Politics
My time as Lord Speaker has taught me that experience, independence and thoughtful consensus can deliver real change

Lord McFall delivers remarks before introducing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at Westminster Hall in 2023 (Pool Photo/Ukrainian Presidential Press Office/Alamy Live News)
4 min read
As I step down as Lord Speaker after almost 40 years at Westminster, one lesson stands out: lasting progress is not achieved by shouting the loudest or wielding the biggest majority. It is achieved by persuasion and consensus.
That truth sits uncomfortably with modern politics, which often prizes theatre over thought. Yet it is precisely why the Lords plays a vital role in serving our democracy, and why sensible reform must strengthen, not weaken, what it does best.
Politics should be a common endeavour, in pursuit of the common good. This is not a naïve aspiration. It is practised every day in the Lords, whose members include judges, scientists, engineers, doctors, entrepreneurs, economists, diplomats, three former directors-general of MI5 and six former heads of the home Civil Service.
When I became Lord Speaker, I set out to make the House of Lords work better, and its work better understood. Too often it is caricatured as a relic or a convenient punchbag.
However, as political commentator Ian Dunt puts it, in How Westminster Works… and Why it Doesn’t, the Lords is “one of the only aspects of our constitutional arrangements that actually works”. He states that it is the independence and expertise of the second Chamber that make it so effective.
That spirit animates Lords committee work. Recently, cross-party Lords committees have shone a light on Britain’s failure to scale science and creative technology firms, and on delays in removing Grenfell-style cladding.
These are not abstract discussions or processes: they go to the heart of effective government.
As senior deputy speaker, I refocused Lords committees to examine issues that fall between departmental silos. The creation of the Industry and Regulators Committee addressed a glaring gap: until then, no parliamentary body consistently asked who was holding powerful regulators to account.
Recently, our Environment and Climate Change Committee launched an inquiry into the illegal dumping of waste, exposing “multiple failings” by the Environment Agency, among others. This triggered a national debate, generating 1,000 pieces of media coverage. This is the Lords at its most effective: setting agendas and forcing uncomfortable questions.
The Lords has also expanded its digital presence, and Lord Speaker lectures from eminent figures such as physicist professor Brian Cox and former prime minister Baroness May reflect a simple belief: good policy is strengthened by listening to those with experience. Engaging with young people is important, and outreach to schools has seen our ‘Learn with the Lords’ initiative reach 100,000 young people since April 2021.
Wider afield, I was the first Lord Speaker to address the Irish senate and to visit the Polish parliament and meet UK troops serving with Nato.
The Commons may thrive on confrontation but when legislation moves from principle to practice, another type of politics is required. In the Lords, bills are examined line by line by experts who understand how policy works on the ground. Since the election, the Lords has considered more than 7,500 proposed changes while scrutinising some 70 government bills.
Members pressed the government for action, and examined decisions, over the more than 1,700 hours of business considered over the same period. In the 12 months to 31 March 2025, they heard from experts, organisations and government in more than 600 committee meetings.
This is improvement, not obstruction. The government sets direction; the Lords shares the task of making and shaping laws, sense-checking and challenging.
What would be reckless is to throw away what works
None of this means the Lords should be immune from reform. An appointed Chamber must justify itself through restraint and public service. That means reducing its size, improving transparency in appointments, strengthening regional balance and making clear that peerages are about public duty, not patronage.
What would be reckless is to throw away what works. The House of Lords offers thoughtful change, grounded in experience, independence and consensus.
Finally, I express my gratitude to have been elected Lord Speaker, the greatest privilege of my public life, and send my warmest wishes to my successor Lord Forsyth as he embarks on a new chapter.
Politics
Israel closes all access into Gaza
Israel has shut down all crossings into and out of Gaza, even for humanitarian workers.
The occupation’s administrative body COGAT claimed the move was a “necessary security adjustment” because of Israel’s attacks on Iran. The blockade will prevent volunteer medics and other humanitarian workers either entering or leaving Gaza while it remains in place. Food and medicine deliveries, already barely a trickle, will be choked off – condemning thousands more Palestinians in Gaza to misery, suffering and death.
The unprovoked Israel-US attacks on Iran are a war crime. The intensified starvation of the people of Gaza is a crime against humanity and a continuation of genocide. While Israel murders in Iran and puts the world in danger, it continues to use disease and famine, as well as bullets, to murder in Gaza.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Zia Yusuf is being a dickhead again
Zia Yusuf came out as a fucking dickhead on the day of the Gorton and Denton by-election.
If you needed any more proof of how useless and clueless @ZiaYusufUK is, then….👇 pic.twitter.com/o52NQ5JyDi
— AxoAndy (@AxoAndy) February 26, 2026
After Matt Goodwin and Nigel Farage kicked off about ‘family voting’, Zia seemed to get his wires crossed.
This is either evidence that Reform were engaged in family voting or that Zia is an idiot. https://t.co/ogEB9oyGDQ
— Will (@WillIam87uk) February 27, 2026
Family voting is when a family member appears to be influencing someone else’s vote, for example, by entering the polling booth with them. The government made it illegal under the Ballot Secrecy Act in 2023.
So was Yusuf endorsing family voting? Or is he just a bit dense? Anyway, he deleted the post, but not before the internet took screenshots.
Zia Yusuf accidentally endorsed family voting in a now deleted post 😂
He was the Chairman of the party and doesn’t even know the voting rules. pic.twitter.com/IDMurvUJgf
— Wolf 🐺 (@WorldByWolf) February 27, 2026
Remember when we had the choice of chaos with Ed Miliband? Imagine the sheer chaos if voters elected this clown to government.
Reforms Clown Department Fake Home Secretary actually believed a 19 year old had a 93 year old mum after the Reform member made up a line to manipulate support from older people for Reform in Manchester’s Gorton and Denton. https://t.co/bpshw9nvPa
— Thomas Evans @Renewal2030 (@ThomasEvansAdur) February 26, 2026
Can you imagine the chaos this #cult fool would cause if he was anywhere near power. ?🤷♂️ https://t.co/2puJtasYMR
— Graham #BringBackBoris 🏴🇬🇧 (@apple_shwn) February 26, 2026
The pretend shadow home secretary showcasing his competence. 👇#GortonandDentonByElection #GortonDentonByElection #GortonAndDentonhttps://t.co/M6g1EbuCli
— Rick O’Shea (@RickOShea54321) February 27, 2026
On that note, is Matt Goodwin now the shadow MP for Gorton and Denton? Will he still be fighting for the best interests of locals?
Please, he wouldn’t have done that even if he were elected. Who am I kidding?
Featured image via Times News/YouTube
Politics
Mark Carney shows he’s an imperialist at heart
Mark Carney, prime minister of Canada, has put out a bullshit statement in support of the US and Israel’s strikes on Iran.
My statement on Iran-related hostilities in the Middle East: pic.twitter.com/NcC8Pzq2Ba
— Mark Carney (@MarkJCarney) February 28, 2026
Of course, he completely fails to mention the illegality of the unprovoked strikes. Instead, he spouts bullshit about Iran’s instability and ‘terror’. More like, he’s a racist muppet who disapproves of black and brown people having free will and being able to live their lives away from imperialist control.
Carney is a liberal through and through
Canada’s position remains clear: the Islamic Republic of Iran is the principal source of instability and terror throughout the Middle East, has one of the world’s worst human rights records, and must never be allowed to obtain or develop nuclear weapons.
What he also failed to mention was that Iran was attending peace talks. Additionally, Netanyahu has been claiming Iran is ‘days away‘ from nuclear capabilities for over 30 years.
Meanwhile, Israel DOES have nuclear weapons and hasn’t signed up to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Israel is the only one that’s been breaking international law and invading multiple countries, all at the same time.
Plus, Carney’s idea of ‘Iran-related hostilities’ is simply the US and Israel’s bullshit, imperialist aggression against Iran.
“Iran-related hostilities” is how Canada’s prime minister describes an imperialist US-Israeli war of aggression against Iran.
Anyone who thought this former Goldman Sachs executive was actually going to challenge US imperialism because of a Davos speech was way too optimistic.
— Ben Norton (@BenjaminNorton) February 28, 2026
‘Imperialist running dog’
It seems like only yesterday the Canadian PM told the US to suck it. In fact, it kind of was – he gave a surprisingly blistering speech in Davos at the end of January.
This guy was just internationally applauded for pointing out the hypocrisy of a “rules based” international order that allowed the powerful to break those rules at will, and here he is engaging in that same exact hypocrisy. https://t.co/kpTWNmWsGQ
— شنشون (@humanprovince) February 28, 2026
During his speech, he called the old “rules-based” order an illusion.
Then, he made a completely unexpected set of remarks. He described the idea that Canada’s ties with the US bring “mutual benefit” as a “lie”.
As the Canary previously reported:
Carney’s remarks came as EU nations started to move troops into Greenland for ‘exercises’ that were really preparations to fight a US invasion. But Canada’s military was also doing the same – Trump has frequently expressed his lust to make Canada a 51st US state, according to Canadian Daily the Globe and Mail.
Of course, Carney is only against the US’s imperialism when it isn’t working in his favour.
In one powerful moment, he noted how:
there is a strong tendency for countries to go along to get along, to accommodate, to avoid trouble, to hope that compliance will buy safety.
Of course, fighting against the economics of the US’s imperialism only goes so far for a spineless liberal. After all, he was governor of the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England, after spending 13 years at Goldman Sachs.
The rich for the rich, and all that.
Carney has now made it abundantly clear that he was only referring to rich, white nations. Obviously, he only meant Canada and Greenland when he stood up to Trump:
When Trump had Greenland and white empire in his crosshairs, liberals were lauding this guy as the man to lead a new world order in defiance of US imperialism. Not two months later this depraved fraud can barely contain his glee as US bombs illegally rain down on Iran https://t.co/xtxI2rrLNZ
— Nate Bear (@NateB_Panic) February 28, 2026
Month ago people were foaming at the mouth as if anything Carney said mattered, but in practice, Canada remains an imperialists running dog https://t.co/5Ifl3JJHMM
— davide🚩🔻 (@criticofpolecon) February 28, 2026
A settler colonial conquest
Of course, the statement is about what you’d expect from another settler colonial nation, which is dripping in its own genocidal history. Its complicity with Israel’s genocide undoubtedly does a lot of the heavy lifting with that crappy IsRaEL HaS ThE rIGhT tO DEfeND ITseLF bullshit.
Like the UK, the US, and several other European Zionist muppets, Canada has also been supplying arms, cutting funds to UNRWA, and laying cover for Israel. The Canadian government even grants tax relief to donors funding a notorious Zionist propaganda organisation: NGO Monitor.
But why are we surprised? Carney stood idly by whilst Israel committed genocide for two and a half years, the US kidnapped Venezuela’s president, and he said fuck all about Cuba for weeks. It’s perfectly in tune with his morals that only appear when rich white people might get their feelings hurt.
Featured image via HG
Politics
Brit Awards 2026: What Did Jack Whitehall Actually Say During His Censored Political Joke?
Brit Awards viewers were left scratching their heads on Saturday night, when the sound suddenly cut out just as Jack Whitehall was delivering a joke.
Early on in the ceremony, Jack was seen mingling in the Brits audience at Manchester’s Co-Op Live arena, at which point he spotted the city’s mayor, Andy Burnham at one table.
“This is the only party he’s allowed into these days,” he quipped, in a nod to the recent drama surrounding the Gorton and Denton by-election, before he noticed that Labour MP and culture secretary Lisa Nandy was on the same table.
Jack then joked that “this must be the politicians’ table” before pondering: “I wonder who else is here…”
However, at this point, ITV cut the sound from the broadcast, meaning viewers didn’t get to hear the rest of his comment.
Viewers in the audience have posted on X that Jack’s joke continued: “I think I saw Peter Mandelson on the list. Oh wait, that was another list…”
Jack was referencing the former Labour minister’s recent arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public office, following accusations of passing on market sensitive information to paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein when he was business secretary.
Mandelson has denied any wrongdoing.
This year’s Brit Awards saw several moments being censored during the live broadcast.
Shortly after Jack’s remark about Peter Mandelson, the sound was dipped when social media personality Angry Ginge jokingly referred to London as a “shit hole”, and US band Geese were censored after musician Max Bassin declared “free Palestine” and “fuck ICE” during his International Group Of The Year acceptance speech.
Towards the beginning of the ceremony, Jack also took a shot at the BBC amid the ongoing scrutiny the national broadcaster is facing in light of the controversy surrounding its coverage of this year’s Baftas ceremony.
Politics
Iran closes Strait of Hormuz in serious blow to US
After US and Israel commenced unprovoked strikes on Iran — launched in the middle of what Washington described as “positive negotiations” — the an all-out war has exploded. The strikes across Iran targeted many residential neighbourhoods. An all-female school was hit, killing at least 85. A sports centre was struck, killing at least 20 volleyball players.
Iran responded by pounding Israeli positions and targeting US-linked military assets in Qatar, Bahrain, the UAE, Kuwait — and reportedly beyond.
And now, Tehran has moved to close the Strait of Hormuz.
This did not happen during last year’s 12-day war. Despite enduring heavy blows, Iran fell short of targeting the artery through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil flows. This time, it didn’t shy away.
The Strait of Hormuz is the narrow maritime passage through which Gulf oil reaches global markets. It is also one of the most militarised waterways on the planet, with the US Navy stationed primarily in Bahrain and along the western shore. The Iranian navy are stationed on the other side.
US empire runs on oil, and oil runs through Hormuz
Talk of Iran closing the Strait of Hormuz is back.
You’ve heard this before but this time feels different.
Here’s a fast, clear thread:
🔹 What the Strait is
🔹 Why it matters
🔹 Who controls what
🔹 How Iran could disrupt it
🔹 What happens if it spirals1/24🧵👇. pic.twitter.com/MpVuncnNTG
— GeoInsider (@InsiderGeo) June 22, 2025
To be clear: Iran is not a romantic anti-colonial liberation movement. It is a state actor pursuing its own survival and leverage. But structurally, this move exposes something the empire prefers to keep invisible — its prosperity always depends on compliance from the Global South.
The last time Hormuz was seriously threatened was during the “Tanker War” phase of the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, when shipping was attacked by both sides but the strait was never fully shut. In 2011–2012, Tehran threatened closure in response to sanctions. In 2019, it seized tankers amid rising tensions after the US withdrew from the nuclear deal. But it never fully closed the strait.
Even during last year’s short but intense 12 day war, Hormuz remained open. This time appears to be different.
The strait is the most significant oil chokepoint in the world, with around a fifth of global oil output passing through it, and a third of global liquified natural gas.
The economic consequences will be felt immediately, and that is the point. Oil prices will spike. Shipping insurance will surge. Inflation globally will rise. Western consumers will feel it almost instantly.
For the West, war has always been a far away, distant ordeal. Now it will be represented at your local supermarket and petrol station.
That is why this move matters for Iran
More than 2 years of genocide, the disruption in the West was only felt through mass protests on the streets and Palestinian flags hung from windows, and so on. But economic disruption is going to be much harder to ignore.
The straight of Hormuz is closed. Oil tankers are clogged up.
The price of everything is going to skyrocket. You can thank trump and Israel. pic.twitter.com/uMiX8r08vf
— Syrian Girl (@Partisangirl) February 28, 2026
Closing Hormuz hurts everyone — including countries in Asia and the Global South that rely on Gulf energy. That’s true. But it is likely going to shorten the lifespan of this war as the cost of war just became much more expensive.
Featured image via Twitter
Politics
Football used to reclaim life by Palestinian player
At the Al-Anan Stadium in Deir al-Balah, the scene of a football player was anything but ordinary. A 43-year-old player ran with steady steps, confidently demanding the ball, his eyes, accustomed to watching the game since childhood, searching for the opponent’s goal. Mustafa Hassouna was returning to his natural place after more than 100 days spent in prison without charge.
His release from prison was not the end of the story, but rather a new beginning. His body emerged burdened, his memory laden with harsh details, but the desire to return to football remained. For him, the game was not a luxury, but an integral part of his identity, one he refused to relinquish.
Football carves space for return
In the Gaza Ramadan Tournament, organized by the Veterans Sports Association and sponsored by the Al-Fares Al-Shahm Association, Hassouna found his first opportunity to regain his rhythm. He donned the “Veterans of Jabalia” jersey and entered the field as if reliving years gone by, not just months of absence.
It was clear that the hiatus had left its mark, but his experience had not failed him. Short passes, intelligent positioning, and a decisive touch inside the penalty area translated into the third goal against Al-Tarabot’s veterans, in a match that ended 3-0. The moment of scoring wasn’t just an addition to the scoreboard, but a profound personal moment; a restoration of confidence and reassurance for a heart that had been captivated by the green pitch.
The organizing committee chose him as the best player of the match, as if granting him symbolic recognition of his return, not only to the game, but also to the daily life that had been forcibly interrupted.
Sports in the Face of Reality
Hassouna’s story unfolds within a sporting landscape facing unprecedented challenges in Gaza. Stadiums have been damaged, facilities have been rendered unusable, and athletes have found themselves caught between arrest and forced absence from training and competition.
In this climate, football becomes a space for social cohesion and a tool for rebuilding what has been broken. The Ramadan tournament was more than just a sporting event; it was an attempt to keep the flame of sports burning in an environment suffocating with pressure.
Questions of Sports Justice
Amidst this reality, the paradox is stark between the global slogans of sports and the reality experienced by players on the ground. International organizations like FIFA raise the banners of fair play and protecting the game’s values, yet the daily experiences of many athletes in conflict zones raise questions about the effectiveness of these principles when it comes to protecting players and their fundamental rights to practice sports safely.
How can sport remain a bridge between peoples when a player is deprived of his right to train and compete due to detention? And how can the spirit of the game be preserved if the stadiums themselves are vulnerable to destruction?
After the Goal
When the match ended, the most important thing wasn’t the result, but the feeling Hassouna carried with him as he left the field. He had returned to what he loves, even if only through a local tournament, and even after a painful absence.
He wasn’t looking for the limelight or continental titles, but something simpler: to prove to himself that imprisonment hadn’t extinguished his passion, and that the football he’d loved since childhood could still give him meaning.
Thus, between the starting whistle and the final whistle, Mustafa Hassouna wrote a new chapter in his story; a chapter that says that stadiums, no matter how tight the circumstances, remain a space wider than restrictions
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Brit Awards 2026: Host Jack Whitehall Jokes About BBC Baftas Drama
Brit Awards host Jack Whitehall made it clear early on during this year’s ceremony that he would not be pulling any punches.
As part of his introductory monologue on Saturday night, the comic delivered jibes about several of the A-list nominees, including chart-topper Alex Warren (“what you get if you order Ed Sheeran on Temu”), Mark Ronson (“like if Nick Grimshaw had worked out how to use Garage Band”), Album Of The Year contender Lily Allen (“her album was launched into the charts like a torpedo – only this torpedo didn’t sink a ship, it destroyed a Harbour), performer Robbie Williams (“he’s had more comebacks than his hairline”) and “Songwriter Of The Year… 1996” recipient Noel Gallagher.
Once the pair delivered their rather subdued acceptance speeches, Jack pointed out to viewers that as the night progressed, the ceremony could well get more raucous, meaning “there may be some swearing”.
“But don’t worry, we’ve got the best in the business on the bleep button tonight,” he added. “It’s the guy who did the Baftas. Nothing gets past him.”
Jack was, of course, referring to the scrutiny the BBC has been under for the last week, after they included an uncensored racist slur in their coverage of this year’s Baftas ceremony, which aired on Sunday night on a two-hour time delay.
The incident occurred when Tourette’s syndrome campaigner John Davidson – attending the ceremony alongside the cast and crew of I Swear, the award-winning film based on his life story – experienced an involuntary tic while Sinners actors Michael B Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting on stage, resulting in him shouting the N-word from his seat.
A day later, the BBC issued an apology and pulled the broadcast from its iPlayer service, and the corporation has since said that an investigation into how the uncensored slur came to be aired is being “fast-tracked”.
Meanwhile, after Delroy Lindo expressed disappointment at how Bafta handled the incident, the film body issued its own apology, accepting “full responsibility” for what transpired.
Politics
Iran anti-war protesters confront Starmer’s bullshit
Hundreds of anti-war demonstrators gathered outside Parliament on Saturday, voicing opposition to the US and Israel-led unprovoked attacks on Iran.
The protest was organised by the Stop the War on Iran Coalition, supported by the Islamic Human Rights Commission, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Stop the War, Campaign Against Sanctions, Military and Imperialist Interventions (CASMII), and others.
Iran face unprovoked attack
Addressing the crowd, Professor Abbas Edalat from the CASMII pointed out that Iran’s historic solidarity with Palestine was one of the main reasons that the West was bombing Iran.
He stated that Iran had been the only country to fulfil its obligations under the Genocide Convention. Iran has refused to abandon Palestinians for 47 years, despite crippling sanctions and threats of regime change.
He also called on anti-war activists not to play into the hands of imperialist warmongers by attacking the Iranian government. He urged unity in defending Iran against the onslaught.
Chris Nineham from Stop the War told the Canary there was a “real sense that Trump and the Americans and the Israelis are taking us to the brink of absolutely disastrous events, and we have to stop them.”
Chris Nineham @ChrisNineham from @STWuk had some stark words for us outside the UK parliament as people came out to protest the US and Israeli assault on Iran. pic.twitter.com/pKBzoyKFh7
— Canary (@TheCanaryUK) February 28, 2026
The UK’s complicity in the colonial war was also condemned. A central message from demonstrators was that the Labour Party was “the war party.”
“Labour Party = War Party” – people have gathered at Parliament Square in the UK to protest the UK’s complicity in the US and Israeli assault on Iran pic.twitter.com/Oq2SA1CIfL
— Canary (@TheCanaryUK) February 28, 2026
Starmer about as useless as a chocolate teapot
UK PM Keir Starmer has done his usual limp dishrag performance in response to the new US andIsrael attacks on Iran. Iran has hit US bases and Israeli facilities in retaliation. He also confirmed that while the UK did not participate in the strikes, British planes were “in the sky today” in the Middle East as part of “coordinated regional defensive operations to protect our people, our interests and our allies.”
Fiona Lali of the Revolutionary Communist Party replied to Starmer’s statement, saying:
Do not bother watching this vile statement. He condemns Iran. Not the US/Israeli strikes that have MURDERED school girls in Minab. This is the servile position of British capitalism, following its US master. He confirms British planes are in the sky. HANDS OFF IRAN!
Do not bother watching this vile statement.
He condemns Iran. Not the US/Israeli strikes that have MURDERED school girls in Minab.
This is the servile position of British capitalism, following its US master. He confirms British planes are in the sky.
HANDS OFF IRAN! https://t.co/TGMMZC7tZY
— Fiona Lali (@fiona_lali) February 28, 2026
Trump and Netanyahu were using the deliberate tactic of killing children, which the South Africans called “reproductive” genocide, as Global Women’s Strike told the Canary.
The caucasity of Trump and Netanyahu is on full display for all to see – now with Iran. But for the sake of people and planet, we must fight back says Cristel from Global Women’s Strike pic.twitter.com/lN9PrNmy7u
— Canary (@TheCanaryUK) February 28, 2026
Bombing Iran — including children, is in the typical US and Israeli imperial playbook. We’re once again seeing their pattern of colonial conquest play out in real time. Professor Edalat’s words remind us that Iran is being targeted precisely because it has stood by Palestinians for nearly five decades – now is the time to stand in solidarity with Iran.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Palestinian footballer battles through tragedy
A highly anticipated match between Al-Sadaqa and Gaza Sports Club, and the seventh week of the season, which held the hallmarks of an early title race. The match was scheduled for October 10, 2023.
Mohamed Balah was ready. He had two goals to his name, the ambition to score a third, and confident steps toward a season of renewed brilliance.
But the morning of October 7th was anything but ordinary.
Balah told the Canary:
We woke up to the sounds of rockets… and in an instant, there was no more league, no more season, no more plans.
Gaza talent struck by geography
Balah is one of the most prominent stars of Palestinian football in recent years. He shone in the Al-Sadaqa jersey, winning both the league and cup titles in the southern governorates, and finishing as runner-up in the competition’s top scorer race, behind the martyred captain Suleiman Al-Obeid. His early talent led to his call-up to the Olympic team in 2014 and 2015, but the Israeli occupation prevented him from traveling to the northern West Bank, thus thwarting his dream of representing his country.
This wasn’t the first time the borders had been closed to him, but it was the first harsh lesson that Palestinian players compete not only on the field, but also for their right to freedom of movement.
In 2017, Balah had a new window of hope when he joined the Jordanian club Al-Ahli. From there, despite the restrictions, the Palestinian Football Association succeeded in securing his participation with the national team, “Al-Fida’i,” allowing him to play his first international match. It was a small victory against a reality of widespread restrictions.
Professionalism expands… then falters
Balah moved between professional experiences in the Sultanate of Oman with Al-Suwaiq, Saham, and Al-Oruba clubs, where he scored crucial goals and accumulated significant experience. He received an offer to move to the UAE league, but the COVID-19 pandemic closed the stadiums and temporarily halted his dream.
He returned to Gaza in 2021 and signed a short-term contract with Al-Sadaqa, scoring seven goals in nine matches. During that time, he got married and began dreaming of a double stability: family life and football.
But a torn cruciate ligament in early 2022 plunged him into the longest test of his career. A year and a half of treatment and rehabilitation before he returned to the pitch in the 2023-2024 season, scoring two goals… before life itself came to a standstill.
From the pitch to the tents
With the outbreak of war, the player’s journey transformed into a harrowing series of displacements: from Gaza to Khan Younis, then to Al-Maghraqa, then back to the besieged Khan Younis, and finally to dilapidated tents in Rafah.
Balah told me:
I lost my home and everything I owned. We sold the car to buy food. We were living without electricity or water, under relentless bombardment.
He made the decision to travel to Egypt in search of temporary safety, hoping his wife would join him within days. But the crossing was closed, and the Rafah invasion preempted all promises. His wife remained stranded in Gaza, where she gave birth to their first child, whom he has yet to see.
Between a father deprived of the moment his son was born and a player robbed of his season, personal tragedy intertwines with collective tragedy.
A comeback from the ashes
In Egypt, Balah refused to let his setback become the end. He embarked on a rigorous physical program and then joined Al Mokawloon Al Arab. In his first official appearance, he scored two goals and contributed to leading the team to the Egyptian Premier League title after scoring several crucial goals.
This wasn’t just a football comeback; it was a declaration of survival.
Later, he moved to the Qatari league with Al Shahaniya, a new professional chapter that revived his old dream: to wear the national team jersey again, but this time with a heavier heart and deeper experience.
A Player… and a Cause
The story of Mohamed Balah is not just about a striker searching for the net, but the biography of a Palestinian athlete battling siege, restrictions, and war, striving to keep his footing on the grass while the land around him crumbles.
He is a player who lost his home, was forcibly separated from his wife and child, and buried entire seasons of his sporting career, but he never buried his dream.
Between a goal in the opponents’ net and a tear held back of a child he never saw born, Mohamed Balah continues on a path not measured by the number of goals scored, but by his ability to run, despite everything.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Labour Together stooge Josh Simons exits politics
Starmeroid front-bencher Josh Simons has resigned as digital government minister over the scandal of Labour Together spying on journalists. These were journalists who were investigating its shady activities and undeclared funding.
Buh-Bye
From 2022 to 2024, Simons ran the sabotage outfit, Labour Togther. He took over after disgraced Morgan McSweeney moved on to become Keir Starmer’s (now former) chief of staff. However, Simons has not resigned his parliamentary seat.
All too typically, the resignation letter is full of self-exoneration and excuses. Instead of taking responsibility, the letter leans on Simons’s supposed vindication by Sir Laurie Magnus. Magnus is the supposedly ‘independent’ adviser on ministerial standards. This is farcical, when Simons’s own leaked WhatsApp messages revealed that Starmer had told Magnus to conduct only a fast (i.e cursory) investigation.
With a complete failure of self-awareness, Simons frames his departure in terms of the public’s justified low trust in politicians. And, like any good Israel apologist, he had to slip in a spurious reference to so-called ‘Labour antisemitism’ to smear the diligent, professional, independent authors, and journalists who exposed Labour Together.
Excuses, excuses
This exercise in self-justifying bullshit reads:
Dear Prime Minister,
I welcome that Sir Laurie Magnus has cleared me of breaching the Ministerial Code. It was important to 1ne to complete this process to prove that I behaved with integrity and that my public statements have been truthful and honest.
Nonetheless, it is clear that my remaining in office has now become a distraction from this Govermnent’s important work. For that reason, and with sadness and regret, I offer my resignation. It has been an honour to serve this great country.
The work of reporters like Gabriel Pogrund, Hany Yorke, and Henry Dyer sustains our democracy. With rigour and objectivity, they hold those in positions of power to account. In an age when trust in politics is low, anything perceived to be an attack on their integrity and independence deserves thorough investigation.
As I have said many times, I never sought to smear these newspaper reporters. I have not been able to go into detail on these claims while this investigation has been ongoing.
During my time as Chief Executive of Labour Together, I sought to investigate how confidential material had been disclosed, and if it was the result of publicly confirmed hacks, including that of the Electoral Comission. I talked to my board, hired expert lawyers, and commissioned a firm – APCO – who said they had relevant cyber-security expertise. I also filed an official case with the National Cybersecurity Centre so they could establish the facts, who met with Labour Together and thanked us for filing the case. Given the concerns I had, it would have been irresponsible not to do these things.
I should explain why I was so concerned. I feared the narratives that this confidential material would be used to push ahead of an election campaign. After the EHRC investigation into antisemitism in the Labour Party, you said “those who seek to blame others or downplay what happened in our party are, themselves, part of the problem.”
I was particularly concerned about the upcoming publication of a book by Paul Holden, who had obtained this confidential material. I believe those concerns were justified. The book diminishes the antisemitism that infected Labour under its previous leadership. It refers constantly to the ‘antisemitism crisis’ in quotation marks, implying it was confected. Its front cover featured an endorsement from [Jewish former Mandela minister] Andrew Feinstein, a man who appeared at an event called “How Jeremy Corbyn was destroyed by a smear campaign led by Israel.” The Labour Party must always be vigilant against denialism and as a Jewish Labour MP, I make no apologies for that vigilance.What happened subsequently was wrong. Until a few weeks ago, I did not know that the journalists Harry Yorke and Henry Dyer had been labelled as ‘persons of interest’. I did not expect APCO’s report to include reprehensible material on [Jewish journalist] Gabriel Pogrund, and nor did I welcome it. I took immediate action and removed it. What happened to Gabriel was a disgrace.
Some have sought to use this matter to discredit Labour Together. While CEO, I had the privilege of working with talented people who are now ministers, MPs, and advisers. My team was an energetic and curious group, doing om· best to help get a Labour government elected and prepare for government.
I will continue serving the people I am proud to represent in Makerfield, and I will continue to support your Government in pursuit of the radical change our politics and our country needs.
Dirty tricks
Just in case readers are unfamiliar with the case, or are tempted to take anything Simons says at face value, Labour Together were caught paying tens of thousands to a firm run by a fellow Labour right-winger’s wife to spy on independent journalists.
This has been known for months, but the ‘mainstream’ media only started to pay attention when two of MSM-aligned journalists were targeted.
Labour Together is exposed and disgraced. Good riddance to bad rubbish, but Simons’s departure is nowhere near enough.
The country needs them all gone.
Featured image via the Canary
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