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Newslinks for Sunday 22nd February 2026

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Newslinks for Friday 30th January 2026

Andrew may have used RAF jets to meet Epstein, Brown tells police

“Gordon Brown has demanded a police investigation into whether Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor used taxpayer-funded jets and RAF bases to meet the paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The Telegraph can reveal that the former prime minister wrote letters to six police forces suggesting that civil servants be questioned about Mr Mountbatten-Windsor’s time as a trade envoy. The royal was an envoy from 2001 to 2011, including almost three years when Mr Brown was in No 10. He has also demanded a full investigation into the trade envoy role, its cost to taxpayers and any evidence that links Mr Mountbatten-Windsor’s government work to Epstein. His five-page letters were sent individually to police in London, Surrey, Sussex, Thames Valley, Norfolk and Bedfordshire this week, but their contents were not publicly disclosed.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • Andrew’s former private secretary faces police questioning – Sunday Telegraph
  • Former Prince’s Met protection told to guard Epstein dinner in New York – Sunday Times
  • Andrew & Mandelson should be investigated for treason, senior Tory MP demands – Sun on Sunday

Trump hits Britain with higher tariffs

“Britain will be hit with higher tariffs after Donald Trump unveiled sweeping new levies on the US’s global trading partners. The president announced on Saturday tariffs would rise to 15pc from 10pc – meaning British exports will now cost significantly more for US consumers. Britain’s baseline tariff was already at 10pc but now exporters face a significant jump in taxes they will have to pay, or add to their prices, to send goods to the US. Experts said the move would “dismay” UK companies, saying the president’s announcement was “something of an eef you” to Britain.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • Trump raises tariffs to 15% on imports from all countries – Observer
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Tories pledge to cut ‘unfair’ interest on student loans

“The Conservatives have pledged to abolish the ‘unfair’ additional interest on student loans. Kemi Badenoch has announced she would scrap supplementary interest on Plan 2 student loans, which students who attended university between 2012 and 2023 took out, saying they “increasingly feel like a scam”. The loans have been criticised for the interest rate of up to 3 per cent that is imposed in addition to inflation, and has been blamed for leaving two-thirds of graduates unable to pay off their balance. Although the loans are written off after 30 years, their structure means that graduates must earn at least £66,000 just to keep up with interest payments and often pay back far more than they borrowed over the course of their career. The Conservatives have pledged to abolish real interest on Plan 2 loans and cap the interest rate at the RPI rate of inflation, which is currently 3.2 per cent.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • Badenoch vows to cut student loan interest and boost apprenticeships – Sunday Times
  • Starmer accused of class warfare over plan to overhaul funding for disadvantaged schools – Sun on Sunday
  • English taxpayers bankrolling ‘out of control’ Scottish benefits – Sunday Telegraph
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Farage: My Chagos aid mission has been blocked

“Nigel Farage has accused the British Government of trying to thwart a mission to send aid to Chagos islanders. The leader of Reform UK flew to the Maldives last week with equipment to assist four Chagossians who are attempting to establish a permanent base on a deserted island in the archipelago, and establish a colony in their former homeland. A boat with Mr Farage on board, and carrying food and medicines, was due to make the 24-hour journey to the island, Île du Coin, about 300 miles south of the Maldives. But The Telegraph understands the plans have been thwarted by threats, mechanical problems and an insistence by UK authorities that only trained crew should be on board.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • We’ll punish Pakistan and others over illegal migrants, says Reform – Sunday Times
  • Reform wants to put public unions ‘under review’ – FT
  • ‘I had a swastika put on my door for having Right-wing views’ – Sunday Telegraph
  • Goodwin is running: the search for Reform’s elusive byelection candidate – Observer
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Sack minister who asked law firm to smear journalists, Starmer told

“Sir Keir Starmer is under pressure to sack a Cabinet minister over his alleged role in a smear campaign targeting journalists. A coalition of senior politicians from across the political spectrum have called on the Prime Minister to fire Josh Simons, the former Labour Together director. They say Mr Simons is “up to his neck” in questionable practices and warn that his position is “untenable” after it emerged he asked spy chiefs to investigate journalists at The Sunday Times. Mr Simons is accused of paying PR firm Apco Worldwide £36,000 to investigate the personal, religious and political backgrounds of journalists reporting on Labour Together’s undeclared funding.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • Lobbyist who examined Sunday Times journalist targeted another – Sunday Times
  • Starmer ‘drawing up plans to sack rival Streeting for plotting to take his job’ – Mail on Sunday
  • PM could have prevented ban on Israeli football fans – Sunday Telegraph

Labour battles disaffection in crucial three-way by-election battle

“Manchester has always been Labour,” was Angeliki Stogia’s response to suggestions the party was now only a “distant third” in the Gorton and Denton by-election race. “We are constantly on the doorstep and acting on what people tell us,” the party’s candidate said in an Instagram video where she rebutted critical social media comments. Yet while the area has indeed reliably voted Labour for most of the last century, the party knows that may not be the case in Thursday’s vote. Some Labour activists fear that Sir Keir Starmer’s party could come third to the leftwing Greens and rightwing Reform, which have both run energetic, populist campaigns against the party struggling in No 10.” – FT

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Zionists ‘will siphon your soul’

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Zionists 'will siphon your soul'

Zohran Mamdani’s condemnation of Susan Abulhawa is a capitulation to the Epstein class, Abulhawa said in a searing but graceful response to the New York City mayor.

Abulhawa views on Israel and Zionism were condemned by Mamdani in a recent press conferece.

Abulhawa has a new book called “Every Moment is a life.” It is an anthology she compiled featuring the writings of young Palestinians experiencing the UK/US/Israeli genocide of Gaza. Mamdani’s wife, Rama Duwaji, illustrated a piece within the collection called “A Trail of Soap.”

Susan Abulhawa’s warning

Susan Abulhawa warned Mamdani in a post on X:

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You succumbed to forces that seek to pick away at you, at your talented, beautiful wife, and at your work, they will claw harder with each apology or concession you make. If you are not careful, they will siphon your soul before you even realize it.

As the Zionist press in the USA got wind of Duwaji’s contribution — Mamdani felt compelled to publicly condemn Abulhawa. He said Duwaji never met Abulhawa and was commissied through a third party, Abulhawa confirmed this.

The fact that Mamdani publicly condemned a Palestinian American author whose work is crucial amid the silencing of voices witnessing the Gaza genocide has disappointed many of his supporters.

The poignancy of the story that Duwaji illustrated, a young Gazan called Deema’s first encounter with the indignity of a public toilet after her home was destroyed, was lost entirely in Mamdani’s condemnation. In his rush to distance himself from a Palestinian voice, he buried the very humanity his wife’s art sought to illuminate.

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In her response to Mamdani, Abulhawa reserved her deepest sorrow not for herself but for the young writers she mentored in Gaza —children who risked their lives walking through bombed streets just to reach writing workshops she held in Gaza in 2024, in the middle of the violent, bloody genocide.

During two trips to Gaza in 2024, Abulhawa conducted eight writing workshops for young Palestinians. The workshops took place amid Israel’s relentless bombing campaigns. She said in her video reply to Mamdani:

No words can adequately capture the evil I have witnessed or experienced at their hands. I do not have sufficient language to describe what they have done to us, what Gaza smells like, feels or looks like up close now. But it is the kind of knowledge that alters one’s life.

She said it was extraordinarily difficult for the young writers to attend the workshops. They traveled for hours on foot, by bicycle, or on donkey carts just to reach the meeting places. Sometimes the journey itself put their lives at risk.

Palestinian-Americans condemn Mamdani

Other Palestinian Americans also condemned Mamdani’s capitulation.

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Anas Saleh’s take down on Mamdani’s zionist position during his mayoral campaign was reshared by him.

Nerdeen Kiswani said that Palestine movement was expendable to Mamdani. She said:

He knows he’ll anger us. He just believes that when the time comes, we’ll vote for him anyway.

Mohammed El-Kurd, a Palestinian writer recalled a conversation with Mamdani in which the mayor once warned him that criticism of politicians ‘gives people permission to go after his wife.’

Yet in condemning Abulhawa, Mamdani himself had now handed his wife’s critics that very permission — sacrificing on the altar of political ambition the very principle he had once invoked to protect his family.

Zionist journalists circling Mamdani

The pressure on Mamdani has been relentless.

Since Duwaji’s illustration was discovered, Zionist journalists have targeted both him and his wife.

For instance, New York Post published a column attacking Duwaji. It accused her of holding “abhorrent, disgusting opinions” and celebrating “mass murder” based on her social media activity. The piece questioned whether Jewish New Yorkers could trust a mayor “who sleeps next to a woman” with such views!

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The journalist who asked the question about Duwaji’s links to Abulhawa at the press conference mentioned above — is called Jon Levine of the Washington Free Beacon.

He is a Gaza Holocaust denier.

Why Mamdani would condemn Abulhawa to a genocide denier shows the limitations of liberal politics.

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Featured image via WikimediaCommons

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Bees Can Live Underwater, And ‘Gills’ May Be Involved

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Bees Can Live Underwater, And 'Gills' May Be Involved

If you want to attract bees to your garden, a special, shallow “bath”, which isn’t deep enough for our flying friends to fall into, is a great place to start.

But for queen bumblebees, apparently, a mini plunge pool would pose no threat.

That’s because new research published in the Royal Society’s Proceedings B has found that bumblebee queens can “avoid drowning” through “underwater respiration,” allowing them to live underwater for days.

How can bees live underwater?

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A 2024 paper showed that bumblebee queens can live underwater for anywhere from eight hours to seven days. This newer research sought to figure out how.

Some bee species, including bumblebees, enter a period of deep rest called “diapause” in the winter. In that time, their metabolism and development slow way down.

But sometimes, the world around them doesn’t stay as rested. Flooding, for instance, can affect a hive (many of which stay underground in the colder months).

Scientists figured the response to submersion noted in the 2024 research was a survival tactic from the bumblebee queen. So, for this study, they put some bumblebee queens who were in diapause underwater and measured the gaseous exchange.

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They found that carbon dioxide levels rose, while oxygen levels sank, suggesting the bees were respirating.

But the carbon dioxide emissions decreased compared to those emitted when the bees in diapause were out of water.

Researchers linked this to metabolic activity; the less that was happening in bees’ bodies, they reasoned, the lower the CO2 output would be.

Prior to being placed underwater, diapausal queen bees – whose metabolism had already dropped compared to non-diapausal levels – produced 15.42 microlitres of carbon dioxide per hour per gram of body mass.

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But after eight days underwater, that shrunk to 2.35 microlitres. That’s almost a six-fold decrease in presumed energy use.

Scientists termed this a “profound metabolic depression”.

Wait – but what about that “respiration”?

That dip in metabolic activity explained some of the survival rates of queen bees living underwater. But, quick question – how are they getting enough oxygen to respirate in the first place?

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Well, scientists couldn’t answer that definitively in this study. However, they hypothesised that queen bees can form a kind of “physical gill” with trapped air that allows gas exchange.

“Future studies manipulating water conditions and the likely physical gill, alongside detailed recovery analyses, will further clarify the adaptations enabling queens to withstand extended submersion,” the researchers wrote.

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Xander West: The Conservative Party must revive the CPC

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Xander West: The Conservative Party must revive the CPC

Xander West is an independent writer and author of the Grumbling Times substack. 

An essential part of any political party’s recovery from major defeat is reform of its internal machinery or institutions.

The Conservative Party, unfortunately, seems not to have taken this endeavour as seriously or comprehensively as is necessary to restore its status as the centre-right’s party of government, in other words to publicly show it has changed for the better over repeating such ad nauseam.

Perhaps this contributed to Danny Kruger, Robert Jenrick and Andrew Rosindell’s decisions that conservatism may be better realised in another party. Nevertheless, the Conservatives’ history provides plentiful inspiration for reorganisation following severe defeats which, whilst not a panacea, could strive to fulfil several present challenges. In particular, the Conservative Political Centre (CPC) embodies the kind of party institution which should be urgently revived.

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The chairmanships of Ralph Assheton and Frederick Marquis, 1st Baron Woolton, with a strong supporting role by R. A. Butler as head of the Conservative Research Department, were the most transformative of the postwar era. To quote Philip Norton’s The Conservative Party (1996), they “not only resuscitated the party but effectively galvanised it” following the landslide defeat of 1945; the creation of the CPC the same year was no exception.

Butler in particular, who influenced its formation, considered breaking the intellectual monopoly of socialism a crucial aspect in radically renewing the party. As its political education body and wholly independent until 1964, the CPC sought to produce well-informed and intellectually self-confident Conservatives at all levels without subjecting them to propagandising diktats or soundbite sloganeering.

Through its extensive publications, lectures, conferences, schools and study groups, it stimulated political thinking and the discussion of new ideas without formally committing the party to certain policies or forcing its members to conform to official opinions. Indeed, the body prioritised the two-way movement of ideas between the Conservative leadership and membership by circulating responses from local branches on specific topics, to which the relevant minister or senior party figure would be obliged to reply and consider in their decision-making. CPC pamphlets were also intended to reach a wider public who might be sympathetic to conservative ideas or arguments.

However, after nearly half a century of prominence in Conservative politics, the CPC appeared to atrophy in its final decade or so, with the idea of education becoming more top-down than grassroots. Perhaps its consolidation into a directorate with the Research Department in 1988 crippled whatever independence and authority it still enjoyed, forcing a greater orientation towards merely reviewing official policy directions. Its closest successor, the Conservative Policy Forum, inherited only a fraction of the role once performed by the CPC in ensuring party members are represented in policymaking, with scant reference to ideas beyond policy and no notion of political education.

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Most importantly, the CPC in its prime was dedicated to explaining problems and suggesting solutions in accordance with conservative principles, its arguments thus setting it apart from conventional think tanks.

Although conservatism has frequently been the most pragmatic body of modern political thought, such considerations must be anchored in some underlying convictions to avoid being attracted into all manner of expediencies and undermining one’s own stated positions. Sometimes trusting the strength of Conservative politicians’ instinctive or dispositional conservatism has proved enough, yet other times this has failed or the right spirit towards conservation has been all but absent, whereupon dire straits ensue.

This demonstrates why the CPC was such a vital asset in policy formation and election campaigns alike, for its educational mission essentially advanced conservatism and strong, articulate conservatives within the Conservative Party. To disregard this role, it implied, would impair the party’s chances of election and the quality of government thereafter. It should be self-evident that disseminating bullet-point lists of ‘values’ via email or press releases will never suffice for thought, nor what the party forgot about itself in recent years in forsaking its distinct and rich political tradition.

Of course, there are obvious benefits in hosting a vibrant environment for ideas within the party today, or in producing competent and knowledgeable activists, both of which the CPC facilitated through its activities. Whilst some may argue the need to teach Conservatives about conservatism shows the party was never conservative in the first place, this is an inaccurate assumption.

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Political education done right entails informing, articulating and deepening conservative expressions of common sense or disposition, indeed of substantiating values and the motivations behind policy proposals. The need for articulated principles and applying the conservative tradition are simply inextricable from the party’s form and function, its identity and purpose.

Reviving an institution like the CPC could begin to satisfy the immense unrealised demand for a party which represents something solid and understands itself, whilst guarding against possible future drift from leaderships seeking more convenient choices. Perhaps the window in which the Conservatives could have monopolised this potential support, however, has already closed.

It is a damning indictment against the Conservative Party of recent years that a plurality of the electorate now supports, for lack of other perceived options, a party which offers fireworks with assertive rhetoric in lieu of solidity, nuance and true depth of thought or feeling. Both options carry ample persuasive power, but only one may engender permanence, although the prominent defections to Reform could quickly upend this assessment in its favour.

Furthermore, whilst the formation of a concrete policy suite at the 2025 party conference was a positive development, recreating the CPC would give them the substance and verifiably conservative credentials they desperately need.

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Again, ‘authentic’ conservatism is more than albeit important counters to Labour policies the Conservative leadership tends to promote and deeper than attempts to find merely popular taglines or policy solutions. Moreover, the realisation that contemporary conservatism ought to defend what is good in society does not make it ‘muscular’, for such an idea is so skeletal to the entire philosophy that it barely should need restating.

Nevertheless, where the party has clear ideas, a reimagined CPC could readily support, campaign for and build upon them. It could also show conservatives, rather than nostalgic centrists, remain the preponderant faction. Yet, the overriding consideration might become that of legacy, not of the past twenty years but two centuries of Conservative achievements which risk being forgotten amidst the political tumult.

In 1945, as now, the repository of wisdom in the conservative tradition demands rediscovery and readapting to present circumstances. The Conservative Party’s survival is much less assured than in 1945 or 1997, but the reinvigoration of a party cannot occur through its leadership alone.

Energy, ideas and self-confidence must be shared by the whole party; the question of sustaining them is where a party institution focussing on political education would come into its own. Given those preconditions, there is little but individual egos preventing Reform from forming an organisation along similar lines and further assimilating the core Conservative vote.

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If given a fair chance, re-establishing a body like the CPC could facilitate much in a Conservative recovery, but if current trends persist might equally find itself passing the torch for the conservative political tradition.

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LIVE: Tice Hosts Reform DOGE and Local Government Press Conference

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LIVE: Tice Hosts Reform DOGE and Local Government Press Conference

LIVE: Tice Hosts Reform DOGE and Local Government Press Conference

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Why migration can’t solve the birth crisis, with Stephen J Shaw

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Why migration can’t solve the birth crisis, with Stephen J Shaw

The post Why migration can’t solve the birth crisis, with Stephen J Shaw appeared first on spiked.

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Met Police announced successful repression of antiwar protest

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Met Police announced successful repression of antiwar protest

The Met Police has issued a statement praising itself for its decision to ban today’s London march against the Iran war. The force allied with the Israel lobby to ban the annual Al Quds Day march and limit it to a ‘static rally’. Then it boasted how great its decision had been because its repression of British citizens’ right to march in peaceful protest had caused some not to attend. It ended by thanking police officers for coming from all over the place to prevent an anti-war protest and “keeping protestors and Londoners safe”:

News – 15 March 2026 17:05

Public order update

Today’s policing operation at the Al Quds day protest and counter-protest concluded this afternoon.

Assistant Commissioner Ade Adelekan, Public Order lead said:

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“Our policing plan worked, with both groups kept apart and we saw no attempts from either side to breach conditions by marching. Both sets dispersed as planned from 15:00hrs.

“We saw significantly fewer people attend than we had anticipated. The restrictions and conditions meant many people chose to stay away and not to attend the protest or counter-protest.

“This shows our decision to apply for the ban was the right one. A static protest meant it was easier for officers to keep the two groups apart and prevent serious public disorder.

“We made 12 arrests including for showing support for a proscribed organisation, affray and for threatening or abusive behaviour. We are also investigating chants made by a speaker at the Al Quds protest.

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“As I said from the outset, the decision to ban the protest march does not set a precedent and we will continue to consider each protest on a case-by-case basis.

“I want to extend my thanks to the officers, including those from across the country who supported us. Their professionalism and commitment helped us to keep protestors and Londoners safe.”

Yeah, well done lads and lasses. You protected us all from the big bad mob that doesn’t want the UK to assist two genocidal regimes from killing people. Bravo 👍.

Met Police, happy to repress

The Met doesn’t say so in its statement, but the “chants made by a speaker” were rapper Bob Vylan repeating his Glastonbury 2025 “Death death to the IDF” chant. As well he might, since police and the CPS already looked at the exact same chant then and decided just four months ago, in December 2025, that the chant merited no further action. Ok then, ok now — unless of course the point is to smear the protest rather than to prosecute.

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But the dishonesty ran even deeper. Both the anti-war protest and the several phone-booths worth of pro-war, pro-Israel counter-protesters were treated as if equal in size and significance — when in fact, tens of thousands still turned up to demand peace, despite police and state repression:

Contrast this with the open racism and tiny numbers of the pro-Israel hate-gathering:

Contrary to its claims of keeping both ‘sides’ apart, sources at the scene said the Met also allowed far-right pro-Israel ‘auditors’ in among the peaceful anti-war protest.

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In reality, the Met Police and its bosses in Whitehall and Downing Street are repressing the will of the British public. More than twice as many UK people oppose the US-Israel war of aggression on Iran. Almost as many oppose the Starmer regime allowing the US to use British airbases to attack Iran. Even more certainly would, if they understood that this enabling consists of directly refuelling and re-arming the carpet-bombing B-52 high-altitude bombers Trump is using to slaughter Iranian civilians:

Keir Starmer has turned Britain into a police state over the heads, and against the will, of the people of this country. He is a war criminal just as surely and just as guiltily as Trump, Netanyahu and their racist enablers.

Featured image via Middle East Eye

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Politics Home Article | PM Says His Principles Are The Same As Public On Iran War

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PM Says His Principles Are The Same As Public On Iran War
PM Says His Principles Are The Same As Public On Iran War

(Alamy)


4 min read

Keir Starmer has said he believes that his principles on how to approach the Iran war “are shared by the British people” as he set out support for UK households using heating oil.

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At a Downing Street press conference on Monday morning, Starmer said there would be “immediate support” worth £53m for households reliant on heating oil that are “most exposed” to rising prices.

Referring to reports that oil companies had been cancelling orders and hiking prices, the Prime Minister said legal action would be taken if they had been found to have broken the law.

UK households will be protected by the Ofgem cap until July. However, energy bills could rise that month if global prices remain high.

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Drivers are already seeing the impact of the war in Iran, with diesel and petrol prices rising sharply in recent weeks. 

On Sunday night, US President Donald Trump called for European allies to join him in the Middle East, telling the Financial Times that NATO faces a “very bad” future if allies like the UK do not help to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

The threat of attack by Iran for traffic passing through the Strait, which is one of the most important trade routes in the world, has led to a spike in oil and gas prices. 

Starmer said he was working with allies on a “viable collective plan” to restore freedom of navigation for ships seeking to pass through the Strait of Hormuz.

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“We’ve already acted alongside other countries to release emergency oil stocks at a level that is completely unprecedented. But, ultimately, we have to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to ensure stability in the market.”

Questioned by the media about what shape this plan would take, Starmer said he was “looking at options” and wanted to involve “as many partners as possible”. 

The Prime Minister said that while the UK would take “the necessary action to defend ourselves and our allies”, it would “not be drawn into the wider war”.

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Starmer has so far committed the UK to “defensive” action, allowing the US to use British bases to carry out strikes in Iran.

However, he refused to join the initial US and Israeli attacks on Iran, arguing that there was no viable, long-term plan or clear legal basis for the action.

In his press conference, Starmer said the question of “whether to commit British troops to military action is the most serious responsibility for any Prime Minister”.

“I have been attacked by some for my decision not to join the offensive against Iran. 

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“But at every stage, I’ve stood by my principles, principles which I held just as strongly when it came to debate about the Iraq war in 2003, principles which I believe are shared by the British people, that our decision should be based on a calm, level-headed assessment of the British national interest. 

“And that if we are to send our service men and women into harm’s way, the very least they deserve is to know that they do so on a legal basis and with a properly thought-through plan,” he said.

Referring to the Conservatives and Reform UK’s initial stance on the war, when both parties called on the UK to join the first US and Israeli strikes, Starmer said some would have “rushed the UK headlong into this war without the full picture of what they’re sending our forces into, and without a plan to get us out”, adding that approach was “not leading”, but “following”.

“My leadership is about standing firm for the British interest, no matter the pressure. And I believe time will show that we have the right approach, right on the economy and the cost of living, right on defence and energy, and right on this war in the best interests of the British people.”

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Iran warns major U.S. corporations to evacuate in UAE and Jordan

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Iran warns major U.S. corporations to evacuate in UAE and Jordan

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has warned companies in which Americans hold shares to evacuate from West Asia “so they are not harmed”.

An accompanying graphic circulated by the IRGC lists various industrial, tech, energy, and financial firms operating in Jordan and the UAE, including specific office locations.

The list includes: Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Microsoft, Oracle, ExxonMobil, Citigroup, Amazon Web Services
and KKR.

Iran is hitting the US where it hurts — financially.

Iran is taking the moral high ground — which honestly isn’t hard when you’re fighting genocidal maniacs.

The US and Israel did not warn the Iranian school full of little girls that they were about to bomb it.

Who are the real terrorists?

And in comparison, the companies Iran might now target are all propping up Israel’s illegal war.

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Iran is singlehandedly decolonising West Asia. But unlike Israel and the US, it is concerned about civilian casualties.

Iran’s retaliation

The UAE has repeatedly allowed the US and Israel to launch strikes on Iran from its territory. Therefore, its fair game.

As Epstein would say, ‘whoops’.

Israel only colonised Palestine in 1948, whereas Iran is attempting to defend its millennia-old history.

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Company values

The Canary has extensively covered several companies on IRCG’s target list.

Lockheed Martin is the manufacturer of Israel’s F-35 warplanes, which have been linked to specific war crimes in Gaza.

The Times of Israel previously reported:

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The ministry said a delegation to the US signed a letter of agreement for the $3 billion deal that included 25 advanced stealth fighters built by Lockheed Martin.

Similarly, Boeing provides Israel with F-15 jets, Apache helicopters, satellites, military hardware and missiles.

Back in 2022, Israel used Boeing attack helicopters and fighter jets to attack Gaza. It murdered 44 Palestinians, including 15 children and 4 women, and wounded 360.

Microsoft also has deep ties with the Israeli state and provides services to the government, the Ministry of Defence, the military, and security bodies. All of Israel’s military apps run on Microsoft’s cloud service.

Leaked documents also show that Microsoft has significantly increased its operations with Israel’s military since 2023.

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It is clear that since October 7, Israel has had the might of the world’s technology giants supporting its illegal siege of Gaza and Palestine. However, if profits start to suffer, maybe companies will rethink their ties to a genocidal terrorist state.

Iran is giving the US and Israel a taste of their own medicine and hitting them where it hurts, whilst also trying to clear the BDS list. Maybe Trump will get a reality check and rein in his ego — or maybe US companies will suffer just like Palestine, Iran and Lebanon.

Feature image via Hult International Business School/YouTube

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Lewis Norton: Why the Welsh Conservatives are containing ‘devo-scepticism’ and is it sustainable?

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Lewis Norton: Why the Welsh Conservatives are containing 'devo-scepticism' and is it sustainable?

Lewis Norton is a PhD Researcher at the Department of International Politics at Aberystwyth University.

 Those familiar with recent events in Welsh politics will understand when I say that managing the Welsh Conservatives has become a particularly complex arrangement.

With the elections to the Senedd approaching in mere months, the party has had to address defections to Reform at both its public-facing level as well as its backroom staff, and polling is continuously showing the party to be stuck at around 12 per cent, which is a potentially dangerous level to be polling at given the intricacies of Wales’ new electoral system.

Chiefly among the issues the Welsh party has faced is the ongoing internal tensions around the party’s stance on devolution.

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Darren Millar, the leader of the Conservatives’ Senedd Group, has been explicit in saying that abolishing the Senedd is off the table, and in seeking to ensure that the party’s candidates share this position, has come under frequent scrutiny from those within (or formerly within) the party who accuse the party leadership of a “war on the grassroots”

With a matter of weeks left until voting day, the potential cracks of this approach are beginning to reveal themselves. Despite Darren Millar’s insistence that anti-devolution candidates would not be able to stand, in the case of Calum Davies, there is a candidate topping the party list who has been vocal in his opposition to devolution, and candidates further down the lists have also made suggestions of a devo-sceptic position. Naturally, affirming this position also goes against the grain of the majority of the Welsh Conservative grassroots and voter base at large, of whom two-thirds desire the Senedd’s abolition.

Beyond the party’s grassroots, there is also an untapped and underappreciated market for devo-sceptic views amongst the wider Welsh electorate. In YouGov polling, support for abolition of the Senedd and a Senedd with reduced powers stood at 31 per cent and 23 per cent respectively (compared with 24 per cent supporting Welsh independence). While this is below the level of support for the status quo or more devolution, no option enjoys majority support amongst the Welsh electorate, and polls like this one show that clearly there is an undercurrent of devo-scepticism within the Welsh electorate.

The party’s platform on devolution is somewhat ambiguous, which is a common theme throughout the post-devolution era. While officially supportive of its existence, the party has dedicated a lot of its campaigning energy thus far against the expansion of the Senedd’s membership from 60 to 96. This may be somewhat ingrained in a level of devo-scepticism, but it has largely been argued on a cost and practicality basis as opposed to an ideological disagreement and has perhaps become a proxy to avoid addressing the “elephant in the room” of real devo-scepticism which has become such a divisive topic.

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It would not be fair, however, to suggest that the party’s direction on this matter is without reason. In fact, it is heavily grounded in logical elite decision-making which those looking at party management would expect to observe.

Firstly, the Conservative Party, perhaps more than any party in the democratic world, sees itself as a natural party of government. This office-seeking logic of the Conservatives is deeply established, and the party has a long and sustained record of adaptation to political and societal change to achieve high office. This logic, seemingly, holds even in Welsh politics despite a long and deep-rooted history of Conservative support in Wales lagging far behind its support in England. As a result, since the birth of the (then) Welsh Assembly in 1999, the Welsh Conservatives have usually attempted to put forward a serious platform for the use of devolved powers in Welsh elections as opposed to dipping their toes into the constitutional questions of the existence of the devolved legislature.

Secondly, in a similar vein to the first reason, the Welsh Conservative aversion to committing to a devo-sceptic platform has become enshrined in a vote-winning logic. While, as mentioned earlier, there is clearly a market for these views amongst a minority of the electorate, targeting this group comes with risks which the party management likely deem unacceptable. The primary risk is that by focusing on the wishes of the grassroots and the devo-sceptic portion of the electorate, the party may alienate the majority of the Welsh electorate who find themselves on the outside of this cluster. Furthermore, those not aligned with the existence of the Senedd are less likely to turn out to vote in its elections. This has been observed throughout devolution, as many Conservative voters in Westminster elections simply don’t turn out at all in Senedd elections. From a vote-seeking perspective, why appeal to a section of the electorate who don’t vote?

If devo-sceptics want to increase their influence on the agenda-setting of the Senedd, then they need to turn out like they haven’t previously. This is somewhat of a double-edged sword, with the lack of a major outwardly devo-sceptic party likely contributing to the lesser turnout, but even where parties campaigning on an abolition platform have been present (namely the Abolish the Welsh Assembly Party – who in 2021 were expected to achieve representation) they haven’t been able to mobilise this voter base to achieve anything substantial. Such cases likely reinforce the current Welsh Conservative antipathy toward adopting such a position.

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The question here is whether this approach is tenable in the long term. Increasingly, there is a sense that the party needs to make a decision on this constitutional question which has been an ever-present issue for nearly three decades. Ultimately, the sustainability of this approach will depend largely on the result the party achieves in May. In particular, what the make-up of the potentially reduced in size Conservative Senedd group is, and its impact on the dominant faction of the group which currently accommodates devolution. If a smaller Conservative group is proportionately more populated with candidates who support an abolitionist position, we may quickly see a change in tact post-election.

Such a change may be further incentivised depending on how Reform’s Senedd cohort addresses devolution. Thus far, in the face of a similar dilemma as the Conservatives, Reform have also sought to accommodate devolution, and are insistent that they will be a constructive presence to “make devolution work”, going so far as to express excitement at the Senedd expansion which the Conservatives have been in steadfast opposition towards, although this excitement was likely more strategically based on the opportunities it provides for the party rather than an ideological delight towards an expanded Senedd.

Similarly to the Conservatives, whether this position holds for Reform will depend on the composition of its Senedd cohort. If the last time a Farage-led party achieved representation in the Senedd on the basis of working constructively within the institution is to be informative (in the case of UKIP in 2016), then Reform may bring with them an influx of very devo-sceptic Senedd members. But if they don’t, and a potentially small Conservative group coming out of the other side of the huge external shock of a poor election result observes the low-hanging fruit of differentiation through scepticism, then a change in tact may become much harder to resist, and potentially even necessary.

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11 Symptoms Of Meningitis Parents Should Never Ignore

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11 Symptoms Of Meningitis Parents Should Never Ignore

This article features advice from Dr Tom Nutt, of Meningitis Now, the NHS and the UK government.

After an outbreak of meningitis claimed the lives of two students in Canterbury, experts are urging people to be aware of the symptoms and seek urgent help if they experience them.

A further 11 people are hospitalised by the illness, the BBC reported, with most aged between 18 and 21 years old.

Dr Tom Nutt, chief executive of the charity Meningitis Now, said they are “deeply saddened” to hear of the deaths.

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“Our heartfelt thoughts are with their families, friends and the entire university community at this incredibly difficult time,” he added.

What is meningitis?

Meningitis is an infection of the protective membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord. It’s usually caused by a bacterial or viral infection (the former is less common, but more serious).

The infection most commonly occurs in babies, young children, teens and young adults.

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Following the latest outbreak; parents, students and university staff are being urged to “remain vigilant” for the signs of meningitis, which can include:

  1. High fever
  2. Severe headache
  3. Vomiting
  4. Sensitivity to light
  5. Confusion
  6. Cold hands and feet
  7. Limb pain
  8. Stiff neck
  9. Drowsiness/unresponsiveness
  10. Seizures
  11. A rash that doesn’t fade under pressure

(Source: Dr Nutt and the NHS)

“Symptoms can appear suddenly and can easily be mistaken for flu, a heavy cold or even the after-effects of a night out, so it is vital that anyone who is concerned seeks urgent medical help immediately,” said Dr Nutt.

What’s behind the outbreak?

Cases of meningitis dropped sharply during the Covid-19 pandemic but have since increased – in 2024-25, cases were higher than they were the year previous, according to the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA)

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Alongside this, infant and teenage vaccination rates have declined, leaving more people vulnerable.

Three vaccines protect against the main causes of meningitis. The MenB vaccine is offered to infants at eight weeks, 16 weeks and one year of age, as part of routine NHS vaccinations. Babies are also given the pneumococcal vaccine at 16 weeks and one year.

The MenACWY vaccine protects teenagers against four types of bacteria linked to meningitis and is usually given in school during Year 9 (when kids are aged 13-14).

If you haven’t had it and are in higher education, speak to your GP about getting one (you remain eligible for the MenACWY jab until your 25th birthday).

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University students and young adults are among the groups at increased risk because meningitis bacteria “can spread more easily in settings where people live, study and socialise closely together”, Dr Nutt noted.

Infections that cause meningitis can be spread through sneezing, coughing and kissing.

How is meningitis treated?

While viral meningitis typically improves on its own within seven to 10 days, the NHS notes bacterial meningitis usually needs to be treated in hospital with antibiotics (and possible fluids/oxygen) for at least a week.

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The UK Health Security Agency is currently identifying close contacts of those impacted by the outbreak and offering precautionary antibiotics where needed.

Dr Nutt concluded: “If anyone is worried about symptoms, trust your instincts and seek urgent medical help. Acting quickly can save lives.”

The government advises that anyone affected with meningococcal disease “will usually become seriously ill within a few hours”.

You should contact your GP or NHS 111 for advice if you have any concerns about your own or someone else’s health.

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If symptoms are getting worse, seek medical help urgently at the closest emergency department or by dialling 999.

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