Politics
It’s not renewables putting up your energy bills, it’s billionaires
Do you remember Great British Energy? Labour’s 2024 manifesto had six pledges. No. 4 was ‘Set up Great British Energy’, a publicly owned clean power company, to cut bills for good and boost energy security.
If you’ve seen the news or paid a bill recently, you’ll be forgiven for wondering where those lower bills are. Then again, it was always smoke and mirrors. When it was set up in 2024, CEO Jürgen Maier appeared in front of a Select Committee. ‘When can we expect to see bills come down?’ SNP MP Stephen Flynn asked him. That is ‘not the scope of Great British Energy’, answered Maier.
Crunching the numbers
So far as state-owned electricity generation goes, GB Energy has helped solar panels get installed on school and hospital roofs. That’s a good policy. But in total, that’s between 70MW and 100MW of energy generation – it barely makes a dent.
Total UK electricity demand was 127 Terawatt hours last year. If we replace fossil fuel vehicles with electric vehicles, and gas boilers with electric heat pumps, demand will rise to between 500 and 800TWh. The lower figure requires us to insulate homes and expand public transport.
That’s a lot of numbers. But to save you the arithmetic, GB Energy’s solar on public buildings will generate between 0.013% and 0.027% of the extra capacity we need. So only another 3,730 years to reach net zero.
Contracts for Difference
The UK government has awarded contracts for more offshore wind, though. 4GW was agreed in January – a benchmark of 4 gigawatts for all renewable energy-generating projects. That will deliver around 7.9% of what we need, which is a start. Except it’s all privately owned, with contracts agreed by auction. It uses a system called ‘Contract for Difference‘ (CfD). This means the government agrees the ‘strike price’ for the next 15 years, which rises with inflation. So whatever happens to the wholesale price, the company gets paid the same in real terms. That money comes from our electricity bills.
January’s CfD set the strike price at £91.20 per MWh. The actual cost to produce the electricity is £46.40 per MWh, according to the International Renewable Energy Association. That’s technically known as the Levelized Cost of Electricity, and takes into account all the planning, manufacture, installation, operation and maintenance. So privatisation results in a 97% price premium. Who owns the companies that won the contracts? Qatar, Abu Dhabi, and Blackrock are the biggest shareholders. The money is leaving the UK economy.
Financial jargon calls this ‘derisking’. No one will invest £4billion in a wind farm unless they are guaranteed a return, or so goes the argument. Another term would be ‘corporate welfare’. We’re told that capitalists should get profits because they’ve taken a risk. But they’re removing the risk. I never hear these people say that an engineer, teacher or chef should be guaranteed 197% of their living costs for the next fifteen years for taking the risk to become qualified.
Private profits, nationalised losses
The UK electricity system was privatised in 1990. Not for any common-sense reason, but from pure ideology. It was explicitly structured to create ‘competition’. Except it’s a monopoly. Or at least an oligopoly – where a few large firms dominate. In the North East, our transmission grid was sold to an American billionaire, under the company name of Northern Powergrid. Their 2024 accounts show a turnover of £536 million. They paid dividends of £300 million. In other words, 56% of everything we pay goes straight to the owners.
They’re not developing the grid, either. As Mayor I worked with a firm who wanted to expand. The electricity supply to their factory was inadequate. I had to step in with investment to get the supply upgraded. They could then install a new production line, creating good jobs. In fact, every £1 I invested in this way returned over £3 to the public purse in payroll taxes alone. Investment in electrical infrastructure is one of the best things that could happen to British industry. But not when every kWh is milked for profit for overseas investors.
The final piece of the puzzle is the energy retailers. They buy from the grid, and sell to us as consumers. In 2022, loads of them went bust. The system is set up so a generator is not allowed to be a retailer. This meant that, when energy prices spiked and a cap was put on bills, loads of retailers could not meet their costs. Many community energy schemes and cooperatives were wiped out.
The system is regulated so OFGEM becomes the ‘supplier of last resort’. That is, we, the taxpayer, foot the bill for transferring the contracts so people don’t get cut off. It’s the old story of privatise the profits, nationalise the losses.
A new approach to nationalisation
This brings me to the Green Party’s recent conference motion on nationalising energy companies. First, a caveat – I wasn’t there and didn’t hear the arguments. I have spoken to someone who was. It was a bit chaotic, apparently. The Green Party’s membership has quadrupled since last year’s conference, and the systems are creaking. Everyone I speak to in the leadership team knows this. But as a strategic choice, focusing on winning elections has been extremely successful. The Greens are polling above Labour.
The previous Green Party policy was to nationalise the five largest energy supply companies. That clearly needed revisiting. Transmission and generation is where the money is creamed off, not retail. The new motion now explicitly calls for ‘public ownership’ of transmission, but diverse ownership of retail and generation.
‘Nationalisation’ is usually used as shorthand. It is thought of as ending wealth extraction where very, very rich people bribe governments so they can rip us off. But you can’t govern by shorthand. Sooner or later, you need detailed policies and specific legislation. Unless you’re Donald Trump, but that’s not a good example to follow. Co-ops, community ownership, municipal, and public-commons partnerships can all be in the mix.
Co-operatives are private profit-making ventures. As a socialist, I’m all for co-ops in a diverse ownership model. They’re a cornerstone of community wealth-building. And technically, I’m a private electricity generator, as is anyone else who has solar panels on their roof that can feed back into the grid. I don’t want my roof nationalised.
Nationalisation is not a magic bullet, either. RBS, NatWest, Lloyds and others were nationalised in 2008. It didn’t change their operation. The National Coal Board was a nationalised industry throughout the 1984-5 miners strike. The Labour 2017 manifesto did not talk of nationalisation, but the alteration of licenses and a transition to a decentralised energy system.
We need whole-system reform
The whole system needs restructuring. Surplus-making community co-ops and local authority generation are a good thing. OFGEM should require private retailers to have commercial insurance to underwrite their liabilities so that, if they go bust, we don’t pay for it. That would stop the ‘privatise the profits, nationalise the losses’ business model. Still, it’s fair criticism to say the Green Party’s new motion leaves the words ‘effectively regulated’ to cover a lot of gaps.
What is really needed is massive public investment. We have to stop worrying about ‘levering in’ private finance. As a sovereign nation with a central bank, Britain can effectively borrow from itself. Using that to create abundant clean energy would repay the investment many times over. It does for private finance, so it would if we owned it. Manufacturing and hospitality would see costs fall. Householders would have lower bills and more money in our pockets. Poverty would fall, along with pressure on public services. The economy would benefit.
It’s not net-zero putting up your bills, it’s billionaires. And neither Farage nor Starmer is willing to do a thing about it.
Politics
‘Succession’ star Brian Cox narrates new film exposing controversial gannet hunt – watch here
Succession actor Brian Cox has narrated a harrowing new animated film. It calls for an end to Scotland’s controversial guga hunt, and exposes the ‘tradition’ of killing gannet chicks.
Firelily Studios created the animation for wildlife campaign group Protect the Wild. It depicts the life and death of a single gannet chick, from the safety of their nest to the moment they are taken and killed by hunters.
Every year, men from the Isle of Lewis travel to the remote island of Sula Sgeir. There they kill gannet seabird chicks (known as guga). The practice originated in times of hardship as a source of sustenance. But today the killing goes on primarily to maintain tradition, with the young gannet flesh considered a local delicacy. It is the UK’s last remaining seabird hunt.
The guga hunt has come under increasing scrutiny from campaigners, with growing public concern for animal welfare and conservation. It can only happen if NatureScot, Scotland’s official nature agency, gives out a licence for it. A petition urging NatureScot to stop its licensing of the hunt has shot past its target of 50,000 signatures.
That demand forms the basis of Protect the Wild’s emotive new animation, which urges members of the public to add their names to the petition.
‘Needless cruelty’ to gannet chicks
In the film’s final scene, a lone gannet parent stands at the edge of a cliff beside their now-empty nest, as Cox condemns the practice as “needless cruelty” and calls on NatureScot to end the guga hunt.
In 2025, NatureScot allowed the killing of 500 gannet chicks. It maintains that the hunt is sustainable and is unlikely to threaten the long-term stability of the gannet population. But recent Freedom of Information requests by Protect the Wild revealed that Sula Sgeir is Scotland’s worst-performing gannet colony. And it’s the only Special Protection Area for gannets in Scotland to have declined while others are growing.
Devon Docherty, Scottish campaigns manager at Protect the Wild, said:
We’re incredibly grateful to Brian Cox for lending his voice to this important campaign and helping to bring this hidden cruelty into the spotlight.
We made this animation to show the reality of the guga hunt, where defenceless chicks are snatched from their nests before they can fly, and battered to death in front of their parents.
This is not about survival. It’s about maintaining a tradition that comes at the cost of immense animal suffering. This horrific practice has to stop.
NatureScot has a choice. This licence is discretionary. As Scotland’s nature agency, it has a duty to protect wildlife, not permit its destruction.
Protect the Wild released the animation across its social media channels at 5pm on 2 April.
Featured image via Firelily Studios / Protect the Wild
Politics
Signs Of Emotional Manipulation | HuffPost UK Life
Emotional manipulation isn’t always obvious. Instead of big explosions or clear-cut moments of harm, there’s typically a sense of covert control through subtle patterns and interactions that leave you feeling confused and anxious.
“It has to do with unspoken rules and expectations,” licensed marriage and family therapist Alexandria Tillard-Gates told HuffPost.
“Emotional manipulation can be present in intimate relationships, friendships and all types of family relationships. Often we experience emotional manipulation in our formative relationships and we don’t realise it until later in life.”
At the extreme end of the spectrum, there are malignant narcissists who use emotional manipulation to get what they want with no remorse or regard for other people’s feelings. But emotional manipulation is not always fully intentional.
“Sometimes it is not as calculated or nefarious as it may seem. It may be that this person just has immature forms of communicating,” said Dr. Sue Varma, a clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at New York University Grossman School of Medicine and author of “Practical Optimism: The Art, Science, and Practice of Exceptional Well-Being.”
But regardless of intent, the impact can be deeply destabilising.
“Emotional manipulation is when our nervous system gets needlessly triggered,” said licensed marriage and family therapist Spencer Northey. “It causes us to feel unwarranted anxiety based on distorted input. It unmoors us, dissociates reality, makes our emotions storm, makes us feel younger than we are, more responsible than we should be, or both.”
The process can be subtle, but there are ways to identify it. Here are eight signs you may be experiencing emotional manipulation.
1. You’re questioning your own reality
“When we are being manipulated in a conversation or conflict, we often feel something very strongly, but the other person denies our experience and refuses to accept that their behaviour could have caused our experience,” Tillard-Gates said. “Often the abuser lies in order to avoid responsibility. This causes us to question our feelings, experience and even our recollection of events.”
This pattern is better known as gaslighting ― a common form of emotional manipulation in which someone systematically lies or distorts reality in a way that makes you doubt your lived experiences and perceptions of things that occurred.
“When humans get together, it’s normal to have occasional misunderstandings about what happened or what’s going on,” Northey said. “Healthy dynamics work collaboratively to figure things out. There is usually an ‘aha!’ moment where the realities merge ― ‘oh, NOW I see where you’re coming from.’ Emotionally manipulative dynamics double down on the divide and rigidly avoid that coming together by insisting on one reality.”
The result of these rigidly incongruent realities is that the other person’s experience and feelings in response to it gets invalidated and denied. Over time, this can seriously erode trust in oneself.
2. Conversations constantly become about proving your love or loyalty
“Emotional manipulation can show up as someone questioning your love or loyalty as a way to avoid or defuse conflict,” said Zainab Delawalla, a licensed psychologist and associate teaching professor in the department of Psychology at Emory University. “For example, if you are trying to set a healthy boundary of your friend not texting you late at night, they might respond with ‘you must not care about me.’”
The emotional manipulator shifts the focus of the conversation away from your valid expression of a concern or need and into the territory of forcing you to prove your care and commitment.

jeffbergen via Getty Images
“In close, healthy relationships, there should be room for mistakes, which can be taken at face value and discussed so that both parties feel heard and understood,” Delawalla said. “If these conversations often lead to one party having to constantly defend and justify their loyalty, it is a sign that there might be some emotional manipulation.”
In addition to derailing conversations, this behavior can also lead you to do things to “prove” your affection ― even things that might conflict with your own needs, like buying special gifts when you don’t have the budget to spare.
3. You feel guilt and shame for things that aren’t your responsibility
“Emotional manipulation can take the form of shaming somebody, making them feel guilty, making them feel responsible for your feelings,” Varma said. “It’s often subtle and goes unrecognised for some time.”
These unhealthy dynamics rely on guilt, shame and a sense of obligation to coerce people into doing or saying what the emotional manipulator wants.
“In a normal conflict or miscommunication, both parties are eventually able to identify a similar recollection of events, understand how their behaviour could have impacted the other in a way they might not have intended, and empathise with each other’s feelings and experience even if they don’t totally agree,” Tillard-Gates noted.
In lieu of two people working through conflict together, emotional manipulation involves one person subtly ― or not so subtly ― placing blame to make the other feel like they’ve done something wrong and pressured into compliance.
4. You feel emotional whiplash from “love bombing.”
“If they can make you feel so good, they also have the power to make you feel so bad,” Varma said.
She pointed to “love bombing” as a common tactic of emotional manipulation, as someone showers you with excessive compliments, attention or affection early on in your relationship. This creates a situation where your sense of self-worth becomes tied to their praise and affection.
“The problem is you become addicted to the highs,” Varma explained. “The point is you have become emotionally dependent on their approval. You feel enmeshed with them, and they control you and your emotions.”
So you find yourself chasing these positive interactions, even as the relationship becomes destabilising. When they later criticise or dismiss you, then you tell yourself it’s your fault.
5. Your emotional reactions feel outsized
“It’s normal to experience big emotions in response to big things happening in the here and now ― positive or negative,” Northey said. “It’s less normal or realistic to have a big emotional response just from communication.”
She emphasised that these feelings are real and valid, but you should ask yourself if they arise in response to an idea that is not consistent with reality. You might feel intense anxiety, fear or even euphoria, but when you step back, the situation itself doesn’t quite justify that level of emotion. Instead, the feelings stem from distorted messages and perceptions.
“For example, if you feel the joy and safety of a devoted long-term commitment just from someone’s flattery,” Northey said. “In this case, it’s the communication, not the reality that’s eliciting this big emotion. Or on the negative side, you feel the big emotion of loss or threat just from how someone is talking to you.”
6. You feel like you have to walk on eggshells
If you’re constantly monitoring your words, tone and behaviour to avoid conflict, that’s another warning sign.
“You are afraid to talk to that person about your feelings,” Varma said. “You are afraid of confrontation, and you walk on eggshells.”
Delawalla also pointed to walking on eggshells in every interaction as a red flag for emotionally manipulative dynamics.
“This interferes with your ability to have open, honest communication, which is a foundational element of any close relationship,” she said.
7. They tell you how you feel, instead of listening
“Healthy conflict and normal miscommunication stay grounded in the present and in mutual consideration for each person,” Northey said. “Even when facing a disagreement and big emotions, healthy conflict continues to respect everyone and everyone’s perspectives. It is free from crossing into other people’s realities by telling someone how they think or feel.”
Instead of asking how you feel, an emotional manipulator might make statements like “You’re jealous,” or “You’re overreacting because you hate me” ― which overrides your perspective and replaces it with their narrative.

Moor Studio via Getty Images
“So many of us do this all the time!” Northey said. “We need to stop normalizing it, even when the intentions are benign, such as saying, ‘you’re mad at me’ as a bid for connection. More pernicious forms of this include accusations, name calling and punishing reactions.”
She added that this behavior strips you of your agency to explain yourself and be seen. It’s another dismissal of who you are and your own experience.
8. Your boundaries keep getting pushed
“An emotionally manipulative person feels their target out,” Varma said. “It can start with a small joke at your expense, or canceling plans on you at the last minute ― just to see how you respond. And they escalate from there.”
Unaddressed, those behaviours intensify. The emotional manipulator isn’t necessarily being super calculated, either.
“Some people are just not good at taking responsibility for their actions,” Varma said. “This could be the person who makes a snide comment and when you call them out, they say, ‘What are you talking about? I was just kidding.’”
This makes it difficult to push back, assert boundaries or even talk about conflict.
“You never feel that your issues with them are being resolved,” Varma said. “You end up feeling inferior, less than, and you end up second-guessing yourself.”
What To Do If You Suspect You’re Being Emotionally Manipulated
If these patterns feel familiar, first shift your focus away from trying to decode the other person’s behaviour and toward understanding your own experience.
“The safest way to navigate relationships is with the belief that the only person you can control is yourself,” Northey said. “Therefore, the best signs to look for to avoid being manipulated come from looking inward to understand yourself, not looking outward to try to assess another person’s behaviour.”
That means paying attention to your emotional reactions and identifying your needs.
“Your needs likely include a need to feel trusted and trusting, need to feel supported, need to be understood, and more,” Northey said.
If you feel consistently anxious, confused or unheard, there’s a good chance those needs aren’t being met. You’ll then want to determine how to change this. That might first involve communicating directly.
“Be clear in your communication and tell them how it feels when the conversation derails into you having to justify your love, loyalty or commitment to them,” Delawalla advised.
It’s also important to be realistic about what communication can accomplish, however. If you’ve already expressed your needs multiple times and been met with defensiveness, dismissal or more manipulation, you may not be able to change the dynamic.
“Unfortunately, it is very rare that you can convince someone who is truly emotionally manipulative that they should change,” Northey said. “Attempting to change someone you believe to be emotionally manipulative is a manipulative game in and of itself. So, just stop playing.”
Instead, focus on strengthening your own sense of reality and connection to protect yourself from further manipulation.
“If you already know what feels [like to be] seen and loved, you’re less likely to fall for a fake version of that through love bombing,” Northey explained. “If you already have a reliable system for checking reality, you’re less likely to fall for gaslighting.”
You can also reach out for outside perspectives in these situations. “In an emotionally manipulative relationship, our spirit or intuition often signals that something is off or doesn’t make sense,” Tillard-Gates said. “However, we sometimes overlook this if we have been in a similar relationship in the past. A good way to check ourselves is to get a second opinion from someone not involved in the relationship, such as a therapist, a friend, or even a stranger.”
Surround yourself with people who engage in healthy connections and promote emotional safety. You can break toxic cycles and create more positive ones.
Help and support:
- Mind, open Monday to Friday, 9am-6pm on 0300 123 3393.
- Samaritans offers a listening service which is open 24 hours a day, on 116 123 (UK and ROI – this number is FREE to call and will not appear on your phone bill).
- CALM (the Campaign Against Living Miserably) offer a helpline open 5pm-midnight, 365 days a year, on 0800 58 58 58, and a webchat service.
- The Mix is a free support service for people under 25. Call 0808 808 4994 or email help@themix.org.uk
- Rethink Mental Illness offers practical help through its advice line which can be reached on 0808 801 0525 (Monday to Friday 10am-4pm). More info can be found on rethink.org.
Politics
London Mayor Criticises Kanye West Wireless Festival Booking
The mayor of London has spoken out against the decision for a major music festival in the city to book Ye, the rapper previously known as Kanye West, as its headliner for this year.
On Monday, it was announced that the All Of The Lights musician would be headlining all three nights at Wireless festival, which will take place at London’s Finsbury Park in July.
Immediately, this decision was met with backlash due to the controversy surrounding Ye in recent history, namely around a slew of antisemitic comments he made last year, including praise for Adolf Hitler and declaring himself to be a Nazi.
Groups including the Jewish Leadership Council, the Campaign Against Anti-Semitism and Board Of Deputies Of British Jews all condemned the booking, with the president of the latter going as far as questioning whether the government should be “blocking” Ye from “entering the country”.
On Wednesday, Sadiq Khan also said in a statement: “We are clear that the past comments and actions of this artist are offensive and wrong, and are simply not reflective of London’s values.
“This was a decision taken by the festival organisers and not one that City Hall is involved in.”

HuffPost UK has contacted Wireless for comment.
In 2025, Ye’s Australian travel visa was revoked in light of a single he released titled Heil Hilter, which was banned by YouTube, Spotify and Apple, among other music streaming services.
His online store on the platform Shopify had previously been pulled when he began selling a t-shirt emblazoned with a swastika and a slogan alluding to Hitler’s Nazi party.
Earlier this year, Ye took out a full-page advert in the Wall Street Journal to apologise for his past antisemitism, claiming his actions came about at a time in which he’d “lost touch with reality” as a result of his bipolar disorder.
He also maintained that he’s neither a “Nazi” nor an “antisemite” (and, in fact, “loves Jewish people”) and apologised specifically to those within the Black community who feel that he “let them down” with his actions.
Following this, he dismissed the suggestion that this apology was a “PR move” to allow him to return to releasing music and carrying out his numerous businesses.
“[This] isn’t about reviving my commerciality. This is because these remorseful feelings were so heavy on my heart and weighing on my spirit,” he said during an interview.
Last week, Ye released his 12th studio album Bully, which was reported by the Official Charts Company to be on course to debut at number 11 in the UK albums chat.
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.
Politics
LBC Host Criticises Trump For Recent UK Remarks
A presenter on LBC delivered a brutal reality check to Donald Trump after his latest attack on the UK over the Iran war.
The US president repeated his claim that Nato countries – especially the UK – “weren’t there for” America in the past.
In a post on Truth Social, Trump hit out at “all of those countries that can’t get jet fuel because of the Strait of Hormuz, like the United Kingdom, which refused to get involved in the decapitation of Iran”.
“You’ll have to start learning how to fight for yourself, the USA won’t be there to help you anymore, just like you weren’t there for us,” he said.
But speaking on his LBC show, Iain Dale said he was “getting sick and tired of the abuse” from the president – and pointed the times over the past 35 years when Britain has supported American military action.
He said: “Donald Trump has spent quite a bit of time over the past week insulting various Nato countries. OK, mainly Britain.
“He’s warned the UK in a post on Truth Social ‘the US won’t be there for you any more, just like you weren’t there for us’.
“Well I remember many occasions in the last few decades when the UK has been there for the United States. For example, in the first Gulf war. For example, in Afghanistan. For example, in Iraq.
“Britain has been the most reliable ally of the United States of any country in Nato since Nato was formed in 1949.
“And I don’t know about you, but I am getting sick and tired of the abuse that the president of the United States is throwing at our country.”
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.
Politics
Peace Vigil attenders see US ground attack planes leaving RAF Lakenheath
Peace Vigil attenders at RAF Lakenheath have observed more than 20 planes taking off on the morning of 2 April. At least six were A10 ground attack aircraft, likely heading for West Asia, where Donald Trump is threatening a ground invasion of Iran.
Witness Avril Simpson said:
This carnage should not be happening, and our government should not be taking part in Trump’s illegal war, and our taxes should be supporting genuine security not killing kids abroad.
Lakenheath Alliance for Peace members have been leafleting in local towns and talking with local people. They discussed what their local bases stand for, and whether their purposes are acceptable or need resisting. An Advan carrying CND’s digital billboard announced that nuclear weapons under the control of Trump have arrived at Lakenheath.
Campaigners are making more moving artworks to add to the display on the fence at the base. These are highlighting the horrors being perpetrated from there.
There will be a major demonstration and blockade at the main gates of RAF Lakenheath on Saturday 4 April. This will demonstrate opposition to its use in the deployment of nuclear weapons and in the illegal attack on Iran. The Alliance promotes genuine security that breaks the cycle of retaliatory violence instead of feeding it.
Lakenheath Peace Camp
Lakenheath Alliance for Peace is holding its Easter Peace Camp from 1-6 April. All who care about surviving the nuclear weapons age are welcome.
A 24/7 vigil at the gates of RAF Lakenheath began at 4pm on Wednesday 1 April and will continue until 3pm on Monday 6 April.
Participants approached the main gate to hand in a letter to the base commander highlighting their concerns. On previous occasions, base staff have refused such attempts.
This time was no different. Angie Zelter, one of the co-authors, said:
This base is taking part in deployment of nuclear weapons, and in illegal wars against Gaza and Iran. Ignoring our warnings by refusing to accept our letter, will not look good in a War Crimes tribunal.
Throughout the week at Lakenheath, peace campaigners will raise awareness of the risks posed by nuclear weapons. They’ll celebrate and promote alternative options, and tell governments that they’re not acting in their citizens’ names or best interests.
They will be joined on Saturday by coaches from around the country, musicians Seize the Day and speakers from CND and World Beyond War.
Camp schedule:
- Wednesday 1 April – Camp set up and beginning of 24-hour vigil outside the main gate of the base. Vigil will run throughout the duration of the camp. CND ad van visiting Cambridge.
- Thursday 2 April – Local outreach in Thetford and Bury St Edmunds – with CND’s digital billboards helping to raise the ‘Kick out Trump’s nukes’ demand.
- Friday 3 April – ‘Environment Day’ theme with workshops on the war on nature, attacks on the right to protest.
- Saturday 4 April – ‘Give Peace a Chance’ demonstration and blockade at RAF Lakenheath main gate.
- Sunday 5 April – ‘Coming Together – Rising Up’ with workshops, music, and poetry.
- Monday 6 April – ‘Grand Finale – Visions into Action’ with networking event and closing ceremony.
More details on the schedule and workshops are on Lakenheath Alliance for Peace’s website.
Featured image via Lakenheath Alliance for Peace
Politics
'What the hell did he just say?' GOP Iran worries build after Trump speech
President Donald Trump’s primetime address on Iran did little to relieve rising alarm from plugged-in Republicans in key states across the country who see the war as pushing costs higher and their midterm chances ever-lower.
Trump declared Wednesday night that the U.S. offensive in Iran is “nearing completion” but warned that military operations would intensify over the “next two to three weeks.” He attempted to clarify his goals for the war — to destroy Iran’s nuclear capabilities — and insisted it was never about regime change. And he shrugged off the spike in oil and gas prices as a “short-term increase.”
To a number of GOP strategists and local party leaders involved in key congressional and gubernatorial races, the message was too little, too late and too jumbled.
“What the hell did he just say?” one GOP strategist in a battleground state wrote in a text to POLITICO after the president’s address, granted anonymity to speak candidly. “A quick recap and a path forward would’ve been helpful. Instead, it was nonsense left for Sean Hannity to articulate.”
Trump’s decision to attack Iran, and the subsequent spike in oil and gas prices, are the latest sources of heartburn for Republicans who were already feeling queasy about public opinion that has turned against Trump’s domestic agenda. They heard little new information Wednesday night from the president that signaled a course correction.
Conversations with more than half a dozen operatives and party chairs across seven battleground states revealed their anxiety that the prolonged conflict is overshadowing the White House’s affordability message and could hurt their chances of holding onto power this November.
The Republicans who spoke to POLITICO were particularly concerned about Trump’s waving off the financial strain the war has put on day-to-day prices, touting “the strongest economy in history” with “no inflation.” Two different strategists compared the latter comments to President Joe Biden’s repeated insistence that the economy was doing better than they believed.
“Not sure people will buy the strong economy part,” Todd Gillman, a Michigan GOP district chair, said in a message Wednesday night. “Inflation is definitely more under control than it was under Biden, but the prices haven’t come down on a lot of things.”
Without any clear announcements from Trump on an endgame in the region, future markets for U.S. stocks recoiled and average national gas prices topped $4 per gallon. Crude oil prices soared to over $111 per barrel on Thursday morning.
Others were left wanting more specifics from Trump on an exit strategy and the factors that drew the U.S. into the war. “I think it could’ve been a little more specific or expanded on the exact threats that Iran poses to the U.S.,” said one Wisconsin-based GOP strategist. “I don’t know the extent he’s able to get into that stuff based off intelligence, but maybe he could have been a little bit more expansive there.”
Polls have consistently shown a majority of Americans oppose the military operation in Iran by double-digit margins. The conflict is already fracturing the president’s loyal MAGA base, alienating young men who believed in his “America First” message. And Democrats are beginning to go on the attack in campaign ads, accusing vulnerable GOP lawmakers of prioritizing the president’s multibillion dollar offensive over making voters’ lives more affordable.
One GOP operative working on a battleground House race found solace in Trump’s talk of an exit strategy, saying voters would be “relieved to hear that we’re not going to be sticking around.”
“On the other hand, I don’t think anybody has confidence that gas prices will just come down on their own,” said the operative, who was granted anonymity to deliver a candid assessment. “Overall, there’s really nothing in here that helps to sell this to the public.”
Some said the address may have come too late.
“It’s something that probably should have been done at the beginning of the conflict,” said Dennis Lennox, a Michigan-based GOP strategist.
Still, others in the party found that Trump’s address met the moment and lavished praise on the president. Mark Levin, a staunch Trump ally and conservative commentator, said he delivered a “PERFECT SPEECH” in a post on X.
Brent Littlefield, a GOP strategist involved in several races, including in Maine’s battleground 2nd congressional district, lauded Trump’s decision to speak directly to Americans and dismissed concerns that the remarks came too late in the conflict to help him articulate his case to voters.
“It was right for the President to wait to do that until after the conflict began,” Littlefield said. “He did not telegraph the move to the enemy of what the United States was planning to do.”
Samuel Benson contributed to this report.
Politics
Trump Brags About Supporting War Instead Of Day Care
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Politics
Reform bow to pressure and sack housing spokesperson
Following his obscene comments about the Grenfell Tower disaster, Reform has sacked spokesperson Simon Dudley. It comes as Reform has been struggling to hold on to candidates for the local election.
Firings do happen
As the BBC reported, Simon Dudley used to be an executive at Homes England and Ebbsfleet. He joined Reform in February.
Sickeningly, Dudley said the following to Inside Housing:
The practical impact of over-regulation is to stop things. Now, people may feel that we’ve done the right thing through introducing this regulation, but on the other side of that, think about all the human suffering of not having a home, not being able to have children and being stuck in your parents’ home in your childhood bedroom. So there is a balance. You know, we can’t, you know, sadly, you know, everyone dies in the end. It’s just how you go, right?
Following an intense backlash, the party gave him the boot. Politics UK reported on the sacking as follows:
Farage said “he is no longer a spokesman for the party. That’s been dealt with”
“The comments were deeply inappropriate. Richard Tice has dealt with him”
Context: https://t.co/uaUqmOQTAG
— Politics UK (@PolitlcsUK) April 2, 2026
People responded to his sacking online:
Nigel Farage has sacked Simon Dudley as Reform’s housing spokesperson over his vile comments about Grenfell, but he refused to rule out whether Simon Dudley will stand as an MP at the next general election.
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) April 2, 2026
That’s right; he’s sacked as a spokesperson – not as a member.
Also, it seems like they sacked him because the backlash grew too great; not because they disagreed with his statement:
Simon Dudley was sacked by Nigel Farage just an hour after Reform deputy leader Richard Tice shared Simon Dudley’s ‘apology’ on X. pic.twitter.com/oiaZPWCdcZ
— Kevin Schofield (@KevinASchofield) April 2, 2026
The Tories are criticising Reform too, which is a bit rich considering they were the party in government when Grenfell happened (and also that they dithered on taking action for years):
Simon Dudley’s comments were shocking and ill-informed. It was right he was sacked but shows exactly why Reform isn’t fit to govern.
Nigel Farage runs a one-man band where policy and people decisions are made on the hoof. That’s chaotic. A govt led by him would be no different.…
— Kevin Hollinrake MP (@kevinhollinrake) April 2, 2026
Danger
As Rachel Charlton-Dailey reported for the Canary, Dudley said ‘fires do happen’ in relation to the tragedy.
Calls for Reform housing spokesperson to be sacked after he dismisses Grenfell tragedy and says ‘fires do happen’
By @RachelCDailey_ https://t.co/0Y5NMTE2Tt
— Canary (@TheCanaryUK) April 2, 2026
Dudley also told Inside Housing:
Extracting Grenfell from the statistics, actually people dying in house fires is rare… many, many more people die on the roads driving cars, but we’re not making cars illegal, so why are we stopping houses being built?
The problem with this is that we famously have made vehicles illegal – most recently the Tesla CyberTruck (or, to be more specific, it failed to meet our standards).
If you’re wondering why CyberTrucks don’t meet standards, look no further:
$TSLA cybertruck lawsuit: Tesla cybertruck tried to kill me by driving off bridge 🤡
🤡 Cybertruck Autopilot “suddenly and without warning” tried to drive off overpass
🤡 Drove straight into concrete barrier
🤡 Other companies use LiDAR, Elon uses cheap low res cameras pic.twitter.com/Z1BJVJ7X5h
— Stonk King ((((🌕)))) (@StonkKing4) March 10, 2026
Tesla recalls all 3,878 Cybertrucks over faulty accelerator pedal that could cause an accident. 😳‼️ pic.twitter.com/ghwN6Rouqo
— DramaAlert (@DramaAlert) April 19, 2024
$TSLA cybertruck on FSD
💀 runs straight into guard rail
💀 veers off road
Thankfully driver was paying attention 🙏 pic.twitter.com/AKNzDUhq3v
— Stonk King ((((🌕)))) (@StonkKing4) August 12, 2025
This is a tangent, obviously, but the point is this: when things are dangerous, they should be illegal.
And do you know what’s really, really dangerous?
High rise buildings clad in flammable materials.
We need reform not Reform
Housing is too important to leave in the hands of greedy companies who prioritise profits over people. Grenfell was the most shocking example of why that is, and Reform has now shown it will side with the profiteers.
Featured image via Miles Glendinning (Wikimedia)
Politics
Scientists Have Found A Way To Stop Ageing ‘Zombie Cells’
As we age, our bodies lose some resilience, which can lead to less movement throughout the day and an increased risk of facing multiple chronic diseases at once (multimorbidity).
This happens partly because senescent cells, sometimes called “zombie” cells, stop dividing and build up. They secrete “proinflammatory molecules that contribute to chronic inflammation and ageing-related diseases”.
A process called senolysis usually clears these away, but as we get older, that cleaning system becomes less efficient.
But scientists from the University of Kyoto think they’ve found a way to slow or stop the production of these “zombie cells”.
How did the researchers stop “zombie cells” from building up?
Though we knew that “zombie cells” seemed to create inflammation that affected nearby cells, scientists weren’t sure about how this went on to affect someone’s body.
These researchers looked closer at the senescent cells themselves and found they heavily relied on glycolysis (using sugar for energy), a process which is also involved in the spreading of cancer cells.
Using bioluminescence to help see what was going on in the cell better, scientists found that two enzymes were crucial to glycolysis in “zombie cells”. Their binding was increased in sensecent cells.
So, when they were able to interrupt that key interaction, researchers could selectively “delete” zombie cells.
In mice, the change was linked to reduced lung fibrosis.
They also found that when this activity was diminished, a protein that triggers cell death was suppressed too.
What might this mean?
The study authors hope this might help to maintain resilience in older age.
That way, it’s hoped, the risk of multimorbidity might go down.
This study’s corresponding author, Hiroshi Kondoh, said: “Our findings in glycolytic regulation suggest that impaired metabolic resilience in ageing is one of the targets for senotherapy, to aid in preservation of resilience in ageing.”
Politics
Ex-sheep farmer speaks out ahead of Easter as campaigners urge public to ‘skip the lamb’
An ex-sheep farmer who once raised animals for slaughter is speaking out ahead of Easter. He’s urging the public to reconsider eating lamb. This comes as new data highlights how demand continues to drive the killing of young animals.
Animal Justice Project is releasing a new video interview with Devon-based farmer Sivalingam “Kumar” Vasanthakumar. He gave up sheep farming and took his entire flock to sanctuary, before transitioning to a plant-based livelihood.
BBC News previously featured Vasanthakumar when he made the decision to leave farming behind. He now grows vegetables on his land and runs a vegan street food business, Kumar’s Dosa Bar, using largely home-grown produce.
Animal Justice Project is releasing a new film, A Change of Heart: From Sheep Farmer to Vegan, over the Easter weekend. It tells Vasanthakumar’s story. He says in the film that he saw his sheep “as individuals”:
Once you see that, you can’t continue as before.
Data reveals demand-led lamb killing – including around Easter
New analysis of 2025 slaughter figures from the Food Standards Agency shows that 11.5 million lambs were killed last year and of those, 893,336 were killed in April, coinciding with Easter demand. This means almost 8% of annual lamb slaughter, or 1 in 13 lambs killed last year, happened in April for the bank holiday weekend.
While this is lower than peak periods later in the year, it remains higher than surrounding months and reflects the continued cultural association between lamb and Easter.
By comparison, June saw 1,106,894 lambs slaughtered, as early-season lambs reach market weight and demand increases. Even higher peaks occur later in the year, driven by large-scale retail demand.
Animal Justice Project says that while Easter does not produce the largest spike, it remains a key moment where consumer choice directly influences the number of animals killed.
Claire Palmer, founder of Animal Justice Project, said:
Easter is often seen as a time of renewal and compassion, yet it’s still associated with eating lambs: animals who are only a few months old when they’re killed.
The data shows that whenever demand rises, more animals are slaughtered. Easter may not be the biggest spike, but it’s one of the most symbolic, because it’s driven by tradition, even though people have a clear choice not to eat animals.
Central London demonstration on Saturday 4 April
To coincide with the Easter weekend, Animal Justice Project will hold a public demonstration in Leicester Square, London. It’ll take place from 12pm to 3pm on Saturday 4 April.
The demonstration will feature a striking visual installation highlighting the reality behind lamb consumption.
A performer portraying a lamb will lie on a table, dressed in a white costume with lamb ears and realistic prosthetic wounds, including a slit throat and severe leg injury. A figure dressed as a butcher will appear to cut into the body. Meanwhile a pile of severed leg props at the end of the table will represent the scale of animals killed.
Alongside the installation, a volunteer will hold a life-size lamb prop, reinforcing the comparison between animals and humans. Other volunteers will hold signs and distribute leaflets encouraging passers-by to “Skip the Lamb”.
Palmer added:
We want people to stop and think. Behind every Easter meal is an animal who wanted to live.
Animal Justice Project is urging the public to choose plant-based alternatives this Easter. And to reconsider the long-standing link between lamb and the holiday. Palmer concluded:
Traditions can change. And when they involve the lives of young animals, they should.
Featured image via Animal Justice Project
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