Politics
Katie Lam: Britain’s regulators care more about quotas than profits
Katie Lam is a shadow Home Office minister and MP for Weald of Kent.
If you put aside money for your retirement, and entrust it to a company to manage, who do you expect to make the decisions about how to invest that money – your money?
Most people would very reasonably expect that their cash would be invested by whatever company they had asked to to invest it, in line with whatever instructions they had given about their preferences and risk tolerance.
Shockingly – but perhaps not surprisingly – this Government doesn’t agree. Their Pension Schemes Bill would give the power to direct pension investments to Government ministers, who could, for example, force private pension providers to invest in British assets, even if those assets will provide lower returns than assets abroad. You can work hard for a lifetime, save a little at the end of each month – and at the stroke of a pen, ministers will be able to decide where that money goes, even if it means that you’ll end up with less money in your retirement.
As shadow welfare secretary Helen Whately has already said, this is an absurd power grab. It is a breathtaking violation of basic property rights: your money is yours to do what you want with, not just a vehicle for the state to achieve its ideological aims.
The Government is right to identify that British assets are not always attractive investments. But the solution is not to just force people to invest in them anyway. It is to make the British economy a better place to operate and grow, to let people take risks, and allow businesses to do what they’re good at, so that people choose of their own free will to invest here.
We see this approach from the Government all the time: overregulate something to destruction, and then either force people to support it, or use taxpayers’ money to subsidise it. It’s exactly the approach they’ve taken to employing young people: they’ve made it prohibitively expensive, so now they’re offering businesses thousands of pounds of your money in subsidies.
And the general approach of Government knows best is one we see writ large all over the economy. Too many people, whether politicians or bureaucrats, have decided that secondary social aims are a good reason to interfere with how businesses operate. We are now harvesting the bitter fruits of this approach – which is a large part of why I haven’t experienced proper economic growth in my adult lifetime.
The market economy is exceptionally good at providing, or inventing, goods and services that people want, at a cost that they’re willing to pay. If individual businesses are allowed to fulfil that function, and are good enough to succeed against their competitors, then they can create jobs, and invest in coming up with new goods and services, or improving their existing offering.
The net result is that we get to live in a country where people have more money, and more choice over how to spend it. This simple premise is what made Britain so successful for so long. Indeed, it has been the single most reliable blueprint for human flourishing and prosperity in history.
However, if politicians try to use the market economy as a tool to achieve other aims, it will be less effective at that original function. The net result is that people end up with fewer job opportunities, less money to spend, and less choice about how to spend it.
These directives are bad enough when they come from ministers – but far more corrosive when they’re set, or enforced, by unaccountable regulators and bureaucrats.
While regulators are sometimes directed by legislation, they have a tendency to take the maximalist position on implementation. After all, if somebody is employed to think about eliminating risk from the financial system, or achieving a particular demographic makeup in the boards of companies, then that’s exactly what they’ll do.
And if the public doesn’t like what those regulators have achieved, or how they’ve achieved it, then they have no mechanism by which to remove them.
Yet we find ourselves in a position where these unaccountable regulators have the power to set, and enforce, all sorts of rules about things that have nothing to do with profit-making or the stability of our financial system.
For example, publicly traded companies must have, or must “explain to the regulator” why they don’t have, an ethnic minority board member, and a minimum of 40 percent women on their board of directors.
It is absurd that our financial regulator cares more about whether you have enough women on your board than if you actually make any money. Unsurprisingly, businesses have simply decided not to list themselves in Britain – with CRH, a building materials firm valued at £50 billion, ditching London altogether this week.
The Shadow Chancellor was absolutely right to say at Party Conference last year that we must scrap these absurd rules. Whenever we’ve let people take risks, and allowed people to hire on the basis of merit and ability, this country has succeeded. Whenever countries have tried to interfere with the market economy in the name of secondary social outcomes, they’ve failed.
We must not let Britain become the latest in a long line of economic basket-cases which have endlessly, and fruitlessly, tried to legislate their way to prosperity. Instead, as ever, we must trust in the entrepreneurial spirit of the British people.
Politics
Dune: Part Three Trailer Unveils Robert Pattinson’s Unbelievable Transformation
The first trailer for the much-awaited new Dune movie has been released – offering fans of the franchise a first look at Robert Pattinson’s character.
In addition to returning stars like Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya and Florence Pugh, Dune: Part Three introduces the former Twilight star as the scheming Scytale, one of Timothée’s character’s main adversaries in the forthcoming movie.
And it’s fair to say that Robert has undergone quite the transformation to play his latest role, sporting almost-white blond hair, no eyebrows and, believe it or not, an even more pale complexion than we’re used to seeing him with.

Denis Villeneuve’s third Dune film will also welcome back cast members Rebecca Ferguson, Charlotte Rampling, Anya Taylor-Joy, Josh Brolin and Jason Momoa.
Jason is set to share the screen with his son Nakoa-Wolf Momoa in the new film, previously insisting that the teenager landed the role “all on his own”.
Watch the two-minute trailer for Dune: Part Three for yourself below:
Dune: Part Three is one of three collaborations between Zendaya and Robert Pattinson hitting cinemas in 2026.
The first, The Drama, will see the pair playing a seemingly happily engaged couple whose world is turned upside down when Zendaya’s character makes a shocking revelation about her past to her husband-to-be in the lead-up to their wedding.
Following this, they’re also both due to appear in the star-studded ensemble of Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey, his follow-up to the Oscar-winning Oppenheimer, which will also feature everyone from Oscar winners Matt Damon, Anne Hathaway, Charlize Theron and Lupita Nyong’o to Elliot Page, John Leguizamo, Mia Goth and Zendaya’s rumoured husband Tom Holland.
Rob recently recalled to his frequent co-star: “I was talking to you on the set of The Drama. I was like, ‘Can I get in one of those Dune movies?’.”
He added: “It was a very unexpected call a few months later. And I kind of did think you had something to do with it.”
Politics
Zendaya Resurrects 2015 Oscars Dress At Premiere Of The Drama
Zendaya and her long-time stylist Law Roach dug deep into their archives when it came to dressing her for the premiere of her new movie The Drama.
The Emmy winner stars alongside Robert Pattinson in the new romantic drama, in which they play a seemingly happy engaged couple whose relationship begins to unravel thanks to a shocking revelation about the bride-to-be’s past in the run-up to their big day.
At the movie’s premiere on Tuesday night, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Zendaya was playing up to the film’s wedding theme (and, indeed, ongoing rumours about her own personal life) by wearing bridal couture on the red carpet.
However, upon closer inspection, the Vivienne Westwood dress is one she actually first wore more than a decade earlier at the 2015 Oscars.

“Who remembers this dress and all the headlines that came with it?” Law wrote on X. “Decided to go with SOMETHING OLD tonight.”
The first time Zendaya wore that white dress, she was much earlier in her career, and found herself on the receiving end of unkind comments from Fashion Police presenter Giuliana Rancic, who became embroiled in a racism row when she suggested that the star wearing her hair in locs made it look like she smelled of “patchouli and weed”

Zendaya responded at the time: “There is already harsh criticism of African American hair in society without the help of ignorant people who choose to judge others based on the curl of their hair.
“My wearing my hair in locs on an Oscar red carpet was to showcase them in a positive light, to remind people of colour that our hair is good enough.
“To me, locs are a symbol of strength and beauty, almost like a lion’s mane. I suggest some people should listen to India Arie’s I Am Not My Hair and contemplate a little before opening your mouth so quickly to judge.”
Explaining why she chose to revive the gown, Zendaya told Variety: “I remembered the saying ‘something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue’. So, this is my ‘something old’.
“I thought I’d bring it back and give it new life.”
Last week, Zendaya attended another event sporting a classic dress.
However, in that instance, it was one previously worn by Sarah Jessica Parker in character as Carrie Bradshaw in Sex And The City.
Politics
Charlotte Cadden: A despatch from the Gorton and Denton frontline. When the going’s tough – you just keep going
Charlotte Cadden is a former police officer, women’s rights campaigner and was Conservative candidate in the recent Gorton and Denton by-election.
“I’ve been a Police Officer for 30yrs, I know how to solve crime and anti-social behaviour” on repeat!
This was my mantra for three and a half weeks in February, after I was selected to be the Conservative candidate, for one of the most talked about by-elections, in the recently formed constituency of Gorton and Denton, in Greater Manchester.
The election was triggered by the resignation of Andrew Gwynne, who had been suspended by Labour for sending offensive Whatsapp messages – hoping an elderly resident concerned about bin collections would soon be dead. There were alleged sexist and racist messages within the legendary “Trigger Me Timbers” group. Several Labour Councillors were also suspended.
So, was the time ripe for voters to consider a representative from a different party, as their Member of Parliament? As it turned out, yes.
I had been a Conservative party member for several years. My own ward Councillor had been David Greenhalgh, who sadly passed away in office in 2021. David had fought hard to be elected in 2019 and became the first Conservative leader of Bolton Council in over 40yrs. He was an inspirational, warm and engaging politician and whenever I met him, he would ask me when I was retiring, so I could stand as a local Councillor and support the team locally.
As a Police Officer in Greater Manchester Police, I was a DCI and the Deputy Director of Intelligence. I also held the role of Force Operation Bridger lead. Bridger covers how the Police keep MPs safe when they are away from Parliament. After the horrific murder of Sir David Amess MP in 2021, the Metropolitan Police Service advertised for a national Bridger lead, to design and implement the changes that Parliament required, to further improve the safety and security of MPs.
I got the job, and it was the most challenging and rewarding role I performed as a Police Officer.
As soon as I retired, I hit the ground running, politically speaking, as I had promised David I would. Police Officers can be members of political parties, but they are not allowed to be politically active. I therefore tracked down my local Councillor Les Webb, and offered him my support. I volunteered to take on a couple of new roles within the party, Deputy Chair Political at a ward level and Deputy Chair Membership & Fundraising, at the Constituency level. Soon after, I started the application process to be considered as a candidate for MP, in advance of the next General Election.
The opportunity to stand as a candidate, however, came a lot sooner than expected. At the end of January 2026, I received an email asking if I wanted to apply to be a candidate in the Gorton & Denton by-election. After a challenging application process, I was selected by the members at Denton Conservative Club, to represent them. I met some incredible people that day, many of whom gave me great advice and practical support during the campaign.
The following day, I received an invite to attend CCHQ to discuss campaign messaging and to meet Kemi Badenoch and Chairman Kevin Hollinrake. This was an incredibly special day. Worth getting the 5am train from Piccadilly to Euston!
When I started on the campaign trail, it felt like getting on a speeding train. I was offered daily opportunities to do interviews on the ground with the BBC, ITV, Channel 4,Tameside Reporter, UnHerd, Jeremy Kyle, Rod Little, Matthew Syed the list was endless! And then there were the hustings!
It’s fair to say that the hustings were pretty stressful and I knew I needed some advice from a professional! My incredible Campaign Manager Matthew Littler, put me in touch with Laura Evans who, in the space of an afternoon, transformed my communication style and gave me some practical tips to manage challenging interviews, and get my key points across. A grilling by Laura and husband Nathan, is all the preparation you need for the most hostile of hustings!
There was a warm reception waiting for Conservative Party canvassers on most of the doorsteps of G&D. This diverse area of Greater Manchester featured in daily national news bulletins, as residents were subjected to near constant door-knocking by teams supporting the 11 candidates in the by-election.
Many residents said they had never met a Conservative candidate in the wild before, but they were willing to listen and happy to tell us what mattered to them most.
Many expressed respect for Kemi and looked forward to PMQs each week, to watch her force the deeply unpopular Labour Government into yet another u-turn. There was no love lost for Labour on those streets. This had been a safe Labour seat for generations but all that was about to change.
Suspended Labour Councillors, a sacked Labour MP, an area laid waste by the Labour Mayor (streets plagued by crime & anti-social behaviour, one train a week from Denton station) and an incompetent Labour Government, mired in scandal after scandal. It seemed likely that Labour was going to lose one of its safest ever seats. The battle was seen to be, therefore, by commentators and constituents alike, between the London TV presenter for Reform, and the ‘working class’ plumber from Hale, for the Greens.
So how did the Conservatives fare on the campaign trail?
I was humbled and will be eternally grateful for all the practical support I received from party members, supporters, Councillors and MPs from across the UK, who came to help knock on doors and campaign with me. The dedication of these people, corralled by Dan and Matthew on a daily basis, twice a day, come rain (lots of) or shine (infrequent) was incredible!
Members of the Shadow Cabinet came up to support the campaign.
Stuart Andrew and Matt Vickers were a real boost to morale and great on the doorstep! The highlight for me personally was when Claire Countinho came to meet me at the statue of Emmeline Pankhurst, just outside the constituency. Kemi and Claire have always understood how important sex-based rights are to women, children and many LGB people. The fact that we met to talk about womens’ rights before we went to campaign in G&D was a big deal. Claire is always in the detail. “You do know which party Emmeline stood for as a candidate in 1927?” she asked. “I do,” I replied!
I would like to thank everyone who supported me before, during and after the campaign, with particular thanks to the following incredible people and groups; Tess White MSP, CWO, CfW, Dawn Cobb, LGBT Cons, Andrea Bartlett, Rosie Duffield (Ind) & Baroness Anne Jenkin.
Would I do it all again, knowing what I know now?
Most definitely!
Back to plan A for me, applying to be a candidate in the local elections in May. See you all back on the campaign trail!
Politics
Pastries and coffee are where we seem to have got to with the normalisation of anything anti-jewish
The ironies just keep piling up.
The day after I reveal that a big majority of Tory members are in favour of the Conservative ban on social media for under 16s, I want to talk about social media for adults – at least those that pretend they are.
I’ve been criticised before – water off my back – for robustly confronting views expressed on ConservativeHome from those who choose to comment below our articles. Just a word of advice to our Reform visitors; being anti ‘bans’ is good solid libertarian stuff but the fact is you are in favour of bans on: under 16s having sex, buying tobacco, or alcohol and wearing headscarves – it is a sign you are in favour of bans – just ones that you like.
I don’t say these are bad ideas, just pointing to the problem. You may want to debate these issues but at least be consistent.
Anyway, I went ‘viral’ this week. Not like some do, but a Tweet/X post I made got a lot of attention. Supported by the many not ‘the few”.
I, like many, including the Guardian’s editor Kath Viner, were less than comfortable with a piece by Jonathan Liew a man with quite the reputation, who tried to explain that being vile to Gail’s bakery is actually ok.
Now, I’ll be honest, I was merely hoping to point out to people that our columnist Georgia Gilholy had argued the best response to attacks on a chain of bakeries is to go out of one’s way to buy and eat their products as a good way to say ‘NO’ to keffiyeh wearing millennials whose lives are seemingly defined by Gaza.
But such was the response to Jonathan Liew’s article – which I’m not going to link to because it can be found, but doesn’t deserve the oxygen of more publicity – that I’m glad instead of my last viral ‘tweet’ about a jasmine arbour I’d created – my counter did at least get nearly a thousand likes.
Why do I care?
Not for myself I promise. I’ve been a TV presenter so the idea I need exposure is a bit weak to say the least, but because I hate the idea that this thinly veiled argument that it is ok to harass people in the UK “because Israel, and Genocide” but couch it in a form of “but just support your independent cafés” – especially if the owner is Palestinian – is being normalised.
I loathed Greta Thunberg’s narcissists’ yachting holiday because it was never going to land, was all about them, and because I personally have done more to ensure actual aid gets to Palestinians than they have in their lifetimes. Not a point they can debate.
Here’s the problem.
Even some of the Guardian’s own people seem to think this was a crass article. The left are volubly defending it saying that Gail’s bakery chain are part of wider commercial interests that are investing in Israeli weapons and …here it comes ‘genocide’
The egregious Zara Sultana, she of the ‘Jeremy Corbyn beat you’ Your Party team argued that Greggs was better than Gail’s. How galling for her to find their parent company has the same very, very, very tenuous connections to investments in Israel, she blamed on Gail’s.
But let us leave all of this aside, even the fact that nobody with the actual, genuine, authority to do so – and politicians should never be allowed to – has declared the war in Gaza ‘a genocide’, what bothers me is thinly veiled attacks on British Jews are becoming normalised – and some people, who should know better, seem fine with this.
I don’t want MPs who are the Member of Parliament for Gaza South. I do not believe the long standing Israel/Palestine conflict – with extreme complexities that it has – is resolved by sixth formers protesting people who serve lattes in the UK.
I went to Israel on the 11th of October 2023 and what I saw will stay with me forever. I don’t blindly support Binyamin Netanyahu, his government or those Israeli’s for whom the only good Palestinian is a dead Palestinian. Predominantly those who suffered the atrocities on the 7th of October were those Jews most committed to living side by side in peace!
I have been shocked by the deaths of women and children in a genocidal war. The ‘genocide’ advocated by Hamas who – don’t take my word for it – say so themselves that the only good jew is a dead jew.
Yes, I know.
Apparently, those who’ve long been accused of antisemitism tell us they can’t be racists because they have a history of being anti racist. That they are only anti- Zionist, and simply ‘dislike’ anyone ‘complicit in the genocide’ they themselves determined. Silence on the Uighurs, the Rohingya, the thousands of Muslims slaughtered by ISIS, Boko Haram or sympathy for the Ukrainians – because apparently ‘they are fascists’
It was an article about a bakery.
But what it said, by ever being published, is that today, arguing the rights and wrongs of the Middle East’s problems, especially if those rights are Palestinian and the wrongs anybody with the remotest connection to a being jewish, is apparently both virtuous and acceptable in a mainstream newspaper and our wider public discourse.
No.
We are at risk, if we haven’t already fallen to a normalised form of debate on this that would have appalled us twenty years ago.
It’s not ok, and I’m glad the Conservatives have not given it credence.
Politics
10 Best Toys And Books To Help Kids Understand Their Feelings
We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI – prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.
Helping your child navigate something as big and complex as emotional wellbeing can feel pretty daunting, if you ask me.
But there are ways to support your child to understand and manage their feelings that can be “fun and even enlightening”, according to Hayley Standen, a social, emotional and mental health (SEMH) advisor, who’s teamed up with Learning Resources to create a Kids’ Wellbeing Toolkit.
Emotional literacy is the ability to recognise, name and talk about feelings – children learn this over time, and it’s pretty important for everything from self-awareness and empathy to maintaining healthy relationships.
You can start building emotional literacy by helping children learn the words for different feelings. “Naming emotions makes them easier to understand and manage,” explains Standen.
Some practical ways to build emotional literacy include:
On that latter point, here are 10 toys and books which can help kickstart some all-important conversations about how your child feels.
Politics
Angela Rayner Criticises Un British Immigration Crackdown
Angela Rayner has launched an outspoken attack on home secretary Shabana Mahmood’s controversial immigration crackdown.
The former deputy prime minister said the government was “moving the goalposts” by threatening to deport migrants who have been granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK.
In her fiercest criticism of the government she used to be a part of, Rayner also warned that Labour is “running out of time” to deliver the change the public voted for at the last general election.
She made her comments at an event organised by the soft-left campaign group Mainstream on Tuesday night.
On Mahmood’s immigration shake-up, Rayner said: “Many people came here to Britain on the understanding that if they worked in the sectors where we needed them, obeyed the law and paid their taxes, they could stay.
“If we suddenly change that, it pulls the rug from under those who have planned their lives and commitments and are contributing to our economy and to our society.
“That would be not just bad policy but a breach of trust. The people already in the system – who made a huge investment – now fear for their future, they do not have stability and do not know what will happen.
“We cannot talk about earning a settlement if we keep moving the goalposts, because moving the goalposts undermines our sense of fair play. It’s un-British.”
Rayner was forced to resign from the cabinet last year after it emerged she had paid around £40,000 less than she should have done in stamp duty when buying a second property earlier this year.
She is still under investigation by His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, amid speculation that she is plotting a leadership bid should Keir Starmer be forced to quit.
In comments which will be interpreted as an attack on the PM, Rayner said: “As a party, and as a movement, we cannot hide, we cannot just go through the motions in the face of decline.
“There’s no safe ground and we’re running out of time.
“The change that people wanted so desperately needs to be seen, it needs to be felt, and we have to show that it is a Labour government that will deliver it.”
Politics
Alex Burghart: The Mandelson-Epstein scandal is far from over
Alex Burghart MP is Shadow Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Shadow Northern Ireland Secretary, and Conservative MP for Brentwood and Ongar.
The Mandelson-Epstein scandal continues to spread. Last night I had a drink with a long-experienced political hand who told me it bore all the hallmarks of Watergate.
Watergate brought down the White House Chief of Staff, its Chief Domestic Adviser, its Counsel, two Attorneys General, a Deputy Attorney General, and a President. So far Mandelson-Epstein has taken the jobs of the UK’s Ambassador to Washington, Downing Street’s Chief of Staff, and it’s Communications Director. It is unlikely to stop there.
The Conservatives have forced the issue from the start, pushing the Prime Minister repeatedly on what he knew and when and forcing the first major defeat of the Labour government last month with our Humble Address. This requires the Government to hand over all of its documentation about Mandelson’s appointment.
Since Kemi Badenoch forced it out of him last month at Prime Minister’s Questions, we have known that the Prime Minister was well aware that Mandelson had maintained his friendship with Epstein even after the latter’s conviction for child sex offences. Following the first Humble Address return we have it in black and white along with, in bold, a warning that there was “general reputational risk”. Who’d have thought it about a man already twice fired?
But the documents have huge lacunae. Either the government was not maintaining a record of what it was doing, or it has not handed over the documents. Last week I wrote to Darren Jones, the Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister, pointing out 56 instances where there should have been a record to publish. The absurdity of it all is highlighted by the fact that there is not one read out, response or reply from the Prime Minister, from his Chief of Staff or Peter Mandelson in the whole release. No notes, no emails, no forms. Nothing. It is as though their fingerprints have been forensically removed from the process.
The seriousness of this is simple. If the Government did not follow due process, the Prime Minister has lied to the House. If the Government has not handed over the documents, it has not complied with the Humble Address and is in contempt of Parliament.
On 11 November 2024, the Cabinet Secretary said that if the Prime Minister wanted to make a political appointment to Washington, the civil service would “develop a plan for … the necessary security clearances and do due diligence on any potential Conflicts of Interest”. Where, then, are the documents that show these security clearances and declarations were down? They are not in the papers the government has released.
I dragged the Government to the House with an Urgent Question to put this to them. There were no satisfactory answers. The Minister refused to confirm either that the security clearance had been done or that Mandelson had submitted a declaration of interests.
We know that at least one document has not been published at the request of the Metropolitan Police. This contains the questions that Morgan McSweeney asked Peter Mandelson. (The absurdity here is, of course, that Mandelson’s vetting was being done by a close friend who wanted him to have the job.) But what is key is that the Government has admitted the existence of the document. If there are other key documents being held back by the police, there is nothing to stop the Government telling us what they are.
So there is no reason for the Government to hide the fact that a security vetting form exists. There is no reason for the Government to hide the fact that Mandelson submitted a declaration of interests. And that means that it is likely those documents do not exist. And if they do not, due process was not followed. And if due process was not followed, then when the Prime Minister assured the House in September that “full due process was followed”, he lied.
There comes a point in any scandal where the cover up becomes the crime. The Government is not being honest. The Prime Minister is not being honest. And that means that the Mandelson-Epstein scandal, will continue to spread.
Politics
Nobody Wants To Clean Up Trump’s Mess In The Strait Of Hormuz
US allies in Europe and elsewhere are continuing to rebuff President Donald Trump’s demands they help reopen the Strait of Hormuz amid the US-Israeli war in Iran, despite Trump’s ultimatums, pleas and claims that, actually, “we no longer need” their help after all.
(Rounding out the mixed messaging, Trump also claimed on Monday that “numerous countries” were already “on the way” to help, but declined to say which ones.)
Turns out allies don’t like helping when all you do is insult them.
“They should be in here very happily helping us,” Trump told reporters on Monday. “They should be jumping to help us because we’ve helped them for years.”
Trump struck a different tone on Tuesday in a post on social media.
“Speaking as President of the United States of America, by far the Most Powerful Country Anywhere in the World, WE DO NOT NEED THE HELP OF ANYONE!”
Here’s what the rest of the world is saying:
UK
Keir Starmer has voiced support for a plan to reopen the critical shipping lane, but has notably stopped well short of committing British resources to doing so.
“Ultimately, we have to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to ensure stability in the [oil] market. That is not a simple task,” Starmer told reporters on Monday.
“So we’re working with all of our allies, including our European partners, to bring together a viable collective plan that can restore freedom of navigation in the region as quickly as possible and ease the economic impact.”
European Union
European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas told Reuters that “nobody is ready to put their people in harm’s way in the Strait of Hormuz.”
“We have to find … diplomatic ways to keep this open so that we don’t have a … food crisis, fertilizers crisis, energy crisis in the world,” she said.
Kallas added that the 27-nation bloc would be open to looking at ways to replicate a deal that helped get grain out of Ukraine amid the war in the country, telling Reuters that the United Nations is already working on that.
Greece
Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said Greece, a major force in global shipping, would not join any military operations near Iran.
“Greece is not going to participate in any operation around the theatre of current operations,” he told a Bloomberg event on Tuesday in Athens. “I doubt that there is much European appetite for such a mission right now.”
Germany
German defence minister Boris Pistorius echoed a similar sentiment.
“The Americans chose this path, together with the Israelis,” he said, according to Politico, noting Germany would prioritise defending NATO territory.
“We did not start this war,” he added.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said, “NATO has no place here at all,” arguing it is “a defensive alliance, not an interventionist one.”
Denmark
Denmark, which in 2024 helped safeguard traffic in the Red Sea amid strikes by Houthi militants in Yemen, has been far more reticent to commit to similar action off the coast of Iran.
In comments on Monday, Danish Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen told journalists the country would like to see a coordinated European response.
“Even if we don’t like what’s going on, I think it’s wise to keep an open mind on whether Europe … in some way can contribute, but with a view towards de-escalation,” he said. “Denmark is a sea-faring nation and we have in every way an interest in ensuring free navigation.”
France
French president Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday the country will not take part in any immediate operation to reopen Hormuz, but might reconsider “once the situation is calmer.”
“We are not party to the conflict,” he said at a defence council meeting. “France did not choose this war. We are not taking part in it. We have a purely defensive position. Our objectives are clear: to protect our nationals, our diplomatic and military sites, and our interests in the region.”
Spain
Madrid’s defence and foreign affairs ministers on Monday flatly ruled out any action in Hormuz.
Foreign minister José Manuel Albares called the war a “spiral of violence” and an “escalation that does not have clear objectives” in an interview with La Razón, a Spanish newspaper.
Defence minister Margarita Robles meanwhile said that “Spain is not considering any mission in Hormuz. What we are considering is the demand that the war end.”
Australia
Catherine King, Australia’s transport minister, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Monday the country doesn’t plan to pitch in on Trump’s crisis, either.
“We won’t be sending a ship to the Strait of Hormuz,” she said. “We know how incredibly important that is, but that’s not something that we’ve been asked or that we’re contributing to.”
Politics
What Does ‘Mid’ Mean When Kids Say It?
We’ve already decoded the meanings of choppelganger, chopped and why kids keep saying lowkenuinely.
Now it’s time to shine a spotlight on another favourite term embraced by Generations Alpha and Z: mid.
The critical descriptor has been knocking around for a few years now, but teens and young adults are increasingly using it in everyday life.
While many of us know “mid” as a term to describe something that’s among, or in the middle of, something; for the younger generations (wow, I feel old writing that) it means something else entirely.
What does mid mean?
When Gen Alpha uses it, “mid” means mediocre or of disappointing quality. If you’re described as “mid” by a teenager then they’re basically saying you are… average.
Possibly even below average.
According to Merriam-Webster, “mid” serves to express that something falls short of expectations, or isn’t impressive.
It’s not bad, per se, but it’s not exactly good either. (In fact, the way it’s used nowadays is probably veering more towards bad than good.)
The dictionary notes that this slang term is thought to have come from a shortening of the term mid-grade, “a designation in cannabis culture of medium quality”.
Over time it’s evolved to be used as a descriptor of everything from people and food, to film and TV.
Some examples of how it could be used include:
- “That burger was mid.”
- “Did you enjoy the party? I thought it was mid.”
- “I liked their last album. Their new album’s mid.”
Want to learn more? There’s also been chat, clock it and glazing, as well as aura farming and crash out. Honestly, the kids have been busy.
Politics
AIPAC faces calls to reassess strategy after split results in Illinois
The American Israel Public Affairs Committee saw mixed results in the first major test of its political muscle in the midterms, drawing fresh recriminations from its foes — and some allies — for its interference in four competitive Illinois House primaries.
Two of AIPAC’s supported candidates won their races Tuesday night, with Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller denying former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. a comeback in the 2nd District and former Rep. Melissa Bean defeating a slew of progressive challengers in the 8th District.
But the group faced criticism from within the pro-Israel Democratic community and harsh words from its opponents after it failed to secure its preferred outcome in the two races where it spent the most money.
In the 9th District, the group spent $7 million, some of it aimed at attacking Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, whose mother is Israeli, making an enemy of a likely soon-to-be U.S. representative who has been critical of Israel’s actions in Gaza but who had previously been willing to engage with the group. Biss won the crowded primary Tuesday night, after AIPAC pivoted from attacking him to instead concentrate its negative ads on progressive social media influencer and Palestinian American Kat Abughazaleh. And in the 7th District, an AIPAC-affiliated super PAC spent nearly $5 million backing Chicago Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin, who lost to state Rep. La Shawn Ford.
The split scorecard comes a month after AIPAC angered its own centrist allies by going after another fairly pro-Israel candidate, former Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.) — a move that ended up handing the primary to a stronger critic of Israel, progressive Analilia Mejia.
“There was once again a vast amount of money spent and wasted trying to dust up a candidate who, by almost anybody’s reasonable analysis, Israel should be happy to have in Congress supporting a strong U.S.-Israel relationship,” one longtime AIPAC member, granted anonymity to speak candidly, said of the group’s spending against Biss.
AIPAC, the person added, “should take a look at the results in [the 9th District] and New Jersey and reconsider their strategy.”
AIPAC-aligned super PACs spent nearly$22 million in the Illinois primaries, more than one-fifth the total $100 million warchest it has in hand so far for the 2026 midterms, to win two of four open-seat races while losing the one that drove the most national attention.
At his victory party Tuesday night, Biss slammed the group for spending heavily “to buy this seat to support the idea that we can’t accept nuance” on the U.S.-Israel relationship.
“AIPAC found out the hard way — the 9th District is not for sale,” Biss told supporters.
AIPAC pushed back against the notion that the group struggled in Tuesday night’s elections.
“Illinois voters rejected half a dozen anti-Israel candidates across several heavily Democratic open-seat races,” Deryn Sousa, an AIPAC spokesperson, said in a statement Tuesday night. “These results further demonstrate that campaigns defined largely by opposition to AIPAC, our members, and the values we represent continue to fall short on election night.”
The controversial organization, already a foil for Democrats grappling with growing anti-Israel sentiment in their party, is facing fresh animosity and renewed scrutiny over its campaign spending as the U.S. and Israel wage a joint war on Iran that’s further soured Americans on their longtime ally.
Recent polling shows Americans — and Democrats, in particular — shifting further away from Israel. A NBC News poll released this week showed 57 percent of Democrats view Israel negatively, a dramatic shift from when just 35 percent held a negative view of the country after Hamas attacked it on Oct. 7, 2023. A Quinnipiac University survey showed 44 percent of voters think the U.S. is too supportive of Israel — the highest percentage since the pollsters started asking the question in 2017. Among Democrats, 62 percent think America is too supportive of Israel, compared with just 22 percent who think the support is about right and 8 percent who think it’s not supportive enough.
It’s clear the organization is aware of its standing in Democratic primaries — its ads focused on everything but Israel, accusing candidates of not being progressive enough on other issues. But AIPAC’s involvement became a major talking point for those it was attacking, especially in the 9th District.
The Illinois Democratic delegation likely won’t have a significant ideological shift on Israel from the races’ results. Bean will replace Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, another pro-Israel candidate, who lost his Senate primary contest to Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton. Biss’s views on Israel aren’t far from those of outgoing Rep. Jan Schakowsky, who endorsed him and has sharply criticized AIPAC in the past. Rep. Danny Davis has supported Israel but denounced its Gaza intervention; Ford doesn’t appear to have said much publicly on the issue.
The biggest potential change is Miller replacing Rep. Robin Kelly, who has called the war in Gaza a “genocide.” She also didn’t advance through the Illinois Senate primary.
“We consider this a pro-Israel win. We are better off in the Chicago delegation than we were yesterday,” said Patrick Dorton, the spokesperson for the AIPAC super PAC United Democracy Project, pointing to the new incumbents in the Kelly, Schakowsky and Davis seats.
Dorton also argued that if the group’s pop-up super PAC “didn’t go negative with more than a million dollars in spending to defeat Abughazaleh, she may well have beat Biss.”
And AIPAC allies took a more generous read on their group’s performance.
“You win some, you lose some,” said AIPAC ally Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Ill.), who backed Fine, Miller and Bean in their races. Schneider added that if a group wins every race they’re involved in, “you probably haven’t pushed the boundaries as far as you can.”
Brian Romick, president of the Democratic Majority for Israel, which often overlaps in its preferred candidates with AIPAC, said Tuesday’s results showed that “Israel wasn’t a determinative factor in these primaries” and “none of the extremist anti-Israel candidates won.”
Opponents of AIPAC crowed that voters had spurned the groups’ hardline tactics, including AIPAC’s use of shell PACs to obscure the source of the outside spending. And they held up Biss’ victory in particular as reassurance for candidates wary AIPAC will wade into their primaries that the group can be defeated. Democratic candidates and strategists are bracing for the group to intervene in a range of upcoming House primaries, as well as the Michigan and Minnesota Senate primaries.
Tuesday’s results “should send a clear message to candidates across the country: you do not have to fear AIPAC’s spending or intimidation,” Jeremy Ben-Ami, the president of J Street, a rival organization that spent $350,000 backing Biss and worked to counter AIPAC in other Illinois House races, said in a statement.
Yet AIPAC is poised to remain formidable through the midterms. One pro-Israel Democratic donor adviser, granted anonymity to speak candidly, said even with AIPAC’s misfires, the money is likely to keep pouring in.
“Their donor talking points aren’t going to be, ‘we only got half.’ They’ll say, ‘we took out two of the worst people,’” said the donor adviser of Tuesday’s results. “They know how to sell it, and there’s no shortage of money.”
Shia Kapos contributed to this report.
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