Politics
UK Adults Increasingly Spend On Ageing Parents
Chances are you’ve heard of “the bank of mum and dad,” or adults relying on their parents for anything from house down-payments to holidays.
But the “reverse bank of mum and dad,” which sees adult children spending on their ageing parents, is a growing phenomenon, says James Mulvaney, Head of Digital at Clifton Private Finance.
Already, 55% of UK adults with living parents financially help, or expect to help, them in retirement. Only 45% of adults in midlife (45-54 years old) are optimistic about their parents’ finances, a figure that drops to 2% among 18-24-year-olds.
Why has the “bank of mum and dad” reversed?
“Several factors are driving this shift,” Mulvaney said.
“Rising care costs and the wider cost of living crisis have made retirement much more expensive, while many older homeowners are discovering that their pensions may not stretch as far as they once expected.”
Then, investment platform Ageon noted, there’s the fact that people are living longer lives. That means that savings, investments, and pensions may have to go further than expected.
“At the same time, families are recognising that housing decisions can play a major role in supporting older relatives,” Mulvaney added.
While the parents of over-50s may have benefited from lower house prices in their youth, parents of younger adults may have been part of a pricier housing market, which offers less return on investment.
Housing is the biggest source of household wealth in the UK (40%), followed by private pension wealth (35%).
“For many households, helping parents navigate retirement is becoming just as important as helping younger generations onto the property ladder,” said Mulvaney.
“And with housing playing such a central role in family finances, property is likely to remain at the heart of how families support one another for years to come.”
How can I prepare for these costs?
Mulvaney told us communication is key.
“One of the most effective steps you can take to help your older parents is reviewing their retirement finances together,” he shared.
That could involve reviewing their monthly outgoings, planning for care costs, and/or a simple budget.
It might also be worth discussing downsizing, which can “release equity from a larger home while also reducing maintenance costs and household bills”.
Lastly, Mulvaney said, “It’s also worth checking whether parents are claiming all the financial support they are entitled to. Recent DWP figures suggest almost one million pensioner households are missing out on an average of around £2,600 a year in Pension Credit, so checking eligibility can be one of the most valuable steps families take.
“Benefits such as Pension Credit, Housing Benefit, Council Tax Reduction, and Winter Fuel Payments can make a meaningful difference to retirees on lower incomes.”
Politics
Labour MPs Leave As Support For Starmer Declines
Support for Keir Starmer among Labour MPs appears to be draining away as he fights for his political life amid the latest Peter Mandelson scandal.
The prime minister eventually told MPs – nearly two hours into his appearance in the Commons – that he did not mislead them when he said due process had been followed when the shamed former peer was vetted for the role of US ambassador.
But by then, the benches behind him were sparse as his own MPs decided to leave the chamber rather than stay to give the prime minister their backing.
“Labour MPs are voting with their feet,” one senior party insider told HuffPost UK.
The prime minister had told parliament it was “staggering” that neither he nor any of his ministers had been told that Mandelson had failed to pass security vetting.
Starmer only found out last Tuesday, and two days later sacked Olly Robins, the most senior civil servant in the Foreign Office, whose decision it was to give Mandelson the all-clear to take up his role in Washington.
“This is information I should have had a long time ago, and it is information that the house should have had a long time ago,” the PM said. “It is information that I and the house had the right to know.”
But his pleas were not met with a wave of support from Labour MPs, many of whom are furious with him for appointing Mandelson to the plumb diplomatic role in the first place.
Emily Thornberry, who is chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee that will take evidence from Olly Robbins on Tuesday, was among those who attacked the Downing Street operation.
She said: “I am afraid to say, doesn’t this look like, for certain members of the prime minister’s team, getting Peter Mandelson the job was a priority that overrode everything else and that security considerations were very much second order.”
Labour MP Neil Duncan-Jordan said: “The real question is why, when Peter Mandelson’s reputation was already known, was he ever considered for such an important role.”

Veteran backbencher John McDonnell said: “Many of us will remain bewildered still why that appointment took place, despite the warnings that many of us gave.
“Isn’t the reality this: that when he sought to realise his ambition to become leader of the Labour Party, with very little base within the party, he became dependent on [former NO,10 chief of staff Morgan] McSweeney and Mandelson and Labour Together to organise, fund his election.
“When he became prime minister the reward for McSweeney was control of No.10, and for Mandelson the highest diplomatic office. The unspoken message to civil servants was what Mandelson wants, Mandelson gets.”
As Labour MPs headed for the exits, one senior party figure said: “Starmer is fighting for his political life and look how his benches have thinned out. It feels like its sinking fast.
“I suspect post may Labour MPs will start saying he has to set out a timetable to go.”
Labour whips were even forced to text MPs begging them to return to the chamber to back the PM.
The message, seen by HuffPost UK, said: “If any [parliamentary private secretaries] are able to head back to the chamber, benches are looking quite empty. Your assistance as always is greatly appreciated.”
Few, if any, heeded the call – leaving the prime minister both literally and politically increasingly alone.
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
5 Moments MPs Grilled Starmer Over Peter Mandelson
Keir Starmer was met with ridicule and disbelief from MPs while fielding their questions over why he ever decided to appoint Peter Mandelson to be an ambassador for the US.
It emerged last week that the ex-Labour peer failed security vetting without the prime minister’s knowledge, and was still given the top job in Washington days later.
Starmer sacked Olly Robbins, the top civil servant in the Foreign Office, granting Mandelson clearance without informing them.
Though Mandelson was sacked in September when the depth of his friendship with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein was revealed, the saga continues to cast a shadow of Downing Street.
Questions swirl over the prime minister’s judgement and apparent lack of authority within his own government.
Here’s how the prime minister’s attempt to address the scrutiny head on went down with MPs…
1. Laughter During Starmer’s Opening Statement
The prime minister tried to preempt the frustration from MPs over Mandelson – and his vetting – by admitting that “many members across the House will find these facts to be incredible”.
Starmer was instantly interrupted with a wave of laughter from the opposition benches which seemed to even take the prime minister by surprise.
“To that, I can only say they are right,” the PM ploughed on, despite the noise. “It beggars belief that throughout the whole timeline of events, officials in the Foreign Office saw fit to withhold this information from the most senior ministers in our system in government.”
2. Mother Of The House Asks The Most Basic Question
Diane Abbott tore into the PM for not doing the obvious: asking if Mandelson passed security vetting.
The MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington pointed out that Mandelson had already been fired from government twice, both occasions long before he was considered for the ambassador role.
“It’s one thing to say, as he [Starmer] insists on saying, ‘Nobody told me, nobody told me anything, nobody told me’,” Abbott said.
“The question is, why didn’t the prime minister ask?”
The PM said he did ask the cabinet secretary to review the “process” around hiring Mandelson once the “further revelations” came to light.
Abbott, Starmer’s former shadow cabinet colleague turned vocal critic, lost the party whip last year and now sits as an independent.
As the longest-serving female MP in the Commons, she is known as the “Mother of the House” as a marker of respect.
3. Labour Backbencher Slams Starmer’s Ambitions
Another one of Starmer’s former shadow cabinet colleagues, John McDonnell, also scorched the prime minister – this time over his wider political career.
“Isn’t the reality this: when he sought to realise his ambition to become leader of the Labour Party, with very little base within the party, he became dependent on [Morgan] McSweeney and Mandelson, and Labour Together to organise and fund his election.”
The Labour MP for Hayes and Harlington claimed Mandelson was then rewarded with the “highest diplomatic office” as a result.
“The unspoken message to civil servants was: what Mandelson wants, Mandelson gets. This has damaged the party that I’ve been a member of for 50 years,” McDonnell said.
Starmer refuted McDonnell’s message about Whitehall, insisting it’s “simply not good enough” for any civil servants to withhold such information.
4. Comparisons To Boris Johnson’s Partygate
“It’s 2022 all over again,” Lib Dem leader Ed Davey told the Commons, referring to the fury Boris Johnson was faced with as prime minister after it emerged he had broken his own government’s social distancing rules during the Covid lockdowns.
Johnson was later accused of misleading the House – including by Starmer himself – and blaming Downing Street officials for the error.
Davey pointed out that, as leader of the opposition, Starmer promised to implement change if he were to get into office.
“I’m afraid the fact that he even had to make the statement today shows how badly he has failed,” Davey said, as he called on the PM to resign.
5. Labour Backbenchers Abandon The PM
Even as Starmer was fighting to keep his job, it seems Labour MPs were not minded to stay in support.
The benches behind the prime minister thinned out substantially during his time in the chamber.
A Labour source told HuffPost UK: “Starmer is fighting for his political life and look how his benches have thinned out. Feels like it’s sinking fast.
“I suspect post-May Labour MPs will start saying he has to set out a timetable to go.”
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Polls show Newcastle Greens surge ahead
Newcastle Green Party are on course to trounce Labour in their heartlands. The JL Partners poll for the Telegraph puts the Greens far out in front on 30%, with Labour and Reform neck and neck on 21% and 19%. The LibDems are on 7%.
Vote Green
The message is simple: vote Green if you don’t want to split the progressive vote. Labour aren’t progressive, of course. But some voters still think historical traces of Labour’s working-class soul linger on. Today’s neo-Labour oppose even the simplest progressive policies like bringing water into public ownership.
It’s quite sad, really. Labour has lost all trust. The lies defending Peter Mandelson’s association with paedophile Jeffrey Epstein are just the latest insult. If Starmer had kept to his ten pledges, we’d be living in a much better country.
Refuse Reform
The public are turning away from Reform, too. By recruiting a load of ex-Tory MPs, it’s quite obvious they are the exact opposite of anti-establishment. Add in their general air of chaos and inability to get anything done in the councils they control, and it’s hardly surprising the Greens are taking seats off them in flagship Reform councils like Kent.
Last week’s council by-election was triggered when ex-Reform councillor Daniel Taylor was jailed for 12 months after admitting controlling and coercive behaviour towards his wife. The prosecution said Taylor had told his wife he would hunt her like prey and kill her, and that he would “put you in the boot and set fire to the car“. So much for protecting women and children.
The Greens took the seat from Reform with a huge surge from 12% to 39% while Reform fell from 40% to 33%.
The only poll that matters is the election
I should point out that JL Partners poll uses MRP. This means they didn’t go and talk to people in Newcastle. They sliced and diced existing data sets in intricate ways based on demographics. For a statistically robust poll, you need to speak to about 1000 people. Given that there are 6,584 voters in Monument where I’m standing, that would require an answer from 15% of the electorate. It’s often said: the only poll that matters is the election.
Still, polls are not just idle curiosity. They are used to influence the outcome. People do switch to who they think can win. Or to stop someone they really dislike. But what is the choice for Newcastle’s voters?
Labour are failing Newcastle
Despite having a Labour government, Newcastle’s Labour council still plans to cut a further £62.8 million before 2028. This means more overflowing bins. More cafes closed in parks. More homeless people sleeping in doorways.
They made a huge mess of the parks. Their plan to take them out of council ownership and into a profit-making trust was hugely controversial. The outsourcing venture went bust, leaving council tax payers with a bill of around £6.7 million. Now Labour are closing the cafes in the parks. Grandparents wanting to take kids to play on the swings can’t get a cup of tea or go inside if it rains. They were warned this was a bad idea. I saw Labour politicians dismiss the concerns of community groups like Friends of the Parks.
Under Labour, Newcastle built 124 council homes in the ten years to March 2022, the latest figures I could find. Over the same period 1,819 social homes were sold and 1,257 were demolished. That’s a net loss of 2,952 social homes in ten years. In one city.
Greens commit to community wealth building
Newcastle Greens are committed to community wealth building. Until central government changes the destructive “right to buy at a huge discount” policy, we have to work around it. We should be taking empty but structurally sound buildings and turning them into good quality apartments. Then, we should be selling them to community asset trusts. These are collectively owned by the tenants, but in a legal framework that keeps rents fair and prevents sales to landlords. It builds a stock of social housing that’s protected from privatisation.
We should establish local finance institutions for business lending that recycle money in the local economy. Cambridge County Council did this in 2012. Now it’s owned by the council pension fund and one of the Cambridge colleges. In addition to boosting small businesses, it makes over £40 million a year for the pension fund. Imagine if we created assets like that to reinvest locally.
Arts institutions like Newcastle’s Live Theatre run fantastic courses so local kids can get a break in the arts. The Theatre owns nearby buildings that are run as pubs and restaurants. Those rents now serve as public good for the people of Newcastle rather than disappearing off into private equity funds in tax havens. It’s a model we should replicate.
If you want your city run in the interests of local people, we’ll need a majority Green council. Otherwise, you’ll get more of the same old same old. So yes, vote Green to stop Reform. Vote Green to stop Labour. But mostly, vote Green for a better city.
Politics
Reform MP Lee Anderson Removed From Commons
Lee Anderson was thrown out of the House of Commons after accusing Keir Starmer of “lying”.
The Reform MP hit out at the prime minister as he came under pressure over the latest Peter Mandelson revelations.
Starmer insisted he was not told by Foreign Office civil servants that the shamed former Labour peer had failed security vetting before he made him the UK’s ambassador to Washington.
The PM said it was “staggering” that he and his ministers were kept in the dark.
But Anderson said: “The problem the prime minister’s got is no one believes him. The public don’t believe him, the MPs on this side of the house don’t believe him, his own gullible backbenchers don’t believe him.
“So does the prime minister agree with me he’s been lying?”
Accusing another MP of lying is banned in the Commons.
Speaker Lindsay Hoyle told Anderson: “Sorry, we don’t use those words, and I’m sure the member’s withdrawn it.”
Anderson replied: “Mr Speaker, I have the greatest respect for you and your office, but I will not withdraw. That man couldn’t lie straight in bed.”
Hoyle said: “Mr Anderson, you’ll have to leave.”
In a post on X, Reform UK said Anderson had been “kicked out of parliament for telling the truth” about the prime minister.
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Six Just Stop Oil supporters acquitted of disrupting key national infrastructure
Six Just Stop Oil supporters were acquitted at Southwark Crown Court on 17 April. This comes two and a half years after they took part in a slow march on Waterloo Bridge to demand an end to new oil and gas licensing.
On 8 November 2023, Sheila Shatford, Julia Mercer, David Kilroy, Geraldine James, Rosalind Bird and Gregory Sculthorpe were among approximately 50 supporters who joined a slow march around the IMAX roundabout before heading north over Waterloo Bridge.
Police arrested them and charged them under Section 7 of the Public Order Act 2023: interference with key national infrastructure. Police had only used this offence for the first time two days beforehand. It carries a maximum penalty of 12 months imprisonment, an unlimited fine, or both.
The six appeared before Judge Hiddleston at Southwark Crown Court in a trial which had to restart after one of the original jury fell ill. The jury delivered its not guilty verdict after approximately six hours of deliberation.
Following the verdict, Geraldine James, 62, a retired child psychotherapist from Plymouth, said:
This is a great verdict and sends a message that the police overreached their powers by charging us with Section 7. We did not cause a significant delay. It serves our democracy ill to invent anti protest laws to be used against a nonviolent and purposeful movement.
I have no regrets. I took action on behalf of children everywhere; the house that they live in is on fire and my generation is responsible.
Despite ending new oil or gas licences our government is now solely focussed on silencing dissent while the climate catastrophe continues. These laws must be repealed.
Dave Kilroy, 66, a retired cabinetmaker from Plymouth, said:
We are pleased that the jury sided with our cause – however just like all other Just Stop Oil supporters we took action in an open and accountable way and would have accepted it if the decision had gone the other way.
And just to repeat why we took action – we oppose the use of fossil fuels and call on the government to rapidly decarbonise the economy – for all our sakes!
The trial
During the five day trial, the Judge denied the defendants all legal defences, including reasonable excuse and necessity, and ruled that agreed facts on climate were “irrelevant”. The defendants were, however, given around 20 minutes each to talk about their motivations for taking action.
The jury was asked to consider whether the defendants had caused a significant delay to other road users and if so whether that was their intention or they were reckless as to whether that would have been the result.
The police produced a compilation of video evidence showing the march and demonstrating some traffic build-up. But they offered no evidence of what normal traffic flow looks like at that location. Laura Stockdale, acting for Greg Sculthorpe, questioned whether the jury could be sure that this congestion was more than would normally occur on a weekday in central London.
She also suggested there would have been less delay if police had let the march continue to the other end of the bridge. And if police themselves hadn’t closed the southbound carriageway. DI Kevin Pender for the Metropolitan police responded that they couldn’t be sure what the marchers were planning to do.
Just Stop Oil supporters’ motivation
The defendants each emphasised their desire to draw attention to the climate crisis. They also spoke of the care and careful planning that went into undertaking a march. All denied that there was any intention to cause anything more than minor slowing of traffic.
In her defence evidence, Sheila Shatford spoke movingly of what inspired her to take action. This included remembering a childhood teacher whose family had been affected by the Aberfan disaster in which 116 children were killed. She said:
Only later did I understand that the slag heap belonged to the National Coal Board, and that warnings were given before the disaster, but no one listened.
She went on to recount how she had learned about the climate emergency and said:
I realised that it’s always the poorest and most vulnerable that are most affected and have the smallest voice. I read and found out the climate emergency was real – there is overwhelming evidence that it’s happening now, and very soon we won’t be able to stop it.
Then home secretary Suella Braverman introduced the 2023 Public Order Act specifically to target climate protest. It named groups such as Extinction Rebellion, Just Stop Oil, and Insulate Britain as the reason for its introduction. Hundreds of Just Stop Oil supporters have had charges under Section 7 and are awaiting trial. But, because of the justice system backlog, this was only the second case before the courts since May 2024.
The first person convicted of the offence was Stephen Gingell. He got six months in jail after pleading guilty in December 2023.
In 2024, Just Stop Oil successfully won its original demand of ‘no new oil and gas’. And on 27 March 2025, it announced an end to the campaign of action. However, it promises that supporters will continue to tell the truth in court. They’ll also speak out for political prisoners and help build what comes next.
Featured image via Just Stop Oil
By The Canary
Politics
Arsenal stumble at the Etihad as City seize the moment
Arsenal’s meeting with Manchester City was framed as a season-defining test. Instead, it became a hard lesson in fine margins, a defeat that dulled Arsenal’s momentum and left supporters wrestling with the feeling of a chance slipping away.
Speaking after the match, Mikel Arteta told press:
Today was a big opportunity but we still have five to go and there are a lot of positives to take from the game.
There’s an element of luck. The ball gets deflected to [Erling] Haaland. There’s that moment to be so cool, precise and ruthless, and you have to be that…
Today was a big opportunity, but we still have five to go and there are a lot of positives to take from the game.
City’s control, Arsenal’s missed rewards
From the opening minutes, Manchester City imposed their familiar rhythm, possession with purpose, pressure applied in waves, and the quiet threat that one error would be enough. Arsenal did not shrink. They pressed in spells and fashioned openings that could have rewritten the story, but football offers no credit for promise without finish.
The result also sharpened the enduring comparison between Mikel Arteta and Pep Guardiola. It was not simply a tactical defeat; it read, to some, as another moment where Arteta’s project met the ceiling of its greatest reference point.
With a draw carrying real value in the context of the run-in, Arsenal’s approach felt bold, (perhaps too bold), when the table demanded restraint.
The Arsenal boss said:
We absolutely did that. Especially the way we ended the game. We could’ve been a bit more composed in certain moments. We took the game to certain areas we wanted.
Space, transitions, and the price of chasing
As Arsenal committed men forward, the game began to tilt into the terrain City relish: managed transitions, runners finding pockets, and opponents forced into rushed choices near the box. The bitter twist was that Arsenal still had enough moments to earn a different ending — one late pass, one cleaner strike, one earlier decision. Against City, waste rarely goes unpunished.
One hundred percent, we generated situations we believe we could generate. There’s even one where Kai [Havertz] is onside on the halfway…
We are on the level we are because this team has taken us there…When you have big chances, you need to put them away to come away with three points.
For supporters, the sting was not only the points; it was the doubt the night can plant. Title races are built on nerve as much as numbers. Losses like this can tighten a team in front of goal, turning instinct into hesitation. The stands feel that shift too, hope hardening into frustration unless the response is immediate.
Arsenal must refuse to become a pattern
Arsenal captain, Martin Odegaard, delivered a rallying call after the match, affirming that the title race remains ”all to play for” despite rivals Manchester City seizing control in the title race.
“We have to keep going,” Odegaard stated, reflecting on the intense battle.
It was always going to go all the way to the end so we have to keep going, keep working hard and sticking together. We just look forward to the next game now and bounce back.
There is still time to salvage the season, but this match will linger because it offered so much and delivered so little. Opportunities were there, the margins were thin, and the consequence felt heavy: a reminder that the biggest games do not forgive uncertainty.
Featured image via AP Photo/ Dave Thompson
By Faz Ali
Politics
Politics Home | Keir Starmer Says It “Beggars Belief” Officials Withheld Information Over Peter Mandelson

(Alamy)
2 min read
Keir Starmer has said it “beggars belief” the Foreign Office withheld information over Peter Mandelson’s vetting failure.
The Prime Minister addressed MPs in the House of Commons on Monday after it came to light that Mandelson was appointed as US ambassador despite serious security concerns and failing vetting checks.
It has also emerged that the single biggest client of Mandelson’s ex-lobbying firm Global Counsel was linked to the Chinese army. Downing Street has said security concerns and vetting failures were not raised with them after Mandelson was appointed.
Starmer told MPs it was “astonishing” neither he nor his cabinet were informed about Mandelson prior to securing the job.
Starmer told the Commons: “I know many members across the House will find these facts to be incredible.”
“To that, I can only say they are right. It beggars belief that throughout the whole timeline of events, officials in the Foreign Office saw fit to withhold this information from the most senior ministers in our system in government.
“That is not how the vast majority of people in this country expect politics, government or accountability to work.”
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch accused the prime minister of throwing “his officials and his staff under the bus” to save his job. Badenoch claimed she was holding the Prime Minister to the same standards Starmer had held Boris Johnson when he was the opposition leader during the Partygate scandal.
Badenoch also said Starmer’s “reputation” was “at stake”.
Starmer reiterated the claims that the Mandelson case “could and should have been shared with me before he took up his post.”
He added: “If I had known before he took up his post that UKSV recommendation was that developed vetting clearance should be denied, I would not have gone ahead with the appointment.”
Foreign affairs committee chair Emily Thornberry asked whether ensuring Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador was a priority which overrode anything else, including security implications.
Starmer said the committee asked the relevant questions during evidence sessions, but said he would not have appointed him if concerns were raised with him.
Starmer responded: “If I had been told Peter Mandelson or anybody else had failed security, not given clearance on security vetting, I would not have appointed them.
“A deliberate decision was taken to withhold that material. This was not a lack of asking, this wasn’t an oversight. It was a decision taken not to share that information on repeated occasions.”
Reform UK MP Lee Anderson was removed from the chamber after using unparliamentary language, claiming the Prime Minister could not “lie straight in bed”.
Politics
Boy George Defends Eurovision 2026 Involvement Despite Boycott Calls
Boy George has defended his participation in this year’s Eurovision Song Contest.
Earlier this year, it was revealed that the former Culture Club frontman will be performing alongside San Marino’s entrant Senhit at the Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna, Austria.
For the last few years, the music event has been at the centre of controversy due to Israel’s continued participation, despite the ongoing conflict and unrest in the Middle East, with many calling for the country to be banned from competing, similarly to how Russia was excluded from the contest after its invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
After it was confirmed by Eurovision bosses that Israel would be back at the event in 2026, five participation countries withdrew in protest, with many critics also calling for a boycott of the contest.
During a recent interview with the Daily Mail, Boy George was asked for his take on the boycott calls, and insisted that, to him, withdrawing would be akin to “turn[ing] my back on” the Jewish friends he’s had since his teen years.
He said: “I am so affiliated with Jewish people. I am not necessarily affiliated with Israel. I don’t really have an opinion on that. But the job of music is to unite people.”
On Ireland pulling out of Eurovision in solidarity with Palestine, George noted: “Ireland is my mother’s home country. I hope they’re not too angry. But if they are, that’s out of my control.”

Mark Case via Getty Images
In February, the Karma Chameleon singer wrote on X: “I love Israel too. Blaming an entire people is moronic. You can be against war and still love humanity.”
He added: “I have DJ’d in Tel Aviv a number of times. I hope I will in the future!”
George was later quoted as saying: “It’s very trendy to hate Israel, but I have always said ‘fashion for the fragile, style for the brave’.”
Two years ago, he also co-signed an open letter calling for Israel to remain a part of Eurovision, alongside the likes of Dame Helen Mirren, Sharon Osbourne and Scooter Braun.
Politics
Why is the RAF suspending cadets for criticising Islam?
It has been clear to most of the British population for some time that criticising Islam is a dangerous game. But one would still hope that the military would be allowed to talk more freely about the threats to our national security.
But apparently not. According to the Daily Mail, a Royal Air Force cadet has been suspended for describing Islam as ‘the greatest threat to the UK’ during a presentation at RAF Cranwell, shortly before Easter. An RAF spokesperson confirmed it was investigating an ‘alleged incident of inappropriate behaviour’, without providing any further information.
The cadet will no doubt be accused of failing to distinguish between Islam and Islamist terrorism. He failed, that is, to abide by the unwritten law of our age – to ‘respect’ the former, and at the same time insist that the latter has no connection whatsoever with the ‘religion of peace’. Either for failing to make this distinction, or for simply mentioning Islam at all, this young cadet will be hauled over the coals much the same way that Conservative MP Nick Timothy was last month, when he (correctly) characterised a mass Islamic prayer in Trafalgar Square as an act of ‘domination’.
The response to Timothy’s comments was ominous, not least as a demonstration of just how perilous it has become to criticise Islam in the UK. But it was also predictable – Labour, desperate to recapture Muslim voters after its loss at the Gorton and Denton by-election in February, was always going to leap at the opportunity to label a political opponent as ‘Islamophobic’.
The treatment of the RAF cadet is in some ways a cause for greater concern. It is increasingly difficult to see where the ‘mainstream’ Islam ends and radical Islam begins in the UK (more than half of Britain’s mosques are run by the fundamentalist Deobandi movement). And radical Islam is by far the greatest security threat the country faces. If this fact can’t be acknowledged in the armed forces, then they are not doing their job.
The statistics support the cadet, not his inquisitors. In the past 20 years, Islamic extremists have killed 95 people in the UK. The ‘far right’ that we endlessly hear of has killed three. In 2020, it was reported that of the 43,000 extremists monitored by MI5, more than 90 per cent were Islamists.
Recent events bear this out. Who attacked the Heaton Park synagogue in October? Who allegedly set fire to four Hatzola ambulances in Golders Green last month? Who was recently convicted for planning to gun down as many Jews as their ammunition allowed at a march against anti-Semitism in Manchester in 2024? It wasn’t the far right. It wasn’t someone who had been ‘radicalised’ by watching Tommy Robinson videos. It was Islamists or suspected Islamists in every case.
The inability to criticise Islam has had a chilling effect on freedom of speech in the UK and across the West. We can hardly be reminded enough that a British schoolteacher remains in hiding, under a new name, for showing pupils a drawing of Muhammad during a religious-studies class at Batley Grammar in 2021. Labour has even introduced a non-statutory definition of Islamophobia (rebranded as ‘anti-Muslim hostility’), which is effectively an Islamic blasphemy law in all but name.
Clearly, this timidity towards Islamism has now seeped deep into the nation’s institutions. The treatment of the RAF cadet is mirrored by the warped priorities of Prevent, the government body that is supposed to stop people becoming terrorists or supporting terrorism. In 2022, it was reported that just 16 per cent of referrals concerned Islamic extremism. Right-wing extremism, on the other hand, accounted for 20 per cent of its caseload.
The evasiveness around Islam must end. Every other country, it seems, is able to see that the UK has a problem with the nature of the Islam practised here. The United Arab Emirates now discourages students from studying in Britain because of the pervasive influence of the Muslim Brotherhood. That a Muslim country can identify a threat that the British authorities can’t, or won’t, hardly inspires optimism.
The Iran war may have exposed the decrepit state of the UK’s armed forces. But the treatment of the young cadet by the RAF suggests that the problem with the British Armed Forces runs deeper than a shortage of materiel. What is the good of having more warships or more troops, if a threat cannot be named?
The treatment of the Royal Air Force cadet is a scandal. The public has come to expect this kind of thought-policing in government bureaucracies, but it appears it’s now worked its way into the military, too. The price we might have to pay for this right-on censorship will be very high indeed.
Hugo Timms is a staff writer at spiked.
Politics
Nancy Sinatra Walks All Over Donald Trump For Frank Sinatra Post
These Boots Are Made For Walkin’ singer Nancy Sinatra made it clear that Donald Trump was a heel, after the US president shared a video of her late father Frank Sinatra singing My Way.
Without explanation, Trump posted the vintage clip of the Chairman of the Board crooning the classic tune of a man looking back on his life without compromise on Saturday.
The posted prompted all kinds of speculation about the reasons behind it, but Nancy clearly wasn’t interested in the president’s motive.
She lamented: “This is a sacrilege.”
One person asked if Nancy could do anything about it, to which she replied, “Unfortunately no. The only people who can do something are the publishers.”
Even that route may not prove fruitful, according to Entertainment Weekly.
“There’s a big difference between Trump using music at rallies or in ads, where a license is required, and merely sharing a video on social media,” the show business outlet wrote.
My Way is one of Ol’ Blue Eyes’ signature hits, but he didn’t sing the original version, Comme D’Habitude, previously performed in French (and co-composed) by Jacques Revaux.

Ron Galella via Getty Images
Nancy has made it clear in plain English that her father was no fan of the two-time president – and nor is she.
Last year, she responded to a commenter on X who wrote that the singing legend would vote for Trump if he were still alive.
“Not a chance,” Nancy said of her dad, who died in 1998 at the age of 82.
“You obviously don’t know my father at all. Do some homework before you post about him.”

Ron Galella via Getty Images
-
Crypto World7 days agoThe SEC Conditionalises DeFi Platforms to Be Avoided for Broker Registration
-
NewsBeat6 days agoTrump and Pope Leo: Behind their disagreement over Iran war
-
Fashion3 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Theodora Dress
-
Crypto World7 days agoSEC Signals Exemption for Crypto Interfaces From Broker Registration
-
News Videos5 days agoSecure crypto trading starts with an FIU-registered
-
Sports3 days agoNWFL Suspends Two Players Over Post-Match Clash in Ado-Ekiti
-
Crypto World6 days agoSEC Proposes Certain Crypto Interfaces Don’t Need to Register as Brokers
-
Business1 day agoPowerball Result April 18, 2026: No Jackpot Winner in Powerball Draw: $75 Million Rolls Over
-
Crypto World3 days agoRussia Pushes Bill to Criminalize Unregistered Crypto Services
-
Politics3 days agoPalestine barred from entering Canada for FIFA Congress
-
Business4 days agoCreo Medical agree sale of its manufacturing operation
-
Politics1 day agoZack Polanski demands ‘council homes not luxury flats for foreign investors’
-
Entertainment7 days agoBrand New Day’ Footage Reveals the Devastating Impact of ‘Now Way Home’
-
Crypto World3 days agoRussia Introduces Bill To Criminalize Unregistered Crypto Services
-
Tech6 days agoMicrosoft adds Windows protections for malicious Remote Desktop files
-
Entertainment7 days agoKarol G’s ‘Ultra Raunchy’ Coachella Set Gave ‘Satanic Vibes’
-
Entertainment7 days agoHow Babylon 5 Turned Brief Side Story Into Emotional Masterpiece
-
Crypto World7 days agoSenate Bill Faces Delay Over Stablecoin Yield Debate
-
Tech7 days agoWhat was the first ransomware attack to demand payment in Bitcoin?
-
Tech5 days ago‘Avatar: Aang, The Last Airbender’ Leaked Online. Some Fans Say Paramount Deserves the Fallout

You must be logged in to post a comment Login