Politics
Newslinks for Thursday 12th February 2026
Reeves calls for close ties with EU
“Rachel Reeves has said that she is “up for” taking Britain closer to the EU. The Chancellor described current negotiations over youth mobility, food standards and energy policy as “first base” and said closer relations with the bloc represented the “biggest prize” for the British economy. Speaking at an event in London organised by the Bruegel think tank, Ms Reeves said Labour was willing to cede more powers to Brussels to secure a better economic deal. The comments are a significant shift in tone from the Chancellor, who just weeks ago told an audience in Davos that Britain could not go “back in time” in its relationship with the EU.” – Daily Telegraph
- Chancellor warned NHS faces massive £20bn black hole that could spark fresh tax misery for millions – The Sun
Appointments 1) Starmer was aware Lord Doyle backed paedophile, No 10 admits
“Sir Keir Starmer nominated a former adviser for a peerage despite being told that he provided a paedophile councillor with “support” because he “believed in his innocence”. Lord Doyle, a former director of communications in Downing Street, told Number 10 he had been “supportive” of Sean Morton after he was charged with possessing and distributing indecent images of children. The disclosure will raise further questions about the prime minister’s judgment in the wake of the scandal over the former British ambassador to the US Lord Mandelson’s links to Jeffrey Epstein, the paedophile financier. Starmer stood by his decision to ennoble Doyle for more than six weeks after he had been made aware that his communications chief had campaigned for Morton as an independent councillor despite him being charged with sex offences.” – The Times
- Vetting process for Mandelson needed more awkward questions, expert says – The Guardian
- Streeting’s links to lobbyist prompt calls for tighter rules – The Times
- Friends and foes of Wes Streeting put down their weapons, for now – The Times
- New shame for spineless Starmer – Leader, Daily Mail
- Starmer KC started ranting and turned into Sid Vicious – Quentin Letts, Daily Mail
>Today: Columnist John Oxley: Are we in a new phase for all Prime Ministers? The era of ‘two year Keir’
>Yesterday: Video: PMQS: Badenoch accuses PM of sacking a string of allies to save himself
Appointments 2) Calls for a woman deputy PM, to change culture
“Female Labour MPs have demanded that Keir Starmer appoint a senior woman as his de facto deputy to oversee a “complete culture change” in Downing Street after a series of scandals that they say have exposed a No 10 “boys’ club”. Harriet Harman, one of the party’s most senior figures, urged Starmer to revive the role of first secretary of state on Wednesday, a post occupied by Peter Mandelson under Gordon Brown.” – The Guardian
- Nandy calls for end to briefings ‘dripping with misogyny’ – Daily Telegraph
- Westminster fears release of ‘embarrassing’ exchanges in Mandelson data dump – Financial Times
- What message does Starmer’s behaviour send to the women who are victims of sexual abuse? – Dan Hodges, Daily Mail
- Labour’s humiliation is richly deserved – Juliet Samuel, The Times
- There was method in Anas Sarwar’s mad mutiny – Alex Massie, The Times
Appointments 3) Challenge to Romeo being the next Cabinet Secretary
“The former boss of the mandarin widely tipped to become the next Cabinet Secretary has urged Sir Keir Starmer to undertake full due diligence checks on her. The Prime Minister is set to appoint as his most senior civil servant to replace Sir Chris Wormald, who is expected to resign after a year in post. The Home Office permanent secretary will become Britain’s first female Cabinet Secretary as part of a wider shake up of the top team at Downing Street. While serving as British consul general in New York in 2017, she was investigated, and subsequently cleared, over allegations of bullying and misusing expenses.” – Daily Telegraph
- Why is the mandarin who backed Peter Mandelson as US ambassador still at the heart of No10? – Andrew Pierce, Daily Mail
- Starmer faces backlash over ousting of Britain’s top civil servant – Financial Times
Economy only grew by 0.1 per cent in final quarter
The economy grew by 0.1% in the final quarter of last year, ONS figures show. This is in line with what economists had predicted. As well as the quarterly figure, the ONS also published December’s monthly GDP figure this morning. This shows the economy also grew by 0.1% on a monthly basis. But the figure for the previous month of November was revised down from 0.3% to 0.2%.” – BBC
Ratcliffe declares UK has been ‘colonised’ by immigrants
“Keir Starmer has demanded Sir Jim Ratcliffe apologise for saying “the UK has been colonised by immigrants”. The Prime Minister hit back on Wednesday night by calling the Manchester United co-owner’s comments “offensive and wrong”…In an interview with Sky News, the businessman said politicians needed to “do some difficult things with the UK to get it back on track”. The founder and chairman of one of the world’s largest chemical companies, Ineos, shared why he believes Britain faces profound political, social and economic challenges. He said: “You can’t have an economy with nine million people on benefits and huge levels of immigrants coming in.” – Daily Express
Reform UK working to prevent Lords veto of their policies
“Reform UK is drawing up plans to bypass the House of Lords in order to push through a radical agenda if it gets into government. Senior figures in the party are concerned that opposition peers will block or hold up its legislation in the Upper Chamber. Nigel Farage, the Reform leader, has urged the Government to allow him to appoint some life peers, but his party would have to stack the Lords with hundreds of new members to compete with Labour and the Conservatives. The party is working on ways to circumvent the Lords’ veto by beefing up the power of ministers and backbench Commons committees.” – Daily Telegraph
>Today: Albert Ward on Comment: Reform UK refute suggestions they’ve ‘hit a ceiling’ but they have and here’s why
Labour shelves plans for 20 free schools
“Vulnerable children are being put at risk by Labour’s free schools review, campaigners have warned. Pausing plans for 20 new state schools for excluded pupils could force more children into low-quality provision, according to a report from the New Schools Network (NSN). In December, the Government announced it was cancelling dozens of planned free schools, including 18 for children with special needs or those unable to attend mainstream education.” – Daily Telegraph
- Half of all new school funding in past decade spent on Send – The Times
New rules on political donations planned
“Labour will end the use of “dodgy front companies” that hide the source of dark money for political donations as part of its sweeping elections bill, which will give votes to 16-year-olds and pave the way for “opt-out” voter registration. Gifts and hospitality for politicians sponsored by foreign states or companies will also be severely curbed, the Guardian understands. The government also intends to put new restrictions on cryptocurrency donations and the size of foreign donations, a key concern of Labour MPs about money that may be funnelled to Reform UK.” – The Guardian
- Green Party has most to gain from lowering voting age – Daily Mail
Four in 10 migrants will challenge Labour deportation plans with slavery claims
“As many as four in 10 Channel migrants earmarked for deportation under Sir Keir Starmer’s “one in, one out” scheme are claiming to be victims of modern slavery in an attempt to thwart their removal. They are claiming to have been victims of trafficking when they were in their home country, in transit or in the UK, according to the Home Office. The disclosure comes as the Government faces a High Court legal challenge by 16 migrants attempting to block their deportation.” – Daily Telegraph
Green Party 1) Whistleblower sends report to counter-terrorism police
“The Green Party has been reported to counter-terrorism police by an internal whistleblower. Fears are growing that the party is becoming a breeding-ground for anti-Jewish extremists. Hard-Left activists have joined the Greens in recent months in protest at Labour’s stance on the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. But a push by pro-Palestine Greens to declare the party ‘anti-Zionist’ has horrified many existing members, who fear extremism, sectarianism and anti-Semitism are being tolerated under Zack Polanski’s leadership.” – Daily Mail
Green Party 2) Activists thrown out of assisted living complex
“A team of Green Party activists was thrown out of an assisted living complex in Gorton and Denton after “distressing” elderly residents with their campaigning. The party has apologised and promised to investigate the incident, which occurred last weekend at the Dahlia House apartment centre in Burnage, Greater Manchester, ahead of the by-election on February 26. The facility is designed for retirees who wish to live independently but want shared facilities or require regular help from carers. The Telegraph understands that a team of Green Party campaigners gained access to the complex and began door-to-door canvassing, which elderly residents found confusing and frightening.” – Daily Telegraph
Tax pushing up cost of holidays
“Holiday bosses have told the Chancellor that getaways are for “relaxing, not taxing” amid fears staycations could rocket by an extra £100 or more. Two hundred bosses from firms such as Butlin’s, Haven and Parkdean Resorts have written to Rachel Reeves, blasting the proposed “holiday tax”. The campaign comes amid concerns £10 per night could be added per night away for a family of five. Shadow Business Secretary Andrew Griffith said: “We’ve a one-trick, miserablist, tax raising government. They’ll tax you more if you drive your car, get on a plane and now if you stay in a bed on holiday.” Ms Reeves has been told it could lead to shorter trips, abandoned travel plans or holidaymakers going abroad.” – The Sun
- Anti-fun party want to wreck your holiday – Leader, The Sun
Other political news
- Lib Dems set out plan to replace Treasury with ‘Department for Growth’ – Financial Times
- Youth work ‘black holes’ in half of all council areas in England, study finds – The Guardian
- Council refuses to enforce 100pc tax on ‘vital’ second home owners – Daily Telegraph
- Reform will not defund Bangor university over free speech row, politician says – BBC
- Labour admits failings over China spy fiasco – Daily Telegraph
- Bangladesh votes in first election after political upheaval – BBC
- Join the military, jobcentres to advise unemployed young Britons – Financial Times
Heath: Labour’s lurch to the Left at odds with public attitudes
“There will be jubilation across the land when Starmer, a nasty, dishonest avatar of a Prime Minister is ousted but the Labour rebels’ confirmation bias makes them incapable of understanding why he is so hated, or the historic paradigm shift upending British society. Yes, voters despise Starmer’s character flaws but public opinion is shifting more profoundly. Despite demographic change and welfare creep, voters are moving Rightwards, not Leftwards, as many ludicrously believe.” – Allister Heath, Daily Telegraph
- Britain should pray that Starmer survives – Janan Ganesh, Financial Times
- A lurch to the left would be a costly gamble Britain can’t afford – Leader, The Times
News in brief
- Inside Keir Starmer’s downfall – Tim Shipman, The Spectator
- What is Angela Rayner up to? – Ethan Croft, New Statesman
- Why did anyone ever listen to Noam Chomsky? – Joseph Dinnage, CapX
- Hope Not Hate political organiser and former Labour councillor pleads guilty to child sexual offences – Toby Young, Daily Sceptic
- We have to mend SEND – Zachary Marsh, The Critic
Politics
Activists participate in coordinated efforts across UK to shut down arms factories
Earlier today, activists across Britain participated in a coordinated day of action to apply mass pressure across the arms industry. Activists targeted arms factories in Sheffield, Brighton, Newcastle and Lancashire. They aimed to disrupt the supply chain of arms headed for the US and Israel.
Factories activists targeted during the action included:
- BAE Systems (Lancashire).
- Radius Aerospace (Sheffield).
- Pearson Engineering (Newcastle).
- L3Harris (Brighton).
Activists gathered in the early hours of the morning to stop workers from entering the sites and continuing the production of various components and equipment used by Israel and the US.
The actions saw hundreds of activists across the country completely halt production in these sites for hours before disproportionate policing moved them away after resistance.
Arms factories increasingly targets
The day of action comes after months of similar protests occurring more increasingly. The most recent took place at an Elbit systems site in Bristol. More and more activists are focusing on the arms factories in their locality.
This has come in part from the exposure of these companies through organisations such as Campaign Against Arms Trade providing maps and intel on their ties to Israel and the genocide unfolding.
The target arms factories and their activities are:
- BAE systems in Samlesbury, Lancashire, produces the rear fuselage for the F-35 fighter jet which is known to be produced in the US and provided to Israel as part of their military contractual obligations.
- Pearson engineering is an Israeli state-owned defence company supplying parts for armoured vehicles and specialising in combat robotics.
- L3Harris provides power systems for strategic missiles, missile defence and aircraft.
- Radius Aerospace while primarily a manufacturer of aerospace components, has been identified as part of the UK supply chain linked to military aircraft, including the F-35 program
A spokesperson from the BAE Out Campaign explained:
We organise these pickets because we know they are effective. Workers have told us that each time we block the site, they are offered overtime to make up for the time lost. This proves that our protests are costing them money and time.
This form of disruption is essential as these corporations only speak in monetary language. As long as BAE remain in the F-35 fighter jet programme, they can expect delays, disruption and discomfort in the face of supporting and aiding a genocide.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Trump Continues Threatening War Crimes If Iran Doesn’t Capitulate ‘Immediately’
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Monday continued to threaten Iran with war crimes if it does not comply with his demands, even as he also insisted a ceasefire deal with the country’s new, “more reasonable” rulers was soon at hand.
“If for any reason a deal is not shortly reached, which it probably will be, and if the Hormuz Strait is not immediately ‘Open for Business,’ we will conclude our lovely ‘stay’ in Iran by blowing up and completely obliterating all of their Electric Generating Plants, Oil Wells and Kharg Island (and possibly all desalinization plants!), which we have purposefully not yet ‘touched,’” Trump posted on social media. “This will be in retribution for our many soldiers, and others, that Iran has butchered and killed over the old Regime’s 47 year ‘Reign of Terror.’”
Destroying a country’s electrical and drinking water infrastructure, unless it is done for a specific military objective, violates international law governing armed conflicts, experts said, as does Trump’s additional threat to “take” Iran’s oil.
“Trump is in Putin territory,” said Fiona Hill, who served on the National Security Council in Trump’s first term, comparing Trump’s threat to Russian dictator Vladimir Putin’s repeated attacks on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine. “It’s a mafia boss play.”
Trump originally threatened to attack Iran’s electrical generation system on March 21, giving Iran 48 hours to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to international shipping. Just before the stock markets were to open on the deadline day, Trump announced he was moving zero hour back five days because Iran was making good progress. He extended it another 10 days on Thursday. It is unclear how Monday morning’s “immediately” wording affects the 10-day time frame, which runs through April 6.
Oona Hathaway, an international law professor at Yale University, said while all of Trump’s threatened actions are war crimes, the most egregious is targeting Iran’s water supply. “In particular, the attack on the desalinization water systems would be the deprivation of objects indispensable to survival of the civilian population. Such objects are specially protected,” she said.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt did not respond to a HuffPost query about Trump’s threats. During a briefing on Monday, she said, “Of course, this administration and the United States armed forces will always act within the confines of the law” — but then refused to take a follow-up question about Trump’s specific threat.
Brian Finucane, a lawyer who spent a decade at the State Department, said whether such an attack is illegal depends on the circumstances and whether it is being carried out for a specific military purpose. That Trump wrote in his post that it was being done as “retribution” clearly suggests, though, that the purpose is not military.
“The president of the United States should not be threatening war crimes,” he said, adding that in this case, the argument against hitting Iran in this manner goes beyond the moral one because Iran is likely to retaliate in like fashion against Gulf state allies of the United States.
“There is very much a tit-for-tat dynamic going on here,” he said. “Why should the United States care about that? Because it has global ramifications, including the US economy.”
That Trump would openly threaten war crimes now comes after years of advocating a lawless use of the military. Two decades ago, Trump repeatedly argued that the United States should confiscate Iraq’s oil — “Take the oil!” — following then-President George W. Bush’s invasion of that country. Stealing a nation’s natural resources is considered “pillaging” and is specifically outlawed by the 1949 Geneva Conventions.
As he ran for president in 2016, Trump said he would target the families of terrorists for killing. When it was pointed out that doing so would constitute a war crime and that US soldiers would refuse to carry out such an order, Trump insisted they would. “If I say do it, they’re going to do it. That’s what leadership is all about,” he said.
During his first term, Trump granted clemency to retired Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher following his court-martial for posing with the body of an ISIS fighter who died in US captivity. Trump was urged to do so by Pete Hegseth, who at the time was a Fox News personality and is now Trump’s defense secretary, against the counsel of his own military commanders.
And starting last summer, Trump began ordering the extrajudicial killing of suspected drug smugglers on open boats in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific by the US military, essentially executing them without even a formal accusation, let alone a trial.
Hill said the US Navy’s sinking of an Iranian frigate after it left a cultural exchange in India, more than a thousand miles from the Persian Gulf, falls into the same category. “Is that not a war crime?” she wondered.
Trump, meanwhile, continues making contradictory claims about the state of things, possibly to calm the global oil market and the domestic stock market. His war, which he originally said would take no more than four or five weeks, is now into its fifth week — yet he continues to say it is well ahead of schedule.
He claims he doesn’t know who in Iran he should be negotiating with because he and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have killed so many of Iran’s leaders while simultaneously asserting that peace negotiations are proceeding well.
As he returned to Washington on Sunday evening after another Florida golf weekend, Trump told reporters that he is actually killing those he is negotiating with. “We’re doing extremely well in that negotiation, but you never know with Iran because we negotiate with them and then we always have to blow them up,” he said.
On Monday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio laid out the objectives for the war: destroying Iran’s air force, navy, missile stockpile and the factories it could use to make more. Notably unmentioned was either its nuclear program or reopening the Strait of Hormuz to unfettered navigation.
That Trump’s own statements are often at odds with those from his top aides or even with self-evident reality is par for the course, said Hill. “He’s negotiating in real time, as he has always done,” she said, adding that his approach to Iran reminds her of the bullying way he has treated Ukraine. “He’s treating the Iranians like the Ukrainians. Unlike the Ukrainians, the Iranians have a hell of a chokehold on the rest of the world.”
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Politics
Iran War: UK Warned It Could Face Energy Crisis Similar to 1970s
The UK could be on the cusp of an energy crisis comparable to the chaos seen in the 1970s, according to a former deputy governor of the Bank of England.
Iran continues to restrict the number of oil tankers which can travel through the major shipping lane, the Strait of Hormuz, in retaliation against the US-Israel strikes from last month.
As the conflict continues, the global economy is facing a period of uncertainty – and energy bills are expected to rise, pushing up the cost of living.
The government is considering supporting some energy bills for targeted households once the current energy price cap lifts in July.
As fears grow over what lies ahead, former deputy governor of the Bank of England, Sir Howard Davies, suggested it was “probably right” to compare the current era to the crises we saw in the 1970s.
World oil prices soared at the time, triggered by the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. The price of an oil barrel then quadrupled in a matter of months.
Arab oil-producing countries only ended their oil embargo against western nations after intense negotiations, though another crisis emerged in 1979 in the wake of the Iranian Revolution.
Davies compared that worldwide energy crisis to the current situation.
“In this case it could well be that supplies from the Middle East are constrained for some time and therefore we may have to live with a higher oil price – perhaps not $150, but certainly higher than $60 it was when we started,” Davies told BBC Radio 4′s Today.
“That requires a plan to increase alternatives and also to reduce consumption because it also looks like we may have a long term reduction in supply.”
Brent crude oil hit $116 per barrel on Monday morning.
Keir Starmer tried to prevent any panic buying from the public when speaking to the media on Monday.
The PM said the advice from the energy sector chiefs is “normal use, no need to do anything other than what’s normal”.
He added: “Obviously, we are bearing down on energy costs. The single most important thing we could do is de-escalate to get the Strait of Hormuz open.
“That’s why I’m putting so much effort into that aspect.”
A Downing Street spokesperson also said: “It’s obviously a serious conflict as the prime minister and the chancellor have said and they’ve been very clear that the impact of disruption to shipping and to the Strait of Hormuz is having an impact here in the UK, and households up and down the UK.”
He said the government’s focus is on working with international partners to de-escalate the situation and reopen the Strait.
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Saturday Night Live UK: Jack Whitehall Confirmed As Latest Celebrity Host
Following the success of the first two episodes, fronted by Tina Fey and Jamie Dornan, the stand-up comic will present the fourth instalment of the live comedy variety show next month.
The Brit Awards host will be joined by Jorja Smith as his musical guest, who’ll be performing two songs over the course of the live broadcast.
Before that, though, Bait actor Riz Ahmed will be presenting episode three this coming weekend, with music from Kasabian.
Once Riz and Jack’s episodes are out of the way, SNL UK will be taking a one-week hiatus, after which it will return for the second half of the season, having recently had its runtime boosted from six instalments to eight.
Lorne Michaels, who created SNL in 1975, is also the UK show’s executive producer, working alongside a team of 20 writers and a resident troupe of 11 comedians, including Taskmaster alum Emma Sidi and Ania Magliano, Black Ops star Hammed Animashaun and TikTok fave Jack Shep.
Politics
Trump gets his way as UK gets more entangled with Iran war
Defence secretary John Healey has announced a major increase in troops and anti-aircraft weaponry to Saudi Arabia. The deployment entangles the UK even more deeply into the Donald Trump/US and Israel-led war. And it presents new targets for Iran.
Trump’s war
The US under Trump and Israel attacked Iran first on 28 February without provocation. Iran was offering unprecedented concessions in negotiations at the time. The Pentagon has since stated there was no imminent threat from Iran. And the UN’s atomic watchdog, the IAEA, has said there is no evidence Iran was developing a nuclear weapon.
The main achievement of the war so far has been to cause a global energy crisis after Iran predictably closed the straits of Hormuz, a vital oil channel.
Healey was visiting Saudi Arabia on 31 March when the announcement was made:
The deployment follows a successful recce by a UK team, and the equipment and teams will deploy this week including radars, control node, and missile launchers and a Royal Artillery battery and battle space managers to operate the system. The system will be integrated into wider Saudi and regional air defences.
The new uplift includes the Sky Sabre air defence system. The press release also confirmed that:
Rapid Sentry – a ground-based air defence missile system – has arrived in Kuwait and the RAF’s ORCUS system is operating in the country, allowing personnel to detect drones early and take action.
Adding:
The system will be integrated into wider Saudi and regional air defences.
The UK’s multirole missile launcher is already in Bahrain.
UK pushes same dubious denials
Healey said:
Iran’s aggressive attacks continue to threaten our allies and interests in the Middle East. That’s why the UK has been flying defensive missions since day one of this conflict to protect British interests and allies – and today we’re delivering further support by extending our UK jets in Qatar and deploying extra air defence teams and systems to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Kuwait.
I am proud of the courage and professionalism our Armed Forces have shown since the start of the war and my message to Gulf partners is: Britain’s best will help you defend your skies. I pay tribute to the heroic efforts of our partners across the Gulf in protecting their nations. We will stand by our long-term partners in the Middle East and continue to push for a swift resolution to this conflict.
The press release repeated the same inaccurate government talking point about the degree of UK involvement which has been pushed since the war began:
The Prime Minister has been clear that the UK will not be drawn into the wider war.
Contrary to Keir Starmer’s claims that the UK role is only defensive, the government has allowed US bombers to use its airbases at home and on the colonised Indian Ocean territory of Diego Garcia. The UK, whatever the government claims, is becoming more deeply entangled in this runaway war.
And regardless of what Keir Starmer and John Healey say, Iran will view new British military assets in the Gulf the same way that it views current ones: as legitimate targets in an existential war for survival.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Trump Says UK Should ‘Just Take’ Oil From Strait Of Hormuz
Donald Trump has called on the UK to “go get your own oil” from the Strait of Hormuz in a new social media post.
The US president has tried and failed to get western allies including the UK to support him in his offensive against Iran.
After the US-Israeli strikes last month, Iran’s forces effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, which transports a fifth of the world’s oil supply.
The subsequent squeeze on fuel has caused a significant economic shock – and Trump has been trying to force Iran to negotiate as the global cost of living rises.
Writing on TruthSocial, he said the UK should either buy jet fuel from the US or “build up some delayed courage, go to the Strait and just TAKE IT”.
He said: “You’ve have to start learning how to fight for yourself, the USA won’t be there to help you anymore, just like you weren’t there for us.”
The UK government has insisted it is not concerned about oil shortages right now though there are worries about an energy crisis later in the year.
Trump’s attack on Britain comes after Keir Starmer refused US requests to use British military bases for premptive strikes on Iran last month, before allowing American troops to use UK sites for “limited and defensive” strikes.
The president also claimed: “Iran has been, essentially, decimated. The hard part is done. Go get your own oil!”
Read Trump’s full TruthSocial post below:
All of those countries that can’t get jet fuel because of the Strait of Hormuz, like the United Kingdom, which refused to get involved in the decapitation of Iran, I have a suggestion for you: Number 1, buy from the U.S., we have plenty, and Number 2, build up some delayed courage, go to the Strait, and just TAKE IT. You’ll have to start learning how to fight for yourself, the U.S.A. won’t be there to help you anymore, just like you weren’t there for us. Iran has been, essentially, decimated. The hard part is done. Go get your own oil! President DJT
The US president also lashed out at France, claiming it will not allow planes headed to Israel, “loaded with military supplies” fly over French land.
“France has been VERY UNHELPFUL with respect to the ‘Butcher of Iran’ who has been successfully eliminated! The USA will REMEMBER!” Trump wrote.
Politics
JP Morgan money strike sees Labour bow down to it
Banking giant JP Morgan has gone on a capital strike (withholding investment). Following this, Labour has been quick to offer an 100% discount on the bank’s business rates, spread out over “a period of years”.
At the same time, doctors have been on a workers’ strike for pay restoration and job security. It appears that, when it comes to workers, Labour suddenly find the will to say no.
The Capital party?
If ‘Labour’ rebranded as ‘Capital’, we probably wouldn’t consider it an April Fool’s Day joke. As well as JP Morgan, pharmaceutical giants have been demanding that the NHS pay them more, or they will withhold investment. Labour agreed to a 25% increase in payments for essential drugs in December 2025.
Meanwhile, resident doctors are asking for real-terms pay restoration to 2008 levels, at 21%. The government is offering a 7.1% increase partly because it disputes the doctors’ use of the Retail Price Index (RPI) to calculate inflation. Apparently, RPI is good enough for calculating increases in student debt, rent and corporate pricing. However, it isn’t sufficient for a doctor’s pay.
Another part of the dispute is specialist doctor posts in the NHS. The government is proposing to increase them from 1,000 to around 4,000. The thing is, the number of specialist applications is projected to exceed 40,000 this year.
Overall, the UK is low on doctors per 1,000 people at 3.2. Some of the highest per capita doctor levels are in Austria (5.48) and Germany (4.53).
48-hour deadline (not for JP Morgan, of course)
Labour has given resident doctors 48 hours to accept the deal. The British Medical Association (BMA) rejected the offer without putting it to a member vote.
The chair of the BMA’s resident doctors committee, Dr Jack Fletcher, has said:
We’ve been willing and have been talking constructively for the last two months and at the very last minute the government has shifted the goalposts of the pay offer. I am very happy and willing to sit down and talk constructively once again.
He further responded to withholding a members vote on the pay and jobs offer:
We discussed this with our committee who are elected to represent our members. Their representatives have considered this offer. We don’t think it goes far enough on pay so we decided not to put this to our members.
While members should decide if they accept the offer, the government goes far too easy on capital like JP Morgan compared to workers. That’s an affront to how the Labour party was founded.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
What Is Gooning? Therapist Explains The New Trend Parents Should Question
Children chat about a lot of pretty odd stuff (remember Ballerina Cappuccina?) – however if you’ve heard them mention ‘gooning’ in conversation with their mates, or during gaming, it’s certainly worth pulling them up on it.
While you might consider ‘gooning’ as messing around or even goofing about (that’s what first came to my mind), per Mashable, it actually means “masturbating for a prolonged period of time, usually hours, without ever climaxing”.
In online spaces, it can also refer to zoning out as a result of intense sexual arousal, which Gabb (a company providing child-safe phones and tech) notes is “most often in the context of pornography”.
The issue is, if tweens and teens are using this terminology, chances are they are coming across pornography or inappropriate content online.
It’s not uncommon – over one-quarter (27%) of kids have come across pornography by age 11, according to a survey by the Children’s Commissioner.
While children shouldn’t be easily coming across porn due to stricter regulation as part of the Online Safety Act, they may still find ways to access it.
When talking about ‘gooning’ is a red flag
If your tween or teen is talking about gooning, even if it’s just joking with friends, it’s definitely worth asking them about it.
If they are getting involved in this activity, Fiona Yassin, a family psychotherapist, told HuffPost UK: “There’s a real neurodevelopmental risk here. During adolescence, the brain is still under construction – very much a work in progress – and when it’s repeatedly flooded with high-intensity sexual content, it drives spikes in dopamine that can create a pathway towards compulsive cycles.
“Over time, young people may need more and more intensity to achieve the same effect, which mirrors the mechanisms we see in other forms of addiction. That’s particularly concerning in a developing brain.”
Yassin, who is the founder and clinical director of The Wave Clinic, also warned that it can impact social development (zoning out in front of a screen might increase isolation, anxiety and low mood) and attachment, particularly as far as sexual relationships are concerned.
“This can disrupt the development of healthy attachment, increasing impulsivity, risk-taking, and a disregard for personal and relational safety,” she explained.
Teens who are exposed to this kind of content can also begin to develop unrealistic expectations of themselves and others, particularly as far as sex and relationships are concerned.
“It can encourage objectification, a sense of disposability in relationships, and a reduced capacity for genuine intimacy – building, sustaining, and nurturing connection,” said Yassin.
Ultimately, she warned, “it can shift how young people see others, which can lead to the oversexualisation of what would otherwise be non-sexual interactions”.
“That has wide-reaching implications for how they relate, connect, and develop into adulthood.”
Talk to your kids if they mention gooning
Some children might use the word without fully understanding where it comes from and the potential impact on others. So, the key here is to be curious about where they’ve heard the term and what they think it means – which can help steer your conversations going forward.
“Rather than reacting with frustration or alarm, the most effective starting point for parents is to stay calm and curious,” said Yassin.
“Parents may ask: ‘What does this word mean to you?’ or ‘What do you think someone else might hear or feel when that word is used?’. Like many aspects of child and adolescent mental health, this situation offers a valuable teaching and learning opportunity.”
If they do know the full meaning, the therapist urges parents to seize the opportunity for age-appropriate honesty. “Teens, in particular, are more likely to engage when they feel respected, rather than lectured,” she added.
“Parents can gently widen the conversation to the bigger picture, which might include the consequences of the word, how pornography can shape expectations, impact mental health, and, in some cases, lead to more compulsive patterns of behaviour.”
Action for Children has a few helpful pointers for talking to kids about porn, but ultimately it advises parents to reassure kids it’s OK to feel curious about sex, while also explaining that “porn is unrealistic” and it “can be harmful for them to watch it”.
Politics
Walking this way could be an early sign of Dementia
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Politics
Prunes: The Dried Fruit That Can Boost Your Health In Older Life
You probably already know that strength training and calcium can help to keep your bones healthy and strong as you age.
But some factors – like getting enough vitamin D, which helps to absorb calcium, and avoiding smoking, which raises your risk of osteoporosis and is linked to a 30-40% higher risk of broken hips – are less obvious.
And in one study, prunes, which are high in anti-inflammatory polyphenols and calcium-balancing vitamin K, appeared to preserve bone density and strength at weight-bearing parts of the hip for post-menopausal women.
What did the research show?
The researchers followed a group of 235 postmenopausal women, who are at greater risk of bone loss, over a year.
They told one group to eat 50g (about five to six prunes) a day during the trial, and another group to eat 100g a day. A third group didn’t eat any prunes at all.
Though both prune levels were beneficial, the first group (50g) were more likely to stick to the habit, which meant they tended to get better results.
Professor Mary Jane De Souza, the study’s lead author, said: “Consuming five to six prunes a day for 12 months resulted in preservation of bone at the hip, a finding that was observable at six months and persisted through month 12.”
Postmenopausal women who didn’t consume any prunes saw a 1.1% bone loss in the same time period, while for those in the study, it stayed the same.
That benefit could lead to fewer bone breaks.
It could have benefits for bone quality, too
The same group of women were part of another study looking at how prunes seemed to affect the structure and estimated strength of their tibia.
“This is the first randomised controlled trial to look at three-dimensional bone outcomes with respect to bone structure, geometry and estimated strength,” Professor De Souza said.
“In our study, we saw that daily prune consumption impacted factors related to fracture risk. That’s clinically invaluable.”
She added that prunes may help to reduce the risk of osteoporosis, but more research is needed.
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