Politics
Politics Home | Former Foreign Office Chief Accuses No 10 Of “Dismissive Approach” To Mandelson’s Vetting

Olly Robbins was appointed as Foreign Office permanent secretary in January 2025 (Alamy)
4 min read
Former Foreign Office permanent secretary Olly Robbins has said No 10 had a “dismissive approach” to Lord Peter Mandelson’s vetting.
Speaking to MPs on Tuesday morning, Robbins said there was “no interest in whether, only interest in when” Mandelson would be appointed to his role.
Robbins was sacked by Prime Minister Keir Starmer last week after The Guardian reported that Mandelson had not cleared the UK Security Vetting (UKSV) procedure for appointment as US ambassador in late January 2025, before starting the role in February 2025.
According to the newspaper, the decision to overrule the UKSV was made by the Foreign Office without the knowledge of Starmer or other senior cabinet ministers.
Speaking to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee on Tuesday morning, Robbins said the UKSV felt the Mandelson case was “borderline” and was “leaning towards recommending that clearance be denied”, but that the Foreign Office deemed the risks manageable.
He sought to stress that Mandelson did not ‘fail’ vetting.
However, in evidence that will likely put more pressure on Starmer’s judgement, Robbins said the Foreign Office had faced “constant pressure” from the No 10 private office to process Mandelson’s appointment as soon as possible, but refused to name any individual officials.
The former Foreign Office chief said that when he started as permanent secretary, there was “already a very, very strong expectation” that Mandelson would be appointed as the UK’s ambassador in Washington and that “he needed to be in post and in America as quickly as humanly possible”.
“He [Mandelson] had been given access to the building,” Robbins said, adding that he had also been given access to “higher classification” briefings before being formally appointed.
He said that the handover briefing he received when he started his role showed a “generally dismissive attitude” to Mandelson’s vetting clearance.
“The focus was on getting Mandelson out to Washington quickly,” he continued.
“Despite an atmosphere of pressure, the department completed developed vetting to the normal, high standard, because the vetting process is not there to determine fitness for office or reputational risk. It’s there to protect national security.”
However, he said it would have been “very difficult indeed” to block Mandelson’s appointment on security grounds once the vetting process had concluded, given it had already been publicly confirmed.
Robbins said the Cabinet Office took the position that it was unnecessary to vet Mandelson at all, but that the Foreign Office insisted and “put its foot down”.
Robbins’ comments come after Starmer telling the Commons on Monday that it “beggars belief” that the Foreign Office withheld information over issues in Mandelson’s vetting and that neither he nor his cabinet were informed prior to Mandelson starting the job.
“That is not how the vast majority of people in this country expect politics, government or accountability to work.”
Starmer’s decision to appoint Mandelson to the role despite being aware of his relationship with paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein has put significant pressure on his leadership.
Mandelson, who was a key figure in the New Labour governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, is currently being investigated by the police over allegations that he leaked confidential government documents to Epstein while in office.
Speaking this morning, Robbins said UKSV’s primary concerns with Mandelson’s appointment did not relate to Epstein.
The former chief civil servant also revealed that he was asked to find an ambassadorship role for former No 10 comms chief Matthew Doyle.
He added that he was asked not to tell Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper about the request, and that he found it uncomfortable.
“It was, to be honest, hard to find something that I thought might be suitable, but I also felt quite uncomfortable about it, and I kept giving advice that I thought this would be very hard for the office, and was hard for me, personally, to defend,” he said.
Doyle, who was appointed as a life peer by Starmer in December, was suspended from Labour’s parliamentary party in February of this year over his past association with a convicted sex offender.
Politics
IMF and World Bank are unfazed by how the US treats Venezuela
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank Group (WBG) have announced they will continue dealing with Venezuela, following the kidnapping of President Nicholas Maduro and the first lady Cilia Flores in January this year.
The United States stopped recognising Maduro as Venezuela’s “legitimate” president in January 2019 and spent years trying to pressure him out of office. The Biden administration held direct talks with Maduro in 2022, and when Maduro resumed negotiations with the opposition, Washington issued a licence allowing Chevron to resume some oil operations in Venezuela.
IMF called the announcement an ‘important step’
Both said that dealings with Venezuela were paused in 2019. The IMF said that this was “due to government recognition issues”. Neither have a problem with the illegal capture of a head of state of course, as long as the US is doing it.
As the hegemon bully, during the Covid pandemic the US blocked Iran, Afghanistan, and Venezuela from receiving emergency loans from the IMF. Now that the US’ claws are deep in Venezuela again — with the US seizing Venezuela’s oil sales, then easing sanctions of Venezuela’s central bank — the IMF and World Bank are back to bless it.
A 2022 US Congress report said that the Maduro government had “shown no interest in working with the IMF on a financial assistance package”.
Maduro was following in Chávez’s footsteps who condemned US-controlled multilateral institutions’ roles in promoting debt and underdevelopment in Global South countries.
Venezuelanalysis wrote:
Under Chávez’s predecessors, Venezuela implemented draconian IMF-conditioned structural adjustment policies that saw over half of Venezuelans living in poverty by 1998.
Board of Peace aka ‘Board of Genocide’
Practices by the IMF and WBG have been condemned widely by the Global South. The recent involvement of the WBG in Trump’s Board of Peace is another example of it being part of the predatory western financial system.
Recently, WBG’s president, Ajay Banga, was told the Board of Peace which he sits on is a “sham” and it was more aptly the “Board of Genocide”.
Pro-Palestinian protester calls out World Bank President Ajay Banga on Gaza peace plan: “You are shaking hands with the devils of genocide, you need to resign…shame on you.” pic.twitter.com/slEouV4MOi
— CSPAN (@cspan) April 7, 2026
Oxfam reported that in 2024, 90% of African countries with IMF and WBG loads had cut spending on essential services to repay debt.
We’re taxing bread… but not wealth ? Make it make sense ! In 2024, 94% of African countries with #IMF and #WorldBank loans cut spending on essential services to repay debt. It’s time to start taxing wealth, not survival. @Oxfam @oxfamkenya #Taxtherich pic.twitter.com/TfVzEVENij
— Oxfam in Africa (@OxfaminAfrica) April 20, 2026
Several empirical studies have shown that IMF loans have increased poverty. The IMF requires countries to implement fiscal austerity as a condition for receiving loans which results in increased poverty.
A study led by Jason Hickel argues that IMF loans are a tool of US-led hegemony. They impose economic conditions when progressive governments “restricted their access to the cheap labour, resources and captive markets”.
This coercion is backed by military coups when necessary. The US toppled Mossadegh in Iran, Lumumba in the Congo, Arbenz in Guatemala, Allende in Chile, and Nkrumah in Ghana, the study names.
Venezuela has suffered both tactics. First came years of sanctions to strangle the government. Then the US illegally captured President Maduro. Now the IMF and World Bank have returned to certify the US takeover.
Featured image via Pixabay/ jeanmanzano
By Nandita Lal
Politics
Watch as Sultana ejected from Commons for telling truth, calling Starmer liar
Coventry South Your Party MP Zarah Sultana has been ejected from the Commons chamber for her – entirely correct – assertion that Keir Starmer is a “bare-faced liar”.
Zarah Sultana booted out by Speaker
Zarah Sultana was referring to Starmer’s evident lies to MPs about his appointment of Peter Mandelson as UK ambassador to the UK (and Starmer’s senior adviser) despite knowing Mandelson had been found unfit for the role.
She made clear as she left Parliament exactly why she had said what she (rightly) said:
View this post on Instagram
Which lie?
But Sultana could just as easily have been talking about Starmer’s leadership election promises, every one of them a lie; his broken general election promises and made-up ‘£20bn black hole’; his lies about the Chagos Islands; his claim that putting bus fares up by 50% was a reduction; his lies about Jeremy Corbyn; his denial that he had said Israel has the right to commit crimes against humanity (just after he said it); his lies about energy bills – and and and.
In fact, you can tell he’s lying at a glance if his lips are moving.
Zarah Sultana’s refusal to slink out in the face of cowardly and Zionist Hoyle’s apoplexy was perfectly correct. Shame on the craven MPs who sided with the bare-faced liar to vote for her removal. Enough of weasel words and ‘parliamentary convention’ that makes calling a bare-faced liar a bare-faced liar a suspension offence.
’50p Lee’ Anderson also accused Starmer of lying. Unlike Sultana, he left without being made to and has little place talking about lying when he’s in Reform UK. But it just goes to show what a horror Starmer is that he gave the awful Anderson look good by comparison.
Featured image via the Canary
By Skwawkbox
Politics
From Das Kapital to Data Capital: AI as a potential new frontier for the exploitation of the working class
The digital revolution was sold to us as a tool for liberation. Instead, it’s becoming the ultimate weapon for boss-class surveillance and the extraction of ‘data capital’.
The relationship between capital and labour has undergone a fundamental shift since Karl Marx put pen to paper for Das Kapital. Marx famously analysed how the ruling class extracts ‘surplus value‘ through wage labour, leaving workers alienated from the very things they produce. In 2026, the battlefield has shifted.
Capitalism no longer just wants your physical strength or your time; it wants your data. Artificial Intelligence (AI), powered by the vast datasets we generate every second, has become the engine of modern production. But AI isn’t just about automating tasks; it is commodifying our very lives to create a new, invisible regime of exploitation.
From the factory floor to the digital stream
Marx’s analysis was rooted in the soot and grime of the factory system. There, mechanisation was used to squeeze every drop of value out of the worker, subordinating human beings to the relentless rhythm of the machine. By the 20th century, Taylor’s ‘scientific management‘ and Ford’s assembly lines had turned human movement into a metric, stripping away worker autonomy in the name of efficiency.
Fast forward to the digital age, and we aren’t just looking at an upgrade; we’re looking at a total transformation. Industrial machines turned labour into mechanical motion, but AI turns labour into data streams.
Data is the new raw material, harvested through the sensors, apps, and platforms that now permeate our daily lives. This extraction doesn’t end when you clock off. It follows you into your social interactions, your shopping habits, and your rest. The line between work and life has been erased. Every click and swipe feeds the predictive models that shape our world, all while the logic of profit remains hidden behind a “neutral” digital interface.
The rise of ‘Algorithmic Taylorism’
In the industrial era, exploitation was easy to spot: long hours, dangerous conditions, and broken bodies. Today, it hides behind the “fetishism of technology.” We are told these systems are “efficient” or “helpful” (which they are), but they are also designed to naturalise surveillance, not merely to improve efficiencies and quality of life.
This is ‘Algorithmic Taylorism.’ In Amazon warehouses and across the gig economy, workers are tracked by devices that set impossible targets and monitor productivity in real-time. Falling short doesn’t just mean a stern word from a foreman; it triggers automated disciplinary actions. Apps like Uber and Deliveroo use opaque algorithms to assign jobs and set prices, leaving workers with zero control and total insecurity.
Even white-collar workers aren’t safe. AI is already gutting routine tasks in accounting and law. While the bosses talk about “upskilling,” the reality for many is increased precarity and the loss of professional dignity.
Can AI work for the people?
It is vital to remember that AI itself isn’t the enemy; the capitalist structures controlling it are. If governed by the people, these tools could be transformative. As with everything, the problem is not inherently in the technology itself but rather in the misuse of these advances by the 1% to further serve their own interests. The material conditions documented throughout the history of capitalism bear witness to this fact.
Predictive maintenance could stop workplace accidents before they happen. Automated scheduling could, in theory, support a genuine work-life balance. Real-time analytics could even be used by workers to expose wage gaps and algorithmic bias.
However, without the redistribution of these productivity gains, “efficiency” is just a polite word for “speed-up.” If the benefits of AI aren’t shared through higher wages and shorter hours, it will only serve to deepen the inequalities Marx warned us about over a century ago.
Time for a digital class struggle
Traditional trade unionism, focused solely on pay and hours, is no longer enough. The unions of the 21st century must become digital insurgents. We need to fight for:
- Data Rights: Workers must own the data they generate
- Algorithmic Transparency: An end to “black box” management; workers have a right to know how they are being evaluated
- Democratic Deployment: Workers must have a veto over how technology is introduced into their workplaces
While the EU’s AI Act offers a starting point, enforcement remains a joke in many parts of the global south. Transnational solidarity is the only way to confront a digital capitalism that knows no borders.
AI will not liberate the working class on its own. Without a radical shift in power and a demand for data justice, it will simply become the most sophisticated tool for control ever devised. The struggle for the means of production has become a struggle for the means of prediction. We must win it.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Tehran warns US and Israel ‘preparing surprise attack’
The Iranian government in Tehran has said that it has intelligence indicating that the US and Israel are preparing a surprise attack as they go through the motions of a ‘temporary ceasefire’ that they have never honoured and supposedly aim to negotiate a permanent truce.
Tehran: US-Israeli attack imminent?
Tehran’s announcement came as US forces attacked, disabled and boarded a civilian Iranian ship in international waters – and flew Trump’s golfing buddies back to Pakistan for supposed further ‘peace talks’. The Iranian government has said that it has “no plans” to engage in any talks as it cannot trust the US or Israel.
Israel has a long track record of murdering or trying to murder peace negotiators. The Pakistani military thwarted a reported Israeli plan to shoot down the Iranian delegation to the previous talks in Pakistan.
Featured image via the Canary
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Miliband distances self from Starmer after disastrous Commons appearance
On 20 April, Keir Starmer stood before parliament and attempted to justify making Peter Mandelson our ambassador to the US. While it was always inexcusable to hire the twice-disgraced Mandelson, the situation has looked even worse recently. As we now all know, Mandelson failed his security vetting but ended up in the position anyway. Starmer wants us to believe he had no idea about the failed vetting, but few do. Now, it looks like his ministers – namely Ed Miliband have begun to accept that the situation is unsalvageable for the PM:
There appears to be something going on this morning. Labour MPs are starting the process of uncircling the wagons. https://t.co/G4Vh43lFtG
— (((Dan Hodges))) (@DPJHodges) April 21, 2026
Terminal mistakes, as Miliband points out
In the clip above, Miliband does not say that he thinks Starmer should go. What he does do is provide next to no defence for the situation that Starmer has created. He also just looks miserable and defeated, adding to the impression that the party is over and it’s time for everyone in the Starmer government to go home.
The clip begins with Sophy Ridge putting the following to Miliband:
SOPHY RIDGE: My argument isn’t that it was rushed [Mandelson’s appointment]. My argument is that Keir Starmer knew this stuff before, right? We knew that Mandelson had been sacked twice. We knew that he had a relationship with a convicted paedophile. We knew that he had a lobbying company with links to Chinese firms, right? We knew this stuff.
ED MILIBAND: So you’re saying he should never have been appointed?
SOPHY RIDGE: Yeah.
ED MILIBAND: And I agree with you.
SOPHY RIDGE: But that’s Keir Starmer’s fault, isn’t it? Not Ollie Robbins’ fault.
ED MILIBAND: Well, yeah, and he said that.
SOPHY RIDGE: But look who’s lost their jobs, right? The chief of staff has lost a job. Olly Robbins has lost his job. The head of the Civil Service has lost his job. The director of communications has lost his job. Should Keir Starmer lose his job? He was the one who made the error, as you admit.
ED MILIBAND: Well, I don’t think so, no. Obviously, I don’t, because I think prime ministers make errors. Prime ministers are fallible. Prime ministers are human.
We’re interjecting here to note that we’ve seen no evidence that Starmer is human. Conversely, we’ve seen a great deal of evidence supporting the fact that he’s fallible.
Miliband continued:
ED MILIBAND: I steered well clear of Peter Mandelson when I became Labour leader in 2010. But people make mistakes. And, you know, the point about mistake is, do you fess up to it and say, ‘yeah, I made an error?’
The issue isn’t that he made a mistake; the issue is that he made the sort of mistake only a highly incompetent person could make.
In other words, he’s not fit to be PM.
Ministers plural
Ridge later asked:
SOPHY RIDGE: What went through your mind when you saw he’d been appointed as US ambassador?
ED MILIBAND: Well, that it could blow up. That it could go wrong.
SOPHY RIDGE: Did you say that to anyone?
ED MILIBAND: I had a conversation with David Lammy about it before the appointment. And I said I was worried about it. I do want to say one thing, though, which is-
SOPHY RIDGE: What did David Lammy say then?
ED MILIBAND: Well, I think he was worried about it, too.
So now we have two ministers who are on the record as having had the foresight which Starmer lacks.
Unless Lammy comes forward to dispute Miliband said, obviously, although we can’t see him doing that at this point.
Clearly, the writing is on the wall.
Familiarity
Miliband also said:
ED MILIBAND: Peter Mandelson was a very familiar figure in the sort of 30-year history of the Labour Party, and it’s almost like that familiarity… It’s almost like his flaws and so on just got almost sort of faded into the background, and that was obviously wrong.
Another way of looking at this is that Peter Mandelson and politicians like him have normalised the Labour Party having zero moral centre.
You could also say this makes the argument for individuals not having political careers which span decades. While it’s true some politicians are still representing their constituencies many years in, other grandees are clearly just settling scores and enriching themselves.
Dead duck – and Miliband is not the only one showing it
Miliband isn’t the only Labour politician putting some distance between himself and Starmer. On Monday 20 April, MPs actually put physical distance between themselves and the PM:
Labour whips have noticed too.
Message sent to MPs: "If any [parliamentary private secretaries] are able to head back to the chamber, benches are looking quite empty." https://t.co/GwD8NfTZuw — Kevin Schofield (@KevinASchofield) April 20, 2026
And the issues go beyond Mandelson too:
Labour MP Sarah Champion tells the Today programme: “I’ll be honest with you, people don’t like Keir on the door. But it’s not about this Mandelson thing, they don’t like him personally.”
— Kevin Schofield (@KevinASchofield) April 21, 2026
Because of his many scandals, Starmer entered the beginning of the end of his career within months of taking office.
We’re now at the end of the end, and after Labour get wiped out in the local elections, the party will soon replace him.
Featured image via Sky News
By Willem Moore
Politics
Senior RCN member accused of racism against Palestinians
A senior member of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) reportedly walked up to a fellow member opposing Israel’s genocide in Gaza and said “all Palestinians are terrorists”. And this instance of vile racism adds to other examples in the RCN of discriminatory attitudes towards people suffering war crimes in occupied Palestine.
Racist member spat bile before ‘walking off smiling’
The Canary spoke to Anna Pichierri, the healthcare worker who was on the receiving end of this disgusting comment. And she shared with us the statement she made to the independent regulator for nursing – the Nursing and Midwifery Council – about the incident.
This states that, at the 2025 RCN Conference, senior union member Karen Lesley Sanders came up to Pichierri – a participant in the Nurses for Palestine group – as she was holding a placard saying ‘Nurses against Genocide’. According to Pichierri, Sanders:
walked over to me and shouted “Nurses against terrorists”
She asked what Sanders meant by that. And Sanders:
said smiling “All Palestinians are terrorists” and as she was walking away I asked to see her name and she proudly held up her lanyard and after saying loud her name she said to me I know you and she then walked off in the building smiling.
Pichierri said this:
hit me very hard. I was in shock, and I was hurt personally and felt pain for others around it. The comments were racist, and this is not something I would expect any nurse to say let alone a senior member of the Royal College of Nursing.
Sanders is a senior lecturer and has had numerous roles within the RCN. These include a role on the union’s Trade Union Committee and even as chair of its “Ethics Forum Steering Committee“. She has also written in several union publications.
The Canary sought comment from Sanders, but had received no response by the time of publication. RCN London, meanwhile, declined to comment on the incident.
The day before, meanwhile…
That wasn’t the only concerning event at the 2025 congress, though. Because the day before, Pichierri told us:
There was a sign painting studio and the artist in charge was very supportive of the Palestinian cause and let a few of us start to write placards on the genocide. Definitely that was not what the congress leadership wanted.
She later joined a short march inside the conference hall, holding one ‘nurses against the genocide’ placard herself and handing over two more to other people. But this behaviour seemed to rattle some senior members. Because as Pichierri said:
At some point the chair of the congress quickly walked up to me and literally snatched the placard from my hand, quickly moving up the podium
RCN and Palestine
The RCN also displayed hypocrisy by donating money to Ukraine while failing to do the same for Palestine.
As the Canary reported previously, Nurses for Palestine have co-produced a report accusing the union of investing in companies complicit with Israel’s genocide, occupation and apartheid. This would be a breach of its own ethical and professional codes of conduct.
The RCN has insisted that it doesn’t invest directly in arms companies or firms committing “ethically unacceptable” acts. It has also expressed ‘grave concern’ about Israel’s systematic destruction of Gaza’s healthcare system.
Nurses for Palestine would like to see the union express similar concern about the vile anti-Palestinian racism at the 2025 congress. Because it should have no place in any trade union, let alone one that is fully aware of the genocidal devastation Israel’s war criminal leaders have submitted Palestinians to in the last three years.
Featured image via the Canary
By Ed Sykes
Politics
US veterans occupy Congress building in protest over Gaza/Iran
Over 120 former US military personnel have occupied the Cannon House Office Building of the US Congress, in a demonstration against Israel’s genocide in Gaza and its joint war with the US on Iran.
US veterans take action
The US Veterans against Genocide group, some of them holding folded US flags signifying fallen comrades or loved ones and others wearing keffiyehs, stood silently:
View this post on Instagram
Yet despite the protest being peaceful, authorities came in and began arresting them:
The building, often referred to as the ‘Old House Office Building’, is the oldest office in the congressional complex and links by tunnel to the Capitol.
In September 2025, five US Veterans against Genocide members were jailed after blocking a key road outside a US military base. Others have resigned reserve posts in protest against the genocide and, more recently, the illegal US-Israel attacks on Iran. The group demands the end of all arms shipments to the genocidal colony:
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Farage complains his candidates face racist abuse
Nigel Farage has run multiple political parties which have sought to demonise migrants. This began with UKIP, which was followed by the Brexit Party, which morphed into Reform UK.
Said parties have generally focussed on recent and first generation migrants, whether it was the Polish EU workers demonised by UKIP, or the refugees hounded by Reform UK. Farage himself would tell you he doesn’t have a problem with people of other ethnicities or cultures; his problem is with Britain losing its character (a character he refuses to acknowledge has never been static, and has notably been shaped by constant migratory influxes from the Romans onwards).
In politics, a ‘dog whistle’ is when a politician says one thing understanding their supporters will hear something else. In his case, Farage talks about ‘immigrants’ but his supporters think ‘Muslims’ or ‘Blacks’.
The problem for Farage is that he wants to replace the Tories as the ‘big tent’ party of the British right; i.e. he wants to appeal to both diehard racists and liberal conservatives (with the latter being people who are racist in many senses, but aren’t solely driven by hatred).
This is why we’re now seeing confusing stuff like the following:
NEW: Nigel Farage says X is now becoming “a very unpleasant place” due to a rise racist accounts and content
Reform leader says that many of his ethnic minority candidates are experiencing huge levels of abuse
— Noa Hoffman (@hoffman_noa) April 20, 2026
It’s also why we now have political parties to Farage’s right which are more clearly following through on Reform’s racist dog whistles.
A very dangerous place
Farage made his comments at a press conference on Monday 20 April:
The online abuse on X that our minority candidates are receiving is utterly appalling in every way.
If it was happening to any other candidates from more established parties in the sense of their age, you would all be in total uproar
The problem with this is that minority candidates from the established parties have faced racist abuse on X/Twitter for years. Further to this, many of them have experienced racist abuse from people who identified themselves as Reform supporters (many of whom have moved on to support Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain).
Farage added:
It really, really is bad.
X is now becoming a very unpleasant, very dangerous place.
As people have noted, Farage has brought this on himself (or, to be specific, he’s brought it on his candidates):
“Becoming”.
Reform UK’s refusal to counter its own supporters hate and racism is a huge part of the problem that’s existed for years. pic.twitter.com/qBSyWYlbug
— Reform Party UK Exposed
(@reformexposed) April 21, 2026
Patterns with Farage and Reform
To be clear, it’s not just first generation migrants who Farage attacks. Recently, he lost his mind because British Muslims were being visibly Muslim in Britain:
What we witnessed in London at the historic Trafalgar Square, in a country built on Judeo-Christian values, was a group of people attempting dominance over our capital city and our culture.
We are not going to surrender everything that was built over centuries and defended at… pic.twitter.com/LcHx0ut1xo
— Nigel Farage MP (@Nigel_Farage) March 19, 2026
In other words, the racists who supported Reform weren’t wrong to think he agreed with them. And it was predictable that they would feel personally betrayed when he began promoting candidates who weren’t white Brits like themselves.
Another recent example of this was when Reform backed Laila Cunningham as their candidate to become the next mayor of London. As we reported at the time:
Recently, nearly three dozen people from Nigel Farage’s past came forwards to allege that he was a strident, Nazi-style racist as a younger man. Farage alternated between denying the comments, claiming he didn’t mean them in a bad way, and then denying them again. As we covered, an insider claimed Farage wouldn’t admit to or apologise for the racism because he’d be telling his supporters ‘you’re all guilty too‘. Now, he’s doing just that.
Specifically, Farage is calling out the racists who are abusing Reform UK’s Muslim mayoral candidate. The problem is that many of these people are the party’s ideological bedfellows, including a founder of the Brexit Party:
I will never vote for her for : she is not English and she is a Muslim. https://t.co/9IShOHTshY
— Catherine Blaiklock (@blaiklockBP) January 7, 2026
This was the moment when many Reform supporters became publicly hostile towards Farage.
Contradictions
For years, the Tories held together an alliance which included both ardent racists and liberal conservatives. Now, that base has split in two, with the majority of the diehard racists in Reform, and the majority of the One Nation Conservatives staying put:
— Seats — Poll: @OpiniumResearch, 15-17 Apr (+/- vs 20 Mar) pic.twitter.com/uQyb0DPblv
— Stats for Lefties
POLL | Reform lead by 4pts
Ref: 26% (-1)
Lab: 22% (+1)
Con: 17% (=)
Grn: 15% (=)
Lib: 11% (-1)
Ref: 288
Lab: 124
Lib: 76
SNP: 47
Grn: 44
Con: 36
Plaid: 10

(@LeftieStats) April 18, 2026
Farage clearly wants to rebuild that alliance, but he risks splitting his own vote, with Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain Party sweeping up the voters who want to go all the way.
The troubling thing is that regardless of where these voters end up, there’s clearly an appetite for far-right politics.
This is why we need politicians who can clearly show what’s actually making us all poor – namely the widening gap between everyday people and the billionaire class which is absorbing more and more of this country’s wealth.
.@faizashaheen: "I support the Greens.. everyone sees the rot in the political system, typified by Mandelson.. no politician is delivering for people.. lots of people are turning to the Greens.. we want to live in a country where we care for each other, where change does happen" pic.twitter.com/ECXSwZKkOC
— Saul Staniforth (@SaulStaniforth) April 19, 2026
Featured image via Canva
By Willem Moore
Politics
US contractor modified UK Gaza spy planes flown from Cyprus base, documents show
A US security contractor modified UK-operated spy planes before they began flying over Gaza from Royal Air Force (RAF) facilities in Cyprus. The modifications included surveillance and air traffic control technology. The UK has previously claimed the flights were to support hostage rescue.
Cyprus air base in the spotlight again
Zeteo found documents confirming the modifications made by the US-based Sierra Nevada Corporation through a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to the US Federal Aviation Authority (FAA).
"UK surveillance flights over Gaza were conducted with more US involvement than previously known."@jason_paladino and @tobyburns1 reveal UK missions over Gaza used US contractor spy planes equipped with military tracking and surveillance tech. pic.twitter.com/wbDE0pNiKv
— Zeteo (@zeteo_news) April 19, 2026
As Zeteo reported on 19 April:
Lawmakers in the UK, UN officials, and human rights attorneys have expressed concerns that the intelligence could have been used by Israel for its military operations in Gaza, which have resulted in tens of thousands of civilian deaths and have been classified as genocide by both a United Nations investigative panel and a leading association of genocide scholars.
The presence of UK-run spy flights from Cyprus became known by accident after a pilot apparently failed to turn off his transponder meaning the aircraft could be tracked on air traffic platforms:
On 28 July 2025:
A pilot employed by the Nevada-based defense contractor Sierra Nevada Corporation seemingly forgot to disable a device that broadcasts flight details live during a surveillance flight over central Gaza, as first reported by Palestine Deep Dive (PDD).
That error led to it being:
revealed that the plane, a highly modified Hawker Beechcraft Super King Air 350ER, circled for hours over central Gaza on the same day that multiple Israeli airstrikes killed at least 23 Palestinians in the same area, including women and children. The aircraft watched Gaza from above, using the callsign “CROOK12.”
It was then found by our friends at Declassified UK that:
another aircraft, owned by the same company, had also flown surveillance missions over Gaza months earlier.
That plane went by the callsign Crook 11.
Zeteo said both ‘Crook’ aircraft:
are owned by Straight Flight Nevada Commercial Leasing LLC, a Nevada-based corporation, according to the FAA registration documents.
Military contractor Sierra Nevada Corporation owns Straight Flight.
Crook 11 over Gaza
Zeteo found FAA documents showing the plane was fitted with a multi-platform anti-jam GPS navigation antenna (MAGNA) system. US defence firm Mayflower Communications says MAGNA-F is the:
latest federated and affordable GPS Anti-Jam solution.
Declassified reported on 12 August 2025 that in late 2024:
two surveillance aircraft operating from RAF Akrotiri, Britain’s military base on Cyprus, circled close to or over Gaza.
The aircraft, one of which was Crook 11, “circled over Nuseirat refugee camp”. Hours later:
On the evening of 12 December 2024, Israel bombed the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza without warning.
Declassified said:
More than 30 Palestinians were killed and over 50 wounded. Entire families died, their names posted online within minutes.
Active British involvement in Israel’s genocide in Gaza has endured under a veil of state secrecy. Yet bit by bit a fuller picture of the UK is emerging. That picture isn’t simply one of complicity. It is one of active support for what looks like the crime of the century so far.
Featured image via the Canary
By Joe Glenton
Politics
Tottenham Hotspur fights for survival
Tottenham Hotspur has spent years acting like they were too strong and too well run to ever be pulled into a relegation fight. Yet, with five games left in the 2025–26 Premier League season, Spurs are in the bottom three, win-less in 2026, and suddenly living week to week.
Sky Sports summed up the headline stat: Spurs are “the Premier League’s only side yet to win in 2026,” a run that has turned from bad form into a full-blown emergency.
Tottenham coach De Zerbi arrives with an urgent message
Roberto De Zerbi has walked into a crisis after his side took the lead twice against Brighton but failed to win. The coach didn’t dress it up.
He told Sky Sports:
We have to be stronger than this result, we have to move on and prepare the next game against Wolverhampton and to try to win the game.
That is not the tone of a coach planning calmly for next season. It is the tone of someone trying to stop the damage before it becomes permanent.
How Spurs got here: ‘catastrophic decisions’
This drop toward danger did not start with De Zerbi. It is the result of months of instability and key calls that have gone wrong.
The Independent said Spurs are “staring into the abyss” after “catastrophic decisions” turned a season that was meant to push forward into one sliding fast in the wrong direction.
The Tudor Interlude made it worse, not better
Thomas Frank’s early optimism faded and his dismissal was sold as a reset. Instead, it exposed bigger problems above the pitch. Igor Tudor came in with a “firefighter” reputation but lasted only 44 days.
Former footballer Tim Sherwood’s description of Tudor’s exit captured the mood around the club, saying he was removed after the Premier League “smacked him in the mouth”.
Home comforts have disappeared
The Spurs’ squad now looks fragile. Injuries have piled up, confidence has drained away, and even their home form — normally a safety net — has collapsed.
The Independent noted that Spurs’ only home league win in their first four matches came against Burnley, and that the decline accelerated after that. The same report recalled how Frank’s call for fans to “get behind us” before Chelsea ended badly, with the performance labelled one of the worst of the season.
Fans have had enough of false dawns
Spurs supporters have seen rocky spells before, but this one feels different because the club’s identity has faded. Even the style that once made Tottenham easy to admire has been replaced by nervous football and weekly damage control.
The Guardian’s Barney Ronay described Spurs as “hollow, confused and in deep trouble”. He points to mismanagement and a run of “stupid” decisions that left the club exposed when it could least afford it.
Five matches to save the season and the club’s status
Spurs are two points from safety with five matches left. That is close enough to escape, but also close enough for one more bad run to finish them.
Relegation would hit on every level: money, reputation, and the ability to keep top players. The New York Times’ Athletic has reported on the potential “cost of relegation”, including wage cuts, sponsorship renegotiations, and the risk of losing key players for reduced fees.
But none of that matters if Spurs do not do the basic thing first: win enough games to stay up.
The clock is ticking
Tottenham still have enough talent to survive. They also have a manager speaking like someone who understands exactly what this fight requires. What they do not have is time.
Five games remain for Spurs to change the story. If they do not, the club that spent years insisting it belonged with the elite may end up where it has tried hardest not to look: the Championship.
Featured image via Manchester City FC
By Faz Ali
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