Politics
John Bald: Conservatives are deluded to think we have defeated the “progressive” educationalists
John Bald is a former Ofsted inspector. He is Vice-President of the Conservative Education Society.
The best news for education in recent years has been the election of Professor Stanislas Dehaene, head of neuroscience in France, to the Royal Society. Dehaene’s work over the past 20 years on the processes of learning, based on direct evidence of brain activity rather than the indirect evidence gained by inferring it from external observation, has provided a clear picture of the way the brain develops from infancy that calls into question every educational practice that is not consistent with it.
His election adds to the substantial number of Royal Society Fellows with a main or significant interest in brain research, and comes at a time when the Society is working to extend knowledge of the field beyond its own members. This is real science, not quackery about “learning styles” or “brain food” (water) that led to so many false dawns in the 00s. The French government has given Dehaene a unit to investigate the application of his work in the school system, and something similar is needed here. Dehaene was kind enough to describe this review of his major work, How We Learn, as “beautiful”, so I suggest it can be taken as an accurate introduction.
Dehaene’s overarching theory, that learning involves an adjustment in thinking to take account of new material, poses challenges to both sides of our current schism over the purposes of education. For Labour and its progressive allies, his demonstration that mental development is a process of adjusting thinking shows that their infatuation with mixed ability teaching is a blind alley. Earlier research, beginning with Santiago Ramón y Cajal´s drawings of brain cells which won him the Nobel Prize in 2006, identified the formation of links between brain cells and the deposit of myelin as an insulator through practice, as the basic process of development.
As the process of intellectual growth is exponential, the highest-achieving children learn at a much faster rate. For example, Marie Clay’s investigation of six-year-old readers in the 1960s found that the most able quarter made very few errors, and were often able to correct their own mistakes. The weakest quarter’s error rate was 20 times as great. They read proportionately less and were rarely able to correct an error. The needs of the two groups were so different that it was not possible for one teacher to meet both at the same time. The same issue arises in maths, though unfortunately, far too few teachers have the skills they need to teach the weakest pupils. Our opponents still control most teacher training and systematically ignore the issue.
David Cameron’s storming defence of his record on education and the responses to it show the challenge to our side. Blazing away as if nothing had gone wrong, it mirrored Jeremy Hunt’s rebuke to me, when I was Chairman of the Conservative Education Society, to focus on what was going right, not on what was going wrong. Did either of them really think our opponents would do the same? And was it not a huge embarrassment to David Cameron and Michael Gove to have trumpeted Perry Beeches School at our Conference, only to have it closed, and the head banned from teaching for corruption?
Chris McGovern, of the Campaign for Real Education, diplomatically suggested that the truth was more “nuanced “. The impact of phonics is one example. International reading scores have risen, in contrast to the progressive miasma in Scotland and Wales, but the inflexible form of phonics enforced by the government, and its prevention of sensible adaptation to meet the needs of children who find learning to read difficult, have been a big factor in the SEND crisis that threatens to bankrupt local authorities. This is not just because of the reading problems themselves, but because of the severe anxiety, poor behaviour and school refusal that failure to learn to read can generate. I am currently teaching a 12-year-old who could not read the, the most common word in the language, which is presented in government lists as an “exception”. Explaining the origin of th by Norman scribes, and demonstrating its frequency in common short words – this, that, then – has solved the problem, and provided the basis for a new neural network, in which each word reinforces the others.
Interestingly, this pupil can now read complex vocabulary related to his interest in marine biology – invertebrate, bioluminescent – following discussion and explanation. Synthetic phonics alone would not equip them to do this, as it would not show him where to place the stress on the words, showed in a very readable book or explain how to handle the variations in vowel (voice) sounds. Two Fellows of the Royal Society have shown in a very readable book (Frith and Blakemore, The Learning Brain) how an area of the brain develops to carry out this discrimination almost 20 years ago. It is high time everyone involved in this area took notice.
The multiplication check, a good idea in itself, shows similar inflexibility. Learning tables requires a major adjustment to the way children think about numbers, as they need to coordinate two columns, one rising in the basic sequence of numbers – 1x, 2x,3x – and the other in a multiple. Children learn these at different rates, and progressives have deliberately avoided investigating this. The government, though, imposed an all-all-nothing test that took no account of development, and gave no credit whatsoever to those who were still in the process of building the neural networks needed for complete success. A simple bronze-silver-gold system would have encouraged pupils and teachers alike, and I still don’t know why this idea was rejected.
Labour has shown, through blocking an Eton-sponsored sixth form in the North-East, and its vindictive VAT levy on independent schools, that it continues to put ideology before progress. On the Conservative side, allowing policy to be determined by ideological fantasists like Dominic Cummings, and ignoring the wiser counsel readily available from experts such as Lord Lingfield and our scientists, threw away a golden opportunity to reverse the progressivism that has prevailed since the days of Richard Crossland and Harold Wilson. It may not occur again.
Politics
We are already getting a glimpse of what Miliband would be like in No. 11
Westminster is, as ever, a rumour mill. One of the latest doing the rounds concerns Ed Miliband – and whether his eventual destination in a future Labour government might be the Treasury. The failed Labour leader, now Energy Secretary, is increasingly tipped as a possible Chancellor in a post–Keir Starmer world.
But we may not need to speculate about what he would be like in No11. In many ways, the Miliband chancellorship is already on display.
Take energy policy. Miliband continues to press ahead with a ban on new North Sea drilling licences even as Norway – sharing the same basin – celebrates a string of new oil discoveries, including one of the largest in a decade. At the same time he maintains the North Sea windfall tax, widely faulted with hastening the decline of Britain’s oil and gas sector. The push towards ever more stringent net-zero obligations continues apace, even when the immediate effect is to increase costs for British taxpayers and businesses.
What is striking is how little this seems to trouble him – even when allies offer their warnings. Tony Blair has said the UK is heading in the wrong direction, and urged a reversal in the ban on new licences. Greg Jackson, the chief executive of Octopus Energy and hardly a fossil-fuel diehard, has pointed out that if Britain is going to use gas, it might as well use domestic supplies rather than importing liquefied natural gas from overseas. Even the chair of Miliband’s own GB Energy has cautioned that “oil and gas is our foundation”, warning of “haemorrhaging workers too fast and risks losing supply chains”.
None of it appears to matter. Miliband presses on regardless.
It is a revealing trait and this set of policies perhaps one of the clearest examples of just how uncompromising he is – putting dogged pursuit of his own pet projects and ideology at the cost of other people’s finances.
Miliband’s view is that he can centralise everything and see it run through the state. Consider GB Energy itself – the much-trumpeted state-backed energy company which, somewhat awkwardly, will not actually produce any energy. Miliband promised that it would lead to “mind-blowing” reductions in household bills. For now, it looks rather more like a vanity vehicle for his own ideology. Or take his intervention in the wind sector, where unionisation has effectively been mandated by government fiat.
As one Tory puts it bluntly: “He basically hates markets and doesn’t meet with business.”
The signs of what a Miliband Treasury might look like extend well beyond energy. During budget debates he has been among the most vocal advocates of scrapping the two-child benefit cap, accusing Conservatives who support it of seeking “to blame the poor for their poverty”.
Quite aside from that row, he bragged about how he has long championed higher taxes across a familiar list of targets: expensive homes, landlords, and gambling firms among them.
His broader philosophy was neatly summarised:
“Our vision of what makes an economy succeed is different from that of Conservative Members. We believe that public investment crowds in and does not crowd out private investment; that the only route to economic success is a government who support industry and workers with a proper industrial strategy; and that rights at work and strong trade unions are not an impediment to a good economy but an essential ingredient of it.”
Let’s take a look at how that vision is going: Good luck with private investment when this Labour government has seeb business confidence at some of its lowest levels; Industries, like hospitality, have been crying out for help as they collapse under Labour’s tax rises; And it’s all well and good saying you’re trying to create new workers’ rights, but what good does that do them when employers can’t afford to hire in the first place.
The two-child cap debate illustrates another tension. Conservatives have pointed out that retaining the cap would save roughly £3.2 billion – enough, they argue, to fund the recruitment of 20,000 additional soldiers, alongside their accommodation and equipment.
Which raises a further question: where exactly would defence spending rank in a Miliband Treasury? He famously opposed military action against Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria in 2013, whipping Labour MPs to block intervention. More recently, he has expressed deep reservations about military action against Iran, and reports suggest he was among those wary of even allowing the United States to use British bases for strikes.
Would a Chancellor Miliband be eager to prioritise defence spending in a more dangerous world?
To look again at his budget remarks, he said: “With the world at its most perilous for generations, their [Conservative] policy is to cross their fingers and hope…” and that is exactly what he is doing. It is a perilous moment for the country’s finances, for energy and fuel prices, yet Miliband presses on with his uncompromising ideology and hoping for the best.
Shadow energy secretary Claire Coutinho put the dividing line starkly in response to him in the Commons: “Labour Members believe the best way out of poverty is welfare; I think the best way is jobs and growth.”
If Miliband ever does make it to No. 11, that argument may well define his chancellorship. The trouble for Britain is that, on current evidence, we are already beginning to see how it might turn out.
Politics
Peter Franklin: Our shallow and simplistic debate over energy policy is a threat to national security
Peter Franklin is an Associate Editor of UnHerd.
Can we have a grown-up conversation about energy please? Because right now, we’re not getting one. I’ll get on to the pro-green side of the debate in a bit, but let’s start with the anti-greens — seeing as they now control policy in both the Conservative Party and Reform UK.
If you were to ask Kemi Badenoch or Nigel Farage about the root causes of our energy insecurities, you can bet they’d reach for a two-word explanation beginning with “net” and ending with “zero”. Indeed, Net Zero has become to the Right what Brexit is to the Left — a general purpose whipping boy for everything that’s gone wrong with the British economy.
But that doesn’t help us with the latest surge in energy prices. After all, it’s not Greta Thunberg blocking the Straits of Hormuz, but an unpredictable, open-ended conflict with Iran.
Crude oil prices are forecast to hit $100 per barrel this week. And if Donald Trump doesn’t wrap this up pronto, there’ll be much worse to come. Even if Iranian missiles and drones don’t destroy the Gulf’s energy infrastructure, the squeeze on tanker traffic is already wreaking havoc. Oil storage facilities in the region are filling-up fast. That in turn threatens a massive shut-down in production and processing — which won’t be reversed easily or quickly. And remember, it’s not just oil. The Qataris are shutting down their LNG export terminals, which is why natural gas prices are spiking too.
But that’s the cost of relying on imported fossil fuels, especially exports from Russia and the Middle East. As well as enriching some of the world’s worst people, we’ve staked Europe’s security on a series of vulnerable bottlenecks — including Russia’s oil and gas pipelines; both ends of the Red Sea; and the aforementioned Straits of Hormuz. Since 2020, all of those have been choked-off — in some cases for months or even years. The harsh truth is that in weighing up the pros-and-cons of different forms of energy we can no longer assume the unimpeded east-west flow of oil and gas.
So when you hear someone urging the country to get real about the vulnerabilities of renewable energy, but without also acknowledging the fragilities of a hydrocarbon-based economy, the argument is either blinkered or made in bad faith.
Of course, the same applies in reverse. For instance, here’s the Business Secretary, Peter Kyle, using the current crisis to call for a “doubling down on renewables.” Well, I’m all in favour of doubling, tripling and quadrupling the deployment of wind and solar power. Not only is it clean and un-depletable, it’s also domestically produced — with obvious benefits for security of supply and our balance-of-payments. One little thing though: what happens when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine? Yes, we’ve kept the lights on so far, but the more wind and solar we deploy, the harder it becomes to compensate for its natural variability.
That doesn’t mean that we can’t find solutions. In fact, the technologies we need to store electrical power are making rapid progress. However, to minimise the costs of this transition, the last thing we ought to be doing is holding ourselves to an artificially accelerated timetable. But that’s precisely what’s happening thanks to Labour’s deranged plan to decarbonise the grid by 2030. Note that there’s no international treaty compelling the country to jump through this hoop. It’s an entirely self-inflicted policy, pushed — and obsessively pursued — by Ed Miliband.
But that’s the problem with our polarised energy debate. To see only the problems with your opponents’ policies leads to virtue signalling with regard to your own.
For instance, the 2030 target only makes sense as a demonstration of ideological correctness. The same goes for another Miliband policy: the ban on new oil and gas exploration in the North Sea. Again, there is no international obligation on UK to make this sacrifice. Nor does is it required by Net Zero which is about consumption not production. Even within the constraints of the 2050 target we’ll still be consuming oil and gas for decades to come — albeit oil and gas we’d have to import instead of producing ourselves. There’s also the absurd inconsistency with the government’s belated efforts to boost production from existing capacity in the North Sea.
Perhaps Ed Miliband thinks his virtue signals are setting a good example, but no one in the world is looking at the costs, chaos and contradictions of British energy policy and saying: “I’ll have what they’re having”.
Sometimes, the natural reaction to excessive virtue signalling is to “vice signal” — that is, to deliberately defy the conventions of a prevailing, but failing, moral order.
Thus Kemi Badenoch has made a point of promising to reverse Labour’s ban on new oil exploration in British waters. Assuming that we can squeeze a few extra drops from the North Sea, this would be good for the public purse, our trade deficit and jobs. There’s also a modest environmental benefit in that extracting fossil fuels close to home tends to spew less carbon dioxide than importing the stuff from afar. Nurturing British expertise in marine engineering also produces transferable skills for offshore renewables.
But let’s not get carried away. Opening new fields will, at best, slow down the decline in North Sea production, not reverse it. Any impression to the contrary is a reminder that vice signalling, like virtue signalling, is just a gesture.
I fear that we’re falling into a similar trap in regard to new nuclear. The dangerous glamour of this technology makes tempting fodder for a vice signal, but the reality isn’t quite so titillating. There’s only one nuclear plant currently under construction in the UK and that’s Hinkley Point C in Somerset. Unfortunately there’s been yet another delay to the completion of the project and yet another budget-busting cost increase. In today’s money, the total projected cost now stands at £49 billion and that’s assuming no further bad news. Luckily, it’ll be the project owners picking up the tab for the overrun not the British taxpayer or bill payer (a fact for which we have my old boss, Greg Clark, to thank). But the same is not true of the proposed Sizewell C plant, which was recently given the go-ahead by Labour and for which the British state will underwrite a massive chunk of the construction risk.
In theory a “fleet” of new nuclear power stations could supply an abundance of home-produced, low carbon energy — but at £50 billion a pop, what we need to worry about isn’t the danger of a reactor meltdown, but the financial meltdown if it turns out we’ve paid the French or Chinese for a herd of white elephants. So I’m sorry neutron-fans, the fact is that we need some kind of technological breakthrough before we can sensibly take the nuclear bet. It may be that that Small Modular Reactors are the way forward, but before getting too excited about those wait for a final quote from the builders.
At this point I’d better stop my drive-by shooting of our energy options. There are others, from coal to fracking to energy efficiency, but they all have their problems too.
So if there are no easy answers, how about a hard answer? Well, in extremely condensed form, here are three things we ought to be doing:
Firstly, we need to work toward a full alignment of environmental and energy security objectives. Wherever contradictions crop up in the policy framework, let’s strip them out. That includes anything (or anyone) whose effect is to replace home produced energy with imports.
Secondly, it’s time to stop targeting given quantities of decarbonisation — especially by unnecessary deadlines. Instead, the machinery of the state should be reorientated towards a related, but distinct, objective — which is to relentlessly bear down on the cost of clean and secure energy. Whether this displeases the energy companies or the environmental NGOs is immaterial. The only guarantee of defeating global warming is if clean tech becomes so cheap and reliable that the world can’t afford not to use it.
Thirdly, and most importantly, we have to get serious about industrial strategy. Alongside our allies, we’ve agreed to spend 5 per cent of our GDP on defence and national resilience (the latter of which includes energy security). That is only affordable if we use these vast sums strategically to build-up our economy as a hi-tech manufacturing power house.
The parallel, intertwined effort to secure clean and affordable energy supplies must work with and not against that goal.
Politics
Chris Philp: With crime and antisocial behaviour unacceptably high it’s time to ‘Take Back our Streets’
Chris Philp MP is the Shadow Home Secretary.
We can all feel that order is breaking down on our streets and within our communities.
Crime and antisocial behaviour are at unacceptably high levels and the social contract that helped make Britain unique is coming apart at the seams.
We used to be known as one of the most orderly countries in the world. But now, every day, too many people witness things that anger and alarm them: towns blighted by graffiti and litter, cannabis being openly dealt and smoked on the street, shoplifting rampant, phones being snatched or yet another headline of a young life cut short by a knife. Our communities have become less civil and more dangerous. I hear it everywhere I go, with good, ordinary, decent citizens telling me they are fed up. People are often afraid on their own high streets.
It does not have to be like this.
We know that when respect for the rules that bind our communities together breaks down, it doesn’t just make the law-abiding majority feel unsafe, but it also fuels a culture of lawlessness that leads to far worse crimes.
The first duty of government is to protect the public. That means taking action against those who make their neighbours’ lives a misery. It means backing our police officers to enforce the law – every law – no matter the perpetrator.
As Conservatives, we are clear who we stand for: the law-abiding majority who agree the police should be backed to enforce the law on everyone.
That’s we we’ve launched our plan to Take Back Our Streets.
The first priority is restoring a strong police presence where crime is most concentrated. Conservatives will recruit 10,000 extra police officers and deploy hotspot patrolling across the 2,000 highest-crime neighbourhoods. A quarter of all crime occurs in these 5 per cent of neighbourhoods. Concentrating visible policing in these places prevents offences and deters repeat offending. Our plan to hire 10,000 more officers will allow us to concentrate police presence in these areas and prevent around 35,000 crimes, including violence, theft, anti-social behaviour and public drug use.
We will also give officers the tools they need to disrupt crime before it escalates. Conservatives will triple the use of Stop and Search to take knives and drugs off the streets and increase arrests. Stop and Search is one of the most effective tools for removing weapons and drugs and disrupting violent gangs. But political pressure not to use stop and search is shackling the police. We will roll out stronger Section 60 coverage in hotspot areas and lower the bar to using stop and search by allowing officers to act on a single suspicion indicator outside those hotspots. This will deliver around one million additional searches a year and, based on detection rates, around 300,000 more arrests.
Technology will also play a role in strengthening enforcement, so we will roll out Live Facial Recognition in crime hotspots to catch wanted criminals. Trials have already shown strong results, including 1,000 arrests of wanted criminals during a Metropolitan Police trial and a 12 per cent reduction in crime in Croydon town centre. Expanding its use in the 100 highest crime areas is expected to lead to around 22,000 arrests of wanted offenders.
Alongside stronger enforcement, our plan will ensure that low-level offences no longer go unanswered. Conservatives will bring in “Immediate Justice” for low-level offences, so police can issue swift, visible community penalties for offences such as criminal damage, drunk and disorderly behaviour, harassment without violence, minor assault and first-time drug possession. We will require offenders to clean graffiti, tidy parks and repair community spaces – with prosecution if they do not. These community penalties will deliver around 2 million hours of visible clean-up work while reinforcing consequences for offences.
The plan will also end the culture of police walking past obvious law-breaking. Conservatives will crack down on cannabis and end the culture of police walking by. Two-thirds of police officers believe it cannabis use has effectively been decriminalised – in other words, the law is not being enforced. A walk-on-by culture has developed, not least because of political pressure from local leaders like Sadiq Khan. Even where the police do stop people, it often only leads to an informal on-street warning. Under the Conservative proposal, police would be required to intervene in all cases of cannabis possession, issuing formal cautions or Immediate Justice assignments for first offences, and automatic prosecution in magistrates’ courts for repeat offences.
Public safety will also be put first in the management of serious mental illness. Conservatives will overhaul Labour’s Mental Health Act and stamp out the ideology that has seen an obsession with racial targets put ahead of public safety – with tragic consequences. An excessive focus on reducing the use of sectioning on racial grounds, is allowing seriously mentally ill individuals to remain in communities, when they should be detained for the safety of the public and themselves.
We will also tackle the emerging forms of disorder that are making streets less safe. Conservatives will curb dangerous e-bikes and e-scooters on pavements, mandating police intervention and strengthening penalties. These vehicles are increasingly used for snatch theft and to evade pursuit, and they pose a direct risk to pedestrians, particularly children and the elderly. Conservatives will update the law and raise penalties, so enforcement has real bite.
Finally, Conservatives will stamp out ghost plates that evade ANPR, enabling organised crime, dangerous driving, and wider lawlessness. Current penalties do not reflect the seriousness of number plate fraud which enables serious and organised crime. Conservatives will introduce tougher criminal consequences for manufacturing, selling, and using ANPR-evading plates, and will target the supply chain that makes this possible.
Britain works best when the rules are clear and enforced. The Conservative plan to Take Back Our Streets will restore visible policing, back officers to act decisively, and ensure that crime and anti-social behaviour face real consequences.
We are on the side of the law-abiding majority. We will relentlessly pursue those whose criminal activity makes life intolerable for the majority with a zero tolerance approach.
It’s time to Take Back Our Streets.
Politics
Critics Torch ‘Unstable’ Trump After Wild Social Media Meltdown
Writing on his Truth Social website, Trump said any attempt to block oil shipments would lead to an attack “TWENTY TIMES HARDER” ― and so severe that it will be “virtually impossible for Iran to ever be built back, as a Nation, again.”
Iran has responded to the US-Israeli military campaign by threatening to attack ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz, effectively cutting off some 20% of the world’s oil.
Critics said Trump’s rhetoric went beyond wartime belligerence and crossed a line into something far more ominous. They hit back on X:
Politics
Ofsted is pushing the bigotry of low expectations
Every few years, schools inspectorate Ofsted publishes a new inspection framework. This usually prompts a lot of frenetic activity on the part of school leaders and others, but little else.
This time, however, the scramble in response to Ofsted’s new offering, implemented in November, is more than a bureaucratic refresh. Ofsted’s emphasis on inclusion, adaptive teaching and ensuring that disadvantaged pupils are ‘not falling behind’ marks a fundamental shift in what it believes education to be.
Spearheaded by former education secretary Michael Gove, previous Conservative governments had promoted vigorous curriculum reform in England. Their aim was to raise standards for all, and push back against the poisonous idea that lowering expectations was a way to be kind. It meant that all pupils, regardless of background, were entitled and expected to learn demanding subjects. Difficulty was not to be seen as a safeguarding issue. Struggle was not failure. And education was not therapy. The whole point was to ensure that all children were academically challenged.
The new inspection framework effectively dismantles that settlement. Under the banner of inclusion, Ofsted’s new guidelines reintroduce an older, far less confident view of education – one in which socio-economic disadvantage permanently limits what achievements should be expected of a child. Ofsted now asks schools to prove that they are ensuring pupils are ‘not falling behind’ – as if anyone would be for children falling behind.
The language here conceals just how low Ofsted’s and the Labour government’s ambitions are for young people. ‘Not falling behind’ is not a vision of education – it is a risk-management strategy. It tells schools to worry less about pushing pupils to greater academic heights and more about adapting to their perceived limits. The universal promise of education is replaced with a conditional offer: access to knowledge, adjusted according to class background.
This way of thinking has been around for decades. Its roots lie in the tradition of the Fabian Society – a group of late 19th- and early 20th-century reformers whose sympathy for the poor was matched only by their scepticism about their capacities. The Fabians did not hate the working class. They ‘worried’ about them.
Though the language may have been tweaked for the modern ear, the underlying messages are all the same. Where the Fabians spoke of poorer people’s moral weakness, Ofsted speaks of disadvantaged pupils’ limited ‘cognitive load’. Where the Fabians were concerned about poor habits, Ofsted identifies unmet ‘needs’. The message is clear either way: some children need permanently lowered expectations, for their own good.
We are assured the new Ofsted framework is about outcomes for pupils, not excuses. But outcomes are no longer related to pupils demonstrating what they know and have learnt. Instead, outcomes are adjusted to pupils’ backgrounds, processed according to the ‘systemic’ barriers they have faced. In this system, the definition of success becomes elastic – it’s all relative to pupils’ starting points. The more disadvantaged the background, the less that should be expected of a child.
This collides directly with the previous focus on promoting a challenging, knowledge-rich curriculum for all. Now, teachers, facing an attainment gap, are being encouraged to slow the pace right down for every student, to ensure ‘none are falling behind’ – to lower the bar, as it were. While the Fabians believed the poor could not be trusted with autonomy, today’s ‘progressives’ seem to think disadvantaged kids cannot be trusted to deal with academic difficulty.
There is a deeper moral failure at play here. Inclusion frameworks are increasingly treating poverty and disadvantage as destiny. Pupils are encouraged to understand themselves not in terms of their potential, but in terms of their background. The possibility that disadvantaged pupils might excel, that they might outstrip expectations, is apparently unthinkable.
Schools should be the place where background matters least, and children encounter ideas that lift them beyond the circumstances of their birth. Instead, under Ofsted’s new regime, schools are being encouraged to limit children according to the circumstances of their birth.
In the end, an inclusion-focussed Ofsted is not promoting compassion. It is limiting and holding young people back. This brand of ‘progress’ is very backwards indeed.
Neil Davenport is a writer based in London.
Politics
The Canary exposes Starmer’s continued Mandelson cover-up
A new video by the Canary’s Ranjan Balakumaran exposes the Starmer regime’s continued cover-up of Peter Mandelson’s appointment and other paedophile-related whitewashes, conflicts of interest, Starmer’s protection of US-Israeli war-crime enablers Palantir, the attacks on Iran and the global oil-price scam. Quite an achievement for a 5-minute video.
The ‘Epstein class’ and its supporters get more exposed by the day. Watch the latest video here and share widely:
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Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Farage’s Trump fandom is undermining Reform
A new YouGov poll suggests that Nigel Farage’s continued admiration for US fascist Donald Trump is electorally damaging for Farage’s Reform UK. Moreover, his would-be closeness to Trump makes the damage worse.
No love gained
A new YouGov poll shows that, overall, the UK population despises Trump – with more than two-thirds describing themselves as ‘anti-Trump’ and even more perceiving Reform as pro-Trump.
67% of Britons describe themselves as anti-Trump, with Reform UK voters the only group more likely to be pro-Trump than anti
By 2024 vote
Lib Dem: 89% anti-Trump / 2% pro-Trump
Labour: 85% / 3%
Green: 82% / 4%
Conservative: 61% / 19%
Reform UK: 24% / 46%https://t.co/9p6MjkSVbb pic.twitter.com/2k93DnOoTN— YouGov (@YouGov) March 9, 2026
Upsetting Reform voters
Hardly surprising, given the wicked actions of Trump and his handlers’ internationally and domestically.
But interestingly, even among Reform’s voters, Reform’s closeness to Trump is hurting the limited-company-as-party.
While ‘pro-Trump’ is the largest self-identification among Reform supporters, it’s not an outright majority. Almost a quarter of them consider themselves to be ‘anti-Trump’ as well.
Could Trump’s idiocy and malignancy move UK politics in a better direction for a change? It seems unlikely, but the new poll might just be a ray of hope.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Trump is delaying Texas Senate endorsement to pressure GOP senators on SAVE America Act
President Donald Trump is delaying his endorsement in the Texas Senate GOP primary to ramp up pressure on Republican senators to pass his high-priority voting restrictions bill, according to two people close to the White House granted anonymity to speak candidly.
Trump had been prepared to quickly endorse John Cornyn after the Texas senator outperformed expectations and finished ahead of Paxton, Texas’ attorney general, in last week’s primary, the people said. But Paxton managed to at least forestall that outcome when he announced Friday that if the Senate passes the bill he would drop his campaign.
Paxton’s last-ditch gamble highlighted an area where he agrees with Trump while poking at a sore spot between the president and Senate Republican leaders who have been begging Trump for months to back Cornyn. And it changed the dynamics inside the White House, according to the two people, an operative close to the White House and an administration ally.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
“I think that was a very smart strategy because it bought time. Because now, if you’re the White House or Trump, why would you now weigh in?’’ said the Republican operative. “Trump has remained very steadfast that he wants this done, and that is a huge priority, and he’s getting pissed off at these members and at [Senate Majority Leader John] Thune.”
Trump posted last Wednesday, the day after the primary, that he would endorse “soon” in the race — and wanted to see whoever he didn’t back drop out of the runoff.
He told House Republicans Monday in a speech at their annual legislative retreat in Florida that SAVE America is his “No. 1 priority” on the congressional agenda this year
Paxton, a favorite of the far right with strong MAGA grassroots backing, initially said he would not end his campaign even if Trump backed Cornyn. Trump responded in an interview with POLITICO last week that the comment was “bad for him to say,” and reiterated he would announce his pick soon.
But Paxton soon came up with an offer: He would step aside if the Senate moved the voting restrictions bill that passed the House but has stalled in the Senate. Republicans lack the necessary 60 votes to break the filibuster to pass the bill and don’t have the bare majority needed to alter Senate rules. Cornyn has long been one of the Republicans who hasn’t supported ending the filibuster but has said he backs the SAVE America Act.
Paxton’s gambit caught the attention of the president, who on Monday declared the SAVE America Act should be the GOP’s “No. 1 priority” during a speech to House Republicans in which he dedicated 13 minutes to the issue.
The president also was irritated when news articles from Axios and The Atlantic published Wednesday declaring that Trump was “expected” to endorse Cornyn, according to the Republican operative. A POLITICO story stated earlier that morning that Trump would likely endorse soon, with a source predicting he wouldn’t back Paxton. Trump and others in his orbit hate when stories get out ahead of official announcements.
The move paid off for Paxton by giving his allies more time to voice their displeasure to the White House at the possibility that Trump would be swayed by pro-Cornyn establishment Republicans in Washington.
That pressure campaign has ramped up in recent days since reports surfaced Trump was close to backing Cornyn. The administration ally said Paxton’s allies are mounting a “big counter-offensive.”
Those pushing against a Cornyn endorsement include Texas donors, according to a Paxton campaign aide.
“The grassroots donor community in Texas did not believe or realize how close Trump was endorsing Cornyn,” said a Paxton campaign aide, granted anonymity in order to speak freely. “Once they realized that the threat was real, they went very hard in the paint.”
A Cornyn campaign aide declined to comment.
While donors work the White House behind the scenes, Paxton also has allies making their case online like conservative influencers Laura Loomer, Jack Posobiec and Caroline Wren, who have blasted Cornyn and touted Paxton. They have warned that a Trump endorsement for Cornyn would mark a betrayal to the MAGA base.
“The Republican establishment is just as guilty as controlled opposition in the destruction of this republic, and exhibit one is John Cornyn,” Steve Bannon, longtime MAGA whisperer, said on Monday on his latest War Room podcast.
Cornyn and his allies have scrambled to respond. On Saturday, Cornyn posted on X, while tagging Trump’s account, that he had supported the SAVE America Act “from day one.” Cornyn declared he “will happily support the ‘talking filibuster’ if that’s what it takes to pass this into law” — a shift from the skepticism he voiced about the feasibility of the talking filibuster just a few weeks ago. He got backup from other Republicans — including from Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), a MAGA ally who is leading the charge for the bill in the Senate, who vouched for Cornyn’s support.
But on Monday, Thune poured cold water on Trump’s hopes once again, stating that formally nuking the legislative filibuster is “not going to happen” and arguing that a talking filibuster without forcing through a rules change is “way more complicated” than people realize.
Cornyn’s supporters believe he still remains in a strong position to receive the president’s backing, especially since Democrats nominated state Rep. James Talarico, a pick that even Republicans say is a formidable general election candidate. Many national Republicans say putting forward Paxton would be an expensive endeavor that would risk the seat and could cost them the Senate, as his past ethics issues and personal scandals make him a vulnerable candidate.
Politics
Unite union sues elected executive member to sheild Graham’s husband
As Skwawkbox exclusively reported in January 2026, the Unite union has been splurging money on court cases against three anonymous X accounts. They have taken legal action against X to obtain the names behind the accounts.
All, apparently, to protect the husband of General Secretary Sharon Graham, Jack Clarke. The inclusion of the union as a claimant almost certainly means Unite is footing the bill. But now the situation has grown even murkier, with the revelation that this expense is being used to target one of its elected executive members — an opponent of Graham.
Complaints pile-up
Jack Clarke was promoted shortly after Graham took over the union in 2021, overseeing the newly-created ‘Bargaining and Disputes Unit (BDSU). Union insiders point out that Unite’s approval procedures for the promotion had not been followed.
Before his promotion under his wife’s leadership, Clarke had been on a final warning from Unite for bullying, misogyny and threats toward subordinates.
Workers in his new unit have also been striking over allegations of bullying and threats against them, too.
Allegations of abuse
In 2018, before Graham became Unite general secretary, she asked colleagues to destroy evidence of bullying and misogyny gathered by staff working under him in his previous role. In December 2024, Graham’s lawyers admitted that, following her take-over, the union destroyed the evidence.
During Graham’s tenure as general secretary of Unite, she has been constantly surrounded by allegations of abuse and anti-union behaviour. This includes her conduct in response to staff complaints about her husband and his allies.
BDSU staff have been in dispute with the union and Clarke over alleged bullying by Clarke and his cronies. These are not the first allegations against Clarke Staff have also accused Graham and her management team of employing intimidation, suspension and anti-union tactics against the staff in the dispute, outraging Unite’s National Industrial Sector Committee (NISC) for the print and graphics sector and the leaders of two unions representing Unite staff and officers.
Yet more allegations
So bad has this alleged conduct been that more than 90% of Unite staff working at the union’s Holborn HQ voted for strike action. Three – some say four – of the five women who worked in Clarke’s department since Graham formed it and put him in charge of it have left, with union sources saying that they also alleged bullying and abuse. The Unite union staff branch unanimously condemned Unite’s abuse of its staff. The influential Officers National Committee (ONC) accused Graham of using Murdoch-style anti-union tactics against workers and officers unionising and taking collective action.
Regarding the executive council, Graham’s allies used expensive lawyers and legal tactics to block the removal of the chair. He’s perceived to be a Graham factionalist whose handling of key issues cost him the confidence of ‘exec’ members. This tactic, repeatedly used, has been at a huge cost to union members.
Pharmacal revelations
The ‘Caseboard’ legal site lists details of ‘Unite the Union and another v content posted…’. This case originally listed ‘Persons Unknown’ associated with three accounts on the X social media platform:
The union also launched a ‘Norwich Pharmacal‘ suit against X. They seeking details of who runs the three targeted accounts.
And it seems the Norwich Pharmacal action disclosed at least one of the names. The updated Caseboard page for the defamation action now lists only two X accounts. The third defendant is named as “Rafik Moosa Mohammed”:
Rafik Moosa Mohammed, known more commonly as Raffiq Moosa to Unite members, is a Leicester councillor. He is an elected member of Unite’s ruling executive (EC). Initially a Graham supporter, Moosa evidently grew rapidly disillusioned with her conduct.
In 2025, as EC and union members demanded to know why Graham was not releasing Unite’s accounts. This came amid reports of membership losses and the squandering of the union’s strike fund. Moosa tried to obtain Unite’s accounts through a statutory application. The union withheld information unlawfully, as the statutory Certification Officer ruled in June 2025. Moosa is now running for re-election to the EC as part of the ‘Unite Alliance’ group. They oppose what they see as Graham’s conduct, cronyism, and betrayal of the movement.
The available paperwork on Caseboard does not mention which comments Moosa made that were allegedly defamatory. Nor does it answer why the union is spending members’ money for Sharon Graham’s husband rather than letting him pay for his own legal action.
This question is particularly important when Clarke appears to be claiming to have been defame. Meanwhile, Unite has said it is suing for “breach of confidence”.
And even more so when Unite has refused to say why it is throwing members’ money at legal action against barely-followed accounts but ignoring defamatory comments by a much bigger one, when its excuse for the Clarke action is that it “makes no apology for ensuring that lies are not told about the union”.
The lawsuit raises an interesting scenario. In 2026, elections will take place for the EC, as well as for Graham’s position as general secretary later in the year. Early indications are that the EC elections are not going in her favour. This may explain why Unite members accuse Graham’s coterie of squandering union resources to campaign for her slate of acolytes.
This may explain why Unite members accuse Graham’s coterie of squandering union resources to ‘callbank’ for her slate of acolytes.
If the EC elections go against her, will the union continue funding her husband’s legal action? And will it impact on her prospects of clinging onto her job despite outrage among members, staff and branches?
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Fox hunting season ends, but the Sabs are just getting started
The official fox hunting season may be over, but the work of the Hunt Saboteurs Association is never done. It is a 365 day commitment to keep our country’s wildlife safe. From the riverbanks of the summer mink hunts to legal battles in parliament, this is how ordinary people are standing as a year-round shield for wildlife.
Sabs end the season in style
On 7 March 2026 the Sheffield Hunt Sabs stepped out onto the fox-hunting foray for a final season outing, and dominated the field. The close-knit, uncompromising group split into four tactical teams. They scuppered the hunt at every bridleway and gate. The presence of the sabs meant the hounds couldn’t pick up a single scent without disruption.
The only fox spotted all day had no reason to fear the hounds, trotting past the Hunt Sab’s van, no care in the world. Simon Howell and volunteers watched the stunning vixen slink away into the bushes. Howell quickly masked her scent with a citronella bottle. It was a quiet, clean victory for the sabs. As the jumped up pricks on horseback packed up in frustration, they ended the season in style.
However, for the HSA there is no such thing as an off-season. Groups like the Sheffield Hunt Sabs don’t just protect foxes, they provide a 365-day shield for wildlife. As one season closes, another, just as brutal, begins. The red coats may disappear for a few months, but other killers in our fields remains.
And these people aren’t professional activists, they’re teachers, doctors and labourers.
Radical kind of empathy
They come from every kind of background and form a line of defence for the defenceless. I spoke to a bus driver, businessman, an off-grid lifer, and a retiree. In the current economic hellscape, most of us are fucking knackered by Saturday, but the sabs, choose to spend their days sitting in muddy fields, sacrificing sleep and comfort. They represent radical empathy.
They face the aggression of the hunt without pay. Their dedication is unwavering. Whilst the hunters treat the countryside as their playground, sabs treat it as a sanctuary. And while the public believes the ‘ban’ worked, the reality is way more sinister.
As this season ends, mink hunting begins in April and runs until September. This summer ‘sport’ takes place along riverbanks where hounds hunt small mammals. Sabs wade through freezing-cold waters, spraying scent dullers on the banks to protect mink. This is ignored by mainstream media, but it’s just as brutal.
Then there are 68 hare hunts currently operating across England and Wales. Hares, unwilling to leave their territories, can be chased in circles for up to 90 minutes before the animal collapses from exhaustion.
This is because they live above ground and have no holes to hide in to escape the jaws of the hounds. They are run until their hearts literally burst. This inhuman practice is a relentless war of attrition against a species already in decline.
The countryside’s dirty secret
By 12 August, the focus shifts to the moors for the start of red grouse season. And before the fox hunting season even restarts, sabs face the dirty secret of the hunting world: cubbing. From August to October, hunts take young, inexperienced hounds into small woods called ‘coverts’. They surround these areas to prevent cubs from escaping and teach these young dogs to kill by tearing apart cubs born that year.
In 2025 alone, there were over 100 reports of foxes being chased during this period, yet the crime stats regarding the legal system are diabolical. Only 2% of reported crimes against wildlife resulted in a criminal conviction in 2024, with only 14 convictions successfully secured for hunting.
The link between wildlife crime and other violence is also clear with 80% of wildlife offenders being active in other serious crimes such as domestic assault and assault.
These are not ‘country gentlemen’ out for a stroll, they’re dangerous individuals. Furthermore 78% of hare coursing offenders have a history of violent crime. This absolute legal failure is exactly why Sheffield sabs believe direct action is the only answer.
Solidarity in the face of the hunt
The Sheffield Sabs build their bravery on a foundation of genuine solidarity and mutual care. This is not a group of individual activists but a collective that has stripped away ego to become an efficient, life-saving machine. Whilst the huntsman appeared dejected by the sight of them, the sabs drew strength from this.
They move through the landscape with a shared purpose, navigating broken footbridges and thick, thorny brush with a level of physical grit which puts the mounted huntsman to shame. A commitment to every living being fuels this grit, from the fox trotting past the van to the toads saboteurs help across the road.
In a society which feels like a fucking burning hellscape, the Sheffield Sabs provide a blueprint for a different way of living. The community checks on one another constantly, ensuring no one stays behind.
Their laughter and camaraderie are a stunning defiance to the culture of violence they oppose. It proves that when people leave their egos at the door, they can outflank even the most archaic of cruelties.
Featured image via the Canary
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