Politics
Stormont minister’s benefit fraud card backfires
A leading academic on social security has slammed a new anti-benefit fraud advert released by communities minister Gordon Lyons. A brief glimpse of the fear-mongering crap can be seen here. The ad features a searchlight seeking out dishonest claimants, with a dramatic voiceover declaring:
Benefit fraudsters are being identified, caught, and prosecuted.
Ciara Fitzpatrick, who is a senior lecturer in law at Ulster University (UU), specialises in the study of social security. Speaking on X, she denounced:
âŠa tax-payer funded ad campaign against benefit fraud despite stats released today suggesting that allegations have increased by 40% since the publication of the names of those convicted.
She asked the reasonable question of:
âŠwhy spend thousands on an ad campaign [?] In my view, itâs an appalling use of funds.
Her first point is in reference to a move in 2025 by the Democratic Unionist Partyâs (DUP) Lyons to restart the practice of naming those convicted of benefit fraud. This coincided with Lyons ramping up rhetoric. He urged people to tout on their neighbours if they suspect wrongdoing.
Fraud panic is an attempt to distract from inequality
Of course, these moves have a clear dual ideological purpose. Firstly, publicising names of those convicted, then starting a song and dance about it, inflates the size of benefit fraud in the public imagination.
In reality it constitutes a mere 2.5% of total benefit spending. There are far fewer cases resulting in prosecution. This is a more solid indicator of actual guilt. Furthermore, this directs people away from looking at much more serious cases of defrauding the public purse. For example, tax evasion is a major issue.
Not to mention diverting people from taking a critical look at capitalism itself. Our entire economic system is one big theft scheme. It is based around bosses stealing a hefty chunk of the value workers produce every day.
Secondly, asking the average taxpayer to grass up their next door neighbour is a convenient way of undermining class solidarity. See the person beside you as a potential enemy, weâre told, rather than the actual enemies faced by the vast majority. These enemies include employers who overwork and underpay us. They also include landlords who steal half our pay check, and politicians that do the bidding of both the above.
People Before Profitâs (PBP) Gerry Carroll made a similar point, saying in response to Lyons:
This is a tried and tested DUP tactic; to whip up fear and suspicion in local communities and turn neighbour against neighbour, in order to distract from the partyâs own political failures on tackling poverty, the housing crisis and widening inequality.
Lyons made a speech in Stormont coinciding with the adâs release, and boasting about the results of his change in tack:
In an early and visible sign of my intent, last year I reintroduced the departmental practice of naming those who were found guilty in the courts. Since doing so, my department has seen anonymous fraud referrals from members of the public rise to 9,857 at the end of [Jan 2026] compared with the total year end figure of 6,353 for 2024/25. It is clear that as a result of my leadership on these issues, benefit fraud is now clearly on the public agenda.
To the annoyance, Iâm sure, of some in this chamber, I will keep highlighting the issue and keep it as a priority for the department.
Lyons has been demanding an increase in the departmentâs ÂŁ16.7 million budget for tackling fraud and error in the benefits system. He claimed discussions had been ongoing with Westminster. The aim was that a portion of money recovered would be kept by Stormont. This indicates that Starmerâs stingy regime is encouraging the DUP approach.
Money for increased clampdown, but not to relieve poverty
Mark Durkan of the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) asked what was actually being done to help people, rather than seeking further forms of punishment. He said:
While some people do abuse the system, this system itself abuses people. Tens of thousands of genuine claimants struggle with a complex, slow and punitive system where genuine mistakes can lead to sanctions, and now sack cloth and ashes too.
How much of that ÂŁ16.7 million has been spent chasing fraudsters and how much has been spent to reduce the stress and suffering caused by a system that creates errors and hardship?
A reminder that, as an example of current benefits available, Jobseekerâs Allowance in the Six Counties is a pitiful ÂŁ72.90 per week for those under 25, and ÂŁ92.05 for those 25 or over. Despite how we are dishonestly told migrants flock to Britain for its generous benefits system, it in fact lags far behind the rest of Europe. UUâs Fitzpatrick also flagged how those on benefits are facing the prospect of discretionary support being gutted. This is leaving the most desperate fully exposed.
Online, commenters contrasted the DUPâs keenness to clamp down on benefits cheats with their lax approach to the massive fraud that took place under the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) scheme. That debacle saw half a billion lost, often into the pockets of big agricultural players. The DUP ignored whistleblowers drawing attention to the money being stolen.
Nobody wants benefit fraud, but we are seeing unprecedented levels of societyâs wealth hoarded by the top 0.1%. Rather than a focus on reclaiming relative pennies in an already ungenerous benefits system, the emphasis should be on taking back the billions hoarded by those at the very top.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Trumpâs Racism Isnât Anything New
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Politics
Your Party kicks off final leadership vote
The final election phase to decide Your Partyâs collective leadership has begun. And for many, it has become a race to determine how much member empowerment and control there will be. As one candidate for Yorkshire & The Humber told the Canary:
This party and its growth and its development shouldnât be down to what a few peopleâwho have found themselves at the top of it before any democratic structureâs been put in placeâthink it should be like.
âOpen Your Party up to the hundreds of thousands of people who need itâ
Chris Saltmarsh is on the Grassroots Left slate in the Central Executive Committee (CEC) elections. And while he called this slate âreally diverse,â he described how everyone participating broadly shares:
A political vision and understanding for what we want the party to be.
That centres around âmaximum member democracyâ.
Saltmarsh explained why this is so important for him, saying:
Most people have seen the [Your Party founding] process and thought: âoh, this doesnât feel like a welcoming space where I can come and express my politics and learn and develop and contribute to building this project. It feels like a space where I have to come and pick a side in a factional feud and Iâm expected to care about this very detailed and, probably to most people, irrelevant stuff.â
I think people donât want to be involved in a party where it appears that itâs the source for people to litigate these personal feuds. And I think they donât want to be involved in a party where it doesnât feel like they have any say.
Statistics seem to back that up. Because while around 800,000 people initially expressed interest, only about 1% actually became full members who participated in the votes at the Your Partyâs founding conference. Something that deterred hundreds of thousands of people. And for many, itâs clear what that was.
Saltmarsh called for an open, inclusive culture going forwards, stressing:
We should open this up to the hundreds of thousands of people who have a stake in this party existing. If I want the party to be eco-socialist⊠then itâs not for me or anyone else to say that that absolutely has to be the case. What we need is a genuine democratic structure so that we can organise around those ideas openly and transparently.
Reflecting on the challenges that Your Party has faced and the possible election results, he said:
For all the demotivation that people might have, this is an incredibly important moment. And I would just plead that people â even if itâs just voting â do get involved and do participate in this. Because I think what the British left looks like in 1, 5, 10, 20 years really could be quite different, depending on how this election goes.
Whatever the outcome, though, he believes there is democracy in Your Party and there will still be space for people with differing views to make their cases.
Your Party or the Greens?
Saltmarsh previously co-founded Labour for a Green New Deal. And because he believes climate politics is âa question of justice, inequality and oppressionâ, he thinks itâs important to bring:
an environmental or climate perspective into left spaces, but also a kind of socialist politics into climate spaces
The wealthiest 10% of people in the world have been responsible for the overwhelming majority of global warming. And while richer countries do the most damage, the poorest countries suffer the most as a result of climate breakdown.
Saltmarsh isnât in the Green Party, however, because he thinks an explicitly socialist mass organisation on the left is necessary. And while the Greens are already âup and runningâ and have a leader in Zack Polanski whoâs âclearly very skilled at communicatingâ, he said:
A cynical interpretation would be, itâs like a really good Instagram account.
While asserting that communication is definitely important, he also thinks Your Party is about taking âa longer viewâ than just elections. Its mission, he stressed, is to:
build in communities, to organise hundreds or thousands of socialists in any given town and city, not just to win elections when thatâs expedient but also to coordinate campaigns, to raise consciousness, to build socialism through social infrastructure.
That means building a âcollective political lifeâ in communities, with things like:
socialist schools, where members and supporters come along and learn about socialism
And it means having a party where, from the beginning, members agree on a socialist, anti-imperialist platform.
âAn incredibly important momentâ
Saltmarsh isnât the only person who thinks the CEC elections are âan incredibly important momentâ. Because the Canary has interviewed a range of candidates who want a member-led party that breaks with top-down, personality-driven politics.
Candidates have emphasised the importance of transparency, accountability, and a collective leadership that focuses on solidarity, bringing people together, and empowering as many people as possible. This message has shone through from everyone whoâs spoken to us.
There absolutely have been questions surrounding accountability and transparency during the founding phase of Your Party. And whether you think this messy start was avoidable or unavoidable, countless members and candidates want that to change, and hope the CEC elections will help to overcome these challenges.
If youâre a Your Party member and you want to vote:
- You need to log in on the top right of the partyâs website.
- On the Your Party Members Area page that will pop up after logging in, you will see âEVENTSâ on the right hand side. Below this, you will see âVOTES AND ELECTIONSâ, and two options: âCEC Election â Public Office Holdersâ and âCEC Election â [the name of your local section of the party]â.
- If you click on each of those âCEC Electionâ links, youâll be able to see the candidates and their statements. You then need to put a number next to all the candidates you want to support (1 being your favourite, 2 your second favourite, and so on).
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Rory Stewart moans that British politicians aren’t paid enough
Recently, Rory Stewart argued that western politicians are âimpoverishedâ on their lofty annual salaries of ÂŁ93,904, attempting to excuse their corruption.
He ignored the generous expenses MPs claim from taxpayers, and critics have condemned what they view as a blatantly self-interested attempt to provide political cover for corruption. Since then, the Canary has spoken with Andrew Feinstein for his take on corruption in the UK government, the disgraced Mandelson, and his response to Rory Stewart.
Feinstein is a former ANC member alongside Nelson Mandela and has built his career fighting corruption linked to the global arms trade. He also challenged UK prime minister Keir Starmer in the Holborn and St Pancras constituency during the 2024 general election. His experience gives him a unique perspective on corruption.
And unsurprisingly, Feinstein was far from impressed at Rory Stewartâs desperate defence.
An existential moment in human history
Recent revelations involving Mandelson and public figures connected to the convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein have exposed a sprawling web of corruption among powerful men. This elite group of politicians and royal family members have used women and girls, trading them around the world to serve their nefarious, self-interested agendas. Their actions reveal a disturbing pattern of exploitation at the highest levels of power. The extent of their abuse continues to outrage the global public.
Rory Stewartâs remarks compound the damage, showing disregard for the severe harms ordinary people suffer.
Hereâs Rory Stewart describing MPs as being on âlow incomesâ.
Their basic annual salary is ÂŁ93,904, putting them in the top 5% of earners.
Thereâs a nuanced debate to be had about MPsâ pay, but describing them as âlow incomeâ is an insult to those who really are. pic.twitter.com/2qE8fYn1sJ
â James Hanson (@jhansonradio) February 4, 2026
Andrew Feinstein â âFrom the belly of the corrupted beastâ
Our own Joe Glenton recently gave his take on Rory Stewartâs desperate attempt to defend the indefensible, writing:
The average wage in the UK seems to be about ÂŁ30,000. The mathematical geniuses among us will notice that that isâŠ. quite a lot less than what MPs get paid.
Itâs almost like Roderick James Nugent âRoryâ Stewart â a humble Oxford educated one-time tutor to the future king of England, former army officer, and imperial governor of a province of Iraq â hasnât got a fucking clue what he is talking about.
When we put Roryâs defence of âimpoverished MPsâ to Feinstein, he responded with:
So that tells you everything you need to know about Rory Stewart, whose podcast, of course, is co-hosted by a war criminal in Alastair Campbell, who enabled Tony Blairâs extreme war profiteering and lied in order to get Britain into the invasion of Iraq. So I take that comment as coming from the belly of the corrupted beast.
To think that a political class, an MP, earning ÂŁ94,000 a year before expenses, and as we all know, claim ridiculous expenses, is frankly an appalling insult to the vast majority of people in Britain. And if thatâs what he thinks is impoverishment, then he needs to get his head out of the sand or out of the fancy restaurant he spends his life in and actually understand how many people in Britain are living right now.
Because in Rory Stewart and Alastair Campbellâs Britain, we have more billionaires than at any time in this countryâs history, while more families are having to use food banks to feed themselves than at any time since the end of the Second World War. And if he thinks the solution to that is to pay our mendacious, mediocre, corrupted politicians more money, then heâs even more stupid than I thought he was.
But at the same time, itâs important to say that Iâve experienced a totally corrupted political class in apartheid South Africa. And South Africa again now, 30 odd years after our democracy, has another corrupted political class running it. But we still managed to defeat the system of apartheid. We didnât get rid of any of the economic problems. But simply by dint of the fact that we managed to defeat the apartheid state, it makes me think that enough committed people within a country around the world can bring fundamental political change.
We also asked Feinstein for his perspective on the importance of radical honesty and transparency in government. Referring to known war criminals and the recently exposed shadiness of Mandelson and co, he said:
Absolutely. I think we, just as responsible citizens, have a duty to expose the lies of our leaders, remembering that we elected them, that they exist because of the money that we pay to the state, and theyâre ingratiating themselves and their billionaire friends and corporate donors. And I like the idea of radical truth, because if we are truthful about our political systems, we would have to admit that they are not fit for purpose and require fundamental change.
I mean in Britain as we speak, we have someone [Mandelson] who is and has been for decades incredibly powerful and influential in our politics. Not only being close friends with a convicted pedophile and sex trafficker but actually giving information to this person that is then used in this web of influence and deceit.
And all the while, we are participating in conflict and often causing conflict around the world from which again, the same elites profit. And the corollary of that is that our own democratic space is closing so rapidly because itâs the only way you can maintain such a totally corrupted system is if you reduce democracy, you reduce civil rights.
And the companies that are central to these conflicts now, the AI companies, the big tech companies, are exactly the same companies who are central to the erosion of our democracies, are central to the authoritarianism that is becoming a part of our daily lives in the US and Britain and in much of Europe. And so, by being aware of what weâre doing in the rest of the world, weâre also becoming aware of what is being done to us by our own leaders. Weâre at an existential moment in human history. And if we donât inform ourselves and challenge our political and economic elite who have become one and the same thing, weâre effectively consigning our countries to despotism. So thatâs really the scale of the moment weâre in.
The agency to decide how our world is organised
Finally, Feinstein finished with a rallying cry to voters and activists across the country:
And I think thatâs what we need to do. We need to realise that one of the things that the sort of late era neoliberal capitalism does is it intentionally stifles our imaginations and our creativity to make us believe there is no alternative. As Margaret Thatcher famously and evilly said, to believe that this is the only way the world can be organised. And itâs not. We have the agency to decide how our world should be organised and we need to take that agency.
Referring to his upcoming book set for release in Autumn this year, he added:
And this book [Making a Killing] is an attempt to give people the information and to propose some of the ways in which we can take agency about something that is destroying our societies and our politics. And Iâm always reminded when people feel very depressed and defeated, which of course I sometimes do too, Iâm always reminded of what Nelson Mandela said when he was asked how he retained hope in an apartheid prison and in very dark and depressing days.
And he [Mandela] said, because anything is always impossible only until itâs done.
And I think we have the ability, we have the brains amongst us ordinary people to change the world profoundly and fundamentally. And I hope that this book will be a very small contribution towards that.
Rory Stewart and his neoliberal ilk can consider themselves âtoldâ after this brilliant takedown from a man who makes fighting corruption his day job.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
The persecution of Jimmy Lai
The post The persecution of Jimmy Lai appeared first on spiked.
Politics
UCU general secretary faces election-rigging hearing
The boss of one of the UKâs biggest education unions â the University and College Union (UCU) â faces a hearing by statutory regulator the Certification Officer.
Whistleblowers have given evidence that Jo Grady used union resources, staff, and software to rig her own re-election. Grady won the March 2024 election by just 182 votes out of 114,310 members â 0.157% â on a 15.1% turnout. UCU union blocked any recount and would not allow candidates to attend the count.
UCU allegations
Two other 2024 candidates, Vicky Blake (Leeds) and Prof Ewan McGaughey (Kingâs College London), have asked the Certification Officer (CO) to order a re-run of the election. They say that OâGrady breached breached union rules and should be ordered to step down. The hearing takes place today, 10 February 2026.
UCU rules on the election of officers, executive members, and trustees expressly prohibited the use of union resources for campaigning. This includes staff, social media and email lists:
However, UCU whistleblowers came forward to the applicants with evidence that the rules had been broken. Certification Officer Stephen Hardy will review the evidence today.
Key complaints include that:
- Grady instructed UCUâs senior management WhatsApp group that âevery single decision we make/thing we do has to be seen through the⊠lens⊠[of] Re-elect GS [general secretary]â.
- Grady said she would âdestroyâ people in the union who opposed her.
- According to witnesses, staff were repeatedly told by Grady and senior managers that their work should focus on re-electing her and that jobs were at risk if she lost. In her initial witness statement to the Certification Officer, â before WhatsApp screenshots came to light â Grady âvehementlyâ denied it.
- UCUâs social media accounts and mass email lists were used for campaigning by Grady, far beyond the four emails to members permitted to each candidate, including around 13 additional emails from Grady to the membership. Grady is also accused of using union property, a union contractor and union software to produce and host campaign videos.
- Candidates had unequal access to put their case to members: Grady spoke alone at events at Bristol, Aberdeen, and Northumbria, which were advertised to members using official union email lists, where other candidates were not invited.
âBasic principleâ
Under UK law, union members can ask the Certification Officer (CO) to determine whether union rules have been breached. If breaches are found, the CO can make enforcement orders to address them. Potential remedies include a declaration that rules were breached and an order to rerun an election.
Blake said:
This case is about the basic principle that union elections must be run fairly and in line with the rules that apply to everyone. Members need to be confident that union resources are not used to give any candidate an unfair advantage, and that staff who raise concerns are protected, not punished.
McGaughey said:
We are bringing this case because UCU members have a right to a union that works for them, not a union used by an incumbent to enrich herself. We are members of trade unions to improve each otherâs working lives, and transform society, with fair pay, equality and democracy. The WhatsApp messages showing Grady ordering UCU staff in the middle of a dispute to get herself re-elected shows how far we must go to rebuild universities and further education for good.
For further information, or to share relevant evidence in confidence about the conduct of the 2024 election, please contact [email protected] and [email protected].
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Your Party weaponise Black identity
Claudia Webbe is an ally of Jeremy Corbyn and a former Labour MP. On 9 February, she criticised a Your Party (YP) group said to represent Black members. The group in question is the Your Party Black Network (YPBN):
Black members helped build Your Party.
Weâre reclaiming our narrative from @YPBlackNetwork. Your theft of our identity ends here. Your weaponisation of Black struggle ends here. You do not speak for us.
We are shutting this down. See our statement heređđŸ pic.twitter.com/rWSWBgOZkY
â Claudia Webbe (@ClaudiaWebbe) February 9, 2026
In response, figures on the other side of YP have accused Webbe of being factional in the opposite direction. Thatâs quite a choice, given Webbe is calling out anti-Black racism.
Your Party âUnauthorised accountâ
The attached statement reads:
STATEMENT FROM BLACK MEMBERS OF YOUR PARTY
For Immediate Release â 8 February 2026
Re: Unauthorised Account @YPBlackNetwork
We, the undersigned Black members of Your Party â the majority of us Black women who have dedicated years to building genuine representation within our movement â issue this statement with deep concern and disappointment.
We do not recognise, endorse, or authorise the account @YPBlackNetwork to speak on our behalf.
This account, launched just days ago, does not represent the Black membership of Your Party. It appears to have been established not to advance the interests, voices, or struggles of Black communities, but to weaponise Black identity in service of narrow factional disputes.
This is unacceptable.
The appropriation of Black identity for sectarian political gain is a form of exploitation. It diminishes the genuine work of Black activists, organisers, and members who have fought â often against significant resistance â for authentic representation and meaningful change.
We call out this account for:
Misappropriation â Using the name and implied authority of Black members without consent or mandate
Misrepresentation â Purporting to speak for a community it does not represent
Misinformation â Creating a false impression of grassroots Black organising where none exists
Exploitation â Treating Black identity as a political prop to be deployed in internal battles
To be clear: our Blackness is not a factional tool. Our communities face real challenges â structural racism, health inequalities, economic injustice, and persistent underrepresentation. These struggles deserve serious, accountable leadership, not anonymous accounts serving ulterior agendas.
We urge all members, supporters, and the wider public to treat any pronouncements from this account with appropriate scepticism. If you wish to engage with Black members of Your Party, seek out those who have earned trust through years of visible, accountable work in our communities.
We remain committed to genuine representation, honest dialogue, and building a party that truly serves all its members â not one where Black identity is co-opted for factional convenience.
Signed â YP Black Sisters
Claudia Webbe
Anna Rothery
Andrea Gilbert
Moira SamuelsVal Watson
Cheryl McLeod
Khadijah Thompson
Sophia MangeraTorkwase Holmes
Mel Mullings
Tracey Hylton
The account under scrutiny state on their X profile:
YPBN is a member-led grassroots network. Our aims include mobilising support for YP and resolving disputes between competing visions within YP to forge unity.
YPBN has since responded to the allegations against them:
Terrible Claudia, I am both grieved and vexed. Thou claimâst to speak for many, even for all Black members, yet thy scroll bears but eleven names. Eleven! Call not a teacup an ocean, nor a whisper a mandate.@ClaudiaWebbe @melesentially @Ana_Zardoshti @JamesGilesRBK https://t.co/2Ecn1ElUOv
â Your Party Black Network (@YPBlackNetwork) February 10, 2026
O pain, when ex-Labour right-wingers
Seek to infect thy noble party,
Yet cry âsocialistâ with coward tongues.
The haters hiss; the potato still must turn.Stand with the roots.
Vote Grassroots.
@Grassroots_Left
Others have noted the issues of having representative groups in a party which is divided in a multitude of ways:
Iâm mostly in support of having organised sections being a coloured migrant, but the flip side of this is that it can easily result in policing of divergent views and viewing the recognised group as authentic and dissident voices as troublemakers.
As in Labour. https://t.co/PS3mWD1tgu
â Nader Shah the Diaspora Destroyer đ”đžđ (@ShinMarginalScr) February 9, 2026
1891. YP update. A row over the presumably unofficial YP Black Network (poss claimed here 2 b close 2 GL?) from what may be a TM position in the ongoing CEC slate battle https://t.co/60r4HDCb6f
â Charlie Mansell (@charliemansell) February 9, 2026
Featured image via Parliament / The Herald (YouTube)
Politics
Why was a dog-humping paedo treated like a saint?
Journalism takes you to some strange places. Alas, to date in my career, I have yet to be asked to review a luxury hotel or a Michelin-starred restaurant. Instead, my lot is to probe the creeps and the criminals, the dregs and the drag queens. Todayâs specimen, the convicted child rapist and popular drag queen, Darren Moore (full name Darren Haydn Meah-Moore), ticks every box.
When the entertainerâs body was found in an alleyway in Cardiff city centre in January 2023, his death prompted a frenzy of speculation. The BBC ran multiple pieces on the investigation and even covered a vigil held at Windsor Place, Cardiff.
âItâs rocked the community, thatâs all I can say, no oneâs safe anywhereâ, his friend, Richard Smith, told a BBC reporter. Drag performer Myky Webb warned it was âvery worrying for Cardiff as a city and for queer people in Cardiff on the scene, to think that this kind of thing still happens in 2023â. Rob Llewelyn said he had watched Moore sing in Cardiff over the past 20 years. âEveryone in the gay community knew him, he was just liked by everyoneâ, Llewelyn said.
The unspoken assumption in the BBCâs reporting was clear: that the dead gay man, who was found in a luminous green dress, blonde wig and diamante heels, had been the victim of a hate crime. Amid the public outpouring, popular childrenâs drag entertainer Aida H Dee helped raise funds for Mooreâs funeral. On the day of the funeral, Cardiff Council and the police went so far as to close roads across the city to accommodate a horse-drawn cortĂšge.
Now, two years on, an inquest has revealed the truth about Mooreâs death. And it is grisly. The coroner ruled that this, er, beloved pillar of the community might have died from an allergy to dog semen. I donât think I have ever written a sentence as grotesque â so thatâs a first.
The 39-year-old certainly went out with a bang. He had been on a night out in Cardiff, performing under one of his monikers â Crystal Couture and CC Quinn. He had âspent time⊠with two menâ before leaving a nightclub. Shortly before 6am, he encountered a man walking his dog. The pair went to an alleyway together. The dog went with them. The last man to see Moore alive said he and Moore had sex, before Moore âencouragedâ the dog to âjoin inâ. The coroner found that âat some stage between 5.52am and 6.38am, the manâs dog penetrated Darrenâ. Although he couldnât confirm precisely which of the men had goaded the dog, he added that it would have been âalmost impossibleâ for the dog to have performed the act without âguidance and encouragementâ from a human. The second man said Moore later fell asleep in the alleyway. This is where he was found dead the next morning.
As no one in recorded history has died from dog ejaculate, it was not possible for the coroner to confirm that this was definitely Mooreâs cause of death. Nonetheless, he found that he was not able to rule out the dogâs semen â and Mooreâs allergy to dogs â as a possibility. The official cause of death was registered as âsudden death in a man with bronchial asthma in the cold who had consumed alcohol and in a temporal association with sexual activity including intercourse with a dogâ.
In any event, it wasnât exactly a heroâs death. Yet even though the nature of his final hours have only recently emerged, it is fair to say the signs that Moore wasnât squeaky clean were all there in plain sight. In 1999, he was convicted on four counts of raping a boy under 16. Twelve years later, in 2011, he was back before the courts, handed a two-year community order and 300 hours of unpaid work for breaching a sex offenderâs order. Yet still, this manâs death was presented as a tragedy worthy of multiple BBC articles, and worth shutting down the streets of Cardiff for.
Of course, his family and friends will be grieving. But given his history, the average onlooker would have to dig very deep indeed to muster much sorrow. Moore was not a symbol of anything except his own sordid choices. His depraved acts speak for themselves. Yet the great and goodâs haste to cast this pervert as a martyr, to float the spectre of a hate crime simply because he was a drag performer, speaks volumes.
Today, drag has become a media shorthand for virtue, a glittery stand-in for âBritish valuesâ, and nowhere more so than at the BBC. As spiked has noted before, the corporation has developed a curious fixation on this genre of performance. It churns out a steady stream of stories about drag-queen story hours, drag workshops and drag âeducatorsâ, as if these niche entertainers were a cornerstone of British cultural life rather than a small subculture, which most of the gay men I know consider somewhat embarrassing. It is hard not to view the prominence given to these diversity divas as part of an agenda. The BBC uses drag not only to entertain, but also to educate and inform licence-paying plebs about the correct opinions.
The trouble is, once any group is treated as above criticism, journalism slides into propaganda. It leads the likes of the BBC to pretend that a man becomes virtuous simply because heâs gay, or because he wears heels and dies relatively young. The sanctification of drag queens is barking mad.
Jo Bartosch is co-author of Pornocracy. Order it here.
Politics
Farage attacks remote work – whilst advertising remote position
Nigel Farage is going after work-from-home, in a hypocritical attempt to make it look like heâs ever worked a day in his life.
đš WATCH: Nigel Farage calls for an end to working from home and the focus on work-life balance
âPeople arenât more productive working from home â itâs a load of nonsense. Theyâre more productive being with other fellow human beingsâ pic.twitter.com/UpjNoh7ZHX
â Politics UK (@PolitlcsUK) February 9, 2026
Of course, Nigey isnât telling us that he previously employed his wife to work from home.
Nigel isnât telling you that his ex-wife worked from home when she worked for him.
He also wonât tell you that the majority of Reform UK roles are hybrid. https://t.co/JwNz63f690
â Reform Party UK Exposed đŹđ§ (@reformexposed) February 10, 2026
To make matters more infuriating, Reform UK also happens to employ people who work from home.
As the Independent previously reported, Reform UK advertised for its South Central regional director as:
home working with occasional travel within the region.
Hilariously, it advertised this role online only days after Nigel Farage promised that no Reform-run council would allow anyone to work from home.
Excellent discovery by @ThisOneAgain123 to spot that despite wanting to scrap your Work From Home, Farageâs Reform are hiring their own staff with work from home arrangements. pic.twitter.com/aXRZ2PGzPI
â Tory Fibs (@ToryFibs) February 10, 2026
Farage said that people with jobs related to climate change, diversity, or anyone working from home:
all better really be seeking alternative careers very, very quickly.
Farage is leading a party of millionaires
Of course, Reform UK are not out to bat for ordinary working people. Whilst they might claim they are, what we need to remember is that the only people who benefit from office-based work are those who own the offices, i.e. rich people.
Populist announces a deeply unpopular idea.
The only people who benefit from a return to office based work, are those who own the offices.
Reform are a party for the millionaires, not the working people.â LeftSideOfHistory (@leftsidehist) February 9, 2026
When offices sit empty, the rich lose money. And oh, what a terrible shame that is.
The amount of white-haired folks in that audience; positively giddy at the prospect of dictating how *I* should work and earn â to pay all my taxes â to fund their ironclad pension hikes and fortnightly dawdle down to the GP.
Least self-aware generation thereâll ever be. https://t.co/hcr7MrCnQYâ James (@JamesFl) February 9, 2026
Additionally, itâs the right-wing shit rag newspapers that are peddling the anti-work-from-home bullshit. Again, fewer people on foot near offices means they lose their precious millions.
The only other people who donât like work-from-home are those who canât.
The only against WFH are those who cant.
I use less petrol, means I can use my lunch break to get the kids, saving me money, I dont have the shite daily conversations meaning I get more work done. I am infact more productive in every aspect of my life due to being able to WFH https://t.co/oUu8pGxaXgâ CMF (@Ohffs1984) February 10, 2026
And why have Reformers managed to pack a Monday afternoon rally to the brim? Shouldnât they all be, erm, in an office?
Nothing says âpeople should be in the officeâ like a packed Reform rally on a Monday afternoon. https://t.co/iCM5TDrybS
â Has Ahmed (@HasAhmed_) February 9, 2026
Accessibility matters
A Reform government would push even more disabled and chronically ill people into work.
Importantly, working from home allows some disabled people to hold down a job. Farageâs attempts to end work-from-home whilst also claiming to want more disabled people to have jobs are contradictory and bullshit. If he actually cared about disabled people, he would be encouraging work-from-home, or work from wherever the hell you want to, as long as the work gets done.
Farage is a hypocrite. And basically, you canât work from home unless it serves him and his pumped-up little agenda.
Feature image via Mint/YouTube
Politics
Far right women cosplay as AI child
Okay, I am sick of writing about this âAmeliaâ AI schoolgirl now. But yet again, it appears a far-right group has adopted this fake child as some kind of mascot.
Although this time, itâs a group of women. Odd.
Weâre fed up of the safety of women and girls being sacrificed for the comfort of migrant men.
WE ARE ALL AMELIA! The movement has just begun. pic.twitter.com/p7QtuPtLVy
â Womenâs Safety Initiative (@WomenSafety_UK) February 7, 2026
Why are you cosplaying as a literal schoolgirl?
You see, the issue I have with the far right using Amelia as some kind of mascot is where this avatar came from.
Amelia is a purple haired goth girl, and she wasnât born in some racist WhatsApp group. She was created by the government to be a part of a video game called Pathways which taught kids about extremism.
Oh, and sheâs a fucking college-aged child. 16 to 18 years old. Yet the amount of knuckle-draggers on the internet sexualising her is absolutely disgusting:
Amelia’s emergence over the last week was explosive, injecting a sexually charged, romantic energy into British nationalism. AI image generation enables ownerless memetic characters to be collaboratively generated faster than ever before. Amelia was the first to step through this⊠pic.twitter.com/NAbBxERJOw
â John Carter (@martianwyrdlord) January 17, 2026
#Amelia #ai pic.twitter.com/yJeFEizMXU
â ASHURA (@Ashura_GG) February 2, 2026
Sheâs meant to be a fucking child. Yet here we see the Womenâs Safety Initiative cosplaying as her and drinking a pint.
Come on girls, do better. When you put yourself under a banner of protect all women, surely you shouldnât be masquerading as a fucking child whilst doing so?
Letâs look a little deeper at who is in that video
On closer inspection, you can see the founder and director of Womenâs Safety Initiative, Jess Gill, right there in the video. And she loved it:
âAnon, why didnât I see you at the mass deportation protest?â https://t.co/j9QjnYEwUA pic.twitter.com/W2wV53Y2k3
â Jess (@jessgill03) February 7, 2026
Bit weird.
Jess, who claims to be British but hates everything about British food, has become a polarising figure at demonstrations. I mean, surely if youâre going to attend a demo to âprotect our womenâ with the racist Pink Ladies, you wouldnât be happy to share a space with ex-Reform MP and known wife beater James McMurdoch?
Well done to the Pink Ladies in Chelmsford today.
This brave lot are standing up for the safety of women and girls. The shame of course is that they shouldn’t be having to do this at all.
“I’m not far right. I’m worried about my kids” pic.twitter.com/8ZlhHk1eTk
â James McMurdock MP (@JMcMurdockMP) November 22, 2025
Now youâre cosplaying as an underage teen girl and quaffing pints?
Using womenâs rights for political clout
As a woman, I am absolutely sick to fucking death of the far right using womenâs safety as a weapon.
I donât get it guys. When 97% of rape claims have not even been brought to charge, why are these women playing dress up as a kid? And a goth kid at that? I thought you hated bright coloured hair?
Can we stop dressing up as heavily sexualised kids as some kind of icon and actually focus on the absolute state of policing? Rape is borderline legal in the UK now when you look at conviction rates, and it pisses me off that these far right women donât actually give a fuck. The only time they care about women is when theyâre whipping up hatred against migrants.
Using attacks against women to hide your racism is fucking disgusting.
Featured image via X
Politics
The Labour Rightâs creepy crush on former military men
Youâd think that Blairites would be wary of ex-military personnel. After all, Tony Blair unites most War on Terror veterans on one thing only: a deep contempt for Tony Blair. But this isnât the whole picture when it comes to Labour.
In recent days, ex-special forces soldier-turned-defence minister Alistair Carns has been touted a possible replacement for Keir Starmer. Starmer is currently hanging on to power by a thread after revelations about Peter Mandelsonâs friendship with serial child-rapist Jeffrey Epstein.
Someone has even reportedly registered a webpage for Carnsâ leadership bid, according to the centrist New Statesman. The paper describes Carns as a âdark horseâ, adding that:
Supporters believe that his background as a colonel in the Royal Marines will help Labour win back support it has lost under Starmer.
And this is the key point. It is Carnsâ background as a colonel in the Royal Marines that makes him a good shout. Not his commitment to democracy, or ethics in public life, or his values. He may have all of these, but Carns is appealing to some on the basis of his military credentials. That reveals something important which well-meaning socialists may miss about the nature of the Labour PartyâŠ
Labour partyâs military fetish
Carnsâ main draw is the nonsensical view that a former military man could sort out Britainâs political mess.
If I even need to say it again, there is nothing about military service which guarantees someone will be a good MP. At least no more than someone being a good nurse, or binman, or, God forbid, journalist.
I meanâŠhave we already forgotten about Johnny Mercer? And letâs not forget the track record of the British military in Iraq â an abject failure and a stain on Blair and new Labour.
But weird soldier fetishism isnât new and often rears its head. I first noticed it with Labour security minister Dan Jarvis, a former Parachute Regiment officer who served in Afghanistan.
Jarvisâ military credentials were routinely flaunted as if they qualified him to lead the country â even during the Corbyn days. And almost always by people, including journalists, whoâd never worn a uniform.
Now there are all kinds of explanations for this. I enjoy the lowbrow ones. For example, Blairites are basically fantasist dweebs who read too many Andy McNab books. Or perhaps the authoritarian nature of the military appeals to their own Stalinist leanings. Or it could be a residual sense of our own imperial history that makes some yearn for the power and status which accompanied those times.
These might all be true in part. But I also think that soldier-worshipping holds up a mirror to the Labour Party. It reminds me of a passage in Richard Seymourâs book âCorbyn: The Strange Rebirth of Radical Politicsâ (2016).
Seymour asked, at a time when Labourâs future was being fought over, if the Labour Party is Marxist (we can laugh now)? Or is it, as Tony Blair said at the time, built on some sort of dusty English Methodism.
Seymourâs answer is that it was neither:
What seems to have more enduring significance for the distinctive shape and trajectory of the Labour Party is its origins in Victorian Liberalism.
This offers a far better explanation of why the party is so in love with militarism and war. Itâs because the party is still operating on Windows 1870.
Seymour goes on:
In fact, whatever else changed about the Labour Party in this era, one of its abiding attributes was to be the priority it accorded to the interests of the ânationâ, and the deference it accorded to extant constitutional arrangements and military commitments.
He adds that:
Those Labour MPs who, today, find simply unthinkable the break-up of the United Kingdom, the repudiation of Trident, and the end of the âspecial relationshipâ with the United States, are in fact authentic legatees of their partyâs traditions.
The truth is, Starmer and his allies, are right in their assessment that the Labour Party â a militarist party of capital and empire â is theirs by right. And with this in mind, why wouldnât centrists get excited about Carns as a candidate?
While it might seem a little out of date, that book is worth picking up ten years on. Because it leaves you in no doubt that the Labour Party was never ours to begin with. And, in all honesty, given it is wedded to empire to the degree that it is, why the hell would you even want it anyway?
Featured image via the Canary
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