Politics
The House Article | Out Of The Rough: Cricket’s Battle To Open Up To All

10 min read
Cricket has long been seen as an exclusionary and rarefied sport, but it is undergoing huge changes, including a drive by its chiefs to open it up to all. Alan White reports
By any standards, the England cricket team had a difficult winter. As well as the now-traditional overseas Ashes thumping, there were headlines about drinking and a general lack of preparation on tour.
Amid the opprobrium over their performance, another jibe became a refrain: the England team were overprivileged, as well as bad. Only three of the losing England team who were educated in the UK did not go to private school (by contrast, the 1985/6 tour saw five who went to private school and 11 who didn’t).
As the Guardian writer Barney Ronay had it: “England cricket has long since been Thatchered, emptied out, atomised. It’s a private party, a silent disco for a small and privileged minority. The England team are at least expressing some truth, that the sport exists most vividly in private schools and private fields.”
The truth, however, is rather more complex. English cricket is, to coin a phrase, working through some issues right now. The game is changing rapidly. Money is flowing in from the subcontinent to newfangled, noisy franchise teams that play in The Hundred, a short-form, city-based format that takes place throughout August, designed to attract a more diverse audience.
While a proportion of this money has flooded down to the counties and the recreational game, many of the stalwarts who are fans of a more traditional format are finding the pace of change bewildering at best and mortifying at worst. For them, a portion of the English summer has been sold off; the rest of cricket has been pushed to the margins of the season’s calendar, to little positive effect.
But at the same time, the women’s game has been utterly revolutionised: the first auction of its kind in a major British sport saw The Hundred create some of the highest-paid sportswomen in the UK this year. As around the world, there has been massive growth in viewership, commercial investment, and player remuneration.
And while this turbulence plays out, there is a genuine belief among the staff of the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) that its chief executive’s stated aim to become “the most inclusive team sport in England and Wales” is now attainable.
It is five years since the ECB took the brave decision to give the green light to an independent commission into the game, which delivered a thunderbolt of a report. It described how private school players were 13 times more likely to become pro than those in state schools, found women faced sexism and structural pay discrimination, and described how working-class children and those from minority backgrounds faced huge barriers to inclusion, including clear, documented examples of racism.
Multiple ECB employees told this magazine at the time how uncomfortable a read it was, and how determined they were to make a change and open up the game to all.
Following the commission, the ECB developed an internal dashboard that measures cricket’s inclusion, diversity, fair access and equity, using a standardised grading system of A to F. In the ECB’s recent state of equity report, it awarded itself a C+; it was a D two years ago. The aim is to hit B by 2028. But to do so, there are significant structural challenges that must be overcome.
Take England’s mostly privately educated Test team. The reasons for the dominance of private school players in the professional game are complex, and demonstrate how a deeply flawed form of accessibility developed within a sport that became, over the years, increasingly exclusionary.
Just over half of professional cricketers will have gone to private school, but just under a fifth of male players will have seen 90 per cent or more of their fees funded by bursaries, while others will have received smaller grants.
While it’s inaccurate to dismiss the professional game as being entirely dominated by the rich and privileged, as the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket (ICEC) report had it, the resulting proliferation of former scholarship pro cricketers is “by no means a systemic response to the class and socio-economic inequities within the game”.
For Kate Aldridge, the ECB’s director of business operations, the key to broadening access is about working with the system as it stands and building partnerships between the state and private sector. “Private schools do contribute a lot to the cricket ecosystem in terms of facilities [and] opportunities… We’re focused on [how we can] work with private schools to open up their facilities, to share the expertise that they’ve got, the opportunities to play matches that they have with more children.”
The other side of the coin for Aldridge is about “levelling up the playing field” for state school children. State schools have been stretched by the hollowing out of statutory services. As Luke Sparkes of the Dixons Academies Trust recently told The Cricketer magazine: “They do this vital work with no extra money, stretching staff and burning them out… Too often it is the very things that bring joy, build character and create well-rounded citizens – sport, drama, and music – which are lost.”
Aldridge describes how the restructuring of the talent pathway will help: an early engagement programme will, she says, give 7,000 young people “a free-to-access trial, gives them coaching, gives them match play at a young age before they get selected into county age group”.
Another support programme designed for state school kids will give them 50 per cent extra training alongside the county programme. “What we know from our research,” says Aldridge, “Is that if you go to a private school, you get disproportionately more access to coaching, and then by the time you come… to U-15s or U-17 trials… you obviously are performing better.”
She says the narrative that there is no cricket in state schools is not true: a partnership with Chance to Shine and Recreational Cricket Boards delivers cricket in 4,268 primary schools, which is about a quarter of all primary schools in England and Wales. However, only two per cent of state-school students currently play in competitive inter-school or intra-school competitions.
Leshia Hawkins, the ECB’s managing director, describes the challenge: “You know, a lot of state schools don’t even have grass, let alone enough grass and a cut wicket… We tracked how many kids are playing each team sport in schools. And technically… dodgeball does beat us. But why? Because it’s so easy to do… you need limited equipment. You can sort of play it anywhere.”
So the ECB is launching a new national softball competition, softball being seen as much easier to deliver than hardball. The rules won’t be different, says Hawkins: “When you’re out, you’re out, you’re caught, etc, but [it’s about] introducing the joy and that first moment when you take a catch or you hit a four or a six.”
Getting state schools to adopt any new initiatives will require teacher buy-in. This is why the ECB has launched Cricket For Teachers, a short entry-level course. “It’s looking like in the pilot year, we’re probably going to train nearly 650 secondary school teachers,” says Hawkins, adding that there’s a 50:50 gender balance among those signed up. She suggests a quarter of a million children could be given access to the game as a result.
The recreational game, says Hawkins, will also benefit from money that has trickled down from the sale of stakes in the Hundred franchises: “we’re able to focus that investment on… women and girls, disabled participants, ethnically diverse participants, and those from lower socio-economic groups, those who’ve been underserved by cricket”.
On women’s cricket, from the poor base as described in the ICEC report, there has of course, been enormous progress in recent years: at a recreational level, the number of women’s and girls’ teams has doubled since 2021, while a record number of girls (30,627) took part in All Stars and Dynamos, the ECB’s national youth programmes. In the professional game, salaries for women in The Hundred have more than tripled in more than three years.
There is huge excitement around the potential for more commercial investment too. Back in 2013, Hawkins was a business development manager trying to sell sponsorship for women and girls’ recreational cricket (“I had to kiss a lot of frogs,” she jokes), and it feels like the game has come a long way in just a few years: “It’s not, you know, sponsors coming in now and just having their brand on the perimeter. It’s a real care… it’s a real purpose,” she says.
There are still areas where progress has been slow, however. The cricket writer Andy Bull recently noted that while women were fetching huge prices at the Hundred auction, it was still “a room full of men sitting around weighing the relative merits of young women so they can bid against each other for their services in a competitive auction”.
Aldridge acknowledges there is work to be done on leadership in cricket: “We’ve gone from eight per cent in 2019 to 20 per cent female. Now that is still far below where we want to be, but it is a consistent year-on-year improvement and increase, particularly in the recreational game.” Could they bring in targets? The challenge, she says, is that, “If you start to put quotas or targets in place around your workforce, particularly for professional counties and recreational cricket boards, you start to incentivise behaviour that could be illegal.”
Quicker progress also needs to be made on developing cricket in the Black community too, which the ICEC report noted had declined from a strong base in the 1980s to be so low as to be statistically irrelevant. Aldridge acknowledges an issue: “I don’t think we have cracked it yet… whether it’s enough initiatives, or whether the initiatives are quite working the way that we want them to.”
The playing base is smaller than for the South Asian population, and it presents a different challenge: the majority of the population lives in around 10 UK cities, in areas the ECB’s data shows are often lacking in facilities. The ECB is attempting to use non-turf pitches and domes to engage the population. One recent success came via upcoming superstar Davina Perrin, who smashed a staggering 42-ball century for Northern Superchargers in last year’s Hundred eliminator. She was mentored by Ebony Rainford Brent, founder of the African Caribbean Engagement programme.
For all this progress, there has also been one significant setback. In 2024 things were looking up: then-prime minister Rishi Sunak pledged £35m in grassroots cricket funding, which ECB staff told this magazine would never have happened without the ICEC report laying bare the game’s ills. But after the general election, that funding dropped to a mere £1.5m, with Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy deriding the funding as a “fantasy”.
It was a huge blow for the ECB. The money would have funded 16 all-weather domes as well as the delivery of cricket into state schools. The ECB is working on ways to fund these domes – with two now open in Bradford and Darwen, Lancashire, with a third opening soon in Willenhall, West Midlands. Further projects are advancing in Farington, Lancashire, and Luton. Just before this magazine went to press, a further £2.5m was announced, which The House understands will go towards funding four more domes.
When approached, Sunak did not comment on the decision itself, but told The House: “I love cricket and I believe it is one of the things that can bring people together. I know there is huge potential to grow the game even further and open it up to everyone, from all backgrounds and in all parts of the country.”
There is clearly a genuine belief the game is about to turn a corner. An ECB spokesperson said: “We have a golden opportunity to capitalise on England and Wales hosting this year’s ICC Women’s T20 World Cup, and the men’s competition in 2030, to inspire a generation to pick up a bat and ball. With government support we can reach so many more people through new and improved facilities.”
The only question is how quickly the game can force its way up the list of Westminster’s sporting priorities.
Politics
Chico Khan-Gandapur: Why policy isn’t enough – a behavioural blueprint for Conservative renewal
Chico Khan-Gandapur is a managing partner at Metrica Consulting.
In the 2019 U.K. general election “Big Dog” Boris Johnson won by a landslide: 365 seats, an 80 seat majority, with 43.6 per cent of the votes cast.
Fast forward to today, and despite Kemi Badenoch’s regular excoriation of Keir Starmer at weekly PMQ’s, a great Conference, and a policy suite that is Conservative through and through, the Party’s vote share is anchored at just 16 -18 per cent (Politico’s Poll of Polls). 13.96 million voted Conservative in 2019, yet current polling would suggest just 5.4 million voters would now, nothing short of a collapse.
I addressed this in an earlier article for ConservativeHome, The Conservative Party Brand Must Shift With Behavioural Science, back in December:
“…The wholesale abandonment and ongoing voter indifference to the Conservative brand is not simply a, ‘we are fed up’ moment, or a ‘protest’ vote; rather, it reflects deeper, more structural issues. Traditional attempts to understand this challenge and turn it around have floundered. The breakthrough lies in analysing this situation through the lens of behavioural science…”
This second essay expands on these themes, and encouragingly finds the Party employing several of the strategies needed to improve its standings, but it still needs to go much further and deeper.
The subject Behavioural Political Science distinguishes between Policy‑Based support, agreement with specific positions, and Affective Partisanship, the sense of emotional loyalty or identification with a specific Party. Extensive research shows these two dimensions of support, while related, are actually distinct psychologically. Individuals may like a party’s ideas but without feeling it represents their group identity, and similarly, may stick with a party they feel close to despite disagreeing with several of its policies.
Neuroscientific studies of political engagement reinforce this distinction, demonstrating that perceptions of leaders and party brands activate emotional and social‑cognitive circuits, not just rational policy evaluation. This evidence supports the view that voters respond to cues about Trust, Competence and Identity at least as much as they do to detailed policy platforms. Indeed, some studies argue Trust, Respect and Like together drive 75 per cent of voter intentions, leaving just 25 per cent for policy evaluation – a huge relative difference.
Analysis of the 2024 election suggests Conservatives lost its 2019 voters over perceptions of incompetence, and a loss of trust in the Party as a consequence. But where these voters subsequently went to was shaped by their values. Many of those defecting to Labour cited a desire for stability, integrity and competent management of public services (which has obviously backfired) while those moving to Reform placed greater weight on immigration, cultural issues and a sense of voice for People Like Us. The latter is classic affective politics: voters searching for a party that feels like it’s on their side.
For the Conservatives to turn these challenges around, Behavioural Analysis suggests three interlocking approaches.
First, they must re‑establish visible competence and reliability. Voters frequently use heuristics (mental short-cuts) and simple stories to cope with political complexity, such as, ‘they’re useless, they never do what they say’. Once these negative labels are attached to a party, they are hard to shake-off and negatively impact subsequent information with voters discounting new promises.
The party therefore needs a period of disciplined, almost boring delivery on a small number of salient promises, chosen to be easily observable and personally relevant. The aim is to replace the prevailing dominant heuristic with a different one: this party now does what it says, consistently and competently. This requires internal restraint – fewer headline‑grabbing but undelivered pledges, and quieter follow‑through, highlighting a distinction and contrast between those in office. The Stronger Economy, Stronger Country promises to align with this approach
Second, the Conservatives must rebuild Identity and Belonging. Behavioural research shows people are strongly motivated by social identity and group attachment. When voters feel that a party comprises people like me, they are more willing to engage, forgive missteps and tolerate policy disagreements. When they feel looked down on, ignored or taken for granted, they become open to alternatives which recognise their status and concerns.
For Conservatives this means addressing messages and local engagement that underpin we are for people like you to distinct groups of electorates: older homeowners anxious about crime and disorder; younger families worrying about housing and childcare; small‑business owners struggling with regulation and costs; aspirational working‑class voters who care about order, fairness and tangible opportunities. Recent messaging from Harrogate, the Party of Common Sense and the Common Ground, acknowledges this requirement.
But it also implies investing in local presence – councillors, associations, community campaigns – as attachment is often and more effectively forged through repeated, face‑to‑face interactions rather than national broadcasts alone. This is an area which Conservatives need to expand significantly in their attempts to reconnect with nearly 8.5mln lost voters.
Third, they must restore Stable Narratives and Messengers. Frequent leadership changes and visible factional conflict have repeatedly broken this vital attachment process by resetting and changing cues about what being a Conservative actually means. Each change of leader and slogan has required voters to ask whether the party has truly changed, or whether it remains the same fractious organisation, but just behind new branding. In this respect, several defections from the Conservatives to Reform will likely prove beneficial, and might even work to pollute the reputation of the destination Party.
Behavioural and neuroscientific work emphasises the importance of the perceptions of the leader. Images serve as powerful proxies for party brands, with voters responding to the characteristics they perceive in a leader – steady or chaotic, sincere or cynical, like them or out of touch – and then generalise that to the party. Conservatives therefore need leaders and local representatives who embody a coherent story about order, opportunity and stewardship over time, rather than a sequence of conflicting personas and narratives. This breadth of leadership, especially locally, is wanting currently.
Taken together, these behavioural insights point to the need for a broader strategic shift. The party should approach politics less as a marketplace for policy products and more as a long‑term relationship in which attachment is built through Reliability, Respect and Recognition.
Intellectual policy work remains necessary, but is not by itself sufficient: it must be accompanied by a deliberate attachment strategy that treats trust, identity and emotional resonance as core design prerequisites rather than as optional extras. Conservatives must demonstrate visible delivery alongside competence in everyday, tangible ways, re‑anchoring the party in the lived identities of key voter groups.
While progress has been made, there is still much more work to be done, especially at the local level. Upcoming local authority elections in May will be the acid test of just how far the Party has progressed.
Politics
What Does It Mean When Kids Say Gyatt?
Ryan Gosling might not be fussed about keeping up with Gen Alpha slang, but that doesn’t mean the rest of us aren’t out here trying to decode what our kids are saying on a daily basis.
One of the terms you might’ve overheard them exclaiming in conversation, or perhaps while gaming, in recent times is gyatt.
What does gyatt (sometimes spelt gyat) mean?
Gyat or gyatt is a phonetic abbreviation for “god” or “goddamn”, which originates from African American Vernacular English (AAVE), dating back as far as the 1700s, according to Parents.
It’s usually used as an exclamation to express excitement or admiration, however it’s increasingly being used by Gen Alpha and Z to refer to someone they find extremely attractive.
Or, more specifically, their posterior.
Nowadays, according to Merriam-Webster dictionary, it’s evolved into slang for “a nice behind” or, per Cambridge Dictionary, “an attractively large bottom”.
In some instances, younger kids might simply refer to their bum as a gyatt, without realising the more sexualised meaning behind it.
It’s clearly pretty popular as some primary schools have even taken to banning its use.
As the word is largely rooted in sexual objectification, it’s worth pulling up your child or teen on their use of it – especially if they’re not using it in a respectful way.
Sexual harassment can include sexual comments, remarks, jokes and online sexual harassment. Government research suggests the issue is widespread in schools in England.
Gabb also noted that if your kids are coming out with gyatt it might flag they’re watching content online intended for older audiences – in which case, a review of their social media use might be helpful.
What else are teens saying?
Glad you asked… Here goes!
Mid
When Gen Alpha uses it, “mid” means mediocre or of disappointing quality. According to Merriam-Webster, “mid” serves to express that something falls short of expectations, or isn’t impressive.
Unc
This is short for “uncle” – and, per Merriam-Webster, it’s “often used humorously to indicate old age” and may imply “someone is old, getting old, or acting older than their age”.
Lowkenuinely
A combination of ‘lowkey’ and ‘genuinely’, which describes expressing something sincere in a casual, laid-back way, according to experts at language platform Preply.
Chopped
In Gen Z and Gen Alpha speak, it means ugly.
Choppelganger
Choppelganger is a portmanteau of ‘chopped’ (aka ugly), and ‘doppelganger’, which is a person who resembles someone else. So basically, it’s calling someone a less-attractive lookalike of someone else.
Chat
According to Gabb’s guide to teen slang, chat is quite simply used “to refer to a group of people, like friends or people in their class”.
Politics
Politics Home | If Labour Doesn’t Revamp The Civil Service, Reform UK Will Dismantle It, Warns Hermer

3 min read
Attorney General Richard Hermer has warned that failure by the Labour government to improve Whitehall delivery will pave the way for Reform UK to “dismantle” the civil service.
Writing for The House on Thursday, Hermer, a close ally of Prime Minister Keir Starmer, said: “We cannot leave the defence of effective government to those who would dismantle it.
“Those who have a vested interest in talking down the state’s ability to change people’s lives for the better, who want to tear away safeguards for working people.”
The Attorney General’s warning comes after the Labour government on Thursday announced a series of reforms designed to speed up government decision-making and tackle what it described as a “consultation culture” in Whitehall.
In addition to reducing the number of consultations, the government will use AI to identify red tape, as well as streamline the ‘write-round’ process, which ministers use to reach collective decisions. PoliticsHome revealed in November that write-rounds, which involve written correspondence between ministers, were frustrating government figures, who felt that the procedure was creating unnecessary delays.
Ministers will also implement a new accountability framework for permanent secretaries to ensure departments are focused on delivering the Prime Minister’s priorities.
Nigel Farage’s Reform UK has been highly critical of the civil service, arguing that it is too large and not fit for purpose.
The Observer recently reported that the party plans to sack the current cohort of permanent secretaries, who lead departments, and replace them in some cases with outsider political appointees. The newspaper reported a senior Reform figure as pointing to Donald Trump’s current administration as Farage’s inspiration.
While work on the reforms announced today started months ago, government sources told PoliticsHome that Cabinet Secretary Antonia Romeo had injected a sense of urgency. Paymaster General Nick Thomas-Symonds is also heavily involved in the work.
In his piece for The House, Hermer said that 122 consultations had been launched on the government website since January, the equivalent of two a day.
“Consultations are vital when they are genuine exercises in engagement: testing assumptions, gathering evidence, shaping policy. At their best, they save the public purse, but at their worst, deployed without thought or proportionality, they cease to be tools of democracy and instead become obstacles to it,” the Attorney General wrote.
Pointing to a “never-ending list” of consultations currently on GOV.UK, he said that while many were “a great way to gather feedback and the views of the public,” some are “more questionable”.
“Of good intentions, probably sound individual decisions, spiralling into something else.
“Layers of bureaucracy that government after government have allowed to accumulate, each intended to safeguard fairness, yet instead creating a jungle of delay, confusion, and frustration.”
He said that the civil service “is full of dynamic, committed people driven by a deep sense of public service” who are being “slowly suffocated by the system around them”.
“The state must not be slowed by its own procedures. Its purpose is to make decisions that matter for the public we serve,” the cabinet minister wrote.
“If trust depends on delivery, and delivery depends on action, then our priority is clear:
cut through the unnecessary thickets, restore the capacity to act, and ensure the state can uphold principle without suffocating under its own processes.”
Politics
Trans girls ordered to leave girl guides in new transphobic policy
Sky News recently reported that trans girls have been told to leave the Guides by 6 September 2026.
BREAKING: Transgender girls have been given until September 6 to leave the Guides.
🔗 Read more https://t.co/LhwTga7pDi
— Sky News (@SkyNews) March 24, 2026
Following the Supreme Court’s ruling that biological sex determines gender, individuals and groups have intensified anti-trans rhetoric and increasingly isolated trans women and girls, citing the decision as justification.
This latest move by the Guides will cause significant anxiety and distress for young trans girls. The deadline signifies a reversal of their previous position. Many of us remember their 2018 statement which showed refreshing compassion towards this vulnerable group.
As the Canary has previously reported, in 2018, their guidance explicitly welcomed trans women and girls.
This makes clear how far anti-trans rhetoric has gone in the UK. The far right have deliberately portrayed trans people as a dangerous threat. Their narrative has lost any moral grounding it seeks to depend upon.
Trans girls, after all, are just that: children.
Trans children demonised: guides have lost their backbone
This decision reflects a troubling pattern of institutions cowing to billionaire-backed, far-right groups that are targeting and scapegoating trans people. Even more concerning is the impact on young trans girls—now excluded from the very spaces that welcomed them. This ostracises and isolates them from their peers.
This X account drew attention to the Guide’s statement on trans policy in 2018 under former Chief Exec Julie Bentley:
Contrast this with what the Guides said in 2018, from their now-deleted page:
“It’s been really disappointing to read and hear comments that suggest the inclusion of trans children and young people in Girlguiding somehow puts our other members at risk.”
“It is quite frankly… https://t.co/UospLiDYtz pic.twitter.com/uUdWWzEGcW
— Adam Smith (@adamndsmith) March 24, 2026
Back in 2018, the group rightfully raised the alarm over the way in which trans girls were being demonised in far-right public discourse.
At the time, the Guides expressed disappointment with the suggestion that the inclusion of trans children “puts” others at risk of harm. In their words:
It is quite frankly disturbing that people assume that a trans child is a threat to others or that they would want to harm their Girlguiding friends.
But we do also recognise that there are legitimate concerns and queries around the practicalities of self-identifying girls sharing sleeping and bathroom facilities, and that’s why we offer bespoke guidance for any leader who is looking to run an activity, like a camp, that’s going to involve a trans child.
“They are simply children”
One X account commenting on these past statements, said the group’s change of tack is likely a response to:
the threat of litigation by middle class middle aged bigots who have media sway is too much for charities.
It is also worth noting that their 2018 statement was based around a survey of girls and young women which showed 86% in support of trans-inclusive policies.
In an expression of solidarity, another X user said:
Well done for publishing this. It’s a sad day for the trans community.
All this hate they are getting, now that transphobes have been given ammunition against them.
A lot can change in eight years. In 2023, the guides appointed a new Chief Executive, Felicity Oswald. Since then, new initiatives aimed at growing membership have been introduced, under the motto “Girls Can Do Anything.”
Notwithstanding this new direction, they have failed to protect all children, and abandoned principles of equality.
Discrimination was bound to happen
The Supreme Court’s ruling worked to roll back trans rights by two decades, as we wrote last year:
By prioritising a gender normative definition of sex over legal gender recognition, the court’s decision disregards the lived experiences and identities of trans women. It raises questions about their access to single-sex spaces, participation in public life, and protection against discrimination.
The Supreme Court’s decision reflects a troubling trend within politics and justice to favour a narrow, right-wing view of gender, ignoring the complexities of gender identity and trampling over the rights of trans people.
This approach fails to consider the social and legal realities and plays right into the hands of the anti-trans lobby, the far-right, and bigots.
The Women’s Institute (WI) almost immediately banned trans women from their events following this shortsighted and extremely damaging ruling. Of course, this has caused significant distress for trans communities who are being pushed out of public life.
Abandoning children is a choice
However, the Charity Commission even intervened to say that no charities were under any pressure to rush to change policies after the controversial ruling, suggesting they are:
within their rights to wait for statutory guidance before abandoning their trans-inclusive policies.
The decision from Girlguiding is a result of capitulation to far-right bigots who are attempting to demonise trans people. Choosing to further isolate already marginalised children from their peers is a sickening decision.
The fact that the group in 2018 had no problem including trans children speaks volumes about the UK’s gigantic swerve towards openly transphobic politics in recent years. One of the Girlguiding mottos is:
We help girls know they can do anything
As long as they’re the right kind of girls.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Richard Osman Teases House Of Games Will Be Getting A Big Rebrand When Michael Sheen Takes Over
Richard Osman in his iconic House Of Games big red chairRichard Osman has shed some more light on how things are going to work over at House Of Games when he steps down as host.
Earlier this month, the Bafta nominee announced he would be leaving Richard Osman’s House Of Games after nine years and around 800 episodes at the helm.
He insisted at the time that House Of Games would remain on the air with a new presenter, later revealed to be the actor Michael Sheen.
But given that Richard’s face is quite literally plastered all over his celebrity game show – and many of its prizes – some may have had questions about whether this would remain in place after his departure.
In fact, as he told listeners on the latest episode of his podcast The Rest Is Entertainment, the show will be getting a big rebrand after he’s left.
“One of the things they’re currently doing is producing prizes with his face on. So it will be called Michael Sheen’s House of Games,” he explained, joking that he “lobbied” to try and stick around in spirit even if he wasn’t hosting the show anymore.
To most of us, Richard rose to fame as Alexander Armstrong’s right-hand man on the daytime quiz Pointless.
Nowadays, he’s as well known for his literary output as he is for his on-screen work, having penned the best-selling mystery novel The Thursday Murder Club, which was adapted for the big screen by Netflix last year.
Since the first book was published, The Thursday Murder Club has spawned four sequels, the most recent of which, The Impossible Fortune, came out in late 2025.
During his time as the host of House Of Games, Richard has welcomed a slew of celebrity guests and put them through their paces, including his now-wife Ingrid Oliver, who he met when she was a contestant on his show.
Politics
Israel issue intention to colonise Lebanon
Israel says it will invade Lebanon and enforce a ‘defensive buffer’ zone up to the Litani river. Or, in plain English, the settler-colonial state means to colonise Lebanon’s south – probably permanently.
In theory, Hezbollah breached a US-brokered ‘ceasefire’ with Israel in early March which had held up since their last war in 2024. In practice, the US gave Israel carte blanche to strike Lebanon, which it has done constantly since the deal was struck. During the intervening period, Israel attacked southern Lebanon about 15,400 times.
Now senior Israeli officials say they have destroyed many of the bridges on the Litani river, largely cutting off the south from the rest of the country.
The Guardian reported on 25 March:
During a meeting with the military chief of staff, Israel defence minister Israel Katz said Israeli forces would “control the remaining bridges and the security zone up to the Litani”, a river in Lebanon that meets the Mediterranean about 30km (20 miles) north of Israel’s border.
Adding:
Katz added all bridges over the Litani river, which he said had been used by Hezbollah to move operatives and weapons into southern Lebanon, “have been blown up and the IDF will control the remaining bridges”.
Far-right minister Bezalel Smotrich said on 23 March that the war:
needs to end with a different reality entirely, both with the Hezbollah decision but also with the change of Israel’s borders.
I say here definitively…in every room and in every discussion, too: the new Israeli border must be the Litani.
However:
He nevertheless represents a widely and deeply-held expansionist desire at the heart of Israel’s settler colonial polity. In Zionism’s ethno-nationalist fever-dream, Lebanon—and even lands far beyond it—are already part of Israel.
Israel aggression gathers steam
Israel attacked 92 villages in the south in 24 March:
The Israeli military attacked 92 villages and towns across Lebanon on Tuesday. A journalist on the ground recorded a new strike today while reporting from the town of Al-Burghuliyah, a coastal municipality in the Tyre district of southern Lebanon, near the Mediterranean. https://t.co/9Uun7KDNwG
— Drop Site (@DropSiteNews) March 25, 2026
Channel 4 News attended the funeral of another two paramedics killed by Israeli strikes on 25 March. the youngest was 16 years old:
Awful, heartbreaking, unacceptable
We’ve just been at the funeral of two young volunteer paramedics in southern Lebanon – killed in a direct Israeli strike… one was only 16 years old
They were killed whilst wearing their full kit according to witnesses – returning from the… pic.twitter.com/K5rtw0WwHO
— Secunder Kermani (@SecKermani) March 25, 2026
The Israeli assault has displaced one in five Lebanese people. The World Health Organisation (WHO) reported that massive surges of displacement were placing pressure on hospitals:
A #WHO team visited Siblin Governmental Hospital to assess capacity amid a surge in displacement. Over 130,000 people in the area are placing growing pressure on health services. pic.twitter.com/CeuYpAKKOa
— WHO Lebanon (@WHOLebanon) March 25, 2026
Al Jazeera reported that the war had caused food prices to inflate. While Hezbollah – a Shia political party and paramilitary force in the south – called for unity.
Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem said:
Negotiating with the Israeli enemy under fire amounts to imposing surrender and stripping Lebanon of its capabilities, especially since negotiations are fundamentally rejected with an enemy that occupies land and continues daily aggression.
We call for national unity against the Israeli-American enemy under one title at this stage: stopping the aggression to liberate the land and the people. All other issues can be discussed afterward.
Israel has had its sights on southern Lebanon for years. It’s desire to drive all the way through to the Litani has nothing to do with ‘defence’ or establishing ‘buffers’. This new outrage is driven by the same nakedly colonialist ambition which has driven Israel’s genocide against Palestinians, its attack on Iran, and its sundry other atrocities in the region.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
The House | Parliament must lead by example in creating a Commons more open, effective and accessible for all

3 min read
Since being appointed Leader of the House last September, I’ve enjoyed chairing the cross-party Modernisation Committee.
It’s been rewarding to act on testimony from MPs, Peers, staff, academics and members of the public on how we can make the Commons more accessible, effective and open.
During the last Labour government, Modernisation Committee reports led to key changes that are now established parts of our parliamentary week, including Westminster Hall debates, topical questions and expanded educational and visitor facilities.
At the end of last year, we published our report into accessibility in the Commons. This year, we are examining the key topics in today’s parliamentary landscape.
Following our inquiry into accessibility, during which the committee heard from disabled MPs, Peers, House and Members’ staff as well as academics and senior officials, it was made clear that accessibility needs to become a major priority for the Commons, and be woven into the fabric of what it does.
Our report made a series of recommendations, including:
• Where reasonable adjustments are required for disabled MPs to contribute in the Chamber and committees, it should be made as clear as possible how they can be accessed.
• Visitors should be asked upon entry if they have a disability or access need and offered support accordingly.
• Senior leaders should establish an External Accessibility Advisory Group, allowing organisations representing disabled people the opportunity to provide feedback on accessibility challenges in Parliament.
• The Commons should lead by example and inspire other public sector bodies by ensuring as much as possible of its communication and engagement activities are delivered in accessible formats such as British Sign Language, Easy Read and audio file.
• Line managers should receive mandatory training on how to support disabled and neurodiverse individuals.
If you haven’t yet read our report, I would encourage you to do so, and we’ll continue following up on this important issue to ensure our recommendations are implemented and progress towards making the Commons more accessible continues at pace.
As a committee, we’re committed to regular engagement with the wider parliamentary community, including smaller parties, the Speaker and his deputies and all those who work here as well as the public.
So far this year, we’ve been working closely with the Liaison Committee on remote access to committee hearings to ensure the resilience of parliamentary proceedings, and we’ve discussed the recommendations from the independent review into Parliament’s Independent Complaints and Grievance Scheme (ICGS).
We’re also interested in how Parliament can use time as effectively as possible, enabling MPs to scrutinise legislation and raise issues of importance to their constituents.
This is a topic that came up in our call for views at the beginning of the parliament and one we will return to this year. We’ll explore practical ways to provide MPs with more certainty about upcoming business and on-the-day changes, ensuring the Commons remains the crucible of national debate.
There is still much to do if we’re to make Parliament a more accessible and open institution which best serves the interests of our constituents. I’m committed to continuing to work with all MPs to achieve consensus in this important work.
Politics
Social workers covering cost of basic essentials for vulnerable people
Hundreds of frontline social workers are regularly stepping in to personally support people in crisis. New research by the Social Workers Union (SWU) suggests that the Government’s new Crisis and Resilience Fund may not be enough to prevent this.
Crisis support
Following a survey of the SWU’s members, many felt compelled to step in and personally fund basic items for people they support – from food to energy prepayment meter top-ups.
The Crisis and Resilience Fund, which is due to begin on 1 April, is intended to provide faster emergency support for households in hardship. It comes after reports of a looming social care crisis in 2024.
However, the SWU warns that the Fund may not go far enough to prevent social workers continuing to plug gaps themselves, particularly when crises arise suddenly or where systems remain slow and bureaucratic.
Survey findings
More than 380 social workers affected by the issue took part in the research last summer, with three in four (75%) saying they were unable to claim back the costs they incurred on behalf of service users.
The overwhelming majority had to buy food (87%), while others were compelled to pay for public transport (36%), clothing (26%), cleaning supplies (24%), and top-up energy prepayment meters (19%) to keep people warm.
Though over half of social workers affected (58%) described such payments as rare, more than a quarter (27%) said they were dipping into their own pockets every month, with nearly one in ten (9%) doing so even more regularly. Most contributions were under £25, but one in twenty social workers spent more than £100.
Over a third (36%) said helping clients put their own finances at risk, highlighting how the cost-of-living crisis is now affecting not just vulnerable families, but the very workers tasked with protecting them.
Despite 86% of social workers trying to secure support via foodbanks, council-run household support funds and local charities, seven in ten times (70%) they were faced with an emergency that left no time to navigate complex or slow bureaucratic systems.
A system in crisis
John McGowan, general secretary of the SWU, has warned the findings expose a “broken support system”:
It cannot be right that social workers are left to plug the gaps in a broken support system with their own money. While the new Crisis and Resilience Fund is a welcome step, it will not solve the problem on its own if support remains slow, complex or hard to access in an emergency.
The data paints a stark picture of a safety net riddled with delays and gaps. The true test of the new Fund moving forward will be to see if it means that local and national governments act urgently to ensure help is there when it is needed.
It is a claim backed up by the stories told by social workers themselves. Asked why they had resorted to providing direct financial support to service users, one social worker told researchers:
There are often several real forms to fill out to request financial support, which are declined anyhow by managers. To save time – something we don’t often have – I’ve paid for items myself.
Another claimed that their local authority “has restricted food bank vouchers to 3 per year”. Another stated that their “service user was unable to access the internet or navigate lengthy online forms.” One went so far as to say that there just was no longer any support left to apply for.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Lisa Kudrow Had A Hand In Writing Phoebe’s Friends Songs
If ever you’ve found yourself with one of Phoebe from Friends’ oddball musical numbers stuck in your head, it turns out that you have Lisa Kudrow herself to thank.
The Emmy winner recently reflected on her performance as Phoebe Buffay during a video interview with Vanity Fair, where she also discussed some of her character’s infamous musical performances.
“With Phoebe and the songs, at first, I took a guitar lesson or two,” she recalled. “And then, I realised I don’t like playing guitar.
“My brother is a phenomenal guitar player, and there’s real musical talent in my family, but not with me. And I also just felt like the point of this character is that she thinks she’s great, and she loves doing it. It doesn’t mean that she’s talented and I think it’s even funnier and more worthwhile if she just sort of knows some chords and doesn’t really play them well.”
With that in mind, it was decided that while Friends’ writers would come up with Phoebe’s melodies, Lisa would work on the melodies, after reasoning that they should sound as amateur-ish as possible.
“I would then have to work on the songs during the week,” Lisa continued. “On a multi-camera show, you rehearse all week, and then you shoot it on one night. And I thought it would be easier if I can come up with the tune of the ditty, because I thought, ‘they can’t be too good’.”
By far, Phoebe’s most famous Friends number is Smelly Cat, which the character performed on multiple occasions during the show’s 10-season run.
In the two decades that Friends has been off the air, Lisa has also performed Smelly Cat with Taylor Swift on her 1989 world tour and Lady Gaga on the show’s 2021 reunion special.
However, she’s admitted that Smelly Cat isn’t even her favourite offering from Phoebe’s oeuvre.
“I thought some of the other Phoebe songs were so much funnier,” she revealed. “When she’s at this nursery school or this kids’ programme, and singing these songs that are so inappropriate – your dog is dead, grandma is, too – those things are really funny. They’re so inappropriate!”
Lisa previously claimed that she’d never actually enjoyed Friends as a viewer, but decided to revisit the show in the wake of Matthew Perry’s death.
During a recent interview, the Romy & Michele’s High School Reunion star admitted she’d been crying with laughter while watching one particular sequence from the sitcom’s hey-day.
Politics
Meta and YouTube found to have deliberately harmed children
A US court has found that Meta and YouTube are deliberately getting kids addicted to their sites and causing them harm in the process. It’s the latest sign that the tide is turning against the sick US tech sector, which has enjoyed an ability to act without impunity for decades now.
A Los Angeles jury has ordered YouTube and Meta to pay $3 million to a woman who sued them, alleging that the negligence of both tech giants led her to get addicted to their platforms at a young age.
— More Perfect Union (@MorePerfectUS) March 25, 2026
Meta is the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp; YouTube, meanwhile, is owned by Google.
Meta and YouTube causing harm
Variety summarised the case as follows:
A jury has ordered Meta and Google to pay $3M to a 20-year-old woman who alleged that she became addicted to Instagram and YouTube as a child:
- Jurors found the companies liable for product design features that harmed her mental health
- The plaintiff, Kaley G.M., testified that the apps replaced her hobbies and contributed to anxiety, depression and body dysmorphia
- The case is the first of thousands targeting Big Tech over addiction to reach trial, a “bellwether” to assess how other claims could be resolved
- Meta was ordered to pay 70% of the damages, with Google responsible for the remaining 30%
The trial took place in Los Angeles over a period of six weeks, with jurors hearing testimony from executives, whistleblowers, and expert witnesses. As the Guardian reported, the plaintiff:
testified that she became addicted to YouTube at age six and Instagram at nine, which she said had deleterious effects on her wellbeing. By age 10, she said, she had become depressed and was engaging in self-harm as a result. Her social media use allegedly caused her to have strained relationships with her family and in school. When she was 13, KGM’s therapist diagnosed her with body dysmorphic disorder and social phobia, which KGM attributes to her use of Instagram and YouTube.
The Guardian compared the case to the 1990s legal action against cigarette manufacturers. Then, like now, it was argued that executives understood the harms caused by their products, but they chose to prioritise profits over public health.
Counters
It’s clear that social media is having a negative impact, but there’s also a simultaneous push to restrict certain freedoms online. According to groups like Reclaim the Net, this latest case could be used to further inhibit freedoms in a similar fashion to what we’ve seen in the UK via the Online Safety Act.
In their summary of the above case, Reclaim the Net write:
The chain from these verdicts to surveillance architecture runs through a single word: “addiction.” Public health emergency follows from that classification. Emergency powers follow from the emergency. Age verification follows from emergency powers. OS-level ID checks follow from age verification. Each step is presented as protecting children. What gets built is a surveillance system for everyone unless we can get more people to wake up to it.
There’s obviously a line to be walked, but the grave harms caused by these companies cannot be ignored or pushed to one side. As the Guardian reported:
The jury’s verdict comes just one day after Meta was ordered to pay $375m in civil penalties in a separate lawsuit in New Mexico. In that case, the jury found the company misled consumers about the safety of its platforms and enabled harm, including child sexual exploitation, against its users. The back-to-back verdicts are the first ever to find Meta liable for how its products affect young people.
The problem activists have is that the loss of online anonymity will feel like a lesser evil to many than the sexual exploitation of children. This is why any successful campaign needs to be clear that the status quo does need to change, and that greedy tech companies cannot be the ones in charge of our digital spaces due to the clear and evident harm to children.
Floodgates
As people have highlighted, this case could open the floodgates for more legal action:
Welp, it sounds like a lot of people can sue Meta and Google and make some good money 😂 https://t.co/0U1uXZ8Juz
— DeepHumor (@DeepHumor) March 25, 2026
The governor of California Gavin Newsom also spoke out following the verdict:
Big Tech is finally answering for the harm it has caused our children — after years of fighting against common sense regulations, today’s verdict shows that they can’t escape accountability.
California isn’t backing down. We’ve enacted the nation’s strongest protections, and… https://t.co/SqY3PtW3Ls
— Governor Gavin Newsom (@CAgovernor) March 25, 2026
Newsom is very much a weather vane politician; he’s also eyeing up a run at the presidency. The fact that he’s speaking out against big tech and Israel shows that some of the US’s biggest political excesses have become unviable for an ambitious politician:
The Democrats’ ranking political weather vane has spoken. California Gov. Gavin Newsom ventured onto what was for him new terrain, invoking the A-word—“apartheid”—to describe a nation that had once been the cynosure of American liberals’ eyes. https://t.co/EuLQompHJA pic.twitter.com/KyrwtkTg2Q
— The American Prospect (@TheProspect) March 4, 2026
Of course, politicians like Newsom are also flip-floppers, so they can’t be trusted to enact the crucial change that needs to happen:
Governor Gavin Newsom: “I revere the state of Israel. I’m proud to support the state of Israel.
I deeply, deeply oppose Benjamin Netanyahu’s leadership, his opposition to the two-state solution, and deeply oppose how he is indulging the far right…”
pic.twitter.com/q2kl7s2GNu— Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) March 24, 2026
Featured image via Wikimedia
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