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Saturday, 22 November 2025

Starmer addresses G19



Starmer addresses G20 summit - but Trump boycotts talks

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is in Johannesburg for the summit - and he spoke about the bloc's "critical" importance on its first day...

"Growth must be a mission for us all to embrace as the means to improve lives, fund public services and to keep our people secure.

"The G20 has worked together before to fix fundamental problems in the global economy. We need to find ways to play a constructive role again today in the face of the world challenges.

"I'd like to see us come together around a five-point plan for growth that leaves no one behind."



Ah yes, that's Starmer-talk, a five-point plan. Could be turbocharged as well, but we can't have everything.  

Meanwhile a more sensible approach -


Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, skipped a foreign ministers meeting in February, and said that he would not waste American taxpayers money on an agenda which was focused on diversity, equity and inclusion and climate change.

Nightmare

 

'COP is a nightmare but best process we've got', says Ed Miliband as climate talks run into overtime


Countries gathered in northern Brazil are still locked in a stand-off over a deal to wean the world off fossil fuels, the main cause of the climate crisis.

Other key sticking points are cash for developing countries to adapt to more extreme weather, like drought in Afghanistan, which they have generally done little to cause.

 


Meanwhile here in the UK, Ed "Windmill" Miliband's energy policy is delivering cheap, clean power to nobody at all, just what saner minds always knew it would  deliver.

Meanwhile, Rachel from Accounts seems to be intent on making sure that the "Miliband Nightmare" is even less affordable and a just a little more scary for many people Labour is supposed to represent - not that it ever did.

Friday, 21 November 2025

I’m just trying to do my best



Rachel Reeves: ‘I’m sick of the mansplaining on how to be Chancellor'


Rachel Reeves has fired back at her critics, saying she’s “sick of people mansplaining how to be Chancellor to me.”...

She explained: “I’m not a public personality. I’m not in show business. I’m the Chancellor. If you want people to enter politics, you have to remember they’re human beings.

“I’m a mum with two kids. I’m a wife and a daughter. I wasn’t born into this, and I’m just trying to do my best.”


Oh dear, if she thinks that's an appropriate excuse for a failing Chancellor of the Exchequer, then she's a fool. 

But we knew that.

Sooner or later Keir Starmer may acquire a small spine and explain to Rachel Reeves why she has to go. Assuming he doesn't go first of course, but if he does she'll probably follow him through the notorious revolving door.

Squabblers Squabble



Sultana accused by Corbyn allies of encouraging 'ultra leftists' to disrupt Your Party conference

A spokesperson for Ms Sultana says she believes Your Party should "unite the entire left" in a row over the influence of far-left groups.

Allies of Jeremy Corbyn fear Zarah Sultana is encouraging members of far-left splinter groups to disrupt Your Party's inaugural conference...

They include the Revolutionary Communist Group, the Socialist Workers' Party (SWP) and the Socialist Party (SP).


That she was “advanced” you could also postulate, but “advanced” in a strange way that would make her all the more dangerous, if only to small circles;. You would know, if you happened to know the type, that she would have “principles” that at odd moments would wreck enterprises, homes, or the lives of friends — always for the purest of motives.

Ford Madox Ford - The Marsden Case (1923)

Thursday, 20 November 2025

Run for the exits



Horror fire sparks panic at COP30 as panicked attendees 'run for exits' in frenzied scenes

A huge fire erupting during COP30 in Brazil sparked scene of panic on Thursday. Delegates were seen running for the exits after the blaze broke out in the pavilion area of a venue where UN climate talks are taking place.

UN and security crews rushed to the area to try and put out the fire, as the building was being evacuated. Firefighters also rushed to the scene to quash the flames, with social media footage showing the fire rising from the venue and smoke engulfing one of the corridors. The efforts may be aided by rain starting to fall after the blaze erupted.


It sounds as if all the delegates evacuated. The things they do for us.

Concrete Actions



Pope Leo XIV urges ‘concrete actions’ to stop climate change & says God’s creation is ‘crying out’

BELEM, Brazil (AP) — Pope Leo XIV on Monday urged countries at United Nations climate talks to take “concrete actions” to stop climate change that is threatening the planet, telling them humans are failing in their response to global warming and that God’s creation “is crying out in floods, droughts, storms and relentless heat.”

In a video message played for religious leaders gathered in Belem, Leo said nations had made progress, “but not enough.”


Not that it matters, but -

Behind the door we don’t open



Starmer announces national summit on challenges facing men and boys

Sir Keir Starmer has announced that his Government will hold a national summit on the challenges facing men and boys next year.


 
Starmeresque Landscape via AI

Do you ever have moments of political indifference where you know political games are simpler, more sordid and much bleaker than we usually admit? I do and I suspect many others do too.

I don’t mean another bout of angst, disillusion or cynical disgust. I'm rather fond of a spot of cynical disgust every now and then. Instead we could be better off making a clean breast of things - in a socially honest kind of way. The political arena is a cold, grey and inhospitable landscape, much bleaker than we care to admit – that kind of honesty.

Suppose we take political rhetoric as an obvious example. Let’s apply a bit of bleak simplicity to it.

Political rhetoric is a loose grouping of language games affecting enough people emotionally to congeal into a few political parties. Social class, taxation, health, welfare and education are enrolled to provide emotional stimuli and induce certain emotional responses. The language games cannot be rational, analytical or investigative or they would lose the emotional crudity they need to congeal and survive.

It is not necessarily productive to pursue this argument as an argument, but as an example of how we could easily and consistently analyse political rhetoric into nothing but language games designed to persuade by inducing emotional responses. The details of how language games gain political traction may be complex, diffuse and fragmented, but once they are established, the analysis is simple. Bleakly uninvolved but simple.

This kind of bleakly uninvolved approach isn’t new and I suspect substantial numbers of people have always teetered on the edge of it from time to time. But most of us don’t quite take the plunge, because to do so would deprive us of interesting, if frustrating political discourse.

Maybe the bleak political landscape lies behind the door we don’t open, the one we are aware of but prefer to leave closed and in many cases locked. Behind the door there are no comfort zones, only bleak reality.

Wednesday, 19 November 2025

Voting is Weird



Voting for a UK political party is weird. It’s not like getting a plumber to fix the leak under the sink. If the plumber bodges the job, causes a major flood, ruins a carpet and clears off without fixing the leak, we don’t use him again.

If we vote a political party into government and it fails to deliver any of its pre-election promises, squanders vast amounts of taxpayers’ money and makes a shambles of everything it touches, millions of loyal voters will still vote for it again.

That’s weird.

To verify compliance



North Korea launches multi-child family inspection campaign as officials visit homes to renew certificates


Visitation teams are checking whether families have valid certificates and if mothers are actually receiving reduced work hours and doubled vacation days promised by the regime

North Korea’s Central Committee has ordered provincial party committees to pay special attention to families with multiple children, dispatching “visitation teams” to homes to verify compliance with pro-natalist policies and renew family certificates that previously required parents to visit government offices themselves.


So backward, surely it would be much easier to verify compliance with a digital ID system. North Korea should invite Keir Starmer and his team over for a prolonged visit.

Leading the Charge



UK Border Stops £500m Fake Goods Influx — Guess Which Countries Are Leading the Charge?

Over the past three years, UK borders have intercepted counterfeit goods worth over £500 million, mainly from China, Hong Kong, and Turkey. The figures expose a sophisticated shift by criminals towards high-value, less voluminous fakes that pose increasing risks to British consumers and businesses...

Faced with such a vast and borderless threat, it is clear that simply seizing goods at the border is not enough. Officials emphasise that effective action requires strong international partnerships between industry, government, and law enforcement to disrupt criminal supply chains at their source.



Cynical guesswork here, but what we also see is an official incentive structure where failing to solve the counterfeit goods problem is what keeps official career structures in place.

Monitoring, seizures and intelligence gathering will provide what seems to be a vital service and to a significant degree it will be just that. Yet the inevitable incentive structure will ensure that enforcement never goes far enough to endanger the bureaucracy and knock a few rungs out of official career ladders.

Tuesday, 18 November 2025

Kept in a cloud environment



Digital ID data will all be hosted in UK, minister claims

As it continues to face a litany of questions seeking details of the planned identity regime, the government has now indicated that the supporting infrastructure will be on UK shores

While data related to new virtual identity – use of which will be a mandatory part of all pre-employment checks – will be kept in a cloud environment, the physical datacentre facilities used for this storage will be situated in the UK, according to junior Cabinet Office minister Josh Simons.


All powered by Ed's vitally important, saving the planet for future generations, sustainable energy policies of course. Anything else would be inconsistent, hypocritical heat-doom...

But in that case, does this development imply that our digital identities are likely to disappear during dark nights when there there is little or no wind?

Well of course not, Ed's twaddle is just twaddle when it comes to anything important. The datacentre facilities won't rely on Ed's sustainable energy, not for something as vital as digital Orwellian infrastructure.

Preposterous



Is there after all a key to the preposterous enigma of the universe?

Arnold Bennett - Imperial Palace (1930)


Even the question seems mildly preposterous, but perhaps there is a preposterous aspect to the universe.

What is it for?
What's the point of it?
Where does Keir Starmer fit in?

Starmer has complete confidence in Starmer



Starmer vows to lead Labour into next election despite terrible polls


Sir Keir Starmer has insisted he will lead Labour into the next general election - as a poll suggested only a third of his own voters want him to.

The Prime Minister said he was “utterly focused” on tackling the cost of living, as he warned Labour against wasting time on leadership rows.

Sir Keir used a Mirror interview to attempt to silence doubts about his position, after the extraordinary briefing war last week over suggestions Health Secretary Wes Streeting was plotting a leadership challenge.



His gravity was unusual, portentous, and immeasurable, not because he admitted any doubt of himself but because he perceived it necessary to forestall any doubt of himself in others. And herein he ranged with that very numerous class of impostors who are quite as determined to keep up appearances to themselves, as to their neighbours.

Charles Dickens – Our Mutual Friend (1864-1865)

Monday, 17 November 2025

Surely Not

 

Two Headlines



Climate change means many kids in Lancashire no longer have sledges in the shed

Anyone still in doubt about the impact of climate change should think back to the winters of the 90s when sledges were found in the sheds of most Lancashire families.

Rising temperatures due to climate change has led to milder winters and fewer occasions when schools are closed, youngsters can go sledging and cars had to be dug out of the drifts.


Lancs warned to brace for snow this week as weather chart predicts freeze

People in Lancs are being warned to prepare for snow as new weather maps predict 50 UK counties will be blanketed when temperatures plummet this week.

The warning arrives as the Met Office expects the freezing blast to bring temperatures as cold as -7C to multiple regions as Arctic air arrives from the north.

Neither Civil Nor Service



Civil Service employing at least 500 diversity officers

At least 500 civil servants are employed across Government to police and develop diversity, equality and inclusion (DEI) policies, The Telegraph can reveal.

Some Whitehall departments have seen the numbers of staff whose jobs involve overseeing equality, diversity, inclusion, gender, LGBT or race policies double in the past year since Labour came to power.

The figures have only been extracted from Whitehall after a two-year battle by the MP Neil O’Brien, who used freedom of information (FOI) laws and parliamentary questions to counter attempts by officials and ministers to block the release of the figures. They are an underestimate as some departments have still refused to answer.


All young men yearn at times for some place where there will be no work to do, and it speaks volumes for the happy administration of this realm that every young man in his yearning fondly turns his eyes to the Civil Service.

Walter Besant - The Eulogy of Richard Jefferies (1888)

Sunday, 16 November 2025

The depressing question



Rayner plots move against Starmer

Angela Rayner is laying the groundwork for a leadership challenge against Sir Keir Starmer.

The former deputy prime minister and housing secretary is already offering Cabinet roles to MPs in exchange for their support, The Telegraph has been told.

A source familiar with Ms Rayner’s moves said she was “on manoeuvres” and was “getting her ducks in a row” for a leadership bid, adding: “The unions will back her and help her.”

Ms Rayner has also joined Tribune, a pressure group of MPs on the soft Left of the Labour Party, led by the architects of the welfare rebellion.


One problem with Starmer and his Labour regime is the depressing question - does the party have anyone who would be a more capable Prime Minister than Keir Starmer? He seems to have chosen his Cabinet in such a way that the question of a challenger is particularly difficult.

Seaside Ange on manoeuvres raises the question yet again and it isn't an easy one to answer. She has baggage but so does Starmer. She is ideologically limited but so is Starmer and Rayner may not be as ideologically intransigent. 

Strewth what a possibility though -

 


The ship goes down but the band plays on



BBC journalist probed by secret services over China spying allegations


A BBC journalist is under investigation by the UK’s security services over alleged links to Chinese espionage, according to reports.

Sources told the Mail on Sunday that the journalist is suspected of cultivating potential targets for a hostile state while previously working in Brussels for another media outlet.

The person remains employed by the BBC, which has refused the Mail’s request for comment.



We're off to Sainsbury's soon. We don't eat popcorn, but may increase our stock of dark chocolate. In spite of everything, life threatens to become amusing. 

If Seaside Ange elbows her way back into the political circus, this winter could become quite jolly. Until the bills come in I suppose. 

The ship goes down but the band plays on.

Saturday, 15 November 2025

Modern Britain In Four Headlines



Labour civil war erupts as MP breaks ranks calling for Keir Starmer to be replaced


Blackburn MP quits Jeremy Corbyn's new party due to 'infighting'


BBC must get its house in order, Starmer to tell Trump


Peter Mandelson spotted peeing in public as he's stripped of honour

The desire to be what we're not



Inevitable perhaps, but that 'fake admiral' chap with the uniform which doesn't fit properly has been arrested.

 
All we know about the Remembrance Sunday ‘fake admiral’ after police charge man

A man has been charged after an alleged military imposter wore the uniform of a Royal Navy rear admiral at a Remembrance Day ceremony.

Jonathan Carley, 64, from Harlech, Gwynedd, has been charged with wearing uniform or dress bearing the mark of His Majesty’s Forces without permission.

He will appear at Caernarfon Magistrates’ Court on December 11.



Strange thing to do, poor chap, but it's the kind of thing which has happened before in various parades. I recall a similar case round here some years ago where a bloke wore medals he'd bought but hadn't been awarded.

It's not a particularly valid comparison, but I'm reminded of our 'Prime Minister' with his absurd knighthood, gifted clothing, worthless speeches, empty promises and feeble attempts at being a real statesman.

Not a particularly valid comparison, but there is something there because we all know it to some degree, the desire to be what we're not.

Friday, 14 November 2025

The internet’s most powerful propaganda tool

 

Superior is Superior



Suppose over recent decades, there has been a significant decline in the social status of a broadly factual outlook plus a decline in curiosity about the real world. Suppose whole classes of superior persons are rising above the factual strata of the industrial revolution. Not a wildly unreasonable supposition perhaps.

Taking it further, we are seeing a particularly damaging development for the technical, factual culture we inherited – in many important areas, social superiority now carries more weight than truth.

It always did of course, but upper classes willingly promoted and absorbed the science, engineering, discoveries, inventions and wealth which went with the industrial revolution. Now the social value of it all has levelled off, socially superior classes have as much as they need and the weight of social superiority has reasserted itself. To be superior has more social value than veracity.

The Superior person does not search for better explanations of how the world works, the superior person merely asserts explanations consistent with superiority. Some narratives supporting superior explanations are difficult for practical folk to digest because they are nonsense. This does not undermine superior explanations, it enhances their superior credentials. 

Superior explanations rely on social credentials, not supporting evidence. Not that this is a drastic change, but now life has become exceedingly comfortable for elites, it has become advantageous to reassert the value of social credentials over facts. The technical stuff is done, superior people have enough of that thank you very much.

Thursday, 13 November 2025

Starmer denies something again - key points



Starmer denies No 10 aides to blame for attack on Streeting: Latest

Key points

  • Starmer warns his senior team that anyone briefing against ministers will be fired
  • 'Voters don't give two monkeys': Streeting refuses to discuss Labour briefing war
  • Aides tell Starmer briefing didn't come from them
  • Reeves responds to slow GDP figures
  • Shadow chancellor says PM and chancellor 'are in office but not in power'
  • PM is going 'nowhere' says former Labour comms chief
  • Britain rapidly going down the drain*

* I added the last one, thought it deserved a mention.

The BBC must lose



Kevin Myers has a powerful Brussels Signal piece on the BBC/Trump debacle.


Theodore Roosevelt urged, Speak softly and carry a big stick. Donald Trump urges: Bellow like hell and swing a two-handed, double-edged, nuclear-tipped claymore. Different forays, different mores. So MAGA takes on the taxpayer-subsidised cult that is the BBC, the Battle of the Capitals, and by God, the Beeb deserves whatever it gets. It is a cult that lies repeatedly, but operating at so many levels of dysfunctionality that it can blandly deny “knowledge” about the many things that it really should know. Yet when dissenters to its liberal dogmas are being interviewed, they can usually expect a well-researched gotcha gin-trap, that will leave an interviewee limping out of the studio and a small smirk sewn onto an interviewer’s face.


Yes we know about BBC bias and dishonesty, but it's well worth reading the whole piece because a dose of healthy vituperation can be good for the soul. It's good for mine anyway.


So the BBC’s armed forays into the language and culture wars in the liberal interest reveal the power of the schismatic toxins within the anglophone world. Trump’s extraordinary achievement has been to recognise the loathing that ordinary people feel for these liberal disorders and to turn it into a powerful political movement. However, the triumph of Mamdani – a name that means “follower of Mohammed” (what a surprise) – has revealed not merely the limits of that power, but also the depth of the divisions within the Judaeo-Christian communities in the USA. But for now, that is a longer-term issue: Next comes the battle between the BBC and Trump. For the sake of the British people and what little remains of their values, the BBC must lose.

Zak The Alien

 

Wednesday, 12 November 2025

A light on the hill



Tim Davie launches fightback against BBC’s ‘enemies’

Lisa Nandy, the Culture Secretary, echoed Mr Davie’s sentiment in a further attempt to shore up support for the BBC, which also faces the threat of a $1bn lawsuit from Donald Trump.

In a statement to the Commons, Ms Nandy described the BBC as “a light on the hill for people here and across the world”. She declined to give her support to Sir Robbie Gibb, the former Conservative communications chief who now sits on the BBC Board and is being blamed for orchestrating a “Right-wing coup”.



A light on the hill? Strewth, that's an unfortunate image cobbled together by Ms Nandy.

Presumably "a light on the hill" is looking down on us from on high, which of course is how the BBC sees itself. It's a perspective which has become a major part of the problem while Ms Nandy seems to be too dim to shed much light on anything.

The word "fightback" wasn't well chosen either as the word "fight" was a key insert in the catastrophic spliced video debacle. Was the splicing done on the same hill?

The Institute of Positive Mediocrity


Introduction

Here at the Institute of Positive Mediocrity we have devised a number of interactive courses for ambitious and self-motivated mediocrities who do not intend to allow their mediocrity to be a professional barrier to what we at the Institute call Positive Mediocrity.

Within our course modules, candidates will be presented with a number of Positive Personal Strategies towards understanding and enhancing the Mediocrity Profile which most suits their ambitions and temperament. 

We present both positive and negative Mediocrity Aspects, any two or three of which may be combined to form an Individual Mediocrity Strategy.

For example, we have –

Loud Mediocrity
Virtuous Mediocrity
Gregarious Mediocrity
Superior Mediocrity
Down to Earth Mediocrity
Fanatical Mediocrity
Vanilla Mediocrity

There are of course many other Mediocrity Aspects on offer here at the Institute, such as Scientific Mediocrity, Technical Mediocrity or Artistic Mediocrity with all their numerous subdivisions. 

However, we warn all our Mediocrities that Vanilla Mediocrity is best avoided except by advanced practitioners and should never be used without careful combination with other Mediocrity Aspects.

For example, Lisa Nandy MP has chosen to use Vanilla Mediocrity as a standalone Aspect with some success, but the weakness of this approach is still uncomfortably apparent.

Or take Jeremy Corbyn MP as another example. Mr Corbyn has chosen to combine Fanatical and Vanilla Mediocrity for decades, but again without the success other strategies might have offered

Here at the Institute we have many courses on offer from beginner to advanced. To take just one more example in this brief introduction, we tackle the thorny problem of Pompous Mediocrity, a strategy which is usually best avoided except by specialist practitioners such as senior BBC presenters.

For more information, contact the Institute of Positive Mediocrity

Tuesday, 11 November 2025

The ‘greater truth’


Harry Phibbs has a useful CAPX piece on the increasingly ghastly BBC. 


The BBC’s arrogance will be its downfall

  • Our national broadcaster has shown itself to be a purveyor of disinformation
  • Reading the BBC's politicised interpretation of events does not count as impartial news
  • To survive, the BBC must take some accountability and move to a subscription model

The extent of the hubris is remarkable. The BBC has been caught out in an appalling act of disinformation. Panorama doctored a Donald Trump speech to falsely show him supporting rioting. This has been described as ‘a mistake’ – as if it were some kind of technical glitch. But the misrepresentation was clearly deliberate – Trump’s call to protest ‘peacefully’ was spliced and diced into a call to ‘fight’.

For the BBC, it was all in the cause of presenting Trump as a baddie. If there is a piece of inconvenient evidence which doesn’t fit that narrative, then it must be twisted to ensure it does. The BBC staff will smugly convince themselves this is morally justified, providing viewers with the ‘greater truth’.



BBC bias will be familiar to all but the hopelessly deluded, but the whole piece is well worth reading because Phibbs makes a key point in the above paragraph, his point about the 'greater truth'. 

This type of 'we know best' mendacity lies behind climate change, Net Zero and various threads of what generally seems to be a covert Fabian agenda. The mendacity is intentional - clearly so.
 

They’re utterly deluded

 

That's nothing



Learner driver has failed their theory test 128 times - racking up a £2,944 bill

For many people learning to drive, the journey to receiving a licence can be long and arduous.

For some, however, it is longer than others. Figures released by the AA Driving School today reveal one learner has spent £2,944 taking their theory test 128 times without success.

Another passed the exam only at the 75th attempt, which cost them more than £1,700 in total.


That's nothing, a learner politician called Ed Miliband is Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero but still doesn't know how Net Zero is supposed to work. 

Ed is 55 years old but still trying.

 



Monday, 10 November 2025

Keir Starmer explains everything

 

We don't need no stinkin' neutrality



So far, only one political leader is prepared to mount an outspoken defence of the BBC

So far, the only British political leader prepared to mount an outspoken defence of the BBC is Sir Ed Davey.

The Liberal Democrat argues that seeing the White House take credit for Mr Davie's downfall - and attacking the BBC - "should worry us all".

He's called on the PM and all British political leaders to stand united in "telling Trump to keep his hands off it".


Without bias the Lib Dems would struggle, as would all political parties, but Ed Davey has taken the unusual step of effectively admitting it. 

Scrambling to prop up the national broadcaster



BBC warned it faces 'last chance' after Trump meltdown: Labour MPs scramble to prop up the broadcaster - with Starmer silent


Ministers and Labour MPs are scrambling to prop up the national broadcaster following a direct attack from the US President overnight.

Mr Trump described Mr Davie and BBC journalists as 'very dishonest' and a 'terrible thing for democracy'.

The intervention leaves Keir Starmer - who has so far remained silent on the developments - walking a diplomatic tightrope.


If nothing else it's good to see the turmoil, accusations and finger-pointing, but I still wouldn't bet on significant reform. 

Hope I'm wrong though - what a day that would be.

Sunday, 9 November 2025

It’s a technique



Often I am horrified myself when I think of my responsibility; for the Government persecutes us, and the absurd legislation that rules us is a veritable Damocles' sword over our heads.

Gustave Flaubert - Madame Bovary - 1856


Leaping gracefully from Gustave Flaubert to Rachel Reeves, we might remind ourselves that her forthcoming Budget is intended to be a Damocles' sword generating a mild sense of unease then a temporary sense of escape when it finally fails to fall.

Afterwards, life is a little worse than it need be but it trundles on with Damocles' sword still suspended over us, doing its job. 

Government persecutes us, and the absurd legislation that rules us... yes it's still absurd and it still rules us.

It’s a technique.

Assured



BBC to apologise over 'doctored' Trump speech as fresh row erupts

• BBC chairman Samir Shah expected to apologise for controversial edit of Donald Trump speech on day of Capitol riot on January 6, 2021

• Row erupts between BBC’s Nick Robinson and Boris Johnson, as the Today presenter hits out at ‘political campaign by people who want to destroy the organisation’

• Ex-PM Johnson describes his remarks as a ‘diversionary tactic’

Speaking to the Mail on Sunday later, Mr Johnson said: “There is a difference between trying to destroy the BBC and trying to hold it to account.

“This is just a diversionary tactic from an organisation that is too arrogant to think it might be at fault.”



As usual this one seems destined to rumble on until it stops rumbling. Nothing worthwhile will be done because, apart from the satisfaction of closing it down and levelling the whole sorry mess to the ground, the only worthwhile move is to require the BBC to fund itself via subscription.

It won't happen though, those who could do something have already been "assured".


Following Tuesday’s reports, Downing Street said Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy and senior officials in the Department for Culture, Media and Sport had received a copy of the memo and were “assured” by the BBC that the broadcaster will be examining the issues raised in the report.

Saturday, 8 November 2025

Getaway Car

 

By asserting manifest absurdities



Maurice Cousins has a useful Critic piece on the corruption of language as a vehicle for political control, especially as it relates to the manifest absurdities of UK energy policy.


The new “enemy within”

Britain needs clear thinking and cheap energy

During the 1970 general election campaign, Enoch Powell delivered a speech in Birmingham in which he warned that Britain was under attack from what he called “the enemy within”. This enemy, he said, was not a physical adversary but a moral and intellectual one. It operated through ideas, slogans and intimidation rather than armies and violence.

Its weapon of choice was purely linguistic. By “asserting manifest absurdities as if they were self-evident truths”, elites dissolved the public’s confidence in its own capacity to reason. The result was paralysis. Ordinary people began to mistrust their senses, defer to official narratives and police their own speech. He warned: “In the end, it renders the majority… incapable of self-defence by depriving them of their wits and convincing them that what they thought was right is wrong, what they thought was real is unreal.” This was the same pathology that George Orwell had described a generation earlier in Politics and the English Language: the corruption of language as the corruption of thought.



The whole piece is well worth reading as a reminder of how crucial it is to retain free speech as a cultural norm. 

For example, the term 'politically correct' is much more useful than the term 'woke', as 'politically correct' demands 'correct language' in a way that 'woke' doesn't. The covert notion of 'correct language' is where censorship shoves its foot in the door.


I was reminded of Powell’s “enemy within” speech this week after reading Professor Sir Dieter Helm’s latest essay on British energy policy. Helm, Oxford economist, former government adviser and hardly a radical, accused ministers of presiding over an energy system that is “not cheap, not home-grown and not secure”. It was his second broadside in a week. In a recent podcast, he went further, predicting that the government would eventually have to renege on renewable contracts if we ever wish to return to economic competitiveness.


Having to renege on renewable contracts is the big one of course.

Plots



Starmer reportedly facing plots to oust him as PM

Labour MPs are plotting to oust Sir Keir Starmer, reports suggest, even as the prime minister has welcomed rebellious backbenchers back into the fold.

The new intake of Labour parliamentarians are among those said to be discussing the mechanics of a future coup, according to the i Paper.

It comes amid despair about the party’s poll ratings and discontent that the government may break Labour’s manifesto promise not to raise income tax.



It's a good job we have journalists to delve into the political mood, keep their ears to the ground and uncover these stories for us.

Friday, 7 November 2025

Milei criticizes Mamdani



As reported in MercoPress, Argentine President Javier Milei recently made an important point about the damaging notion of capitalism as a “necessary evil” within the developed world. 

Here in the UK, we have major political parties and huge government bureaucracies where that notion is tacitly accepted as a foundational axiom of modern government. 


Milei criticizes Mamdani and praises Trump

In his appearance on Thursday at the America Business Forum in Miami, Argentine President Javier Milei seized the opportunity to lambast New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, praise his US colleague Donald Trump, and seek investments for his country. Milei described his own electoral victory as a mandate for capitalist reform...

Milei's central theme was an apology of free-market capitalism and a dire warning against socialist ideas, which he referred to as the “Kuka risk” (a pejorative term for Kirchnerism/Peronism).

He argued that Western societies have mistakenly accepted the notion that capitalism is a “necessary evil” that requires state intervention to address “unequal impact” and prevent monopolies.

Milei contended that this justification for state intervention leads to ever-expanding government control, eventually reaching the same destination as those who openly hate capitalism: “the total control of the state, the economy, and people's lives—that is, communism.”

The existence of some mysterious, superior method



Starmer hit by revolts on Lammy's handling of jail crisis and tax

Sir Keir Starmer faced extraordinary Cabinet infighting over David Lammy’s handling of the scandal over prisoners being wrongfully released and a Labour revolt on an expected manifesto-busting increase in income tax.

As he flew home from the COP30 summit in Brazil, the Prime Minister’s grip on his Government and his party looked increasingly shaky.

Ahead of the Budget on November 26, a split has erupted at the top of Labour over breaking its manifesto promises on tax hikes,.


Oh dear, what a rabble they are. I don't think Lammy is the worst of them though, Ed Miliband has done far more damage and he is said to be a popular candidate for replacing Starmer when the absurd muddler is finally shown the door. It's a revolving door though, so he'll be fine - probably better off too.

On a more serious note, it's another reminder of a catastrophically weak and deluded leadership which cannot grasp the essentials of strong leadership. They just don't get it we might say. Or perhaps, as in the Emile Zola quote below, they are dimly conscious of the existence of some mysterious, superior method of leadership, if only...

...if only.

The post title is a phrase taken from Emile Zola's novel La Débâcle and his graphic and poignant description of a catastrophic French defeat in the Battle of Sedan during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870.

Aghast and confounded, having failed so far to acquire the first idea of the rationale of the campaign, he was dimly conscious of the existence of some mysterious, superior method which he could not comprehend, against which he ceased to struggle, although in his dogged stubbornness he kept repeating mechanically:

“Courage, my children! victory is before us!”


Emile Zola - La Débâcle (1892)

The process followed



Culture Secretary breached governance code in appointing football watchdog chair

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy was found by a probe to have breached the code on public appointments by failing to declare she had received donations from her pick to chair the new football watchdog.

In a letter to Sir Keir Starmer, she apologised for “unknowingly” breaking the rules by not disclosing that David Kogan had given £2,900 to her leadership campaign in the 2020 race to succeed Jeremy Corbyn.

The Prime Minister replied that she had “acted in good faith”, but reprimanded her by saying “the process followed was not entirely up to the standard expected”.



It's "the process followed" again, but surely Sir Tier Starmer is being disingenuous here, even while sticking firmly to his own denial process.  

It is clear enough that Lisa Nandy's pick for chair of the new football watchdog was well down to the standards expected from Sir Tier's government.

Thursday, 6 November 2025

Sanity Takes a Holiday



Claire Lemaire has a Brussels Signal piece on a familiar EU failure mechanism, its obsession with uncompetitive green rules.


‘Uncompetitive EU green rules’ push bloc’s industry to outsource more

Stricter environmental regulations in the European Union are making it harder for domestic companies to stay competitive.

Firms are now turning to subcontractors outside Europe, where rules are less demanding, to reduce costs. The result: European industries risk losing jobs and expertise, even as the EU pushes to lead on climate change...

Other EU regulations — including the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) and the Deforestation Regulation — also carry major implications for trade but remain external rules, separate from the trade agreements themselves.


Admission incoming - my main reason for the post was an opportunity to make an award , the Loony Nonsense of the Week award, which this week goes to -

The Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM). 

Not a huge achievement as I invented the award this afternoon as a one-off* for this post. Yet surely the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism should be formally recognised as an outstanding EU achievement in the arcane field of ludicrously damaging bureaucratic eco-twaddle.

*There are far too many candidates to continue the award beyond this one.

Starmer defies



Starmer defies Farage on net zero at COP30 summit in Brazil


Sir Keir Starmer rejected Nigel Farage’s attacks on net zero as he pledged at the COP30 summit in Brazil that the Government would press ahead “full speed with the clean power revolution”.

The Prime Minister insisted that the shift to green energy will deliver hundreds of thousands of jobs for Britain and economic boosts in regions across the country...

In a speech at the world leaders’ gathering at the COP30 climate change summit in Belem, in the Amazon region of Brazil, the PM was due to defend his push for clean energy, with more onshore and offshore windfarms, as well as solar power farms, arguing that green power was “the economic opportunity of the 21st century”.



There are two types of knowledge. One is knowing a thing. The other is knowing where to find it. Sir Keir Starmer is a stranger to both.

Not quite Samuel Johnson

Wednesday, 5 November 2025

Planning for the worst



M&S boss warns customer confidence dented by Budget worries


The boss of Marks & Spencer has said Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s pre-Budget speech had fuelled customer worries over tax hikes and warned shoppers were now “planning for the worst”.

Chief executive Stuart Machin said the retailer’s customers were “increasingly concerned about rising costs and taxes” and what might be in store in the upcoming Budget.

He said the Chancellor’s unusual step to deliver a pre-Budget speech on Tuesday did not help ease fears or give certainty to businesses and consumers.



Hmm - it's probably much more than Budget worries. Having to make a pre-Budget speech was bound to remind people yet again that this is the worst government in living memory, Keir Starmer the worst Prime Minister and Rachel Reeves the worst Chancellor.

Whether or not Labour voters know it, they are to a significant degree voting for the Fabian Society. This goes some way to explain the teenage ideology behind the absurd mess the party is making of its Parliamentary majority.

According to Copilot AI -

Senior government posts, including Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves, and Wes Streeting, are confirmed Fabian members, signaling continued influence at leadership and ministerial levels

While the Fabian Society does not openly publish a comprehensive list of its Labour MP members, credible sources and historical records indicate that approximately 200–220 Labour MPs are members of the Fabian Society, encompassing the leader, many cabinet members, and senior figures across the party. This represents a significant proportion of the parliamentary Labour cohort.

We have turnips

 

A Headline and a Quote

 

 Trump and his media buddies are taking the muddling of reality to a whole new level



In this stupid world most people never consider that a thing is good to be done unless it is done by their own set.

George Eliot - Middlemarch (1871-72)

Tuesday, 4 November 2025

The Type Against the Individual



Sadiq Khan in Rio: war of words with 'climate wrecker' Donald Trump


Sir Sadiq Khan has criticised Donald Trump in a set-piece opening speech at a Brazil climate change conference - the London mayor’s fifth foreign trip of the year.

He told the “biggest-ever gathering of mayors” that the US president was one of the climate “wreckers” they needed to fight back against to reduce the threat of global warming.



No mention of a "fight back" against Xi Jinping though, must be a reason for that. 

It's a reminder of a 1933 Hugh Walpole quote about a fight he foresaw between what he called the 'type' and the individual. In this sense Sadiq Khan is a 'type', a conformist progressive, he based his career on it. Trump is an individual.


I couldn’t help thinking yesterday as I listened to him that that may be the fight the whole earth is slipping into — the type against the individual.

Hugh Walpole - Vanessa (1933)

We're worse than even you feared



Starmer and Reeves hint at tax rises to come ahead of unusual pre-budget speech today


Last night, Sir Keir gave Labour MPs a taste of what's to come by warning of the need for "tough but fair" decisions.

Speaking at a party meeting in Westminster, he said the budget "takes place against a difficult economic backdrop".

"It's becoming clearer the long-term impact of Tory austerity, their botched Brexit deal and the pandemic on Britain's productivity is worse than even we feared," the prime minister said.



Blimey, for a chap pretending to be UK Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer isn't very strong on personal responsibility or anything resembling The Buck Stops Here. His knighthood clearly wasn't collected for something as courageous as that.  

It has been equally clear for ages that he doesn't mind scraping the barrel and as many barrels as it takes to plod on, plod on then plod on some more.

Just give it up you ridiculous man.

Man?

Monday, 3 November 2025

Shortage of rashers



Ryanair boss hits out at chancellor over growth as profits climb 42%

Europe's largest airline by passenger numbers says it remains cautiously optimistic it is on track to secure fare growth across its financial year as a whole.

Michael O'Leary told Sky's Mornings with Ridge and Frost programme that Rachel Reeves "hasn't the rashers how to deliver growth" while taking aim at a planned rise in air passenger duty slated for next April...

"Until she starts cutting these insane taxes and stop trying to tax wealth, the UK economy is doomed to continue to fail", he said.


So Reeves "hasn't the rashers how to deliver growth", not an expression I've heard before but every little helps. Won't push Rachel from Accounts into doing something useful though, her boss hasn't the rashers either.

Mysterious Account Tests the Waters



Gu Cheng has an interesting People News piece about a mysterious mainland social-media account relating to the mostly opaque Xi–Zhang power struggle in China.


Mysterious Account Tests the Waters: Xi–Zhang Power Struggle Loosens Externally, Tightens Internally

Xi’s Diplomatic Tone Turns Weak and Fatigued

[People News] Recently, former CCP Central Party School professor Cai Xia revealed that He Weidong and Miao Hua had formed a secret army in Langfang, Hebei, sparking widespread attention and heated discussion. Around the same time, a mysterious mainland social-media account called “Wind Direction Observer” (风向观察) suddenly released alleged court documents detailing the trials of former Rocket Force leaders Li Shangfu, Wei Fenghe, and others accused of colluding with foreign powers.

Both incidents were not from official sources, yet occurred in close succession. Coupled with the recent, markedly softer diplomatic tone Xi Jinping adopted in meetings with U.S. and Japanese leaders, these developments highlight that, after the CCP’s 20th Fourth Plenary Session, fierce internal struggles within the military persist — and that the complexity of the power structure at the top far exceeds what is visible on the surface.



It's worth reading the whole piece, if nothing else it makes our UK media obsession with Andrew Whatsit seem even more trivial.


Then came Xi’s meeting with his nemesis, new Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi.

In their first summit, Xi found himself completely on the defensive. After the CCP failed to interfere in Japan’s election, Xi sulked and withheld congratulations; Takaichi ignored him and confronted him head-on.

She listed every sore point: the East China Sea (including the Senkaku Islands), rare earths, concern over detained Japanese citizens, safety of overseas nationals, the South China Sea, Hong Kong, Xinjiang, and North Korea abductions — directly challenging Xi’s regime on all fronts.

Xi was speechless.

Unprepared and without his cue cards — or with cards that lacked any answers — he was utterly stumped.

Such questions went far beyond the CCP’s script; even Cai Qi, his chief of staff, would never dare write responses for these.

Sunday, 2 November 2025

The government debacle burial process



Elliot Keck has a useful CAPX reminder of the government debacle burial process.


The Covid Inquiry has become an expensive farce

  • The Covid Inquiry is likely to have spent around £230m by next summer, a daily spend of about £160,000
  • An almost unlimited remit was built into the Covid Inquiry from the start
  • By the time we get to the Covid Inquiry's final report, the pandemic will be a distant memory

‘Flawed analysis’, they called it. For years, we at the TaxPayers’ Alliance have been forecasting the ultimate cost of the Covid Inquiry. And on pretty much every occasion, the inquiry has completely dismissed our warnings, saying it was based on ‘hypothetical future expenditure and an imaginary end date’.



The whole piece is well worth reading - this item of blatant bloating for example.


One of the biggest items of spending – almost £15m or nearly 10% of the total cost – has been ‘Every Story Matters’, described as the largest public engagement exercise ever undertaken by a UK public inquiry. It has led to 58,000 stories being shared with the inquiry. Which undoubtedly meant a lot to those telling them. But it’s difficult to see what value this has when it comes to answering the question: was the government’s approach to the pandemic the right one?

Return of the Demented Sheep



Ed Miliband 'to hit Brits with £100 boiler tax rise' in new heat pumps plot

 


I thought I had never seen anyone quite so fluent and so futile, and yet there was a kind of feeble violence in him like a demented sheep.

John Buchan - Mr Standfast (1919)

Saturday, 1 November 2025

No great awakening



Criminal on the run for 10 years caught by Met facial recognition

Half a second after the live facial recognition (LFR) camera snaps the young man walking towards Leicester Square, an alert pings on Sgt Kevin Brown’s handheld screen with a matched image.

Two faces flash up alongside each other on his smartphone-sized device. One is an image of the young criminal taken by the LFR camera and the second is a police mugshot with details of the serious offences he is being sought for by Scotland Yard.

Within seconds, the young man in his 20s is stopped and questioned by two officers. In minutes, they establish he is wanted by the Met for a crime meriting at least a year in jail. He is arrested, handcuffed and taken into custody.


Another hint that technocrats in the developed world see China as the government model to follow, at least in terms of social control. It is particularly obvious here in the UK. 

Human behaviour suggests that a few stories such as this will accustom most people to a life of mass surveillance if surveillance is sold as safety, which of course it will be. The obvious negative aspects could become more obvious later, but familiarity is likely to dull the impact as familiarity so often does. There will be no great awakening.

David Starkey on the Fabian Society

 

Friday, 31 October 2025

Minister swallows a whole word salad



Minister vows to push for ‘accelerated action’ on climate at Cop30 in Brazil


Scotland’s Climate Action and Energy Secretary has pledged to push for more ambitious action to tackle climate change when she attends Cop30 in Brazil.

Gillian Martin said Scotland has a “unique opportunity” at the UN summit in November as Regions4 president and European co-chair of the Under2 Coalition...

She said: “We have a unique opportunity as Under2 European co-chair and Regions4 president to champion the essential work taking place across the globe to support vulnerable communities who are at most risk from the impacts of climate change.


This soggy word salad is merely bureaucracy, nothing to do with the world beyond the bureaucratic bubble of meetings, resolutions, agendas, posturing, announcements, brochures, discussion papers, media briefings, logos, NGOs, quangos, lectures, strident finger-wagging, virtue peddling, overseas travel and more meetings.

Then even more meetings.

Harriet's Dig



Government warned against 'deplorable' budget strategy

The government hinting at a rise in income tax at the budget only to not go through with it in a bid to win over voters would be "deplorable", according to Labour peer Harriet Harman

She told Sky's political editor Beth Rigby on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast that it would be the "worst sort of briefing and political games playing".

"I hope they're not seeding the idea there's going to be an increase in income tax announced at the budget so they can get credit for not announcing it, because I just think that's manipulative of public opinion," she said.


To describe traditional political kite-flying as 'deplorable' appears to assume that voters haven't noticed how the game is played over many years. 

It is more likely that Harriet is merely making sure that Labour's useful idiots also know about kite-flying by making a rather obvious dig at the Ghastly Duo, Starmer and Reeves.

All is not well with Starmer's regime.

Thursday, 30 October 2025

Not Needed



Investigation into Reeves not needed, says Starmer - after she apologises for rental 'mistake'

Sir Keir Starmer has dismissed calls for an investigation into his chancellor after she apologised for putting her family home up for rent without obtaining the necessary licence.

Some London boroughs require private landlords to obtain a specific kind of licence if they are putting their property up for rent - including Southwark Council, where Ms Reeves' home is listed.



It is mildly entertaining to imagine how righteously indignant "Sir" Keir would be about a Tory Chancellor making this 'mistake'. His eyes would gleam with confected outrage through Lord Alli's spectacles.

With her Budget coming up on November 26, Rachel from Rents should consider an early exit. She is the one who isn't needed and the whole world knows it.

A Game of Rackets



Up to now, America has not been a good milieu for the rise of a mass movement. What starts out here as a mass movement ends up as a racket, a cult, or a corporation.

Eric Hoffer - The Temper of Our Time (1967)


Suppose we extend Hoffer’s observation to a claim that UK political parties have evolved a mix of cults and rackets. Not so much as a permanent viewpoint, but to outline a worst case scenario where UK political parties eventually lose whatever genuine connection to democratic accountability they once had.

In which case it could be said for example, that the Green Party is a pseudo-environmental political cult, as the Lib Dems have become, while Labour has always been a cult with a fondness for politically-inspired rackets. Tories struggle to know what they are now the democratic political charade has collapsed, so they seem destined to go under.

More generally, Net Zero is an unmistakable mix of cult and rackets. It has become a monster, so huge that it tends to obscure numerous other progressive cults and petty government rackets from featherbedding to vast and dubious networks of patronage, including cult patronage.

The cult/racket problem seems to be one reason why civilisations fail, too many political cults and rackets eat away at the social fabric which maintains a civilisation as civilised. They erode the importance of social norms and civilised behaviour which need to be widely understood if not always adhered to.

As stated at the beginning, to describe UK political parties as cults and rackets merely highlights a worst case scenario. Unfortunately it is also becoming more useful.

Wednesday, 29 October 2025

Wikipedia's Days Are Numbered


Anyone paying attention will already know about problems with using Wikipedia as a source of information, but this video gives a useful take on it. Also a comparison with version 0.1 of Grokipedia, which can be found here.  


Fiscal Event Rachel forecast for November 26



Income tax rise not ruled out by Starmer in Budget clash with Badenoch

Sir Keir Starmer refused to rule out an increase in income tax at the Budget.

At Prime Minister’s Questions, he was asked by Tory leader Kemi Badenoch to confirm that the Government would stick to Labour’s manifesto not to raise the rates of income tax, National Insurance and VAT.

Sir Keir declined to make this commitment ahead of the Budget on November 26, saying governments did not do so ahead of such fiscal events



As far as I'm aware, when questioned on the forthcoming Budget, Sir Keir Starmer has not yet ruled out pinching even more of your money, otherwise known as a "fiscal event". We should give names to these fiscal events as we do with storms. 

We already have a red alert about Fiscal Event Rachel predicted to sweep destructively across the UK on November 26.

Determined to "defy" forecasts



'My decisions at budget don't come for free,' warns Reeves

Rachel Reeves has said she is determined to "defy" forecasts that suggest she will face a multibillion-pound black hole in next month's budget, but has indicated there are some tough choices on the way.

Writing in The Guardian, the chancellor argued the "foundations of Britain's economy remain strong" - and rejected claims the country is in a permanent state of decline.

Reports have suggested the Office for Budget Responsibility is expected to downgrade its productivity growth forecast by about 0.3 percentage points.

That means the Treasury will take in less tax than expected over the coming years - and this could leave a gap of up to £40bn in the country's finances.

Ms Reeves wrote she would not "pre-empt" these forecasts, and her job "is not to relitigate the past or let past mistakes determine our future".



By gum she's useless. A chap is bound to ask if her determination to "defy" forecasts is similar to Ed Miliband's determination to defy reality. 

They may as well paint their faces and dance around the stone circle on Stanton Moor at midnight, chanting defiance at the heavens. At least that would be amusing and I could go and watch.

Tuesday, 28 October 2025

A vote for Zack Polanski is a vote against success


Another useful CAPX piece, this time from Eliot Wilson who writes about the war on success promoted by Green Party leader Zack Polanski.


A vote for Zack Polanski is a vote against success

  • The Green Party leader's belief in wealth taxes is based on opinion polls rather than economic experience
  • Wealth taxes are supported by Marxists to punish those deemed too successful
  • The Green Party's plans for Britain's economy will make us all poorer

A wealth tax is a hugely attractive concept for many, as it sounds simple and fair: the wealthy, of course, are those whom we ought to be taxing, since they have, as Labour politicians forever remind us, the ‘broadest shoulders’. It is certainly popular with the voters, and a YouGov poll last week found that 75% of those surveyed supported its introduction. By contrast, only 22% supported a higher rate of income tax or an increase in National Insurance Contributions, while 14% of people backed a rise in VAT.


The whole piece is well worth reading as a confirmation of something we've known for decades, fostering malice towards a social class most voters will never join is a powerful political technique. 


Polanski does not descend to the muddy arena of finely grained economic statistics, however. His approach is much simpler and, to give him credit, much more frank. He explained to the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg recently: ‘this isn’t about creating public investment, we can do that anyway, we don’t need to tax the wealthy to do that’.

Set aside how he would ‘do that anyway’. If he is not primarily concerned with raising revenue, you might wonder why on earth he wants to introduce a new tax at all. The answer is frightening in its simple-mindedness:


It’s ultimately about reducing inequality… this is ultimately about tackling the deep inequality in our society.

Translation: Polanski thinks that there is some objective measure by which some people can be judged to have too much money, and the gap between them and everyone else judged to be too great. This can be solved by taking more money away from the rich and decreasing their wealth. This is a measure designed to punish those deemed too successful.



And as B.F. Skinner pointed out to us decades ago, punishment leads to escape behaviour, but presumably Polanski isn't too concerned about that. In a sense he's right too, if success escapes then we'll have less of it to dilute the egalitarian purity of failure.

Politics is changing – because it must


Lawrence Newport has a very interesting CAPX piece on what appears to be the terminal decline of UK politics dominated by traditional political parties. Terminal because far too few decent, honest and able people want to join in.  

Newport is co-founder of a political organisation called Looking for Growth (LFG) which may or may not succeed in its aims, but the whole piece is well worth reading as a reminder of the need for major political change. 


Our politicians won’t save Britain. We will

  • We are living through a turning point in British political history
  • The current lack of effective political leadership poses a unique opportunity
  • Britain has rescued itself in the past, and it can again

Politics is changing – because it must.

We are living through a turning point in British political history. The two main parties that have dominated the 20th century are now in a state of crisis so deep that there are good reasons to suspect that they might collapse into oblivion. They are seen to have ignored voters, ignored principles and been unwilling to take actions to once again ensure Britain can actually be run effectively by its leaders. But out of this failure, and this gap in leadership, new movements and platforms are emerging, and new crowds are entering politics that never would have considered doing so before.

Last Thursday, at the O2 Indigo Theatre, Looking for Growth (LFG), of which I am a co-founder, gathered a crowd of 1,300 people. It brought together speakers from across the political spectrum and from those outside of politics: Matt Clifford, Liv Boeree, Labour MPs Chris Curtis and Sarah Coombes, Conservative MP Katie Lam, Reform MP Danny Kruger, Marc Warner, Dominic Cummings and the TS Domestics (a group that has been cleaning their local area because their council has failed to do so). These speakers came together to make the case for one cause: growing the British economy with radical ideas that speak to changing the very roots of government.

Monday, 27 October 2025

Sunday, 26 October 2025

Whitehall chaos



‘Woke’ policies are fuelling Whitehall chaos, says Lord Case


Woke staff networks and an “obsession” with officials’ feelings are fuelling the chaos at the Home Office, the former head of the civil service has warned.

Lord Case said mandarins at the department were “obstructive” towards government policies and more interested in “how they cover their backs” than outcomes.

Writing for The Telegraph, he said Shabana Mahmood, the new Home Secretary, would have to “face down” internal opposition to cut immigration...

“Bring your whole self to work was the mantra brought into the civil service in the 2000s that has clung on, limpet-like, as a charter for woke networks and obstructive behaviours towards government policy.


Really? I thought one of the problems was "Keep your whole self at home." Another was "Let your whole self have a few days off sick."

Too cynical perhaps, but this culture problem isn't likely to be resolved by a failed political administration under Keir Starmer. If he goes, as he should, then there will be more upheaval to postpone dealing with Whitehall chaos - as Whitehall bods already know.

Twenty warnings for Sir Keir



Twenty warnings for Sir Keir Starmer from new deputy leader Lucy Powell


Sky's Jon Craig breaks down what Labour's Lucy Powell said - and what she meant - as she was crowned the party's new deputy leader after a closely fought race against Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson.

Labour's new deputy leader Lucy Powell promised to be Sir Keir Starmer's ally.

Yet in her victory speech she criticised his government and its record no fewer than 20 times. And told him to raise his game, or else.


All we learn from this is that Lucy Powell's approach is to be more assertive and hard-nosed when pressing ahead with changes which won't work, never have worked in the past and aren't going to work in the future. More of the same but louder seems to be the message.

Powell is attempting to distance herself from failure by insisting on a need for much more assertive presentation and a greater determination to implement vague ideological ambitions. It's all too facile, tottering precariously on wobbling planks of misplaced confidence.

Distancing herself from her party leader without distancing herself from his practical and ideological difficulties isn't going to work. Powell hints that distancing herself from Starmer is enough to extract the party from failure. It isn't enough, there is much more to do.

The things which weigh heavily upon my mind are these—failure to improve in the virtues, failure in discussion of what is learnt, inability to walk according to knowledge received as to what is right and just, inability also to reform what has been amiss.

Analects of Confucius


Saturday, 25 October 2025

Blow for one reject as another reject isn't rejected



Blow for Starmer as sacked Cabinet minister Lucy Powell wins Labour deputy leader contest


Keir Starmer suffered another blow today as Lucy Powell was named as his new Labour deputy.

Ms Powell - who was sacked from the Cabinet by the PM just last month - saw off Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson in the contest.

She received 87,407 votes compared to 73,536 for her rival, although the turnout was just 16.6 per cent.



Gosh a turnout of 16.6 per cent is impressive, at the moment that counts as wild enthusiasm. 

Humpty Dumpty goes to court



French court convicts TotalEnergies over misleading climate claims


The Paris court found that TotalEnergies had made environmental claims that “misled” consumers into believing that it could achieve carbon neutrality by 2050 while increasing oil and gas production.

The court, however, dismissed complaints over TotalEnergies linked to its fossil gas and biofuels.

Activists had argued that they had deceptively promoted gas and biofuels as clean energy.



“When I use a word,’ Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.’

’The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’

’The question is,’ said Humpty Dumpty, ‘which is to be master — that’s all.”

Lewis Carroll - Through the Looking-Glass (1871)

You couldn't even run a lemonade stand!


This jibe raises yet again the question of why Ursula von der Leyen is where she is. Perhaps she has an aura of being harmlessly useless which suits the EU machine as an enabler of political rackets.