Politics
Why class must not become a ‘protected characteristic’
There is a new push to make social class a ‘protected characteristic’ under UK law. A report by Manchester organisation Class Ceiling has claimed that ‘more than 50 per cent’ of respondents who worked in the arts said they had been discriminated against on the basis of their background – treatment that involved ‘harassment’ and ‘bias’. The Trade Union Congress, Co-op and University of Manchester chancellor Nazir Afsal – who led the report – have called for class to become the 10th protected characteristic under the 2010 Equality Act.
The report certainly paints a bleak picture. It describes working-class people who have been called ‘thick’ and ‘poor’, who were ‘laughed at’ because of their accents. Classism, it seems, remains one of the few last ‘acceptable’ prejudices in modern Britain. But we should nevertheless be wary of demands for protections under equality law.
The argument that class should be a protected characteristic has been around for some time. A 2024 report by Creative Access and FleishmanHillard UK argued that the arts world is too posh and that people of working-class origins should enjoy what would, in effect, amount to a form of positive discrimination. The authors call for ‘urgent radical reform in the creative industries’. Like other policies introduced to promote diversity, the Creative Access proposal demands that people from working-class origins be treated according to a special standard.
The legal definition of a protected characteristic is provided by the Equality Act, which makes it illegal to discriminate against certain people on the basis of things such as race and sex. In fact, the act encompasses nine areas: age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sex, and sexual orientation.
The justification for special treatment based on those protected personal attributes is that these are historically linked to prejudice, discrimination and systemic disadvantage. Regrettably, prejudice and discrimination are, by definition, subjective acts that are difficult to capture legally. This means that decisions taken by courts and tribunals rest heavily on the feelings and testimony of the person who believes they have been discriminated against. Increasingly, such claims are made on the grounds of ‘unconscious bias’, which can only ever be in the eye of the beholder.
Another problem with the institutionalisation of protected characteristics – and arguably the biggest – is that it cultivates a sense of vulnerability. It endows those with protected characteristics with a victim identity. Invariably, they begin to see the world through the lens of victims and oppressors.
The victim plays a central role in contemporary Western society. Almost nobody is prepared to question the claims made either by a ‘victim’ or on his or her behalf. Victim movements possess unquestioned moral authority. Victimhood and suffering provide a warrant for public recognition and special treatment. That is why public figures of all shades of political opinion are keen to associate themselves with victims – it is a proxy for moral integrity.
Inevitably, victim culture has spread like wildfire. In recent years, we have witnessed ever more groups demanding to be admitted into the protected-characteristic family. Carers UK campaigns for unpaid caring responsibilities to become a 10th protected characteristic. There are demands to make menopause a standalone protected characteristic. In 2024, the Scottish Green Party argued that women, despite already being protected against sex discrimination, should get additional protections under the Equality Act whenever they are on their period.
Other activists, including those involved in the World Afro Day campaign, have urged the UK to make afro hair a protected characteristic, to prevent hair-based discrimination in schools and workplaces. Labour MP Paulette Hamilton and singer Mel B are among prominent black Britons urging parliament to make the UK the first Western country to introduce a law explicitly ending afro-hair discrimination.
It is a sign of the times that there is so little pushback against the concept of protected characteristics, even as it quite clearly cuts against the grain of democratic ideals like equality before the law and equality of opportunity. Once, it was assumed that citizens should enjoy the same rights regardless of identity. Today, we increasingly have two categories of citizen: those who are ‘protected’ and those who are not.
What’s more, there is now considerable evidence that the rise of victim culture is having the opposite effect of what its advocates intend. An atomised public feels more alienated and powerless, rather than empowered, by their armour of protected characteristics. Relations between groups are made more fractious, rather than harmonious.
The quest for victim status has been one of the most pernicious consequences of identity politics. When ‘oppressors’ are said to be everywhere, it becomes all too easy to conclude that we all need to be protected. Almost imperceptibly, the ethos of child protection has enveloped adulthood. We are all ultimately infantilised.
Frank Furedi is the executive director of the think-tank, MCC-Brussels.
Politics
Green Party win points to a fairer more tolerant Britain
In the end, it wasn’t even close. Hannah Spencer stormed the Gorton and Denton by-election. This is the first parliamentary by-election the Green Party has won. It won’t be the last.
‘Urgh, Labour’
The day before the vote, a group of us from the North East were knocking on doors there. Speaking to voters who’d not yet been contacted – either always out at work, or maybe just back from their hols.
I quickly got to know the “urgh, Labour” face. Men, women, old, young, black, brown, white – whenever the subject of Labour came up they looked like they’d found a hair in their coffee. Not anger, more a bewildered disgust.
Some of it was about the local services. Fly tipping, rubbish. A bit about the poor quality of housing. From the state of the front door I could see some landlords were skimping on maintenance. Some spoke to me about Gaza.
Mostly, though, people raised the cost of living in one form or another. Energy bills. Rents. Food prices. Insecure work. Not a single person said anything remotely transphobic. That seems to be an obsession of online culture warriors. The working people of Gorton and Denton are more worried about their depleted bank accounts.
The future’s Green
Wednesday drive time I did a Times Radio interview on my phone. John Pienaar remarked how upbeat I sounded. I told him what people told me – the Green vote was strong. It wasn’t a scientific sample, but from what I’d seen Hannah Spencer was going to win.
So is anything less than a resounding victory a bad result for you, he asked. Isn’t it remarkable, I said, how this has been framed. This is an ultra-safe Labour seat. Whatever happens, Labour’s last remaining argument has been shredded. You don’t need to vote Labour to stop Reform.
Gorton and Denton was 127th on the Greens’ target list. In other words, if the Greens won by just 1 vote, they’d expect to win 127 seats in a general election. Political analysts Electoral Calculus looked at the demographics and said that, based on this result, we’d see only 33 Labour MPs elected at the next general selection. 10 Tories, 38 Lib Dems, and 254 Reform.
249 Green MPs would be elected, including all three Newcastle seats. I’ve been working on those already. Data from campaigning already shows that Greens will replace Labour in council seats across Newcastle this May. No more will people hold their nose and vote Labour to keep out Tories or Reform. People will vote Green to win.
Green Party positive, not divisive
John Pienaar put it to me that the Greens had run a divisive campaign by raising the issue of Gaza. I said that in a democracy people can and should choose their own voting criteria:
People like you and me, John, read the economic sections of the manifestos. Most people don’t. They see video of hospitals being bombed and civilians being gunned down while queuing for food. They want to see some compassion from their leaders. They look at the way their politicians respond to issues like Gaza and use that as an indicator of their character.
We were out again from 6am Thursday, delivering “get out the vote” reminders. Then door knocking in the rain until well after it was dark. Voters didn’t let the weather deter them. I guess they’re used to it in Manchester.
The establishment parties have been roundly thrashed, and Reform candidate Matt Goodwin blames the electorate, calling them “a coalition of Islamists and woke progressives.” We can expect to see them ramp up the dirty tricks. Not just fake polls, but nasty disinformation. But they’ve already been doing it.
The Green Party said loud and proud, we will tax billionaires. We will take utilities into public ownership. We’ll have a humane asylum system. We’ll introduce rent controls. We will treat drugs like a public health problem. And we will treat everyone with dignity and human rights, and stand against racism, sexism, homophobia and transphobia.
And it worked. The Great British public heard all the slurs and lies from Labour and Reform, and thought, you know what, I quite like the sound of a country where everyone works together. A tolerant Britain. A fair Britain. And they voted for a northern working class woman in a party led by a gay Jewish man.
Featured image via Barold / the Canary
Politics
Claudia Winkleman Denies That Strictly ‘Scandals’ Led Her To Quit
Claudia Winkleman has insisted that the various controversies surrounding Strictly Come Dancing were not behind her decision to leave the show.
In October 2025, Claudia and her co-host Tess Daly shocked Strictly fans when, in the middle of the most recent series, they announced they would be stepping down as its presenters at the end of the year.
During a new interview with the Daily Mail, the Traitors host was asked if the pair’s decision to leave came after “one scandal too many” for the long-running BBC dance show, to which she responded: “Absolutely not.”
“It is a genuinely beautiful show to be part of. Almost every single person who’s taken part is happy they did,” she responded. “So no, it wasn’t that.”
Claudia also claimed that she and Tess had decided the most recent season of Strictly would be their last “about a year before” they made their official announcement.

Guy LevyCREDIT LINEBBC/Guy Levy
She said at the time: “Strictly is a magical, glittery, fake tanned train and it’s been a privilege to be a tiny part of it. The extraordinary talent of the dancers, the band, the hair and makeup and costume teams, the unbelievable production crew and creatives – all utterly amazing.
“I’ve always believed it’s best to leave a party before you’re fully ready to go and I know the new hosts will be magnificent, I look forward to watching them take Strictly to new heights.
“As for Tess – I’m so so lucky I got to stand next to you. You’re funny, kind, whip smart and a true friend and I love you.”
Following her Strictly exit, Claudia is currently gearing up for the debut of her new BBC talk show, made by the same team as The Graham Norton Show.
The launch date for the seven-part series was confirmed earlier this week, as well as the line-up of celebrity guests who’ll be joining Claudia in her first episode.
Meanwhile, a host of celebrities have been rumoured to be in the running to replace Tess and Claudia on Strictly, ahead of the show’s return in the autumn.
Politics
Wes Streeting caught cramming 5 people into 4-seater
A Canary journalist spotted Wes Streeting bundling five people into a four-seater Fiat 500 – clearly breaking the law:
The Canary spotted the car in Gorton and Denton on Thursday, 26 February. Streeting pulled the passenger seat forward to allow three other people into the back seats. He then got into the passenger seat. Another person got into the driver’s seat.
Of course, we had to check the registration plate to confirm, but the car is a 2016 Fiat 500 POP. It has 3 doors, and four (small!) seats.
And four seats equals four seatbelts. Which means one passenger was not wearing a seatbelt, and therefore broke the law.
UK law states:
You must wear a seat belt if one is fitted in the seat you’re using – there are only a few exceptions.
You’re also only allowed one person in each seat fitted with a seat belt.
You can be fined up to £500 if you do not wear a seat belt when you’re supposed to.
Wes Streeting also got into that car, knowing the passengers were breaking the law.
Road fatalities
In recent years, there has been a huge increase in the number of road fatalities due to people not wearing seatbelts.
The most recent figures from the Department for Transport show that 40% of back seat passengers killed in car crashes were not wearing their seat belts.
In 2023, 1,766 people died in the UK, and many more received serious, life-changing injuries which could have been prevented by wearing a seat belt.
Amid ever-increasing pressure on the NHS, and with Streeting as the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, there seems to be an ever-so-slight mismatch between messaging and action.
Simply getting into an overfilled car without enough seatbelts shows that Streeting thinks he is above the rules.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Guido Whispers: Dented Confidence
Members get access to Guido Whispers every Friday. For all the latest gossip swirling around Westminster and beyond, join us today by clicking here to get 50% off your membership. Get tomorrow’s news, today…
Politics
On 3 March, The 'Worm Moon' Will Turn Blood Red
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On 3 March 2026, the “worm moon” – a name given to the full moon in March – will rise.
And due to an event called a total lunar eclipse, this year, it’s set to look deep red from some parts of the Earth.
What is a total lunar eclipse?
This can only happen during a full moon. It occurs when the Earth gets into a position right in between the moon and the sun, making the surface of the moon look dimmer.
When the moon moves into the inner part of the Earth’s shadow (its umbra) in a total lunar eclipse, the Earth’s atmosphere filters the light from the sun to the moon.
Why will March’s “blood moon” be red?
During a total lunar eclipse, the light on the moon has to pass through our atmosphere.
Because shorter waves of light, like blue and purple tones, scatter faster than their longer-length cousins, red and orange, the moon can look reddish or orange during the event.
“It’s as if all the world’s sunrises and sunsets are projected onto the Moon,” NASA said.
This is sometimes called a blood moon, thanks to the colour.
The more dust in our atmosphere, the redder the moon is likely to look.
When will the “blood moon” happen?
It’s set to happen on 3 March, 2026. And while the time the moon actually spends in the Earth’s umbra is just under an hour, Space.com said that “the show goes on for much longer than that”.
The eclipse will “peak” at 11:33am GMT. At this point, the moon will move closest to the centre of the Earth’s shadow, as part of the “eclipse maximum”.
Where can I see the March blood moon?
Sadly, it won’t be visible from the UK or Ireland – nor will it be seen from Africa or Europe.
But views from North America, the Pacific area, Australia, and parts of East Asia are expected to be particularly stunning.
Why is the March moon called the “worm moon”?
Per Royal Museums Greenwich, the name comes from Native Americans, who coined the term because of “the worm trails that would appear in the newly thawed ground” in March.
Other names include the death moon, crust moon, sap moon, and chaste moon.
And, of course, this month, it counts as a “blood moon” too.
Politics
French League game sees Ramadan pause
A French League match between Nantes and Le Havre showed a human moment. In the 74th minute, Nantes goalkeeper, Portuguese Anthony Lopes, fell to the ground, clutching his hamstring, in what at first glance appeared to be a routine injury requiring medical attention. Play was halted for several minutes as the medical staff rushed to the veteran goalkeeper.
But behind this pause, another story was being written.
French League shamed
The French League has regulations prohibiting the suspension of matches for religious reasons, unlike some European competitions that allow a short break at sunset to enable fasting players to break their fast.
In England, for example, the Premier League has adopted a mechanism allowing referees to grant a minute of rest at sunset during Ramadan. In France, however, the situation is different.
As Lopez fell to the ground, the Muslim players on the pitch found those precious moments they had been waiting for. They quickly headed to the touchline, ate dates, and drank water, in a quiet scene tinged with gratitude.
There was no official announcement, no special refereeing decision, just a brief window of opportunity created by the goalkeeper.
After the moment passed, Lopez got up. He showed no signs of injury and didn’t ask to be substituted. He returned to his position under the crossbar, as if nothing had happened.
Solidarity beyond words
Such details might not be recorded in goal reports, but they are etched in the players’ memories.
Lopez’s action – whether spontaneous or deliberate – carried a clear message of solidarity: in football, there is more to it than just competition.
The match ended with Nantes winning 2-0, bringing their points tally to 17. But the most important statistic wasn’t in the standings, but in the 74th minute… when the match was paused, and some players quietly broke their fast.
Between law and spirit
This incident highlights an ongoing debate within French football regarding how to handle fasting players during Ramadan, at a time when other competitions are moving towards flexible solutions that respect the legal framework while also acknowledging religious sensitivities.
Amidst this debate, Lopez’s gesture offered a simple example of humanity: a non-Muslim player giving his teammates a moment they needed, without speeches or slogans.
Sometimes, solidarity doesn’t require an official statement; it’s enough for a goalkeeper to fall, and others to rise up and break their fast.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Valdo Calocane, the BAFTAs and the poison of wokeness
The post Valdo Calocane, the BAFTAs and the poison of wokeness appeared first on spiked.
Politics
Palestine supporters ‘systematically’ censored, finds study
Analysts have documented over 900 cases of UK institutions and pro-Israel groups targeting supporters of Palestine with different types of repression.
The European Legal Support Center (ELSC) and research group Forensic Architecture have put together an Index of Repression. Upon launching this public database, the ELSC said:
For too long, anti-Palestinian repression has been dismissed as incidental, exceptional, and justified. On 25 February, we confirm what the movement has long known: this repression is multi-sited, institutionalised and systematic, unfolding across varied stages.
This, it insisted, is a “coordinated system” seeking to undermine public criticism of Israel’s settler-colonial crimes and genocide in Gaza. And the Index of Repression has documented:
964 verified incidents of repression targeting Palestine solidarity documented across Britain (January 2019 – August 2025)
Those responsible, the Guardian said, were:
police (220 incidents), educational institutions (192), pro-Israel advocacy groups (141), and journalists and other media actors (141).
‘Strategic targeting to dismantle solidarity’ with people living under Israeli occupation
The UK’s crackdown includes smears, sanctions, and other repercussions for speaking out. And it:
focuses deliberately on sectors fundamental to shaping public discourse and holding public trust: Education; Activism and Protest; Workplace; and Culture.
It is a “strategic targeting across sectors” that:
aims to dismantle solidarity at every stage, from the formation of political consciousness in universities and schools, to its expression in culture, to its organisation in public spaces.
The cancel culture on behalf of a genocidal foreign state has targeted educators and those they teach in particular. As the Guardian summarised:
Students, academics and teachers (336 incidents) appeared most frequently on the index as targets of repression, followed by activists and organisers (229). The report says they are often targeted in different ways, with artists and cultural workers often having events cancelled (71 incidents).
The paper added that techniques included:
smears, disinformation, harassment, doxing (having private or identifying information published online), visa cancellations, financial blacklisting, loss of employment and arrest
Large-scale Western repression in service of Israel’s genocide
The UK has faced significant criticism domestically and internationally for its unlawful proscription of non-violent direct-action group Palestine Action. The government has already spent hundreds of thousands of pounds on its highly controversial ban. But it is still fighting the courts to keep it in place.
The ELSC’s Tara Mariwany clarified that it was “not our role” to discuss or determine whether allegations against targets were true or not, emphasising:
It’s simply our role to document it and to show that it doesn’t matter if you wear a watermelon sticker on your shirt, that might give rise to the allegation of antisemitism…
It’s simply about showing the scale of it and that should give enough of a cause to question the allegation itself and question the smearing itself.
The project is not a standalone piece of work either. Instead, as the ELSC explained:
It builds on Germany’s Index of Repression, which we have launched in May 2025, and is both a continuation of this work and an expansion into a broader transnational effort to document and expose repression across Europe. The forthcoming Index of Repression for the Netherlands – alongside other country reports – marks the next phase of this sustained, cross-border project.
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
Politics Home | Keir Starmer Says Greens Won By-Election Off Back Of George Galloway Endorsement

(Alamy)
5 min read
Keir Starmer has accused the Green Party of embracing “sectarian” politics and claimed that its historic victory in the Gorton and Denton by-election was driven by support from George Galloway.
The Prime Minister said Zack Polanski’s party was no longer comprised of “harmless environmentalists” in a letter to all Labour MPs following their defeat in Greater Manchester.
Labour is reeling after finishing third in a constituency it had controlled for over 100 years and where it won with an absolute majority at the 2024 general election.
Green candidate Hannah Spencer won with 40 per cent of the vote, in the clearest sign yet of the threat posed to Labour’s left flank by Polanski’s “eco-populist” left-wing party.
Reform UK candidate, former academic Matt Goodwin, came second.
In a letter to Labour MPs on Friday, seen by PoliticsHome, the PM said: “We’ve seen the true colours of Zack Polanski’s Greens in this campaign. The Greens were able to capitalise on an endorsement from George Galloway to win over enough voters to push them over the line.
“Their willingness to welcome Galloway’s divisive, sectarian politics is a sign that the Greens are not the harmless environmentalists they pretend to be, and their position on legalising all drugs shows how unstable this electoral coalition is. It cannot survive a general election campaign.”
Galloway, a former MP for Labour and the Respect parties, is a controversial figure in British politics, accused of running divisive campaigns in areas with significant Muslim populations.
His Workers Party of Britain decided not to stand a candidate in Gorton and Denton.
In his letter, Starmer said he would continue to “warn of the risk the Greens pose” to the country, including “extreme policies like legalising all drugs and pulling out of NATO”.
He also sought to assure Labour backbenchers that Polanki’s party would not be able to replicate its by-election success on Thursday at a nationwide general election.
“The Greens may have won here, but they simply do not have the resources, the activist base or the local knowledge to replicate this victory across the country. We’ve seen that before.
“We’ve seen it with the Lib Dems, who have often won mid-term by-elections against both the Conservatives and Labour, but never been able to come close to winning nationally. We’ve seen it with George Galloway, who won two mid-term by-elections but held neither of those seats in a general election.”
Some Labour MPs have privately expressed concern that the lettercould further alienate progressive voters who supported the Greens on Thursday, with one calling it “appalling”.
One Labour backbencher complained to PoliticsHome: “That letter is what the Greens will use to raise the money. Slow clap.”
Additional reporting by Zoe Crowther
Here is the letter in full:
Dear Colleagues,
The result in Gorton and Denton is deeply disappointing.
Instead of a Labour MP who can be a local champion delivering for Gorton and Denton alongside a Labour Government and a Labour mayor, the people of Gorton and Denton now have a representative who is more interested in dividing people than uniting them. We have to learn lessons from that, and we will.
I know this is a tough result for our movement but I still want to thank you for everything you did to support our brilliant candidate Angeliki Stogia. She did a fantastic job and Gorton and Denton deserved to have her as their MP.
We’ve seen the true colours of Zack Polanski’s Greens in this campaign. The Greens were able to capitalise on an endorsement from George Galloway to win over enough voters to push them over the line. Their willingness to welcome Galloway’s divisive, sectarian politics is a sign that the Greens are not the harmless environmentalists they pretend to be, and their position on legalising all drugs shows how unstable this electoral coalition is. It cannot survive a general election campaign.
It hurts, but this is the kind of result that we have often seen parties of government face. In by-elections people can make their voice heard without risking a change of government. I get it: people are rightly impatient to see the change they voted for.
It’s my job to make sure that happens. And I’m working day in, day out to see it through.
Over the coming months, people will feel the benefit of the long-term decisions this government is taking. Look at the good economic news we’ve had in the past week: inflation and borrowing coming down, retail sales and business confidence rising, energy bills falling. And look at the policies that are going to make a difference in people’s lives in the coming months: the landmark Employment Rights Act, money off energy bills, the cruel two-child limit scrapped, more free breakfast clubs opening, Pride in Place funding coming through, NHS waiting lists continuing to fall. It will show what we’ve been saying from the outset of this year: the country is turning a corner. These are all Labour policies, putting Labour values into action – policies no other party would or could deliver.
The Greens may have won here, but they simply do not have the resources, the activist base or the local knowledge to replicate this victory across the country. We’ve seen that before. We’ve seen it with the Lib Dems, who have often won mid-term by-elections against both the Conservatives and Labour, but never been able to come close to winning nationally. We’ve seen it with George Galloway, who won two mid-term by elections but held neither of those seats in a general election.
We will continue to warn of the risk the Greens pose: the risk of extreme policies like legalising all drugs and pulling out of NATO that most voters strongly reject, and the risk of splitting the progressive vote so that Reform come through the middle.
The next election is too important to let that happen. It’s a fight we can win, and we’re going to win it.
Best,
Keir
Politics
UK Temporarily Withdraws Staff From Iran Embassy
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