Politics
Mandelson did for Morgan, now Kemi wants Keir’s scalp but be careful what you wish for
Lazarus didn’t have a better revival, if you are in the Labour Party.
One day after the resignation of his Chief of Staff, the ‘brains of the operation’, Mandelson protogé and eventual sacrificial lamb, Morgan McSweeney, the man who relied so heavily upon him was on the ropes. Ugly for Starmer was the Monday mood in Westminster, and yet the coup that couldn’t deliver the coup de grace announced itself in Edinburgh.
It’s a really heartwarming thing to see so many people that you know have doubts, like you, about Starmer’s ability to do the job, suddenly spontaneously express their strong conviction that this ‘man of integrity’ in his borrowed suit and glasses is the man to lead them. Almost as if it was co-ordinated, by his allies.
The Cabinet had spent the middle of the day with their tanks strangely quiet, their ranks confined to barracks, waiting to see which way the wind blew, as Kemi Badenoch stalked the skies, and Sky, eager to add another ‘kill’ to the fuselage of her fighter plane. But despite Anas Sawar firing the opening salvos, battle did not commence.
And then arose a faintly ‘saintly’ Sir Keir from a meeting of the PLP. A shame the ‘best speech of his life’ took place behind closed doors, rather than the nasal Nightol he usually serves up in public, and suddenly all is well in the best of all possible Labour worlds. They’ve really turned the corner. The leopard has abandoned spots as yesterday’s fashion.
The truth is the PM ‘saved the day’, or rather his bacon, and will be back at the despatch box this afternoon, where the woman he once felt able to write off will no doubt be right up in his face.
Actually Starmer has merely bought time. How long? Probably the length of an HMRC tax investigation, or May.
I’m old enough to remember when, having survived Conference 2025 with aplomb, we warned that with Robert Jenrick in the Party (he was actually already in Reform – he just hadn’t told anyone yet) that May 2026 was the moment Kemi was most vulnerable.
However with a sustained personal, if not party, revival and Robert Jenrick actually gone that threat has not only reduced substantially, it’s flipped onto a Labour leader who once, filled with confidence, liked to dangle that threat over the Conservative leaders head at PMQs. I doubt he’d risk that today.
One wonders, since he’s expressed his full confidence in so many people shortly before they’ve fallen – or been thrown- under a bus, if he’s confident in himself? The illusion of the big Starmer reset being real, rather than him being taken hostage by his Cabinet and his party – will unravel as he is forced, sans Morgan, to ‘talk left and govern lefter’.
But I have a doubt? What’s Kemi Badenoch’s play here?
She’s gunning for the PM, and with a substantial stack of ammunition on his poor judgement over Mandelson, taking the risk with national security by making him Ambassador to Washington, she’s harried him and will continue to with relentless accuracy. There’s lots more to come out, even today.
But do the Conservatives, who shied from a leadership challenge in the last nineteen months for the very same reasons Labour have for the moment, really want Starmer out?
Strategically it’s a tricky question. What’s the end game we are after? Almost all potential replacements for our adenoidal overlord are flawed in ways that will either see them unable to win over the membership of the Labour party or those that can run a government so akin to socialism the country and economy implode further and faster than Keir and Rachel have delivered already.
ConservativeHome columnist Miriam Cates pushed at this in her role as GBNews presenter when interviewing Kemi this week. She asked the Conservative leader who she thought could fill Starmer’s shoes, and predictably but effectively Kemi said “me”.
Right so we get, I even fully support, that aim. Kemi for PM and all that. But we’re not there yet. The mission seemed to be ‘Operation Remove Starmer’ not Operation General Election. Indeed, Kemi herself has said some while back that Labour are not under any obligation to call an election until 2029 and with as majority their size they won’t. Angela Rayner made much of the fact that every new Conservative Prime Minister should have sought a fresh mandate from the people. She’d be reminded of that if she won any race.
Right now it will be a Labour somebody who’d replace Starmer. The Reign of Rayner? Downing Streeting? back on the Milibandwagon? Engineering the destabilising impact on the country of a leadership contest mid term, a process the Conservatives now know is downright toxic to voters and have for that reason avoided having their own repeat, might look a little off. Quite a lot off actually.
And whilst they continue to crow – and I don’t remotely blame them – about poll leads, and uniparties, and bang on about Bangor, Reform, even with Farage performatively putting his party on an ‘election war footing’ are no more ready than the Conservatives to actually fight one right now. And our poll numbers still show, that an increasingly popular Kemi can’t save the Conservative brand alone.
Take candidate selection processes as just one example of why Reform and the Conservatives are not ready yet. Which is fine because it’s three years away, right?
Unless the cautious careful planning, the deep dives into policy to build a platform for government are suddenly to be rushed forward to bring down a PM, which might in short order in a number of scenarios eventually bring down a Government.
Besides there are advantages of having a deeply unpopular and mortally wounded and weakened individual struggling on in the top job. Maybe that’s the plan. I can see that.It’s a bit party before country, but then Starmer is the hypocritical expert there.
Maybe I’m instinctively too cautious, maybe I lack the killer instinct, happier with the logic of phased well thought out plan over four years to change, learn tough lessons, acknowledge mistakes, offer a consistent message to voters over years, and develop the language, policy and mindset to tackle the challenges the country faces, which no party, including our own, has yet demonstrated that it truly understands when it comes to the scale of the the remedies required – all of which will be bad medicine to the voters.
Credible radical unpopularism is, if you’ll forgive me, a bastard to sell on doorsteps.
I await PMQs with interest today. It will be hard to get the audible gasp of last week’s skewering. The fact at the PM is at the despatch box at all shows that so far, the when, if perhaps not the if, is still not fixed.
But if it is to be ‘Keir today, gone tomorrow’ I just wonder if we need to be careful what we wish for.
Politics
Graham Norton ‘Nicked’ (And Then Almost Lost) Pivotal Prop From Taylor Swift Video
Graham Norton is lifting the lid on his surprise appearance in Taylor Swift’s latest music video.
Last week, the Irish presenter was unveiled as one of several celebrity cameos in Taylor’s Opalite video, which features all of the stars she shared the sofa with while appearing on The Graham Norton Show towards the end of last year.
The Grammy winner’s latest video centres around a product called Opalite that helps bring lonely people together, with Graham making a brief appearance as the salesman of an antidote called “Nope-alite”.
In the latest episode of his podcast Wanging On, Graham opened up about filming the Opalite music video, revealing he shot his parts in around November, just weeks after interviewing Taylor about her latest album The Life Of A Showgirl, at a shopping centre in Croydon.
“This I shouldn’t say, but I nicked my bottle of Nope-alite,” he then confessed. “I have it at home!
“And here’s the thing, we got a new cleaner. So, I had the bottle of Nope-alite in my office. And we got a new cleaner, and – phew! – when I came home, I found the empty bottle of Nope-alite in the bin! Because she thought, ‘this is just an empty bottle of cleaner’ and chucked it out!”
Graham also heaped praise on Taylor as a video director, insisting that “everyone” on set was “lovely”, making the experience a “really, really fun” one.
“In the bit that I was doing, in the shopping centre, there were lots of extras and things, and I just thought, ‘oh word is going to leak out that this is happening’… but no one joined all the dots and came up with ‘it’s everyone off The Graham Norton Show’,” he said.
However, it seems keeping the secret of his cameo wasn’t always the easiest task for Graham, finding himself at various points in the last few months pleading for her to “please release the video so I can tell someone I did this”.

BBC/So Television/PA Media/Matt Crossick
Admitting he was “so in awe of myself” for managing to keep schtum, he admitted: “I came so close. On New Year’s Eve, I was with a gaggle of gays, and I just thought, ‘oh this is so good, it’ll be out in a minute, surely I can tell them?’.
“But I thought, ‘no, I mustn’t’, so I didn’t. So apologies to all the people I could have given this juicy bit of gossip to, and I didn’t, but I am available now and will sing like a canary.”
Joining Graham in the Opalite music video are actors Domhnall Gleeson, Greta Lee and Jodie Turner-Smith as well as singer Lewis Capaldi and a voice cameo from Cillian Murphy.
The release of the video means Opalite is currently on course to become Taylor’s sixth UK number one, after her new album’s lead single The Fate Of Ophelia topped the singles chart upon its release last year.
Politics
Epstein’s notes mark “JAIL OUT = 10”. Guess what date he ‘died’?
Handwritten notes made in prison by serial child-rapist Jeffrey Epstein show him writing “jail out = 10”. It may well indicate that Epstein expected to be out of prison on the 10th day of a month, which is, of course, the day he allegedly died. Or, it could be the ramblings of a predatory child rapist who was becoming increasingly unhinged.
Epstein’s handwritten notes: clues or ramblings?
Epstein’s ‘death’ has now been cast into doubt by evidence found in the latest release of US government files. Prosecutors prepared an announcement of his supposed suicide a day before it happened. A subpoena revealed that an anonymous message board post describing Epstein’s removal from prison – posted before his ‘death’ was announced – had been written by a prison guard on duty that night.
The latest discovery will only fuel suspicions that Epstein is still alive.
File EFTA00134596 and its adjacent release EFTA00134597 contain notes scribbled on a yellow pad in Epstein’s spidery handwriting. While much of it is either coded or difficult to read, much also is not.
One of the pages, alongside sketches that may show containers or building layouts, has clear mentions of:
• Israel
• Jet – US prop
• Guards
• govt clear
• Niger/Nigeria
• Visa
• Red notice (a request to law enforcement worldwide to locate and provisionally arrest a person pending extradition, surrender, or similar legal action).
• Gangsters
• Banks
• Computer
• Tourist
• Gaza
• Muslim
Along with several names:
But the other is briefer. Shown upside down in the file, when rotated it shows, among initials:
• JAIL OUT = 10
What all of this means when put together is unclear – but it could be that Epstein was laying out his train of thought around some kind of plan. Or, it could be the desperate and deranged scribblings of a man who, even then, did not care about his victims – only himself. All of this will only add to speculation the child rapist’s death was not all that it seemed.
For more on the the Epstein Files, please read our article on how the media circus around Epstein is erasing the experiences of victims and survivors here.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Bad Bunny Super Bowl Director Reveals Technical Blunders
Bad Bunny’s halftime performance at the Super Bowl on Sunday night may have received widespread praise and become one of the most-watched of all time, but it didn’t go entirely without a hitch.
To audiences, the Grammy winner’s tribute to Puerto Rico and Latin America looked like a tightly-produced spectacle, but those who worked behind the scenes have admitted there were a few technical issues on the night.
Director Hamish Hamilton and creative director Harriet Cuddeford revealed in an interview with Variety that the crane around the on-stage hut (called the casita) lost digital connection just moments before it was supposed to be shown on live TV.
Hamilton also shared that later in the performance, a low-angle camera near the casita started to wobble after a handheld cameraman and a Chapman dolly collided while trying to capture a section of Bad Bunny’s energetic performance for the viewers at home.
Luckily, most of us were so busy enjoying the spectacle that we didn’t notice this wobble.
The director admitted it was “terrifying” to watch the many camera operators running around the pitch, which was full of wedding guests, street vendors and celebrities, in order to not miss any of the action.
“In the performance of NuevaYol, there are moments when the cameras literally get to their point of shooting half a second before they’re on,” Hamish explained.
Cuddeford also praised the work of the team holding the cameras and capturing the iconic performance.
“The camera work was insane and so intricate and so carefully planned and such a feat, and could have just gone so wrong at any moment,” she enthused.
Luckily, even with these mishaps, the camera operators still managed to capture all the details of the singer’s meaningful halftime show, which featured guest appearances from Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin.
Politics
Signs Of Coercive Control Explained By A Legal Expert
There were 49,557 offences of coercive control recorded by the police in England and Wales in the year ending March 2025, according to domestic abuse charity Women’s Aid.
This is an increase from 45,310 in the year ending March 2024.
Domestic abuse isn’t always physical. “Coercive control creates invisible chains and a sense of fear that pervades all elements of a survivor’s life,” said the charity.
“It works to limit their human rights by depriving them of their liberty and reducing their ability for action.”
Jessica Wilson, managing director at Eventum Legal, suggests that while awareness of coercive control has risen in the past decade since it became a criminal offence, many people still don’t know the full extent of what it can entail.
Signs of coercive control
Gaslighting
Merriam-Webster defines gaslighting as “psychological manipulation of a person usually over an extended period of time that causes the victim to question the validity of their own thoughts, perception of reality, or memories”.
This typically leads to confusion, loss of confidence and self-esteem, said the dictionary, as well as uncertainty of your own emotional or mental stability, and a dependency on the perpetrator.
Wilson added that it often involves “denying events, rewriting history or making someone doubt their memory and judgement”.
Isolation
Isolation is a key coercive control tactic that involves restricting or discouraging contact with friends or family. It can be subtle and gradual.
Wilson added: “They might not even say ‘don’t go out’, but their reaction makes you want to stay in and avoid seeing loved ones.”
Financial control
Financial control involves limiting access to money, monitoring spending and forcing someone to account for every expense.
Wilson noted it can start by suggesting they ‘help’ you manage your finances and then escalate to a point where you have nothing of your own.
Blame-shifting
Blame-shifting involves holding the victim responsible for the abuser’s moods or actions.
“This can include perpetrators saying ‘look what you made me do’ or blaming their outburst, [or] bad habits such as drinking, on the victim,” said Wilson.
“They can also withdraw affection or support as a form of punishment.”
If you are a victim of coercive control or any form of domestic abuse, Women’s Aid have a Survivor’s Handbook which can guide you through getting information, support and help to leave safely.
Help and support:
If you, or someone you know, is in immediate danger, call 999 and ask for the police. If you are not in immediate danger, you can contact:
- The Freephone 24 hour National Domestic Violence Helpline, run by Refuge: 0808 2000 247
- In Scotland, contact Scotland’s 24 hour Domestic Abuse and Forced Marriage Helpline: 0800 027 1234
- In Northern Ireland, contact the 24 hour Domestic & Sexual Violence Helpline: 0808 802 1414
- In Wales, contact the 24 hour Life Fear Free Helpline on 0808 80 10 800.
- National LGBT+ Domestic Abuse Helpline: 0800 999 5428
- Men’s Advice Line: 0808 801 0327
- Respect helpline (for anyone worried about their own behaviour): 0808 802 0321
Politics
Stewart Harper: Why if you are on the frontline of campaigning – Harrogate this year, matters
Stewart Harper is President of the National Conservative Convention, a member of the Board of the Conservative Party, and chaired the Conservative Party Conference in Manchester in October 2025.
Chairing last year’s Party Conference in Manchester was a personal honour, with many highlights not least of which was the closing speech from our Party Leader. Every person I have spoken to since then talked about that speech being a turning point.
Across the four days we demonstrated something very important: that when our members come together, we renew not just our message, but our confidence. Our ideas were sharpened, our energy was restored, and the Party reconnected the people who make it work day in, day out.
Since our time in Manchester, Kemi Badenoch and the Shadow Cabinet have continued to work together – to hold the government to account and demonstrate that it is only the Conservative Party who are developing credible and deliverable plans to get Britain working again.
We are continuing that in Harrogate.
But the truth is, we can’t succeed unless the strengths demonstrated in Manchester percolate throughout the Party. Put it simply, as I said in my opening speech at Conference – Kemi, and the Shadow Cabinet, cannot do it alone. The momentum we have built together must not be kept in a box until the Party Conference comes around again. So this March, Spring Conference returns – this year at the Harrogate Convention Centre – and every Party Member should join us.
Here’s why: Spring Conference brings together activists, councillors, candidates and volunteers from across the country for a weekend focused on ideas, skills and connection. Not sitting still, determining what we might do in three years’ time, but actively developing ourselves and our movement in that renewal – the fruits of which are already visible.
Delivered in partnership with the Campaign Academy and the Conservative Councillors’ Association, the programme is designed to be practical and engaging. And unapologetically optimistic about the Party’s future. And it’s an opportunity to socialise together too – including with a members’ dinner on Saturday night – meeting up with friends and colleagues from across the country.
So, will you join us in Harrogate?
Our Spring Conference offers members a valuable opportunity to hear directly from senior figures within the Party, including the most senior members of the Shadow Cabinet, and to gain first-hand insight into a growing and evolving renewal programme. It is a chance for every Party Member to engage – not through headlines or soundbites, but through thoughtful discussion and shared experience.
Alongside the political content, Spring Conference is firmly focused on delivery.
Development sessions that are designed to “level up” your local campaigns, equipping you with practical skills that you can take back. From campaigning and organisation, to leadership and development, the emphasis is on empowering ourselves to win in May – and to win well.
From crafting your message, establishing an electoral strategy, harnessing the opportunities to use AI in campaigns, having persuasive conversations with voters (or communicating persuasive messages in writing), and ensuring that our supporters get to the polling station (or return their postal vote) in time for the hard work to count.
We’ve brought together a strong range of speakers – both from our own professional team and volunteers, and also from the Leadership Institute. Based in the US, but working around the world, the Leadership Institute is renowned for equipping grassroots activists and emerging leaders with practical, hands-on skills in campaigning, communications and organisation-building, bringing proven, high-energy training methods to our conference. We’ve been working in partnership with them for some time, including in developing our own Campaign Leadership Programme which was reviewed in a recent article on this site. By learning from the best in the world, we can continue the renewal our Party needs.
Of course, there will be some who say that they can’t afford to take time away from their campaigning – and I sympathise. But equally, we have to recognise that investment of time in development is as important as (or perhaps more important) than continuing the approaches already tried and tested.
For those who have elections in 2027 and 2028, in particular, it is essential that we put the work in now. For as former Australian Prime Minister John Howard, who joined us in Manchester, is fond of saying: “You can’t fatten the pig on market day.”
But no Party Conference is all work – one of its great strengths is its atmosphere. We saw that in Manchester, and I am sure the same will be true in Harrogate. Yes, having lived in Yorkshire for more than 20 years I know I’m biased – but Harrogate is worth visiting in itself. Harrogate offers the perfect blend of elegant spa-town charm, Yorkshire hospitality and some pretty decent venues, making it an inspiring and welcoming place to come together.
With a full programme of social events, the weekend offers opportunities to relax, network and reconnect with members from across the country. It’s where campaign tips are swapped over coffee, friendships are formed over dinner, and the shared sense of purpose that binds the Party together is most visible.
Spring Conference is about enjoying being part of the Conservative and Unionist Party, and remembering why that matters for our country.
We have a great programme of social events planned, and I know that when people leave Harrogate they will do so with a renewed determination to do all we can in the service of our aims.
Places at Spring Conference are limited, with some events already sold out. If Manchester showed what our members can achieve together, Harrogate offers the chance to build on that success – sooner rather than later – and to ensure that it is not just on the national stage we show our best side, but in every election battle in the coming years.
Spring Conference 2026 is not just another date in the diary – for someone else and not for you. It’s an opportunity for Party Members to learn, connect, and to be ready to shape what comes next.
Join us from 6 to 8 March – tickets are available from www.conservatives.com/spring-conference/
Politics
WWE Raw Topples Bridgerton As Netflix’s Number 1 Show Right Now
Bridgerton has finally been toppled from the top spot on Netflix’s list of most popular shows in the UK right now.
The forbidden romance between Benedict Bridgerton and Sophie Baek (played by Luke Thompson and Yerin Ha) had captured the hearts of the country, resulting in Bridgerton occupying the number one position on Netflix’s chart for almost two weeks.
However, that love affair is apparently now over – at least temporarily, given that the second half of the season will premiere later this month.
According to the streamer, part one of Bridgerton’s fourth outing has amassed 23.4 million viewers globally since it premiered at the end of January.
In its place, the WWE Raw has now once again risen to the top of the chart, solidifying to Netflix that it made the right decision to stream wrestling content on its platform.
WWE Raw is followed on the streaming chart by Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich. Despite the Netflix original documentary first being released in 2020, the recent publication of his emails has evidently piqued users’ interest in the prolific sex offender.

Other shows currently on Netflix’s most-watched list in the UK at the time of writing include the new series of original drama The Lincoln Lawyer and German spy thriller Unfamiliar.
Meanwhile, the Tessa Thompson crime series His & Hers is still holding strong in the top 10, more than a month on from its early January release.
This week, also added all 15 seasons of ER to their platform – and considering that everyone seems to be watching the George Clooney medical drama at the moment, we can expect it to appear in the top 10 in the coming days.
Part one of Bridgerton season four is now streaming on Netflix, with four new episodes of the hit period drama being released on 26 February.
Politics
William runs from Andrew-Epstein questions
The Saudis have castigated ‘heir to the throne’ William for his Epstein-linked uncle during his visit to Saudi Arabia this week. Saudi Arabia is an absolute monarchy with an appalling human rights record, but it is still able to look down on the UK and US establishment’s cosiness with murderous paedophiles.
Saudi media challenged the royal in Riyadh, with a reporter demanding to know whether the Windsors have “done enough around the Andrew and Epstein issue”. He ignored the question and walked off. That’ll be a ‘no’, then.
The US justice department’s latest, intentionally-chaotic release of Epstein files show further disturbing images of Andrew with anonymised girls. They also show Andrew leaking confidential information and Epstein trafficking another young woman to the UK for him. Mountbatten-Windsor paid now-deceased Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre around £12m in an out-of-court settlement. This was funded by the monarchy and therefore by UK taxpayers.
Mountbatten-Windsor was stripped of all titles in December 2025. The public has repeatedly challenged his brother Charles in recent weeks for his failure to take more serious action against him. Charles has now said he will ‘support’ the police investigation.
It remains to be seen how exactly the royal family intends to make any sort of amends to the victims and survivors shoved into the spotlight during this debacle.
Featured image via FCDO
Politics
Why Letby’s defenders are angry with Netflix
The post Why Letby’s defenders are angry with Netflix appeared first on spiked.
Politics
The House | It must be the Iranian people who decide their fate when the Islamic Republic collapses

Glasgow, January 2026: A candlelit vigil for Iranian protestors | Image by: Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert / Alamy
4 min read
That the current regime has lost any sense of moral authority over the vast majority of Iranians is clear
It’s no secret that the situation in Iran is dire. What’s more difficult to determine is an accurate picture of precisely what is going on. We know that the protests that began towards the end of December spread fast and wide, on a scale not seen before in the catalogue of protests that have erupted intermittently, and been quashed violently, since the start of the millennium. This time, it was not only dissatisfaction with social issues but the virtual collapse of the economy which drove even the bazaaries – or shopkeepers – onto the streets in droves.
That the current regime has lost any sense of moral authority over the vast majority of Iranians is clear. Yet the Islamic Republic persists in power through a combination of breathtaking brutality and lack of a suitable alternative. This regime is undoubtedly in its final death throes – the violence demonstrates a desperate struggle to survive another day at any cost – but it’s impossible to say how long it will be before the final breath; will it be quick or long and drawn out? Either way it’s likely to be painful.
And what then? The real question is what will follow once the Islamic Republic collapses. There is no credible opposition around which others will coalesce, only factions and groups, each with their own agendas (some, incidentally, just as dangerous as the status quo). Whatever happens, it must be the Iranian people who decide their fate and build for themselves a better future. Certainly, the support of the international community is essential, but a new government imposed by, say, America, with a puppet leader will not do. That way lies the ongoing cycle of dissatisfaction and corruption, with a people beholden to the whim of external powers, ultimately involved, not because of altruism but for their own self-interest.
A new government imposed by, say, America, with a puppet leader will not do
Right now, foreign media are banned from entering the country and the internet shutdown has virtually cut Iran off from the rest of the world. At best there are sporadic reports; brief spells during which news leaks out and families here, desperate with worry, get snatches of information. I’m trying to stay in touch with a few people, but my WhatsApp messages remain, sometimes for days, showing one tick only – unseen and unread at the other end.
Reportedly, there are anything between a few thousand and 30,000 dead; no one disputes that many of them are young people. Whatever the precise number, it’s too many. And there are countless more injured or in prison. The people I’m in contact with tell me terrorist groups were rampaging the streets, killing and beheading government officials, while the regime didn’t distinguish between them and innocent protesters, clamping down with unprecedented violence.
There are rumours that medical staff treating the injured have been executed. One message I received a few days ago said, “As far as I know, everyone who helped the wounded has either been arrested or killed.” Another, that though “some medical staff were killed in the clashes”, reports of their “execution” is exaggerated. Unsurprisingly, the protests are getting weaker – I’m told they’re now restricted to rooftop chants at night-time – and so, while the country is gripped by “a great sorrow”, inevitably the media are losing interest. I suspect it will only be a matter of time before the cycles of protest and violence repeat themselves.
Meanwhile, the US is amassing troops, threatening to attack Iran, at the same time, holding conversations, hoping to reach some kind of resolution. The future is uncertain and people continue living under violent oppression, unimaginable fear and the catastrophic effects of a failed economy. And these are a proud people – the product of a once great and ancient civilisation; ordinary people longing for freedom, justice, the opportunity to live their lives to the full. They are my countryfolk and I weep for them; they deserve better, much better.
Lord Bishop of Chelmsford is a Lords Spiritual peer
Politics
DWP have no idea which water companies are deducting benefits
The Canary has revealed how during a 12-month period, water companies leached £22.4m from customers’ Universal Credit via the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP).
However, in obtaining the figure, we also discovered that the DWP has no record of what each company has been seizing from welfare claimants. When already vulnerable benefits claimants are in debt to water companies, the DWP will then allow these privatised water companies to deduct benefits from desperate claimants.
Apparently it needs saying: water is not a luxury
DWP doesn’t know the scale of water companies’ Universal Credit deductions
The Canary submitted freedom of information (FOI) requests to the department for regional and parliamentary constituency data on water deductions. In order to comply with the request, it appeared that the DWP had to collate this data from its records. In other words, until the Canary queried the proportion of third party deductions the water industry had made, it was not information the DWP had already calculated.
What’s more, through a series of further FOIs, the DWP admitted to the Canary that it doesn’t know how much each water company has deducted individually.
The DWP said that this was because:
data on deduction requests from specific organisations or the date a deduction request was made is not readily available for Universal Credit.
As such, it told the Canary that to “explore the available datasets” and “collate the relevant data” would take it over the cost limits in the FOI Act. But the admission ultimately underscored how the DWP has made no efforts to assess the scale of individual companies clawing back aggressive arrears through the benefits system.
What water companies took £22.4m in Universal Credit?
The Canary also attempted to find out how this divided up for water versus sewerage services. But in response to a further FOI, the DWP said that:
The Universal Credit deductions data does not state the name of a water company owed money, or reason for the debt, and as the water arrears data is not broken down, we cannot determine whether any deduction is for water supply or sewerage.
Unfortunately, outside official statistics, it’s really difficult to get a read on individual water company deductions.
The first reason for this is that water supplier coverage overlaps in some constituencies. So, while we can use obtainable data showing coverage by constituency, companies don’t actually always supply water services to all postcodes within these electoral boundaries.
It’s also not the case constituencies always have the same sewerage providers to their water suppliers. In other words, the deduction could come from either company administering these services. That further complicates calculating what each company is deducting.
However, under the Universal Credit priority order, the water supplier makes deductions first for any arrears. The company providing wastewater services can only start taking deductions once the water debt is cleared.
Because it comes first in the order of priority, it’s probable that the lion’s share of these deductions is for water supply services. Ultimately though, it’s not possible to establish from the data available how much is for water, and how much for sewerage arrears.
Water companies won’t say, naturally
The Canary contacted 13 of the largest water and sewerage companies. We asked them directly to provide figures on their Universal Credit deductions. Predictably, not a single company offered this information. By and large, despite a few initially responding that they would look into this, water firms ignored our query. Only two companies eventually came back to confirm that they were not willing to supply these figures.
A spokesperson for Pennon Group, South West Water’s parent company, responded saying that:
The information you have requested is commercially sensitive but all Universal Credit deductions are managed in line with DWP guidelines.
Meanwhile, Dwr Cymru came back with a similar dismissal:
We’re unable to provide specific figures for Universal Credit deductions received by Dŵr Cymru for 2024 and 2025 as this information is commercially sensitive.
However, we can confirm that deductions are managed in line with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) guidelines, including the Fair Repayment Rate and deduction cap changes, which aim to ensure affordability for customers.
Our focus remains on supporting customers in financial difficulty with affordable payment arrangements.
In both instances then, water firms leaned on the claim it’s “commercially sensitive” information to refuse the data.
In reality, it’s nonsense for them to suggest this. For one, water companies already publish data about their ‘bad debt’. As just one example, they will include financial information on County Court Judgements (CCJ) against their customers in annual reports.
More likely, firms fear the reputational fallout of the public learning just how much they’re hammering their poorest customers.
The DWP should turn its attention to the real fraudsters
The Labour government continues to justify brutal disability benefit cuts and dystopian surveillance with nonsense rhetoric around the so-called ‘benefits bill’. Yet, the DWP couldn’t put figures to the welfare it’s funnelling into the pockets of privatised water firms.
Perhaps it’s time the DWP turned its attention to the corporate criminal water corporations draining the welfare system for profits they neither need, nor deserve.
Featured image via the author
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