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Thursday, 21 May 2026

Wes Tries Noble Spite



Wes Streeting pledges wealth tax as he prepares for Labour leadership bid


Former health secretary Wes Streeting has set out plans for a wealth tax that would see capital gains tax equalised with income tax.

Mr Streeting, who had made clear he intends to stand in any leadership contest to replace Sir Keir Starmer, said the current system is not fair and penalises work...

Mr Streeting said: “A member of my family is a cleaner in Lancashire. She pays a higher tax rate on her salary than her landlord pays for the growing value of the home she lives in.

“She slogs her guts out, he puts in far less effort, yet the state rewards him more than her.

“And we wonder why people are angry.


Wes comes across as being just as unreliable as Starmer but more creepy. That took some doing, even for an ambitious politician.

They pay us some money



Not personal experience, just something I heard the other day.

GP Nurse to patient: We have government targets for cholesterol, if we put a person on statins they pay us some money.

But we already knew that.

Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Sentiment analysis



DWP signs £100k deal for AI ‘sentiment analysis’ tech tool

Government’s benefits department has renewed an arrangement with a specialist firm that delivers a tech system designed to use artificial intelligence to turn ‘siloed, messy, verbatim’ information into data dashboards

On 1 April, the DWP entered into a two-year contract with specialist tech firm Wordnerds. The deal, which is valued at £100,800, covers the provision of technology which supports “text analytics and sentiment analysis”, according to a newly published commercial notice.



A chap is bound to wonder if sentiment analysis is intended to form a barrier between DWP staff and the more robust public comments about the work they do. 

Credibility in Government is at stake



Healey warns Labour must get serious as leadership row puts credibility at stake

John Healey warned Labour’s “credibility in Government is at stake” in an apparent rebuke of leadership jockeying among rivals looking to oust Sir Keir Starmer.

The Defence Secretary urged colleagues to “get serious” and put Britain’s security before politics in a speech in Westminster on Tuesday after more than a week of turmoil following the party’s May elections mauling.

Speculation has mounted over who might run in any challenge for No 10 after a path opened up for leadership hopeful Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham to return to Westminster via the Makerfield by-election.


It's an embarrassing thing for Mr Healy to say as credibility in Government went AWOL some time ago. Maybe he is reminding us that Andy Burnham won't restore it, but neither would any of the other people touted as replacements for Keir Starmer.

That's the problem of course, Labour doesn't produce credible political leaders and in that restricted sense Healey may be right - what's the point?

Okay we've done appalling - what comes after that?



World's 'most expensive' high-speed rail line to be slower and cost more


A high-speed train line between London and Birmingham will be more expensive, take longer to make and go slower than previously announced.

The HS2 project will cost between £87.7bn and £102.7bn (in 2025 prices), with the first train services not starting until at least May 2036 and possibly not until October 2039, Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander told the Commons on Tuesday.


Mrs H and I are off out for coffee and breakfast this morning. 

We'll walk.

Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Masterpiece



Collector Jennifer Gilbert Is Selling Masterpieces at Sotheby’s to Fund a New Arts Nonprofit in Detroit

The Detroit patron and philanthropist is parting with major works by Joan Mitchell, Kenneth Noland, George Rickey and Harry Bertoia to fund Lumana, an arts hub opening in Little Village in 2027.

One of the masterpieces -

 
Kenneth Noland’s Rare Circle,
which has a $4-6 million estimate

The dirty tricks campaigns



The dirty tricks campaigns trying to stop Burnham in race for No 10

A meeting of the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) on Monday evening has inadvertently confirmed that the underhand tricks and backstabbing by MPs has got out of hand.

At the meeting, both foreign secretary Yvette Cooper and chief whip Jonathan Reynolds did their best primary school teacher impressions and gave their colleagues a dressing down for all their briefings against the prime minister and various leadership candidates.

It was apparently meant to be an appeal for unity. But one MP suggested it was the 21st-century equivalent of King Cnut shouting at the sea to stop the tide coming in. It was seen as both a complete waste of energy – and a little hypocritical on a day it was revealed that Sir Keir Starmer’s allies are briefing against Andy Burnham, claiming he would bring back Jeremy Corbyn if he became prime minister.


Imagine a headline - 

The clean tricks campaigns trying to stop Burnham in race for No 10

Goes against everything we know doesn't it? May as well leave out "dirty tricks" in the original headline - it's political squabbling among people nobody should ever have voted for.