Politics
Starmer Fails the ‘Great Expectations’ Test
Eighteen months really is a long time in politics.
Yesterday I was clearing out some papers and came across a copy of the New Statesman from 12 July 2024. It was their post-election issue. I flicked through it and was astonished by the hubris of some of the columns, and how wrong many of their pundits proved to be. There were, however, a couple of exceptions.
Ed Docx’s column was headlined BEYOND THE WALL: KEIR STARMER COULD BE A GREAT PRIME MINISTER – IF HE CAN ONLY BREAK THROUGH THE BARRIER OF HIS OWN RESERVE.
I’m not sure Sir Keir was ever going to be a great prime ministers. Technocratic managerialists rarely are, but Dovx was bang on about his reserve. Starmer appeared to be a man for the times. On the face of it a man of total probity, straightforward and the antithesis of Johnsonian ‘flash harryness’. And then came ‘Freebiegate’, which ruined everything. Overnight, he turned from Mr Straight into Mr Dodgy and, not for the last time, the voters wondered if they had been sold a pup. It turned out that he appeared to be as bad as those wicked Tories had been.
It’s not only Starmer’s timidity and reserve that has done for him. It’s the fact that he’s an empty vessel. He believes in nothing, apart from himself, and even that is something that I increasingly doubt. The only conviction he seems to have is that constantly flip-flopping is a winning electoral and governing strategy. Yet another one came along yesterday, when he withdrew the Chagos Bill. That makes at least 14 serious U-turns. There is no vision. There is no belief. There is no signpost to the sunlit uplands. But then again, would his putative challenger, Andy Burnham, be any better? He certainly has the self-belief, but does anyone know what he really believes in, policy-wise? A joke doing the rounds at the moment goes: “A Brownite, a Marxist, a Corbynite and a Blairite walk into a bar. ‘Hello Andy,’ shouts the barman.” I well remember the 2015 leadership campaign hustings I hosted, when Andy Burnham fizzled out like a damp firework.
The article from the post-election issue of the New Statesman that has stood the test of time was by Katie Stallard and headlined WHY THE STARMER ERA WILL BE DEFINED BY FOREIGN AFFAIRS. Having attracted the headline of ‘Never Here Keir’, he’s certainly had his challenges, not least dealing with Donald Trump. Up until recently his policy of positive engagement with the presidential manchild appeared to have reaped dividends, but some believe it was always destined to end in disappointment. Yes, his words this weekend reacting to Trump’s outrageous comments about NATO servicemen in Afghanistan reflected the horror of the nation, but they were in stark contrast to the disgraceful measures contained in the Northern Ireland Veterans Bill. Labour MPs were cheering on the Prime Minister for standing up to Trump and speaking our for veterans and their families, yet this week they voted through measures which will see brave service personnel in Northern Ireland pursued through the courts by ambulance chasing human rights lawyers.
Another article in that issue of the NS was by Hannah Barnes, which bore the headline WE IN BRITAIN ARE FORTUNATE THAT THE TRANSFER OF POWER IS SO CALM AND DIGNIFIED. Up to a point, Lord Copper. Why do I say that? Because the transfer of power from one party to another is illusory. Everyone knows it is the civil service that actually wields the power. Few new cabinet ministers have any idea of how to pull the levers of government to effect real change. And so the machine grinds on inexorably, leaving voters with the impression that there has been very little change at all. As Orwell might say, they look from man to beast and struggle to tell the difference. Wasn’t it ever thus?
Politics
Why Are Girls With ADHD Flying Under The Radar?
It’s thought 5% of children have attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), with boys more likely to receive a diagnosis than girls.
Yet when girls remain undiagnosed, it can harm their mental health and self-esteem.
Girls with undiagnosed ADHD are “more likely to blame themselves, turning their anger and pain inward”, according to the Child Mind Institute, which noted they’re also more likely to experience depression, anxiety and eating disorders than those without ADHD.
Dr Chris Abbott, chief medical officer at Care ADHD, told HuffPost UK his team regularly witnesses how early recognition can be “utterly life-changing” for girls who have ADHD, as “it reduces shame, helps girls understand how their brain works, and unlocks the right support so they can thrive”.
He noted that population research and reviews suggest ADHD is identified more often in boys in childhood at a ratio of 3:1 (males to females), while the ratio appears to even out in adulthood at 1:1, “which is consistent with the notion that many women are diagnosed later in life”.
So, why are girls more likely to fly under the radar in terms of diagnosis?
There are a few key factors coming into play here, which we’ll break down with the help of experts.
1. There is a gender divide in how ADHD symptoms are expressed
A key piece of the puzzle is that many people still associate ADHD with visibly hyperactive children – perhaps they picture someone who is impulsive or disruptive in class, usually a boy.
Dr Mukesh Kripalani, a consultant psychiatrist for The ADHD Centre, told HuffPost UK: “Traditionally, diagnostic patterns show a distinct gender divide in how ADHD symptoms are expressed. Girls tend to demonstrate more inattentive symptoms and internalise their struggles significantly more than boys, who more frequently exhibit the hyperactive and impulsive behaviours that demand immediate attention from parents and teachers.
“Because boys are more likely to become oppositional, they are identified earlier.”
While girls and boys can present with hyperactivity, Dr Abbott noted that “many girls struggle in ways that are easier to overlook – difficulties with attention, organisation, working memory and time, that can look like daydreaming, forgetfulness, or quietly falling behind”.
“They may be seen as ‘coping’ because they’re not causing problems for others, even when the internal effort to keep up is huge,” he added.
2. Social expectations can play a part
Girls are often raised to be kind, obedient and put others’ needs first. Both experts noted the social expectations we place on girls can also factor into them slipping under the radar for diagnosis, quite simply because they learn to keep quiet and carry on.
“Many girls learn to be ‘good’, stay quiet and blend in, so ADHD is more likely to emerge as a hidden struggle: overwhelm, people-pleasing, perfectionism or anxiety, rather than disruption,” said Dr Abbott.
3. Girls seem to develop sophisticated masking strategies
Both experts highlighted masking – where a person might act in a “socially acceptable” way to fit in with their neurotypical peers – as another factor in why girls slip through the diagnosis net.
“Many girls develop sophisticated strategies here: over-preparing, copying more organised peers, people-pleasing, or suppressing restlessness to meet social expectations,” said Dr Abbott.
“That can create an outward appearance of success, but it often comes at a cost: chronic stress, exhaustion, anxiety and low mood.
“Emerging research in early adolescence suggests higher masking is associated with poorer mental health in neurodivergent girls, reinforcing what many of our clinicians hear in consultations.”
Dr Kripalani added “the drive toward masking and conforming is notably higher in girls”. But telltale signs might begin to emerge over time.
“As these children grow older, the elements of Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria (RSD) often become prominent,” he noted.
RSD is where a person might feel strong emotional pain because of a failure or feeling rejected – as such, their reactions to criticism might be very intense.
Alex Partridge, the host of the ADHD Chatter podcast, previously described it as feeling like “a bull has charged at you and headbutted you in the chest”.
“It can be the smallest of criticisms, but my brain turns it into the most heart-wrenching comment ever uttered or heard,” he added.
4. Girls are likely to be diagnosed with sleep problems or mental health conditions before ADHD
Dr Abbott noted that girls may first present with anxiety, depression, sleep problems, or emotional dysregulation – yet the possibility of ADHD isn’t always explored, particularly if school reports focus on attainment rather than day-to-day functioning.
“In adult services, it’s not uncommon to meet women who’ve been treated for years for ‘mood’ symptoms without anyone stepping back to ask whether untreated ADHD is a driver,” he added.
Dr Kripalani noted that approximately 75% of the time, ADHD presents alongside at least one other mental health challenge.
Studies also consistently show that teachers tend to underrate symptoms in girls, sometimes misattributing their behaviours to primary anxiety or mood disorders.
“Anxiety remains the most common co-occurring condition, presenting a ‘chicken and egg’ clinical dilemma when trying to determine which is the primary driver,” he added.
What needs to change?
Ultimately, better awareness of how girls are impacted – and the signs they might present with – is crucial.
“What would genuinely shift the needle is both practical and achievable: better awareness training in schools and primary care, and clearer SENCO and referral pathways that don’t rely on ‘disruption’ as the signal,” said Dr Abbott.
“It’s important to say this isn’t about blaming parents or schools. Recognition is a shared responsibility across families or carers, schools and the wider system – including the pathways and thresholds that determine who gets referred.”
Politics
Liam Downer-Sanderson: Labour don’t want to reopen Hammersmith Bridge. Local Conservatives will.
Cllr Liam Downer-Sanderson is a councillor for Fulham Town Ward on Hammersmith and Fulham Council.
“Keeping Hammersmith Bridge closed is something we may have to look at.”
Those were the words of a Labour Hammersmith and Fulham Cabinet Member at a council committee meeting on 2 February 2026. After seven years of disruption, delay and evasion, it was a moment of rare honesty.
Labour finally said out loud what many residents have long suspected. They are comfortable with the bridge staying closed to traffic permanently.
That position is wrong for Hammersmith and Fulham, wrong for London and wrong for the country.
Hammersmith Bridge was closed in 2019 after serious cracks were discovered in its foundations. The bridge is more than a century old and decades of heavy goods vehicles had taken their toll. Closure was unavoidable to prevent the risk of collapse.
The consequences were immediate and severe. Six key bus routes were diverted overnight. Emergency vehicles were forced onto longer, slower routes. Journeys to hospitals, schools and workplaces became harder, longer and more expensive. A vital transport link between Barnes, Richmond, Wimbledon, Hammersmith, Fulham and Chiswick was severed.
At that moment, the council’s task should have been obvious. Restore public transport and emergency access across the Thames as quickly and safely as possible.
Instead, Labour chose a different path.
Rather than pursuing interim or staged solutions to reopen the bridge to traffic, several of which were put forward at the time, the Labour Administration fixated on a single option. A full, gold-plated restoration costing around £250 million, with no credible timetable for reopening.
Years passed. Progress was minimal.
Recognising the scale of the problem, the Conservative Government stepped in with a pragmatic offer. To split the cost three ways between central government, Transport for London and the council. A deal was on the table. The route to reopening was clear.
Labour walked away, claiming the council could not afford it.
That argument simply does not stand up.
Because during the same period, Labour somehow found the money for something else. A brand new Town Hall. The Civic Campus project now exceeds £200 million. It was meant to be completed in 2023. It is opening three years late. And even now, Labour has allocated a further £38.5 million of capital funding in 2025/26, on top of tens of millions committed in earlier years.
This was never about affordability. It was about priorities.
Labour chose to prioritise a prestige building over restoring public transport, emergency access and everyday vehicle crossings across the Thames.
That choice tells you everything you need to know.
But the problem goes deeper than mismanagement or poor judgement. Increasingly, Labour councillors are no longer even pretending that reopening the bridge is the goal. For some, a functioning bridge is seen as an incentive to driving and therefore something to be resisted altogether.
In other words, inconvenience is not an unfortunate side effect. It is the point.
Conservatives reject that worldview outright.
It is not progressive to slow down ambulances, lengthen school runs or force carers, tradespeople and small businesses to waste hours detouring across west London. It is not progressive to cut communities in two and call it progress.
As the Opposition, our job is to hold Labour to account for its failures. But it is also our responsibility to offer solutions. That is exactly what the Hammersmith and Fulham Conservative Opposition Group has done.
We have set out a clear and practical alternative. The construction of a temporary bridge just north of the existing crossing. Delivered for an estimated £10 to £20 million, it would allow buses, emergency vehicles and general traffic to cross the Thames while permanent repair work continues.
Similar structures are routinely deployed elsewhere. They can be delivered in months, not years, and at reasonable cost.
London is a global city, yet a major Thames crossing has been left closed for seven years with no clear end in sight. That failure reflects poorly on local government and undermines confidence. If we cannot reopen a bridge in west London, it raises serious questions about our capacity to deliver essential infrastructure across the country.
As the Conservative Opposition, our position is straightforward.
If elected to run the Council in May, we will invite engineers to put forward proposals for a temporary bridge and finally move from delay to delivery.
We will get Hammersmith and Fulham moving again.
Politics
Reform vs the Greens captures the real divide in politics
Not only does it look like the beginning of the end for Keir Starmer, which May’s local elections will surely precipitate, we are potentially on the brink of a recalibration of Britain’s party politics. You only have to look to the by-election in Gorton and Denton in Manchester on 26 February to take stock of the profound change afoot.
For the first time anyone can remember, in a contest for a Westminster seat in an English city, the two parties vying for power won’t be Labour or the Conservatives, but instead be two insurgent outsiders. This is a twin-pronged revolt against the political mainstream – against a clique that has become ever more detached and tin-eared since the advent of globalisation in the 1990s.
The concerns articulated by both outfits, Reform UK and the Green Party, mirror those seen in all developed countries around the globe. In Reform, we have a party that appeals to small-c conservatives and a disaffected working class who inhabit deindustrialised areas, who feel their homeland has been degraded by an aloof, footloose liberal-left who cares little for them or their country. In the Greens, we have a party that has enjoyed a surge in popularity by taking a sharp turn to the left, appealing to a graduate class for whom the ‘elites’ are instead neoliberal capitalists, who must be humbled through punitive tax hikes. The Greens have remained steadfast passengers on the woke bandwagon, still proud to fly the Progress Pride flag, while simultaneously making gainful overtures to Muslim voters. Time will tell how well that interesting marriage works out.
Whoever wins in Manchester, it will not only signal a recalibration – it will also confirm a wholesale change in our thinking. For those who are drawn to these two parties, concerns over culture, place, identity and community have become almost or equally important as material, bread-and-butter issues.
Many of the affluent middle-class voters attracted to the Greens are preoccupied with identity politics related to gender and race, or by the plight of migrants and the people crossing the English Channel on small boats. They espouse a border-free, airy hyper-liberalism, which transcends allegiance to any nation. Muslims attracted to the Greens also have identitarian concerns, namely what’s happening to other Muslims in Gaza and Palestine. For Reform supporters, the economic pros and cons of Brexit were often a secondary concern. What worried them in 2016, and worries them even more now, is the manner in which the fabric and appearance of this country has so rapidly changed in their lifetimes.
To expand on David Goodhart’s terminology, the technocratic centrists of the ‘Anywhere’ class will be the losers on 26 February. This vote will instead be contested between the ‘Somewheres’, those attached to place and their people, and an unholy alliance of ‘Elsewheres’, with an allegiance to a foreign country, and ‘Nowheres’, who don’t believe in nations at all. It will be a showdown between an unloved and unfashionable people, telling unpleasant truths about a country they love vs a nice, well-meaning class preaching hope not hate, and who scarcely care for the country at all.
Not for the first time on these islands, an ideological contest will pit the revolting but right against the romantic but wrong.
No one owns moral high ground
When Billie Eilish gave her oration at the Grammys earlier this month, she famously defended the rights of undocumented immigrants to settle in the United States on the grounds that ‘no one is illegal on stolen land’. For this, she faced criticism not only from those who find this kind of vacuous piety deeply tiresome, but also from elders of a Native American tribe.
A spokesman for the Tongva people argued that the ‘Bad Guy’ singer was herself squatting on land that didn’t belong to her, claiming that her $3million Los Angeles mansion was situated on ‘ancestral land’. The voice for indigenous inhabitants of the Los Angeles Basin, known as the ‘First Angelenos’, also noted that Eilish had failed to acknowledge them and their land in her speech at the Grammys.
Yet tribal elders might also want to rein in the self-righteousness. According to archaeological and linguistic evidence, when the Tongva arrived in the Los Angeles Basin about 3,500 years ago, they displaced or absorbed the Hokan-speaking Chumash people who had previously inhabited the area. Who the Chumash supplanted before them, who is to say.
History everywhere is one long, sorry sequence of events in which one group of people arrive and take land from another. Violence, exploitation and expropriation have been the eternal and universal human norm. No one today has the moral high ground.
Richard Dawkins: a fearless, peerless public intellectual
It’s always disconcerting when you see adverts online announcing the latest tour by a public intellectual, like Slavoj Žižek or Richard Dawkins, listing the dates they are due to appear at Nottingham’s Royal Concert Hall or the Liverpool Philharmonic, with some shows excitedly hyped as ‘Sold Out!’. It’s disconcerting because I forever mistake them for music concert tours promoted in The Sunday Times or those I remember from Kerrang! magazine. I keep expecting to see it announced beneath the main act: ‘With support from George Monbiot and Megadeth.’ I drift into a reverie in which I imagine ageing intellectuals leaping on to the stage and screaming to the crowd: ‘Hello Wembley! Let’s make some fucking noise!’
But back to Dawkins and his forthcoming nationwide speaking tour, which marks the 50th anniversary of his seminal first book, The Selfish Gene. Although the British have never warmed entirely to the notion of a public intellectual (Bertrand Russell became more broadly known for his Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament than for his philosophy), Dawkins surely qualifies as our finest today. What distinguishes this thinker is not only his intellect but also his consistency and fearlessness. He has railed against unreason in all its forms, especially against the postmodernist relativists of the 1990s, whose corrosive ideas morphed into today’s horror show of wokery. At 84, Dawkins remains a doughty foe of hyper-liberalism.
Many people think he got a bit sidetracked and monomaniacal in the 2000s, when he went through his ‘new atheism’ period. But this happens to the best of people – both AC/DC and Aerosmith also went through an iffy patch in the mid-1980s, and both recovered.
As with old rockers who refuse to retire, so it is with Richard Dawkins: we still prefer the early stuff, and we still hold dear the smash-hit debut that made his name.
Patrick West is a columnist for spiked and author of Get Over Yourself: Nietzsche For Our Times (Societas, 2017). Contact him on X at @patrickxwest.
Politics
Israeli colonisers plant trees in Lebanon in land-grab attempt
A large gang of extremist Israeli colonisers has illegally crossed the ‘blue line’ dividing southern Lebanon and Israel to try to stake a claim to land that is not theirs. The far-right ‘Awaken the North’ group planted trees somewhere on the Lebanese side of the border and demanded the restart of Israeli settlement in Lebanon.
The group was then whisked back into Israel by the occupation military. Israeli authorities went through the motions of condemning the excursion, but no action against the racist group is likely.
In a deranged statement, one of the group’s leaders claimed its action was “moral” and “necessary” and that it was reclaiming “our land:”
This is right for security and it is a necessary step from a moral and historical point of view.
One of the group’s leaders said that the Israeli colonisers were “putting down roots” in “our country”, regurgitating Israeli ‘inheritance’ propaganda:
We came here today, to plant trees and put down roots in the soil of our country, regardless of the fences. The State of Israel must renew the settlement in Lebanon, this is historically correct, it is right from a security point of view, and it is right from a moral point of view. South Lebanon is a piece of the inheritance of our forefathers, where Jewish settlement existed for thousands of years. In order to ensure the security of the residents of the north, the construction of civilian settlements in southern Lebanon, near IDF posts, must be promoted.
If you look closely at the featured image, you’ll find the group has the Lebanese cedar in the centre of a Star of David as their logo. In the words of brother Omar from Four Lions: “I think you’re confused bro.”
Israel has bombed southern Lebanon daily, despite the supposed ‘ceasefire’ in place since the occupation’s 2024 terrorist attack using exploding pagers. These attacks have murdered dozens of civilians.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Starmer told by female MPs party branded “paedo lovers”
Labour MPs have complained to their boss Keir Starmer that the party and its activists are now dismissed by the public as “paedo lovers”. The complaint came during Starmer’s emergency meeting with women from the parliamentary party yesterday, 11 February 2026.
The meeting followed a further ‘Labour nonceberg’ scandal over Starmer’s peerage for former adviser Matthew Doyle despite knowing Doyle had campaigned for the election of a Scottish Labour paedophile. This in turn followed the scandal of the various appointments given to the disgraced Peter Mandelson despite his ardent fandom toward serial child-rapist Jeffrey Epstein — to whom he also leaked confidential state and financial information.
There is no mention in reporting that women MPs raised the issue of the victims of Epstein or Doyle’s close friend Sean Morton. Starmer has also refused to say that disgraced former royal Andrew should apologise to his victims.
To the informed, none of this is surprising, either from Starmer or from the women MPs. Labour’s ‘white feminists‘ have routinely ignored the plight of victims who are not ‘people like us’. Starmer’s record as Labour leader is an appalling continuation of the impunity of celebrity paedophiles when he ran the CPS.
Nonceberg
As well as the cases of Mandelson, Doyle/Morton and Andrew, Starmer:
The public are right
The angry public on the doorstep is not wrong: Starmer’s right-wing, pro-Israel faction is rife with paedophiles:
- ‘Friend of Israel’ Liron Velleman has just been convicted of repeated sex crimes against a 13-year-old girl.
- In January 2025, former Blair minister Ivor Caplin was arrested in a sting operation as he allegedly attempted to meet a 15-year-old boy for sex. Local police went after local left-winger Greg Hadfield for exposing the explicit content Caplin posted on his X feed — Hadfield defeated the ‘vexatious’ charge in November 2025. However, no charges have yet been brought against Caplin and a court did not impose bail conditions after his initial bail expired.
- Hackney councillor Tom Dewey, an organiser in pro-Israel group ‘Labour First’, admitted possession of the most serious category of child rape images in 2023. The party knew of his arrest when it allowed him to stand for election. After his conviction, it blocked local women members from its systems to prevent them discussing the case.
- In March 2025 Sam Gould, another JLM activist who worked for Starmer’s health secretary Wes Streeting, quit as a Redbridge councillor after being convicted on two separate counts of indecent exposure to a 13-year-old girl.
- The following month Dan Norris MP, an ally of Keir Starmer, was arrested over allegations of rape, child sex offences and child abduction. Avon and Somerset Police says its investigation is still ongoing.
- The same Dan Norris was arrested again for allegations of rape and sexual assault.
And in August 2025, the US allowed Israeli cyberwar official Tom Alexandrovich to fly back to Israel after he was caught in a police paedophile sting. Starmer is fond of both countries.
Starmer’s war on Labour-left — in retrospect
And while Starmer’s senior cronies were deselecting or blocking potential left-wing parliamentary candidates on any pretext they could find, they were ignoring legal advice to let their mates stand.
Labour’s national executive ignored the advice of its barrister that it needed to thoroughly investigate allegations of ‘serious’ sexual assault against slum landlord Jas Athwal. Then-Redbridge council leader Athwal is now a right-wing Labour MP close to health secretary Wes Streeting. Instead of investigating, the NEC dropped the case and reinstated Athwal to allow his rigged selection as the party’s parliamentary candidate in Ilford South.
Starmer ignored whistleblower
Perhaps most seriously, Starmer and his then-sidekick David Evans covered up Jewish whistleblower Elaina Cohen’s allegations of serial abuse of women by a party staffer.
Cohen repeatedly warned Starmer and Evans that a staffer working for then-Perry Barr MP Khalid Mahmood — and allegedly Mahmood’s lover — was engaged in ‘sadistic’ and ‘criminal’ abuse of vulnerable Muslim women. The victims were fleeing domestic violence, through the now-defunct domestic violence ‘charity’ that she ran.
Warned time and again, Starmer and Evans did nothing. Mahmood remained on Starmer’s front bench as long as he chose to be there. Cohen was sacked from her role as a parliamentary aide.
One of the victims gave evidence, at Cohen’s successful wrongful dismissal tribunal, of the horrific abuse she and others had suffered. This included blackmail and sexual exploitation. Her evidence was not challenged by Mahmood or his lawyers. Mahmood admitted under oath to the tribunal that he had also personally made sure that Starmer was fully aware of Cohen’s allegations.
Starmer’s protection of child sex offenders is a mountain. His contempt for their victims is another. Both have been almost entirely ignored by ‘mainstream’ media.
For more on the Epstein Files, please read the Canary’s article on how the media circus around Epstein is erasing the experiences of victims and survivors.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Homelessness addressed as Wales passes landmark housing law
The Welsh government has unanimously passed the Homelessness and Social Housing Allocation Bill into law, which experts have labelled “life-changing”
The Senedd passed the new law on February 10, 2026, and it will provide support far sooner than current legislation allows, preventing people from losing their homes and falling into homelessness.
It will also require public services to work together to prevent homelessness and to allocate social housing to those most at risk.
The bill will:
• Expand access to homelessness services and provide additional support to those who need it most.
• Widen responsibility to certain specified public authorities to identify individuals who are homeless or at risk of homelessness and respond effectively.
• Prioritise allocation of social housing to those most in need.
Homelessness — a growing crisis
From April 2024 to March 2025, 13,287 households were homeless in Wales. Local councils only secured accommodation for 25% of these.
The total number of households staying in temporary accommodation was 6,285. Of these, 2,397 (38%) were staying in unsuitable bed and breakfasts.
As it stands, local authorities can only take action 56 days before someone falls into homelessness. The new law will extend this to six months.
The bill also commits to scrapping both priority need and the intentionally homeless. However, it does not give a date for doing so.
As it stands, priority need means that certain groups, such as pregnant women, people with children, young people, care leavers, and victims of domestic abuse, are accepted as being a higher priority for homelessness assistance.
Being ‘intentionally homeless’ technically means that a person is homeless, or threatened with homelessness, due to something they deliberately did or failed to do.
However, local authorities often use it as a guise for refusing help to people who have to leave unsafe situations, such as traumatised women having to leave mixed-sex accommodation, or young people feeling unsafe in adult hostels.
If a council deems someone intentionally homeless, it does not have to offer long-term housing.
Social housing allocation
The bill has placed all registered social housing providers under a new legal obligation to assist people experiencing homelessness. It has also given ministers new powers to issue orders to these providers, requiring them to comply.
However, some organisations have criticised the bill for failing to outlaw the use of unsafe temporary accommodation.
According to the Bevan Foundation:
At present, local authorities only need to have “due regard” to the various legal standards on the suitability of accommodation when fulfilling their homelessness duties. This includes having “due regard” to whether the property is fit for human habitation and the presence of Category 1 hazards such as damp and mould, excessive cold, fire risk and structural issues like unstable staircases.
The organisation previously published a report on the dangers of unsuitable accommodation. It highlighted how temporary
accommodation causes physical harm to children, along with the fact that local authorities are not meeting or enforcing regulations.
Other amendments related to protecting victims of domestic violence and abuse had been put forward, but not included.
Matt Downie, Chief Executive at Crisis, said:
The new Homelessness and Social Housing Allocations Bill has the potential to be life-changing for the thousands of people across Wales that are facing the trauma that comes from living without a stable place to call home.
But the work does not end here. The Welsh Government and incoming Members of the Senedd after the elections in May 2026 must now invest in the proper implementation of these new laws. It is critical that services have the guidance, funding and resources to really deliver the ambition of the Bill and work towards ending homelessness.
Feature image via Centre for Homelessness Impact
Politics
McSweeney’s ‘inner circle’ is still trying to control Labour
Morgan McSweeney is gone, for now. But an MP who served on Labour’s frontbench has passed me details of an unknown, unelected group that “rules with a rod of iron” and is still fighting to retain control of the Labour Party.
Morgan McSweeney: still trying to control Labour
Matthew Doyle is the first link in McSweeney’s inner circle.
In December, Starmer was criticised for giving Doyle a peerage even though he had previously campaigned for Sean Morton, a Scottish Labour councillor now convicted of child sex offences. Sean Morton, councillor for Fochabers and Lhanbryde, was charged in 2016. In 2017, he stood for re-election as councillor. Doyle travelled up to Scotland, wore a t-shirt that read “Re-elect Sean Morton”, and accompanied him to the election count. Then, in 2018, Morton was convicted of a string of crimes that included possession of indecent pictures of ten year-old girls.
On 10 February, and despite originally defending the decision to nominate Doyle for a peerage, saying that his links to Morton had been “thoroughly investigated” before the decision was made, Labour was forced to suspend him.
But here lies the problem: such is the grip that the McSweeney faction has held over Labour, no misdemeanour is too big to be swept under the carpet, and it is only when scandals are picked up by investigative journalists that the Starmer regime feels forced to act.
McSweeney reportedly insisted on the appointment of Epstein-informant Peter Mandelson as US ambassador. Starmer went along with it and Labour MPs fell into line. Everyone knew, they just didn’t care.
McSweeney’s ‘tight’ crew
According to the former Labour frontbencher who contacted me:
The inner circle were tight. WhatsApp tight. They talked openly of taking over the Labour Party literally. And to get rid of every existing MP eventually. Morgan seemed to run everything.
The second link in McSweeney’s “inner circle” is Matthew Faulding. Faulding worked under McSweeney’s close supervision as Labour’s director of candidates, ensuring that only Mandelson-Starmer loyalists could be selected as candidates. He has previously been known to stalk the offices of Labour politicians, “striking the fear of death into MPs”, according to a party staffer. But Starmer’s grip on the reins of power is slipping. And now, after the events of the weekend, even McSweeney can’t save him.
The third link in McSweeney’s “inner circle” is Matt Pound. Pound was instrumental in Labour Party leadership rule changes that helped Starmer rise to power. He was previously head of the Labour First group, working to ensure the success of McSweeney-favoured candidates in “internal elections”. Pound has previously been photographed alongside Marlon Solomon and Luke Akehurst, with the three wearing matching t-shirts bearing the phrase “Zionist Shitlord”.
In 2019-20, Solomon was given £11,877 by the Pears Family Charitable Foundation to put on an Edinburgh Fringe show that would “put a comic spin on antisemitism”. In 2008, the Pears Foundation established the Britain-Israel Research and Academic Exchange Partnership, “a major initiative launched by the prime ministers of both countries”. In 2010, they helped establish the UK-Israel Life Sciences Council. David Chinn attended the launch.
David Chinn is the eldest son of life-long pro-Israeli lobbyist Trevor Chinn. Trevor Chinn was a co-director and major funder of McSweeney’s Labour Together Limited. When McSweeney was found to have concealed over £730,000 in donations to Labour Together, he said it was “to protect Trevor Chinn, Labour Together’s great benefactor”.
Pulling in the money
The McSweeney-Starmer takeover of the Labour Party still needed cash, and Waheed Alli was on hand to provide. Alli was Starmer’s biggest personal donor, giving over £30k for the prime minister’s clothing and glasses. Now, his name appears in the Epstein Files.
Alli’s name appears on a list of guests due to attend an Epstein-hosted dinner in February 2010 and another dinner in August of the same year. In another leaked e-mail from 2012, Epstein tells a friend that Peter Mandelson and Alli are staying at “Shelter Island”.
McSweeney enforcer Faulding was working for Alli in the run-up to the general election in 2024. According to the former Labour frontbencher who contacted me, McSweeney’s inner circle:
had lists of people approved or pressured before a selection ever began.
He believes that Faulding, however, soon fell out of favour:
his lack of charm leading to complaints about his arrogant out of control behaviour. He was becoming a liability to Morgan.
The problem is, McSweeney has himself become a liability to Supreme Leader Starmer. My source added:
The thugs beneath him are minions who any good leader would dispose of right away.
One of those who rushed to the by-then-doomed McSweeney’s defence was Adam Langleben, current head of Labour Party think tank Progress and former national secretary of the Jewish Labour Movement.
The Zionist link
Langleben has previously supported Ivor Caplin, the former Labour minister caught by “paedophile hunters” last year. He has also described ex-Labour MP Greville Janner as his “inspiration”. Back in 2021, the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse said police deliberately “shut down” investigations into Janner. In 1997, just weeks after his election, Tony Blair gave Janner a peerage.
In The Lobby documentary produced by Al Jazeera, Rose, a director of the Jewish Labour Movement who previously worked at the Israeli embassy, was caught boasting about participating in IDF-developed Krav Maga training. Rose served as a Labour councillor in Barnet alongside Velleman.
In January, former Labour councillor Velleman pleaded guilty to a series of sexual offences against a police decoy he thought was a 13-year-old girl. Velleman sent naked pictures of himself to the ‘girl’ and asked whether she “was a virgin” and “at home alone”. Then, on 10 February, Velleman admitted further charges, including sending the “child” videos of his penis and asking to see her underwear.
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Unbelievably, Velleman had given evidence at the committee stage of the government’s Child Safety Bill in 2022, where he’s listed as a political organiser for Hope not Hate. Labour minister Peter Kyle, who was technology secretary when the Bill came into force, previously apologised to those:
let down by governments failing to keep them safe from toxic online content.
He also happens to be best friends with Ivor Caplin, the former Labour minister caught by “paedophile hunters” in 2025, and whose X account was still followed by Labour frontbenchers including Rachel Reeves whilst replete with a stream of explicit material. Caplin has “congratulated” Velleman online on several occasions, whilst Kyle once sent him a message of thanks at 2 o’clock in the morning!
On 9 February, Jewish News, apparently not reading the room, wrote a gushing piece extolling the virtues of political genius McSweeney, who by my research has only stood for public office himself once, receiving 149 votes in a Sutton West council election. McSweeney of course lived on an Israeli “kibbutz” shortly before joining the Labour Party and has a long history of promoting Israel lobby-backed candidates.
Langleben is quoted as saying:
No one did more to drag the Labour Party out of the darkest moment in its history than Morgan McSweeney. The Jewish community owes him a debt of gratitude.
Words of praise also effused from Michael Rubin, the director of Labour Friends of Israel, a shadowy lobby group within the party which refuses to reveal its funders. He said:
Morgan was essential in dragging Labour back to sanity after the dark Corbyn years.
The adults are not back
Some people might have an issue with the description of appointing Mandelson, the “best pal” of a notorious paedophile, to a top diplomatic role, as “sanity”. If this is “the adults back in the room”, it’s not a room I want to set foot in.
Krav Maga-trained Ella Rose opined:
A lot will be written and said about the role of Morgan McSweeney…We would not have been fit for government without him. Thank you, Morgan.
One thing is true: by accepting the resignation of McSweeney, Starmer lost the final card in his deck. On Monday, the prime minister told his fast diminishing staff at No. 10 that he is “not resigning”, but his removal is now simply a matter of time.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Judicial Review ruling on Palestine Action imminent
The fate of the 2,787 people arrested for terrorism offences for peacefully holding signs saying “I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action” in silent vigils in towns and cities in all four nations of the UK, will be decided on Friday 13 February at 10am in Court 4 of the Royal Courts of Justice when the long-awaited Judicial Review ruling will be finally read into court.
Outside the court, supporters of the Lift The Ban campaign will again risk arrest by holding the same signs in a display of the ongoing defiance of the government’s authoritarian attempt to treat protest as terrorism. The Lift The Ban campaign – which aims to de-proscribe Palestine Action and end government complicity in genocide – has become the largest UK-wide campaign of nonviolent civil disobedience in recent history.
A spokesperson for Defend Our Juries said:
The Filton 6 verdicts show that only a Judicial Review ruling that strikes down the Palestine Action ban as unlawful will be in tune with the public’s understanding of justice. Unlike the government, the public knows the difference between protest and terrorism.
The Filton 6 verdicts have been a huge blow to government ministers who have tried to portray Palestine Action as a violent group. They have repeatedly referred to the single incidence of alleged harm to an individual in the case as justification for banning Palestine Action before the allegation was proven in court.
Yet Palestine Action never advocated causing harm to people and never caused unlawful violence to a person in over 400 actions. Their aim was always to save lives by causing damage to companies like Elbit Systems whose made-in-Britain quadcopter drones have been killing innocent civilians in Gaza.
Our action outside the Royal Courts of Justice will create yet another dilemma for the police – will they arrest us as the result of the Judicial Review is being read out? If the appeal against the proscription is successful, their action looks ridiculous.
If it is unsuccessful, more people will be added to the queue for prosecution in the courts – and people of conscience who want to defend our fundamental rights and freedoms will have no option but to continue to resist this unjust, unnecessary and unenforceable law.
Lobbyists for proscription
As the Channel 4 documentary Palestine Action – The Truth Behind The Ban showed, home secretary Yvette Cooper held meetings with lobbyists for arms companies and Israel that were revealed by Freedom of Information requests. Even the government’s own adviser on terrorism legislation, Jonathan Hall KC, condemned Cooper’s “nudge, nudge, wink, wink” approach to justifying the ban.
We also know about pressure from arms companies and lobbyists for Israel that was put on the government, and that in March 2025 Keir Starmer took two phone calls from Donald Trump about Palestine Action after the group painted “Gaza is not for sale” on Trump’s golf course in Scotland.
The decision was made despite warnings that the move would backfire, and despite deep and widespread concerns amongst civil servants, international experts, human rights observers and civil society.
Impacts of the proscription
The decision to proscribe has not only led to 2,787 people being arrested for sitting peacefully, holding signs in front of the world’s press. It has also resulted in the the misapplication of counter-terror resources, international condemnation, the exhaustion and lowering of morale of police officers and the possibility that people might be criminalised for showing support for the Palestinian people.
But it has not stopped people taking direct action against the properties of the companies who are complicit in genocide.
The judicial review grounds
Huda Ammori was granted four grounds on which to challenge the proscription in a judicial review which was heard at the Royal Courts of Justice over three days between 26 November and 2 December 2025.
On 30 July 2025 Mr Justice Chamberlain granted two grounds: that the proscription was a disproportionate interference with Article 10 and Article 11 rights Convention Rights, namely the rights to expression and assembly; and that Palestine Action should have been consulted.
Two additional grounds were granted by the Court of Appeal on 17 October 2025: that the home secretary failed to have regard to domestic public law principles and that she did not apply her own policy including the proportionality of the proscription.
Allegations of a judicial stitch-up
Avaaz launched a petition demanding an explanation from justice secretary David Lammy MP as to why the judge overseeing the case was removed just days before it was about to begin. The lack of an explanation has meant the Judicial Review has been dogged by allegations of a ‘stitch-up’ with questions about the suitability and independence of the three replacement judges demanding to be answered. A former British ambassador suggested the result had been to “load the dice for Israel”.
The judicial review
On the opening day of the Judicial Review, Raza Husain KC, representing Palestine Action co-founder Huda Ammori, noted that the group was the: “first direct-action civil disobedience organisation that does not advocate for violence ever to be proscribed as terrorist.” He said the ban was an “ill-considered, discriminatory, due process-lacking, authoritarian abuse of statutory power … that is alien to the basic tradition of common law and the European Convention on Human Rights.”
Defend Our Juries’ Lift The Ban campaign was cited as evidence of mass civil society disagreement with the proscription.
Intervening in the Judicial Review, United Nations Special Rapporteur Ben Saul warned the ban makes the UK “out of step with comparable liberal democracies” and “sets a precedent” for further crackdown on other protest movements in the UK such as climate protesters.
Amnesty International UK said it represented a substantial departure from established responses to protest movements which use direct action tactics and that it breached our fundamental rights to protest and free speech.
Liberty argued the ban was disproportionate because counter-terror powers have historically been directed at groups whose modus operandi includes intentional violence against people
Best-selling author Sally Rooney told the hearing how she may no longer be able to sell or publish her books in the UK due to her support for Palestine Action.
On the final day of the Judicial Review – Tuesday 2 December 2025 – the government presented part of its defence using the secret court system known as Closed Material Procedure. This method has come under criticism for allowing evidence to be presented without challenge and has been described by Angus McCullough KC as being a system “in meltdown”.
Government would have let hunger strikers die
During a rolling hunger and thirst strike running from November to January, Lammy refused to meet lawyers for the families and loved ones of hunger strikers, or even to reply directly to the several letters that they sent. This was despite warnings from medical professionals that participants had passed the point where there was a high risk of death and serious permanent injury.
UN experts said any death and injury would be the government’s responsibility:
The State’s duty of care toward hunger strikers is heightened, not diminished … Preventable deaths in custody are never acceptable. The State bears full responsibility for the lives and wellbeing of those it detains.
The conditions of Palestine Action-connected prisoners held without trial were earlier criticised by the UN in a letter to the UK government.
Government complicity in crimes against humanity and genocide
Evidence of UK complicity in crimes against genocide continues to mount. In October 2025 the UN issued its draft report Gaza Genocide: A Collective Crime detailing the complicity of states including the UK in the destruction of Gaza. Amongst other things, the UK continued to supply arms including components for F-35 stealth bombers, undertook daily surveillance flights over Gaza for Israel, maintained normal trade relations, and allowed Israel to undertake international crimes with impunity.
In December Declassified UK released its film Britain’s Gaza Spy Flight Scandal, investigating the hundreds of RAF intelligence flights conducted on behalf of Israel.
The genocide continues but the government is silent
The genocide continues to unfold in Gaza. Since the 11 October 2025 “ceasefire”, Israel has killed at least 556 Palestinians in Gaza and wounded 1,500. The total recorded death toll since 7 October 2023 is now 71,824.
In October 2025 the UN reported that 81% of buildings in Gaza had been either damaged or destroyed rendering the vast majority of the population homeless and relying on temporary shelters. Israel continues to destroy buildings in Gaza.
Israel recently banned 37 aid groups from working in Gaza. UN experts said:
Banning life-saving organisations from operating in Gaza marks a new phase in a policy that renders life unbearable for a population already devastated by genocide. This strategy will create conditions that force Palestinians into chronic deprivation, threatening their very survival as a group and further violating the Genocide Convention – it must be stopped …
We have entered a new phase in which Israel and its supporters have reached the genocide without witness stage. With journalists being killed, denied access, or forced out, humanitarian organisations paralysed or expelled, and a misleading global sense of ‘ceasefire’, atrocities are being committed without public scrutiny.
Featured image via Defend our Juries
Politics
It’s the cost of living, stupid
The Westminster circus will be following every twist and turn of the admittedly disgraceful Peter Mandelson, Jeffrey Epstein, Morgan McSweeney and Keir Starmer nightmare blunt rotation. Many will say that this is the sort of scandal that could bring down the UK’s Labour government. But the biggest threat to any government comes from bread-and-butter economic issues, and Britain in 2026 is no exception. These days one might be labelled ‘cognitively-challenged-a-phobic’ for quoting James Carville, but what matters most is still the economy, stupid.
Another Downing Street chief of staff who left in acrimonious circumstances, Dominic Cummings, nails this on his latest Substack. It is a distillation of dozens of focus groups he has been monitoring to gauge the public mood. His conclusion: forget Epstein; the reason Labour will be sunk is that, despite talking a big game, it has completely failed to reduce the cost of living. Alongside immigration, this is the greatest failure of this government in the minds of the public.
Labour inherited inflation that had been brutally suppressed by what turned out to be the Pyrrhic efforts of former chancellor Jeremy Hunt. When Hunt entered No 11 at the end of the Truss interregnum in 2022, inflation was at a 41-year high of 11.1 per cent. By May 2024, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) hit the Bank of England’s two per cent target. Yet, by late 2025, within six months of Labour taking office, CPI had crept back up to around 3.4 per cent, driven mainly by the growing cost of services, food and drink.
Starmer and chancellor Rachel Reeves have now set about making the situation worse. Their employers’ national-insurance hike from 13.8 per cent to 15 per cent, the large minimum-wage increases, vehicle-excise-duty rises on higher-emission vehicles, and the restrictions on winter-fuel payments have all added to household and business costs. Milton Friedman called inflation a hidden tax. It hurts the poorest hardest.
Worse still, Labour is doubling down on policies that will put further pressure on prices and squeeze living standards, just when people are already feeling the pinch. Hikes in so-called sin taxes – that is, taxes on things ordinary people like, but the government disapproves of – are making life especially difficult.
The last autumn budget included another tax increase on cigarettes: an extra £2.20 per 100 fags from October 2026. This will noticeably lift the tobacco component of the CPI later next year. Alcohol duty is also increasing again, remote gaming duty is being doubled to 40 per cent from April 2026, general betting duty on online sports is heading to 25 per cent, air passenger duty is rising for non-economy flights, and the five-pence cut on fuel duty is only being extended temporarily, before being reversed in September this year.
All of this is exactly the opposite of what is needed to ease the cost-of-living crisis, or help inflation return to two per cent. Just imagine what a mini-boom there would be if, going totally against the grain, and in time for the World Cup this summer, Labour announced it would scrap all these extra rises and hikes. This would cost a fraction of what the government plans to give Mauritius as part of the Chagos surrender deal. Even I, no fan of this Labour government, would join the jubilation.
Ironically, if Starmer can just hold on for a few more months, he might see slightly better economic headlines before many of these price-raising measures fully hit. Economist Kallum Pickering has pointed this out: inflation is inching down, and the Bank of England is likely to cut interest rates in March. But, as this week’s events have demonstrated, that is one almighty ‘if’.
As Starmer enters the most dangerous period of his premiership, he should be wary. The persistent feeling of being robbed at the checkout will remind people every single day of how little he has done to help them. Ronald Reagan once described inflation as being ‘as violent as a mugger, as frightening as an armed robber, and as deadly as a hit man’. These are words Starmer should heed – although, given Labour is also presiding over a surge in shoplifting and general lawlessness, you can see why this other violent phenomenon seems to be no big deal to those in charge.
Only constant vigilance against inflation can bring it under control. But as the debacle of Peter Mandelson’s hiring shows, vigilance isn’t exactly Keir Starmer’s forte. Brace yourselves for more pain to come.
James Price was previously chief of staff to the chancellor of the exchequer.
Politics
Gaza population drop of 10% could mean 200,000 deaths
In what is considered one of the most serious estimates since the outbreak of war in October 2023, the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights has suggested that Palestinian deaths in Gaza may have exceeded 200,000. The estimate is based on data indicating a population decline of more than 10% in recent months.
If confirmed, the figure would call into question current casualty estimates. It would also raise serious concerns about the gap between published statistics and the reality on the ground.
Gaza’s population decline opens the door to shocking possibilities
Stuart Casey-Maslen, head of the Academy’s International Humanitarian Law Focus Project, told Anadolu Agency that the recorded population decline could indicate the loss of around 200,000 people. He stressed that the figures announced so far “do not reflect the full extent of human losses.”
He explained that the officially documented toll includes only bodies that have been found or registered. An unknown number of victims may remain under rubble or in inaccessible areas. He said
We will need time to know the exact number. But it is clear that we are facing a huge human loss, and it is necessary to know how these people were killed.
According to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, documented deaths have reached 72,037, with more than 171,000 injured. The ministry notes that thousands of victims have not yet been recovered due to ongoing destruction and limited rescue access.
International report monitors Gaza among 23 armed conflicts
Maslen’s comments were included in the Academy’s War Watch report, which assessed Gaza and the West Bank alongside 23 other global conflicts over the past 18 months.
The report states that conditions in Gaza remain extremely dangerous. This is despite a decline in large-scale clashes compared to the most intense periods of fighting.
Maslen said the absence of widespread hostilities seen before last year’s ceasefire “does not mean that the suffering of the population has ended.” He stressed that people “are still dying in Gaza.”
He added that wounded civilians in need of urgent evacuation face severe shortages of food, water, shelter, and healthcare. He called for a significant increase in humanitarian aid and guaranteed, unhindered access.
Exceptional destruction and years of reconstruction
Turning to reconstruction, Maslen described the scale of destruction as “exceptional.” He said returning life to pre-October 2023 levels will take years, not months, and require billions of dollars in investment.
He emphasised that rebuilding critical infrastructure demands long-term international commitment. This must go beyond emergency relief to comprehensive development planning.
Legal characterisation and pending accountability
In legal terms, Maslen noted that the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry previously concluded that genocide had taken place in Gaza, though it did not specify a timeframe.
He also pointed out that in November 2024, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former defence minister Yoav Gallant. The charges relate to alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Maslen criticised sanctions imposed on several ICC judges in connection with those warrants. He argued that such measures undermine international justice rather than support it.
He concluded that the attacks carried out by Hamas on 7 October 2023 cannot justify the scale of human losses that followed. He called for genuine legal accountability for events over the past two years.
Between limited official figures and alarming population estimates, the situation in Gaza remains unresolved. The true scale of human loss may be far greater than current records suggest.
Featured image via Wafa News Agency
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