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Students hit by ‘graduate tax’ and Derbyshire misses the point

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Students hit by 'graduate tax' and Derbyshire misses the point

On BBC, Victoria Derbyshire interviewed a university graduate who shared his experience with lofty student finance repayments. Pointing out how much he has paid in ‘a few years’ of working, Derbyshire asked if comfort is found in the knowledge that the public fleecing ends after 30 years.

The privileged elder misses the point that 30 years of accumulating interest will drive repayments far beyond the original loan, generating a significant profit for the state.

This incident exposes how the establishment is perfectly willing to squeeze more money out of young people to boost public coffers, all while claiming that there are ‘too many options’ available to prospective students. At the same time, they refuse to consider measures like a wealth tax, arguing that the richest would simply leave.

When quality education leads to better jobs, stronger economic growth, and ultimately higher tax revenues, the double standard becomes clear. The state targets those trapped within the system for profit, while avoiding any serious effort to make the rich and powerful contribute more.

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Captive students: Low-hanging fruit

Recently on Good Morning Britain, Martin Lewis successfully challenged Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch on her attempt to revise student loan repayment Plan 2 as a solution to the student debt crisis. The money-saving expert rightfully pointed out it would be easing things slightly for one group, whilst ignoring all others. This prompted widespread debate with graduates across the country supporting Lewis’ calls to wipe student debt that is creating a deadweight effect on workers in the economy.

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A highly lucrative deadweight that was clearly pointed out by Max in the interview, which went as follows:

Victoria Derbyshire: Let me ask you then, Max, how much did you borrow in total?

Max: So, I borrowed £84,000 in total, and that’s about half tuition fee, and the rest maintenance loans that you need to live on and pay your rent whilst you’re there and so on.

Derbyshire: And how much have you paid back so far?

Max: I’ve paid back about £8,000 over the past few years that I’ve been working.

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Derbyshire: And how much do you owe now?

Max: £110,000.

Derbyshire: Oh, my God.

Max: Yeah.

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Derbyshire: What does that feel like?

Max: Well, I mean, it feels ridiculous because I know I’m never going to be able to pay that back. So for me, this is no longer a student loan. It’s a lifelong graduate tax.

Derbyshire: Right. Do you take any comfort in the fact that after 30 years, if you haven’t paid it back, it’s wiped out?

Max: Well, I feel like that’s a bit of a misconception because the fact that people end up not clearing their debt within 30 years actually means they end up paying for longer because the interest rates are so high and they’re often going to end up paying more than they actually borrowed. So you’re trapped.

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Derbyshire: Right. That’s how it feels.

Max: Yeah.

Derbyshire appears to ignore the fact that if Max continues at his current repayment rate, without any future pay rises increasing his contributions, his repayment would be at least £88k. This shows he will still repay the full cost of his original loans and then some over 30 years. Therefore, the expiration date of this unavoidable “student tax” offers no comfort when it only signals the conclusion of exploitative interest charges.

After all, education is an investment in the future of the economy. Seeing it as a source of profit instead is counterproductive and just works to undervalue graduates.

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Our youth are not the ‘magic money tree’

Since Lewis’ principled and informed intervention, others with specialised insight into university education have spoken out. Historian and former university head Sir Anthony Seldon even argued that Lewis should take on a four-week role to fix the mess former Labour and Conservative governments created.

We wrote:

Contrary to the Conservatives’ policy being dangled like a carrot to voters, historian Anthony Seldon has called for all student debt to be wiped. He went further, urging the government to accept that it must stop treating students as a source of profit. Instead, Seldon argued that they already contribute to the economy through the skills and expertise they develop at university.

Furthermore, Seldon emphasised that higher education is about far more than achieving high grades or obtaining a certificate. After all, it is a formative experience where young people develop vital life and social skills. Also, it’s essential for improving critical analysis skills with young people engaging in progressive, informed debate.

The neoliberal state will likely continue to insist there is ‘no magic money tree’ to address the scale of underfunding across society. Yet at the same time, the wealth of the richest has soared at record-breaking rates. Therefore, those who once benefited from free education now resist asking the wealthiest to contribute their fair share in taxes. Instead, they continue to target the easy pickings — students striving for opportunity and a better life.

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The government have stated they will ‘look at ways to make it fairer’. Easy. Deploy wealth taxes to ease the burdens facing graduates and students across the country.

Featured image via Green Country

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Why is Bob Vylan posing with the ayatollah?

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Why is Bob Vylan posing with the ayatollah?

The post Why is Bob Vylan posing with the ayatollah? appeared first on spiked.

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Starmer says UK navy will prop up illegal US-Israel war on Iran

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Starmer says UK navy will prop up illegal US-Israel war on Iran

The Starmer government has announced that the UK navy will bail out the Epstein axis’s floundering, illegal war on Iran. A statement on the official UK government website declares that because of its “deep concern about the escalating conflict”, the UK will help escalate the conflict by collaborating with the US.

The UK navy will assist the US in trying to keep open the Strait of Hormuz, along with France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan and Canada. The UK is therefore, entirely unsurprisingly, siding with the aggressors to prevent a sovereign state defending itself in accordance with international law.

But, Starmer being Starmer, the hypocrisy has to be ladled on. The statement also:

condemn[s] in the strongest terms recent attacks by Iran on unarmed commercial vessels in the Gulf, attacks on civilian infrastructure including oil and gas installations, and the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iranian forces.

We express our deep concern about the escalating conflict. We call on Iran to cease immediately its threats, laying of mines, drone and missile attacks and other attempts to block the Strait to commercial shipping… Freedom of navigation is a fundamental principle of international law, including under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.

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The effects of Iran’s actions will be felt by people in all parts of the world, especially the most vulnerable.

Oddly, no mention is made on the page of the US’s gleefully murderous sinking of an unarmed Iranian ship in international waters, or Israel’s wanton attack on Iran’s major gas field designed to ‘escalate the conflict’ and prevent any negotiations to end the war. Or of both those countries launching their illegal war of aggression in the first place, which forced Iran to take all the measures it can to — entirely legally — defend itself.

Since Starmer is taking the side of the aggressor, those are presumably ok. Yet he and his drones continue to insist ‘we’ are not really taking an active part.

Featured image via the Canary

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Zack Polanski delivers his first major economic speech

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Zack Polanski delivers his first major economic speech

Green party leader Zack Polanski delivered his first economic speech to the New Economics Foundation on 19 March. Polanski’s diagnosis of the issues with the UK were privatisation, deregulation and the excesses of the rentier class. His solutions included nationalisation of water, rent controls and wealth taxes.

Zack Polanski — End ‘rip off Britain’

He began by highlighting the ‘extreme economic inequality’ in the UK:

We live in Rip Off Britain. Sky high bills, stagnating wages – extreme inequality. It can’t go on like this. But we have a plan to change it.

He then spoke of how green energy not only addresses the climate crisis, but also delivers cheaper bills and shields the UK from volatile international oil markets:

Spain… has doubled its wind and solar capacities since 2019, taking it from having some of the highest energy bills in Europe to some of the lowest. Other countries have been able to learn the lessons from previous crises and prepare – why is our response so weak when disaster strikes? The answer, put simply, is that we live in rip-off Britain: an economy built to reward the few off the work of the many. A country where people work so hard and try to do the right thing but still struggle to afford the basics, and people find themselves constantly cutting back.

Polanski stopped short of offering a publicly owned Green New Deal in his speech, simply saying that we should speed up the transition to renewables. Currently the market is moving towards renewables, but it isn’t happening fast enough to avert the risk of climate catastrophe. It’s worth noting that the esssential of energy was once in public ownership and would deliver even cheaper running costs.

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That said, he did state the problem:

A bonfire sale of our water, our energy, our railways – and so many other fundamental services – meant UK Public Wealth went from the Highest in the G7 to the Lowest… over… two decades.

End Right to Buy

Polanski began with an analysis of Right to Buy, but then concluded that it should be replaced with state landlordism:

Over two million houses have now been sold under right to buy since it was introduced. In the first place, those houses went to people who had worked hard and saved up to own the home they lived in and loved – but now they’re increasingly owned by private landlords, property developers and investment firms who treat those homes – and their tenants – as cash cows.

So we need to end right to buy completely.

Instead, why not replace the social homes that are bought up and make provisions against them being used for private rent?

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Billionaire Britain

Polanski continued:

In 1990, when I was going through primary school, and there were 15 billionaires in the UK. By last year, that number had risen to 154. And let’s look at how those people are making their money: today, more than 1 in 4 billionaires draw some or all of their wealth from property and inheritance.

Unearned wealth is a huge issue because it undermines the economy. Inheritance tax should be progressive rather than flat.

Zack Polanski on public investment

The Green leader then spoke of an issue with government planning:

UK fiscal forecasting currently relies on rigid fiscal multiplier assumptions that constrain effective government policy. By assuming that spending multipliers expire after 5 years, the current model is prioritising short-term fiscal targets over the longer-term economic and social gains that targeted government spending could achieve. Right now we can’t plan major infrastructure projects. We can’t invest properly in a healthy, educated population. Right now, we can’t build our future.

To be sure, Polanski’s speech was an inspiring and accurate diagnosis of the issues with Britain.

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Featured image via the Canary

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Is Drinking Days-Old Water Bad For Health?

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Is Drinking Days-Old Water Bad For Health?

I regularly drink from stray glasses of water I see scattered around my house that were poured the day before. I think I’m being efficient and resourceful, but am I being safe?

Experts say there is actually a tipping point at which it is better for your health to dump that glass of water and start afresh.

Kristen Smith, a dietitian and spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, said that she personally follows a 12-hour rule for a glass of water. After 12 hours, Smith will pour it out and drink a new glass. However, she said you can drink a day-old glass of water “as long as it hasn’t been exposed to contaminants or left uncovered”.

Microbiologist Jason Tetro, aka The Germ Guy, also said 12 hours was the limit for drinking leftover water in glasses.

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To him, the potential bacterial problems wouldn’t come from air contaminants but from the tap. One study found that bacterial cell concentrations in drinking water increase overnight. Infrequently used drinking water taps can also harbour high levels of bacteria.

“For those first 12 hours, there’s not going to be enough food for the bacteria numbers to rise,” Tetro said. “After those 12 hours, there will be food for the bacteria to multiply.”

In other words, if you drink water from the night before, you’re likely fine. But if the water has been sitting for a whole day, it’s better to get a new glass of water, even if you used a water filter, Tetro said, or you risk suffering from gastrointestinal issues.

Day-old water “becomes a growing environment for opportunistic pathogens,” Tetro said. “And so what you want to do is just get a new glass of water.”

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Sharing water with someone else speeds up the timeline of when you should tip it away.

“Once a person drinks directly from a bottle or glass, bacteria from their mouth can transfer to the remaining liquid and begin to multiply,” Smith said. “So for that reason, after you put your mouth on a bottle, it’s best to finish it in one go and dispose of it rather than saving it for later, especially if you’re sharing a cup or bottle with someone else.”

You can buy yourself more time by using bottled water, which is designed to avoid bacterial growth for longer than a day, Tetro said.

Of course, if you are parched, it’s better to stay hydrated than worry about how stale your water is.

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If “the only option you have is that water bottle that’s been sitting around for a day, it’s definitely better to drink than to stay dehydrated,” Smith said.

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Palestinian prisoners banned from their families

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Palestinian prisoners banned from their families

As Muslims around the world are celebrating Eid al Fitr, with family gatherings and the sharing of food, the Israeli occupation continues to detain thousands of Palestinian prisoners in their jails. Since the beginning of the genocide in Gaza, these political prisoners have continued to be banned from any communication and visits with their families.

Hundreds of Palestinian prisoners have not communicated with their families for decades

The Palestinian Prisoner’s Society says that hundreds of Palestinian prisoners have been prevented from seeing their families for decades by the Israeli occupation — some for as long as 40 years.

Since October 2023, these policies of isolation have expanded exponentially, and have further intensified since the US and “Israel” began their attacks on Iran. Lawyers have long been the only window to the outside world for Palestinian prisoners, but the occupation has now also suspended all lawyer visits for detainees. It has also extended the state of emergency in prisons, until May. This means that any measures imposed on prisoners since the beginning of the genocide in Gaza will remain in place, under the pretext of “security”.

Escalating Abuse and Conditions During Ramadan 2026

The Palestinian Centre for the Defense of Prisoners (PCDP) says this Ramadan 2026 marked:

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one of the harshest periods for Palestinian detainees in Israeli prisons in more than four decades.

Not only were prisoners having to cope with the usual medical neglect, starvation and torture, but they were also facing unprecedented conditions during Ramadan, imposed on them by the occupation. “Israel” ensured there was a lack of regular pre-dawn meals, while also significantly delaying the breaking of the fast. According to the PCDP, the occupation’s intentional neglect of Palestinian prisoners during this time has worsened the suffering of fasting detainees and negatively impacting their health.

In a clear violation of religious freedom, some prison sections have also limited Palestinian prisoners on bringing in copies of the Quran, and banned group prayers on group prayers. “Israel” has also carried out various raids against Palestinian prisoners this Ramadan. In February, the fascist National Security Minister Ben-Gvir, gave orders for detainees in Ofer Prison near Ramallah to be violently assaulted. This resulted in stun grenades being fired at prisoners, who were also violently attacked.

More than one in three Palestinian prisoners are held with no trial or charge

As of early March 2023, according to the Palestinian Prisoner’s Society, there are more than 9500 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons. The majority are being held without charge or trial, including women and children. More than 100 have been killed by the systematic repression and torture practiced against them by the Israeli occupation. 88 of these martyrs have been identified.

As of 20 March, 79 Palestinian women are locked up in the occupation’s prisons, and 350 children. More than 3440 are held under administrative detention, without charge or trial. Almost 1250 from Gaza, known as “unlawful combatants,” are currently being held without trial or charge.

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With international attention waning, the Israeli occupation has increased abuses against Palestinian detainees. Measures are also being adopted that could pave the way for legalising executions. These developments deepen the vulnerability of prisoners, and make urgent independent oversight and accountability more necessary than ever.

Featured image via the Canary

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The Best Vanilla Perfumes That Will Make You Smell Good Enough To Eat

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The Best Vanilla Perfumes That Will Make You Smell Good Enough To Eat

We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI – prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.

And when it comes to sweetness, you can never go wrong with vanilla.

Light and floaty or rich and deep, there are countless vanilla variations to choose from in the perfume world – so it can be tricky sorting the wheat from the chaff.

Whether you want something truly indulgent or are hunting for a scent that’s budget-friendly, here’s a big list of some of the very best vanilla perfumes to satisfy your sweet tooth.

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Tolyamory: What It Means, How To Spot It, And When To Leave

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Tolyamory: What It Means, How To Spot It, And When To Leave

Expert comment provided by licensed sexologist, relationship therapist, and author at Passionerad, Sofie Roos.

You’ve probably heard of polyamory, or non-monogamous relationships, which can sometimes involve more than two partners.

When done healthily, these involve open communication, clear boundaries, and frank discussions.

And while “tolyamory,” which was coined by relationship writer Dan Savage, is a relatively new term, sexologist and relationship therapist Sofie Roos says this kind of permissive behaviour has been happening for ages.

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“I would say that this phenomenon is pretty common,” she told HuffPost UK.

What is tolyamory?

It’s a combination of the words “polyamorous” and “tolerate”. It refers to a relationship where some indiscretion – be it flirting, flings, or inappropriate messages to other people – is understood to be going on in the relationship, but is never discussed openly.

One partner usually turns a “blind eye,” Savage said.

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Roos told us people can be hesitant to bring up behaviour outside of the implied or stated boundaries of their relationship, “to protect the safety, peace, the family, to avoid conflicts or because it feels scary to open a door you might not be able to close again”.

And while the sexologist doesn’t think tolyamory is absolutely always terrible, she does think it usually comes with an imbalance of power.

“If two adults actively choose… this quiet agreement… I think it’s up to them,” she said.

“However, the problem is that this most often isn’t a mutual decision… [often], one tolerates, and the other one takes liberties. The one who’s the victim doesn’t feel they can say what it really costs them emotionally as they’re afraid of the consequences, which leads to a toxic situation.”

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How can I tell if I’m in a “tolyamorous” relationship?

“The most obvious sign is that there are situations where boundaries have been crossed, moments which you both know you should talk about,” but nobody brings them up, shared Roos.

You might also sense an invisible “line” of candour about suspected, or known, indiscretions. These don’t have to involve outright cheating: it can also include unspoken feelings about an ex, a slightly-too-close relationship with a coworker, or “a general feeling around how your partner gives other people romantic appreciation”.

Perhaps, “you aren’t asking the questions you wanna ask, maybe because you don’t want to hear the answer, or… you tell yourself it’s better to keep the peace than to be honest”.

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Your relationship could look, and even feel, great on the outside or the inside. But the two of you have “shut off” some lines of communication.

“To me, the problem seriously starts when this turns into you not being able to trust your partner, and when you start putting your own feelings aside to spare peace between you, which… tends to lead to a toxic relationship where you also start to step over the line with others instead of setting boundaries,” said Roos.

When should I consider tolyamory a dealbreaker?

If you identify with some of this and aren’t sure whether it should be a dealbreaker, Roos says you should consider your sense of ownership in the decision.

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“In my opinion, it should be a dealbreaker when the tolerance no longer is made out of free will, but is something you do out of feeling powerless, broken down or afraid of losing the relationship,” she shared.

That includes regularly feeling uncomfortable with your dynamic, constantly comparing yourself to others, losing your self-esteem, or feeling that your needs always have to come last.

“Another red flag is if the person uses confusion to their advantage in a way where they want to be free to do whatever they want, but without taking
responsibility, checking in on you, or giving you the same freedom,” she said.

If that’s the case, you’re likely facing an “imbalance” where it feels as though “one partner sets the boundaries for the relationship without you being a part of it”.

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Ultimately, when silence is used to avoid responsibility, when you feel unable to tackle difficult topics head-on, and when you’re staying more out of fear than love, try to “think over the situation”, Roos warns, as the price for your relationship “is too high to pay”.

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The Most Cringeworthy Slang Of 2026, Ranked

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The Most Cringeworthy Slang Of 2026, Ranked

If you’ve spoken to a single teen in recent years, chances are you’ve been confronted with slang like “six-seven”, “glazing,” “mid,” and “unc”.

But according to new research conducted by Preply, which surveyed over 1,500 Brits, some of these are already deemed cringeworthy.

Here’s what UK respondents said bothered them the most, and why:

What’s the most cringeworthy slang?

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Per Preply, the words most likely to make people wince include:

1. Six-seven (24.4%)
Meaning: Nonsensical, “so and so”

2. Skibbidi (21.6%)
Meaning: “Cool” or “Bad”

3. Preggo (20.8%)
Meaning: Pregnant

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4. Sorry, not sorry (18.1%)
Meaning: Humorously means “I don’t feel bad about it”

5. Holibobs (17.6%)
Meaning: Holiday

6. Slay (16.1%)
Meaning: To do something exceptionally well

7. Rizz (15.7%)
Meaning: To charm or seduce (from “charisma”)

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8. Bae (15.7%)
Meaning: Significant other (similar to babe)

9. Wifey (15.3%)
Meaning: Wife or “girlfriend”

10. YOLO (14.9%)
Meaning: Abbreviation for “You only live once”.

Wait, why are these so bad?

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Melissa Baerse Berk, an Associate Linguistics Professor from the University of Chicago, who is working with Preply, said: “Cringe isn’t really about the word itself, it’s about context and identity. Terms like ‘Skibbidi’ or ‘Rizz’ are closely associated with online subcultures and younger generations.

“When those words cross into everyday offline conversations, they can feel forced or inauthentic.”

As someone who heard “chat” out loud for the first time recently, I couldn’t agree more.

But, Prof Berk added, that doesn’t mean your favourite slang necessarily has to be out of reach.

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“Using words found cringeworthy in an ironic sense suggests people aren’t just reacting to trends, they’re participating in them with a layer of self-awareness,” she explained.

“Irony acts as a social safety net, it allows people to engage with trends without fully committing to them.”

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The House Article | Inside The Battle For Labour’s Mainstream: Luke Akehurst Vs Luke Hurst

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Inside The Battle For Labour's Mainstream: Luke Akehurst Vs Luke Hurst
Inside The Battle For Labour's Mainstream: Luke Akehurst Vs Luke Hurst

Labour First’s Luke Akehurst and Mainstream’s Luke Hurst (l-r)


12 min read

Two internal players called Luke are battling to claim Labour’s mainstream. The outcome of their rivalry will shape the future of the party – and possibly the country. Sienna Rodgers reports

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On one side is Luke Akehurst. He is a veteran organiser within the party and has served as secretary of Labour First, the ‘old right’ Labour factional group, for 20 years. In recognition of his services, the 54-year-old became a Labour MP for the first time at the last general election, and now also runs a WhatsApp group of 198 MPs called “mainstream”.

On the other is Luke Hurst. He is the lesser-known Luke, having only involved himself in Labour during Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership years, via student politics. Today, the 27-year-old is national co-ordinator of new membership organisation Mainstream, which represents the soft left of the party and is best known for being close to Manchester mayor Andy Burnham.

As their respective brands suggest, both claim to stand for Labour’s mainstream. And both, behind the scenes, are doing the hard work of organising the networks of MPs and activists. Whoever proves most successful will determine where the party goes next.

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‘Mainstream’ on WhatsApp

“It’s not some sort of den of hot political intrigue,” Akehurst says of his MPs’ WhatsApp group. Comprising almost half of the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP), and open to ministers as well as backbenchers, the messages in it are not usually very political.

“I will occasionally put things in it like, ‘Here’s the details of the trigger process’ and, ‘Can you tell me who your constituency has elected to annual conference and where they stand politically?’” he explains. (The trigger process is the procedure by which Labour MPs are reselected, or deselected, by their local parties.)

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“But really, the PLP, thankfully, hasn’t gone down the Tory path of online groups where there’s incredibly frank political discussions, because I think we’ve learnt the lesson of that getting leaked all the way through the last Tory government.”

It mostly consists, he says, of MPs asking colleagues for the basics – to help make their upcoming all-party parliamentary group meeting quorate, for example, or to share canvassing leaflets they can take inspiration from. Part of the reason is that the membership is so broad.

“My criteria was people who, at the start of this Parliament, I perceived to be broadly aligned with the leadership,” Akehurst says. “But some of the fault lines that we’ve had around policy, on welfare reform and stuff, would go right through the middle of that group. That’s just the political reality of where we are now.”

The Labour First parliamentary group – which has 104 MPs and peers in its own WhatsApp chat – is where MPs from that tradition can find more political intrigue. Its meetings, which take place at least monthly, do not focus on chatter about “who’s up, who’s down”, leadership contenders being floated, nor the latest controversial legislation going through Parliament – but instead on “healthy strategic discussions” about their role in the party, according to Akehurst.

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Mainstream the organisation

When Hurst first encountered factional Labour politics at Leeds University, Nols – as the National Organisation of Labour Students was known – was being scrapped by the Corbyn leadership. 

He says he belonged to neither side in that war: not the ‘Nolsies’ defending the body, nor Labour Students Left, which championed its abolition. But he backed the move to a one-member-one-vote system, so aligned himself with the latter. That positioning foreshadows Mainstream’s own: not Labour right, not fully left, but sitting in the soft middle.

Hurst later moved to Manchester, where he was a Unison rep in a hospital, then completed a master’s in philosophy at King’s College London, before working for Neal Lawson’s centre-left pressure group Compass. It is from there that he has been seconded to Mainstream, which had Compass and soft left group Open Labour contribute to its start-up costs when it launched last autumn.

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He organised the Compass “CHANGE: HOW?” conference in May 2025, headlined by Burnham, Miatta Fahnbulleh and Louise Haigh. “That was a big moment for the soft left trying to reassert its politics and say it had a distinct Labour tradition and ideological basis,” Hurst says.

Keir Starmer
Keir Starmer rehearses his Labour Party Conference 2025 keynote speech with his wife Victoria (Credit: Stefan Rousseau/PA Images/Alamy Live News)

Labour’s 2026 internal elections

Labour First is squarely focused on organising ahead of September party conference and for Labour’s National Executive Committee (NEC) elections. 

“Media can turn up at conference and go, ‘The mood of Labour Party Conference has changed’, as though it’s some random collection of people that turn up,” Akehurst observes. While speeches can make the weather – he cites Hugh Gaitskell in 1960 or Neil Kinnock in 1985 – the nine months of factional wrangling in the run-up to the event are far more likely to shape it.

This involves co-ordinating members in local parties to deliver a set of delegates on the conference floor who reflect a faction’s politics – for Akehurst, that means members who will be “cheering ministers to the rafters, not trying to undermine them in any way”.

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“The constituency half is an aggregation of 650 local organisational battles,” the MP explains. (The other half of the conference floor is made up of trade unions and other affiliates.) “Fighting those battles is a machine that I’ve had some involvement in for decades, but really, we perfected that machinery on the defensive during the Corbyn years.”

Akehurst managed this alone until 2017, when Matt Pound – who went on to advise Rachel Reeves – joined Labour First. “I’ve had various extremely talented young organisers working for me since then.”

As for the race to win spots for the nine Constituency Labour Party (CLP) representatives on Labour’s ruling body, it was once hotly contested. Since Keir Starmer introduced a proportional voting system in 2020, however, the contests have been far less dramatic.

“Because it takes a six or seven per cent swing for a seat to move, I would not expect movements of seats of more than about one,” the Labour First secretary says of the looming battle to shape the NEC.

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The Labour right is putting forward four candidates, the Momentum left is promoting three, and Mainstream has a slate of three. (New outfit Restoration has six candidates, which Akehurst points out is unwise – “you can risk perverse results if you run too many”.)

But the results will tell us a lot about the factional composition of the party membership.

“The number of members who are deserting the party because it has become hostile and hyper-factional means it’s quite hard to know how members will resonate with different NEC slates,” says Hurst. 

“We’ve also noticed this year that, when CLPs are trying to nominate candidates, so many aren’t quorate because they just don’t have the members to come along to meetings.”

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Akehurst, of course, sees things differently: “What always happens when we’re in government is that some of the difficult decisions in government lead to some grassroots activists becoming disillusioned with the leadership. It’s offset to a certain extent by the very far left having other forums in which they’re exercising their politics, and the internal elections will tell us which of those factors is larger.”

“My impression from talking to activists and other MPs is, weirdly, that a lot of the political heat is here inside the PLP over policy,” he adds.

Andy Burnham
Andy Burnham, Mayor of Greater Manchester, on Day One of the Labour Party Conference 2025 (Credit: Milo Chandler/Alamy Live News)

The leadership question

Akehurst is not covertly preparing Wes Streeting’s leadership bid as some on the left might assume. “People know that I’m very loyal to Keir. You can see, with the things going on in the Middle East, how good he is in a crisis, and the stature but also calmness he’s got on the global stage,” says the MP. He hopes “there’s not going to be a leadership contest in the Labour Party any time soon”.

What would Labour First do if the situation does arise? “It really depends on whether there’s one consensus candidate on the moderate wing of the party.” In 2020, it told supporters to vote for Starmer, Lisa Nandy or Jess Phillips; in 2015, Akehurst personally backed Yvette Cooper but again Labour First endorsed a selection – Cooper, Burnham and Liz Kendall – in its bid to stop Corbyn.

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Akehurst employs a Game of Thrones analogy to make his point. “While the Seven Kingdoms are all biting chunks out of each other, the Night’s Watch has to protect the kingdom on the wall,” he says, casting Labour First as the Night’s Watch.

“Internecine warfare between people who should get on with each other – that’s sometimes a reality of politics. Our job is to sustain a broadly social democratic majority at conference and on the NEC, and make sure we don’t slip back into the politics of the Corbyn years.

“That we don’t do it immediately in one go, which I think is highly unlikely, but also that we don’t end up doing it in stages, where we end up with, say, a soft left leadership that reopens the door in terms of rule changes to the politics of the Corbyn years.”

That possibility is represented by Mainstream, which is closely linked to the Labour Party’s ‘King in the North’, Andy Burnham.

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Despite having been founded just two weeks earlier, Mainstream endorsed Lucy Powell for the deputy leadership last year. “In the event of a leadership election, we would intervene in the same way. We’d ballot our members like we did for the deputy leadership and find out who they wanted to back, and we’d endorse a candidate,” confirms Hurst.

He insists that Mainstream’s focus right now is on developing a political programme, ready for any candidate that might emerge to succeed Starmer to take up. For too long, he says, the soft left has acted as kingmaker “without necessarily trying to assert a substantive politics in the process – that has to change this time”. The outline looks a lot like Burnham’s ‘Manchesterism’; a similar political economy, and an embrace of public ownership (not necessarily the top-down kind).

“There are other sections of the party that organise for the sake of organising, and then control becomes the end, and you end up in the situation where we are now. We have a government that’s done some good things, but has also made a huge litany of missteps, and there have been so many missed opportunities because it doesn’t have the political, moral, ideological roots to its project,” argues Hurst.

“We think it’s just as important to do that antecedent work of sketching out where you want the country to go, why you want power before – or alongside – trying to gain power.”

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So, Mainstream is not just a front for the Burnham campaign? “If Andy were on the pitch, I think he would have a huge appeal to our members. But we work with people from all across the party… There are other talented Labour politicians in our orbit.”

At the group’s March reception in a Whitehall pub, Angela Rayner was the keynote speaker. She made headlines by warning that Labour “cannot just go through the motions in the face of decline” and by joining the growing group of Labour MPs urging a rethink of the government’s “un-British” immigration reforms. 

“He won’t do deals – Andy does the personality and doesn’t feel the need to organise”

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But if Rayner cannot overcome her own obstacles – most notably the stamp duty affair – to challenge Starmer after the May elections, Burnham backers reckon he still has a chance. The Prime Minister would be so weakened by terrible results, the theory goes, that he’d be forced to set a date for his departure; then, when another Greater Manchester seat popped up, Burnham could not be blocked.

Although Burnham has friends willing him to succeed in parts of Labour, including Mainstream, The House understands that he lacked internal organising nous ahead of the Gorton and Denton selection, declining to put calls in to union general secretaries or the key players on the NEC. “He won’t do deals – Andy does the personality and doesn’t feel the need to organise,” says one source who knows Burnham well. That does not bode well for such a plan.

So, could he be allowed to run next time a constituency is vacated? “I’ll be careful not to pre-judge that in case it comes to full NEC,” replies a sceptical Akehurst, a member of the NEC himself. “The last time around, it was a decision taken by the NEC officers.

“But I can’t see a reason why they would change their stance, given the argument was that we could not afford – in the literal sense of money – a by-election for the mayor of Greater Manchester, or afford in the political sense of potentially losing that, maybe to Reform, maybe to Green. It could be a tight three-way race. 

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“Once you get past the end of Andy’s term of office as mayor of Greater Manchester, why would we not want him in the PLP? He’d be an asset to the PLP. I would encourage him to make it clear that his motive in coming back to Parliament is to be a team player with Keir, or whoever is Prime Minister, but I do think he’s probably got to serve out his term as mayor.” 

 

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The White Lotus Season 4: Cast, Location And Everything We Know So Far

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The Château de La Messardière hotel is a rumoured filming location in the next season of The White Lotus

One of the many thrills of The White Lotus is its ever-rotating cast and location.

From one season to the next, you’ll go from Jennifer Coolidge cutting about on a boat in Sicily, to Jason Isaacs as a desperate man on the brink of ruin in Thailand.

With the last season of the Emmy-winning show wrapping up more than a year ago, chatter has naturally now turned to the next instalment – and what new collection of eccentrics and property porn showrunner Mike White’s brain will concoct for us.

From rumoured cast members to shooting locations, here’s everything we know about it so far…

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When will The White Lotus season 4 be released?

Fans will be pleased to hear that filming for season four isn’t far off. In fact, according to Variety, it’s due to begin at the end of April and last until the end of October, meaning we can expect another sun-drenched season of the hit show.

With that in mind, it looks like we can expect the new series of The White Lotus at some point in 2027, but with no official announcement yet we’ll have to wait and see.

Where will the next season of The White Lotus be set?

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Season four will take us back to Europe after previous seasons in Thailand, Italy and Hawaii, with The White Lotus opening its doors in France this time around.

And with shooting taking place across the French riviera and Paris, it sounds like we’re in for a characteristically luxurious experience – especially if recent reports of filming at a 19th-century palace-turned-luxury hotel in Saint-Tropez are anything to go by.

The Château de La Messardière hotel is a rumoured filming location in the next season of The White Lotus
The Château de La Messardière hotel is a rumoured filming location in the next season of The White Lotus

JARRY via Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

What will season 4 of The White Lotus be about?

So far, creators are staying tight-lipped on what the next storyline will be. All we know for sure is that it will stick to the classic White Lotus format of following a group of guests and hotel staff over the course of a week.

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Variety has cited a combination of sources and alluded to filming dates that indicate we could see the Cannes Film Festival work its way into the plot, but for now that’s all speculation.

The Cannes Film Festival is rumoured to be a plot point in the next season of The White Lotus
The Cannes Film Festival is rumoured to be a plot point in the next season of The White Lotus

Season three saw the conclusion of the plot that straddled all series of the show, surrounding Jennifer Coolidge’s Tanya and her eventual demise, so we can presume that that’s now totally done and dusted, and we’re in for a completely fresh storyline.

Having said that, the show has a penchant for bringing back old characters, and with Belinda’s Natasha Rothwell setting off to start a new life at the end of season three, there’s always the possibility that we could see a return from other familiar faces in the next run.

Which actors are in the White Lotus season 4 cast?

The good news is, we have a hefty list of cast members who have already been reported to be on the call sheet.

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Charlie Hall, Helena Bonham Carter and Steve Coogan are all set to appear in the new season of The White Lotus
Charlie Hall, Helena Bonham Carter and Steve Coogan are all set to appear in the new season of The White Lotus

Evan Agostini/Jordan Strauss/Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP

Among them are well-known faces like Helena Bonham Carter, Steve Coogan, Vincent Cassel, Ari Graynor, Sandra Bernhard, Chris Messina, AJ Michalka (aka one half of musical duo Aly & AJ) and Alexander Ludwig, with the likes of Caleb Jonte Edwards, Corentin Fila, Nadia Tereszkiewicz, Dylan Ennis and Marissa Long also believed to be checking in.

Meanwhile, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Brad Hall’s son Charlie Hall, previously seen in The Sex Life Of College Girls, will take the “nepo baby” baton from last season’s Patrick Schwarzenegger and Sam Nivola when he joins the cast.

Most recently, it was announced that Kumail Nanjiani would be joining the line-up, along with New Girl actor Max Greenfield, Marvel star Chloe Bennet and Jarrad Paul.

There’s also the possibility that we’ll see some unexpected guest stars later down the line, as was the case during last season’s surprise appearance from Sam Rockwell.

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Kumail Nanjiani, Sandra Bernhard and Max Greenfield are more recent additions to the White Lotus cast
Kumail Nanjiani, Sandra Bernhard and Max Greenfield are more recent additions to the White Lotus cast

Richard Shotwell/Evan Agostini/Invision/AP

What have the creators of The White Lotus said about season 4?

While White Lotus creator Mike White is keeping his cards pretty close to his chest for the time being, he dropped a few season four tidbits in a recent interview with W Magazine.

He spoke about shooting his latest stint on the reality show Survivor six months before kicking off his White Lotus prep, explaining: “I came up with the concept of the show and the characters while I was there. But I don’t know if the experience itself really influenced it.”

Mike explained that the experience of returning from Survivor, and seeing the social media of people who he’d bonded with on the show, shaped his thinking for the series.

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“I don’t know if that’s exactly the theme of the next season of White Lotus, but it’s definitely something I’ve thought about a lot – prioritising likes or the attention of strangers over creating real relationships,” he noted.

Pressed on what the new season will be about, the creator said “it’s a bit about fame, about who has the world’s attention, who is the plus-one, and how that can organise a relationship”.

“Some people are satisfied with the love of just an intimate partner, and some people need the love of strangers and a bigger kind of attention,” he elaborated.

The White Lotus creator Mike White
The White Lotus creator Mike White

And after the high melodrama of guns, blood and parables we saw in season three, last year Mike said he was keen to return to themes more aligned with season one in an interview for the official White Lotus podcast.

“Maybe something a little bit back to the first season where it’s satirising stuff that I know about,” he pondered.

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“Art and criticism and movies and fame and celebrity and a film festival type of thing, or like an art world sort of situation. It just feels like that would be some kind of new theme to get into that’s maybe a little less heady than what we just did, but still have some juice to it.”

The first three seasons of The White Lotus are available to stream on Sky and Now in the UK.

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