decision was incorrect, and that it created an undue administrative burden. That is to say, the NI government argued, successfully, that ensuring the liberty of the severely disabled cost too much.
The 2014 ruling meant that DoLS referrals rose from 13,700 to 322,455 in the decade leading up to 2024. In turn, this led to a 123,790-case backlog. As the Disability News Service (DNS) reported, this week’s ruling will likely see those referrals fall dramatically. Writing for DNS, John Pring added that:
Cheshire West led to the drawing-up of the Liberty Protection Safeguards (LPS) system, based on a report by the Law Commission.
The last government had originally planned to bring in LPS in October 2020, but its implementation was repeatedly delayed by Conservative ministers.
Care minister Stephen Kinnock announced last October that there would be a new consultation on the new LPS system “in the first half of next year”.
It is not yet clear where this week’s judgement leaves this consultation.
Supreme Court — Devaluing fundamental rights
The new ruling establishes that, for the purposes of the ECHR, a lack of legal capacity is not synonymous with a lack of valid consent. Instead, as the Mencap joint statement put it:
The Court implies that individuals with profound cognitive disabilities cannot be “deprived” of liberty because their condition limits their ability to experience it—a view that devalues their fundamental rights.
Meanwhile, in borderline cases, the Supreme Court would only consider a care facility to deprive an individual of their liberty if it closely resembled a prison.
Likewise, if the individual appears passive and unprotesting, the law will treat this as consent. This aspect of the ruling would apply even in situations where they are routinely restrained or sedated, whether physically or chemically.
In practice, this is likely to mean that the overwhelming majority of current independent DoLS inspections will be cancelled. As the three charities explained, the human impacts will be vast, across both the healthcare and social care settings. They gave practical examples, including:
If an autistic person with high support needs, someone with a serious mental illness, or a person with a severe learning disability is locked in a care setting and sedated, but does not actively protest, they will no longer be considered “confined” by the state. They will lose their automatic right to independent reviews, a legal advocate, and protection from closed care cultures.
For example, in psychiatric and crisis wards, if an individual experiencing a severe psychiatric crisis, acute psychosis, or clinical depression is admitted to a mental health hospital ward as an “informal patient,” they frequently lack the mental capacity to consent to their stay and therefore do not have any of the protections of independent reviews.
A plea to government
Mencap, Mind and the National Autistic Society also issued a plea directly the UK government. They called upon it to “act with urgency”:
to issue interim guidance to local authorities and health and care providers to prevent them being plunged into chaos by this ruling. It should urgently bring in new laws and guidance that strengthens protections for some of the people who are most at risk. This should include clearly explaining how disabled people and their families can challenge breaches of their rights and get the advocacy and support they need.
As always, as human rights continue to erode across the UK, it is the most vulnerable, those who can’t defend themselves, who become the first targets.
However, when a government — without any apparent show of remorse — can make an argument that ensuring liberty costs too much, we are all very much in danger.
However, the three charities ended their missive with a show of solidarity:
To the many people that will be affected by this ruling now and in the future, we stand with you and you are not alone. This decision devalues the rights and dignity of disabled people in this country.
Featured image via Dan Kitwood/Getty Images
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