Politics
Keir Starmer even manages to make Wes Streeting look decent
Imagine if you will, for just one moment, having the fucking brass neck to (falsely) boast that you booted Jeremy Corbyn out of the Labour Party while that utterly vile specimen, Epstein’s best pal, Mandelson, was up to his eyeballs in nonce-worshipping.
Corbyn’s Labour certainly had its faults, but it never recruited Peter Mandelson. No shadow cabinet appointments, no diplomatic roles, Crony Mandelson was persona non grata.
Keir Starmer’s government is a gutless, corporate-kowtowing betrayal of everything the Labour Party was supposed to stand for under Jeremy Corbyn. A Corbyn premiership would have been a revolutionary upgrade, not this tepid, right-leaning bullshit we’re stuck with.
I guess it’s easy to think about what could’ve been.
What could have been
Corbyn’s Labour would have built solidarity with global struggles rather than bowed to NATO warmongers and US hegemony. Starmer’s Labour is a whitewashed, Zionist-appeasing machine that silences dissent and props up imperialism.
Corbyn’s Labour would have prioritised aid over arms and cooperation over conquest, turning the UK into a force for global equity, not another lapdog for empire. Starmer’s Labour has escalated tensions with Russia and China to please the Atlanticist overlords and ramped up military spending to 2.5% of GDP while nurses line up at food banks.
Corbyn’s Labour would have ended the failed neoliberal austerity policies that have hollowed out Britain for decades. Rail, mail, water, and energy would’ve been back in public hands where they belong, rather than lining the pockets of fat cat shareholders. Starmer’s Labour ruthlessly ditched those Corbyn-lite pledges faster than a rat fleeing a sinking ship. His “fiscal responsibility” rhetoric is simply code for continuing Tory-lite cuts, cosying up to big business with tax breaks for the filthy rich while public services crumble to the fucking ground.
Starmer’s Britain
Starmer’s Britain is still a playground for billionaires, while Corbyn would have taxed them into oblivion to fund the NHS properly, not this half-arsed patching-up.
Starmer’s “growth” is a euphemism for gangrenous decay. NHS waiting lists are stagnating, schools are falling apart and councils are on the brink of bankruptcy, all while he funnels your billions into private health vultures and arms dealers.
Keir Starmer isn’t building Britain, he’s burying it alive, six-feet-deep in austerity’s grave, like a gravedigger with a knighthood.
You see, Jeremy Corbyn wasn’t just a better option, he was the perfect antidote to the poisonous, soul-sucking capitalist rot that Keir Starmer is peddling as “change”.
So next time you hear or see the oligarchs plaything taking a swipe at his predecessor, just remember the Labour Party didn’t have a place for an honourable, decent man like Jeremy Corbyn, but it has plenty of room for paedo-enablers, Tel Aviv bootlickers, corporate shills and Blairite zombies.
And that’s just Peter Mandelson.
Decency???
To be honest, I am absolutely sick of hearing the liberal media tell us that Keir Starmer is a beacon of decency, a steady hand rescuing Britain from Tory chaos. In reality, the BBC and Guardian’s insistence on Starmer’s decency is just cover for their own complicity in propping up a system that chews up poor and working class people.
Starmer is anything but decent. If you have read the last five hundred words you might even agree with me, wherever you place yourself on the Overton Window.
Starmer’s entire rise reeks of deceit and opportunism.
Starmer won the Labour leadership in 2020 by pledging a raft of left-wing Corbyn-lite policies such as scrapping tuition fees, nationalising utilities, and defending migrants rights. But once in power, they were abandoned faster than a bad date.
That isn’t decent, it’s calculated betrayal.
What about the freebies? I haven’t forgotten about that, and I doubt you have either. More than £100,000 of freebies from the elite — more than every other Labour leader combined — while pensioners freeze and children go hungry under Labour’s austerity-lite regime.
If that’s decent, I’m a devoted Faragist.
Authoritarian thuggery
Then there’s Starmer’s vicious purge of the Labour left, which the liberal media whitewashes as “professionalising” the party. Starmer and his former enforcer, Morgan McSweeney, have systematically expelled or marginalised anyone with a whiff of socialism under the guise of rooting out antisemitism, but really to crush dissent and drag the party to the right to the delight of their elitist paymasters.
Decency? No. Authoritarian thuggery? Yes.
On Gaza, his slow-footed, mealy-mouthed response to Israel’s actions has been a national embarrassment and a fucking disgrace and has truly exposed his lack of moral spine.
Complicit Keir Starmer is a jellyfish, drifting with the tides of power rather than boldly standing against injustice.
Even the ultra-Blairite, Wes Streeting privately thinks Israel is a “rogue state” committing “war crimes” and “calculated brutality”, yet publicly it’s business as usual for this dreadful, callous government.
Remember, “decent” Starmer rolled out the red carpet for Israel’s war criminals, licensed the tools of their barbaric, criminal slaughter, and suppressed the movement demanding accountability, only to be told it was unlawful.
Maybe someone in the liberal media can explain to me how supplying military equipment to a baby-killing regime is in any way, “decent”?
Haven’t the actions of this vile, discredited Prime Minister caused enough harm to children already? Their blood is on your grubby hands, Keir Starmer.
Starmer: a gutless fraud
Less than two years into the age of beige, Starmer is the most unpopular PM on record, with polls tanking and chants calling him a “wanker” echoing from football grounds to darts halls across the country.
We are not fooled. Keir Starmer isn’t a fighter for the people, he is a doormat for the establishment.
Keir Starmer isn’t decent, he is a man without conviction and the embodiment of everything that is so very wrong with centrist politics — hollow, elitist, and utterly treacherous.
Starmer’s diabolical legacy was secured some time before the latest Peter Mandelson scandal.
History will not remember Keir Starmer as a decent Prime Minister, it will remember him for the gutless fraud that he is.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Timms still hasn’t got a clue what his own DWP PIP review is doing
Stephen Timms has once again demonstrated just how pointless and directionless his own review into Personal Independence Payment (PIP) for the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) actually is.
DWP PIP review still no further forward
During a debate on Work Capability Assessment (WCA) timescales, the minister for disabled people told MPs that the Timms review is still working out which outside agencies to involve. This is despite, as Benefits and Work points out, there only being 44 working days left for the steering group.
He said:
We are going to have a full day together tomorrow, considering how to secure external input to our consideration of how the system should work in the future. The review’s recommendations will be submitted to the Secretary of State in the autumn.
But with such a tight work schedule and limited involvement from the steering group, this is something that should’ve been worked out weeks ago. Especially considering many disabled people’s organisations have been pushing Timms for co-production since last autumn.
This is either complete weaponised incompetence from Timms, or evidence that the review was never genuinely going to include disabled people. I suspect it’s both. The man has a history of demanding answers of the DWP when he was chair of the Work and Pensions committee, so it’s inconceivable that he’d be so well and truly shit at this.
But then it’s becoming increasingly clear that Labour never actually cared about helping disabled benefit claimants. They just wanted to use us as a stick to beat the Tory government with.
Whilst the steering committee only has 44 working days, that will be spread out over the coming months. The Review is expected to be concluded and reported on in Autumn, expected sometime in November. In that time, the committee will have to somehow decide on what changes will be made to PIP eligibility. This is whilst the government already wants to make it harder for those with neurodivergent and mental health conditions.
What’s going on with the WCA?
Alongside this, there’s also (naturally) limited understanding of how the PIP review will handle the Universal Credit Health Element moving to PIP and what that will mean for the future of the WCA.
That’s why this debate was particularly relevant as it once again shows just how much the DWP are overestimating their abilities to carry this out.
They’ve already been hauled over the coals by both the Work and Pensions Committee and Public Accounts Committee for their incompetence. But as we well know with the DWP, there’s always more incompetence.
The debate focused on the scale of claimants waiting for a WCA reassessment and how the DWP plans to deal with the backlog. MPs spoke about the need for the backlog to be fixed but also compassion within the system that still forces people into work who are too sick to do so.
Timm talks utter bullshit, as usual
In Timms response however, he once again willingly missed the point and instead focused on how the system will force people into work even more
One of the problems with it has been that although people deemed not capable of work are still offered help to look for work, there is no requirement to take it up and, in practice, they rarely do. The system has given up on them, but we are now changing that. Work coaches with a new specific brief to support people classified as LCWRA say they are getting a positive response from the people they are contacting.
Truly an absurd response when the solution would surely be to just leave people alone.
He continued:
In future, eligibility for additional health-related financial support in universal credit will be assessed in England and Wales via the personal independence payment assessment. It will be based on the impact of disability on daily living, rather than on capacity to work.
This change again makes no sense, as the “UC health element” is for anyone who can’t work. This includes people with short term conditions such as cancer or pregnancy complications who would not qualify for PIP with the current assessment times.
He carried on bigging up the changes, which for a review that is still ongoing, definitely make it sound predetermined
Our ambition is a system that is simple to navigate, can be trusted by those who use it, provides a good experience and, generally, obtains the right decision the first time. Due to its link with the PIP assessment, the WCA abolition will not proceed until after the conclusion of the review into PIP that I am currently co-chairing.
Their plan certainly is ambitious, considering they cant handle their current system which is plagued by delays. Not that it stopped the DWP giving their civil servants horrendously steep bonuses. There’s also still a lot of confusion over whether the WCA will be abolished. DWP chief Pat McFadden has insisted it will, whereas the department’s own figures show it will still exist well into 2030.
Only clarity is how fucked the DWP is
The only thing that is clear here is that the DWP have been attempting to peddle through shit since their PIP cuts were thwarted last summer. Because of this, no matter how predetermined the DWP’s plans, they can’t do fuck all until this bullshit review concludes.
That’s why it’s in the best interests of the department that this farce of a review is as vague and disjointed as possible. Because any clarity would bring scrutiny from the disabled organisations Timms is attempting to shut out.
The DWP can’t come out and say they want as little resistance to cuts as possible, but their actions are proving it.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
96% of UK adults unaware most Mother’s Day flowers come from East Africa
Ahead of Mother’s Day (Sunday 15 March), the Fairtrade Foundation commissioned a new Kantar survey. It reveals only 4% of UK adults are aware that most of the flowers sold at this time of year come from East Africa (mainly Kenya and Ethiopia). Over 80% of flowers sold in the UK are imports, with around half grown in East Africa, 12% in the Netherlands and 9% in Colombia.
Flowers remain one of the UK’s favourite Mother’s Day gifts. 39% of people plan to buy them this year, rising to 70% of 25-34 year olds and 61% of 16-24 year olds. However, the survey highlights a striking lack of awareness of the people and places behind the stems.
Flower growers’ working conditions
Many flower workers in Kenya, Ethiopia, Colombia and Ecuador – most of them women – face low pay, long hours, unsafe working conditions and exposure to harmful chemicals. On average, flower workers in Kenya earn £2 a day or less.
More than three quarters (76%) of people in the UK aren’t aware that most flower growers working in East Africa earn below the living wage for their work growing the flowers we buy at this time of year.
90% were concerned about the human rights and environmental challenges in the industry, including low pay and exposure to pesticides, faced by flower growers working overseas, and two thirds of people are interested in finding out more about the people who grow their flowers (rising to 88% of 25-34 year olds).
Choosing flowers with the Fairtrade Mark on their packaging means they have grown on Fairtrade-certified farms. These have met strict standards, including rules on health and safety including pesticides and protective equipment.
Up to 70% of workers on flower farms in Kenya are women. On Fairtrade-certified farms, workers – most of them women – benefit from stronger protections and investment in their wellbeing.
At Shalimar Flowers Farm in Naivasha, Kenya, Fairtrade Premium funds have supported leadership training, childcare and skills development. As Rebecca Amoth, who works as a flower grower on the farm, explained:
When I started working here, it was common to hear cases of harassment. Women were afraid to speak up, and even more afraid to dream… Today, more women are stepping into leadership. And when something isn’t right, we speak up.
Rebecca has also been able to access subsidised childcare because of Fairtrade sales – paying just £0.90 a month instead of the £12 charged by private facilities. Fairtrade Premium funds have helped train workers like her to develop new skills and earn additional income to support their families. Rebecca explained:
I’ve paid school fees without stress, and I’m building a permanent home.
Fairtrade flowers
Fairtrade flowers are grown with respect for people and for the planet, making them a good option for those looking to buy flowers this Mother’s Day. 57% of people (60% of women) surveyed agreed, saying that knowing flowers were Fairtrade would make a Mother’s Day gift feel more meaningful. However, over half of UK shoppers (57%) are unaware that Fairtrade flowers are widely available to buy, in supermarkets and online retailers.
Responding to the findings, Marie Rumsby, director of advocacy at the Fairtrade Foundation, said:
Women make up a large proportion of the global flower workforce, yet too many are still in low-paid, insecure and unsafe roles.
This Mother’s Day, we’re urging people to support the women behind our bouquets – by choosing Fairtrade flowers and by signing Fairtrade’s petition to demand business that’s fair to people and planet – these simple acts will help protect the women who grow the blooms we love.
Our research shows UK shoppers care deeply about how their flowers are produced, but they aren’t getting the transparency they deserve. People want to make ethical choices, yet the reality of low pay, long hours and unsafe conditions is too often hidden from view.
Businesses and government must step up to ensure the people behind our flowers are protected and treated with dignity.
Right now, companies can still operate without taking full responsibility for what happens in their supply chains. That’s why Fairtrade is calling for a strong, mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence law – one that ensures workers are safe, paid fairly and able to speak up without fear.
This Mother’s Day, look for the Fairtrade Mark on your flowers to support the people who grow them. And as the government concludes its Responsible Business Conduct Review, we urge ministers to put fairness for farmers and workers at the heart of UK supply chains.
The government is in the process of updating its National Baseline Assessment of progress against the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. And it’s due to release the outcome of its Responsible Business Conduct Review later in March. As the government finalises its Review, Fairtrade is urging ministers to introduce a strong, mandatory human rights and environmental due diligence law so companies take responsibility for conditions in their supply chains.
Call for government action
Against this backdrop, the research shows strong public backing for tougher action: 82% of UK adults surveyed believe both the UK government and businesses should do more to prevent human rights abuses and environmental harm in their supply chains.
To amplify the call for government legislation, on Tuesday 10 March a digital van will tour Westminster displaying messages to the minister for trade, Chris Bryant. The messages come from Fairtrade’s CEO, Fairtrade farmers and workers, fair fashion campaigner Venetia La Manna, and the CEO of the Co‑op. They all urge the introduction of a responsible business law (also known as a Human Rights and Environmental Due Diligence law).
Alongside this, Fairtrade supporters are sending around 1,000 postcards directly to the minister to reinforce the message.
In the UK, shoppers can buy Fairtrade flowers online at Arena Flowers and Bloom & Wild, or in supermarkets like Aldi, Asda, Co-op and Lidl.
Emily Pearce, Co-op’s senior sustainable sourcing and international development manager, said:
It’s clear from the research that flowers remain a firm Mother’s Day favourite. At Co-op, we’re proud to be making it easier for our members and customers to choose Fairtrade as the UK’s largest retailer of Fairtrade flowers, sourcing 112.5 million stems last year alone.
We have been supporting Fairtrade for more than 30 years, championed by our passionate members.
We see first-hand the difference it can make and whilst there is still much to do to address unfairness in global food supply chains, we know that through our commitment, our members and customers are contributing to a fairer deal for the farmers and workers producing these beautiful blooms.
The global cut flowers trade is worth over $30bn. Last year in the UK, florists saw a more than fivefold transaction uplift on the Friday before Mother’s Day.
Featured image via the Fairtrade Foundation
Politics
WATCH: My Hour Long Interview with West Ham Legend Clyde
I have a treat for you. Clyde Best is a true West Ham legend. He can legitimately be described as Britain’s first star black footballer, and a real role model for the black players that followed him into the professional game in the 1970s and 1980s. He came to this country as a 17 year old from Bermuda in 1968 and played for West Ham from 1969-76, before playing for various teams in the NASL in the USA,
On 25 March, a new documentary will be premiered at Sadlers Wells East in Stratford. It’s called ‘Transforming the Beautiful Game – The Clyde Best Story’. It will have daily showings from 25th-28th March. Sadlers Wells East is the theatre on the right as you walk up to the London Stadium from the station.
After each screening, Clyde Best, Ade Coker and others will join a panel to discuss the documentary and the issues raised.
I’ve seen the documentary and it is absolutely superb. It features many players like Viv Anderson and Ian Wright, who say they couldn’t have had their careers without Clyde.
Last week Clyde came into the LBC studio and I recorded an hour long interview with me for my IAIN DALE ALL TALK podcast. We don’t normally film these, but in this case, I decided we would film it so I could share it with you.
So you can watch above, or if you prefer you can listen on the podcast HERE from 1am on Wednesday 11 March.
And if you want to attend one of the screenings you can buy tickets HERE.
The PR blurb for the docuentary describes it thus…
He was a striker, and at 17, he debuted alongside Sir Geoff Hurst for West Ham United. Despite constant racism, he rose to stardom—playing 218 first-team games and scoring 58 goals over his career. On Easter weekend in 1972, West Ham United became the first team ever to start three Black players in one game, making English League history: Clive Charles, Ade Coker, and Clyde Best. His untold story is featured in the new upcoming documentary Transforming the Beautiful Game, a powerful testament to resilience, quiet revolution, and a legacy that reshaped the future of the global game.
The Clyde Best Story features never-before-seen archival footage from historic matches involving the Bermuda National Team, West Ham United, and the NASL, paired with in-depth interviews with football legends including Ian Wright, Geoff Hurst, Viv Anderson, Garth Crooks, Rodney Marsh, Howard Gayle, and Harry Redknapp. Additional voices—Randy Horton, Bobby Barnes, Patrick Horne, Carlton Cole, Paul Davis, Ade Coker, Kasey Keller, and Clyde Best himself—add depth, perspective, and authenticity to the story.
Politics
Iain Duncan Smith on his ancestors’ pursuit of perfection

Samurai suit of armour and helmet: Iron, silk, wool, leather, gold and lacquer, 1519 (helmet), 1696 (armour) and 1800s (textiles) | Image by: Charlie J Ercilla / Alamy
5 min read
From elaborate displays of armour to exquisite costumes and art, this spectacular exhibition enabled me to see the full extent of the mastery and enduring influence of my Japanese forebears, the samurai
I was pleasantly surprised when The House magazine asked me to review the samurai exhibition at the British Museum. I had already been meaning to see it, particularly because of my great-grandmother who was Japanese and whose family had been samurai.
In the 1860s my great-grandfather had set up a trading company in Fuzhou (Foochow), a port in southeast China. It was there that he became friends with a Japanese artist who had left his homeland during the Meiji Restoration, and his sister, who later became my great-grandfather’s wife.
The emperor Meiji had ended over 250 years of Tokugawa shogunate rule, returning authority back to the emperor (the restoration is one of several periods covered in this excellent exhibition). This action catapulted Japan out of its isolation and, in an astonishingly tiny number of years, transformed Japan from a closed and feudal state into a modern, industrial and military power. It also ended the authority of the samurai and withdrew their extensive and arbitrary rights.
Photo © John Bigelow Taylor
The exhibition charts the development of the samurai from loose collections of warriors into what eventually became a highly structured organisation in the 11th and 12th centuries, loyal to their shūgo (lord), up to their eventual demise in 1868. In fact, in their last 250 years, there were few battles to fight and many of them became more like civil servants, organised into a hierarchy and running different domains for their lord. Samurai had to adhere to their code: courage, righteousness, benevolence, respect, honesty, honour and loyalty.
As I walked around the exhibition, I became aware that the term ‘samurai’ is more commonly used in the West than in Japan. Instead, the usual Japanese term is musha for warrior – or bushi to describe the ruling class.
The pursuit of perfection is apparent in everything they did
The exhibition also carefully pointed out another misunderstanding – that samurai warriors mainly used their swords in battle. Their main weapons and the ones they trained on endlessly were in fact the pike (yari) and the bow and arrow (yumi and ya). The exhibition is filled with such weapons, including their swords (katana).
And contrary to the generally accepted view that woman stayed at home looking after the household, the exhibition reveals how many women were trained in weapons and martial arts. Tomoe Gozen was one such female warrior, an expert in bow and sword in around 1180. There were also a couple of vivid paintings of a female warrior slicing through a soldier.
Yet samurai weren’t just warriors – in fact, in the last 200 years before the Meiji Restoration, the country was pretty stable, with very little warfare. This led to them becoming artists, writers and poets, and the displays of their work were compelling. Perhaps the most illuminating was the painting of the formal procession of the courtesans in Edo (Tokyo), as well as books and paintings about the sexual proclivities of this warrior class.
The museum had also gathered together a fascinating and stunningly elaborate array of Japanese armour. Similarly exquisite, but more understated, were the various costumes and beautiful clothes.
This spectacular exhibition enabled me to see how detailed and precise the culture of the samurai was.
From their armour and paintings to their books and swords, and even a deeply structured tea ceremony, the pursuit of perfection is apparent in everything they did – not just as armoured warriors engaged in the brutal art of war. In fact, this pursuit of perfection led even to the steel in their swords being of probably the highest quality in the world.
My great-grandfather’s brother-in-law, I understand, was one of those samurai who had become a full-time artist having moved to China – and which in turn led to their meeting.
As I wandered round the exhibition, I noticed how many young children were peering intently at the armour on display, even holding an imaginary katana above their heads. After all, much samurai culture has become part of modern western culture. You only have to look at the American film industry to see the extent of its influence. From The Magnificent Seven to Darth Vader’s helmet, cloak and lightsaber, we in the West of all ages remain fascinated by this unique group of people.
That’s why I recommend that anyone who can, should take the time to see this exhibition, and I congratulate the British Museum for putting it on.
Iain Duncan Smith is Conservative MP for Chingford and Woodford Green
Samurai
Curated by: Rosina Buckland and Joe Nickols
Venue: British Museum – until 4 May 2026
Politics
LIVE: Reform Pledges to Cut Fuel Bills
Nigel Farage and Robert Jenrick are “cutting fuel prices for the day at a petrol station in Derbyshire.” They’ve branded up a petrol station for it…
Politics
Short Bursts Of Exercise Form ‘Fertiliser For Your Brain’
Exercise is amazingly good for your brain. Even a 10-minute walk might help to improve your mood, focus, and reaction time; 150 minutes of activity a week could keep your mind younger for longer.
A new paper published in Brain Research has suggested that short bursts of exercise could increase people’s brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), linked to the health and growth of brain cells.
BDNF has been described as a “fertiliser for the brain”.
15 minutes made a lot of difference to unfit participants
In this research, the scientists took participants (aged 18-55) who weren’t physically active and asked them to take part in a 12-week programme with short cycling sessions, three times a week.
They looked at factors like the participants’ VO2 max (or their ability to use oxygen efficiently during exercise) and BDNF, both before and after the 12-week scheme.
They also completed tasks which were designed to test their attention, reaction times and memory.
And scientists looked at the activity in their prefrontal cortex, which is linked to focus, decision-making and impulse control, too.
After their training, the participants’ base-level BDNF was roughly the same as when they started.
But after a 15-minute workout, they saw a higher spike in BDNF than the participants had had when they started. This positively correlated with VO2 improvements, linked to overall aerobic fitness.
These higher BDNF levels brought on by exercise were linked to better focus, attention, and inhibition.
This might help to explain why exercise is so good for our brains
“We’ve known for a while that exercise is good for our brains, but the mechanisms through which this occurs are still being disentangled,” the study’s lead author, Dr Flaminia Ronca, said.
“The most exciting finding from our study is that if we become fitter, our brains benefit even more from a single session of exercise, and this can change in only six weeks.”
Politics
Family courts overhaul welcomed by campaigners
An overhaul of the family courts system means that children will be better protected from abusive parents under a new law that MPs are set to debate today at a second reading of the Courts and Tribunals Bill.
Under the new Courts and Tribunals Bill, the government will revoke the law that judged a child should have contact with both parents, which campaigners argued has put the rights of abusive parents over a child’s safety.
The move follows a decade-long campaign by Claire Throssell MBE, whose two sons — Jack, 12, and Paul, 9 — were both killed by their father despite her warnings he was a danger to them. She has since campaigned to prevent unsafe child contact with dangerous perpetrators of domestic abuse.
The Women’s Aid ambassador said:
For a decade, I have been campaigning with Women’s Aid to change the family courts system to make sure that no child is ever again placed at risk of further harm from abusive parents.
Seeing that the presumption of parental contact will finally be repealed, and in the memory of my sons, Jack and Paul, is deeply meaningful.
No child should have to hold out a hand for help in darkness, saying that they were hurt by someone who was meant to protect them. No parents should have to hold their children as they die from the abuse of a perpetrator, as I did 11 years ago.
Family courts dismantle ‘pro-contact’ culture
The Victims’ Commissioner for England and Wales, Claire Waxman OBE, paid tribute to Throssell’s “extraordinary bravery and determination in the face of unimaginable grief and pain”.
She welcomed the government’s landmark decision which marks a decisive shift away from a pro-contact culture in family courts that has historically placed children at risk of harm from abusive parents, Waxman explained.
She said:
[Throssell’s] success in removing this dangerous presumption from family law is a vital step in dismantling the dangerous ‘pro-contact’ culture that is so deep-rooted in our courts.
This is a hard-won victory for Claire, but more importantly, it is a lasting legacy for Jack and Paul — ensuring a new era of protection and justice for every woman and child seeking safety from abuse.
The presumption of parental involvement was introduced into the Children Act 1989 to help ensure children could maintain a relationship with both parents after separation.
However, evidence shows the current process can leave children at risk of harm from abusive parents.
The current law contains safeguards that allow involvement to be restricted where it harms a child’s welfare, but repealing this provision is what campaigners have advocated for.
Featured image via Unsplash/Suzi Kim
Politics
Travelodge complicit in sexual assault, say Labour MPs
Over 100 Labour MPs have co-signed a letter to the CEO of Travelodge to request a meeting to discuss a sexual assault that occurred in the hotel chain. According to the letter, a woman was sexually assaulted after making a solo booking at the hotel – only for staff to give her attacker a key to her room. The perpetrator of the sexual assault, Kyran Smith, told staff he was her boyfriend and needed another key card. Despite not being present on the booking, the hotel gave him that key which enabled his abuse.
Smith has since been convicted and sentenced to 7.5 years in prison. Nevertheless, the letter addressing this serious incident also refers to a woeful response from Travelodge in light of their security error was to offer a measly £30 compensation to the victim.
Travelodge have serious questions to answer
However, as these Labour MPs highlight, the Travelodge played an intrinsic role in enabling this abuse and their remedial response should be far stronger. Once again, corporates have little compassion for ordinary people even whilst they play a hand in their very real trauma.
A woman was sexually assaulted in a Travelodge. Staff gave her attacker the key to her room after he pretended to be her boyfriend. She was offered £30 in compensation. Appalling.
Along with 100 Labour colleagues, I’ve written to Travelodge’s CEO & asked to meet. pic.twitter.com/1pxjVqZvn3
— Anneliese Midgley MP (@anneliese_midge) March 8, 2026
This letter paints an appalling image of this corporate hotel company. It details how the abuse was able to have taken place, and highlights how little safeguarding is present for women, or frankly anyone, staying at Travelodge’s across the country. Apparently, despite the victim of assault having made a solo booking, the hotel staff didn’t think it was appropriate to double-check the abusive man’s claim by speaking directly to the guest. No, a man walking in and laying claim to her is enough to invade her privacy without question, according to shady-as-fuck Travelodge.
The MPs listed four areas of focused discussion:
We would also welcome the opportunity to discuss:
- Travelodge’s security policies and procedures relating to providing a key card and/or room number to someone not named on a booking
- Travelodge’s safeguarding training processes
- Any training relating to Violence Against Women and Girls that Travelodge provides for staff
- Changes that Travelodge will make to the above to ensure the safety of women staying at your hotel chain
I’m a signatory.
This case is sickening. My thoughts are with the victim following this sexual assault.
We need urgent answers from @TravelodgeUK who did not take VAWG seriously.
What are their security procedures? How do we stop this happening again? https://t.co/kCE2ImnOmP
— Dawn Butler ✊🏾💙 (@DawnButlerBrent) March 9, 2026
‘We want to apologise to the victim’
Travelodge have said that they recognise the £30 compensation offer was ‘inappropriate’. Since, they have told the BBC:
The safety and security of our guests is our priority and we were deeply concerned to hear of this distressing incident and our sympathies are with the victim.
We want to apologise to the victim for the way this incident has been handled.
Travelodge adopts industry standard security procedures which were followed at the time of the incident in 2022.
We will carry out a full review of our room security policies to learn from this incident and further strengthen our procedures.
We covered the rising fear in women and girls as figures continually rise back in October, pointing out how men are seemingly more emboldened than ever. Discussing this terrifying rise, we wrote:
Domestic abuse is a serious issue, accounting for 54% of rape crimes between April 2024 and March 2025, with the remaining being committed by men over the age of 16. There is also a marginal difference between the likelihood of being attacked by a stranger or an acquaintance, making it a minefield for vulnerable women and girls.
In the last 20 years, sexual offences have increased: from 970 against young girls under-13, and 8,192 against women over 16 to 5,067 and 49,075 respectively. When looking at all rapes, crimes have increased by 511%.
In fact, rape offences doubled between 2014 to 2019, rising from 29,420 to a horrifying 59,999. There is a slight reduction seen in 2020/2021 down to 55,685, during COVID and lockdown periods, before shooting up to 70,031 the following year.
Women have enough to fear without fearing our safety and security in hotels
Privacy and security are human rights and protected by civil law. Nonetheless, women and girls have continually suffered abuse at some point, if not multiple times in their lifetimes. Abusive men have long believed they can do whatever they want to their victims, often getting off on the most invasive and traumatising ways they can do so.
This incident is horrifying and will spark fear in every woman across the country. Equally terrifying is the feeling that other men may see this and get ideas of their own, leaving more women in harm’s way. The fact Travelodge’s security procedure is supposedly ‘industry standard’ suggests this must be levelled across the hotel industry as a whole.
Therefore, Labour MPs are completely right to press this deplorable incident, but they must push further. We hope they push hard against the Travelodge to take action that truly shows they recognise the trauma inflicted by the sexual assault they played an essential role in making possible. As a woman myself, I know that I won’t feel safe until I hear all hotels have safeguarded against this life-changing risk of abuse.
Frankly, I’d have thought something as egregious as this could not be possible in the first place. More fool me, I guess.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Hudson Williams Calls Out ‘Bigotry’ Among Heated Rivalry Fans
The stars of Heated Rivalry are calling out toxicity within the show’s fan community.
On Monday evening, leading man Hudson Williams – who portrays Shane Hollander in the Canadian sports romance – had a message for viewers who have been posting “bigoted comments of any kind” in an attempt to put cast members or characters down.
“Don’t call yourself a fan if you share racist/homophobic/biphobic/misogynistic/ageist/ableist/parasocial/bigoted comments of any kind,” he told his Instagram followers. “None of us need your hateful ‘love’.”
Hudson added: “We all respect and support and love each other and are on the same side. If you can’t accept that [get the fuck outta here].”
François Arnaud, better known to Heated Rivalry fans for his portrayal of Scott Hunter, also shared the same message at around the same time.

Based on Rachel Reid’s Game Changer romance novels, Heated Rivalry became an international sleeper hit after premiering on the Canadian broadcaster Crave towards the end of 2025.
The six-part series stars Hudson and Connor Storrie as its central couple, playing hockey stars Shane Hollander and Ilya Grigoryevich Rozanov, two rivals who are embroiled in a passionate romance away from the public eye.
Heated Rivalry has gone on to become an unexpected global phenomenon, making household names of its previously-unknown central actors ahead of its UK premiere on Sky and Now back in January.
A second season, unsurprisingly, is already in the works, though fans could be in for a bit of a wait before it arrives.
“This time last year I’d written five of these, and this time this year I’ve written zero of them,” series creator Jacob Tierney told Variety at the end of 2025. “So it’s going to be a little bit later, but it’s still going to be soon.”
Meanwhile, Connor and Hudson have teased a “hotter, wetter, longer” season two, which is expected to begin shooting in the summer before debuting in the spring of 2027.
Politics
Difficult People Literally Age You, Study Finds
“Hasslers,” or people who repeatedly “create problems or make life more difficult” for you, can literally age you, a new study published in PNAS found.
Stating that relationships like these are “not rare,” the researchers added that they are “disproportionately experienced by individuals facing greater social and health vulnerabilities, and consequential for ageing”.
And the more of these sorts of relationships, the worse the health outcomes seem to be.
How do “hasslers” affect our health?
This research showed that for every “hassler” in a person’s life, biological ageing sped up by 1.5%, or nine months.
The authors think this could happen because negative interactions chronically strain the body’s hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which helps to regulate stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline.
And, they posit, the chronic stress of talking to “hasslers” leads to lasting inflammation, which is linked to ageing if it lasts when the body doesn’t need it.
This could, they say, be an example of allostatic load; a form of “wear and tear” that happens when we try repeatedly to adapt to ongoing stress.
That might be why people with more “hasslers” fared worse, on average, on measures like self-reported health, psychiatric symptoms, epigenetic inflammation scores, and waist-to-hip ratio.
How common are hasslers?
Almost 30% of us have one or more in our lives, the paper stated.
But some people are more likely than others to have “hasslers”.
Who’s most likely to have hasslers?
What types of hasslers are there?
This study looked at kin and nonkin hasslers as well as spouse hasslers.
In this research, only the first two were found to affect participants’ biological ageing.
“Ties characterised by obligation, shared space, or structural interdependence, such as parents, children, coworkers, or roommates, are more likely to be hasslers than voluntary, self-selected ties such as friends, church members, and neighbours,” the paper reads.
Kin hasslers are the most linked to accelerated ageing, while nonkin hasslers seemed to affect mortality-sensitive metrics the most.
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