Politics
Sky accused of vile attack on anti-Zionist Jews
Sky News has run a frankly deranged — and antisemitic — article that attempts to demonise Brighton’s anti-genocide activists. To the educated eye, it reads like an extract from an Israel lobby playbook. This should perhaps not surprise. Antisemitism is rife in the British media — just not in the way audiences are routinely told to expect.
The article features a seven-minute video that Sky also shared on its social media. The video barely bothers even to ‘both-sides’ the issue. It gives no more than a cursory nod to the idea that activists asking Brighton households to boycott Israeli products might not be antisemitic. Then it goes on to showcase, at length, the ‘fears’ — its interviewees seem anything but afraid, of course — of ‘the Jewish community’ at these supposedly terrifying young people and their clipboards:
Sky’s @LisaAtSky reports from Brighton, where volunteers are going door-to-door asking people to boycott Israeli products.
Brighton’s Jewish community fear the actions of these volunteers could encourage antisemitism.
🔗 Read more: https://t.co/jcyx0X231K pic.twitter.com/p0aDFHZSaY
— Sky News (@SkyNews) February 11, 2026
Zionism is antisemitism?
And it is absolutely shameless about pushing the claims of a string of Israel advocates that anti-Zionism is antisemitism. This is widely pushed in and by ‘mainstream’ media. It is also a fundamentally antisemitic claim: it posits that being Jewish automatically means supporting the horrific crimes of a racist, apartheid colony. It is also fundamentally dishonest: Jews who oppose Israel’s crimes are front and centre of anti-genocide and anti-Zionist protests. So much so that the ‘mainstream’ media airbrush them out as their presence undermines the proposition that all Jews support Israel and therefore opposing Israel is antisemitic.
Which is exactly the claim that Sky is amplifying, of course. To do so, it showcases a string of some of British Zionism’s most notorious.
Fiona Sharpe, for example. Sharpe is given ample space to claim, without challenge, that many Jews are afraid to wear their ‘star of David’ and that antisemitism is everywhere:
She says: “I think there is an underlying feeling that this country and this city [Brighton] is dealing with an underlying sense of antisemitism and mistrust unlike anything I have ever experienced.
“I think increasingly we see Jewish communities and individual Jews almost forced to take what I call purity pledges – to say ‘yes I’m Jewish, but I don’t support the state of Israel, the situation in Gaza or whatever’.
“I’m a British Jew. I don’t need to justify my existence and my place in my city to anybody.”
‘No part of society not scarred by antisemitism’
Fiona says she feels antisemitism is cutting through “all segments” and “all classes” of British society.
She says: “There is no part of British society that is not marred and scarred by antisemitism.”
‘Antisemitism’ — but not really
Antisemitism in the UK has been directly equated with opposition to Israel’s genocide in the mainstream media — never called that in the statistics, of course. The latest ‘antisemitism’ statistics page of Israel-funded lobby group ‘Community Security Trust’ (CST) mentions Israel no fewer than 130 times. The page admits that more than half of the incidents it counts as antisemitic are in fact to do with Israel.
It also inadvertently makes clear that many ‘antisemitic’ incidents are directly addressing the political ideology of Zionism — a racist belief that land, that has people of multiple different religions living on, belongs only to Jews. This in turn makes way for apartheid, ethnic cleansing and genocide. For example, an image of an ‘antisemitic’ incident shows graffiti on a toilet door stating that:
Zionists are child killers.
The text does not say “Jews are child killers”. If it did, it would be antisemitic and a lie. So many Jews are horrified by Israel’s crimes and so many oppose them. But Zionists in Israel have slaughtered hundreds of thousands of Palestinian children since October 2023 and are still bombing and starving them. Zionists outside Israel support the slaughter and demand silence on Israel’s crimes.
Let’s get a couple of things straight:
Most Zionists are not Jews. Many Jews are not Zionists. Not just that, many Zionists are antisemitic.
Judaism is around 3500-4000 years old. Zionism is roughly 130 years old. The state of Israel is 78.
These are facts. Facts cannot be antisemitic.
Of course, these factual distinctions don’t fit into the establishment narrative, so the ‘MSM’ ignore them. So does Sky’s article.
Vexatious and failed
Sky also fails to mention that Fiona Sharpe was in the news recently, though nowhere near as widely as she should. Humiliatingly and damningly so — for her and for the Israel lobby. Sharpe was at the centre of a lobby attempt to criminalise Brighton author Greg Hadfield that crashed and burned in January 2026. Hadfield was accused of malicious communications after Sharpe complained that he had posted a screenshot of a tweet that exposed local Zionist and alleged paedophile Ivor Caplin. After his acquittal, Hadfield told Skwawkbox that his acquittal was:
a victory for all journalists and everyone who believes in free speech. It is a defeat for Zionist extremists like Fiona Sharpe, who has embedded herself in the criminal justice system and the local media in Brighton and Hove. It is a defeat for Peter Kyle and the Labour Party who knew for a long time about Ivor Caplin’s ‘likes’ and likes. They said nothing and did nothing. Neither before nor after Caplin was arrested for allegedly sexually communicating with a child.
The Brighton Israel lobby is no stranger to malicious prosecutions. Heidi Bachram, another Brighton Zionist — one of the non-Jewish ones — teamed up with another lobby group, the ‘CAA’, to try to prosecute comedian Reginald D Hunter. Sharpe and CAA accused Hunter of antisemitic abuse — an attempt to ruin him. It didn’t go well for the lobbyists.
The judge in the case threw it out as malicious and vexatious, after CAA deliberately withheld evidence that exonerated Hunter, including lengthy tirades Bachram poured on her victims. So incensed was the judge at the blatantly political lawfare attempt that he didn’t just throw the case out. He ordered that in any future such cases, CAA must attach a copy of his judgment to their submissions to ensure that the court and everyone involved knows how dishonestly it acted.
In his withering remarks, judge Michael Snow said that:
[CAA] did not reveal the extent of her tweets directed against Reginald Hunter in the period immediately preceding the complaints (her tweets were sent between 15 August and 11 September 2024).
The summary misled me into believing that his comments were addressed to her involvement with the Jewish faith as opposed to his response to attempts that were being made to have him ‘cancelled’…
…Ruling
20. I am quite satisfied that the failure to disclose the matters record at paragraphs 19a) to p) above were intentional. If I had been aware of those matters, I would have refused to issue a summons as I would have found the application to be vexatious.
21 . The CAA have demonstrated by the misleading and partial way in which it summarised its’ application and its’ wilful, repealed, failure to meet its’ disclosure obligations, that its’ true and sole motive in seeking to prosecute RH is to have him cancelled. I have no doubt that the prosecution is abusive…
22…However, my view of the conduct of the CAA is consistent with them as an organisation which is not “playing it straight but is seeking to use the criminal justice system, in this case for improper reasons.
23. I direct that a copy of this judgement must be disclosed by the CAA and attached by it, in all future applications.
24. I quash the summons.
‘I love you IDF guys’
Unsurprisingly, Sky didn’t mention any of this either, despite its relevance and locality to its topic. Nor did it mention that Vicky Bhogal, its first interviewee, has donated to a crowdfunder for the genocidal occupation military because, in her own words:
I love you guys and what you’re doing.
Watermelon smugger
Sky also interviewed Josh Breslaw, drummer with British-Israeli band Oi Va Voi. Breslaw was allowed to drone about the ‘antisemitic’ injustice of having a gig cancelled in 2025, supposedly because the band wouldn’t sign a promise not to be ‘political’.
Breslaw omitted to mention — and Sky didn’t bother to point out — that the Oi Va Voi gig was cancelled because its Israeli lead singer Zohara Niddam had just released a solo album, in the middle of the Gaza genocide, whose cover art showed a naked Niddam taking watermelons away from a watermelon field in a wheelbarrow:

The pearl-clutching, Israel-fanatic and deeply-dishonest Jewish Chronicle demanded to know:
If a non-Israeli artist featured watermelons on an album artwork, would their gig be banned?
Well, that would depend whether the non-Israeli artist’s nation had slaughtered hundreds of thousands of people identified with watermelons as a symbol of their resistance and self-determination, wouldn’t it.
Watermelons have become internationally recognised during the genocide as a national symbol of Palestine and Palestinian identity. During the genocide, Israel has poisoned or destroyed more than 98% of Gaza’s agricultural land. Outraged humanitarians had demanded that the Bristol venue cancel the event. It later caved to the faux outrage of the Israel lobby and apologised.
And of course, it didn’t take long before the wider ethno-supremacist mouthpieces got their own shots in at the Brighton humanitarians. Like the unhinged Murdoch hack Melanie Phillips. Phillips has gone on record to say that anti-Zionist Jews are a threat to the Jewish people. So it’s no surprise she had to stick her oar in, again amplifying the antisemitic proposition that Jewish people are inseparable from her racist political ideology:
Every. Damned. Time.
Sky barely bothered to even gesture at veiling its hit-piece as anything else. The UK ‘mainstream’ media rely on their viewers being too uninformed to spot their lies and misdirections and too busy to investigate.
But scratch the surface and the lies, misdirections and omissions quickly come tumbling out. Especially when the subject is anything to do with the genocidal colony or those who resist it.
Every. Damned. Time.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Walking this way could be an early sign of Dementia
!function(n){if(!window.cnx){window.cnx={},window.cnx.cmd=[];var t=n.createElement(‘iframe’);t.display=’none’,t.onload=function(){var n=t.contentWindow.document,c=n.createElement(‘script’);c.src=”//cd.connatix.com/connatix.player.js”,c.setAttribute(‘async’,’1′),c.setAttribute(‘type’,’text/javascript’),n.body.appendChild(c)},n.head.appendChild(t)}}(document);(new Image()).src=”https://capi.connatix.com/tr/si?token=19654b65-409c-4b38-90db-80cbdea02cf4″;cnx.cmd.push(function(){cnx({“playerId”:”19654b65-409c-4b38-90db-80cbdea02cf4″,”mediaId”:”d0c0715d-b6f4-4c5b-a7be-52b728918d0f”}).render(“69cbbadce4b010178ee70322”);});
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.
Politics
Hegseth: Iran "Regime Change Has Occurred"
!function(n){if(!window.cnx){window.cnx={},window.cnx.cmd=[];var t=n.createElement(‘iframe’);t.display=’none’,t.onload=function(){var n=t.contentWindow.document,c=n.createElement(‘script’);c.src=”//cd.connatix.com/connatix.player.js”,c.setAttribute(‘async’,’1′),c.setAttribute(‘type’,’text/javascript’),n.body.appendChild(c)},n.head.appendChild(t)}}(document);(new Image()).src=”https://capi.connatix.com/tr/si?token=19654b65-409c-4b38-90db-80cbdea02cf4″;cnx.cmd.push(function(){cnx({“playerId”:”19654b65-409c-4b38-90db-80cbdea02cf4″,”mediaId”:”52ca7643-7998-446c-a20e-9db25b6fd9b7″}).render(“69cbd726e4b039d10fc6df5a”);});
Politics
MP Critical Of Jury Trial Reforms Has Labour Whip Suspended
Labour MP Karl Turner has had the party whip suspended after rebelling against the government over its plans to scrap most jury trials.
It is understood the MP for Kingston upon Hull East was informed by the chief whip Jonathan Reynolds today that he had the whip suspended following his recent conduct.
This decision will be reviewed at a later date, HuffPost UK understands.
However the MP has suggested he was not told of the party’s decision before the media announced it.
Turner wrote on X: “I am being told that I have had the whip suspended but I have not had any notification from the whips about this. It seems journalists have been told but I have not.”
He issued a full statement hours later, saying he was “disappointed” to be suspended without prior verbal communication.
Ministers have been pushing to end jury trials in cases that carry a likely sentence of less than three years, which would instead be heard in front of a lone judge.
The government argues that this is needed to clear the huge backlog of cases within the system, but critics like Turner say jury trials are a fundamental right.
Turner also told HuffPost UK less than a fortnight ago that a “revolt” by the Parliamentary Labour Party is just weeks away unless Starmer turns around the government’s fortunes ahead of the May elections.
He voiced his support for former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner after she warned the government was “running out of time” to deliver the change voters were promised.
The MP said: “It is refreshing to see a senior Labour politician come out and speak clearly to the situation we find ourselves in.”
He claimed there is “a great deal of discontent on the Labour benches”.
Turner said he still supports the prime minister’s leadership but urged him to up his game as Labour trails in the polls.
And he said the elections for the Scottish Parliament, Welsh Senedd and English councils on May 7 were D-Day for his premiership.
He said: “The PM needs to listen hard to what his PLP are saying. We cannot be treated with contempt.”
Meanwhile the Guardian reported that Turner’s suspension was related to an interview the MP gave to Jody McIntyre, a campaign who previously stood at the 2024 elections against Labour’s Jess Phillips.
Politics
Hegseth Open To Boots On The Ground
!function(n){if(!window.cnx){window.cnx={},window.cnx.cmd=[];var t=n.createElement(‘iframe’);t.display=’none’,t.onload=function(){var n=t.contentWindow.document,c=n.createElement(‘script’);c.src=”//cd.connatix.com/connatix.player.js”,c.setAttribute(‘async’,’1′),c.setAttribute(‘type’,’text/javascript’),n.body.appendChild(c)},n.head.appendChild(t)}}(document);(new Image()).src=”https://capi.connatix.com/tr/si?token=19654b65-409c-4b38-90db-80cbdea02cf4″;cnx.cmd.push(function(){cnx({“playerId”:”19654b65-409c-4b38-90db-80cbdea02cf4″,”mediaId”:”2d686915-cc19-4a2a-8708-d3aeb1a20580″}).render(“69cbd725e4b0bb388b875d05”);});
Politics
Prevent now being used by mental health staff for kids
A government report has raised concerns about people being referred to the ‘Prevent’ counter-terrorism program, not because of genuine concerns about radicalisation, but to speed up access to the UK’s crumbling mental health services.
However, given the biases and bigotries rife in both the program and mental health services themselves, this tactic is likely to be extremely risky for any Muslim, Black, and Brown people it affects.
‘Badly twisted approach’ ends up with Prevent
Whilst the government’s report was internal and never intended for public scrutiny, the Financial Times stated that it has seen the document. It was submitted in evidence for an inquiry into teenager Axel Rudakubana’s murder of three children in Southport in 2024.
However, the Financial Times doesn’t go far enough in its article.
We’ve known for a long time now about the use of health professionals to surveil patients for Prevent. We know Prevent has a massive bias against Muslim, Black, and Brown people. And, of course, we know mental health services themselves have a bias against Black and Brown individuals and Muslims.
As such, this referral tactic is likely to have severe consequences for many of the people it was ostensibly intended to help. As highlighted by Sarah St Vincent of campaign group Rights and Security International, health professionals are:
so desperate to get help for their patients that they’re referring them to a secretive policing programme that could impact them for the rest of their lives.
If that’s not a sign of a badly twisted approach in Westminster to people’s welfare, I don’t know what is.
Crumbling system
This desperation, if not the approach, is fully understandable. The waiting list for mental health services in England includes more than half a million young people. According to the Royal College of Psychiatrists, over half of them have been waiting over a year. For over a third, the wait has lasted two years or more.
For childhood autism diagnoses alone, NHS data places the median waiting time as 19 months. However, guidance states that people who are referred to mental health services through Prevent should be seen within a week.
Psychologists working within counter-terrorism programs like Prevent have previously suggested that autistic people make up around 13% of their caseloads. For comparison, autistic people make up around 1% of the population.
The leaked Home Office report states that:
sometimes practitioners made referrals to Prevent to try to expedite mental health and neurodiversity support and diagnosis.
Similarly, it also claimed that evidence suggests:
that the limited capacity of mental health resources has a notable impact on Prevent thresholds. Separately, waiting lists for neurodivergence assessments reportedly impact the support available to them.
Racism within mental health support
However, once referred to Prevent – with its accompanying stigma – outcomes are likely to be far from positive for Muslim or Black and Brown people.
Prevent itself is well-known for disregarding the mental health needs of the individuals referred to it. Research from health work campaign group Medact highlighted the intertwined biases of Prevent and mental health ‘support’:
Racism is highly significant to both mental health and policing, especially ‘pre-crime’ areas such as Prevent, and the hubs stand at the intersection of these two fields.
A racialised Muslim is at least 23 times more likely to be referred to a mental health hub for ‘Islamism’ than a white British individual is for ‘Far Right extremism’
Likewise, with regard to combined policing/mental health ‘support hubs’, Medact highlighted the reciprocity between the two sectors:
A high proportion of patients referred to each hub were already in contact with NHS mental health services and many were actually referred into Prevent from the health sector, underlining the circularity and duplication the
hubs create
Even regardless of the Prevent element, racist treatment is rife within mental health and neurodiversity services themselves. For example, Black children face 3-year delays for autism diagnoses.
Black people are also four times more likely to be restrained or sectioned by mental health services than their white counterparts, and are more likely to be diagnosed with schizophrenia.
The disconnect
A Home Office spokesperson told the Financial Times that there was no link between radicalisation and neurodivergence or mental health needs. They stated that:
We understand that people referred to Prevent may have a range of vulnerabilities, and we take our safeguarding responsibilities extremely seriously. That is why we continue to strengthen Prevent’s approach to mental health and neurodiversity.
However, this somebody apparently forget to tell Prevent itself. 2025 Prevent Duty guidance from Ofsted states that:
Children and young people with Autism are at increased risk of being susceptible to extremism. This is because they are more likely to develop special interests. […C]hildren with autism are more likely to experience social isolation and so use the internet to find friends. They trust the information they read and the “friends” that they find online and so can be drawn into extremism.
Lasting consequences of Prevent referrals
The massive underfunding of mental health support by the UK government is making some health workers reliant on Prevent as a workaround for referral and diagnosis.
However, contact with Prevent can have a lasting impact and stigma attached to it – particularly for Muslims and Black and Brown individuals. Research, like Medact’s landmark study, has shown the level of reciprocity within mental health ‘care’ and Prevent – with both serving to create a web of surveillance.
Meanwhile, neurodivergence is being targeted by Prevent as a cause and indicator of radicalisation. Making Prevent referals in order to expedite diagnosis can only serve to entrench this view.
Whatever the intentions of the clinicians passing kids off to Prevent, their actions could have severe and lasting consequences for the vulnerable children they purport to protect.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
London’s West End Elphaba Talks All Things Wicked
We got green-ified with Wicked West End Elphaba, Emma Kingston, and Head of Wigs, Heather-Jay Ross! Join us as we chat about London’s ever-Popular stage production of Wicked, including everything from what it’s like being painted green, to how it feels performing Defying Gravity every night.
Politics
Trump has lost the Iran war and we need keep pointing it out
US president Donald Trump doesn’t appear to have any idea what he is doing over the Iran war. Trump has claimed victory several times, while also pledging to keep bombing. He’s told reporters that the war will end with or without a deal now.
Trump cannot tell the truth that this war is lost. The US has been humiliated. Pointing this out must be at the centre of any anti-war politics going forward.
Trump is finished
The Financial Times reported on 31 March that Trump told journalists:
We’ll leave whether we have a deal or not. It’s irrelevant.
The US 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 Iranian government remains intact after over a month of intensive US and Israeli attacks. The US-Israeli attack’s main achievement seems to be a global energy crisis after Iran predictably closed the straits of Hormuz, a vital oil channel.
The FT also reported on 31 March that Trump indicated he wanted to:
knock out every single thing there.
Adding:
They don’t have to make a deal with me when we feel that they are . . . put into the Stone Ages” without being able to “come up with a nuclear weapon”.
Despite this erratic and belligerent rhetoric, there’s a strong sense that the war is lost in everything but name.
It’s over
Author and journalist Spencer Ackerman wrote on 31 March:
IT’S WEEK FIVE of the Iran War—past the point Donald Trump initially forecasted it would be over—and the Trump administration has a new line: The Strait of Hormuz doesn’t matter.
He referred to an interview on 30 March in which secretary of state Marco Rubio tried vaguely to save face for the US. Rubio did this by, among other things, trying to:
convince an audience that the aims of the war were limited, achievable and consistent.
Ackerman went on:
Here we have the foreign minister of a belligerent power—the regnant superpower, no less—insisting that if the U.S. ceases fighting with the Strait of Hormuz closed, it’s still victory by the original terms the U.S. set out, no matter how thoroughly Iran has obviated those terms.
Adding:
That’s not just a lost war. That’s a humiliation.
The warmongers can’t be allowed to get away with their ridiculous assertion that the US, which has achieved none of its goals, has in any way won:
A narrative that the 2026 War was a success will hasten both that return and to the deeper catastrophes it will unlock.
He warned that we must tell the truth of the US defeat or:
We will be right back here if the architects, the profiteers, the propagandists and the forerunners of this war get away with their evasions once again.
One of the reasons we still got an Iran war after the disasters of Libya, Afghanistan, Iraq and others is that no proverbial heads rolled. On Iran, they have to. Failure in this area guarantees the next war – and the one after that.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
DWP admits Youth Job Grant is actually nonsense
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) announced its flagship new “Youth Jobs Grant” scheme in March. It did so alongside a package of new policies to tackle the so-called rise in young people “not in education, employment, or training” (NEET). But now, it has admitted that all is not what it seems.
DWP Youth Jobs Grant
The grant scheme offers employers £3,000 for every young person aged 18-24 they hire who has been claiming universal credit for over six months.
The DWP will issue the grant irrespective of the claimant’s conditionality regime. It means that this could also apply to young disabled people claiming limited capability for work-related activity (LCWRA), who the DWP has assessed as not fit for work.
Alongside its new Youth Jobs Grant, the DWP is also introducing a £2,000 “Apprenticeship Incentive” to encourage small and medium-sized businesses to employ 16-24 year-olds into new apprenticeship roles.
It also announced an expansion to its so-called “Jobs Guarantee“. This will now make the fully funded six-month wage subsidy available to employers hiring young people aged 18 to 24.
However, the Canary’s Rachel Charlton-Dailey has highlighted how the government’s raft of youth employment policies risks coercing young chronically ill and disabled claimants into low-waged and unsuitable work.
Cat out of the bag
Now, in response to a series of parliamentary written questions, the DWP has admitted that the Youth Jobs Grant will “not require employers to demonstrate” that they have hired young people into any roles that wouldn’t have already existed without the new incentive funding.
Independent MP James McMurdock asked “what steps” the DWP “plans to take to help ensure that jobs created through the Youth Jobs Grant are additional to existing positions”.
The answer came amid a lengthy response addressing 14 separate written questions McMurdock had tabled probing the government’s youth employment plans.
On 27 March, DWP minister Andrew Western wrote:
The scheme will not require employers to demonstrate that roles are additional.
Meanwhile, the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has separately said:
Offering £3,000 to all employers without checking for additionality would result in substantial dead weight.
In particular, it has highlighted how “DWP statistics from 2022–25 show that only 19% of 16- to 24-year-olds on UC who have been unemployed for 6 months are still on the benefit 18 months later”.
It said this “implies that the majority are likely to find work even in the absence of wage subsidies”.
Barriers to employment
Disabled young people face significantly greater barriers to employment, so the grant’s lack of an additionality requirement could fail to ensure employers offer accessible roles for 18-24 year-olds well enough to work and/or not in the LCWRA group.
Western told McMurdock that the DWP would pay the grant in “staged instalments”. The department has yet to specify what these will be. It also hasn’t confirmed the length of time these instalments will span in total.
But Western admitted that the government isn’t planning to place any minimum retention requirements on employers for the grant.
He said that the staged instalments would “encourage sustained employment during the early months without requiring a formal retention period”.
Elsewhere in the response, he stated that the scheme’s “purpose is to reduce the barriers young people face when entering the labour market”.
According to Western, the grant aims to do that “by helping employers with the early costs of recruitment and training, rather than placing conditions on wider staffing decisions and how long an employer must retain someone”.
The revelations call into question the government’s claims that its new package of employment policies will create 200,000 new jobs for young people.
More DWP nonsense?
The DWP anticipates that the Jobs Guarantee and the Youth Jobs Grant will create 30,000 and 20,000 new job roles for young people respectively. However, the IFS has said that in tandem, even if these are additional, the policies will “directly benefit a small percentage of the almost 1 million 16- to 24-year-olds who are NEET”.
Now, Western’s response has confirmed that the DWP can’t guarantee these will be genuinely additional.
The government has been citing its programme of employment support, including these employer incentives, to justify widespread cuts to welfare.
From 6 April, DWP will slash the universal credit health element in half for new claimants.
The cut exempts existing claimants, those who meet the department’s “severe conditions criteria”, and those who are terminally ill.
In its Pathways to Work green paper, the government also floated plans to restrict the health element of universal credit to over 22s. It has yet to make a decision on the proposal.
However, in November work and pensions secretary Pat McFadden referred to former Labour health secretary Alan Milburn’s “independent” investigation into Young People and Work.
He said that he did not “want to make a decision” on the minimum age requirement proposal until Milburn had looked at “the whole issue of young people, sickness, unemployment and work”.
The inquiry’s terms of reference show that it will solely target chronically ill and disabled claimants.
Politics
From M&S to Damson Madder: 11 Of The Best Dresses For Spring 2026
We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI – prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.
After a long, dreary winter, it’s finally spring, which means one very important thing – that’s right, it’s time to cycle out our cold-weather wardrobes at last.
Sure, it’s not exactly tropical outside right now, but the height of spring is looming, and with that comes an influx of springtime-friendly dresses.
And I, for one, have been on the edge of my seat waiting to say goodbye to my big coat and thermals for another year.
From florals to LBDs to leopard print, if you’re looking for some shopping inspo to get you started for the new season, here’s a list of the best spring dresses you can buy right now.
-
News Videos7 days agoParliament publishes latest register of MPs’ financial interests
-
Business6 days agoInstagram, YouTube Found Responsible for Teen’s Mental Health Struggle in Historic Ruling
-
Tech6 days agoIntercom’s new post-trained Fin Apex 1.0 beats GPT-5.4 and Claude Sonnet 4.6 at customer service resolutions
-
NewsBeat5 days agoThe Story hosts event on Durham’s historic registers
-
Sports5 days agoSweet Sixteen Game Thread: Tide vs Michigan
-
Entertainment2 days ago
Fans slam 'heartbreaking' Barbie Dream Fest convention debacle with 'cardboard cutout' experience
-
Entertainment4 days agoLana Del Rey Celebrates Her Husband’s 51st Birthday In New Post
-
Crypto World1 day ago
Dems press CFTC, ethics board on prediction-market insider trades
-
Sports1 day agoTallest college basketball player ever, standing at 7-foot-9, entering transfer portal
-
Tech3 days agoThe Pixel 10a doesn’t have a camera bump, and it’s great
-
Crypto World3 hours agoGold Price Prediction: Worst Month in 17 Years fo Save Haven Rock
-
Tech2 days agoEE TV is using AI to help you find something to watch
-
Entertainment7 days agoHBO’s Harry Potter Series Will Definitely Fail For One Big Reason, And It’s Not J.K. Rowling Or Snape
-
Tech2 days agoApple will hide your email address from apps and websites, but not cops
-
Tech2 days agoFlipsnack and the shift toward motion-first business content with living visuals
-
Tech2 days agoHow to back up your iPhone & iPad to your Mac before something goes wrong
-
Fashion6 days agoEn Vogue in Brown Leather and Tailored Neutrals by Atelier Savoir, Styled by J Bolin
-
Politics2 days agoShould Trump Be Scared Strait?
-
Crypto World2 days agoU.S. rule change may open trillions in 401(k) funds to crypto
-
Fashion5 days agoWeekly News Update, 3.27.26 – Corporette.com

You must be logged in to post a comment Login