Politics
Stop trying to race-swap Shakespeare
My reaction on reading headlines like ‘Shakespeare was a black woman’ is very much like that of Tom Hardy’s Mad Max on seeing a naked woman caged atop a tower in the middle of the desert: ‘That’s bait.’
You feel as though you’re being lured into a futile anti-woke tirade. Or, at least, you want to dismiss the idea out of hand – purely on the basis of rigid dogma, unexamined racial prejudice and male chauvinism. The reason being that only an Englishman could have produced work of such universal genius…
Now that would indeed be ridiculous. Women, and indeed people of various races, have produced a wealth of evidence to the contrary, albeit not so much in late-16th and early-17th-century England.
One could make a strong argument that, long before the first wave of organised feminism, the two greatest British novelists of the 19th century were women. Despite the success of Jane Austen only a few years earlier, the fact that poor Mary Ann Evans (better known as George Eliot) chose to change her name is still occasionally portrayed as an adaptation to patriarchal tyranny – even if it may have been a ruse to conceal her identity while she pursued an extra-marital affair. But exposing this misdemeanour is a footling ambition among serious literary scalp-hunters. It’s Shakespeare or bust.
The unhappy mule chosen to smuggle in the blasphemy that Shakespeare was a black woman is one Emilia Bassano. She was certainly an interesting figure, and one who rode what were treacherous waters for a talented woman at the time with considerable elan. She published what Wikipedia affirms was ‘the first book of substantial, original poetry written by an Englishwoman’. You’d think that might be enough. But no.
So, for the avoidance of doubt, let me say why I, and I suspect so many millions, find this kind of thing so tiresome. It is because efforts to undermine the few foundations of British pride and identity that have thus far resisted ‘decolonisation’ have to be named for what they are – aggressive and malevolent attempts to confuse and demoralise an already deracinated people.
It should be clarified that Bassano is not a new candidate for the ‘true’ creator of Hamlet, Falstaff and Lear. She has long been conjectured to be the ‘Dark Lady’ who Shakespeare wrote about in his sonnets, who plays second fiddle to the ‘Fair Youth’ in the 154-strong collection. Nearly 20 years ago, John Hudson decided to give this the kind of twist that it would demand were it to be a Netflix drama, and asserted that Bassano was the actual creative genius behind at least several of the Bard’s plays. You can just picture the montage of flashbacks – meaningful glances, discreetly passed manuscripts, borrowed signet rings pressed into hot wax – as it all begins to make sense to the puzzled library mole.
Now, on this precarious pole, feminist historian Irene Coslet has erected a new tent – namely that Shakespeare was ‘a black woman, Anglo-Venetian, of Moroccan descent, and covertly Jewish’. All of which makes poor Will look even more pale and stale than an unsold bacon wrap awaiting its fate as the shutters come down on another slow day in the Stratford-upon-Avon Greggs.
I am not going to attempt to go toe-to-toe with a feminist historian of two decades standing on the terms she has established for the debate. Anyone wishing to poke about in her cogitations will find a workable precis in her own essay for the LSE blog, published earlier this month. Good luck.
Suffice to say that Coslet acknowledges the importance of Shakespeare not merely as a dramatist, but also in having ‘shaped the thinking of many modern philosophers, including Freud and Marx’, which feels like a slur. She then begins to reference the old père des mensonges himself, Michel Foucault, a name that clangs a bell as ominous as any that warned Macbeth that the hour of regicide had come.
However, I do accept the subtitle to her LSE piece as pointing to a real issue: ‘Why authorship and representation matter.’ Because that might be the nagging doubt playing on many readers’ minds – why should I care?
The long-standing determination of various parties to demonstrate that Shakespeare was not the son of a lowly glove maker ranges from harmless parlour game to something considerably more pernicious. The general drift of it has been to suggest – with pained expressions of regretful patrician concern – that such an uneducated and unworldly rube simply could not have had the learning or the experience to peer so deeply into the hearts and minds of Caesar and Lear. Thus Edward de Vere, the Earl of Oxford, rose to become the poet manqué of choice.
This latest iteration – that the immortal verse was the work of an even more marginalised and erased archetype, not less – is exactly what we should expect in the present moment. But it is every bit as charged with bitterness, class hatred and snobbery as its predecessors. ‘How dare this individual, with so few opportunities presented to him, have done what none before or since has managed?’ The real author surely must have been, not an earl or a courtier this time, but a cruelly repressed soul, a victim of unenlightened social norms – and of men. She must have been the product of social forces, of material dialectics, and not simply a gift miraculous to a degree that looks suspiciously like the beneficence of God.
Shakespeare is the target for this sort of thing for obvious reasons, but nevertheless I think they are worth revisiting. He was not simply the greatest writer in the English language – in any language, in fact, when it becomes permissible to say so again – but by such a great height as to evoke the sublime. He is not the highest peak in a substantial range. He towers, from every angle, like the Matterhorn.
The only comparison I can think of in the arts is Beethoven. But even Beethoven had Bach, Mozart and Haydn on whom to build. Shakespeare erupts from the timeline like a kraken, his imaginative scope unmaking our minds. Forebears like Geoffrey Chaucer and Edmund Spenser are worthwhile subjects of study. But, if we are honest, they are mostly of interest to scholars – often young and resentful ones. Christopher Marlowe undoubtedly had immense and rightly lamented potential. But it was Shakespeare, in the words of Harold Bloom, who made us who we are. With his miraculous ability to make us self-aware, to overhear our own thoughts, motivations, inner struggles and desires, he invented the human.
This is then a source of pride – to me and millions of other Englishmen. Because yes, representation matters.
So no, we are not going to start slicing up and sharing out pieces of Shakespeare. I do not propose to start emphasising Frederick Douglass’s white father, or Bob Marley’s, or Barack Obama’s white mother (whose dreams he has yet to memorialise). I am happy for the Jews to have Spinoza back, after they rejected him, and Disraeli too, of course. And even for Alexandre Dumas’ quart of black blood to be cherished by readers who share it. Even works and ideas that are powerfully universal, that resonate for all humans, are the products nevertheless of individuals, who have the characteristics they have.
A notorious troll on X called Howling Mutant once quipped:
‘A black woman invented the telescope. You might disagree. You might even have some evidence to the contrary. But you have to ask yourself: is this really worth losing my job over? A black woman invented the telescope.’
But when it comes to Shakespeare, just this once, I am even willing to lose my job over it. He is ours. End of, as I expect he first said.
Simon Evans is a spiked columnist and stand-up comedian. Tickets for his tour, Have We Met?, are on sale here.
Politics
Orgreave inquiry finally underway – Canary
The Starmer government has finally announced the start of its bland inquiry into state violence during the ‘Battle of Orgreave’ coking plant during the 1980s miners’ strike.
The inquiry’s brief should be to identify those who should stand trial or at least face disgrace for sending heavily-armed police, and soldiers dressed as police, to viciously beat prosecute striking miners then prosecuted the victims. It should be shaming media bosses and ‘journalists’ who helped smear the victims. Like the BBC’s editing of footage to falsely portray miners as attacking first.
This photo was taken 36 years ago today just before the massed ranks of police attacked and brutalised the miners at Orgreave.
Later that day @BBCNews reversed their film to make it look to the whole nation like the miners attacked first.
Don’t ever forget that.#OrgreaveJustice pic.twitter.com/M7PaIdfyyA— Ian Prowse (@IanProwse) June 18, 2020
Instead, its job will be to “aid public understanding” — but not until 2028, almost four years after Starmer conned his way into government after promising a prompt inquiry into the police charge.
Orgreave — the war on miners
As the Thatcher regime continued its war on the miners and its cover-up of its own crimes, it tried to jail 95 miners but the trials collapsed. South Yorkshire Police were eventually forced to pay more than half a million in compensation and costs, a large sum at the time. But no police officer was ever disciplined, let alone prosecuted.
The Orgreave Truth and Justice Campaign said the government had taken far too long to begin inquiry and paid tribute to its members’ tenacity in continuing to push for it. Anglican bishop of Sheffield Pete Wilcox, who will chair the inquiry, said he wanted to resolve the trauma of miners and their communities and would:
follow the evidence without prejudice, wherever it may lead, wholly independent of government, law enforcement or any other public body.
Anyone who has observed the contempt establishment creature Starmer and his hangers-on have shown to the Orgreave campaign for years will know that Wilcox will have another fight on his hands to keep that promise.
The Orgreave Truth and Justice Campaign, which has sought a statutory inquiry since forming in 2012, welcomed the announcement, although it said it was disappointed at the time taken to reach this formal start.
The campaign said its members, who include former striking miners, had needed “determination and tenacity”, supported by the wider labour and trade union movement. It said: “We have … tried our best to influence the process to ensure this does not become a police-led inquiry but one shaped by the miners and their experiences.”
The truth
Sarah Jones, the policing minister, said the panel’s purpose was to get to the truth about the Orgreave events. She said:
I’ve had the privilege of meeting the campaigners, and I think the overriding sense of injustice is obviously palpable, but also the sense that people just haven’t been believed or listened to for a very long time.
What is important to me is that people have the confidence to come forward, with whatever information we’re going to need, and to be able to tell their story of what happened in a way where they know that they will be listened to and believed.
South Yorkshire police said they were “fully committed to supporting the Orgreave inquiry”.
The four panel members are Wendy Williams, a former chief prosecutor in the Crown Prosecution Service and inspector in the police and fire service inspectorate; Mary Bousted, a former joint general secretary of the National Education Union; Joanna Gilmore, a senior lecturer in law at the University of York who specialises in public order, human rights and policing policy; and Angela Sutton-Vane, a historian with expertise in archiving and preserving police records.
Wilcox said:
I wish to help resolve a trauma that persists to this day — for the miners who were injured at Orgreave, who were arrested at Orgreave, who feel their story has not yet been fully told. For their families and communities, and for the relationship between police and the mining community.
I will follow the evidence without prejudice, wherever it may lead.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
EU border research supporting repressive migration policies
The University of Reading is one of the top universities to receive research and innovation funding from the EU’s Framework Programmes and a range of other EU instruments to support the building of Europe’s border regime.
A new report from the Transnational Institute, “Border Labs,” highlights how universities are deeply involved in Europe’s repressive border and migration policies in multiple ways.
Three UK universities were in the top 20 recipients of EU funding for border security and control research: the University of Reading, Queen Mary University of London, and Sheffield Hallam University. From 2002 to May 2025, over 200 universities, higher-education institutions, and academies participated in 110 EU Framework Programme projects related to border security and control, receiving a total of over €100 million in EU funding.
Although UK universities were temporarily excluded from EU funding following Brexit, a new agreement has allowed them to fully participate again from 2024 onwards.
From biometrics and surveillance to AI, lie detection, drones, and other unmanned systems, the report documents universities working across a wide range of border-control technologies.
AI and pseudoscience
The report points out that there is investment in technologies that are not merely repressive. Some are straight-up stupid and are done through opaque ways, like spin-off companies.
These spin-off start-ups are built on university research. The same academics who did the research often run them.
Manchester Metropolitan University was a recipient of EU funding for iBorderCtrl, a Horizon 2020 project that ran from 2016 to 2019.
Silent Talker was a Manchester Metropolitan University spin-off that claimed its AI could detect lies. Its creators claimed it could detect deception by analysing facial micro-expressions.
The company is now dissolved, and accusations of pseudoscience have followed it.
Working with arms companies
The report also shows how deeply universities are embedded with the arms industry.
Italian defence giant Leonardo is the most frequent corporate partner of universities in EU-funded border security projects. It has collaborated repeatedly with Finland’s Laurea University of Applied Sciences and the Università degli Studi di Roma La Sapienza. These partnerships span projects on maritime surveillance, hybrid threats, and customs interoperability.
In the UK, BAE Systems has a longstanding relationship with the University of Southampton. The report gives an example of how the border-industrial-academic complex works.
BAE funds research through the university’s Centre for Research in Active Control. That partnership helped produce ClanTect, a university spin-off that sold heartbeat detectors to Frontex and the UK Border Force.
The report describes Frontex as “a central node in the EU’s securitised border regime.” Frontex is the European Border and Coast Guard Agency.
EU and the Saudi connection
The report also brings out a connection between European universities and Saudi Arabia.
Frontex has a longstanding cooperation with the Naif Arab University for Security Sciences, or NAUSS. The institution is based in Riyadh and linked to the Saudi royal family. Its governing council includes senior officials from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Morocco, and Jordan.
The report says
Training of security forces in Arab countries is an important part of the university’s programme, which is where Frontex has stepped in. Institutional contacts date back to at least 2020, at a time when Saudi Arabia was playing an active role in the Yemen War.
Canary reported this week on Saudi Arabia’s record.
The Western-backed Gulf theocracy is one of the biggest recipients of UK arms exports.
African trade unions have accused it of widespread violations against migrant workers: forced labour, wage theft, physical and sexual abuse, and systemic racism. Workers have been locked in homes, forced to work 18 to 20 hours a day, denied wages, healthcare and rest.
Saudi Arabia is now trying to dismiss a formal complaint at the International Labour Organisation.
Netanyahuisation of EU universities
Michele Lancione, who wrote the foreword, argues that Europe is seeing a Netanyahuisation.
That means universities are not simply being controlled by far-right governments.
They are being reshaped to serve the military-border-industrial complex, just as Israeli universities have been reshaped to serve occupation and genocide.
In Israel, universities have become servile to the military occupation of Palestine. No Israeli institution has spoken out against the genocide in Gaza.
Europe is heading the same way, the report warns.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Motability changes will limit how far disabled people drive
The Motability Scheme has announced more changes that will negatively impact disabled people’s lives. As part of reforms to the scheme, disabled people will see their mileage allowance halved.
More Motability cuts
The scheme announced that from July 1 2026, new leases will only have a mileage allowance of 10,000 miles a year. This has been slashed in half from the previous 20,000. The excess mileage fee will also increase. The previous 5p per extra mile will go up by five times that amount to 25p.
The excess mileage fee mightn’t seem like a lot, but you’ve got to remember just how vital a lifeline driving is for many disabled people. Especially with the state of accessible public transport. It’ll soon add up. It also doesn’t allow for emergencies. For instance, my nearest specialist hospital is 14 miles away — that’s an extra £4.50 there and back.
But it’s not just for hospital appointments. Disabled people use their cars to live the same lives as the rest of society. To get to work, take their kids to school, go on holiday, do whatever the fuck we like.
Labour bowing to right-wing dickheads
Except for the government, the media and a lot of society don’t want us doing what we want.
This follows the Labour government bowing to pressure from right-wing Twitter dickheads last year. As The Canary previously reported, Starmer’s leadership listened more to right-wing rage bait than to disabled people’s concerns.
Along with wanting to confiscate asylum seekers’ jewellery, Labour announced that ‘luxury’ vehicles would no longer be part of Motability. Disabled people would also face thousands in up-front fees and be subject to VAT.
The missing context from this, of course, though, was that many ‘basic’ cars can’t be adapted in the ways disabled people often need — but Labour didn’t let facts stop their hate.
Cuts will limit disabled people
Most bizarrely, Motability are using those cuts as a reason to impose more restrictions on disabled people. And they’re phrasing the mileage restrictions as a good thing.
Andrew Miller, CEO of Motability Operations said:
In last year’s Autumn Budget, the UK Government announced tax changes that affect the Scheme. From 1 July 2026, VAT and Insurance Premium Tax (IPT) will apply to most leases. Together, these changes mean it will cost significantly more to run the Scheme. If we did nothing, the average cost of a new lease would increase by around £1,100.
It was clear to me that simply passing all these costs on to customers was not an option. We had to carefully consider how to reduce the tax impact as much as possible, but also focusing on changes that reflect how most customers already use their vehicles.
Whilst it’s clear Motability is trying its hardest to offset the government’s imposed changes, but they’re still punishing those who need to use their car more.
To limit disabled people’s driving in this way, implies that we shouldn’t be able to participate in life as fully as non-disabled people. And again that’s playing right into the right-wing arsehole’s hands.
Featured image via MotabilityScheme
Politics
DHS confirms that Lewandowski left the department along with Noem
Corey Lewandowski, the Trump 2016 campaign manager who served as an unpaid adviser to former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem for the past year, is no longer working at DHS, the department said Friday.
A statement confirmed his departure from DHS but did not specify any future government role for Lewandowski, who was photographed with Noem this week in Guyana during an official visit she made to the South American country.
“Mr. Lewandowski no longer has a role at DHS,” the statement said.
The confirmation of his status at DHS comes amid speculation about his future after Noem was named a special envoy for Western Hemisphere security issues. Lewandowski appeared with her in photos released by the U.S. Embassy in Guyana.
Controversy swirled around Lewandowski’s role at DHS during Noem’s stormy tenure leading the department at the forefront of the administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement operations.
Lewandowski started working as political adviser to Noem while she was South Dakota governor and lobbied President Donald Trump to name her DHS chief. He played an outsize role at the department once she joined the Cabinet.
Lewandowski came into the Trump administration as a “special government employee,” raising questions about how he was counting his days at the agency. U.S. law limits temporary government employees to 130 days per year of unpaid work, but Lewandowski has worked at DHS since the start of Noem’s tenure in February 2025.
He did not respond to an earlier request for comment about whether he’d be staying in government. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Lewandowski’s employment status Friday.
Despite his informal status, Lewandowski had the ability to veto any contract exceeding $100,000 at the agency, as well as other high-level decisions. An administration official, granted anonymity to speak candidly, also told POLITICO that Lewandowski was already facing heat over DHS’s short-lived move last month to shut down TSA PreCheck. The move was seen as a way to pressure Democrats to fund the department, which has been shut down since February of this year over a funding impasse.
Noem earlier this month refused to answer questions from House Democrats about her relationship with Lewandowski amid media reports that the two have had an affair.
Lewandowski, who served as Trump’s campaign manager in 2016, was widely credited with the tactical decisions that led to the president’s win in the New Hampshire primary that year. His star faded after he was accused of grabbing a female reporter by the arm at a campaign event. He was removed from his post during an internal power struggle with then-campaign chair Paul Manafort. The Trump ally denied any wrongdoing for the incident.
Despite Lewandowski’s rocky efforts in 2016, Trump and Lewandowski have remained close. Trump briefly named Lewandowski as a senior adviser to the 2024 presidential campaign, though he was moved into a surrogate role by October in the face of displeasure from Trump.
Politics
Israeli MP calls murdering Gaza children ‘normal’
Far-right Israeli Knesset member Yitzhak Kroizer is an unashamed, racist advocate of the murder of Palestinian children. He is a party ally of possibly-deceased genocidal maniac Itamar Ben-Gvir and the son of a settler rabbi linked to Israeli terrorist Meir Kahane. Kroizer told Israel’s parliament that there are “no innocent children” in the occupied West Bank and that he doesn’t have “even a bit of any kind of feeling of mercy for Palestinians”:
🚨HOLY SHIT !!!!!
Israeli politician Yitzik Kroizer says killing Palestinian children is normal if it supports the IDF mission.
He adds there are no innocent children in the West Bank.
Repost this. Please I beg you pic.twitter.com/jCZPrQtG4i
— Save Gaza (@Alee93ale) March 26, 2026
He fits right into the murderous, child-raping Epstein state.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Reform have cancelled democracy and are having an auction instead
After less than a year in power, a Reform council has cancelled democracy. For the first time anyone can remember, Durham County Council has just decided to cancel a full council meeting, “due to a lack of business.”
Council meetings are the forum where the public – you, know, the ones who pay the council tax – get to ask questions and see decisions made. Where other elected representatives get to challenge decisions. Residents will be asking if the councillors will hand back their allowances since they’re not bothering to hold the meetings they’re paid to attend. This contempt for democracy is a warning for what would happen if they won national power.
Cuts, cuts, cuts
It’s less than a year since Reform won Durham County Council with a landslide: 65 out of 98 seats. As predicted, they would struggle when it came to actually running a local authority.
Reform Durham were elected on a pledge to cut waste. But after fifteen years of austerity, services were already cut to the bone. Instead, they cut funding to town and parish councils, forcing a 6.92% increase in council tax precepts to make up the difference. Leisure centres and kids playgrounds are on the chopping block. A school free transport scheme has been cut with 143 kids now paying for passes.
They’ve abolished the council tax reduction scheme. Thousands of people in poverty are now liable for council tax. Report after report shows that this just racks up debts onto the most vulnerable. Many of those affected experience mental ill-health or physical disabilities. People just end up in a debt spiral with court orders against them. Councils rarely get their money back. It’s counterproductive – the extra despair increases pressure on local services.
The Money and Mental Health Policy Institute charity, chaired by money saving expert Martin Lewis, described councils’ polices of sending in bailiffs as “worse than loansharks.” There’s a total of £6 billion in council tax arrears across the country, and it’s rising year on year. You can’t get blood out of a stone.
The fact that Reform Durham have ran out of policies to implement makes a mockery of their claim to take back control. They still collect their £13,300-a-year salaries though, and that’s without any extras for being on committees.
So here’s the question: does the evidence show that Reform are on the side of ordinary people?
Discrimination and bullying
In a move that surprised literally no one, we did see a lot of performative actions around flags. Notably, they removed the Pride Flag just before the Durham Pride event. So apparently they support ordinary people, but not if they’re queer. And their deputy leader in Durham, Darren “Crafty” Grimes, posted on social media that he refused to attend Diversity, Equality and Inclusion training. Except there wasn’t any – he made it up for attention.
Like all parties, Reform’s voter base is a coalition of different views and values.
There’s always been a nasty, xenophobic streak to Farage personally. 34 independent witnesses cite extreme racist comments and bullying. But he’s not racist enough for the ethno-nationalist culture warriors who are splintering off into Advance UK and Restore UK.
The shine is coming off Reform. They lost the Caerphilly by-election in November. Farage had been hanging round the count looking to do some media gloating, but high-tailed it out of Wales once they could see the piles of votes. He’s not even in the corner of his own candidates.
Losing ground
Reform lost in Denton and Gorton. And were sore losers. In Durham they lost the Murton ward by-election earlier this month, with an 11.2% swing against them. After less than a year in charge, Reform Durham are down to 60 councillors.
Many Reform voters were drawn to Reform on a “we don’t trust politicians” and “no one is on our side” line. Most of us would agree with that. A lot of people believed that same line when Boris Johnson used it, despite being an Eton-educated Bullingdon Boy.
They can see their high streets declining. They can feel the cost of living crisis. Once you get past the tribal hard-liners, many Reform voters don’t really think Reform have any answers, they just want to send a message. They want to be heard. Instead, they are seeing neoliberalism being imposed on the Reform Party from the top. They’re wondering why loads of ex-Tories with serious corruption records are taking senior positions in their party.
Corruption
So Reform Durham have snubbed families with kids, people who live in towns, LGBT+ people, those with disabilities, those with mental health problems, and of course, anyone who doesn’t fit their definition of British. But who have they supported?
Welsh Reform leader Nathan Gill is serving a ten and a half year jail sentence for accepting Russian bribes. What a patriot. Although whether he supported Putin or just his own bank account is hard to tell.
Farage certainly supported Trump’s idiotic attacks on Iran, which are wrecking the finances of millions of Britons. Then changed his mind when he realised he was out of touch with the public.
Reform are keen supporters of tax dodging, too. Earlier this month, Richard Tice MP, Reform’s deputy leader, was rumbled as having dodged £600,000 in tax through a rare legal loophole. He then doubled down saying he was all in favour of tax avoidance.
Farage himself is never seen in his constituency. He’s too busy earning more from side-hustles than any other MP in Parliament – over £1.1 million. A true man of the people. Remember that next time you’re wondering if you can afford a holiday.
Here’s another question. What prompts a man who is already a multi-millionaire to spend his time saying whatever he’s told to say for £70 a pop on Cameo? Including pushing dodgy crypto currency investments. Is that the behaviour of someone who is serious about fixing Britain? Is he really on your side, or is he for sale to the highest bidder?
Reform have cancelled democracy, and are having an auction instead.
Politics
Three steps governments can take now to cut energy bills
As volatile energy prices continue to spike, driven in part by geopolitical instability and gas market shocks, governments face an urgent challenge. How can they bring down household energy bills immediately and protect citizens from fossil-flation making everything more expensive?
The good news is that short-term relief and long-term transition are not mutually exclusive. Here are three measures that countries could implement almost overnight.
1. Tax windfall profits of fossil fuel companies and use them to support households
Fossil fuel companies cashing in obscene profits during high fossil fuel prices should contribute to shielding consumers. Fossil fuel companies profit from this crisis. They should pay for the solution.
A windfall tax can capture excess profits and redistribute them directly to consumers through measures such as targeted bill support, direct cash transfers to most affected sectors, an expansion of existing free or heavily subsidised (“lifeline”) electricity tariffs to vulnerable households, and free public transportation.
Recycling windfall revenues into consumer protection helps avoid that outcome while keeping incentives for clean investment intact. The UK’s windfall tax on oil and gas producers raised around £12bn in 2024. This helped fund its Energy Price Guarantee, limiting average household bills during the crisis.
Anne Jellema, chief executive of 350.org, says:
This is about fairness and maintaining public trust. Right now, fossil fuel companies are making obscene profits while households struggle to pay their bills , and people can see that.. Taxing these windfall profits and redirecting them to support households is essential to protect people and livelihoods.
2. Decouple electricity prices from gas
Many markets, such as the UK, Germany, Italy and Netherlands still tie electricity prices to the cost of gas. This is even the case when much of the power comes from cheaper renewable sources like wind and solar. As a result, when gas prices spike, electricity bills rise unnecessarily.
In Spain, however, the reduced influence of expensive fossil gas and coal power on the electricity market, driven by surging wind and solar, has turned the country into one of the cheapest power markets in Europe.
Governments can intervene through market reforms such as contracts for difference, regulated tariffs, or temporary price-setting mechanisms to ensure consumers benefit from lower-cost renewable energy. Jellema comments:
Decoupling electricity from gas prices is one of the most effective ways to stabilize bills. It protects households from global fossil fuel shocks and reflects the true, lower cost of renewable energy.
3. Decentralised renewable energy
Governments should fast-track the just deployment of renewable energy in affected regions using emergency energy response funds, bilateral finance, and development support. Priority must go to distributed renewable energy solutions which are quick and easy to deploy.
These can include off-grid solar and mini-grids for communities and essential infrastructure such as hospitals and schools, rooftop and balcony solar for households, and clean cooking solutions for smallholders.
Emergency renewable funding must be redirected from fossil fuel emergency response budgets and existing bilateral aid, not by creating new debt instruments that will burden already-stressed countries.
Equity, accessibility, and long-term sustainability must be ensured in decentralised renewable energy deployment. This can ultimately guarantee that these systems are owned and managed by communities.
Jellema points out:
Relief today means transition tomorrow. These measures are not a substitute for a green energy transition; they are a bridge. In the longer term, the only durable solution to energy price volatility is to accelerate the transition to homegrown, renewable energy.
Investing in wind, solar, storage, and energy efficiency reduces dependence on imported fossil fuels and insulates economies from geopolitical shocks. It also addresses the root cause of the climate and biodiversity crisis.
But the transition must be managed carefully. Without immediate relief, households and businesses will struggle, and support for change may erode as calls for reopening ‘national’ fossil fuel sources increase.
By redistributing windfalls and cutting energy bills, and decoupling energy prices from gas, governments can ease the pressure now while building a cleaner, more stable energy system for the future.
The choice is not between affordability and sustainability. With the right strategy, we can, and must, deliver both.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Signs to ‘US war crimes base’ appear in Fairford, Gloucestershire
Signs directing locals to a nearby ‘US war crimes base‘ have appeared in Fairford, Gloucestershire.
In March 2026, Declassified UK reported that B-52H and B-1B warplanes were seen flying from RAF Fairford to bomb Iran. Keir Starmer had initially refused use of the base in February, except for “defensive” purposes. But as with the Gaza genocide, the word “defensive” has been stretched beyond all meaning.
With the UK government continuing to exploit every possible loophole to excuse its complicity in war crimes, guerrilla campaigners have chosen to cut through the noise. The signs appeared along access roads on 26 March.
Protests at RAF Fairford
It’s not the first time RAF Fairford has been subject to protests by anti-war campaigners. The base was at the centre of a high-profile direct action trial in 2003. Five protestors were charged with criminal damage for breaking instrument panels on tankers and cutting the brakes on trailers used to carry bombs.
Keir Starmer was, at that time, a part of the protestors’ defense council. Now he’s enabling use of the same site for another illegal war. At the same time, he’s cracking down on those who take similar action to prevent war crimes.
Featured image via Facebook
Politics
Labour health minister courted by private healthcare donations
Labour health secretary Wes Streeting has taken another £55,000 from the ODP Group Ltd—which provides headhunting services to the NHS and private healthcare providers.
The firm’s owner, Peter Hearn, has longstanding links to private healthcare.
The donation
Millionaire recruitment mogul Hearn is the ultimate controller of the ODP Group. In addition to overseeing senior NHS recruitment, Hearn also works on recruitment for private healthcare providers. This dual role is particularly interesting, as the NHS and private providers are in competition for staff.
Lobbyists and firms with private healthcare connections have brought in over half a million pounds to Labour’s cabinet since 2023.
That’s on top of a £4m donation to the party from Quadrature Capital, which has significant investments in private healthcare. More broadly, MPs have accepted £2.7m in donations from private healthcare linked companies or individuals since 2023.
This is not the first donation Streeting has accepted from a Hearn-linked company. In 2023, he took £48, 000 from the OPD Group, according to the National (Scotland). in donations from another company Hearn controls. And the Financial Times has reported that, through seemingly shell companies, Hearn previously donated over £1m to Labour and prominent individual MPs like Streeting from between 2014 and 2023.
Labour is a “party for the rich”
Scottish Greens co-leader Gillian Mackay said that Labour is a party for the “rich,” betraying its working class origin story.
Once again, the Labour Party are showing the public that they are the party for the rich, leaving working people and families in the lurch. While Labour takes donations from those that profit from sickness and bad health, the Scottish Greens will continue to stand up for an NHS that is fit for purpose, that everyone can use and is free at the point of use Voters across Scotland have a chance on May 7 to finally end the status-quo, and vote for a party that will make change happen. A political system that finally works for people, not for profit.
SNP MSP Clare Haughey added:
It is high time the Labour Party came on clean on whether its health policy is being shaped by patient needs or lining shareholder pockets
It’s no wonder private healthcare-linked firms are donating to Streeting. The Labour prime minister said in January 2025 that the government will increase private provison of NHS services by 20%. But in some areas it has already increased by significantly more than that.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Your Party goes missing as local elections approach
Your Party (YP) has once again dragged its feet in establishing processes and structures since its inaugural conference in November. As a result, membership have grown frustrated at being unable to stand Your Party candidates in the upcoming local elections.
4,850 councillor seats will be up for grabs on May 7, with projections suggesting Reform will be a significant threat at the ballot box. The Green Party look set to be the real competition to the far-right, as YP appears set to miss the starting pistol.
However, socialists across the country are wary of the Green Party’s broad-church approach. After all, they justifiably fear it could follow a similar path to Labour – ultimately capitulating and abandoning its left-wing socialist base once in power.
As a result, Your Party members have refused to allow a failure of leadership to prevent socialist candidates getting elected. Forming their own independent groups and standing without the party machine behind them, they intend to fight the far-right in their communities themselves.
From the north of England to the south, socialism intends to be firmly on the ballot across the country.
Your Party in the South
Groups have formed in North Somerset, North Devon and Torridge, East Herts, and West Essex, indicating a growing wave of socialist energy at the grassroots level across the South. These areas have typically alternated between the Liberal Democrats, Conservatives, Greens and Labour, but socialist candidates now intend to give the established parties a serious challenge.
Championing socialism under a Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (USC) banner, Paul Lenihan will be standing in Harlow in Essex.
The fact people who could have stood as Your Party candidates are standing under other organisations tells us something important. It underscores an inescapable reality: where there is the political will, there is always a way. The leadership of Your Party must take heed.
We also see a dogged perseverance in the London region, where we find the Camden People’s Alliance and Haringey Socialist Alliance. Both have told the Canary that they are coordinating with other progressives and setting up non-compete agreements to prevent the left vote from splitting unnecessarily.
Andrew Feinstein co-founded Camden People’s Alliance (CPA) alongside local activists and will be supporting six local candidates in the election. Working with other progressives to stop pointless infighting and push the left forward in unity, CPA are hoping to keep the far right out of Camden.
Having previously helped found MOU Ltd as a director, they have grown disillusioned with YP due to petty factionalism. No surprise, really – as Feinstein explained below, the crucial goal must be to kick Labour off our councils:
Hi For what it’s worth, I am not a member of YP. Even though I was very involved in the initial discussions I eventually never actually joined as a consequence of the factionalism & a number of other issues. I am working locally in Camden with the Camden Peoples Alliance. We have… https://t.co/z5Nu2pn9Hm
— Andrew Feinstein (@andrewfeinstein) March 15, 2026
YP endorsement for Haringey Socialist Alliance
We have also learned that there is an endorsed group in London that will have official Your Party councillors standing for election: the Haringey Socialist Alliance (HSA). HSA have six councillors up for election across three wards. In Bruce Castle, the candidates are Amelie Cooper and Paul Burnham; in Northumberland Park, Alison Davy and Gary McFarlane; and in West Green, Meryem Ulger and John Sinha.
Crucially, HSA told the Canary that they maintain a functioning working arrangement with their local Greens, ensuring socialists do not compete against one another. This display of respect and shared purpose will work to genuinely unite people over and above party-political interests – a lesson YP would do well to take on board.
London has been a particular hub of activity for socialist organising, with other groups also contesting the elections in their areas as independents.
The Enfield Community Independents, led by Khalid Sadur, will be hot on the doorsteps, engaging with their local community ahead of the ballot. In addition, the Southwark Independent Socialists are fielding candidates as well as East London’s Waltham Forest.
There is also an impressive assembly of socialists participating in the All-London Delegate Assembly (ALDA).
“People are angry”
Jacob Garnham-Warnock of Southwark Independent Socialists proudly stated that their YP branch is “strong and successful,” built last year by three DIY groups of YP supporters. Showing ingenuity, the group collected their own database of members and have focused their energy on a high-need ward in Old Kent Road.
Highlighting that the area has the “highest concentration of social housing” within a local authority with the “highest proportion” of social housing outside of Birmingham, Garnham-Warnock told the Canary:
We have registered a political party with the electoral commission, because we realised that the Your Party headquarters might fail to put an appropriate system in place, either on purpose or through a kind of malign neglect. We were right.
We have been out campaigning every weekend for the last month and are getting a noticeably enthusiastic response. People are angry. They are angry that rent is going up. They are angry that housing repairs are not being actioned. They are angry at the lack of facilities in the area. And they are angry that developers are building expensive flats that they know are not for them.
It is undeniable; Your Party members show they will not accept any excuses for not being ready. In Your Party’s absence, socialist candidates are set to be strongly represented in the upcoming local elections. Thankfully, this signals a coordinated and organised effort ready to mount a significant challenge to Reform UK.
Heading up north
Independent socialists are also fighting the far-right in our northern communities. Mike Forster of PACE in Huddersfield is sick to the back teeth of their local Labour council. Having been unable to secure official YP endorsement as previously hoped, Forster has been working hard in his community to put forward genuine socialist candidates for election.
Speaking to what can be achieved by principled, community-focused activism, Forster said:
I am a long-standing community campaigner and socialist in Huddersfield, best known as Chair of the Hands Off HRI campaign, which successfully pushed back management plans to close the hospital and A&E. The campaign was launched in 2016, continuing until 2020 when it was wound up during lockdown.
During that time, we raised enough money to bring a successful legal challenge and had numerous lobbies, demonstrations and public fundraising gigs. Our success was down to the huge public support we attracted. The outcome was to not only save our hospital, but also to secure a brand new A&E!
Finishing:
We cannot go on like this and need elected councillors who will stand up and fight for local communities and services.
In the midlands, Harris Khaliq is standing in Ward End fighting Labour in Birmingham. Not too far away, David Hitchmough is representing Knowsley Independents with Steve Guy putting his arguments to voters in their community in Kirkby.
Furthermore, a socialist group in Warrington has completely run out of patience and are now looking to formalise as the Warrington Socialist Alliance in the coming weeks. Little is known for candidates in Wales and Scotland, who have largely been abandoned by YP altogether.
YP springing into action, apparently
Nevertheless, whilst writing this article, we have become aware of groups receiving emails from Your Party awarding their endorsement in line with certain conditions. YP state that they cannot endorse individual candidates until they have seen due diligence checks. With time marching on, it is hard to imagine many will manage to tick all the bureaucratic boxes to get full approval from up high.
Needless to say, our criticism of Your Party has clearly lit a fire under them. That said, if only a few candidates secure endorsement, it is unlikely to make a significant impact in time for the elections.
For instance, one group who have achieved endorsement are good friends of Corbyn; Sam Gorst and Alan Gibbons of Liverpool Community Independents. Coincidentally, they don’t actually have an election to contest until 2027.
Of further concern, their email touts “campaign coordination with Jeremy Corbyn” – but makes no mention of Zarah Sultana, fellow co-founder and MP. Staying true to form, it reads like yet another slap in the face to Sultana and grassroots socialist members.
Your Party—which once promised hope—is now a wrecking ball, destroying any chance of a united front against billionaire-funded racist right-wing parties.@MaddisonW92 reports.https://t.co/46Fmhx9zC0
— Canary (@TheCanaryUK) March 24, 2026
Factionalism can only be defeated by true unity
Therefore, it is clear that factionalism remains alive and well in YP, with Corbyn and his allies firmly positioned to secure endorsements for their own factions.
But refusing to be sidelined, a determined cohort of socialists has dug in, standing their ground and refusing to go quietly. Undeterred by YP’s bureaucratic obstacles, they are stepping up to defend their communities against far-right division and hostility.
This marks a powerful display of solidarity and genuine courage – exactly the kind of grassroots spirit the Canary proudly supports.
Keep pushing forward, comrades. The fight for our communities has only just begun.
Featured image via the Canary
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