Politics
Travelodge complicit in sexual assault, say Labour MPs
Over 100 Labour MPs have co-signed a letter to the CEO of Travelodge to request a meeting to discuss a sexual assault that occurred in the hotel chain. According to the letter, a woman was sexually assaulted after making a solo booking at the hotel – only for staff to give her attacker a key to her room. The perpetrator of the sexual assault, Kyran Smith, told staff he was her boyfriend and needed another key card. Despite not being present on the booking, the hotel gave him that key which enabled his abuse.
Smith has since been convicted and sentenced to 7.5 years in prison. Nevertheless, the letter addressing this serious incident also refers to a woeful response from Travelodge in light of their security error was to offer a measly £30 compensation to the victim.
Travelodge have serious questions to answer
However, as these Labour MPs highlight, the Travelodge played an intrinsic role in enabling this abuse and their remedial response should be far stronger. Once again, corporates have little compassion for ordinary people even whilst they play a hand in their very real trauma.
A woman was sexually assaulted in a Travelodge. Staff gave her attacker the key to her room after he pretended to be her boyfriend. She was offered £30 in compensation. Appalling.
Along with 100 Labour colleagues, I’ve written to Travelodge’s CEO & asked to meet. pic.twitter.com/1pxjVqZvn3
— Anneliese Midgley MP (@anneliese_midge) March 8, 2026
This letter paints an appalling image of this corporate hotel company. It details how the abuse was able to have taken place, and highlights how little safeguarding is present for women, or frankly anyone, staying at Travelodge’s across the country. Apparently, despite the victim of assault having made a solo booking, the hotel staff didn’t think it was appropriate to double-check the abusive man’s claim by speaking directly to the guest. No, a man walking in and laying claim to her is enough to invade her privacy without question, according to shady-as-fuck Travelodge.
The MPs listed four areas of focused discussion:
We would also welcome the opportunity to discuss:
- Travelodge’s security policies and procedures relating to providing a key card and/or room number to someone not named on a booking
- Travelodge’s safeguarding training processes
- Any training relating to Violence Against Women and Girls that Travelodge provides for staff
- Changes that Travelodge will make to the above to ensure the safety of women staying at your hotel chain
I’m a signatory.
This case is sickening. My thoughts are with the victim following this sexual assault.
We need urgent answers from @TravelodgeUK who did not take VAWG seriously.
What are their security procedures? How do we stop this happening again? https://t.co/kCE2ImnOmP
— Dawn Butler ✊🏾💙 (@DawnButlerBrent) March 9, 2026
‘We want to apologise to the victim’
Travelodge have said that they recognise the £30 compensation offer was ‘inappropriate’. Since, they have told the BBC:
The safety and security of our guests is our priority and we were deeply concerned to hear of this distressing incident and our sympathies are with the victim.
We want to apologise to the victim for the way this incident has been handled.
Travelodge adopts industry standard security procedures which were followed at the time of the incident in 2022.
We will carry out a full review of our room security policies to learn from this incident and further strengthen our procedures.
We covered the rising fear in women and girls as figures continually rise back in October, pointing out how men are seemingly more emboldened than ever. Discussing this terrifying rise, we wrote:
Domestic abuse is a serious issue, accounting for 54% of rape crimes between April 2024 and March 2025, with the remaining being committed by men over the age of 16. There is also a marginal difference between the likelihood of being attacked by a stranger or an acquaintance, making it a minefield for vulnerable women and girls.
In the last 20 years, sexual offences have increased: from 970 against young girls under-13, and 8,192 against women over 16 to 5,067 and 49,075 respectively. When looking at all rapes, crimes have increased by 511%.
In fact, rape offences doubled between 2014 to 2019, rising from 29,420 to a horrifying 59,999. There is a slight reduction seen in 2020/2021 down to 55,685, during COVID and lockdown periods, before shooting up to 70,031 the following year.
Women have enough to fear without fearing our safety and security in hotels
Privacy and security are human rights and protected by civil law. Nonetheless, women and girls have continually suffered abuse at some point, if not multiple times in their lifetimes. Abusive men have long believed they can do whatever they want to their victims, often getting off on the most invasive and traumatising ways they can do so.
This incident is horrifying and will spark fear in every woman across the country. Equally terrifying is the feeling that other men may see this and get ideas of their own, leaving more women in harm’s way. The fact Travelodge’s security procedure is supposedly ‘industry standard’ suggests this must be levelled across the hotel industry as a whole.
Therefore, Labour MPs are completely right to press this deplorable incident, but they must push further. We hope they push hard against the Travelodge to take action that truly shows they recognise the trauma inflicted by the sexual assault they played an essential role in making possible. As a woman myself, I know that I won’t feel safe until I hear all hotels have safeguarded against this life-changing risk of abuse.
Frankly, I’d have thought something as egregious as this could not be possible in the first place. More fool me, I guess.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Champions League: Opta unveil predictions
Arsenal topped Opta’s list of favorites to win the UEFA Champions League title ahead of the Round of 16, a surprising result considering the London club has never lifted the continental trophy.
According to details published on The Analyst website, the network gave Arsenal a clear advantage of 26.7% to win the title, ahead of their rivals, before the anticipated match in the next round. This reflects the high level of confidence in the work being done by Spanish coach Mikel Arteta this season.
The supercomputer’s predictions were not much different from Opta’s, also predicting Arsenal to win the tournament with a 27.4% chance in the final to be held in Budapest, Hungary. Bayern Munich came in second with 14.28%, while Liverpool finished third with 12.83%.
Champions League: PSG in trouble
Meanwhile, Paris Saint-Germain’s task of retaining their title appears more complicated this season. French radio network RMC reported that the team is well aware that retaining the continental trophy is much harder than winning it, especially given their inconsistent results recently.
The Parisian team ranked only seventh among the favorites to win the title, with a 4.3% chance, after delivering inconsistent performances in the group stage, before struggling to overcome Monaco in the play-offs.
Furthermore, Luis Enrique’s team suffered several setbacks domestically, with two heavy defeats against Rennes and Monaco (both by a score of 3-1), which has negatively impacted their chances in the European competition.
Bayern Munich and Liverpool trail the leaders.
According to Opta’s predictions, the top contenders to win the Champions League title are:
• Arsenal — 26.7%
• Bayern Munich — 16.4% (facing Atalanta)
• Liverpool — 11.4% (facing Galatasaray)
• Manchester City — 11.1%
• Barcelona — 9.7%
• Chelsea — 6.4%
• Paris Saint-Germain — 4.3%
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
People Against Genocide take action at Chubb’s Manchester office
From 7am on Tuesday 10 March, two activists from the People Against Genocide group scaled the front canopy above the front doors of Chubb Insurance’s Manchester office in Booth Street.
After climbing onto the platform, they covered the area in symbolic blood-red paint. Police removed and arrested the two action takers at 1.30pm. Firefighters had earlier refused to assist the police in removing the protesters.
Multiple actions against Chubb
This is the third action that People Against Genocide has undertaken against Chubb. The company provides insurance for UAV Engines, a subsidiary of Elbit Systems, Israel’s biggest weapons company. Chubb took over this role after Aviva, UAV Engines’ previous insurer, dropped the company following a sustained direct action campaign.
At its site at Shenstone in Staffordshire, UAV produces engines for Israel’s huge killer drone fleet, of which Elbit Systems produces more than 85%. They include the R902(W) Wankel engine for Elbit’s Hermes 450 drone. This is the same model Israel used to kill seven aid workers from the World Central Kitchen, including three British nationals.
Without the mandatory Employer Liability Insurance provided by Chubb, UAV Engines could not operate in the UK.
Last month, on 18 February, three activists from People Against Genocide targeted the London headquarters of Chubb Insurance. They sprayed blood-red paint all over the front of the building, and locked-on to shut it down.
A week later, on 25 February, the group targeted Chubb’s Birmingham offices, again using symbolic blood-red paint.
In addition to targeting Chubb, People Against Genocide has also recently targeted Aspen Insurance. Aspen took over providing cover for Elbit Systems UK, after its previous insurer, Allianz, also succumbed to pressure from pro-Palestine activists.
A spokesperson for People Against Genocide said:
While the Gaza Genocide continues, and civilians are killed by Israel on the Palestinian West Bank, Lebanon, and Iran, Elbit Systems are cashing in.
Elbit and UAV Engines can only manufacture deadly weapons in Britain because they are provided with Employer Liability Insurance by Chubb and Aspen.
Our action today, in Manchester, is aimed at disrupting the operations of Chubb Insurance, and exposing their role in profiting from war-crimes.
We will continue to target these greedy, amoral companies until they drop the Israeli weapons makers they are facilitating.
Featured image supplied
Politics
Israel using white phosphorus again in Lebanon
Israel has used white phosphorus, an illegal chemical weapon, over homes in Yohmor al Beqaa, Lebanon.
NEW: The Israeli military unlawfully used white phosphorus over homes on March 3, 2026, in the Lebanese town of Yohmor.
The use of white phosphorus over residential areas is extremely alarming and will have dire consequences for civilians.
Read more: https://t.co/ulrNyd9Ceh pic.twitter.com/DlUTViKwo7
— Human Rights Watch (@hrw) March 9, 2026
Israel using chemical weapons again
Human Rights Watch verified and geolocated eight images, which show:
airburst white phosphorus munitions being deployed over a residential part of the town and civil defense workers responding to fires in at least two homes and one car in that area.
As the Canary previously reported, white phosphorus is a chemical substance which ignites instantly upon contact with oxygen. It’s incredibly hard to extinguish and sticks to surfaces like clothes and skin. White phosphorus is extremely harmful to people, no matter the route of exposure. It causes deep and severe burns – often down to the bone, breathing problems, and burning of the eyes and respiratory tract.
The human body can absorb the chemical, causing dysfunction in multiple organs, including the liver, kidneys and heart.
It burns at more than 800 degrees Celsius (nearly 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit). That is high enough to melt metal.
Importantly though:
The incendiary effects of white phosphorous can cause death or cruel injuries that result in lifelong suffering.
The use of chemical weapons in civilian areas is a war crime for exactly this reason. Generations of Lebanese people will now suffer the consequences of Israel’s indiscriminate and illegal attacks.
According to the World Health Organisation:
The use of white phosphorus may violate Protocol III (on the use of incendiary weapons) of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCCW) in one specific instance: if it is used, on purpose, as an incendiary weapon directly against humans in a civilian setting.
War crimes
There is plenty of evidence of Israel’s unlawful use of white phosphorus. Since October 7, Israel has carried out over 1,000 illegal white phosphorus strikes in Gaza.
According to the Euro-Med Monitor, in 40 minutes alone, the IDF launched 300 white phosphorus strikes on a packed residential square in the northern Gaza town of Beit Lahia.
That same evening, reports of multiple white phosphorus shells were recorded in a crowded area of Gaza City. Israel launched similar attacks in the Al-Shati refugee camp, west of Gaza, and the Jabalia town and camp in the Strip’s north.
But it’s not just Palestine. Amnesty International reported that the Israeli army fired artillery shells containing white phosphorus along Lebanon’s southern border in October 2023.
Human Rights Watch also verified Israel’s use of white phosphorus on two locations along the Israel-Lebanon border and over Gaza City’s port.
US origins
As the Canary previously investigated, the US Army supplies Israel with white phosphorus-filled projectiles.
The chemical agent can be deployed through artillery shells, bombs, rockets or grenades.
The white phosphorus itself comes from Israel Chemicals Ltd. (ICL), which has a chemical manufacturing plant in St. Louis.
The US government contracted ICL to produce white phosphorus for the US Army, for:
a 5-year, indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity, fixed-price contract at $3,342,150.
ICL has 10 illegal quarries in the occupied West Bank, according to a report by the Israeli Ministry of Interior. Notably, ICL is also operating in the occupied Syrian Golan.
Of course, it is no surprise that a country with a history steeped in colonialism is supplying chemical weapons to a genocidal terrorist state.
Israel’s entire existence is based on colonialism, war crimes, and the displacement of indigenous populations.
So now Israel is once again using illegal chemical weapons to further its terrorist agenda at the expense of indigenous communities – we are not surprised. But Israel knows it can and will get away with it, which is why it’s even more important that international communities take a stand.
Featured image via FRANCE 24 English/ YouTube screenshot
Politics
Heated Rivalry stars call out abuse from fans
The stars of Heated Rivalry are calling out their own fans for the sheer amount of horrific abuse being levelled at them
Hudson Williams and Francois Arnaud both posted on their respective Instagram stories:
Don’t call yourself a fan if you share racist/ homophobic/ biphobic/ misogynist/ ageist/ ableist/ parasocial/ bigoted comments of any kind
None of us need your hateful ‘love.’
They continued
We all respect and support and love each other and are on the same side.
If you can’t accept that gtfoh [get the fuck outta here]
Heated Rivalry cast have to deal with parasocial weirdos
Though they don’t clarify, this is appears to be aimed at so-called fans who have been subjecting Arnaud to homophobic and biphobic abuse. Since he was pictured with co-star Connor Storrie, Arnaud has been subject to the sort of queerphobic rhetoric you’d usually get from right-wingers. Not so called fans.
It’s also seemingly aimed at the racism Williams has received, especially after his Letterboxd reviews were bizarrely analysed. He’s also been accused of queerbaiting, purely because he’s in a queer show and is close to his male co-stars while being in a relationship with a woman.
Apart from Arnaud, who is bi, none of the cast has disclosed their sexuality. And nor should they be expected to. But as we’ve seen with other fandoms, this toxic obsession can push celebs to come out before they’re ready. This happened with Heartstopper’s Kit Connor, who was forced to come out as bi at just 18 in the same circumstances.
You’d think such a bold statement would stop many in their tracks, but they still found a reason to attack Arnaud, because Williams posted it slightly before him seemingly.
One “fan” posted on Threads claiming none of the team would defend Williams without him posting a statement.
To this, Williams replied:
It was Francois’ idea and I helped write it! I don’t scroll comments so I did not see the hate. I was vibing watching figure skating highlights.
On Instagram, Arnaud also responded to a fan who accused him of posting the statement but not crediting Williams and “acting like you drafted it’
I did draft this message and Hudson and I tweaked it together and wanted to make a joint statement. We thank you for your concern.
Fans need to remember this is a queer hockey show ffs
Heated Rivalry came out at the end of last year, and its success spawned a huge fandom in a very short amount of time. With that came a huge amount of parasocial and inappropriate fans who don’t like it when their ‘faves’ don’t act exactly as they want.
But really, these fans need to remember the true message of the show and grow up.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Israel intensifies brutal attacks on Lebanon
Israel has launched a new wave of attacks on southern and eastern Lebanon, taking the total number of people that the terrorist state has murdered in the country since February 2nd 2026 to at least 486.
On Tuesday 10 March 2026 Israel launched two air attacks on Tyre (Sour), a city in Southern Lebanon. Not long before the attacks, the Israeli army threatened attacks on both Tyre and Sidon (Saida). It urged residents to:
evacuate immediately and move at least 300 metres [about 1,000ft] away.
Since Israel assassinated Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, it has been increasing its illegal presence in Eastern Lebanon, whilst also bombing the country, including the capital, Beirut.
Israeli media are reporting that:
Israel wants to expand its presence in southern Lebanon, expand that buffer zone.
Which is, of course, illegal and entirely intolerable under international law.
Meanwhile:
Hezbollah says it has so far repelled advances on a number of axes.
Israel repeatedly claims it is expanding into Lebanon to defeat Hezbollah. Except that if that were the case, it would not be indiscriminately bombing civilians.
Talks of a ‘demilitarised area’ or a ‘temporary buffer zone’ mean one thing and one thing only – illegal occupation. In other words, Israel is stealing even more land, which it has no legal right to.
Israel intensify attacks
Overnight on Tuesday, Israeli warplanes launched attacks on the towns of Almajadel, Chaqra, Srifa and in the Bekaa Valley.
As if that wasn’t bad enough, Lebanon’s National News Agency (NNA) also reported:
heavy Israeli attacks near the town of Ansariya as well as on the outskirts of Bint Jbeil and Ainatha.
Four people were killed in the Bint Jbeil district.
Other Israeli attacks included the southern Lebanese towns of Majdal in the Tyre district and Kafr Sasir in the Nabatieh district.
Israel also murdered a Maronite Catholic priest, Father Pierre al-Rahi, in the village of Qlayaa.
Lebanese newspaper L’Orient-Le Jour reported that:
al-Rahi was killed after an Israeli tank fired on the home of a local couple a second time after several people had rushed there to try to help.
One day before his death, on the steps to his church, al-Rahi told France24:
We are forced to stay despite the danger, when we defend our land, and we do so peacefully. None of us carries weapons. All of us carry peace and goodness and love.
Resistance
In the last week, Israel has also targeted at least 30 sites belonging to the Al-Qard al-Hasan association, which provides interest-free loans and other financial services in Lebanon. It is doing so because it’s “affiliated with Hezbollah”.
But what we need to remember, and what the entirety of the West seems to forget, is that Hezbollah would not exist if Israel had not invaded Lebanon in 1982.
Additionally, armed resistance is not illegal under international law. A United Nations General Assembly resolution states:
The General Assembly,
Reaffirms the legitimacy of the struggle of peoples for independence, territorial integrity, national unity and liberation from colonial domination, apartheid and foreign occupation by all available means, including armed struggle;
In December 2025, Canary writer Mohamad Kleit wrote:
I saw nothing but rubble. Destroyed houses, lost dreams, and graffiti in Hebrew promising an Israeli return to take over the border towns. This statement on the wall was accompanied by other racist, colonial slurs against Lebanon, drawn on what remained of houses and shops, by the Israeli occupation forces during the 2024 war.
This shows the current attacks on Lebanon are not some new attempt to disarm Hezbollah. They are part of a prolonged and systematic colonial attempt to invade the land.
Moreover, Israel’s ‘Greater Israel project’ was formally established in 1967. This was only one month after Israel illegally annexed the Gaza Strip, the Sinai Peninsula, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights in the Six-Day War.
According to Middle East Eye:
It is often understood as a vision of territorial expansion to encompass Palestine, Lebanon and Jordan, along with significant parts of Syria, Iraq, Egypt and Saudi Arabia.
So it is not surprising that, according to a Financial Times report, Israeli officials discussed launching a strike on Hezbollah before the attack on Iran even started.
Bombing Lebanon has never been about disarming Hezbollah – that’s the same bullshit we were fed about Hamas in Gaza while Israel carpet bombed the whole area.
Israel’s actions created Hezbollah, just as it did with Hamas. But as soon as Israel has to face the consequences of its actions, which let’s face it, are tiny in comparison, it plays the victim and cries terrorism.
Israel and the US simply do not like the idea of people in the Global South being able to defend themselves.
And from where I’m standing, there is only one terrorist.
Featured image via Hook Global/YouTube screenshot
Politics
Access to Work in crisis – Disabled workers pushed out of jobs
The government’s flagship employment support scheme for Disabled people is in “deep crisis”. Delays, cuts and outdated systems are putting thousands of jobs at risk. This is according to new evidence the Disability Poverty Campaign Group has submitted to the Public Accounts Committee’s inquiry into Access to Work.
The Disability Poverty Campaign Group is a coalition led by Disabled people’s organisations and allies from anti-poverty, disability, carers and research organisations. Disability Rights UK and Inclusion London co-chair the group.
In February the National Audit Office published its own report looking at challenges in the operation of Access to Work. Following on from the National Audit Office’s findings, the Public Accounts Committee wanted to take evidence from senior Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) officials and disability organisations on how and if the DWP is addressing challenges within the scheme. Topics included what impact backlogs have had on claimants and employers, and how to improve the scheme.
The Disability Poverty Campaign Group sent a 3,000-word submission to the Public Accounts Committee. It said Access to Work, once regarded as a cornerstone of disability employment support, is now failing on multiple fronts.
This is despite Access to Work being vital to helping Disabled people stay in work. The scheme now suffers from extreme waiting times, inconsistent decisions, inaccessible processes and steep reductions in support.
The submission used evidence and data collected from the Disability Poverty Campaign Group’s own Access to Work survey, Access Action on Disability, The Access to Work Collective, Decode collaboration, RNIB and policy discussions undertaken with officials and Ministers in DWP.
Access to Work gutted by cuts
The Disability Poverty Campaign Group submission showed the evidence of widespread cuts to Access to Work packages is now overwhelming:
- In the Disability Poverty Campaign Group’s 2025 survey, half of recipients said their support was insufficient.
- One person saw their annual allowance cut from 52 hours of support to just 5.
- Decode, a network supporting Disabled people in the arts, reports that 89.5% of reassessment cases they supported in 2024–25 resulted in lower awards. There was an average reduction of 53%.
- Action on Disability found support worker hours for their clients dropped 82% between 2022 and 2025. And job retention fell from 88% to 43%, with employers directly linking job losses to Access to Work cuts.
Amongst other concerns reported in the submission was that the processes for applying for, administering, and appealing Access to Work awards are becoming inaccessible. New rules have been introduced which prevent digital sharing of applications and documents and instead require communication by post.
There have also been instances of many Deaf users of Access to Work having advisers repeatedly telephone them. That’s despite knowing that they are Deaf and cannot use the telephone.
The Disability Poverty Campaign Group is pushing for more funding for Access to Work. It showed that Access to Work delivered £1.14 directly back to the Treasury for every pound it cost. This confirms that it is cost‑effective to the government.
Disabled people’s recommendations
The Disability Poverty Campaign Group submission sums up widespread system failures and problems arising from the design or processes of Access to Work, and value for money in the scheme.
It also recommends policy solutions that, if implemented, would go toward securing the future of the Access to Work scheme. They would make it more inclusive, sustainable and fit for the future.
Disability Poverty Campaign Group recommendations were:
- Immediately increase funding to match rising demand.
- Invest in modernising Access to Work, making all processes fully accessible and inclusive for all applications and renewals.
- Ensure any future changes to the scheme are co-designed with Disabled people’s organisations, Disabled people and Disabled freelancers and business owners.
- Move Access to Work from Departmental Expenditure Limits (limits set by the treasury to manage public spending in the UK) to Annually Managed Expenditure funding based on need, to manage growing caseloads.
- Create a transferable Access to Work award that moves with the individual from an existing job to a new job. This would enable people to start a new job immediately without having to reapply from scratch.
Now that the Disability Poverty Campaign Group along with other Access to Work groups and Disabled people’s organisations have submitted evidence, the Public Accounts Committee will follow a well‑established parliamentary oversight process.
It will take oral evidence from senior officials and relevant witnesses. Then it will produce a formal report, to be laid before parliament and published online. The government must issue a Treasury Minute response, normally within two months, setting out the actions the DWP will take.
Dan White, co-chair of the Disability Poverty Campaign Group, said:
When Access to Work fails, Disabled people lose their jobs, employers lose valued staff, and the economy loses talent it cannot afford to waste.
The evidence we have submitted—drawn from many Disabled workers and employers across the UK—shows a system at breaking point. Yet it also shows the solution. Access to Work is not only life‑changing but cost‑effective, returning more to the Treasury than it costs to run. With the right investment, modernisation and co‑production with Disabled people, the scheme can once again become the cornerstone of disability employment support that it was supposed to be.
We urge the Public Accounts Committee to use its powers to help secure the future of a scheme that is vital to the employment rights of Disabled people who can and wish to participate fully in working life. The recommendations we set out are practical, necessary, and achievable. What is needed now is the political will to act.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
‘The woke Foreign Office doesn’t stand for Britain’
The post ‘The woke Foreign Office doesn’t stand for Britain’ appeared first on spiked.
Politics
Labour accused of blocking jury trials advice
Allegations have been made that the government has controversially blocked Labour MPs from receiving advice on plans to cut jury trials. The group ‘Society of Labour Lawyers’ (SLL) appears to have been shut out of giving advice to ministers.
Karl Turner, who is leading a backbench rebel group of MPs from within Labour, has raised alarm that officials are blocking the SLL from briefing MPs on their professional legal opinion about the government’s proposed ‘reforms’. Turner told the Guardian:
The policy position of the SLL is that these measures are a terrible mistake, are unworkable and must be stopped but they have been blocked from sharing that position with Labour MPs in a briefing of the sort which one would expect it to be able to make.
Labour barking up the wrong tree
Under justice secretary David Lammy’s plans, the right for a jury trial will be removed from some defendants in yet another move to take from ordinary people. Apparently, the government now wants to treat crimes carrying sentences of three years or less as undeserving of the right to a fair trial. A right which will continue to be afforded to more serious offences.
This cut will be applied to either-way offences which receive a sentence lesser than 3 years. Lammy has faced widespread push back from lawyers across the UK in protest at this move which removes a crucial aspect to a UK citizen’s right to a fair trial.
Lawyer Peter Stefanovic has also condemned the shocking authoritarian move to block advice from specialists by the UK Labour government:
This is shocking. Labour lawyers ‘blocked’ from briefing MPs on jury trials overhaul before vote. The Prime Minister is completely out of control on this. MPs must come together and stop him from undermining and restricting a fundamental cornerstone of our democracy…
— Peter Stefanovic (@PeterStefanovi2) March 9, 2026
No informed decisions allowed for MPs, apparently
It’s deeply ironic that qualified lawyers cannot share their specialised knowledge, particularly when David Lammy – a qualified barrister himself – has demonstrated such ineptitude. Legality clearly isn’t a concern for the UK government, as we wrote yesterday:
Once again, the UK government is shown to be woefully inept with cabinet ministers unable to even exercise their supposed specialised knowledge. Lammy, a qualified barrister and first black Briton to study at Harvard, seems incapable, or unwilling, to be honest about the likely impact of his penny-pinching policy to remove jury trials in some criminal cases.
This latest revelation reinforces the reality that the UK government continues to make transparency harder in the way the state operates against its citizens. Only those with something to hide seek to prevent others from making informed decisions. Ordinary people should not suffer the consequences of the criminal justice system’s mismanagement by successive governments.
If the government can find money for bombs, it can find money to safeguard and strengthen justice.
This isn’t a new issue, they’ve always struggled with their priorities:
“Schools don’t have money for pens.”
Starmer is spending on bombs not schools, says teacher at London protest against “austerity 2.0” pic.twitter.com/XS5eRmnUHw
— PoliticsJOE (@PoliticsJOE_UK) June 7, 2025
Women MPs in favour of proposed changes
According to the Guardian, there are over 30 female Labour MPs pressing Lammy to continue on and not back down to the pressure. The letter from the MPs read:
We know from our personal experiences the ways in which our justice system is failing women and girls across this country.
Playing devil’s advocate, there is some merit to the argument that this could lead to swifter justice for female victims of abuse. Jury trials can sometimes result in offenders receiving lighter convictions when jurors project self-rationalised judgments about what victims supposedly ‘asked for’. As a result, victims often have to relive their deep trauma in court. This only works to compound the impact of abuse on their lives, while effectively facing greater scrutiny than their abusers.
However, we cannot prioritise one type of victim while risking creating countless more victims of our CJS. After all, a right to a fair trial is a right inherent to every citizen of the UK in accordance with the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). Instead of infringing rights further, work should be done to make trials by jury fairer, more efficient, and more effective.
Informed legal decisions are essential when ordinary people will ultimately bear the fallout. Abuse victims already contend with immense trauma; policymakers should not use their suffering to justify curbing others’ human rights.
The fact so many lawyers are deeply concerned about Lammy’s proposals but are being blocked from advising MPs is nothing short of a disgrace for our justice system.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
International recruitment and the NHS post-Brexit
Vilija Vėlyvytė looks at the use of overseas recruitment in the NHS since Brexit and argues that it should be a key part of any plan to solve workforce shortages.
The need to reduce the NHS’s reliance on international recruitment has become a recurring theme in the government’s response to NHS workforce shortages. It is echoed in Labour’s 10 Year Health Plan for England and is also expected to inform the next iteration of the NHS workforce strategy, anticipated in the coming months.
This post traces the evolution of international recruitment into the NHS since Brexit. It argues that international recruitment is a vital component of any credible solution to workforce shortages, and should be acknowledged as such.
The NHS has long used overseas recruitment to meet staffing needs. The UK’s membership of the EU facilitated this by allowing EU and EEA-trained health professionals to take up NHS employment on unusually low-friction terms offered by the EU’s framework for free movement of persons.
Brexit brought free movement to an end. Unless protected by settled or pre-settled status, EU nationals seeking to work for the NHS post-Brexit are subject to the same immigration rules as other non-UK nationals.
They must apply for the Health and Care Worker (HCW) visa that did not exist under EU law (introduced in 2020). It makes working in the UK conditional on meeting criteria relating to occupation, salary and sponsorship. Permission to stay is also time-limited: leave is granted for up to five years, after which the visa must be extended.
Notably, the UK maintains a ‘standstill’ regime for the recognition of healthcare qualifications obtained in the EU and EEA. This means that EU/EEA applicants can register and practice in the UK without additional competence assessments. A unilateral policy measure, the ‘standstill’ is not guaranteed to last indefinitely. It is due for review in 2028; if revoked, EU applicants would be subject to the procedures applicable to other internationally trained candidates, including individual evaluation of qualifications and – where required – standardised testing.
The post-Brexit legal and policy landscape has inevitably dulled the UK’s appeal to EU nationals. Nuffield Trust analysis shows that the share of EU/EEA-trained healthcare professionals registering to practise in the UK fell markedly after Brexit, with nursing most affected.
That decline has, however, been counterbalanced by a steep increase in recruitment from outside the EU/EEA. For those who never had the benefit of the free movement, the HCW visa – offering lower fees and expedited processing – became a gateway to NHS employment. The impact was dramatic. Nearly one in five NHS staff in England now report a non-British nationality, up from roughly one in eight before Brexit. Medicine and nursing show the starkest shift: in recent years, over half of newly-registered doctors and nearly half of newly-registered nurses trained outside the UK and EEA. Internationally recruited staff have at this point become indispensable to the NHS’s day-to-day service delivery.
Despite rapid growth in international workforce, shortfalls persist. The NHS vacancy rate was 6.7% in 2025 and is expected to rise over the next decade. The situation is worse in social care, where vacancies remain around 7% – down from 11% in 2022 (before the HCW visa was extended to social care roles).
The causes are multiple and complex: insufficient training capacity, chronic underfunding across health and social care, and persistent retention problems linked to pay and working conditions. The effects, moreover, cut across both sectors: shortages in social care delay hospital discharge and lengthen waiting times, while NHS gaps draw staff away from already fragile care providers. This dynamic leaves both systems more exposed.
The initial post-Brexit policy response was to lean heavily on international recruitment. The emphasis has since shifted towards domestic supply.
The 2023 NHS Longterm Workforce Plan ties large training expansion explicitly to becoming less reliant on international recruitment; the 2025 Immigration White Paper uses immigration policy to steer employers towards investment in domestic skills to ‘grow our domestic workforce’ and ‘end reliance on overseas labour’; and the 10-Year Health Plan for England, released in the same year, likewise signals a move away from ‘dependency on international recruitment’, aiming to reduce it to below 10% by 2035.
This rhetoric portrays international recruitment as something of an uncomfortable necessity – tolerated to plug current gaps, but politically undesirable and expected to recede as domestic capacity builds.
What, then, is the alternative plan? The current NHS workforce strategy, presented in the Conservative government’s 2023 Long Term Workforce Plan, focuses on expanding domestic training. It promises to double medical school places and nearly double nursing training places by 2031/32, projecting an overall workforce increase of around 60% by 2036/37. The Plan also pledges to improve retention through measures including enhancements to the physical working environment, support for flexible working, and pension-related reforms intended to keep staff in post for longer.
The Plan is ambitious but offers little clarity on implementation. How will education and training capacity be expanded? What will finance that expansion once the dedicated five-year funding ends? Can retention realistically improve without confronting issues of pay? These are some key questions that remain unanswered.
The Labour government has criticised the Plan as implausible and has committed to publishing a ‘refreshed’ workforce plan expected this spring.
Unlike the NHS, social care has no statutory long-term workforce plan. That omission is ever more striking in the current political climate: last year, the Home Office closed the HCW visa route to new care worker applications, as part of the wider effort to reduce lower-skilled migration. The government has also commissioned an independent review of social care, but its terms of reference require recommendations to remain ‘affordable’. This casts doubt on the prospect for meaningful change.
It is clear that there is no quick fix to the UK’s health and care workforce crisis. What should be resisted is the tendency to frame international recruitment as problematic in itself. Doing so undervalues the contribution of internationally recruited staff to the day-to-day functioning of the NHS and care services, and risks diverting attention from the real drivers of shortages, which are long-standing and largely domestic in origin.
By Dr Vilija Vėlyvytė, Lecturer in EU Law, The Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London and co-editor of forthcoming book The UK Regulatory Framework Post-Brexit: ‘Law Unbound.
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