The BBC has platformed the views of fossil fuel giant Shell’s boss in the latest shocking example of media bias on the climate crisis. In an article titled Oil giant Shell warns cutting production ‘dangerous’, the BBC interviewed Shell chief executive Wael Sawan. At the time of writing on 6 July, the public service broadcaster had the article featured on the front page of its online news site.
The BBC’s bias makes it a fossil fuel industry mouthpiece
The interview with Sawan appears to have come as a result of Shell’s recent announcement of its plans to maintain its oil and gas production levels until 2030. The BBC stated that Sawan had:
angered climate scientists who said Shell’s plan to continue current oil production until 2030 was wrong.
In response to these criticisms, the BBC article uncritically amplified Sawan’s view that:
What would be dangerous and irresponsible is cutting oil and gas production so that the cost of living, as we saw last year, starts to shoot up again.
Of course, the article failed to mention that oil and gas companies have been remorselessly profiteering during the “cost of living” crisis.
As the Canaryreported, Shell raked in record profits of $42.3bn last year alone. The BBC itself broke the story in February with the headline Shell reports highest profits in 115 years.
Given this, campaigners and politicians have been highlighting the incongruity between these record corporate profits and long-marginalised communities in the UK facing starker energy poverty.
A just transition for who?
Then, without a shred of irony, the BBC amplified Sawan’s appeals for a “just transition”.
Commenting on the “international bidding war for gas” in 2022, the outlet noted how:
poorer countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh unable to afford liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments that were instead diverted to Northern Europe.
The article then quoted Sawan feigning concern for citizens in Pakistan and Bangladesh by saying:
They took away LNG from those countries and children had to work and study by candlelight,
The BBC continued to uplift Sawan’s call for a just transition without challenge, quoting his argument that:
If we’re going to have a transition it needs to be a just transition that doesn’t just work for one part of the world.
As I have previously reported, it was, in fact, the fossil fuel corporations themselves that caused these mass blackouts in places like Pakistan and Bangladesh. Companies such as Italian oil and gas firm Eni purposely defaulted on their energy contracts when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sent energy prices soaring. Capitalising on the opportunity, fossil fuel firms broke these contracts so that they could profit from the new demand from higher-paying customers in Europe.
Fossil fuels drive climate chaos
Moreover, this isn’t even to mention fossil fuel companies’ role in driving the climate crisis which has already been causing extreme weather disasters in the Global South. Of course, the BBC allowed Sawan to invoke the blackouts in Pakistan, without even a cursory reference to the climate-exacerbated floods that have devastated those same communities.
Naturally, the BBC also facilitated Sawan’s barefaced ploy to shamelessly invoke marginalised children in these climate-vulnerable nations to bolster his own, unrelated argument for maintaining oil and gas production.
Moreover, fossil fuel companies like Shell have known about climate change for decades but have been engaged in a suite of unscrupulous tactics to delay the transition to greener technologies.
Again, another BBC article from September 2022 detailed a study which found that transitioning to renewable power could save the world $12tn in energy costs. Study author professor Doyne Farmer said that the research:
shows ambitious policies to accelerate dramatically the transition to a clean energy future as quickly as possible are, not only, urgently needed for climate reasons, but can save the world trillions in future energy costs, giving us a cleaner, cheaper and more energy secure future.
Climate bias not a thing of media past
The interview with Sawan showed that BBC bias over the climate crisis is very much alive and well. Journalist Amy Westervelt has extensively documented the corporate press’s weaponisation of ‘false equivalence’ for climate coverage.
‘False equivalence’ refers to the media practice of giving both sides of an argument equal weight. In climate terms, this has often meant platforming the views of deniers against the peer-reviewed research of climate scientists.
For example, a 2019 study in the journal Nature Communicationsfound that American news outlets gave 49% more coverage to climate science deniers than to climate scientists.
Furthermore, back in 2014, even the parliamentary Science and Technology Select Committee criticised the BBC’s blatant bias in its coverage of the climate crisis. It stated that:
BBC News teams continue to make mistakes in their coverage of climate science by giving opinions and scientific fact the same weight.
Nearly a decade later, little has changed. At a time when climate experts have announced the global hottest day ever recorded, and the UN human rights chief declared that the climate crisis threatens a “truly terrifying” future, of course the BBC would shill for the fossil fuel industry.
Feature image via Mike Mozart/Wikimedia, cropped and resized to 1910*1000, licensed under CC BY 2.0
Alt text: Title ‘BBC editorial meetings’. Man wearing a white shirt and blue tie hands a ‘Daily Fail’ newspaper to a colleague. Speech bubble for the man says, “Usual drill… you look through Farage and Laurence Fox’s latest tweets, I’ll flick through the Daily Mail!”
Just Stop Oil activists disrupted Wimbledon to demand that the UK government halts new licences for fossil fuels.
In the afternoon of 5 July, two Just Stop Oil supporters ran onto Court 18 while Sho Shimabukuro and Grigor Dimitrov were playing. They threw orange confetti glitter and jigsaw pieces onto the courts before being removed by security. The game was disrupted while marshals cleared up the debris.
68 year-old Deborah Wilde took part in the action. She said:
I’m just an ordinary grandmother in resistance to this government’s policy of serving us new oil and gas licences. In normal circumstances this sort of disruption would be entirely unacceptable, but these aren’t normal circumstances. We’ve just had the hottest June on record, breaking the previous record by nearly a whole degree! We don’t need Hawk-eye to see that our government issuing over 100 new fossil fuel licences is a very bad line-call.
She continued:
Forget strawberries and cream, scientists are warning of impending food shortages, mass displacement and war. We are facing new pandemics, economic inflation and increasingly authoritarian governments who will attempt to crush civil unrest. This is a crisis and it needs a crisis response. I want a safe future, not just for my grandchildren but for all children around the world and the generations to come.
‘Humanity vs oil and gas’
66-year-old Simon Milner-Edwards also took part in the action. He said:
I’m here for my grandchildren and everybody else’s. I’m not prepared to let our politicians wreck everything and leave the next generation to pick up the pieces. The last thing I want to do is spoil people’s enjoyment of Wimbledon, but right now, on Centre Court, it’s humanity vs oil and gas- and the umpire is getting every call wrong. How long are we going to take this before we see a McEnroe-level meltdown!?
The Just Stop Oil supporters targeted Wimbledon after it signed a sponsorship deal with Barclays Bank. The groups argues that Barclays is using the tournament as a means of greenwashing its reputation. It says Barclays has given £30bn to oil and gas companies including Exxon Mobil, Shell, and TotalEnergies, in the last two years alone.
Over 2,200 arrests
Just Stop Oil said:
Since the Just Stop Oil campaign launched on 14th February 2022, there have been over 2,200 arrests and 138 people have spent time in prison, many without trial. Just Stop Oil supporters Morgan Trowland and Marcus Decker are serving three-year prison sentences for resisting new oil, gas and coal in the longest sentences for peaceful climate action in British history.
Trowland and Decker were imprisoned for hanging a banner from Dartford Bridge about the climate emergency and stopping traffic.
As Just Stop Oil activists continue to protest, we are likely to see more ridiculous prison sentences like this. The British government has passed draconian new laws such as the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts (PCSC) Act and the Public Order Act. The PCSC Act is extensive, and includes increasing police powers to stop/control demonstrations, allowing police officers to impose conditions on protests if they are ‘noisy’, making the obstruction of vehicle access to parliament an offence, and creating an offence of statutory public nuisance. Meanwhile, the Public Order Act has granted the state powers which include locking people up for a year in custody for blocking roads, railways and airports. On top of this, protesters who use the tactic of locking-on could face six months in prison.
Meanwhile, Just Stop Oil is gearing up for more action. The group said:
Time’s up for new oil, gas and coal. It’s time everyone got on the streets, marching every day to demand change. Join us to march 16-23rd July, sign up for action at juststopoil.org.
The once mighty United Kingdom is displaying all the signs of a rapidly deteriorating and declining power, and its politics are one of the surest indicators of this. In the past year, the country’s reigning Tories have cycled through three leaders—each plagued by scandals and screw-ups of dazzling proportions. That may all be bad enough, but the opposition Labour Party is hardly faring any better. TRNN contributor Jon Greenaway joins Associate Editor Mel Buer to recap the trends in British politics in recent years, and to discuss where this could all be headed.
Studio: Adam Coley
Post-Production: David Hebden
TRANSCRIPT
Mel Buer: Hello everyone, and welcome back to another episode of The Real News Network Podcast. My name is Mel Buer, and I am an associate editor at The Real News. I’m so glad that you’re back with us. The Real News is an independent, viewer-supported, nonprofit media network. We don’t take corporate cash, we don’t have ads, and we don’t put our reporting behind paywalls. To stay up to date on the important stories that we’re covering, sign up to our free newsletter at therealnews.com/sign-up. Follow us on social media, and consider becoming a monthly sustainer therealnews.com/donate.
Today, we’re talking UK politics. Over the last couple of years, and really in the last year alone, there have been a number of wild shake ups in the Conservative government of the United Kingdom. Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson stepped down last year in the wake of a truly Tory-level scandal in which he held parties at Number 10 at the height of the COVID lockdowns, and then lied about it, followed quickly by a disastrous and short run by Liz Truss, who was chosen as his successor and did an absolutely horrible job, after which another Conservative, Rishi Sunak, was elected.
The Conservative factions within the UK government have presided over what could reasonably be called catastrophic economic and social conditions in the post-Brexit, post-COVID climate, many of which, if not all, were exacerbated by the party’s policies.
There’s a lot to talk about and contextualize, so let’s just get into it. With us today is writer, podcaster, and Real News contributor Jon Greenaway to discuss. Before we get started, would you like to introduce yourself, Jon?
Jon Greenaway: Yeah, thank you so much for having me to talk about this with you. Yeah. My name is Jon Greenaway. I am a former academic, a writer, and podcaster from the North of England. I write about culture and media and philosophy, but I also write about politics for The Real News Network when something particularly newsworthy is happening here in the UK.
Mel Buer: Great to have you on. Okay. Where to begin? Maybe the best place to start is the continued fallout of the Johnson Partygate scandal. Can you just give us a quick rundown of what happened to start this conversation?
Jon Greenaway: Yeah. Okay. So to condense things down as much as possible and to gloss the timeline a little bit, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK, there were very strict political and then later legal requirements for people to be socially distanced, and this extended at every level of society. And there there’s several stories, really high-profile stories of people being heavily fined, charged by the police for breaking these laws during COVID. It was presented as a matter of public safety. Generally, adherence was pretty good, but the aftermath of the most serious bits of lockdown has caused a lot of ill feeling in the general public, and I think that’s true in most places where there were really long, prolonged lockdowns.
And over the last few months or so, increasing numbers of videos have surfaced of high-level members of Boris Johnson’s administration during that time having drinks parties, having social gatherings, having a Christmas party during lockdown when there were people who couldn’t go and see relatives dying in the hospital, people who couldn’t go and see their family during Christmas.
So obviously this caused a phenomenal amount of public outrage on a level which I think it’s hard to overstate how angry this has made an awful lot of people, and generally a lot of people who would’ve been thought of as natural Conservatives in their voting patterns, because it’s a blatant act of hypocrisy. So for about the last year or so, there has been an investigation being organized by what’s called the Commons Privilege Committee. This is a cross-party group of MPs, one of the many committees that make up the day-to-day activity of the House of Commons in Westminster. And the Commons Privileges Committee was investigating the extent to which Boris Johnson, whilst he was prime minister, had deliberately misled Parliament about his own involvement with these parties and social gatherings. It should be pointed out that, actually, there was also a police investigation into these gatherings at Number 10 during the worst of lockdown.
And so the big news is that the Committee, a few weeks back now, we started to get news that the Committee was going to release its report. And the Committee had several options available to it: so it could recommend a suspension of Boris Johnson as an MP if it had found him guilty. A suspension of over 10 days would have resulted in the possibility of his local constituency issuing a recall petition and a potential by-election, which he was widely tipped to lose.
When the committee report came out, the Committee had recommended a suspension of 90 days from Parliament. This would’ve been, I think, the second longest suspension ever given. Johnson tried to bluster his way through it at first, but then effective almost immediately resigned as a member of parliament rather than be forced into a byelection, which he probably doesn’t want to do anyway, he decided to flip over the table and make a break for it.
This last week, there was a vote by the House of Commons on whether or not it would ratify and uphold the findings of the report and censure Boris Johnson. And so one of the things that came out of that vote – Which was voted for overwhelmingly by all members of parliament, I think only seven MPs voted against this, and there are hundreds upon hundreds of members of parliament – One of the things that was revoked is that former members of parliament, and particularly prime ministers, get an awful lot of privileges when you leave office, and one of them is basically unlimited access to Westminster. You get given a special card, it’s a kind of access to all areas pass. Johnson has had his revoked. So this is big news. It caused a huge fallout within the Tory Party, and is yet another public example of the various antagonisms and contradictions within British conservatism playing out on the national stage.
Mel Buer: The news that I was reading about this was that, even leading into the debates and the receiving of the report, that many Conservative MPs were concerned about voting in one direction or another because they were trying to avoid what would be an all-out internal civil war between the various factions within the Conservative government. And I know that Sunek’s stance was to take a back seat to the proceedings and let it play out as it should, and he ran on this platform of accountability in the government, if I remember correctly. And so this was a moment for him to step back and see how it came forward. Do you still see, in your assessment, do you still see these internal divisions worsening within the Tory government? Or is this something where they finally fell into lockstep with each other and you don’t see much fallout from it?
Jon Greenaway: Yeah, generally British Conservatives are very good at falling in line. Historically, the history of British politics is the history of Conservative infighting. But when everyone’s back is to the wall, British Tories generally tend to fall in behind the leader. They’re very good at doing this. The last few years have been wildly unstable in the Conservative Party because one of the big schisms in British conservatism is about the country’s relationship to Europe.
Now, this is what the Brexit referendum back in 2016 was supposed to solve. Britain left the EU, left the European Union, but the consequences of it have been economically hugely problematic at best and outright disastrous in some ways. And so it didn’t solve the problem. And so all of the various factions within the Conservative Party now are trying to wrest control over the direction of, essentially, a political project which has run out of ideas.
So when the first news about the report was breaking, Johnson was scathing about this. He tried to bluster his way through it, accused it of being a kangaroo court, said the opposition politicians were out to get him, that this was an affront, a miscarriage of justice. And there were quite a few other MPs who thought that, who at first came out and said that this was a very dangerous precedent to set.
I think the opposite argument is to say that Johnson’s response is very much seen as an attack on the impartiality of Parliament itself, of the House of Commons. It’s a cross-party committee, it’s not just one side out to get the other. And so lots of senior Tory politicians then came out and said, actually, we should probably support the report. It sets too bad a precedent not to.
Sunak, I think, has taken the coward’s way out. So it’s not that he didn’t vote, he didn’t vote for the report, he didn’t vote against it, he just made sure that he wasn’t there when the vote was happening. And so it, it’s an attempt to diffuse the situation. And quite a few other Tory MPs just weren’t present because that way you avoid being drawn in.
So I think this has cooled things down a little bit in one particular way. But as we get closer to the next general election, I think these deep-seated fractures within the Conservative Party as a Parliamentary party and as a wider kind of political ideology are really going to come to the fore.
Mel Buer: For our members of the audience who are unfamiliar with the ways in which you schedule elections, when is the next general election scheduled?
Jon Greenaway: So there is a piece of legislation called the Fixed-Term Parliaments Act, which is that general elections have to happen on a five-year interval. You can call a general election earlier than that if you think you can win. But there’s a legislative mandate which means an election will kick in at a certain date based on when the last one was held.
So the last one was at the end of 2019. So by law, the very next election has to happen, at the latest, the very beginning of 2025. So probably, my suspicion is it’ll probably be sooner than that. We’re probably within about, I would say, probably 15 months or so, there’ll be another general election in the UK. But there has to be another one, I think it is January 2025 that the next one has to happen.
Mel Buer: Great. So you’ve written a great explainer on the Labour Party for, I should say, on the current leader of the Labour Party, Keir Starmer, and the various ideological underpinnings of what their strategy seems to be in countering the Conservative government. I want to highlight that here as really a good primer for those of us, those in our audience who are unfamiliar with British politics and the political maneuvering that happens within Parliament.
To expand upon this, though, let’s talk about Labour’s response to the fiasco to the Johnson scandal and the ongoing crisis that’s been happening in the UK. This inflation crisis is getting worse, which is creating an even more stark crisis of legitimacy for Sunak’s government. Labour are poised to take advantage of this instability. Can you give us a sense of what the economic and social conditions have been like in the last year or so, and what Labour is doing to position itself for what I assume they’re hoping or planning on being a success in the next election in terms of Parliamentary majority and what’s coming next?
Jon Greenaway: I think it’s really important to emphasize the economic fragility in the UK at the moment. As a country, its economy is very heavily weighted towards financial markets and towards the city of London. And what this means is that huge amounts of the economy are very dependent upon fluctuations in the wider global market. A really big problem that’s coming down the line very quickly is that inflation is very high and has been running at somewhere between, depending on the charts you look at, has been running somewhere between 7% and 10%, which means purchasing power goes down. And the whole point is about tightening the money supply at the moment.
The real problem that’s going to hit is one of the big areas that underpins the British economy, and that was hit enormously hard during the 2008 financial crisis, is the mortgage market, just as in the States. It’s perhaps even bigger in the UK. Households are now looking at when mortgage rates increase and when fixed term deals come to an end, there are going to be millions of people who are going to be spending probably an extra 20% to 25% of their income just on housing costs. And that’s going to happen within a year.
And that is a scary proposition at a time when British workers have been looking at basically around 12 to 14 years of flat wages – Wages have not kept up with the cost of living and wages have not kept up with inflation – And a housing market which is increasingly dominated by landlords and exorbitant rents. So that’s one big problem.
Basically, the Conservative response is – Again, I’ve said it before but I think I’ll say it a lot – As a party seems to have run out of ideas. The aftermath of COVID was pretty brutal. Britain’s economic recovery has been, I think, the weakest in Europe, getting over the pandemic. And there are no real ideas or willingness to try and tackle things. Liz Trust, who you mentioned right at the top, was prime minister for an embarrassingly short amount of time, but managed to do huge amounts of economic damage simply because she had this very right libertarian approach to economic policy. It spooked the financial markets, it drove the cost of government borrowing through the roof, mortgage rates spiked, and the cost of living knock-on it was a very real thing.
So you would think that for the Labour Party this is a kind of colossal opportunity. And in so many ways it is, but I think if you count yourself as leftist or a progressive internationally, you should be looking at UK politics with some concern. The strategy from the Labour Party basically seems to be to just… The phrase that gets used a lot is they want to appear as the government-in-waiting. They want just to be the safe pair of hands that can pick up the pieces.
But as I mentioned a little bit in the primer that you mentioned that I wrote for The Real News, a lot of the policy suggestions and the priorities that have come out of Starmer and Starmer’s handpicked front bench politicians don’t really seek to address any of these deep, systemic problems within the British economy. It isn’t going to make life easier for a lot of working people. A lot of his stuff is very reticent to be seen.
So the big attack line that Conservatives have used against Labour is that Labour spends too much money. And so we’ve had 13 years of chronic underinvestment, 13 years of depressed wages, 13 years of massive cuts to public services. Local government spending has been cut by about half in a decade, which has this colossal knock-on effect on the social fabric of an entire country – In fact, of an entire generation of people.
All of Labour’s policy announcements have been, of all the things that they’re not willing to do, they’ve talked very about very strict fiscal rules for themselves. They’ve even talked, an announcement that came out a few weeks ago, which is genuinely jaw-dropping when you stop and think about it, was that they would cut the number of free childcare hours that people were entitled to. If you have a generation who are just about maybe going to be able to buy a house, might want to have kids one day, how can you do that? How can you do that if you can’t afford the childcare costs that are now going to be put upon you?
So I think what we’re looking at is probably as a small or relatively slim Labour majority in the next election, but a Labour government that is, in so many ways, going to continue the chronic underinvestment, the hangover of austerity which has dominated British politics, and the genuinely systemic change that could address some of these structural issues just isn’t going to happen. It’s not a surprise that you’ll see lots of high-ranking Tory politicians go, we can live with Keir Starmer, we can live with Keir Starmer as prime minister. And it’s like, it’s very telling that right-wing politicians look at the leader of the Labour Party, the representative of the British left in the mainstream and go, yeah, we can live with this.
Mel Buer: You bring up good points, that if the factions of the Conservative government that you don’t want to be agreeing with if you exist in any sort of space on the left, just saying, we can hack it with this particular party leader. That’s very concerning. And you talked about this in your primer on the Labour Party, that a lot of the policy points that Starmer ran on when he wanted to be elected the party leader, those positions, he’s walked back either quietly or not so quietly very quickly in the last, what, six months or so. And so it definitely doesn’t bode well for a Labour majority for any tangible solutions to an ongoing crisis.
Jon Greenaway: I think the point is there are two ways. There are two strategies on how you build political legitimacy. So firstly, there’s the strategies that were undertaken by people like Bernie Sanders in the States, Jeremy Corbyn in the UK, where you try and actually bypass the mainstream political discourse and you try and do this through on-the-ground work and movement building. And the brutal reality is, in 2019, Jeremy Corbyn was annihilated, lost heavily. And in so many ways, the problem for the left or the left that was energized by that strategy is that it becomes a problem that you have to think through.
Maybe we should stop talking about Corbynism, but really it was a moment of possibility, and yet it lost so heavily and in such a demoralizing way. But the brutal reality of UK electoral politics is that it also came very, very close to winning. And that line that divides a very close victory to an absolutely annihilating defeat is razor thin in places.
The other strategy is the strategy of mainstream political legitimacy where you seed the ground that you think you might be weakest on in context of your ideological opponents. You aim at competence above everything, or at least the theater of competence. You want to be seen as the government-in-waiting without actually having to make any of the difficult decisions that would involve taking on things like vested power interests.
Starmer has very much been courting big business. The Labour Party conference under Jeremy Corbyn was very much an activist-led celebration, I suppose, and a real place of intellectual curiosity. But the Labour Party conference in the last couple of years has been dominated by talks from Amazon and Google on harnessing the power of big data in the National Health Service.
So that’s been the strategy. The point is not to worry the business world, not to worry the financial sector, not to worry the, frankly, hyperbolically awful British media, and to, above all else, pursue the strategy of the appearance of legitimacy. And because the kind of dark shadow of that strategy is who else are people going to vote for? Where else are you going to go? What else are you going to do?
And I think if you are, for people who were inspired and given some hope by Corbyn, it’s the same problem that people who were introduced to politics by the Sanders movement in the US have to face, which is, well, what comes next? And really that’s something that I got into at the end of that article, which is probably some hard theoretical work of actually trying to work out, is the kind of politics that you want to see in the world possible within the Labour Party? And if not, what does that mean about a left relationship to the Labour Party? And as a result, what kind of politics, what kind of governmental politics are we probably going to get from this version of the Labour Party?
Mel Buer: The question that comes to mind when you’re talking about this, particularly about this government-in-waiting, the non-committal action of making promises to the corporations and really having not much to throw in terms of scraps at a voter base of working people. Are you worried that this government gets into power and begins making decisions, if someone just pulls one of those threads and this government doesn’t really have the strength to be able to maintain itself, is that just going to come crashing down as quickly as this last year’s worth of Conservative policies? This doesn’t feel like a suitable alternative at all. Middle-of-the-road type answers aren’t going to do much for a populace that’s already severely affected by the economic and social conditions that have come out of these policies.
Jon Greenaway: And I think it leaves the door open for some truly reactionary politics to find really full expression. I say this to my American friends all the time, which is the British media, when it comes to its treatment of trans people, for example, is worse than the American media by a factor of many. Anyone who reads British media of my friends from the States are shocked at the stuff that will happen in it. And there is a very vicious transphobic and often racist and xenophobic culture war that bubbles under the surface. And I think there is no real attempt to address that in a way that’s going to quash it or push it out of public discourse, and I think that’s going to be a real problem. That’s going to be a real problem – It already is a real problem. It’s going to get worse before it gets better.
Mel Buer: No, I agree. You know, and I have talked at length about the decay of the neoliberal project in the Western world. We’ve talked about, you and I have been in each other’s circles for many years, we’ve really talked about how late capitalism has wreaked havoc on the lives of working people all over the globe. We’re both seeing this. There are parallels to draw between the economic and social conditions in the UK and the US, I think they’re closely related. And this neoliberal rot tends to manifest itself in the various reactionary responses to what you and I see as heightening contradictions within a rotting capitalist system.
And what we’re seeing now and have been seeing for many years is this hard pivot to far-right cultural extremism and extreme aggression towards LGBTQ people, as you have mentioned, racist and discriminatory policies and backlashes getting worse, and the extreme xenophobia that is presenting itself in your country, in you using the migrant refugee crisis that has continued since the ’10s, really, as a flashpoint for continuing and creating more aggressive border policies, particularly in a post-Brexit society that’s got to be harsh, to put it as softly as possible.
So you have some really good thoughts about this reactionary turn, and maybe we can puzzle through a little bit in this conversation, and then hopefully we can end this on positive responses, maybe reactions that we’re both seeing in our respective countries that are combating this and end on something hopeful. But let’s keep talking about this a little bit deeper.
Jon Greenaway: Yeah. So one of the big fault lines in British politics for a long time has been immigration. And this has been something that has been alternately pandered to – Often by the Labour Party, to what should be its deep shame – And exploited by the Conservative Party, and, actually, even further far-right figures. Brexit was fought on the basis of controlling immigration, which is a very vile little euphemism that gets tossed around on the political right, and I can’t help but think of the former politician, Jo Cox, who was a Labour member of parliament for the North of England, for a constituency in the North of England, who was assassinated by a far right political activist primarily because of her work with refugees. And this was in the lead up to the Brexit referendum. And Nigel Farage, an odious figure in British politics, was on television boasting about how it was a revolution where no guns had been fired, and there was a politician dead in the street.
And she was someone who talked very passionately about the importance of integrated communities and the value and the importance and dignity of asylum seekers and refugees. But those kinds of voices in the mainstream don’t really have a chance to be heard. I think the Conservative government has basically become far more carceral in its approach towards immigration and asylum seekers. I’m sure people might be familiar with the absolutely outrageous plan of sending asylum seekers out of Britain to Rwanda as a place where they could be processed. There are infamous stories of asylum seekers being essentially locked up in military barracks, subject to the most appalling conditions. So not just that, but the sheer indignity of being treated as this criminal object, something that has to be policed or out of the state. And pretty much the rhetoric on that has been ramping up markedly.
And I think the desire for this, there’s a kind of very nasty desire for purity in a lot of the media discourse that you’ll see around asylum seekers and immigration. Probably the most famous one is the absolutely disgusting column from Katie Hopkins referring to migrants as cockroaches, which is just the tip of the iceberg, really. So there are now two very right-wing cable news-style channels in the UK, and a lot of their panicking is around the absolute dangers of open borders, a very kind of typical rhetoric of what you hear in the States.
But without, of course, without actually questioning, why is social integration so much more difficult when local government has so many of its funds taken away from it, when communities are placed in opposition to one another, and when people are under the impression, deliberately created, that resources are scarce, and that for somebody else to get something, it means it’s been taken away from you? That’s a deliberate narrative that goes through a lot of the discussion around immigration and asylum seekers in this country.
There are analogies to the situation in the US, but it is newcomers to the country and LGBT people particularly, those are two groups that have been the focus of prolonged, sustained media attention in a way that is deeply concerning. And actually, as a point of principle, any politician on the left should be willing and able to take a very clear stand against that, against the kind of cultural fear mongering of people who are our friends, our neighbors, our family, our comrades, and defend them, because otherwise what are they for? What good is it to have a left government if the people who most need the protections of the state are never afforded them?
So those two issues, I think, are not going away anytime soon. And there has to be a contestation of that ground if bigger political problems are going to be solved as well. Anyone who’s come across TERF [Trans-Exclusive Radical Feminist] talking points will know quickly that it spirals outwards from trans people to include just being gay in public life, and then the enforcement of heteronormative gender roles, and then suddenly their political project spirals out much, much quicker than just being concerned about their one issue. And if you give ground on that issue, you’re giving up ground on all of these other things as well.
So there’s incredible work by groups on the ground and activist groups, organizers trying to fight back against this. There’s multiple, multiple incredible stories of local anti-fascist and local LGBT groups turning up when Patriot Alternative try to picket drag queens reading stories at the local library. This is the ground upon which there is actually some good news. But I don’t think the Starmerite Labour Party has any real answer for this sort of populist, vicious, reactionary politics.
Mel Buer: You’re speaking to the choir here. We’ve been dealing with essentially the exact same conditions in the United States. And in the United States, the Democratic Party puts out their statements and their thoughts and prayers and whatever else you want to call it, these hollow comments and commentary that do nothing to actually secure the protections and the rights of the people who are under assault from very dangerous and very scary factions of the right, the conservative factions, the conservative Christian factions in this country.
And I think we talk a lot about these reactions to the economic… Well, I don’t want to reduce this to just economic conditions because it’s a far more complex talk topic than that. But I think it’s important to end this conversation with a good chunk of time spent on… I don’t even necessarily want to call it a reaction in another direction, but I do want to highlight the ways in which there are certain cultural and political movements happening in both of our respective countries that is cause for hope and optimism in the face of such extreme conditions.
I know in the UK what this looks like is a renewed labor movement and labor actions that have had impact on working communities all across the UK in the last year. Also, this increasing influence of labor unions in the wider political project. And hopefully this means that they can be a group that can continue to have an impact in policy making, and at the very least be a group of individuals, working people in general who can’t be ignored by any government. Do you want to just give us a little…
Jon Greenaway: Yeah, there’s a couple of things… There’s a couple of things I think are really important to mention right at the top: there’s an increasingly active anti-raids network in the UK. So one of the things that the home office will do in terms of chasing immigrants is do what they call “raids” on a neighborhood where they’ll turn up, they’ll arrest everybody, they’ll demand to see papers, if you don’t have papers, you get taken away. And so it started in London, it’s appeared in lots of other cities now, this anti-raids network where people will turn up, will blockade doors, will get people out of their homes, will keep them safe.
I think maybe a really good example of this is it happened in Glasgow, and honestly it’s a really moving story, if you look it up there. A few guys were held in an immigration van and essentially the entire community, hundreds of people came out. People laid under the wheels of the van to keep the people who live in their neighborhood in their neighborhood. And I think it’s a beautiful example of, if we keep each other safe, the motto of the story. So the anti-raids network I think is a great thing, and I think that’s going to continue to grow.
I think increasingly there are problems within it and potential issues that could come up, but I think the increasing militancy of trade unions is an unequivocally good thing because it’s an empowering thing for working people to see that they can exercise their own political agency. Political agency doesn’t have to be deferred to an identitarian label of which party do you vote for? And political agency can be something more than just something that happens every five years when the state tells you you’re allowed to vote now. So the wave of strikes has had some notable successes, it’s had points at which contradictions have heightened, and there needs to be more trade union militancy to bring that to a point. So I think those are two really important movements that have to be nurtured.
The third thing that I want to mention is, and this is maybe a job for people who write and think about politics and count themselves on the left, is the importance of capturing and retelling a history of British radicalism. So I do want to mention a really great book that just came out recently by Alex Niven called The North Will Rise Again, and it’s about the counter histories and cultural histories, specifically of the North of England, and the ways in which they expose the fractures of England as a unified political project.
So the thing that I would really love to see more of in the next few years is serious talk about the structure of the United Kingdom. I think devolution is not going to go away, and it is an opportunity to think about how do we create a country that is not so economically skewed towards the South, and that doesn’t necessarily have to subscribe to this project that’s been knitted together over centuries of violence and domination?
So those are three things that I think have to be fostered and encouraged. The first two are about rediscovering a sense of political agency in the moment, and that third point is about the importance of recuperating a sense of historical possibility. If you look back at the radical history of the country, you see the moment when things could have been otherwise. And if we’re concerned about trying to create a potential better future, then we have to nurture that hope as well, that militant hope, that optimism, that is both the pessimism and optimism that goes together with being a leftist. We have to have this belief that, actually, in the past there were these moments of possibility that maybe they failed, but they were never extinguished entirely. And so what that means is that there is the potential to make a better future.
There’s a great Welsh historian called Gwyn Williams who said that he wrote a book called When Was Wales? He said Wales is always being made, and it’s made by the people who live there, if they choose to do it. And the point is like, well, what is Britain? What is English politics? And it’s like, well, it’s made by the people. And so I think those are three things that I think are really important to hang on to. The first two are very practical involved in on the ground organizing and actually trying to build some sense of class consciousness in the moment. But that third one is about looking back to the possibilities of maybe even very recent history and actually using those as catalytic for understanding the possibility of the future.
Mel Buer: That, I think, is a great end point that we can get to with this conversation. That is all the time that we have today. Thank you again, Jon, for joining us. It’s always a joy, and I always come away from our conversations feeling 50 times smarter. So thank you for joining us, and we want you back on this program, anytime you want to join to talk about anything, not just UK politics, but whatever writing you’ve got going on. I really appreciate you taking the time to speak with me today. Can you just let folks know where to find you, your podcast, your other writing…? Take it away, drop some links.
Jon Greenaway: Yeah, you can find me on social media @thelitcritguy. I have a couple of books coming out next year which I’m working on at the moment, and people can get sneak peeks of those over on patreon.com/thelitcritguy. I am the co-host of a podcast about media analysis, horror movies, and radical politics. So if you like that, please do check out Horror Vanguard wherever you get your podcasts from. And yeah, thank you so, so much for having me on the show.
Mel Buer: That’s it for us here at The Real News Network podcast. Once again, I’m Mel Buer, associate editor at The Real News. Feel free to follow us on your favorite social media as we continue to bring you independent, ad-free journalism. Until next time.
The Tory government has confirmed that it’s letting train operators close countless rail ticket offices across England. The plans were originally leaked by campaign group the Association of British Commuters (ABC). However, much of the corporate media has absolved the government of responsibility in this – framing the train operators as wholly responsible.
Ticket office closures: greenlit by the Tories
As the Canary previously reported, the ABC leaked the news on 26 June that transport secretary Mark Harper was about to green-light train operators mass-closing ticket offices. This has been on the cards since at least September 2022. The Sunday Telegraph reported at the time that the government was changing East Midlands Railway’s contract – ‘hardwiring’ ticket office closures into it as part of its broader industry plans. The paper also reported back then:
sources saying the conditions will be replicated across the country.
Train operators and the government argue that only 12% of people buy tickets via station offices. However, many of these are likely to be disabled people or other marginalised groups. Disability rights activist Paula Peters previously told the Canary:
Taking away ticket offices is another barrier to exclude and marginalise disabled people from travelling, ticket machines are often broken and inaccessible to use, visually impaired people can’t use ticket machines and many with a learning impairment can’t either.
The story has been widely reported in the corporate media. Sky Newsnoted that:
the Rail Delivery Group (RDG), which represents the train companies, is due to unveil the proposals in an attempt to save money in the wake of the COVID pandemic causing a drop in revenue.
Train operators told staff on Wednesday morning of proposals to shut down almost all of the 1,007 remaining offices, bar at the busiest stations, within three years.
However, some of the mainstream media failed to mention that the closures were not only a government plan, but that it also has the power to stop them.
For example, not once in the BBC‘s article did it state that the idea came from the Tory government, nor that it had to approve it before train operators could make the closures. The Independent did similar, putting the blame on the RDG. Meanwhile, the Times went further – not only failing to mention the government’s role (except in quotes from opposition voices) but also calling the passenger-led ABC a “lobby group”.
Even allegedly left-leaning media’s reporting of ticket office closures was limp, at best. The Guardiannoted that the plan had been “pushed by the government to save costs”. The Mirror was more robust – placing the blame squarely at the Tories’ door. It noted that a public consultation the government will be running could derail the plans.
However, nearly all the corporate media failed to mention there is a legal case for stopping the Tories and train operators closing stations.
the ORR informed us that it “has not seen any plans or given assurances on any matter connected with [the closures].” The EHRC also confirmed that it had been excluded from these discussions despite recently meeting with the Department for Transport (DfT) about railway destaffing. Experts believe that “this alone raises serious questions about whether the DfT has been following due process regarding its public sector equality duty.” They say: “Unless the ORR acts immediately, the process will go forward without adequate equality assurances, and without the necessary retail and accessibility mitigations in place.”
It went further in its open letter, stating that if the ORR and EHRC believed the government had breached its public sector equality duty, then the two organisations:
must now take urgent action, including a public position on whether accessibility and retail mitigations are ready to go forward. If they do not believe this to be the case, they should call for an immediate pause to proceedings and prepare to make use of their full regulatory powers to intervene. This is the only way to ensure that rail modernisation plans are properly regulated and consistent with the public sector equality duty to ‘eliminate discrimination’ and ‘advance equality of opportunity.’
In other words, the regulators could stop the ticket office closures in their tracks. As of 4pm on 5 July, the ORR had begun to intervene:
BREAKING: @railandroad has demanded oversight of all train operator destaffing plans. TOCs now have until 21 July to prove they are in compliance.
— Association of British Commuters (@ABCommuters) July 5, 2023
No care for disabled and marginalised people
Of course, for much of the corporate media, reporting on the fact that the Tories’ decision could potentially be unlawful is clearly a step too far. Alternatively, not giving the public this information is either an oversight, or a failure by journalists to grasp the complexities of the situation.
Either way, the government and private train operators are pushing through one of the biggest changes in the rail network’s history. Yet some of the corporate media is failing in its duty to properly report on this. Disabled, chronically ill, and other marginalised people will bear the brunt of this disastrous decision. However, that fact seems to have escaped some journalists – because if it hadn’t, they’d have thoroughly pulled apart the Tories’ toxic plans.
On Tuesday 4 July, Lewes Crown Court fined Thames Water £3.3m for polluting rivers. The company pleaded guilty to pumping millions of litres of undiluted sewage into rivers near Gatwick Airport in 2017.
Cathryn Ross, interim co-CEO of Thames Water, said:
We are deeply sorry for the entirely unacceptable pollution incident into the Gatwick Stream and River Mole six years ago. It should not have happened, and we deeply regret the incident.
Ross has replaced Sarah Bentley, who resigned as CEO on 27 June.
Empty promises
The UK’s private water companies have pledged to make investments to prevent our rivers being polluted (at bill payers’ expense), but they continue to pump extensive amounts of raw sewage into our rivers.
Thames Water was already fined a massive £20m back in March 2017 after it polluted the river Thames multiple times. Meanwhile, the Guardian recently reported that the number of leaking pipes managed by Thames Water is the highest it has been in five years. So, seemingly nothing has changed for Thames Water in the past six years.
Meanwhile, the BBC stated that the country’s water companies pumped raw sewage into rivers and seas 825 times a day on average in 2022. Companies released sewage for 1.75m hours throughout that year.
The public pays the cost
Not for the first time, Thames Water has announced that it will spend significant amounts of money to upgrade its infrastructure. However, campaigners are outraged that this cost will be passed onto consumers.
Water bills across the country could surge 40% by 2030 to fund infrastructure works. This news comes amid mounting concerns over water quality and laxer environmental protections post-Brexit.
Despite this, shareholders will continue to profit. The Guardian has reported that:
Plus, water company bosses continue to rake in the money through wages and extortionate bonuses, despite being completely incompetent at their jobs.
Renationalisation
Thames Water could come under temporary renationalisation as it drowns in almost £14 billion worth of debt. But this isn’t the right solution: we need water companies to be permanently nationalised. The Canary’s Maryam Jameela hit the nail on the head when he said:
Thames Water is just the latest company that’s supposed to be offering a public service but has put profit over people. The government should be permanently bringing these greedy companies under public control. Don’t hold your breath though – unless you’re in sewage-infested waters.
As it scrambles to find £1 billion in equity, it remains to be seen whether Thames Water can salvage itself. It isn’t the only water company to be in substantial debt. Since Margaret Thatcher sold our water industry to private hands back in 1989, privatisation has been a disaster. A new buyer for Thames Water will not be any kind of solution. We need to renationalise our water companies now, for the public’s sake, and most of all, for the environment’s sake.
Striking staff at Brighton University took their campaign to an international conference on Tuesday 4 July. It was over a senior manager’s keynote speech, given on the same day he announced the names of 25 professors he and his bosses are forcing redundancy upon. So, staff made a point of raising the issue outside of campus walls – and got support from some well-known academics in the process. Plus, all this comes as some staff have also just started an indefinite strike.
Brighton University: what a mess management has made
As the Canary has been documenting, bosses at Brighton University are making over 100 staff redundant. PhD researcher at Brighton UniversityKathryn Zacharek has been writing from the frontline of the dispute for us – and she’s laid out how the institution is now a mess. For example, bosses are closing parts of it while spending massive amounts of money elsewhere. Most concerningly, Zacharek previously noted that the university:
intends to make 110 academics and 30 professional staff redundant, all in a bid to save almost £18m
Bosses say these pressures include the government freezing regulated tuition fees, and inflation. However, people are finding it difficult to believe this, given that the university has spaffed £17m on buying out the Virgin Active lease of sports facilities on one of the campuses.
Since the Canary last reported on the situation at Brighton University, its branch of the University and College Union (UCU) has told us that 80 academic staff have agreed to voluntary redundancy. In spite of this, staff and students alike have been fighting back against the bosses’ plans.
Brighton University UCU told the Canary that, on 4 July, staff protested against the redundancies at the European Congress of Psychology, which was taking place at the Brighton Centre. The reason for the demonstration was the presence of the university’s pro-vice chancellor for research, professor Rusi Jaspal. He was delivering a keynote speech at the conference.
However, this came on the same day as Jaspal helped decide which professors are to be included in the 25 compulsory redundancies bosses are making:
We now know why @ProfRJaspal had to leave #ECP2023. It was to attend a management meeting where they were choosing the final 25 people to be made redundant. He was just popping out to try to ruin 25 people's lives. If you see him at the conference please tell him what you think https://t.co/BhUVX13W6Z
So, staff held a demo outside the conference centre to make their feelings clear:
Jaspal is a member of the senior team of vice chancellor Debra Humphris. Staff members’ list of grievances against her is long, including closing the Hastings and Eastbourne Campus while getting a CBE from the state – for what, you’d rightly ask. Moreover, 94% of staff and students recently voted that they have no confidence in Humphris:
Interestingly for Brighton University staff (and unfortunately for Jaspal), other academics speaking at the conference voiced their support for the people protesting. These included professor Kate Pickett (co-author of The Spirit Level and The Inner Level) and Serdar Değirmencioğlu (co-author of Social and Psychological Dimensions of Personal Debt and the Debt Industry). Brighton UCU told the Canary that both academics “directly called out the treatment of staff by management”:
Chair of Brighton University UCU Dr Mark Abel said in a statement:
Professor Jaspal has been taunting staff threatened with redundancy with comments on Twitter about ‘resilience during crises’. He flaunts his champagne lifestyle while Brighton lecturers suffer 100% deductions in their pay for participating in the union’s national marking boycott. It’s a disgrace that he is given a platform to talk about his own research when he is responsible for slashing the research funding for the rest of the staff at Brighton University.
The university has accepted 80 applications for voluntary redundancy from academic staff. This level of shrinkage will produce huge financial savings. Sacking a further 25 lecturers and professors is completely unnecessary. Not only does it steal the livelihoods of the staff affected, it will undermine the breadth and quality of the education the university offers to students.
But the protest at the conference was just another part of staff and student’s fightback.
Brighton University is closed
Brighton University UCU members began an indefinite strike against the proposed redundancies on Monday 3 July. They said in a statement that unless management drop the compulsory redundancies:
no preparation for the new academic year will take place and the autumn term will not start.
Today our members start indefinite strike action that will shut @uniofbrighton until every single compulsory redundancy is off the table. There will be no beginning of the academic year without our talented staff. With your support we will #SaveBrightonUnihttps://t.co/bAtulsN6wx
So far, bosses are refusing to budge. With Brighton University potentially closed for the new academic year due to the strike, you’d think they’d have to change tack soon.
However, the current carnage in higher education – thanks to years of government malpractice and university bosses’ profiteering – may mean this impasse between staff, students, and bosses won’t be resolved anytime soon.
And why should it be? When young peoples’ education – and workers’ livelihoods – are on the line, resistance is the only option. Management needs to change course immediately – or face the consequences.
Featured image via Brighton UCU, and additional images via Bee Dabrowska
The Tory government is already considering a real-terms benefits cut in April 2024. It could hit people claiming things like Universal Credit. This is because the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is reportedly thinking about only increasing benefits next year in line with wage increases – not inflation. The news comes off the back of this year’s ‘increase’ also not being enough to cover the cost of rising prices.
Working age benefits could be cut in real terms as part of the Government’s drive to reduce public spending and fund tax cuts…
Whitehall sources have told The Telegraph that ministers are considering uprating benefits in line with earnings instead of inflation next year, in a move that could save £1 billion.
Health-related benefits like Personal Independence Payments (PIP) are excluded from this. However, what this means is that any DWP increase in benefits like Universal Credit next April won’t keep up with rising prices. Therefore, as the Telegraph notes, the department will be forcing a real-terms benefits cut on people. It said that:
inflation currently stands at 8.7 per cent with regular pay rising by 7.2 per cent.
Currently, the government is pushing the idea that rising wages are causing inflation to stay high. Health secretary Steve Barclay said as much recently as a reason not to meet NHS junior doctors’ demands of a 35% pay increase. The capitalist International Monetary Fund (IMF) has agreed. So, on this basis, the Tories will be aiming to see reduced wage growth for the rest of the year.
Some forecasts put inflation at 5% by the end of 2023. If the government gets its way, this means pay will be rising by less than 5% – so benefits will go up by whatever amount that is. This will be disastrous for millions of families.
Universal Credit consistently lower
April 2023’s DWP benefits increase wasn’t really an increase at all. As the Canary previously reported, all the department did was take things like Universal Credit back to the value they were in April 2022:
That is, if you’re on Universal Credit, your money will only be worth what it was a year ago. This is because everything is now more expensive.
We also noted that actually, benefits still weren’t worth as much in real terms as they were before the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. So, given that this year’s rise wasn’t a meaningful one at all, the DWP will leave people even worse off in April 2024 if it fails to increase benefits in line with inflation.
Astonishingly, it is not until April 2025 that benefit rates are set to recover the ground they lost over the autumn and winter of 2021
That is, benefits will not be worth what they were before the pandemic, in real terms, until April 2025.
However, the IFS’s assessment was based on the DWP increasing benefits like Universal Credit in line with inflation each April. Now, with the department eyeing up only raising them in line with wages from April 2024, it is likely that they will not return to their pre-pandemic value until at least 2026.
Jumping through ever-tightening hoops
All this comes after years of freezes and real-term cuts to benefit rates since 2016. Yet the Tories are still hell-bent on penalising people claiming social security anyway – under the guise of saving £1bn. This amount of money is, of course, a drop in the ocean of overall welfare expenditure. £1bn is also nothing in terms of the record-breaking public debt the Tories have racked up on all our behalf. In fact, it’s just 0.04% of the £2.6tn the government owes.
So, the DWP pushing another real-terms benefits cut can only be seen as one thing: ideological. It’s a continuation of the ‘benefit scrounger’ narrative successive governments have pushed for years. Another real-terms benefit cut also plays into the Tories’ current drive to force as many people into work as possible – regardless of whether they can actually work or not. However, ultimately it is – as the Canary has repeatedlysaid – the DWP working as intended.
There’s no such thing as a social security net in the UK. There are ever-tightening hoops people have to jump through, just to barely survive – all whilst politicians are determined to make people reliant on benefits an underclass in the UK.
Featured image via VideoBlogg Productions/the Canary and Wikimedia
The now-infamous Bibby Stockholm barge is currently moored in Falmouth, Cornwall. The Tory government plans on using it to detain hundreds of refugees. However, since it arrived on the south west coast, activists have made it clear the barge is not welcome in Cornwall – and they’ve continued to protest its presence despite cops “harassing” them.
Meanwhile, 40 organisations – including the Refugee Council – have signed an open letter to the Bibby Stockholm’s owner. It highlights the company’s links to the slave trade – and also calls out its current association with “quasi-detention”.
Cornwall: currently home to the Bibby Stockholm
As the Canary previously reported, the Home Office is planning to forcibly detain around 500 male refugees on the Bibby Stockholm. This is despite Dutch authorities’ alleged human rights abuses aboard the vessel when its government used it to detain refugees in the 2000s. The UK government’s plans have also prompted outrage from groups like Amnesty International.
However, while a company refits the Bibby Stockholm in Cornwall, local people and campaign groups have not let its presence go by quietly. They have repeatedlyprotested it being there, and what it represents. This included a week of resistance, and ‘redecorating’ the premises of A&P, the company refitting the barge:
Massive love to the legends who splattered A&p building last night with red paint. According to a statement received by Cornwall Resists, the building was "redecorated with red paint to symbolise the racist border violence that's led to the death of thousands of people.” pic.twitter.com/fstRVOyB5W
Cornwall Resists is a network of grassroots anti-fascist groups in the county. As the Canary has documented, it has been prominent in resisting both the far-right and the state’s racist abuse of refugees in Cornwall. The group has also been at the forefront of the resistance to the Bibby Stockholm. So, on 30 June, it and other campaigners once again made some noise.
Direct action, and cops siding with corporations
The group said in a press release:
Cornwall Resists delivered a loud and clear message to A&P workers currently refitting the Bibby Stockholm refugee prison ship: lay down your tools! The noise demo was part of a protest that marched through Falmouth making it clear that Cornwall will not be complicit in border violence.
The protest was originally called as an emergency demo as the Bibby was listed as leaving on shipping websites. However, campaigners decided to continue with their plans to protest once it was clear this was not happening, and to take their message of resistance straight to A&P.
As Cornwall Livereported, activists marched through Falmouth before going to A&P’s premises. However, cops were on hand to “protect” the company:
On Friday we told A&P loudly and clearly what we think of them refitting the Bibby Stockholm refugee prison ship, and we had a message for the workers – “lay down your tools!”.
— Cornwall Resists (@CornwallResists) July 2, 2023
Cornwall Resists said in a press release:
Campaigners have also accused the police of harassment after several incidents that included contacting one campaigner on their personal number and turning up to a public meeting. Despite police claims that they want to facilitate protest, their actions at the protest on Friday made it clear that they are only interested in protecting A&P.
The police were not present during the protests in town, but only attended at A&P, and only cared about whether protesters crossed an invisible line on the road where it becomes A&P property.
When Pendennis workers, who were not connected to A&P, came to speak to protesters to ask them to let them leave, the police attempted to physically stop campaigners from talking to them. Despite this aggression, Cornwall Resists were able to talk to the workers, and immediately moved to allow them to leave.
Of course, cops in Cornwall siding with the racist state and its proponents like A&P is nothing new. They had already targeted Cornwall Resists’ meeting about its Bibby Stockholm action:
Devon and Cornwall cops decided it was a good idea to harass us at our public meeting to #SinkTheBibby. But this is how Kernow responds to police harassment! pic.twitter.com/DayU5ghqu2
The Bibby Stockholm remains moored in Falmouth. Campaigners are unclear when it will be leaving for its final destination in Dorset. A spokesperson for Cornwall Resists said:
The resistance to the Bibby Stockholm and refugee prison ships is growing. Most people do not agree with this government’s hostile environment policy – they want to see refugees and asylum seekers treated with empathy and respect, not locked up on boats or in camps.
Those seeking sanctuary have made incredibly traumatic journeys to get here, often fleeing from wars the UK has perpetrated or from devastation caused by bombs manufactured by UK companies. Many of those who’ll be imprisoned on the Bibby will already have suffered immense sea-related trauma, and it is utterly obscene and heartbreaking to think they’ll then face being imprisoned on a boat.
Meanwhile, 40 organisations including the Refugee Council have published their open letter to Bibby Marine, the barge’s owner. You can read it in full here. It said:
We… believe that your company’s alleged historical association with the slave trade makes it all the more important that you reflect deeply on whether a contract which leads to the effective detention of people fleeing war and persecution is where your company wishes to position itself in 2023.
Links between your parent company Bibby Line Group (BLG) and the slave trade have repeatedly been made. If true, we appeal to you to consider what actions you might take in recompense.
Cornwall’s and the broader resistance to the Bibby Stockholm cannot be viewed in isolation. It may seem bizarre that an inanimate floating vessel can be the subject of such anger. However – like slave trader statues, banks, or parliament itself – it is what the Bibby Stockholm represents that makes it a target.
Cornwall Resists’ actions serve to highlight the colonialist, racist, and classist government policies that allow it to be in Falmouth in the first place.
A Black youth worker who was Tasered by police has lost his fight for damages in court. Edwin Afriyie was stopped for alleged speeding whilst driving in Central London. Officers claimed that Afriyie took up a “fighting stance” before they tasered him. This was later shown to be an outright lie.
Afriyie made a malfeasance allegation against Central London Police. He also claimed to have suffered back, head and knee injuries during the incident. Police body-worn camera footage clearly shows Afriyie falling backwards after being tasered. He landed with his head against the hard edge of a stone ledge. Medical evidence suggested that he suffered a head injury and was knocked unconscious.
The judge, Henrietta Hill, declared that the police were “objectively reasonable” in their belief that the use of the taser was necessary.
Police lied
In a common occurrence with our corrupt police force, the officers’ original claims regarding Afriyie’s behaviour toward them turned out to be a fabrication. Police statements held that he had been “steeling himself to attack officers”.
However, body camera footage showed Afriyie was standing with his arms crossed. Officers had encircled him at some distance, and were shouting orders. City of London Police denied liability for Afriyie’s claims of assault and battery. They also claimed that the use of force was “necessary and reasonable”.
Hill ruled that the footage showed Afriyie had done “no such thing” as adopting a fighting stance. Looking at the footage, he didn’t do so “at any point in the incident”. In turn, she said that this warranted “justifiable concern” that the officers colluded to overstate Afriyie’s aggression.
Reasonable belief
However, and in spite of acknowledging that the police had fabricated their reasons for tasering Afriyie, Hill still ruled to dismiss his claims of assault and malfeasance.
David Hughes, Afriyie’s barrister, argued that the use of the taser was not in response to an “identified threat”. He also argued that the use of tasers should be proportionate and lawful.
Mr Hughes submitted that I should find as a fact that nothing was about to happen that necessitated the use of force.
He may be right that nothing would, in fact, have happened had the Taser not been discharged.
However what matters is whether [the officer’s] belief in what might happen, so as to justify the use of the Taser, was objectively reasonable.
Let’s be clear here. Afriyie was stood with his arms crossed. He made no move against the officers, nor did he look set to “at any point”. Instead, the police lied in their statements. They did so to cover up the fact that they tasered a stationary Black man.
Still, the judge ruled in their favour.
Racism in action
White supremacy primes Western society in the belief that a motionless Black man surrounded by police is “steeling himself” to attack. Likewise, because of this belief, police can be sure that – even when they know they’re recording themselves – their claims of aggression will be tolerated.
As this case so aptly demonstrated, we are also primed for the belief that the preemptive use of force is reasonable. And, if all the police have to do is prove their “belief in what might happen” in order to justify the use of force, they will continue to win their cases. It will always be a justifiable belief that a Black man might attack if standing whilst being Black is an act of aggression.
We know already, and have seen over and over again, that our police force is racist at its core. Afriyie’s case was a clear demonstration of the way in which our justice system aids and abets the police in their racism. Root and branch, this system is beyond reform or redemption.
In March 2023, we reported on a new activist group called Housing Rebellion. Now, it will be making itself known to even more people on Saturday 8 July when it takes part in a national Day of Action. The event seeks to draw attention to the housingcrisis and the many issues around it.
Housing Rebellion is a new offshoot of Extinction Rebellion (XR). The group exists to highlight the fact that many of the anti-tenant policies that landlords get away with are also having an enormous impact on the environment.
Now, and in a press release for the upcoming action, it states:
On Saturday July 8th 2023, residents and housing campaigners across the UK are organising a day of local actions and protests, to highlight the links between the climate crisis and the UK’s broken housing system.
Groups as far apart as Glasgow, Cornwall, and Birmingham will be demanding an end to the injustice, environmental destruction and greed that together fuel our housing crisis.
There are currently over 250,000 long-term empty homes in the UK which the group says “could be used to provide secure” accommodation.
Housing: linked to environmental justice
Besides solving the issue of homelessness, it’s argued that this would be the best option for the environment. Backing this point up, Housing Rebellion highlights a quote from Carl Elefante (former president of the American Institute of Architects):
The greenest building is the one that already exists.
A report by the US National Trust for Historic Preservation in 2016 found, through a series of case studies, that ‘it takes between 10 and 80 years for a new building that is 30 per cent more efficient than an average-performing existing building to overcome, through efficient operations, the negative climate change impacts related to the construction process’.
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The report concluded that ‘reusing an existing building and upgrading it to be as efficient as possible is almost always the best choice regardless of building type and climate’.
Housing Rebellion has further highlighted what it refers to as the “root causes of housing and environmental injustice”:
The Day of Action will be drawing attention to the social and environmental impact of profit-driven development, and campaigners are demanding that everyone have access to secure, affordable, warm, dry homes that are energy efficient.
Protests and actions will be focusing on the root causes of housing and environmental injustice in the UK, including :
High housing costs – mortgages, rents, service charges and energy bills – across all sectors.
A private rental market stacked in favour of landlords, with no requirement to insulate or reduce energy bills without also increasing people’s rents.
Over-development, including destruction of green spaces, to build unaffordable new private housing, while social housing numbers are diminished.
Council housing – our most affordable form of social housing – needlessly being destroyed in catastrophic social cleansing/demolition schemes.
Disrepair, damp, and mould plaguing all sectors of UK housing, with no funding provided by government, or required from landlords, to raise standards on energy efficiency or fire safety. Meanwhile, the UK has some of the most poorly insulated housing in Europe.
Perverse tax incentives diverting much needed housing to be Air B&Bs or holiday homes.
Cross-campaign support
Other groups involved in organising the Day of Action include:
Trade union and estate-based campaigns such as Greenwich and Bexley Trades Union Council and Save Central Hill Estate and Wyndford Residents Union.
London
Housing Rebellion describes London as “a key battleground, with residents fighting to save their communities, battling against councils, housing associations and developers, all trying to capitalise on land values”. It adds that unnecessary “demolition is causing untold damage to the climate, as well as shrinking the supply of social housing”. The group notes:
Why is London blighted with such high levels of homelessness, alongside so much unnecessary demolition, with so many thousands of homes sitting empty?
Crisis estimates there will be 300,000 homeless people in the UK every night this year. Millions more are struggling to keep up with the rising cost of housing whether that’s rents, mortgages or energy bills.
Meanwhile, there are over 250,000 long-term empty homes in the UK which could be used to provide secure housing.
Action will take place in several areas. These include Bexley, Islington, Haringey, Kensington, Lambeth, Wandsworth, Merton, and Southwark. Housing Rebellion provides examples of the problems faced by these areas, including Lambeth:
Lambeth Council are pressing on with controversial demolition projects as part of their failed ‘Homes for Lambeth’ scheme, in spite of Sir Bob Kerslake’s damning 2022 report into the chronic levels of mismanagement and waste involved. Demolition and rebuilding here will lead to a loss of social housing.
On Central Hill Estate 80-100 properties are sitting empty.
Lambeth are spending at least £14 million on demolishing and rebuilding one block, which was supposed to be the first of many. According to Central Hill resident Sabine: “The council could have used that £14 million to refurbish and retrofit 80 of the empty properties here – that’s £175,000 per property – a huge amount. Then they’d have 80 council flats forever, which could house families in need and generate income for the council. What they’re doing now makes no sense whatsoever.”
Nationwide action
Housing Rebellion has “produced an action pack about the link between housing and environmental issues and the types of actions people can take”.
Planned actions for 8 July include:
Glasgow (Wyndford Estate green area, Glasgow G20 8EZ from 12pm until late).
Bexley (1pm to 3pm Church of the Cross, Lensbury Way, London SE2 9UE).
Southwark (Assembling 11am outside E&C leisure centre, St Mary’s Churchyard, Newington Butts, SE1 6SQ).
Islington (11.30am Wellington Mews, Roman Way N7 5SQ).
St. Ives, Cornwall (St Ives Harbour from 1pm).
Harlow (protest at 2pm, Obelisk, Broadwalk, Harlow town centre).
Folkestone (Campaigners in Folkestone are supporting a new play called Fleecehold at The Green Room, The Grand, The Leas, Folkestone, Kent from 7pm followed by a Q&A about leasehold with the NLC founders. Fleecehold is a dark political comedy exploring the unfair and exploitative power imbalance affecting 10 million leaseholders including those trapped by the cladding scandal).
The NHS is fast approaching its 75th Anniversary. So, what better way to celebrate that milestone than with a bone-headed article from the media’s shallowest thinker Laura Kuenssberg? The article in question is titled Love it or hate it, the NHS is here to stay, and somehow the piece only gets worse from there.
What?
Many people’s jaws hit the floor when they read the article’s title:
Who hates it??? It’s a vital public service that has been vilified in the unnecessary and hateful pursuit of profit. No one hates it unless they are in a position to profit from others’ ill health.
The British have a love-hate relationship with the NHS.
Do we? Because no one I’ve ever met has hated it (although, then again, I don’t spend my life surrounded by Oxbridge media freaks and right-wing policy wonks). If you’re worried this opening gambit goes unexplained, fear not. Although the explanation is somehow worse than the statement:
Kuenssberg’s statement is like saying that people have a ‘love-hate relationship’ with boats because they love sailing but they hate being shipwrecked.
It’s like saying people have a ‘love-hate relationship’ with the environment because they love long walks but they hate that Canada is on fire.
It’s like saying people have a ‘love-hate relationship’ with the concept of homes because they like having somewhere warm to sleep but they hate paying their landlord £2,000 a month for the pleasure.
Her statement is so monumentally stupid that it’s forced us to reevaluate our entire operation here at the Canary.
We’ve been reporting on Kuenssberg’s idiocy for years, and if even we didn’t realise she was this colossally vacant, what does that say about us? Before everyone else caught up and saw Kuenssberg for the establishment stooge she is, we were regularly slammed for our strident criticism of her. Now it seems like we were giving her too much credit if anything; that we were overestimating her abilities.
As the NHS approaches its 75th anniversary, politicians are falling over themselves to praise the service.
But when the cameras aren’t rolling, the message you hear can be a very different one. Just like us, politicians have a love-hate relationship with the NHS.
Oh good lord, here we go again.
She can’t be for real, can she?
Anyone with a modicum of common sense understands that the greedy little piggies in charge have nothing but contempt for their golden goose.
Kuenssberg’s statement is like saying that poachers have a ‘love-hate relationship’ with elephants because they love their tusks but they hate them being alive.
It’s like saying fast fashion brands have a ‘love-hate relationship’ with sweatshop workers because they love poverty wages but they hate health and safety laws.
It’s like saying mainstream British journalists have a ‘love-hate relationship’ with the truth because they love selling themselves as truth-tellers but they hate actually telling it:
The NHS has practically universal support in British society.
Only a tiny fringe of right-wing head bangers want to scrap the NHS.
So why does the BBC think it's justified to suggest NHS is like Marmite in public opinion?https://t.co/aVDFqWjJv3
Kuenssberg says “The British have a love-hate relationship with the NHS” – what?!
And then peddles a series of unnamed (mainly Tory) figures expressing their frustration at discussing… alternatives. ie – pitch-rolling privatisation. https://t.co/pQ6JMqRcoq
— Dr Mike Galsworthy (@mikegalsworthy) July 1, 2023
My Mother has worked in the NHS for over thirty years. I know people whose lives have been saved by our NHS.
To a person the majority of people love the NHS & are proud of it
But the Tory mouthpiece Laura Kuenssberg here is trying to persuade you otherwise
— Mirabel:Calling Out Bollocks (@LunaSpencer16) July 1, 2023
The British Bollocks Corporation
Would you believe me if I said the rest of Kuenssberg’s article was just random letters, as if she’d repeatedly banged her head against the keyboard? That’s not true, but it might as well be given that she reported things like this (largely from politicians she afforded the privilege of anonymity, of course):
A former minister says rather than go for bold reforms after the pandemic “we have gone straight back to the voodoo land of heroic pointless commitments that will never get met because as a country we are so ill”.
Another suggests ministers are actually scared of telling the public hard truths about increasing cost pressures in the health service. “The public has unrealistic expectations of what we can deliver – the government is frightened of that,” they say.
The only ‘hard truth’ you need to know is this. The NHS isn’t unaffordable, and neither are public services in general. What’s happening is these vital institutions suffer yearly funding decreases while the wealth of the rich just keeps growing. Ever heard of ‘trickle down economics’? It’s like that, except the wealth is flooding upwards. What’s going down, though, are all the services that said wealth used to fund.
There’s a reason why Kuenssberg’s article is filled with quotes from anonymous politicians but not regular members of the public. That’s because she’s never spoken to the latter. If she had, she’d maybe have a view of the world that wasn’t shaped by the whisperings of the nation’s most notorious bullshitters. Then again, maybe not. She really doesn’t have much going on upstairs.
Really, what we need moving forwards is a ‘love-hate relationship’ with billionaires – one in which we hate the fact they exist, but we love re-directing their undeserved wealth back into the public sector.
Following on from this May’s March for Independence in Wales, YesCymru and All Under One Banner Cymru (AUOBCymru) have announced their next mass movement. It will take place on 23 September. Organisers are urging potential attendees to join them in order to “help shape the future of a new Wales“:
The Canary reported on the then-upcoming May march in Wales earlier this year. At the time, Namoi Hughes of YesCymru said:
This is going to be a great march with outstanding speakers in the rally afterwards. The marches are a wonderful opportunity for those of us who have realised that Independence is the key to a better future for Wales and for the children of Wales, to come together and share our passion for our nation and to campaign for the freedom we need. I’m really looking forward to it!
Independence isn’t about creating division. It’s about celebrating our unique place in the world. It’s about becoming part of the international family of nations. https://t.co/4k7gIPr7FFpic.twitter.com/3gTvXMgzJG
In a press release for the upcoming march, organisers said:
YesCymru and All Under One Banner Cymru (AUOBCymru) are excited to announce that the next March for Independence will be held in Bangor in twelve weeks’ time on Saturday, September 23rd. With the latest polling indicating support for independence at 34%, and following the success of the March for Independence in Swansea earlier this year, where over 7,000 marched for an independent Wales, this forthcoming march aims to further galvanise the movement for an independent Wales.
The polling in question discounts ‘don’t knows’ to arrive at the 34% figure, and was conducted on 17 to 18 June. Also in the press release, it’s stated:
Supporters are invited to gather at Glanrafon Car Park from 12pm onwards, with the march officially starting at 1pm. Marchers are encouraged to bring flags, banners, whistles, drums, and, above all, their family and friends.
Cymru has an ‘opportunity’
Geraint Thomas of YesCymru has said of the event:
We are delighted to announce that the next March for Independence will be held in Bangor on September 23rd. This march presents an opportunity for supporters of Welsh independence – as well as those who want to learn more – to come together, united in our common goal of creating a better Wales. We have witnessed the power of collective action through previous marches, and we believe that this march will further amplify our voices and inspire positive change.
David Evans of AUOBCymru added:
Throughout history, UK governments of all political hues have neglected Wales, relegating us to, at best, an afterthought. It has become painfully clear that the UK political establishment is resistant to meaningful change. We are not campaigning for independence for its own sake, but rather because we wish to create a better Wales for all who live here. We therefore encourage everyone who shares our vision to join us in Bangor on September 23rd and help shape the future of a new Wales.
The groups provide additional information on how interested parties can keep up to date with the movement:
More information about the March for Independence in Bangor, including updates and other details, will soon be available on the websites of YesCymru (www.yes.cymru) and AUOBCymru (www.auob.cymru). Additionally, people can stay connected through social media channels using the hashtags #AUOBBANGOR, #IndyWales and #Annibyniaeth.
On the evening of 29 June, protest group Just Stop Oil posted on its Twitter account stating that it had been “in negotiations with the organisers of Pride in London”. The climate activist group is demanding that Pride “return to its protest roots”, and align itself with the demand to halt oil production:
NO PRIDE IN NEW OIL AND GAS
Today, queer supporters of Just Stop Oil have been in negotiations with the organisers of @PrideInLondon, demanding Pride returns to its protest roots and empowers queer people to stand in civil resistance against their genocidal government.…
We are a group of LGBTQ+ supporters of Just Stop Oil. We have been taking action against the licensing of new oil, gas and coal in the UK, repeatedly putting our bodies and our liberty on the line, in resistance to a government which has been bought by corporations and fossil fuel capital. We take action because the government is continuing to develop new fossil fuel projects in 2023, even though the world’s climate scientists agree that this threatens the collapse of our food systems and the breakdown of ordered society.
Pride is a protest
Now, first things first, Pride is – or at least should be – a protest. This is at the core of its history. Pride originated as the Christopher Street Liberation Day March. In turn, the march marked the one-year anniversary of the Stonewall riot.
In the riot, queer patrons of the Stonewall Inn in the Greenwich Village neighbourhood of Manhattan rose up in response to aggressive and repeated police raids. The first Pride was, very literally, about throwing rocks at cops.
Some modern Prides – and especially London’s – have drifted away from that spirit of protest into one of celebration. Now, with rising homophobic hate crimes and a government-led crackdown on trans lives, we could surely do with a return to “protest roots” – just as Just Stop Oil is asking.
Seeking clarity
Likewise, the first point on Just Stop Oil’s list of demands seems laudable. The group stated that it requires:
Clarity on where Pride sources its money from, what floats are included and what ethical considerations are taken when deciding where to accept money from
Pride in London is somewhat notorious for its poor attitude to social justice issues more broadly. Just Stop Oil offered “some context” of the event’s deplorable sponsorship deals. In particular, the Green London Assembly criticised Pride’s choice of headline sponsor – United Airlines.
Pride makes a statement to demand an end to new oil and gas.
Again, all good! Any new oil and gas extraction scuppers our planet’s chances of remaining within the tolerable limits of the 1.5C warming set by the Paris Climate Agreements, or even its 2C upper bounds.
This being the case, Pride – and queer movements more broadly – have a moral duty to stand in solidarity with climate defenders. However, this is where the problem with Just Stop Oil’s threat creeps in. To me, what they’re doing doesn’t look much like solidarity.
Pride to set a public meeting for it’s volunteers about joining in civil resistance against new oil and gas, and why the climate crisis is the biggest threat to LGBT+ rights, due to societal collapse.
Along with the list, they set an ultimatum:
We will wait 24 hours, as of 4pm today (28/06), for Pride to respond to our demands and the actions Pride will take. Beyond this time or not meeting these demands will mean we may or may not take action at this weekend’s events.
The ultimatum’s time limit has now elapsed. However, at the time of writing, neither Pride nor Just Stop Oil had confirmed whether any response had been issued. It’s this last demand – and accompanying threat – where I feel the climate group has overstepped its mark.
Is this your solidarity?
Now, solidarity between progressive movements is hugely important. Chances are, at any given Pride in the UK, you’ll see a handful of people wearing “Pits and Perverts” t-shirts. These refer to a slogan used by Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners (LGSM):
a political activist group of gay women and men that formed in a spirt of solidarity with the striking miners in 1984. Mark Ashton, one of the founders, saw the struggle of the miners as the same faced by gay people fighting for their rights against a government that would not listen.
LGSM supported the Neath Dulais and Swansea Valley Miners mining communities during the 1984 strikes. Its fundraisers generated £20,000 for direct aid. This is what queer solidarity looks like at its best.
What Just Stop Oil are demanding is nothing like this. It’s not a hand across a divide. To put it bluntly, they’ve issued a vague threat in an attempt to co-opt what should be a queer protest space.
‘Help us make your activists into our activists… or else’ is not a way to foster community – which isn’t even to mention the greater threat to queer people that accompanies being arrested as part of a climate protest or elsewhere.
Learn it, and come back
Let me be completely clear. I want Pride to be a real protest again, and especially London’s corporate, pinkwashed parody. Fuck knows we need it now. Oil money has no goddamn place within 100 miles of a queer march. Hell, I don’t particularly think any corporations belong in Pride – half of them scarper as soon as the winds of public opinion change.
That said, Just Stop Oil can – for now – sling its hook right along with United Airlines. Go away and learn what solidarity and community building actually look like. I know you can manage it.
Hell, I’ll even take a statement of support for any of the numerous actual queer protests in the UK. If Just Stop Oil has ever made one, I couldn’t bloody find it.
Happy Pride.
Just Stop Oil had not responded to a request for comment at the time of publication.
Jess Phillips and Jacob Rees-Mogg. Then, Alistair Campbell and Rory Stewart. Now, Ed Balls and George Osborne. Labour figures are so snuggly with Tories it is hard to imagine what the actual difference between the parties is supposed to be. Of course, the likes of Balls have no skin in the game. these are all wealthy, comfortable figures. But the combination of podcast grift and civility politics says a lot about power in this country.
Chums
The latest offering in the chum grift is a podcast hosted by former shadow chancellor Ed Balls and former actual chancellor George Osborne. Balls’ successes include a run on a TV dancing show and once tweeting his own name. Osborne’s greatest hits involve the most violent processes of austerity in modern times.
“Ed and I are frenemies”, Osborne beamed to the Guardian on Thursday 29 June:
Once bitter foes, and now firm friends. When we talk politics and economics I find myself talking to someone who brings a different perspective but with an insight and intelligence I rate.
Meanwhile, Balls said:
George and I want to bring economics back to life and on the agenda – with explanation and entertainment in equal measure.
Nothing so entertaining or restorative as chumming up with the Bullingdon Club, hey Ed? We can and should mock this kind of thing. But we should also discuss what it says about our body politic.
From economics to empire
The Balls-Osborne podcast follows tightly on the heels of another Labour-Tory crossover. Except in that case, it is two arch-imperialists pouring into your ears. Alistair Campbell and Rory Stewart started The Rest is Politics in May 2023.
As the Canary has had to point out before, Stewart is a favourite of the Mk 1 centrist Twitter ignoramus. Simply sounding sort of authoritative and posh is enough for them. At least, enough to cover for his objectively vile voting record and his stint as imperial governor of a province of Iraq.
Former Blair-era comms guru Campbell, of course, is even more familiar with Iraq. He is a figure of contempt for his role in the buildup to the war. Though one can almost admire how this slippery character has used the debate over Brexit to recondition his reputation. For well-heeled #FBPE liberals, little Poppy’s gap year being disrupted by ‘Brexshit’ is far more important than, say, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis killed, maimed or displaced.
Jacob, bab
While it hasn’t become a podcast yet (if it does, then just whack me over the head with a shovel) the Jacob Rees-Mogg-Jess Phillips love-in is another prime example of this utterly turgid trend.
In 2015, Phillips, who routinely cosplays as working class, toured Mogg’s Somerset constituency:
The ultimate outcome of this was lots of smiley pictures and jovial banter about nannies and Jeremy Corbyn.
Naturally, people who buy into this kind of performance – just like the people who do it – have a particular formulation. That is, they have no skin in the game. They’re comfortable. Politics can be chummy if you’re secure. You can afford to talk about ‘civility’ if the barbarism inflicted by Mogg’s, Osborne’s, and Stewart’s doesn’t touch you.
Civility politics is a trap
Personally, I have no time for this bourgeois mode of politics. I do not ‘love my enemy’, as the Christian adage urges us. Better, surely, to take the man and the ball. Your political commitments should actually be, er, commitments. And not something to suspend for a headline or to fill a gap in the podcast market.
That’s not to say one wouldn’t be polite or collegiate if the occasion demands, or even as a general rule. Sometimes it is right. And sometimes it isn’t. Like last week, when I spent a few days rinsing butt-hurt Corbyn nostalgists and discredited Labour Big Brains. Either way, the idea that we should all get on board with the sort of smirking comradely patter embodied in these podcasts is just bizarre to me.
That’s all very well for the wealthy, posh, and comfortable but it’s not conducive to any serious politics. A serious working-class politics is ‘chat shit, get banged’ not ‘pass the biscuits, please, Rory’.
Dead in the water
And there is another point to be made here. The three politicians mentioned here aren’t marginal figures. Balls, Campbell, and Phillips represent the dominant politics in Labour. A brief and accidental moment of left-wing leadership did not change this. These three aren’t just figures in the Labour Party, they embody it.
And a look at the purges in Labour since 2019 then tells us there won’t be another time like the Corbyn moment. The Labour left won’t get near the levers of state power again. Vapidly and abstractly calling for everyone to back the party just won’t cut it.
Nor will talking about ‘extra-parliamentary’ activity as if getting some Red Tories elected should be at the centre of our thinking. What we need isn’t ‘extra-parliamentary’ activism, it’s an anti-parliamentary politics. The point isn’t to put your preferred set of capitalists, imperialists, and grifters in a position to govern you. It is to become yourself ungovernable.
The Undercover Policing Inquiry (UCPI) published the conclusions of its first stage on 29 June. Campaigners celebrated the so-called ‘spycops’ report’s damning verdict of the Met Police and its undercover units. However, they also criticised it for not going far enough.
Undercover policing tactics were ‘not justified’
The Undercover Policing Inquiry Tranche 1 Interim Reportsummarises the inquiry’s investigation into undercover policing activities between 1968 and 1992. Most infamous of these was the Special Demonstration Squad (SDS), which was so secretive that allegedly many senior officers within the Met didn’t know of the undercover unit’s existence. Officers recruited into the unit were sent to spy on trade unions, political parties, anti-apartheid and environmental groups, and other left-wing activist campaigns.
Tactics used by SDS officers included forming sexual relationships with women, adopting the names of dead children, and even infiltrating police accountability groups. However, the inquiry’s head John Mitting said in the report that these methods were unjustified:
Was the gathering of intelligence about subversive organisations or individuals so defined, by the means adopted by the SDS, a legitimate exercise of police functions?
I have come to the firm conclusion that, for a unit of a police force, it [was] not; and that had the use of these means been publicly known at the time, the SDS would have been brought to a rapid end.
However, Mitting’s conclusion also defended the decision of the SDS not to deploy into right-wing and fascist groups. Campaigners have long criticised the unit’s focus on left-wing causes, with Campaign Opposing Police Surveillance (COPS) previously describing it as part of the SDS’s “prejudiced nature”. Mitting, however, claimed there was no bias in the decision:
the fact that in this period no decision was made to infiltrate right-wing groups did not result from political bias on the part of those responsible for targeting, but from the belief that existing coverage sufficed and through concern about the risk of violence which such a deployment might pose.
Campaigners both welcomed and criticised the report. A press statement by COPS said spycops’ victims “welcomed the findings” of the report. Core participant Zoe Young said:
The police have tried to justify their actions by saying they were targeting subversives and protecting public order. Their own evidence showed this was not the case.
They ignored violent groups such as the National Front in favour of reporting on cake sales and campaigns for free nurseries. While we were on the street calling for an end to racist murders, we now know police were spying on us. They treated as criminal anyone who wanted to change the world for the better.
If there is a subversive organisation in all this, it is the institutionally anti-democratic Metropolitan Police through their systematic attacks on basic human rights.
Police Spies Out Of Lives (PSOOL), a group supporting women that were coerced into sexual relationships with spycops, said those women also ‘welcomed’ the findings. However, it also noted the Met Police is yet to release the files it holds on the women. PSOOL accused the inquiry of “protecting police” by publishing its report without pressuring the Met Police to release its files.
Diana Langford, who participated in the inquiry and who was targeted by at least seven undercover officers, said:
The production of an interim report is cruel while women are still waiting to see files written by those who messed with their bodies and minds. The Inquiry is pandering to the Met’s cynical delaying tactics. The Met has not changed since the 1960s in its attitudes to women, people of colour and queer people, yet the Inquiry goes out of its way to accommodate the excuses, lies and prevarications of former SDS officers.
The Blacklist Support Group, which speaks for trade unionists blacklisted as a result of undercover policing, was also critical. While it said that Mitting’s key finding that the SDS’s tactics were unjustified “echoes and vindicates what activists have argued from the very beginning”, it also found his conclusion over a lack of right-wing infiltration “pure comedy gold”.
stating ‘that no decision was made to infiltrate right wing groups did not result from political bias’ is an astounding endorsement by Sir John Mitting of the very political bias the police and security forces displayed at that time.
It is reprehensible that Sir John Mitting does not take a stand on the very evidence of discriminatory policing his inquiry uncovered.
Part one of six
The report marks only the end of the first part of the inquiry, with a further five still to come. Yet, after eight years, this inquiry has so far proven a problematic exercise for those at the heart of the issues. Responses to the stage one report show that, rather than acting as a tool of accountability, the inquiry is something of a shield for the Met Police. However, this has been clear from the outset as pastcoverageby theCanaryrevealed.
Even so, the extent to which the inquiry criticises the actions of the SDS should illustrate just how far beyond the pale it really was. Furthermore, the fact that successive Tory and Labour governments continued signing off on the unit’s actions shows how the political class prioritised its own existence over that of supposed ideological rivals.
Appeal court judges in London have ruled the UK government’s plan to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda is unlawful, after a legal challenge by migrants and campaigners. Since the ruling, PM Rishi Sunak has pledged to contest the decision.
The judges said home secretary Suella Braverman had not properly considered the circumstances of the eight claimants in the case.
Unravelling?
Tackling asylum claims has become a political headache for the Conservative government. Ultimately, their plans to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda triggered a wave of protests from rights groups and charities, while last-gasp legal challenges successfully blocked the first deportation flights in June 2022.
Several individuals who arrived in small boats, along with organisations supporting migrants, brought a case to the High Court in London. They argued that the policy was unlawful on multiple grounds, including the assessment of Rwanda as a safe third country.
Meanwhile, an unhappy sounding Sunak tweeted about criminal gangs – a common Tory strawman argument in relations to refugees:
It is this country – and your government – who should decide who comes here, not criminal gangs.
Meanwhile, civil rights organisation Liberty said this was a huge blow against the government, but the racist Illegal Immigration Bill must still be opposed:
While we celebrate today’s win there is still work to do
We will continue to stand against the Gov’s Illegal Migration Bill which entrenches the hostile environment and would allow those in power to commit human rights abuses without consequencehttps://t.co/bT5l68k1Af
In court, the three judges said they were not satisfied by government assurances:
The deficiencies in the asylum system in Rwanda are such that there are substantial grounds for believing that there is a real risk that persons sent to Rwanda will be returned to their home countries, where they faced persecution or other inhumane treatment.
They added:
In consequence, sending anyone to Rwanda would constitute a breach of article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights
No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
It’s true this is a substantial victory for human rights. But we must not forget that the Tories aren’t going to stop their assault on asylum seekers anytime soon.
There’s more to come, and – as Liberty point out – the Tory’s racist immigration bill will still need to be stopped.
Fascists attacked a Drag Queen Story Hour event in Honor Oak, South London. The far-right protesters damaged property and injured counter-protesters and a reporter on Saturday 24 June. This is just the latest attack on drag events.
Counter-protestors from the local community faced off with the bigots. Reports suggested far-right Turning Point UK was present, as well as individuals linked to defunct Neo-Nazi groups like Combat 18. A local church was also attacked, while police reportedly allowed space for the violence to continue.
Far-right assault
Drag Queen Story Hour is a popular educational event featured with the likes of the NHS and Greenpeace. Organisers say:
Drag Queen Story Hour UK wants to show the world that being different is not a bad thing, and by providing imaginative role models for children to look up to, we can change the world book by book!
Needless to say, this is an affront to knuckleheaded fascist and far-right orthodoxies. Trans Safety Network reported on the kind of people who protest against these events:
The protests against Drag Queen Story Hour at Honor Oak Pub have been primarily led by Turning Point UK. Turning Point UK are the UK branch of far right organisation Turning Point USA. Turning Point UK’s previous claims to fame include speakers at their conference openly defending Hitler. The group has links to the Conservative Party, whose MPs have praised its work.
Openly fascist
And that’s not all. The event also pulled in former members of some of the most violent Neo-Nazi groups of the 80s and 90s:
Also present were those with previous involvement in neo-Nazi organisations. For example, Lance Wright was present, who was previously a member of the groups Blood & Honour and Combat 18.
Meanwhile, the counter-protesters were largely local people who didn’t want boot-boys and thugs wrecking their local area. Trans Safety Network reported:
The counter-protesters, on the other hand, were led by members of the local community. A group called South East London Love has formed in reaction to the far right’s presence, in order to protect and care for the local queer community.
Injuries and damage
The far-right attacked the counter-protestors who tried to stop them getting to the event. Amid violence and threats one counter-protestor, Ada Cable, was reportedly beaten:
One anti-drag protester repeatedly punched trans counter-protester Ada Cable in the face, leading to the injuries seen in our Twitter thread. Ada backed away and received first aid from another counter-protester. Ada was visibly injured to her head, which was bleeding, and also appeared to have a broken nose.
Initially only one police officer was on the scene. When other cops arrived they arrested a counter-protestor and then, according to reports, struck the already injured Ada Cable while she gave first aid to someone else:
I was still crouched on the floor, but one of them punched me in the face. I can tell the difference between a shove and a punch.
Brighton anti-fascists
Brighton anti-fascists were in attendance at the counter-protest. They tweeted a thread on the confrontation which made some important points:
On Saturday antifascists took a stand against far-right attempts to shut down a Drag storytelling event for kids in the Honor Oak pub in South London
You may have seen photos online of bloodied faces and fighting in the street
— BrightonAntifascists (@brightonanti) June 26, 2023
Firstly, that this is the latest in a series of attacks on these events:
This was the 5th event that has had the far-right trying to shut it down and been defended by a diverse coalition of queer / trans ppl and antifascists
Every time the far-right have been massively outnumbered and forced to the margins, far from the venuehttps://t.co/v0dLwcbOdK
— BrightonAntifascists (@brightonanti) June 26, 2023
The group also stated that there has been a change in tactics. The far-right seems to have drafted in old school fascist thugs to provide muscle.
The group also warned that these kinds of fascists are likely to become more common, if left unchallenged:
The context of the street violence is a vicious moral panic over gender / sexuality, heavily stoked by the billionaire-owned press and Tory party, of which far-right thugs are happy to be the foot soldiers
We see in the USA where this can go if allowed to run out of control
— BrightonAntifascists (@brightonanti) June 26, 2023
Ultimately, the counter-protestors served their community at great personal risk by facing down a far-right assault. LGBTQ+ people have always been a favourite target of the right, and community organisation is vital to keep them at bay in these febrile times.
Academic institutions across the UK are in turmoil. Strikes, pickets, marking and assessment boycotts (MABs), and large-scale protests are recurring features on campuses up and down the country. Yet, the Universities and Colleges Employers’ Association (UCEA) and senior management teams still refuse to negotiate with the University and College Union (UCU).
UCEA states that until the UCU calls off the MAB which is currently underway at 145 universities, no negotiations will take place. However, when you look at what’s going on in higher education, it’s of little surprise workers and students are fighting back – not least at Brighton University.
Don’t blame the UCU – blame university management
This is nothing short of a national scandal. Thousands of students are set to either ‘graduate’ without degree classifications, or be unable to graduate at all. We have already witnessed students at the University of Glasgow ‘graduating’ without knowing their final grade. Students at the University of Cambridge will not graduate until their final exams are marked. This will impact nearly half of final-year undergraduates and 90% of post graduates on taught courses at Cambridge.
At Brighton, the university told the Argus that UCU had “deliberately timed” the MAB to cause “maximum disruption”. However, undergraduate student Alexei Fisk disagrees. They told the Canary:
After years of intermittent strikes without resolution, with rapidly worsening working conditions and a huge real terms pay cut over the past decade, I fully believe the MAB is really the only card the UCU staff had left to play.
However, the truly draconian punitive measures have been put in place by universities in response – to deduct up to 100% of pay from the staff who are boycotting, despite the fact that they have continued to fulfil their teaching and supervisory roles throughout the period – are utterly shocking.
This complete disregard for ethics is an obvious attempt to force staff back to work through starvation and the threat of homelessness. It reveals the callous inhumanity at work in senior management teams within the higher education sector, and should be condemned.
Fisk continued:
The MAB is being sold to students as, essentially, unnecessary troublemaking – and actually, maybe they are partly right. But it is unnecessary because all the UCEA needs to do is get around the table and agree on a fair deal for all staff.
It is not unnecessary for lecturers to demand decent working conditions and a salary that reflects their passion, dedication, and expertise. I stand in full solidarity with our teaching staff, now and always.
Brighton Students Union misses the point completely
On 22 June, Brighton Students Union (BSU) posted a video to their Instagram page in response to the MAB. In it, the union’s president Sufia Begum states that students’ academic progression should not be a “political football”. She also said BSU is distressed to see students bearing the brunt of this standoff between workers and management.
The problem with this statement is that BSU fails to even acknowledge the root cause of this problem. It is management’s refusal to negotiate with staff. We are in a situation where the livelihoods of over a hundred people at Brighton University are under threat. Yet BSU demeans industrial action as simply a way for staff to “voice concerns”. A postgraduate researcher who wishes to remain anonymous told the Canary:
The SU’s response seems to suggest that management and the UCU are both equally making our lives as students difficult by calling for both to ‘prioritise students’ wellbeing’. We as students have been consistently prioritised by our lecturers and supervisors even when they are being overloaded with work by management.
When will the SU realise that the working conditions of our lecturers affect our education? By using this neutral language, the SU is failing to use its power to pressure the university management, the only people responsible for the stress we are going through.
Mismanagement at Brighton University gets you a CBE
Staff and students at Brighton University are still fighting against mass redundancies. Now, on top of the MAB, staff have announced an indefinite strike. This means that the new academic year will not start until – and unless – management call off the mass redundancies.
Brighton University is effectively closed until further notice. So, it came as a complete shock to everyone that our vice chancellor Debra Humphris has been awarded a CBE. This is for services to nursing and education. A lecturer who wishes to remain anonymous told me:
It feels like the vice chancellor is waging war on her staff, with 100% pay deductions in a cost of living crisis, including for those colleagues she is trying to make redundant. So I think there is widespread anger and disbelief at the news of a CBE. There’s a 94% no confidence vote against her after all!
Rewarding Humphris’s services to education seems little more than a joke in bad taste.
During her time at Brighton her ‘achievements’ include:
The key concern for staff and students alike is that attempts to circumvent the MAB, steamrolling through mass redundancies, and taking punitive measures against staff will only diminish the quality of education that students receive. Leeds University UCU shared on Twitter that they were hearing from multiple faculties that “dissertations/final year projects are being marked by non-experts & not 2nd marked” so that they can be classified by July.
At UWE Bristol (in a since-deleted posting) zero hour contracts at a double pay rate were advertised to mitigate the MAB’s impact. It’s no surprise that managers are trying to undermine the MAB. However, they are doing so at the expense of the marks themselves. If experts are not grading the final projects, students will not get appropriate feedback or recognition of their hard work and knowledge.
This is a profound insult to students. It leaves many of their grades in a position to be contested. This will be a process which is stressful for students, and wasteful to already overstretched university assessment procedures.
At Brighton University, what began as students experiencing minimal impact has resulted in annual progression reviews (APRs) and vivas being cancelled for PhD researchers. There is constantly shifting and unreliable information about when and how assessment will resume.
We were initially told that no APRs will go ahead without two assessors present. However, an email sent out by the doctoral college on 27 June then informed us that APRs can go ahead with only one assessor. This goes to show that, when managers come under pressure, they’re willing to let academic standards slip rather than negotiate with their own employees.
Defending Brighton University
In Brighton UCU’s latest actions, staff, students, and someone dressed as Mickey Mouse have demonstrated at prospective student open days:
Prospective applicants and their parents were eager to hear about how the university is treating staff members. The combination of public demonstrations and social media campaigns has kept the pressure up. However, we know that there is still a long way to go. If management thinks that we are going to give up, they are sorely mistaken. Students and staff deserve much more than this current lot.
The future of education at Brighton University is at stake. We owe it not only to ourselves but future students to hold management to account. At the end of the day, we’re fighting for a world where the powerful aren’t allowed to make everyone else pay for their mistakes; where everyone can go to work without fear of managers’ whims tearing the rug from beneath them, and where workers and students have real control over their working and learning conditions.
If you wish to support us at Brighton University, we are currently fundraising for staff who are facing pay cuts, and for campaign materials. If you can afford it, you can donate here.
Kathryn Zackarek is a PhD researcher currently working on the biopolitics of right-wing populism at Brighton University.
Featured image and additional images via Brighton UCU
Thames Water, Britain’s biggest water supplier, might need to be temporarily renationalised by the government. At least, that’s according to reports on 28 June, just one day after its chief executive resigned.
Sarah Bentley stepped down with immediate effect amid mounting worries over the company’s debt, which totals nearly £14 billion.
Thames Water supplies 15 million homes and businesses in London and elsewhere in southern England. The country’s water companies have accumulated a combined debt of £54bn since privatisation. This has funded investments and shareholder dividends, according to an investigation last year by the Guardian. This investigation found that more than 70% of England’s water industry is under foreign ownership.
Once again, Thames Water has shown that privatisation is only for businesses and shareholders to hoard wealth while the public are shafted. Just days earlier, a Freedom of Information request from the Guardian found that the number of leaking pipes managed by Thames Water was the highest it had been in five years. Not only this, but the company is behind on its schedule to repair leaks. And, on top of that, there are reports that water bills are set to soar by 40% so that water companies can deal with the sewage crisis.
Shareholders getting richer, while the public have to pay more? Sounds familiar.
Dim view
Many people on social media took a dim view of this mess.
Author Richard Huntington pointed out that Thames Water was debt free at the point of privatisation:
Thames water about to collapse according to sky news. Struggling Under 14bn of debit. To be clear they were debt free at privatisation. Paid dividends rather than investing. Board should be personally liable.
— richard huntington – Upriser (@adliterate) June 28, 2023
MP Dawn Butler urged people to wake up:
This is shocking!
How is this possible when they’re paying huge amounts to their shareholders?
When companies are asked to invest in something for the public good they never find the money.
Thames Water’s incompetence would be galling enough on its own, without the rumoured public bill to clean up sewage. There are also concerns about water quality and lax environmental protections post-Brexit.
Water firms have been under fire for years over releasing untreated wastewater into rivers and seas. This is blighting fragile ecosystems and leading to illnesses in people and the closure of beaches. Jo Robb, from a wild swimming group in London, said:
It disgusts us that in a G7 country in 2023 we get parents telling us weekly about their children who have vomiting and diarrhoea from swimming in the river. This is a result of total failure of Thames Water to invest in sewage infrastructure for the last 30 years.
Ex-Thames Water boss Sarah Bentley gave up her bonus over her failure to oversee sewage cleanup. This is a move that GMB Union has called a “flimsy PR stunt”. It’s only rendered all the more unconvincing given that Bentley recently doubled her pay to £1.5 million.
Ultimately, the boss can resign but that doesn’t stop the rot at the company. Thames Water is just the latest company that’s supposed to be offering a public service but has put profit over people. The government should be permanently bringing these greedy companies under public control. Don’t hold your breath though – unless you’re in sewage-infested waters.
In a debate in Westminster Hall, the UK government evaded scrutiny over its impending approval of the controversial Rosebank oil and gas field.
City A.M.has reported that government regulators are planning to sign off the new North Sea oil and gas development within the next two weeks. The secretary of state for energy security and net zero Grant Shapps will then have the final decision on whether to approve the project.
Norwegian fossil fuel giant Equinor is planning to develop the enormous oil and gas field in the North Sea. Ithaca Energy, which owns a majority of the contentious Cambo oil field, holds a minority stake in the project.
Campaigners have highlighted that the large Rosebank oil field will produce nearly 500m barrels of oil and generate more carbon emissions over its lifetime than the annual CO2 output of the 28 lowest-income countries combined.
Green Party MP Caroline Lucas called for the debate on the environmental impact of the new fossil fuel development, which she described as an “act of climate vandalism.”
However, Grant Shapps failed to attend. Instead, the minister for energy security and net zero Graham Stuart represented the government for the proceedings.
No Rosebank and no new North Sea oil and gas
The debate came on the same day the UK’s independent advisor on the climate crisispublished a new report.
The Committee on Climate Change’s annual publication to Parliament called out the government’s failure to make meaningful progress towards reducing its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Notably, it argued that while the UK will continue to require some oil and gas into the future:
this does not in itself justify the development of new North Sea fields.
Despite this firm message, Stuart continued to parrot the very same justification. Moreover, he made the argument that UK domestic oil and gas supply would have a lower climate cost than imports.
However, the government’s own offshore oil and gas regulator has found that the UK’s “carbon intensity” – the amount of CO2 emitted during production – was higher than the global average in 2022. It ranked at 42 out of 71 fossil fuel-producing countries. This means that UK North Sea production generated higher CO2 emissions than over half of global oil and gas extracting nations.
Significantly, a 2022 analysis identified that UK North Sea oil and gas creates nearly three times the emissions of Norwegian fossil fuel production. Since the UK sources the majority of its oil and gas imports from Norway, this challenges the ministers’ claims that domestic production will have a lower climate impact.
In addition, the CCC also sent a letter to the UK government in February 2022 on its plans to permit more fossil fuel projects. It stated that:
extra gas and oil extracted would support a larger global market overall.
While it acknowledged the uncertainty of accurate projections, it noted that:
Some academics have attempted to estimate this effect and suggested that 20-60% of the additional production would lead to additional consumption (rather than reduced production elsewhere)
UK oil and gas cleaner for the climate?
In other words, new oil and gas projects in the UK would not necessarily reduce oil supply elsewhere. Instead, it could add to global supply. This would mean that more oil and gas would be extracted and burned. This would emit polluting greenhouse gases into the environment.
What’s more, the #StopCambo campaign group has pointed out that 80% of the oil that companies produce in the UK is exported. The group therefore suggests that the majority of the oil Equinor extract from Rosebank would likely be exported for refining overseas, rather than for direct domestic consumption.
Moreover, the government has no control over where the oil and gas will go. As explained by CarbonBrief:
Once a licence is awarded, North Sea oil and gas belongs to the licence holder.
Essentially, Equinor will sell the oil and gas on the international market. Executive director and founder of anti-fossil fuel research and campaign group Uplift Tessa Khan also made the point that the Norwegian multinational will simply sell the oil and gas from Rosebank to the highest bidder.
In addition, Lucas also raised the point that Equinor has sought to justify the new climate-wrecking oil field with a pledge to electrify the offshore rig and plans to utilise renewable energy to power its operations.
The Guardian recently highlighted that Equinor has indicated its intention to use energy generated by the 103-turbine Viking windfarm on the Shetland Islands.
The article detailed new research from Uplift. Uplift analysts found that alongside two other oil fields exploring energy from the windfarm, the Rosebank rig would monopolise renewable energy that could power more than 450,000 UK homes.
Billions more barrels of oil
As the Canary has previously reported, the latest International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in March set out in clear terms the need to cease oil and gas expansionism. Specifically, wealthy nations like the UK have a particular responsibility to stop approving new fossil fuel projects.
However, minister Graham Stuart also attended a fossil fuel industry forum on Tuesday 27 June. The forum emphasised that the UK government has no plans to stop licensing new oil and gas developments. The North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA), a private company wholly owned by the UK’s secretary of state for energy security and net zero, hosted the event.
During the meeting, the NSTA told the forum that it is working with the fossil fuel industry to:
progress more then 21 projects capable of producing 1.5 billion barrels of oil and gas
Notably, these are existing projects. It also stated that it expected the government to award further projects from the latest oil and gas licensing round that companies applied for last year.
With the decision on Rosebank imminent, the UK government demonstrated in today’s debate how little it cares about addressing the climate crisis. No surprises there, then.
Feature image via Gary Bembridge/Wikimedia, resized and cropped to 1910 by 1000, licensed under CC BY 2.0
Revolutionary change is not built by people, but by communities. As many oppressed communities will tell you, basing movements largely upon one leader will simply result in states destroying said leader. Martin Luther King and Fred Hampton could attest to that if they hadn’t been killed for their advocation for Black rights.
Waiting on a saviour
There are other movements we can turn to in order to see great leaders suppressed and overpowered by a seemingly irrepressible state. The crushing weight of the status quo often appears to stamp out any glowing embers that possible resistance might have conjured up.
There is a particular tendency amongst left-wing white folks in the UK to rally around figures on the left as saviours. These figures are supposed to be the ones who come along and do the work. They’ll finally get rid of the Tories, save the NHS, and be good for a soundbite that does numbers on Twitter.
But be they Jeremy Corbyn or Mick Lynch, that’s simply not going to happen.
This is nothing to do with the proven talents of the likes of Corbyn or Lynch. Instead, it’s because unduly investing in one leader is no path to liberation. No one person can do it alone – nor should they have to.
Ruminating and re-litigating
My colleague Joe Glenton caused quite a stir when he asked Jeremy Corbyn supporters to accept what has come to pass over the Corbyn years and move on. Here at the Canary we’re hardly strangers to how Corbyn has been lied about and his supporters ridiculed. The man himself has been smeared, targeted, and subject to infuriating aspersions on both his politics and character. None of this is to criticise him, and I’d wager, he may well agree with what we’re saying.
Given the Canary’s history of being a staunch supporter of Corbyn, it’s fair to say that our social media pages and comment sections are a reasonably accurate picture of the mood amongst supporters of Corbyn. One thing that hasn’t changed since 2019 is how much fans of Corbyn – and I would note, not necessarily Corbyn himself – insist on ruminating over how Corbyn was shoved out of mainstream politics.
Now, you may well counter that it’s possible for people to care about more than one thing at once. However, our mentions demonstrate a huge amount of energy being sunk into re-litigating the Corbyn years.
Parliamentary politics won’t save us
It’s tempting to rally around political camps and leaders, but to do so is – as we should have learnt by now – a distraction that keeps us from finding connection and community with the people who suffer the most. Rallying around a memory of Corbyn is dangerous because it positions parliamentary politics as a legitimate source of change.
Parliamentary politics will not save us. Voting cannot get us out of this mess. As many of us have asked so often since 2019, who on earth would you happily vote for anymore?
Any kind of radical politics that actually helps the most vulnerable people in our society, that doesn’t operate through racism, classism, and transphobia, but through dismantling those very oppressions, is a politics that cannot – and will not – be found in Westminster.
The Home Office has spent several administrations pouring money into the Prevent duty in the name of counter-terror. All this, to make sure Black and Brown Muslims are surveilled and abused as a matter of course.
Our police forces operate with impunity and stifle dissent wherever they can. Those same police forces target and kill Black people with very little consequence. All conceivable levels of institutional power are engaged in anti-Blackness. Reports are then commissioned to confirm or deny such a thing, all whilst the anti-Blackness continues.
Our country is paying to facilitate bombing Yemen. We’re raining down an apocalypse across regions Britain has already destabilised with decades of colonial and neocolonial violence. British companies are the ones making vast profits and causing the climate crisis, and are congratulated by the government and media for doing so.
Consider all this. Consider the actual communities that are being crushed under this weight. Then, realise that it’s more than a little fucking annoying to see people rallying around the Corbyn years as though nothing else matters.
A familiar blow
For some of us, Corbyn’s demise as Labour leader was a blow. The man himself appears to have a proven track record politically and an admirable doggedness. He even has a rare ability amongst his skin folk to treat Black and Brown people as his equals. But, it wasn’t a blow that was unfamiliar.
Poor Black and Brown people know what it is to be lied about, ignored, and shoved out of the way. We know because it happens to us. Not on the same scale, and perhaps not with the same level of scrutiny but it happens nonetheless.
We know because our doctors don’t believe our pain. Our workplaces require us to not make too much of a fuss about racism. The people teaching our children are guided to report them to Prevent before they are to treat them as children. Whenever a famous Black or Brown person is caught in a racist storm, the rest of us get it in the neck.
Our class identity is erased. We’re implicitly, and sometimes explicitly, shut out of queer spaces. Our disabilities are less often diagnosed, and are even questioned by the people who are supposed to treat us. Teachers look at us not with care, but with suspicion. Our fellow comrades fail to see us and our struggles, all while we’re supposed to be fighting for the same thing. These same comrades will often further marginalise and betray us.
Communities, not leaders
Corbyn was a breath of fresh air. There is more air to be taken in, fresh lungfuls, if we can lean on the communities some of us have had to build up in order to live.
Black and Brown people – and queer, disabled Black and Brown people in particular – live with the knowledge that the systems we live under want us dead. We know what it means to only be able to rely on people like us in order to be seen. And, we also know the strength, and the necessity, of that kind of community.
We shouldn’t be rallying around one person. Instead, we must rally around communities of people. After all, that’s what Corbyn himself has spent his political career doing.
The UK government’s advisory body on tackling climate change voiced concern at the country’s slow pace of action to tackle the climate crisis on 28 June.
The independent Climate Change Committee (CCC) warned that time was running out for the UK to meet its goals to cut carbon use by 2030. The committee said it was “markedly less” confident than a year ago that the country could achieve its climate-focused aims.
Worryingly slow action on climate crisis
The CCC said ministers were over-reliant on technology that had not been rolled out at scale, as opposed to encouraging the public to reduce high-carbon activities.
Some developments, such as new renewable energy projects, provided “glimmers” of hope. However, it broadly concluded that:
the scale up of action overall is worryingly slow.
CCC chairman John Gummer, a Conservative peer, said “early action” was cheaper in the long run. It would allow the government to meet looming environmental challenges more easily. However, he warned that:
even in these times of extraordinary fossil fuel prices, Government has been too slow to embrace cleaner, cheaper alternatives and too keen to support new production of coal, oil and gas.
Gummer spoke of a “worrying hesitancy by ministers to lead the country to the next stage” needed to arrive at the country’s net zero commitments. He urged them to commit to bolder delivery. Gummer insisted that:
This is a period when pace must be prioritised over perfection.
However, the CCC pointed out that emissions had so far only fallen 46%. In light of this, the committee highlighted that:
In only seven years, the recent rate of annual emissions reduction outside the electricity supply sector must therefore quadruple.
Time is now very short to achieve this change of pace.
The CCC said the UK had sent “confusing signals” on its climate ambitions, undermining its COP26 commitments.
The panel said the government has “no clear policy” to deliver its aims of decarbonised steel production. It also noted that upgrading the electricity grid to include renewable infrastructure, particularly onshore wind, is caught up in planning restrictions.
The CCC urged more tree-planting, increased use of domestic heat pumps, and a moratorium on airport expansion.
Responding to the CCC’s report, Greenpeace UK’s head of politics Rebecca Newsom said:
There’s almost no progress in this progress report, just a pitiful catalogue of Rishi Sunak’s climate failures. The same government that promised to deliver the most ambitious environmental programme of any country on earth is now turbocharging fossil fuel expansion while actively blocking renewables and neglecting home insulation, public transport and an ageing power grid.
Sunak is snubbing the solutions that can give us lower bills, warmer homes and a safer climate, while cheerleading for the oil giants making billions from climate destruction and people’s hardship. Whose side is he on?
Climate change campaigners targeted the UK headquarters of oil giant TotalEnergies with paint on 27 June. They were protesting the French firm’s alleged human rights violations in the construction of its oil pipeline in Uganda.
Supporters of Just Stop Oil sprayed black paint in the interior lobby of the company’s headquarters in London’s Canary Wharf district. Others daubed orange paint on its exterior, according to the protest group.
London’s Metropolitan police said officers had arrested 27 people:
for a combination of suspicion of criminal damage and aggravated trespass.
EACOP
Dozens of students from Students Against EACOP also massed outside the building during the stunt to show support. The pressure group is opposed to the building of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP)
TotalEnergies is the largest shareholder in the climatologically disastrous East African venture. The project is set to carry crude oil to the Tanzanian coast through several Ugandan protected nature reserves.
Communities in the region claim the energy firm and other EACOP backers have caused serious harm to their rights to land and food in building the 930-mile pipeline.
Critics have called the project a “carbon bomb” which would release over 379 million tonnes of carbon into the atmosphere.
An end to oil and gas exploration
Related action took place on the same day in mainland Europe. On 27 June, in France, a group of Ugandan citizens and aid groups, joined by French aid organisations, filed a lawsuit in a Paris court against TotalEnergies for damages over the alleged human rights violations.
lead to over 1,600 million tonnes (Mt) of carbon-dioxide (CO2) pollution over their lifetimes, if the projects’ oil and gas reserves are fully extracted and burned.
Just Stop Oil wants the UK and other governments to end all new oil and gas exploration. The campaign has promised not to let up in its high-profile protests until it does so. The action on 27 June is just the latest in Just Stop Oil’s campaign of direct action, which shows absolutely no signs of stopping soon.
Kernow (Cornwall) will stage a rally on Saturday 8 July, celebrating everything about the nation’s history and culture. However, it will also have a bigger point: the question of self-determination for Kernow.
Kernow: not English – Celtic
Cornwall, as it’s called in English, was actually a Celtic nation in its own right. As the Ertach Kernow (Cornish Heritage) project wrote:
Up to the Norman Conquest Cornwall was in reality a quasi-independent principality only loosely tied to the rest of England with its borders set at the east shore of the River Tamar by English King Æthelstan in 936 AD. This separated Wessex and Cornwall and the river still forms most of the boundary between Cornwall and England today.
In other words, Kernow was not really much to do with England – and actually aligned with other Celtic nations like Scotland, Wales, and the Isle of Man. Then, in 1337 Edward III decided he wanted it, and forced the nation to be a royal duchy. So, Kernow ended up being part of the UK. However, the nation’s Celtic heritage has always been there – and in recent years more and more people have been engaging with the idea of Kernow as its own, distinct nation.
Mebyon Kernow is a left-wing political party in Cornwall. It says on its website that:
Mebyon Kernow believes that the historic nation of Cornwall, with its own distinct identity, language and heritage, has the same right to self-determination as other constituent parts of the UK, such as Scotland and Wales.
Cornwall is alone amongst the Celtic nations in having no form of effective self-government. Government bodies, quangos and agencies which develop key strategies and policies are located outside of Cornwall and inevitably fail to recognise the strengths of Cornwall or understand the special needs of its communities.
Given what Westminster and national political parties have done to Cornwall, it’s of little wonder people think self-determination is needed.
a grassroots campaign movement formed to act as a catalyst to promote greater discussion of the future of Kernow.
The group is aligned with its sister campaigns in Cymru (Wales) and Scotland. AUOB Kernow recognises the problems that English governance has caused the nation. It said in a press release:
Kernow faces major economic, social, and cultural issues affecting its people daily. Self-determination, to which Kernow has a historic right, will allow its people to revitalise democracy to address these issues, such as homelessness; hunger; the destruction of our towns, villages, and historic green spaces; a lack of meaningful jobs with a living wage; and others such as loss of support for our language and cultural programs.
Of course, this is not different to much of the UK. However, in Kernow it comes against a backdrop of its historical independence from England. This, coupled with the nation’s distinct cultural heritage, language, and rich history make the case for self-governance strong. So, AUOB Kernow are taking action.
Rallying for self-determination
The group will be holding a rally for Kernow on 8 July. People are invited to meet on Barras Street, Liskeard from 10:30am, with a rally starting starting at 11am. The group says the march will involve:
musicians and members of other organisations representing many issues and working hard to alleviate the challenges the people of Kernow face.
The rally is partly about celebrating the nation’s history and culture. However, it’s also about continuing the discussion around self-determination. The group said in a press release:
The outside promotion of Kernow as a holiday playground takes jobs and homes from local people and takes economic prosperity out of Kernow. It replaces true industry and commerce with low-paying temporary jobs for the tourist industry.
High streets no longer have shops to provide for the community’s needs but to cater to holidaymakers. Structural support is not sufficient to allow the people of Kernow to stay and support themselves or raise their families.
Once traditional and community-led, local events have been turned into commerce opportunities for outsiders. At the same time, the distinct identity of the Cornish people was declared under European Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities; yet its language and history are derided and erased in efforts to make Kernow seem merely a part of England. Greenfields and historical parks in towns and villages have been developed to allow second homes, empty most of the year, to predominate communities.
Breaking English shackles?
For its part, Mebyon Kernow is pursuing “meaningful devolution” of powers to a Cornish parliament, working “within the framework of the United Kingdom”. The party is specifically campaigning for:
The creation of a Cornish Parliament with powers equal to those of the Scottish Parliament, which would set the funding and policy framework for the majority of the public sector within Cornwall.
With 10% of the nation’s population identifying as “Cornish”, not “English”, there is a solid bedrock for the campaign for autonomy to grow off. The rally on 8 July will be a welcome step in that direction for those who believe Kernow should break the shackles of its English overlords.
Leaked government plans have revealed that it’s allegedly planning to allow train operating companies to perform mass ticket office closures. Bosses have reportedly been keeping this secret, but the government has been speaking about it for months. The impact of any closures though, not least for disabled people, could be huge. So, the National Union of Rail, Transport and Maritime Workers (RMT) and activists have hit back.
The Sunday Telegraph has reported that 25 of 30 East Midlands Railway ticket offices will be closed under a new contract, with this understood to be “broadly in line” with the government’s plans for the rest of the rail network.
Proponents of closures argue that most people don’t use them – buying tickets online instead. They also claim that closing these offices will free up staff elsewhere. However, during a Transport Select Committee hearing on ticket office closures in January, Labour MP Ruth Cadbury pointed out that:
The 12% of passengers who are currently using ticket offices are more likely to be occasional travellers and tourists, more likely to have disabilities, more likely to be cash buyers, more likely to have children in tow. That’s why they need that human contact.
She also questioned whether train operators would actually redeploy ticket staff like-for-like across stations, instead of just reducing the workforce.
Now, it seems the government’s and train operators’ plans to close most ticket offices are happening.
Leaked plans
The Association of British Commuters (ABC) tweeted that:
Industry sources tell us that operators have been secretly preparing for mass ticket office closures since early June. The DfT wants these plans to be announced as soon as NEXT WEEK.
Pls RT and tell @Mark_J_Harper he'll have a massive fight on his hands if he goes ahead.
— Association of British Commuters (@ABCommuters) June 26, 2023
this is a new stage – a direct DfT [Department for Transport] mandate given to operators a month ago.
Closures would begin with 21 day consultations under “Schedule 17” of ticket retail regulations…
But these are no ordinary consultations – when completed they will sweep away the regs, leaving **no visibility of staffing numbers whatsoever**
“Schedule 17” applies only to ticket retail – not accessibility.
In other words, train operators can close ticket offices and not have to consider disabled people’s accessibility in the process. The Guardian reported that around 1,000 ticket offices could be closed.
People on Twitter pointed out lots of problems with the government’s alleged plan. One user poo-pooed the idea that people didn’t use ticket offices:
In Chichester, yesterday morning, there was a queue at the ticket office! An incident had messed up the train to Victoria, and the electronic signs were wrong. We need to keep the service available at all times. https://t.co/6rsn2EAkPC
Another person reminded us that UK rail travel is basically money for old rope – even more so if the government shuts ticket offices:
In Britain you pay the highest rail fares in Europe and among the highest in the world. But the Tories don’t think you even deserve a ticket office should you need one.
You’ll also be potentially fined £100 for boarding a train without a ticket.
There are rumours circulating online that the DfT plans to announce mass ticket office closures next week.
The train operating companies and the government must understand that we will vigorously oppose any moves to close ticket offices.
We will not meekly sit by and allow thousands of jobs to be sacrificed or see disabled and vulnerable passengers left unable to use the railways as a result.
RMT will bring into effect the full industrial force of the union to stop any plans to close ticket offices, including on our upcoming strike days of July 20, 22 and 29 in the national rail dispute.
Disabled people: yet more government-mandated marginalisation
However, perhaps the biggest issue with ticket office closures is the effect it would have on disabled people. This is something many Twitter users highlighted:
For people who depend on station staff to enable their travel the closure of ticket offices would be a disaster. This government keeps trying to spin the narrative that disabled people don’t want to work – well, make the infrastructure accessible and I’m sure more people would! https://t.co/wGn0cHkreJ
— Dr David Wilkin FRSA (@DavidRWilkin) June 26, 2023
The Canary has documented for years just how badly train operators treat chronically ill and disabled people. Now, it appears this next move is another twist of the knife.
Paula Peters is a disability rights activist with Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC). She told the Canary:
The mass planned closure of ticket offices across the rail network is an outrage and an absolute travesty.
Taking away ticket offices is another barrier to exclude and marginalise disabled people from travelling, ticket machines are often broken and inaccessible to use, visually impaired people can’t use ticket machines and many with a learning impairment can’t either.
Going over to an app to book a rail ticket is complete foolhardiness from the government; older people, disabled people, many struggle with online technology and it often crashes or totally difficult to use. It’s all about profits for the greedy CEOs and shareholders.
Peters said that disabled people want:
Ticket offices kept open.
Guards on trains.
Fully staffed stations.
Critical safety-trained staff to assist and support them.
Ticket offices: “The fight goes on”
Peters summed up by saying:
Overall, we simply demand the right to ride.
We will continue to take the fight to the government and the train operating companies to stop the closure of ticket offices and de-staffing rail stations. This is about our safety and access.
We will take them on in the courts, with the continuation of street protests. The fight goes on.
So, it seems that despite the alleged plans, the government won’t have an easy ride pushing them through. The ABC has already floated potential court action, the RMT will incorporate this into its strikes, and disabled people will push back via protests. Train operators won’t be closing ticket offices without a fight from those at the sharp end of these brutal cuts.
Man Utd has come out mid-table in research around Premier League access for disabled people. However, this masks bigger problems in terms of football’s overall accessibility – not least in terms of chronic illness, but also poverty for disabled people.
Man Utd: mid-table for disabled people
Oak Tree Mobility is a disability adaptation and aid company. But it also does research into disability access. It’s looked at just how accessible all 20 Premier League clubs are for disabled people – and the results are a mixed bag. The company based its research on multiple criteria. These included:
The number of wheelchair-accessible seats relative to capacity. Accessible Stadia Guide’s recommends for a 40,000 capacity stadium, there should be 210 wheelchair accessible spaces, with an additional two per 1,000 seats.
The number of accessible toilets.
Provision of audio description services.
On-site blue badge parking.
Sensory rooms for fans with specific needs.
Oak Tree Mobility also factored in fan-submitted ratings of “away days” to capture the overall experience for travelling fans. It then gave clubs a score out of 110. The results showed Liverpool came out top – while all three teams newly promoted to the Premier League – Burnley, Sheffield United, and Luton Town – were in the bottom six:
Perhaps surprisingly, Man Utd came in at 11th. Oak Tree Mobility gave it 68 points in total; 27 points behind the club’s Man City rivals. However, it’s not the first time Man Utd has shown to be not fully accessible for disabled people. As the Telegraph reported, disabled fans were furious after an ‘oversight’ at the start of the 2022/23 season meant accessible seats weren’t available.
Plus, Man Utd being accessible is a relatively new thing. A Telegraph investigation in 2017 found the club was not complying with the Accessible Stadia Guide’s recommended quota. In the end, Man Utd had to invest to make changes.
Accessibility for chronic illness: bottom of the league?
In 2015 a pledge was made by the Premier League to Accessible Stadia Guide stating that all participating clubs would achieve compliance by August 2017. Despite these promises, suitable wheelchair-user spaces have actually fallen in the last five years.
As a result of failure to meet this pledge, disabled supporters have voiced their hesitance to attend future matches. In addition to limited seating and other accommodations, disabled fans have even experienced abuse from other fans.
However, there are two other issues with accessibility to the Premier League. What much of the Accessible Stadia Guide fails to consider are chronically ill disabled people. For example, many people living with genetic, or chronic, diseases or illnesses have “energy-limiting conditions” (ELCs); that is, as the Business Disability forum wrote:
reduced physical and cognitive energy levels
For example:
some people will feel physically exhausted after having a shower. This may mean they need rests between washing and dressing.
However, in terms of Premier League clubs like Man Utd there is little done to make attending matches easier for these people – like queue jumping. This is not confined to the Premier League, though – as it’s an issue across society. One in three chronically ill and/or disabled people live with an ELC. Yet laws, workplaces, public services, and policies do not account for them.
Then you then have specific chronic illnesses. Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (PoTS) is a condition where the heart beats too fast when a person goes from laying or sitting to being upright. This can cause people to feel sick, faint, and have severe headaches. One of the ways a person can alleviate the symptoms is to elevate their legs.
However, Premier League clubs like Man Utd make no provision for this. Of course, nor does wider society – as putting your feet up on a chair in a public space is still viewed as a social faux pax.
The real accessibility issue: poverty and classism
So, disability access in the Premier League is still lacking. Clubs’ provisions for chronically ill people are often non-existent. However, the biggest barrier for chronically ill and disabled people to watching top-flight football is still the cost.
A Man Utd season ticket for 2023/24 comes in at over £1,000. For many people, this cost is extortionate and reeks of classism. However, for many chronically ill and disabled people too it is well beyond their reach. When working-age disabled people are twice as likely to live in poverty, and more than half of foodbank users are disabled – then getting to see a Premier League football match is a no-no.
The poverty rate for disabled people is well above the national average. Half of all people in poverty are either disabled or carers to them. So, while Premier League clubs like Man Utd are failing to meet basic stadium accessibility, it’s the thin end of the wedge when countless chronically ill and disabled people couldn’t afford to get through the turnstiles in the first place.
Comedy writer Ben Elton was a guest on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg on 25 June. His appearance led to a somewhat enjoyable rant about prime minister Rishi Sunak’s “Orwellian, meaningless, evasive word salad”. While the outburst was fun to watch, it also revealed a depressing truth about why crooked politicians keep getting away with – namely the tendency of media people to simply believe what they’re told.
‘Mendacious, narcisstic sociopath’
Before the rant, the BBC’s senior softball-questioner Kuenssberg interviewed Sunak. During it, he proposed bold and exciting new ideas. These included (wait for it…) training an adequate number of doctors and nurses – a plan he described as something “no government has ever done”:
“It will represent… the largest expansion in training and workforce in NHS history”
Kuenssberg nodded along while Sunak detailed his aim to do the absolute bear minimum. To be fair to the PM, should he follow through on his plan (unlikely), the ‘bear minimum’ would be a shit load more than any 21st century prime minister has committed to; to be fair to the profession of journalism, why didn’t Kuenssberg get into all this?
Well, that was a tough interview! Laura tried to put me off by nodding at everything I said, but I managed to carry on talking bollocks anyway. #BBCLauraK
Don't blame the pandemic for the NHS waiting lists, Sunak. They've been growing under successive Tory PMs. And don't hide behind "only been PM for 6 months" – you were Chancellor before that, in charge of nation's pursestrings. #bbclaurakpic.twitter.com/C7KefMyIw1
Following the interview, Kuenssberg said to Elton:
Now I have to say, Ben, you were looking distinctly unimpressed throughout that interview. Fair to say, I think you’ve never been a fan of the Conservatives, but what did you think of what Mr Sunak said?
Her “fair to say” comment was an interesting one in that you never see this sort of clarification in reverse – i.e. she’d never say to a Tory prime minister, ‘fair to say you’ve never been a fan of poor people’, or ‘you’ve never been a fan of compassion, empathy, or baseline human decency’.
Elton himself wasted no time in explaining exactly what he thought of “Mr Sunak”: “It’s not so much depressed as sad” he began, before saying:
if anybody was still watching after that extraordinary, Orwellian, meaningless, evasive word salad – I mean, I sort of – everybody else wanted to believe – and I sort of believe maybe he’s kind of a bit more decent, you know, and it turns out he’s as much of a mendacious, narcissistic sociopath as his previous boss. I mean, this man literally – he seems to be making a principle of the fact that he resigned from a government that he’d served loyally, and while he was chancellor of the exchequer under Johnson, he seems to act as being born into Downing Street six months ago was a miracle birth. No, he was a part of a 13-year cycle which has got us to this point.
He talks about foreign, other countries having the same problems. He doesn’t admit what he well knows, which is that they’re all doing better under [their own leaders]. … I genuinely wanted to believe that maybe the Tories had made a reset, even though they had elected a man who had loyally served under Johnson – a man who made a mockery of a parliamentary democracy, and clearly was venally motivated by self-interest. The fact that the Tories chose that easy option, for a man now to say ‘we don’t take easy options’, when they took the easy option, which was Johnson, because they thought it would keep them in power. And when they thought for a moment he wouldn’t, they dumped him instantly.
I mean, he’s the prime minister. He owes us honesty, and we got nothing but mendacity, evasion, and vanity.
Comedian Ben Elton describes #BBCLauraK's interview with PM Rishi Sunak as "an extraordinary, Orwellian, meaningless, evasive word salad" pic.twitter.com/5wT2hnSIEX
— The London Economic (@LondonEconomic) June 25, 2023
Fooled again (and again (and again…))
Many people – especially those outside the media – were able to look at Sunak becoming the latest Conservative prime minister and immediately know he’d be terrible. What gave him away? Namely the word ‘Conservative’ in ‘Conservative prime minister’ – a word which is synonymous with derogatory terms such as:
If you can’t judge politicians by their blatantly dishonest promises, though, what can you judge them by? Their actions, actually – something Elton and others only seemed to realise in hindsight.