Category: UK

  • The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has said it will be paying claimants their £10 Christmas bonus soon. However, the amount is worth barely anything anymore. Moreover, with the cost of things like a Christmas dinner having skyrocketed, it seems like the DWP is taking the piss paying the Christmas bonus in the first place.

    The DWP Christmas bonus

    As Devon Live reported, the government launched the Christmas bonus in 1972 for social security claimants. Despite successive governments keeping it, the amount given hasn’t changed since 1972. It doesn’t take an economist to work out this is a farce. A quick input into the Bank of England’s inflation calculator shows that if governments had increased the Christmas bonus with inflation, it would now be worth at least £108. As This Is Money noted, back in 1972 the £10 Christmas bonus:

    was enough to cover the cost of a turkey dinner for the whole family, with change leftover for presents.

    In fact, it would probably have covered more than that – because, for example, the cost of a Christmas dinner was actually around £3.34 in 1972. Now, analysis from the Trades Union Congress (TUC) as well as the BBC shows that the £10 the DWP will be bunging to millions of claimants in the next few days won’t even get you a turkey.

    Like turkeys at Christmas

    TUC research shows that the cost of a Christmas dinner this year has gone up three times faster than wages have. It said in a press release:

    the cost of traditional Christmas dinner items such as turkey, pigs in blankets, carrots and roast potatoes has risen by on average 18 per cent over the past year, even faster than the consumer price index at 11.1 per cent, while wages have risen by just 5.7 per cent. The cost of cranberry sauce and bread sauce have risen by 33 per cent – six times faster than wages.

    If wages had gone up as much as the cost of a turkey this Christmas, the average worker would have an extra £76 a week in their pay packet.

    Meanwhile, the BBC did a breakdown of how much a basic Christmas dinner would cost at various supermarkets. It said that:

    A basic Christmas dinner for five people – comprising a frozen medium-sized turkey, stuffing balls, Brussels sprouts, roast potatoes, pork chipolatas, onion gravy and mince pies for dessert – will cost £30.03 compared to £24.67 last year.

    That’s a 22% increase on last year. If social security had gone up by that much, the state pension would now be £219.11 a week (£39.51 more), and a Universal Credit award for a couple aged over 25 would be £622.09 a month (£112.18 more).

    DWP: an insult to millions of us

    However, the real sting in the tail with the DWP’s miserly Christmas bonus is what it should be worth compared to 1972, taking into account the standard inflation increase.

    Back in 1972, the weekly state pension was just £6.75 – and it was pensioners that originally got the Christmas bonus. On that basis, if governments had kept the Christmas bonus rising in line with the rate of the full state pension (currently £185.15), it would now be £274.02. That £274 could pay for a family’s entire Christmas – albeit modestly.

    It feels like the government and DWP are mocking people with the £10 Christmas bonus. The department has cut some people’s social security by up to £13,000 across recent years. Meanwhile, the DWP’s 10.1% increase in rates from April 2023 won’t actually make up for its previous years of cuts.

    The department knows £10 is taking the piss – and that most people won’t even notice the money. Yet it continues to pay it anyway. The Christmas bonus is a cruel joke – and the only ones laughing are those at the DWP.

    Featured image via Pixabay and Wikimedia 

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • People in dozens of cities across the United Kingdom hit the streets on Saturday to demand immediate government action to prevent thousands of struggling workers from freezing to death in their homes this winter. Demonstrators drew attention to the worsening crisis of fuel poverty and called on lawmakers to pick up more of the tab for skyrocketing bills, fund home insulation…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • The Canary is excited to share the second edition of our members’ letters page. This is where we publish people’s responses to the news, politics, or anything else they want to get off their chest. However, this is a members-only benefit! If you’d like to subscribe monthly to the Canary – starting from just £1 – and get a letter published, then you can do that here:

    Subscribe here

    This week’s letters

    This week we’ve a poem about those who seek to privatise our public services, a letter on Labour’s betrayal of socialists, a personal story of how difficult it is to rent if you rely on social security, and some robust responses to last week’s letter about Scottish independence. 



    Privatisation and hedge funds

    Over the past decade the Tories have proceeded to monetise our public services, in four stages: fragment, underfund, blame, and privatise. Our right-wing media are now facilitating the third and fourth stages – blaming the NHS for the consequences, and claiming that the ‘old institutions’ of the welfare state established 70 years ago are ‘crumbling’ and need to be ‘re-visited’. However, they are not crumbling. They have been demolished brick by brick in a ten-year death of a thousand cuts whilst billions have been wasted on corrupt Covid contracts. Hedge funders and spivs, not civil servants, now ‘manage’ our economy, and any alternative this government offers will be for their benefit not ours.

    A poem: ‘Hedge Funder’

    His heart is a wallet

    Calculator his brain

    His kids tax deductible

    His tears acid rain

    His fingers are Midas

    His bullion belly full

    From the gorging of plunder

    And the shitting of bull

    His promise a shop bell

    As he locks shut the door

    His country a car crash

    He’ll sell off for more

    His arms are a bypass

    His legs chopped down trees

    His pillow dead badger

    Stuffed full of dead bees

    His dreams are full bank vaults

    His nightmares pickpockets

    His death is a terminal

    His soul empty sockets

    His bones sticks of kindling

    In a shroud with no pockets

    RednotDead, via email


    What’s left of Labour?

    Most social media sites are full of complaining and objecting. I can empathise with that, and nobody could be more angry than me. But where is the pressure to do something?

    Even I am now giving up hope that those ‘good socialists’ within what remains of what was ‘the Labour Party’ will ever lead the way to a new start. I could – since I too am in my 70s – understand that Jeremy Corbyn is already ‘whip-less’, ostracised by a Party that he has belonged to, led, campaigned for over decades. But for pity’s sake, can the rest not see that ‘Labour’ is no longer there? Decimated and pillaged for greed, ambition, and stupidity. Even at the centre, they were totally unable to see that their leader [Keir Starmer] was being schooled by outsiders and his personal ambition and greed. A victim of flattery and indoctrination.

    I know there are other groups springing up (I have even joined one of them). However, a proper alternative led from the centre – by Corbyn, or Sultana, or Burgon – would be so much more attractive to people who once joined Labour in their droves. They were inspired by the Corbyn manifesto – and then so unceremoniously cast aside, their views completely ignored and disrespected by the puppet whose strings were being pulled by vested interests and by the former Thatcherite ‘groupie’ Tory Bliar [sic] and his cronies.

    Can the Socialist MPs still left with the Labour whip explain how they can remain within the aegis of what was the Party when their views and ideals are so alien? They stay when so many of their supporters have been expelled or driven out. I find no acceptable explanation. It cannot be that they feel ‘loyalty’ to the people that voted for them as ‘Labour’ candidates, because they are now no longer actually ‘Labour candidates’, since the tenets of the Party have long since been thrown into the garbage.

    Indeed, all their ‘Party’ has done since being elected is support the Tory government, and sell their supporters – and the country – down the river. This is at a time when we have the most arrogant, self-serving, and – to add insult to injury – incompetent gang of crooks in my living memory. All increasing their personal wealth – and that of their friends – at our expense.

    Anonymous, via email


    How can you privately rent on social security? You probably can’t.

    I was delighted when the law was passed, banning the discrimination against people on benefits from renting. But did this stop that discrimination? I would say in part, but agencies soon found anther way of stopping those on any benefit from renting – by adding an income ceiling level. I will give my experience of trying to rent on the private market.

    Being a pensioner and disabled, my income consisted of state pension and Personal Independent Payment (PIP). My relationship broke down, and with me being a bit old school I settled for myself to rent a smaller home with two beds – one for me and one for my youngest daughter, who wanted to move with me.

    I applied at four letting agents in my middle-sized town, and viewed four different properties, one from each agent. When I went in to discuss the terms, etc., I ended up being told I needed to have an income of 20 times the monthly rent on two of the flats, and 30 times the monthly rent on the other two. This meant my income had to be over £13,500pa for two, and over £20,250pa for the other two. After the coronavirus lockdowns, the monthly rent on many properties was raised even higher. On one flat this went from £675 to £725, which also increases the amount of income needed, to rise at least by another £1,200.

    My income is just a little over £9,000 per year. I stood no chance. Social housing is as rare as unicorn hoof prints, so that avenue was blocked. I was informed I had to widen my chosen areas to cover very rural areas with no bus services, and to move way out my area by up to 40 miles away – again sometimes with no public transport. I declined to do that. My family is far too important for me, plus I need care in the home.

    I have written to Shelter and MPs, stating the way the benefits discrimination laws are being got round. But I’ve heard nothing back from anyone. Luckily for myself and my family, we were splitting on very good terms. So, we have decided to stay as we are, with the biggest change being myself sleeping on a bed-settee in the living room. Other people will not be so lucky as me.

    Anonymous, via email


    Two responses to David Carter’s letter about Scottish independence, published on Saturday 26 November:

    David Carter is not Scottish, he speaks for the unionists. The truth is that the largest majority of Scottish people want independence. As for First Past the Post, it is the only way unelected Tory and Labour politicians get into government – by the back door. So, to the English people that criticise Scotland and believe that England is subsidising Scotland: what’s the reason why London and Westminster won’t allow us independence?

    Anonymous, via email

    In 2014, David Cameron, Gordon Brown, and a group of self-serving rich unionists, along with the Daily Record and Mirror Newspaper Group, made a panic ridden, 11th-hour promise to the Scottish electorate. It was the “Vow”. Cameron and Brown et al lied to swing the independence vote. They had seen the way the Scottish people were going, and it was not their way – hence the lie. Not the Vow, a barefaced lie.

    Not one of the things promised to the Scots were implemented. It is true what the political elite think of us: that we are uneducated fools who have the memory span of a goldfish – no matter what they do or how bad it is, the plebiscites will forget. The biggest lies, though, were that North Sea oil and gas were dying, and wouldn’t last another 10 Years – as well as the doozy ‘if you vote Yes the SNP will take you out of the EU!’. I wonder what happened with that then. I will end with a couple of questions to the English and Scots Unionists:

    Question one: Why, if my nation as portrayed by the Westminster government as leeches clinging and sucking money from southern taxpayers through the Barnett formula, is Scottish Independence not manna from heaven – the best opportunity to be rid of the leeches from the north? Why are the English and Scottish unionists fighting tooth and nail, desperately telling lies to the UK, to keep Scotland in this blighted Tory English dictatorship, advertised as a ‘Union’?

    Question two, to the Scottish working class, poor, student and unemployed, disabled and retired unionists: Why would you vote to remain shackled to a Westminster government, a Tory English-elected government, who in 12 years have destroyed the UK and set us back 120 years? We are all poverty stricken in the year 2022; we are probably worse off than our ancestors of the 1900s. Saor Alba.

    Anonymous, via email

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    By Steve Topple

  • The UK and Italy are closing in on a jet fighter deal with Japan. Reuters reported on 2 December that the deal could be done by the following week. The contracts would see the UK’s Tempest project merged with Japan’s F-X project.

    Efforts by the ruling Japanese political party are underway to develop a new, more aggressive foreign policy:

    The announcement will come before Japan releases a new national security strategy and military procurement plan around mid December, the sources said.

    There have also been moves in Japan to secure an increased long-range missile capacity. Rivalry with China is seen as the major justification:

    That arms build up, which could double the country’s defence budget to around 5% of gross domestic product (GDP) over the next five years, will pay for new weapons including long-range missiles designed to deter China from resorting to military action in and around the East China Sea.

    Neutral no more

    Japan is becoming increasingly militarist – and this agenda is being driven by the US:

    The US has been pressuring Japan for some time to increase its defence spending to share the security bill in the Asia-Pacific region.

    In the aftermath of WW2, Japan’s new constitution revolved around the notion of neutrality.

    As The Canary reported in May 2022:

    Japan’s post-war constitution still bans particular kinds of militarist behaviour, including the possession or development of nuclear weapons. However, in recent years defence reforms have still gone ahead under different governments. Article 9 of the constitution was created to prevent Japan becoming a military power again.

    But some in Japan want to change this. As Japanese politics expert Ra Mason has explained, the increasing militarism:

    raises concerns of entrapment into American proxy wars and increasing economic involvement in the US “military-industrial complex”, the system by which the defence sector encourages arms spending and war.

    Militarism on the move

    Japan’s return to a war footing under US influence should concern us all. Chinese military buildup was touted as a threat by NATO and the US. With Europe already at risk of expanded war due to Ukraine, every effort must be made to resist the march to conflict in Asia.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons/Angelique Perez, Us Air Force, cropped to 770 x 403.

    By Joe Glenton

  • The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is planning on forcing more chronically ill and disabled people back to work. That’s according to its new boss –  who seems to be ignoring the fact that there aren’t any jobs out there for them.

    DWP: too many sick people

    Mel Stride is the new work and pensions secretary – and he’s already making his plans for the DWP clear. As the Telegraph reported on Wednesday 30 November, Stride gave evidence to the work and pensions select committee. He was talking about how the DWP needed to get more people into work – with no mention of the fact that successive Tories have trashed the UK economy. Stride noted that the pension age would probably have to go up again – something much of the corporate media were quick to report on. But he also has chronically ill and disabled people in his sights.

    The Telegraph reported that:

    No 10 has become increasingly alarmed by the rise in the number of economically inactive people since the pandemic.

    Nine million people aged 16-64 now fall into this category. As the Canary previously reported, this figure has increased partly due to a rise in the number of chronically ill and disabled people. There could be a link between the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic, long Covid, and the increase. This is because 363,000 more people are now off due to ill-health than before the pandemic. Regardless of this, the fact people are too sick or impaired to work clearly won’t stop Stride from trying to force them to.

    Torynomics

    The Telegraph said that:

    Stride is carrying out a review into how to get many of those [economically inactive] people back into the workforce amid record vacancies. He told the Commons work and pensions committee there was an “overarching case” for setting ambitious targets for doing so.

    It also noted that:

    Stride said his department used other targets, such as on getting more disabled people into work, which was “a very useful metric”.

    However, there are several problems with this – the first being the number of job vacancies, despite what the Telegraph claimed.

    The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said in November 2022 there were 1.225m job vacancies. The problem is, there are 1.264 million unemployed people (those who claim out of work social security). You don’t need to be an economist to work out that there aren’t enough jobs for all the unemployed people – let alone anyone else. Plus, the redundancy rate has started to rise again too. With the UK recession set to last into 2023, the number of job vacancies isn’t going to improve anytime soon. However, the fact that there are no jobs for chronically ill and disabled people probably won’t stop Stride, either. This is despite the evidence that his department making unwell people work just makes them more unwell – or worse.

    Forcing chronically ill and disabled people into work

    The DWP has a long history of forcing chronically ill and disabled people into work, and rarely successfully. For example, as the Canary previously reported, the Personalisation Pathways back to work programme trial in the 2010s was an abject failure – with the majority of people not getting a job or seeing their lives improve. The DWP’s use of sanctions against chronically ill and disabled people is another area where the department has faced criticism. As the Canary wrote in 2018, a report by think tank the Economic and Social Research Council stated:

    that “welfare conditionality did very little to move disabled people closer to the labour market”. It said the Work Capability Assessment (WCA) was seen as “uncaring” and “insensitive”, leading to “inappropriate outcomes” for disabled people. The report noted sanctions generally triggered “profoundly negative outcomes”, exacerbating physical and mental ill health. The report said compulsory work training (‘workfare’) was of “poor quality” and “limited use”.

    However, at its worst the DWP forcing sick and disabled people into work has led to deaths.

    DWP: blood on its hands

    Between December 2011 and February 2014, 90 people a month died after the DWP told them they were fit for work. Furthermore, between March 2014 and February 2017, 10 people a day died after the DWP put them in the Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) Work Related Activity Group (WRAG). This meant it told them they were healthy enough to start moving towards work. The latest figures show that the department’s approach to chronically ill and disabled people hasn’t changed. As the Canary reported, the DWP is already putting more people in the Universal Credit group that’s the equivalent of the ESA WRAG.

    Stride’s plans to force more people into work are hardly new. However, what they do show is that the DWP has failed to learn any lessons over the past 15-odd years. This is probably because it institutionally doesn’t care. However, Stride’s comments should ring major alarm bells. The historical evidence shows that any attempt to force chronically ill and disabled people into work often ends in disaster. Any fresh push by the DWP to do this must be resisted – because few things have been more heinous in recent times than successive, capitalist governments’ drives to make people work when they really shouldn’t be.

    Featured image via Chris McAndrew – Wikimedia, resized to 770×403 under licence CC BY 3.0, and Wikimedia 

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The minister of defence procurement Alex Chalk has confirmed that the government has ejected Elbit Systems from a £160m contract. The news follows significant third quarter losses for the Israeli weapons company, putting its future in the UK in doubt. Activist group Palestine Action, meanwhile, is taking credit for a successful campaign against the manufacturer. Elbit Systems supplies 85 percent of Israel’s drones, with large parts of its infrastructure currently based in the UK.

    The ‘end in sight’

    The work that Elbit Systems lost is a £160m contract to deliver training for a Dreadnought-class submarine crew. Chalk additionally confirmed that there are ongoing negotiations for Elbit to depart from a £123m contract for Project Selborne navy training. According to Chalk:

    This has not happened because of any specific issues with Elbit Systems UK or any wrongdoing on their part but rather a result of applying revised operational sovereignty standards for the UK’s highest priority capabilities.

    Some have questioned this, however. Andrew Feinstein is an arms industry expert and author of The Shadow World: Inside the Global Arms Trade. Reacting to these latest developments, he said:

    The loss of these contracts is a major crisis for Elbit and raises questions about the future of the controversial company in Britain. The government claims that it has happened as part of a ‘sovereignty’ drive, but the reality is that many other foreign defence companies continue to play vital roles as suppliers of equipment and services to the UK’s armed forces. I strongly suspect that they have lost these contracts as a consequence of the Direct Action group Palestine Action having so successfully revealed the brutal reality of Elbit’s gross human rights abuses, especially in enforcing the illegal occupation of Palestine by Israel. Not that the UK government will ever admit this.

    Activist and rapper Lowkey similarly commented on the situation:

    He also praised the actions of activists before finding himself blocked by Elbit on Twitter:

    The Canary has previously reported on Elbit Systems, writing:

    Elbit is Israel’s largest private arms manufacturer and produces up to 85% of Israel’s drones. These drones have massacred Palestinians in Gaza. The company is also responsible for manufacturing small-calibre ammunition for the Israeli army. Direct action campaigners are therefore trying to force Elbit out of the UK.

    Stocks away

    Chalk made the submissions in Parliament, which was the first time this information entered the public domain. He was responding to shadow defence secretary John Healey, and to Labour MPs Chris Evans and Kevan Jones. Both of these latter two men are associated with the ‘Labour Friends of Israel’ group.

    Release of the information served to further damaged Elbit Systems’ share prices which were already plummeting following third quarter losses. The reveal led to a fall of 10% over November 29th, with the shares down 18% through November overall.

    Describing the situation in a press release, Palestine Action said:

    The loss of these contracts is a huge blow for Elbit, with their attempts to gain MOD favour a major reason for their manufacturing presence in Britain. These contracts were initially awarded after Elbit’s deep involvement in procurement and training for the Israeli defence, across army, navy, and air forces. Not only are Elbit’s manufactured products described as “field-tested on Palestinians”, but their training and simulation contracts have been gained following their performances in Israel, including delivering the ‘Brigade and Battlegroup Mission Training Centre’

    However, it now seems that these hundreds of millions of pounds will stop flowing from British taxpayers to the outfitters of Israel’s murderous military – amidst constant pressure of sustained and intensive direct action by Palestine Action. For over two years, Palestine Action has targeted Elbit Systems and its partners with actions that have included breaking into factories and offices, and breaching security in order to impede Elbit’s ability to securely complete its contracts across manufacturing and delivery.

    Direct action

    Elbit’s Dreadnought Ministry of Defence (MOD) training contract was agreed on 9 May 2022, according to Palestine Action. They further note that just 6 days later, nine of their activists breached security at Elbit’s Bristol site and barricaded themselves inside the offices while causing high-level damage. Palestine Action further noted:

    On another occasion, activists from Palestine Action Scotland broke into the factory of Elbit partner Thales and again dismantled what was inside – including a completed periscope which Thales specifically for the Dreadnought-class submarine. Across the over two-year campaign, the sites of Elbit Systems and its partners have been broken into over 100 times. Despite increasing its spending on surveillance, security guards, and even maintaining dogs at all sites, Elbit have been unable to address the constant threat made to its ability to securely deliver on contracts and handle sensitive material.

    Palestine Action’s campaign to shut Elbit down and force them out of Britain has so far seen their Oldham factory and London offices forced to close permanently [10]. Actions taken against Elbit partners, such as Thales, APPH, JLL, have seen Elbit appear a decreasingly safe consortium member, while they simultaneously struggle to recruit for British posts – potentially as a result of the strong reputational harm done.

    Reporting on the failure to prosecute Palestine Action activists, the Canary wrote in October:

    The trial of the ‘Bristol 3’ is one of a long list of cases against anti-Elbit campaigners where the state has failed to secure a conviction for similar reasons. The common thread throughout these cases has been that Elbit has not provided evidence to prove that what it does is lawful

    In 2015, a case against nine protesters collapsed after defence lawyers asked for the disclosure of arms export licenses. Neither Elbit nor the UK government supplied them, and the court ruled the case shouldn’t go forward.

    Since then, Elbit, the CPS, and the campaigners have been at a stalemate. An onslaught of direct action against Elbit has closed down two of the company’s premises in the UK. But the state has failed to successfully prosecute people for actions at Elbit sites (although one person was convicted for an action against Elbit’s landlord in March).

    Featured image via Palestine Action – Guy Smallman

    By John Shafthauer

  • Following the tragic and avoidable death of 2-year-old Awaab Ishak, Labour MP for Jarrow Kate Osborne has called on the government and local councils to take urgent action in response to multiple reports of damp housing across the UK.

    Responding to an inquest into Awaab’s death, the family’s barrister Christian Weaver said:

    Indecent homes

    Osborne wrote to the secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities to highlight that:

    • 3.5 million currently occupied homes did not meet the Decent Homes Standard in 2020.
    • 2.2 million had at least one category one hazard – such as black mould.
    • 941,000 had serious damp.

    The MP also wrote to South Tyneside Council leader Tracey Dixon, Gateshead Council leader Martin Gannon and Paul Mains, the managing director of South Tyneside Homes. She asked them what action they were taking to tackle this problem, writing:

    We know that lower-income households are more likely to live with damp and mould and less likely to be able to keep their home warm in winter.

    The government must urgently intervene. Renters, regardless of whether their landlord is a private entity, agency, housing association or local council, must be protected this winter. The Secretary of state Michael Gove’s suggestion that private sector reform proposals may come in 2023 will be too late for many.

    Osborne says she took action after several constituents contacted her in the wake of the shocking death of Awaab Ishak. Reporting on Awaab’s death, The Canary wrote:

    On 15 November, the inquest into the death of 2-year-old Awaab Ishak in 2020 concluded that the toddler died due to prolonged exposure to black mould in his family’s flat. Since 2017, Awaab’s family had complained to Rochdale Boroughwide Housing (RBH) about the damp and mould in their home, and had requested to be re-housed. RBH, the social housing association responsible for the Rochdale council flat, failed to take action. The toddler died on 21 December 2020, having been discharged from hospital two days prior.

    Following his death, the company who rented the property attempted to place blame on the Ishak family:

    RBH later backtracked, saying they were wrong to “make assumptions about lifestyle” and that they “abhor racism”. This followed a coroner’s ruling proving there was no “excessive behaviour” as RBH had alleged.

    More homes remain unsafe

    A press release from Osborne’s office notes that those who contacted her include:

    a constituent who suffers with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and is living in a Home Group property full of damp and black and green mould. The walls are wet to touch, and he is understandably extremely worried for his health.

    Yet, despite reporting these conditions to the housing association and being told action would be taken, nothing has happened.

    Osborne is also calling on the government:

    to commit to a fully new Decent Homes Standard enforceable in law – one that covers the private rented sector as well as council and social housing – and to provide urgent funding to enable local authorities to invest in social housing stock and tackle landlords who refuse to carry out repairs, such as tackling damp and mould.

    She notes that the Decent Homes Standard currently excludes the private sector. This is despite almost a third of the 1.2 million private renter households across the north of England living in “non-decent” standard homes, according to a Northern Housing Consortium report.

    The situation comes not long after Conservative party backbenchers successfully shot down planning reforms in the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill that would have established a target of building 300,000 new homes a year in England.

    Questions for government

    In her letter, Kate Osborne asks:

    What is the timetable for the private rental sector reform paper?

    What action are you taking now to ensure families living in these damp, squalid conditions receive immediate support?

    What are you doing to assist investment in social housing, enforcement capacity, and legal help to end this scandal once and for all?

    Will you bring a fully new decent homes standard enforceable in law?

    Will you re-evaluate each local authority’s funding, so they have the resources needed to tackle this issue?

    Will you confirm what steps your department is taking to retrofit and insulate older social housing stock to make homes cheaper to heat?

    Osborne additionally said:

    We urgently need a commitment from the Government for a fully new decent homes standard, enforceable in law. There is also a clear need for funding to address this crisis for local authorities who need to both invest in their social housing stock and invest in enforcement teams to tackle landlords and housing associations who are refusing to carry out remedial works. That is why I have written to the Secretary of State to demand action now, not at some point in the future.

    The Canary has previously reported on the UK housing crisis, including Welsh campaigners’ demand for a 100% tax rise on second home owners to tackle the plight of local housing shortages. Further afield, Irish politicians heard that a right to housing is ‘morally and socially’ correct. We’ve additionally reported on the ‘filthy and decrepit’ conditions that refugees have endured at British facilities.

    Featured image via Wikipedia – Roger Harris CC 3.0 – cropped to fit image

    By John Shafthauer

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • While the Scottish government continues to freeze people’s rents, the same cannot be said for the Tories in England. So, several groups are taking action against self-serving MPs, and “out of control” landlords and estate agents – all of whom are responsible for housing chaos across the country.

    England’s rental chaos

    The London Renters Union is a community-led action group fighting for tenants across the capital. As Inside Croydon reported, the group is working with the Greater Manchester Tenants Union. They’re staging a coordinated day of action on Saturday 3 December over the rented housing market in England:

    The English rental market is a mess. As Inside Croydon wrote, London Renters Union research shows:

    members are facing an average rent increase of £3,378 per year – reckoned to be a 20.5% rent rise

    Inside Croydon also noted how no-fault evictions:

    under which landlords do not need to provide any cause for ordering a tenant out of their property, have increased by 76% in 2022 compared to the previous 12 months. In 2019, the Tory government made an election pledge to abolish Section 21 of the Housing Act 1988. Three years later, nothing has been done to honour that commitment.

    Across England, Guardian research showed that:

    rents on new listings are up by almost a third since 2019, and some people are facing increases of up to 60%. Prices in 48 council areas are now classed by the Office for National Statistics as unaffordable when compared with average wages.

    The protests on 3 December will be highlighting all this:

    “Out of control”

    London Renters Union said in a press release:

    Many of us are facing huge rent increases and homelessness. Landlords and estate agents are out of control.

    On Saturday, we’re fighting back. We’re protesting against the big estate agents that make their money by pushing our rents up. There’s already a rent freeze in Scotland. That means its illegal for landlords in Scotland to raise the rent or evict renters. Let’s fight for the same here.

    In Scotland, the SNP-led government changed the law so landlords could not put rent up between 6 September and at least 31 March, 2023. The government can keep the rent freeze in place for a “further two six-month periods”. Plus, the law also stops landlords evicting people – except for in certain circumstances. Moreover, new figures show just why the rent freeze was necessary. As the National reported, in the year up to September (before the rent freeze started), figures showed that:

    average rents rose in 17 out of 18 [Scottish] regions, with South Lanarkshire seeing the highest rise of 10.3%.

    Of course, it would be too much to think that Westminster MPs would freeze English rents. This is probably because, as Transparency International found:

    • 27% of MPs own a second home.
    • 40% of MPs and peers have a property interest – with the Tories being the highest at 43%.

    This level of conflicts of interests is part of the problem with England’s rental system. So, as London Renters Union said:

    By taking action together, we can force politicians to back a #RentFreezeNow. But to do that, we need you to join our day of action this Saturday.

    Fighting back

    You can get involved on social media using the hashtag #RentFreezeNow. Physical protests are happening at the following locations:

    • Brent: 12pm, Willesden Green station.
    • Lewisham: 11:30am, Vicar’s Oak entrance to Crystal Palace Park.
    • Hackney: 12pm, the platform on Mare Street next to Hackney Tap.
    • Haringey: 10:30am, Pret A Manger, the Mall, Wood Green.
    • Newham: 12pm, Stratford Station, opposite the old shopping centre.
    • Tower Hamlets: 11am, Roman Road market.

    With inflation set to continue to rise and Tory government inaction also likely to continue, community organising has never been more important.

    Sign up for London Renters Union’s day of action here.

    Featured image via the London Renters Union

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Once again we are being asked to believe that being elderly and posh is an excuse for being racist. In this case it’s the old classic: no, but where are you really from? As if it simply does not compute that someone can be Black and British at the same time.

    The latest offender is a royal aide, Lady Susan Hussey AKA Baroness Hussey. Hussey had worked with the royal family since the 1960s. She’s been a lady-in-waiting for 60 years, including to the late queen. She is also godmother to Prince William.

    Given all that time spent in the company of a family famous for its racism, it may not be surprising that she’s reverting to type.

    Hussey stepped down on 30 November after a bizarre exchange with the Black founder of a charity at a reception event.

    Ngozi Fulani, founder of the Sistah Space charity, later tweeted a transcript of the interaction, saying it had left her with “mixed feelings”:

    Forgiveness for the rich

    It seems like an open and shut case of racism. But not for the political right. Tory TV headmistress Katharine Birbalsingh was quick to suggest that her age ruled Hussey out of accountability:

    However, this wasn’t a view which carried much weight with other Twitter users, who pointed out that forgiveness is beyond Birbalsingh if you aren’t white and posh, apparently:

    Racist intent

    With “she’s 83” soon being satirised on Twitter, Hussey apologists were accused of ignoring the content of the transcript as well as its aggressive tone:

    Some commenters tried to excuse Hussey’s comments as mere curiosity. However, others pointed out that merely reading them back should dispel any such notions:

    We also had a timely reminder that it is in fact possible to be old and not racist:

    One twitter user even shared a helpful guide to the stages of white innocence, which ought to make sure you can get away with being racist no matter what age you are:

    Special treatment

    It’s clear that if you are rich, white, and posh your prejudices will be overlooked or let slide far more easily than if you don’t have those attributes. However, this isn’t just about individual examples of racism. Hussey was part of the royal entourage for decades. She enjoyed the privileges and status which accompanies a role at the heart of the royal family. It seems impossible to imagine the kinds of view which informed her comments flourished only recently. And it certainly isn’t the case that they can simply be attributed to her age.

    That she has stepped down is something. However, racism will continue to run through the heart of the British establishment – it is, after all, built on colonialism and exploitation.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons/Ibagli, cropped to 770 x 403.

    By Joe Glenton

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Brexit has caused a food price hike of nearly £6bn in the last two years, according to new research. The study by the London School of Economics (LSE) states that the rise in prices is due to increased red tape. That’s somewhat of an irony given Brexit was often touted as a way to reduce bureaucracy and added costs.

    The study says that the average household spent £210 more in 2020 and 2021. Researchers at LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance (CEP) said that it was poorer families, who spend a larger portion of their income on food, who would feel the worst effects.

    Going hungry

    The authors said:

    We find that leaving the European Union increased the price of food products by 3% a year, leading to a 6% increase over a two-year period.

    The researchers wanted to understand the impact of so-called ‘non-tariff barriers’ (NTBs) on prices. Their findings were grim:

    One Twitter user was bemused, recalling the great steps forward Brexit was meant to deliver:

    The report’s publication comes only a day after prime minister Rishi Sunak took a pasting in the Commons over his own Brexit position:

    Sunak had been told to admit that Brexit was a significant cause of UK economic problems by the Scottish National Party’s Ian Blackford. We won’t hold our breath for that.

    Brexit freedom?

    Sunak was also slammed for suggesting that Brexit increased ‘freedom‘ in the UK:

    People had zero time for arch-Brexiteer Nigel Farage, who decided to go on a rant about the EU banning Twitter:

    Farage’s claim seemed to be in relation to report that Twitter owner Elon Musk could drop moderation rules for the app. Reuters reported on 30 November that the EU had issued a warning that Twitter must abide by its strict content rules.

    Best efforts

    Meanwhile, some people were still searching in vain for a single benefit of leaving the EU:

    Despite the weight of evidence, supporters of Brexit continue to flail around to find benefits of leaving the EU. In the case of Rishi Sunak that includes coming up with spurious arguments about freedom. The truth is it’s long been clear that Brexit is not what it was cracked up to be – and it will continue to be the poorest who suffer the worst effects

    Featured image via Wikimedia Common/Cabinet Office, cropped to 770 x 403, licensed under Open Government License.

    By Joe Glenton

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • A Welsh language campaign group has used the World Cup as an opportunity to “put every school on path to teaching in Welsh”. It comes as a Welsh footballer drew criticism for responding to a Welsh-speaking journalist in Welsh:

    Laying the foundations

    Cymdeithas yr Iaith describes itself as “a society of people that takes non-violent direct action for the Welsh language and Welsh communities as part of the international revolution for rights and freedoms”. The group have called on the first minister to ensure that all children educated in Wales in future leave school fluent in Welsh. They added:

    the foundations need to be laid now to start transforming the education system, so that all schools are teaching through the medium of Welsh by 2050.

    The Welsh government is currently preparing its Welsh Language Education Act, which Cymdeithas has called “a once-in-a-generation opportunity to ensure that all young people in future leave school able to speak Welsh”. The group says one education system is needed for the whole of Wales, where everyone, from all backgrounds, learns through the Welsh language.

    The World Cup has also displayed the criticism that Welsh people can receive for speaking in their native tongue:

    “Passion”

    In a letter to Mark Drakeford, Robat Idris, the newly elected national chair of Cymdeithas yr Iaith, discusses “the passion for the language” following Cymru’s campaign in the World Cup, as well as the feeling expressed by many, that the current education system has failed them by not ensuring they leave school able and confident in their Welsh language skills. Idris’s letter reads:

    Although Cymru’s World Cup campaign has ended, this period will have had a long-term impact on the nation in many ways. But what will the World Cup’s legacy be for our national language? The Government under your leadership has the opportunity and responsibility through the Welsh Language Education Act to ensure that the legacy of the World Cup for future generations will be to give every young person the ability to speak Welsh by placing every school in the country on a path towards Welsh-medium education. This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to address the social injustice of the current divide, by setting a long-term goal that will have far-reaching effects in terms of the confidence of future generations to use the Welsh language and ensure that no-one is left behind as the language thrives.

    Cymdeithas yr Iaith has drawn up a draft of its own Welsh Language Education Act, which was launched at the end of the summer. The act sets a clear goal that the entire education system will be in Welsh by 2050, with the intention that all schools move gradually along a path to teaching through the medium of Welsh over the next 25 years. The results of a survey into the mandatory status of English in Wales can be found here.

    Gwaddol iaith Cwpan y Byd?

    A Welsh version of the press release from Cymdeithas yr Iaith follows:

    Gwaddol iaith Cwpan y Byd? Rhowch bob ysgol ar lwybr tuag at ddysgu drwy gyfrwng y Gymraeg – Cymdeithas yr Iaith

    Mae ymgyrchwyr iaith wedi galw ar y Prif Weinidog i sicrhau bod pob plentyn fydd yn cael addysg yng Nghymru yn y dyfodol yn gadael yr ysgol yn rhugl yn y Gymraeg. Dywed Cymdeithas yr Iaith bod angen gosod y sylfaen nawr i ddechrau gweddnewid y gyfundrefn addysg, fel bod pob ysgol yn dysgu drwy gyfrwng y Gymraeg erbyn 2050.

    Mae’r Llywodraeth wrthi’n paratoi ar gyfer Deddf Addysg Gymraeg, ac yn ôl Cymdeithas yr Iaith mae hwn yn gyfle unwaith mewn cenhedlaeth i sicrhau y bydd holl bobl ifanc y dyfodol yn gadael yr ysgol yn gallu siarad Cymraeg. Mae’r mudiad yn dweud mai creu un gyfundrefn addysg i Gymru gyfan sydd ei angen, lle mae pawb, o bob cefndir, yn dysgu drwy’r Gymraeg.

    Mewn llythyr at Mark Drakeford, mae Cadeirydd cenedlaethol newydd Cymdeithas yr Iaith, Robat Idris, yn sôn am yr angerdd sydd i’w deimlo dros yr iaith yn dilyn ymgyrch Cymru yng Nghwpan y Byd, yn ogystal â’r teimlad sy’n gyffredin ymhlith llawer o bobl Cymru bod y gyfundrefn addysg bresennol wedi eu methu drwy beidio sicrhau eu bod yn gadael yr ysgol yn abl ac yn hyderus yn eu Cymraeg.

    Yn y llythyr at y Prif Weinidog, meddai Robat Idris:

    “Er bod ymgyrch tîm Cymru yng Nghwpan y Byd wedi dod i ben, bydd y cyfnod hwn wedi cael effaith hirdymor ar y genedl mewn sawl ffordd. Ond beth fydd gwaddol Cwpan y Byd o ran y Gymraeg? Mae gan y Llywodraeth o dan eich arweiniad gyfle a chyfrifoldeb i sicrhau drwy’r Ddeddf Addysg Gymraeg mai gwaddol Cwpan y Byd i genedlaethau’r dyfodol fydd rhoi’r Gymraeg ar dafod pob person ifanc drwy osod pob ysgol yn y wlad ar y daith tuag at addysg cyfrwng Cymraeg. Dyma gyfle unwaith mewn cenhedlaeth i gywiro’r anghyfiawnder cymdeithasol presennol drwy osod nod hirdymor a fydd yn cael effaith bellgyrhaeddol o ran hyder cenedlaethau’r dyfodol i ddefnyddio’r Gymraeg gan sicrhau nad oes neb yn cael eu gadael ar ôl wrth i’r iaith ffynnu.”

    Mae Cymdeithas yr Iaith wedi llunio drafft o Ddeddf Addysg Gymraeg ei hun, a lansiwyd dros yr haf. Mae’r Ddeddf yn gosod nod clir y bydd y gyfundrefn addysg gyfan yn un cyfrwng Cymraeg erbyn 2050, gyda’r bwriad bod pob ysgol yn symud yn raddol ar hyd llwybr i ddysgu drwy gyfrwng y Gymraeg dros y chwarter canrif nesaf. Mae’r Ddeddf gyfan i’w gweld ar ein yma.

    Featured image via YouTube screenshot

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Buckingham Palace apologised on Wednesday 30 November after a member of the royal household repeatedly asked a Black British charity campaigner where she “really” came from. The household member in question has now quit. Ngozi Fulani, the chief executive of the London-based Sistah Space, recounted the exchange with the unidentified woman on Twitter:

    Fulani is a prominent advocate for survivors of domestic abuse. She was attending a reception at the palace with other campaigners on Tuesday 30 November. Sistah Space is a community-based group which offers domestic abuse services for African heritage women and girls.

    Belonging

    Fulani recounted how a ‘Lady SH’ repeatedly asked her:

    Where do you really come from, where do your people come from?

    Fulani replied to say that she was “of African heritage, Caribbean descent”. But Lady SH forced her to repeat several times that she was a British national. Fulani said the exchange left her with “mixed feelings” about the reception, which was hosted by queen consort Camilla to highlight violence against women and girls.

    People on social media took a dim view of the actions of ‘Lady SH’. Leader of the Women’s Equality Party, Mandu Reid said:

    Both The Times and LBC have reported that the ‘Lady SH’ in question is Susan Hussey, prince William’s godmother. Journalist Lorraine King expressed her disbelief:

    Writer Dr. Shola Mos-Shogbamimu called for more extensive apologies:

    Black Activists Rising Against Cuts (BARAC) expressed their horror:

    Buckingham Palace said it took the incident “extremely seriously” and called the comments “unacceptable and deeply regrettable,” adding:

    We have reached out to Ngozi Fulani on this matter, and are inviting her to discuss all elements of her experience in person if she wishes.

    In the meantime, the individual concerned would like to express her profound apologies for the hurt caused and has stepped aside from her honorary role with immediate effect.

    All members of the Household are being reminded of the diversity and inclusivity policies which they are required to uphold at all times.

    Diversity

    Last year, the royal family revealed for the first time how many ethnic minority staff it employs and admitted it had not made sufficient progress on diversity. The focus on improving diversity followed claims from king Charles III’s youngest son Harry Windsor and his daughter-in-law Meghan Markle about racism in the royal family. At the time, the Canary‘s own Sophia Purdy-Moore explained the role mainstream media plays in anti-Blackness:

    Black women are under-represented in journalism, over-represented in those receiving online abuse, and under-protected in both instances. The British public and mainstream media need to get with the times. And they must work to root out anti-Blackness, inherent bias, and white supremacy in all their forms.

    The treatment of Fulani was nothing but anti-Blackness and characteristic of a Britain where you only belong if you’re white.

    Featured image by Wikimedia Commons/Diliff via CC 3.0, resized to 770×403

    Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse

    By Maryam Jameela

  • Royal Mail is on the verge of a “Christmas meltdown” due to the backlog in letters and deliveries. That’s the verdict of postal workers in the Communication Workers Union (CWU). The warning comes as bosses refused to enter eleventh-hour talks to avert two strikes – one being today, Wednesday 30 November.

    Royal Mail: looking like shits

    The ongoing dispute between the CWU, workers and Royal Mail bosses doesn’t look like it’s ending. After the company made what it called its “final and best offer” – including an insulting 3.5% pay rise – the CWU came back with another offer. This included an 18-month pay deal and a business strategy for Royal Mail. Bosses dug their heels in – with union sources saying CEO Simon Thompson has not even turning up to recent negotiations. Royal Mail have now offered managers bonuses to push through redundancies – with some of these managers being Unite members; putting the CWU’s actions at odds with its fellow union.

    Then, Royal Mail continues its Uberisation – with the company hiring gig economy workers to cover the strikes. Little did the company know that CWU members were onto it – with hundreds of them posing as couriers and registering to do the work:

    So, on 30 November CWU members walked out once again across the country:

    But behind the scenes, boss’s arrogance is starting to seriously impact the business.

    Letters stacking up

    The CWU says workers are “sounding the alarm” over the huge backlog of letters, parcels, and deliveries stacking up. As BBC News reported, Royal Mail bosses are telling workers not to make letters a priority for delivery. One worker said:

    First thing management will say is ‘no overtime allowed and just clear your parcels and leave all the mail’, so that can mean you’ll have half a job left on the deck… This week I’ve had a hospital appointment [letter] on my round that has been there for two days… Unfortunately, you don’t agree with your management but you have to do what they tell you to do.

    Meanwhile, the CWU said in a press release that:

    Small businesses and companies reliant on mail have already expressed grave concerns about the lack of negotiations, with a recent letter to The Times signed by leading business figures rom eBay, the British Chamber of Commerce and the Federation of Small Businesses reminding readers that Royal Mail’s “army of postal workers” are integral to the “real economy”, and calling for a resolution to the dispute.

    The union wrote to Thompson at the weekend, calling for fresh negotiations. However, bosses have so far failed to act on the offer.

    Horrible bosses

    CWU general secretary Dave Ward said:

    Royal Mail bosses are risking a Christmas meltdown because of their stubborn refusal to treat their employees with respect. Postal workers want to get on with serving the communities they belong to, delivering Christmas gifts and tackling the backlog from recent weeks. But they know their value, and they will not meekly accept the casualisation of their jobs, the destruction of their conditions and the impoverishment of their families.

    This can be resolved if Royal Mail begin treating their workers with respect, and meet with the union to resolve this dispute.

    CWU members will walk out again on Thursday 1 December. Given Royal Mail’s intransigence, it looks like this dispute will continue into 2023.

    Featured image via the Evening Standard – YouTube

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is back in court next week. The case could see the department forced to pay millions of people over £1,500 each. However, the situation is not that straightforward, because this DWP case has been ongoing for over a year.

    DWP: uplift for some

    During the pandemic, the DWP increased Universal Credit by £20-a-week. But it did not do the same for people on so-called legacy benefits. This included social security like Employment and Support Allowance (ESA). Disability rights activist Paula Peters previously told The Canary:

    the Tories completely overlooked and ignored legacy benefit claimants during the pandemic. Many of these 2.2 million claimants are disabled people. Some were also shielding. Living costs rose and disabled people couldn’t afford the most basic standard of living…

    We just want to live with dignity and respect.

    However, the DWP has not gone unchallenged on the issue.

    There was discrimination, but ‘meh’

    Several claimants brought a court case against the department over the issue. Represented by solicitors including Osbornes Law, the claimants argued that the DWP paying extra money to some people and not others was discriminatory – specifically against disabled people.

    In November 2021, a court looked at the claimants’ case – and dismissed it in favour of the DWP. Osbornes Law wrote that:

    Whilst the Court accepted that there was discrimination towards disabled people on legacy benefits, the Judge ruled that the difference in treatment was justified. Mr Justice Swift (giving judgment in this case) accepted the justification put forward by the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (“SSWP”), that the increase to the standard allowance of UC [Universal Credit] was done with the intention of providing additional support to those people who lost their jobs as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic and were forced to claim UC for the first time. Mr Justice Swift accepted that using the increase in UC to cushion the loss of employment or reduction in income was a legitimate objective.

    Of course, the DWP’s argument is slightly different from what the government said before. The then-chancellor Rishi Sunak told Martin Lewis in 2021 that the DWP’s:

    original rationale for doing the temporary uplift in Universal Credit [UC] was to help… people in work but on lower incomes, whose incomes were going to be affected by the [pandemic] crisis.

    So, which was it? Did the DWP uplift Universal Credit for people who’d lost their jobs, or people whose incomes reduced? Now, the claimants and their lawyers are appealing exactly this.

    Appealing the irrational

    As the Daily Record reported:

    One of the litigant’s involved in the challenge confirmed on social media that the legal team representing the four benefit claimants will present their case to the Court of Appeal on Wednesday December 7, 2022. The post, shared on Twitter, said: “I can now confirm that I have had word from legal counsel today that the hearing in the appeal of the #LegacyBenefits case will be held on 7th December 2022.”

    If the claimants’ appeal is successful, the DWP could have to pay around £1,500 in backdated money to people. Campaign group Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) said in a press release:

    There are in excess of 2.2 million people claiming legacy benefits, yet there has been no focus on their exclusion in the mainstream media, who instead have centred on Universal Credit claimants. This case was brought by claimants who were excluded from the £20 uplift and they are fighting for equal treatment for all legacy benefit claimants.

    Winning this appeal would mean that the DWP would have to pay the value of the uplift received by Universal Credit claimants to legacy claimants as well, and a lump sum payment, particularly during the costs crisis could provide vital financial relief for millions of disabled people in poverty.

    Whether or not the judge sees sense this time around remains to be seen. It should seem fairly clear cut to most people: the DWP treated workers differently to disabled people who cannot work – ergo, discrimination. However, in the world of the DWP and the UK legal system, that doesn’t mean anything. So, millions of people will await the outcome of this latest battle against the DWP.

    Featured image via Dan Perry – Flickr, resized to 770×403 under licence CC BY 2.0, and Wikimedia 

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • A wildlife and environment coalition released its annual report on wildlife crime in England and Wales on 29 November. It showed that wildlife crime is taking place at record levels.

    The Wildlife and Countryside Link report also highlighted the institutional failures that hinder the effective tackling of the problem. Worryingly, it also pointed out that things could get much worse in this regard if a controversial government bill becomes law.

    Record wildlife crime figures

    Wildlife and Countryside Link, known colloquially as Link, has released a yearly report on wildlife crime since 2016. The latest report indicated that the record high rates of such crime during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic show no signs of abating.

    Based on information provided by groups including the World Wildlife Fund UK, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, and the League Against Cruel Sports, Link found that there were 1,414 reported wildlife crime incidents in 2021. This doesn’t include reports of crimes in fisheries. In 2020, the figure stood at 1,404.

    In terms of international wildlife crimes, 2021 [p16] saw a “marked increase” in Border Force seizures. Records show 720 total seizures in 2021, compared to 438 in 2020. The report said that this:

    might reflect changes linked to the Covid-19 pandemic and a resumption of travel and trade.

    Domestically, the report reviewed crimes against species such as badgers, birds of prey, bats and rare plants. It found that reported crimes against badgers dropped to 526 in 2021, compared with 618 in 2020. However, the authors cautioned that the fall is likely due to “fewer volunteers reporting the crime”, rather than less persecution.

    Meanwhile, reported crimes against bats increased from 105 to 136 between 2020 and 2021. Raptor crime reports remained relatively steady at 302, down just 10 from the previous year. However, reported crimes against marine mammals – such as the disturbance of dolphins and seals – increased by 84. This brought the total reported marine mammal incidents in 2021 to 450.

    Wildlife crime going under the radar

    Link CEO Dr Richard Benwell highlighted that the report is effectively a “snapshot” of wildlife crime in England and Wales. He emphasised that it:

    is likely to be a significant under-estimate of all kinds of wildlife offences.

    The figures for reported crimes against marine mammals illustrate his point well. They solely relate to Cornwall because nationwide reporting is lacking. As Link highlighted, Cornwall’s figures can act as “an indicator of national trends”. But to confirm trends, data is necessary.

    The lack of adequate data is essentially down to the government. Wildlife crime isn’t a notifiable offence, meaning authorities don’t hand data on it to the Home Office to include in national statistics.

    As Link highlighted, a 2021 United Nations (UN) report recommended that the UK make “all wildlife crime recordable and notifiable offences”. However, the government has failed to act on this report’s recommendations, according to Link.

    Martin Sims, chair of Link’s wildlife crime working group, noted that such statistics would allow authorities:

    to gauge the true extent of wildlife crime and to plan strategically to address it.

    Low rate of convictions

    The report also pointed to other institutional failures in relation to addressing such crime. It welcomed the rise in convictions for some crimes in 2021. However, it also highlighted that low rates of prosecutions and convictions are “an on-going challenge in tackling wildlife crime”.

    The 2021 figures are a case in point. Excluding fisheries crimes, there were only 55 convictions for wildlife crimes across the year. Moreover, 53% of hunting crime prosecutions failed to secure a conviction. This is significantly below the conviction rate for all crimes, which stood at around 82% in 2020/21.

    Link cited a “lack of training and resources” as a key reason for these low conviction levels. This mostly applies to wildlife crime teams in police forces. However, Link also highlighted the need for more lawyers to receive training in wildlife crime-related legislation.

    Out with the old, out with the new

    The legislation itself is also a problem, according to Link. It described UK wildlife crime law as “antiquated and disparate”. It recommended that the government reform wildlife crime legislation, along with addressing the other aforementioned shortcomings.

    Link further called on the government to immediately withdraw the retained EU law bill. This bill is currently making its way through parliament, and it aims to sunset potentially thousands of EU laws that the UK retained after Brexit unless ministers actively opt to keep them. It’s effectively a looming bonfire of regulations, which includes 570 environmental laws, according to the Guardian.

    Link warned that the bill could “actively worsen wildlife crime”. This is because laws facing the axe include ones like Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2017, which criminalises damaging certain species’ habitats. The coalition pointed out that habitat offences:

    form the majority of the wildlife crimes against badgers and bats

    In short, Link’s report lays bare a series of institutional failures behind the record wildlife crime figures. This is nothing short of disgraceful, although not surprising. Despite successive governments‘ rhetoric on the importance of protecting the planet and its lifeforms, their actions – and the impact these have had – speak louder.

    The level to which the government prioritises nature and the wild lives contained therein is perhaps best illustrated by the fact that the UK is one of the most wildlife-depleted countries on Earth.

    Featured image via Kumweni / Flickr, cropped to 770×403, licensed under CC BY 2.0

    By Tracy Keeling

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The results of the Census 2021 continue to come in. However, on Tuesday 29 November, the latest release caused gammon across the UK to collectively lose their minds – helped along by the Guardian, which then changed its article after it was published.

    Census: cue moral outrage from the right wing

    As Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported, for the first time, less than half of the population in England and Wales identifies as Christian. This was according to census data released Tuesday. The 10-yearly census carried out in 2021 showed ‘no religion’ was the second most common response after Christian, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said. Data for Scotland and Northern Ireland is released separately. The ONS added the religion question to the UK census in 2001. It remains voluntary to answer, but 94% of respondents did.

    Some 27.5 million people in England and Wales, or 46.2%, described themselves as Christian This was down 13.1 percentage points from 2011. ‘No religion’ rose by 12 percentage points to 37.2%, or 22.2 million, while people describing themselves as Muslim stood at 3.9 million, or 6.5% of the population, up 1.6 percentage points. The next most common responses were Hindu (one million) and Sikh (524,000), while Buddhists overtook Jewish people (273,000 to 271,000).

    Of course, the real story here is that more and more people are not religious. However, not to let the facts get in the way of an opportunity, right wingers used the Census as an opportunity to drop racist horseshit – with the Guardian aiding and abetting them.

    Manipulating figures

    The Guardian originally wrote that:

    The census revealed a 5.5 million drop in the number of Christians and a 44% rise in the number of people following Islam.

    It continued:

    37.2% of people – 22.2 million – declared they had “no religion”, the second most common response after Christian. It means that over the past 20 years the proportion of people reporting no religion has soared from 14.8%.

    However, the Guardian was intentionally mixing up its measurements:

    It should have used either the changes in the number of people or the changes in the percentages. Instead, the Guardian used the percentage change for Muslims to make it look huge. Clearly, editors realised the pushback their biased reporting would receive – as the article was changed on the same day. It now uses the same measurements for both statistics.

    However, the Guardian doubled down on the race-baiting with its dire takes on ethnicity figures.

    Guardian: jumping on ethnicity

    AFP reported that the ONS found the number of people in England and Wales identifying their ethnic group as white had fallen by around 500,000 since 2011. This went down from from 86% to 81.7%. The proportion identifying as white and from the British Isles stood at 74.4%, down six points from 2011. However, the ONS noted that respondents could also choose from more options than in 2011, encouraging them to list other identities.

    The second most common ethnic group after white was “Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh” at 9.3%, up from 7.5% a decade ago. Within that group, most respondents identified their family heritage as Indian, followed by Pakistani, “other Asian”, Bangladeshi, and Chinese. The next largest ethnic group was the African, followed by Caribbean.

    Of course, the Guardian jumped on this. It said that places where more Black and brown people lived were called “minority majorities”:

    Ushering in a new age of city-wide “super diversity”, the ONS data showed 59.1% of the people of Leicester are now from ethnic minority groups, a big change since 1991, when black and minority ethnic people made up just over a quarter of the city’s residents.

    The term “super diversity” is problematic for several reasons.

    Race-baiting

    As professor of applied linguistics Sinfree Makoni wrote, he was:

    extremely uncomfortable with the notion of diversity when used to refer to ‘mass movements’ for three main reasons. First, writing from a vantage perspective of being an immigrant in a rural university which seeks to bring to fruition diversity, I keep asking myself whether it is not the case that diversity… is a version of a description of reality that can only be advocated by those who are part of the powerful elite, such as researchers.

    Second, those of us who have spent most of our professional lives outside our countries of origin find that diversity may be extremely uncomfortable, because it is typically others who do so. It is the powerful who celebrate the notion of diversity; those of us from other parts of the world feel the idea of diversity is a careful concealment of power differences…

    Third, I find it disconcerting, to say the least, to have an open celebration of diversity in societies marked by violent xenophobia, such as South Africa… Furthermore, diversity stresses the differences between individuals, languages, groups, etc. Whether we are diverse or not depends on the power of the social microscope being used.

    So, not only did the Guardian prop up right-wing narratives about, for example, “invasions” of refugees – it then did what the liberal media do so well, and covered its tracks by spinning it as “super diversity”. For a supposedly left-wing outlet, it does a remarkably good job of sowing the seeds of division and racism for the right wing.

    Featured image via the Guardian – screengrab

    Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse (AFP)

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Wednesday 30 November will see several unions taking national strike action – with one of them holding a rally in central London. However, with more unions planning industrial action, it could be the first of many ‘super strike Wednesdays’.

    Super strike Wednesday

    Thanks to campaign group Strike Map UK, we have a clear idea of what industrial action is happening on 30 November:

    There are three main unions on strike that day. First up, the Communication Workers’ Union (CWU) is continuing its long-running action against Royal Mail over dire pay and terms and conditions. The company has made inadequate offers to workers – yet still, the CWU said on Sunday 27 November that it offered to talk with Royal Mail once more to try and avert strikes. However, as of 12pm on Tuesday 29 November, nothing had changed – so super strike Wednesday will see over 110,000 Royal Mail staff walk out. The CWU has also announced a day of strike action in London on 9 December:

    The next union striking on 30 November is the National Education Union (NEU). Its members in 77 sixth form colleges are walking out over pay. As the NEU wrote on its website:

    the government is sitting on the cash that should be in colleges. Since the government started attacking colleges in 2010, our pay has fallen in real terms by 20% – that’s before the current inflation crisis.

    The NEU also noted that the colleges themselves weren’t innocent:

    colleges [have] benefitted from an average increase in student numbers of 5%. This came as a consequence of the Covid crisis and is now feeding through in increased funding for the current year. On top of this, a change in the funding mechanism will further increase per-student funding by 8.5%. If there are any affordability issues, colleges must demand adequate funding from the Government.

    So, sixth forms across England will see teachers walk out on 30 November. Strike Map UK has logged where the strikes are happening:

    Then, the University and College Union (UCU) is also striking on the same day – but it has an additional piece of action going on.

    National rallies and more unions walking out

    UCU members have been walking out over pay, pensions, and terms and conditions. As the Canary previously reported:

    70,000 staff at 150 universities walked out on 24 November over pay, pensions, and working conditions. Bosses have cut workers’ pay by around 25% since 2009, while they also want to slash their pensions by 35% too.

    The union also held a strike on 25 November. Now, not only is it holding a third a third strike on 30 November, the union is coordinating the action by holding a rally in central London. Crucially, other trade union leaders like the CWU’s Dave Ward will be speaking in solidarity:

    A UCU campaign image

    Once again, Strike Map UK has listed all the UCU action locations – check it out here.

    For the rest of the year, and heading into 2023, it’s likely we’ll see increasing numbers of these super strike days as more and more unions walk out. However, a question still remains as to why trade unions are not properly coordinating for a general strike.

    Given the sheer number of sectors currently involved in industrial action, it would seem like the logical next step to get unions to take action on the same day. Let’s hope this is something in discussion behind closed doors.

    Featured image via UCU

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Regional services are due to replace the NHS Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) which used to serve trans youth in the UK. England has now released its interim specification for these services. However, the specification has set alarm bells ringing for trans rights groups. They claim that the proposed changes would set back the standard of healthcare for trans youth, rather than advancing it.

    The Cass Review

    The specification was released in reaction to the findings of the Cass Review. The Cass Review was an independent investigation conducted by Dr Hilary Cass. Commissioned by NHS England and NHS Improvement, the review sought to:

    make recommendations about the services provided by the NHS to children and young people who are questioning their gender identity or experiencing gender incongruence.

    Previously, care for trans youth was centralised in the Tavistock Centre. The Tavistock formed a bottleneck because it simply could not deal with the volume of patients required. The interim findings of the Cass Review stressed that the old model simply wasn’t working. It stated that:

    The rapid increase in the number of children requiring support and the complex case-mix means that the current clinical model, with a single national provider, is not sustainable in the longer term.

    It also stressed that trans youth deserve the same level of healthcare as any other individual in the UK:

    Children and young people with gender incongruence or dysphoria must receive the same standards of clinical care, assessment and treatment as every other child or young person accessing health services.

    However, experts have criticised the NHS response to these assertions for raising further barriers to healthcare for trans youth.

    Interim specification

    The actions and measures set out in the interim specification have received wide-ranging criticism from professional bodies and trans advocacy organisations. The trans healthcare organisations which have voiced their concerns include the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH); its counterparts in Asia (ASIAPATH), Europe (EPATH), and America (USPATH); the Professional Association for Transgender Health Aotearoa (PATHA);  and the Australian Professional Association for Transgender Health.  Evidenced critiques have also been set out by specialist Dr Natacha Kennedy and trans youth advocate Cal Horton.

    Grassroots trans charity Gendered Intelligence has released a statement in reaction to the interim specification. It said:

    the new service specification seems likely to repeat – even exacerbate – the problems already faced by GIDS. Changes seem intended to reduce the number of referrals and the scope of available treatments, rather than improve access.

    Even more so than many other NHS services, GIDS was already massively overstretched, with wait times of several years. The response to this, however, cannot be to create further barriers in order to artificially reduce the number of people receiving treatment.

    Alarm bells

    Gendered Intelligence also highlighted an important fact. The specification suggests that children should be reported to social services if they seek trans healthcare through pathways other than the NHS. Expressing concern over this suggestion, the charity stated:

    Young people who are already receiving puberty delaying treatments or hormone therapies from private sources may find themselves threatened with safeguarding alerts and refused transfer into NHS services. This makes it more likely that people will avoid talking to their doctors about self-medication, and could force young people into a terrible choice between either detransitioning or being denied NHS care entirely.

    It’s also deeply troubling that the interim specification seems to suggest that doctors and healthcare providers should have a say in a child’s social transition. Social transition consists of an individual changing their presentation, such as clothing and hairstyle, and often their name and pronouns. These are aspects of a child’s daily life, and they should surely be beyond a doctor’s influence. Gendered Intelligence said of social transition:

    Not only is it both harmless and reversible, it actually benefits young people to be able to safely explore their identities in this way.

    We need to push back

    The NHS is currently running a public consultation on the changes proposed in the interim specification. It is open until 4 December. If you are able, please respond to condemn this setback for trans youth care. Dr Ruth Pearce, former ‘patient public voice’ of the NHS England Gender Programme Board, highlighted that this struggle is part of a wider fight for self-determination for marginalised youth. Pearce said that the proposed changes:

    will impact other young people more widely – especially girls and LGBTIQ+ youth – by undermining principles of autonomy and respect.

    Trans youth deserve healthcare. They deserve to receive treatment in a timely fashion, from professionals who have their best interests at heart. The interim specification fails to provide these assurances on multiple levels – and so fails those same children it purports to help.

    You can read the specification itself here.

    A detailed breakdown of its contents and guidance on how to respond can be found here. The deadline is 4 December.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons, resized to 770*403

    By Alex/Rose Cocker

  • The Breakthrough Party has just completed its first weekend of coordinated action across the country. The party said the events were to “kick off” its community work – and it put the current Labour Party to shame.

    Breakthrough, breaking through

    The Breakthrough Party launched in January 2021 and has evolved and grown significantly since then. Its headline statement is that it wants to be a:

    new home for those who have been abandoned by the political establishment… We are the working class in all its diversity, rising up to take power from the elite and give it back to the people. Together, we will build a future worth fighting for.

    The party claimed in a recent press release that what makes it different to, say, Labour is that it is:

    truly grassroots and participatory, seeking to build power in communities, workplaces and, ultimately, in government.

    Some of Breakthrough’s main policies include:

    • £16 minimum wage.
    • The nationalisation of energy, water and transport.
    • A renationalised, publicly-funded NHS.
    • Universal Basic Income.
    • A global green new deal.

    Currently, the party has thousands of members and supporters. It has eight local councillors, and it hosted its first party conference in Manchester In October. The speakers included Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union (BFAWU’s) national president Ian Hodson, women’s rights activist Patsy Stevenson, and representatives from Don’t Pay UK and Just Stop Oil.

    It’s the Breakthrough Party’s community focus which has been at the forefront of its activities recently – with a whole weekend dedicated to it.

    Community organising: where’s Labour?

    On 26 and 27 November, Breakthrough mobilised activists from across the country to kick off its nationwide work in communities:

     

    The party said in a press release:

    From Plymouth to Newcastle, Cambridge to Liverpool, the Weekend of Action saw Breakthrough organise street stalls and leafleting sessions at 16 locations in England. Other locations included London (Camberwell, Camden and Tottenham), Manchester, Nottingham, Bristol, Exeter, Reading, Colchester, Bury, Ashfield and Wellingborough.

    Party leader Alex Mays said:

    While things may seem bleak right now, this weekend showed us that there is hope. The positive feedback we had in communities up and down the country has been truly overwhelming. A massive thank you to all those who took part across the weekend and those who spread the word online too. People are crying out for an alternative and we’re building it.

    In towns and cities, Breakthrough members asked the public what they would like to see changed in politics and society:

    At present, an alternative to the Labour Party is sorely needed. What’s interesting is that Breakthrough is making an intentional point of focusing on grassroots, community-led action. This comes after Keir Starmer’s party sacked a load of its own community organisers, failed to support strikes and Starmer himself betrayed activists like Just Stop Oil. With a handful of councillors and a clear political agenda, Breakthrough aims to fill the void left by Labour’s purging of Corbyn-style politics from its party ranks.

    On first impressions, Breakthrough appears to be moving in the right direction. Now, it needs to build on its community work to ensure that it can be a new home for people mainstream politics has abandoned.

    Featured image via the Breakthrough Party

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • An independent review has concluded that London’s fire service is institutionally misogynistic and racist. The service said it had accepted around two dozen recommendations from a review led by former senior prosecutor Nazir Afzal.

    Afzal discovered dozens of examples of racism, bullying and misogyny. In one case, a female firefighter’s helmet had been filled with urine; in another, a Black employee found a noose above his locker. More than 2,000 current and former staff, as well as the public, were interviewed. The report also involved speaking to members of the west London community left devastated by the 2017 Grenfell fire.

    The report conceded that it had “accounts of shockingly poor behaviour and painful experiences over many years”. Following the leak late on Friday 25 November, Afzal himself confirmed on Twitter that he “did find LFB [London Fire Brigade] was institutionally misogynist & racist.” He added, “the staff deserve better.”

    ‘Abhorrent’

    London Fire Commissioner Andy Roe said in a statement that the report made it “a very sobering day” for the service, and added:

    I am deeply sorry for the harm that has been caused. I will be fully accountable for improving our culture and I fully accept all of the 23 recommendations.

    London mayor Sadiq Khan said the review was “a watershed moment”, calling the findings “abhorrent”. He called for:

    significant and necessary changes to root out all those found to be responsible for sexism, racism, misogyny, homophobia, bullying or harassment – and to support members of staff to speak out.

    Roe asked Afzal to conduct the organisation-wide independent culture review following the death by suicide of trainee firefighter Jaden Matthew Francois-Esprit. The 21-year-old took his own life in August 2020. And a subsequent internal investigation unearthed “some tough questions for the Brigade regarding its culture”, said the LFB. Jaden’s mum welcomed the findings of the report, saying:

    When Jaden completed his firefighter training he was proud to be wearing his uniform, but within a short time the London fire brigade had completely destroyed him…LFB continually failed to address cultural issues year after year. I do question how that culture is going to change. How are they going to make a young, black, neuro-divergent person like Jaden, who was very inexperienced, feel confident and comfortable at work. What will be put in place?

    ‘Completely unacceptable behaviour’

    Indeed, the union representing UK firefighters said it was “sceptical” LFB leaders would implement the reforms needed. The Fire Brigades Union noted it had “raised concerns about many of the issues contained within this report historically”.

    Gareth Cook, its regional organiser for London, said the union was “committed to working to address these serious concerns” and added:

    We aim to improve the working conditions of our members and protect them from discrimination and unfair or illegal treatment by representing them in the workplace.

    The report has echoes of the 1999 Macpherson inquiry into London’s Metropolitan Police, following the racist murder of teenager Stephen Lawrence. That report condemned the force for “institutional racism”. A quarter century on, the Met is still grappling with serious racial and gender bias problems, with a recent slew of allegations of sexual misconduct and discrimination.

    As the Canary’s Sophia Purdy-Moore explained:

    According to a report from Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS), “forces still do not fully understand the impact on individuals and communities of the use of police powers”. The report examined police use of force and stop and search against people from Black, Asian, and minority ethnic (BAME) backgrounds.

    She concluded that:

    It’s appalling that over 20 years after the MacPherson report was published, forces across the UK are still unwilling and unable to recognise the realities of institutional racism and disproportionate policing, let alone start tackling them.

    Earlier this year, the Metropolitan police were placed into special measures. Report after report about institutionally racist and misogynist services has led to widespread scepticism over anything changing. The Fire Brigades Union also said:

    we have raised concerns about many of the issues contained within this report historically and as a consequence we remain sceptical about the changes senior leaders will implement with regards to their own behaviours.

    Featured image by Wikimedia Commons/Graham Mitchell via CC 2.0, resized to 770x403px

    Additional reporting by Agence France-Presse

    By Maryam Jameela

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • On Friday 25 November, Keir Starmer – leader of the Labour Party, despite all appearances to the contrary – made an appearance on the Telegraph’s in-house podcast. Presented by political commentator Christopher Hope, the episode was titled Chopper’s Politics: Sir Keir Starmer on taxes, the trans debate, and kissing a Tory.

    As usual when the topic turned to trans rights, Starmer gave a bunch of by-the-numbers platitudes – and then sat on the fence so hard that he’s going to need tweezers for the splinters.

    A ‘small group’

    Let’s get this out of the way – Starmer did manage to get a few things almost right. He was emphatic that he would not be joining the growing gaggle of politicians who are dismissive or outright hostile towards trans identities:

    I’m not going to just dismiss or ignore or pretend that a small group of people who don’t identify with the gender they’re born into don’t exist in some way or disparage them in some way.

    Furthermore, when asked how he would define a woman, he stated:

    Let me start by saying the blindingly obvious for 99.9 something per cent of women, it’s all biological and it’s very straightforward…So that’s, in a sense, very straightforward. But as you will all know, there is a small number of people who do not identify with the gender that they were born into, and it can be incredibly stressful.

    During the interview, Starmer leant quite hard on there being a “small group” or “small number” of trans people. Now, we don’t have accurate data on the population of trans people in the UK, as the government doesn’t collect this demographic information – a fact for which I’m increasingly thankful. However, Starmer is probably off by an order of magnitude. Stonewall puts the percentage of trans and non-binary people at around 1%. Still, a relatively small population.

    Trans youth

    The Labour leader also took some time to focus on trans youth. He said:

    And there are young people who are going through real anguish actually in relation to this, and I’m not going to join those that just want to add to the abuse of that small group of people.

    Young trans people are at the centre of an increasingly venomous attack. They form a wedge issue for anyone who can stretch to the recognition of trans adults’ autonomy but can’t extend the same basic decency to children. Most recently, new NHS guidelines call for social workers to get involved if young trans people obtain healthcare outside of the NHS.

    Trans youth deserve our full support and solidarity. However, this professed desire to support young trans people is somewhat at odds with Starmer’s recent words. In an interview only last month, he said:

    Children shouldn’t be making these very important decisions without consent to their parents, I say that as a matter of principle, I say that as a parent.

    We all know what it’s like with teenage children. I feel very strongly about this… This argument that children [can] make decisions without the parents is one I just don’t agree with at all.

    I’d like to point out to the Labour leader that denying trans children their healthcare simply because they have unsupportive parents is the very definition of adding to their abuse, as he put it.

    Fence sitting

    Never one to say the right thing and leave it at that, however, the Labour leader also repeated some tired talking points that are at best inaccurate and at worst deeply worrying. He stated that the discussion of trans issues had become “toxic”. How exactly a ‘debate’ can remain non-toxic when one side is seeking to strip the other of their already-existing rights is quite beyond me.

    He also complained that any discussion of trans issues resulted in “immediate shut down” the “moment anyone expresses a view or even inquires”. Let me be clear – this “immediate shutdown” is completely fictional. This fact should be obvious with even a moment’s reflection.

    The mainstream media is literally flooded with articles on the manufactured ‘trans debate’ (Lord how I hate that phrase). The halls of parliament ring with increasingly regular attacks on the rights of trans people. And even within the Labour party, we can see that the ‘debate’ hasn’t been shut down. Despite her loud-and-inexplicably-proud transphobia, Rosie Duffield still has the whip.

    Inevitably, Rowling

    Then, responding to the inevitable question on gender-critical darling and sometime author JK Rowling, Starmer completely dropped the ball. “I respect her position on this,” he said. “People do take different positions on this.” It would be good to pinpoint what exactly that position is before we “respect” it, though.

    It feels like we haven’t managed a month in the last few years without Rowling being in the news or trending on social media for her hostile stance on trans rights. She’s a vocal opponent of self-ID in Scotland. She supported Maya Forstater, whose job contract was not renewed due to her transphobic tweets. On top of that, she’s also published lengthy screedsdevoid of good evidence – on her opposition to trans women being women, and conflating hormone therapy and conversion therapy.

    In the Chopper interview, Starmer said:

     Let me say there’s a small group of people who don’t identify with the gender they’re born into and I’m not going to ignore that, most reasonable people say, ‘Actually I can live with that as well’.

    However, we know for a fact that Rowling isn’t one of those reasonable people. She has specifically mocked the idea that womanhood is not directly tied to menstruation. If you have no room in your worldview for someone who menstruates whilst not being a woman, you have no room for trans people.

    Off the deep end

    When Starmer claims that there’s “much more room for agreement than we sometimes think” with people like Rowling, it is worth remembering where a transphobic line of thinking leads, and who supports it.

    Better thinkers than me have highlighted the pipeline from ‘just asking questions’ transphobia to far-right ideologies. We also know that much of the transphobia both in the UK and the US is funded from far-right and evangelical Christian pots.

    Evidence of the links between so-called ‘gender critical’ transphobia and the far right can be seen in miniature on Rowling’s timeline. She’s received rightful criticism for her praise of self-described fascist Matt Walsh’s film What is a Woman? More recently, she has even liked content from ‘Libs of Tiktok’ – an extreme-right twitter account which directs hate toward left-wing individuals and LGBT+ people. Most famously, the account posted a video which lead to bomb threats being made against Boston Children’s Hospital.

    No common ground

    So, where is this “room for agreement”, Sir Keir? If – as you say you do – you don’t want to dismiss trans people or pile hate on them, where can you find common ground with the people who do want those things?

    The opponents of trans rights are edging ever closer towards the far right, if they weren’t there already. As the Overton Window on trans issues slips ever further toward the denial of our basic humanity, we need a political leader who is actually willing to take a firm and unequivocal stance in our favour.

    Fence-sitting will not save us. ‘Both sides’ centrism will not save us. Allowing transphobia to run rampant in the Labour Party certainly will not save us. Keir Starmer, please, for once in your miserable career, choose a side – and let it be the right one.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons, resized to 770x403px

    By Alex/Rose Cocker

  • Right-wing shitrag the Telegraph ran an article on Sunday 27 November criticising NHS workers for striking. Of course, in reality it was little more than a poorly-written piece of gammon catnip with a clear pro-privatisation bias. Moreover, the article was devoid of actual facts.

    Telegraph: bloated with bullshit

    Economics editor at GB News Liam Halligan wrote the hit-piece on public sector workers for the Telegraph, with a predictably divisive headline:

    The bloated public sector is showing its contempt for taxpayers with plans to strike

    Demands for double-digit pay rises fail to recognise the suffering felt by private workers

    The article comes as various NHS workers are preparing to strike. In the piece, Halligan admitted that:

    Yes, hard-working front-line state employees deserve a decent pay rise.

    However, his overall points were that:

    • Workers are asking for too much money.
    • Higher-paid public sector workers shouldn’t be asking for more money at all.
    • Public sector workers have had it easier than private sector ones.

    Halligan wrote a clear piece of propaganda, pitting worker against worker across a thinly-veiled pro-privatisation narrative:

    Twisting the truth

    Of course, the article was also littered with holes and mistruths – as one reader pointed out in the comments:

    A reader comment which reads "A shameful piece of dim-witted click bait with distorted facts. Comparing public and private sector pay makes limited sense - a lot of public sector made of up of nurses and teachers who had to undergo professional qualifications - compared based on qualification not simplistically public vs private sector. Also what has been wilfully neglected is the pay erosion of many years of subinflationary pay rises over the last decade which does not match the private sector. Honestly telegraph has become lame low brow clickbate rather than any articulate, accurate balanced jounralism. Oh yes and the much touted house price 'crash' that telegrpah has totued for years..... Liam - either you sacrficed your journalistic integrity on orders to write this, or your IQ is <100. Cancelling subscription, found Times far more interesting"

    For example, Halligan claimed that:

    Average public sector wages were £579 per week in 2021, compared to £536 in the private sector.

    Here, he has cherry-picked one figure. As BBC News wrote, private sector pay is actually more than public sector pay when you take bonuses into account. Moreover, when regular public sector pay is adjusted to factor in demographics like gender and ethnicity, it is lower as well. Plus, as BBC News wrote:

    public-sector workers are more likely to be highly educated professionals who command higher wages in the labour market.

    So, overall Halligan’s article was a load of BS opinion pretending to be economic analysis. However, the GB News hack also missed another critical point in his hit-piece: that private sector workers are also striking.

    Private sector strikes

    For example, nearly all of Jacob’s Cream Crackers’ workers have recently gone on indefinite strike. As the Guardian reported, bosses have offered staff at the Aintree factory repeated real-terms pay cuts. So workers have walked out, and Jacob’s has chosen to move production of crackers to Portugal. However, crucially, the Guardian noted that:

    Workers from rival biscuit maker Fox’s recently secured a 13.5% pay rise over two years after threatening strike action backed by the Unite union while those at Heinz’s condiment factory in Telford won an 11% pay rise this week.

    Meanwhile, as the Canary recently reported, cleaning, catering, and housekeeping staff in the private health sector have won repeated pay rises after they protested and campaigned.

    Then, two of the biggest private sector strikes Halligan failed to mention in the Telegraph were that of the Communication Workers’ Union (CWU) against Royal Mail, and the National Union of Rail, Transport and Maritime Workers (RMT) against privatised rail companies. Moreover, charity sector workers are also striking, with staff at homelessness organisation Shelter walking out over pay.

    Blood vessel-bursting gammon-fodder

    Of course, readers of the Telegraph didn’t consider this, with one person even commenting the private sector ‘can’t strike’:

    A comment that reads: "Once again private sector who can’t strike and haven’t a gold plated pension being made to pay for idle,inefficient public sector.We need a right wing revolution in 2024"

    Telegraph readers will digest Halligan’s very obvious divide and conquer propaganda and burst a blood vessel over the “bloated public sector”. But in reality, it doesn’t matter if workers are in the public, private, or charity sectors. Everyone is feeling the effects of the Tories’ capitalist race-to-the-bottom agenda. And no amount of poorly-written drivel from Halligan will change that.

    Featured image via puffernutterlou – YouTube and the Telegraph – screengrab 

    By Steve Topple

  • Five-year-old Yusuf Mahmud Nazir has died of pneumonia after being turned away from hospital. Sky News reported that Yusuf’s parents took him to see his GP after he complained of a sore throat. The GP prescribed antibiotics, but Yusuf’s condition worsened at home.

    When his family took him to the emergency department of Rotherham General Hospital, Yusuf’s uncle recounted how one doctor said:

    it was the worst case of tonsillitis he had ever seen.

    Yusuf was still sent home, and he became even more ill. His parents called an ambulance and had to insist that he be taken to a paediatric unit at Sheffield Children’s Hospital. As Sky News reported:

    It was too late to save the young boy’s life.

    The infection had spread to his lungs and caused multiple organ failure resulting in several cardiac arrests.

    Yusuf died of pneumonia on Monday.

    Begging for help

    Zaheer Ahmed, Yusuf’s uncle, said:

    He stopped breathing, he stopped talking, when he was choking, he couldn’t breathe. He was struggling. And it’s led to his life being taken at five years old.

    If they would have treated him where we wanted him to be treated he would be here with us now.

    Zaheer also explained that the family begged doctors for help:

    We begged and begged and begged for help. We couldn’t get it. We just did not get the help we wanted, or we needed or we should have got.

    They kept saying to us, they kept saying to us, ‘We’ve got one doctor. What do you want us to do? We’ve got no beds available. What do you want us to do? We’ve got no space for him. What do you want us to do? Complain to the big people, don’t complain to us. Complain to the big ones that only gave us one doctor’.

    New research from NHS England suggests that in England, the NHS is short of 12,000 doctors, and more than 50,000 nurses and midwives. Miriam Deakin, director of policy and strategy at the British Medical Journal (BMJ), said:

    Almost all respondents who replied to a recent NHS Providers survey said that staff shortages are having a serious and detrimental impact on services and will hinder efforts to deal with those major care backlogs.

    Deakin also explained that:

    Staff continue to work flat out, doing their best for patients, but many of the problems we face now existed long before the pandemic and won’t disappear overnight. There are currently 110 000 job vacancies across NHS trusts and many thousands more in primary care.

    These massive shortfalls in available doctors and other healthcare professionals mean tragic deaths like Yusuf’s are only going to become more common. Yusuf should still be alive, and it’s up to the government and NHS bosses to answer why he died.

    Grief pouring in

    Massive underfunding and mismanagement of the NHS means deaths like Yusuf’s are little more than state murder. Twitter users expressed their grief, with rapper Lowkey saying:

    Islam21c asked for accountability:

    One person urged a look at higher-ups, rather than hospital workers themselves:

    And one commenter explained how the NHS is becoming less and less accessible:

    Beyond crisis

    Pressure group NHS Support Federation has explained time and time again just how stripped back our healthcare has become. The group explained that:

    the government’s “generous” spending on the NHS from 2010 to 2015 actually only resulted in funding that rose at 0.9% a year in real terms, according to analysts at The Health Foundation and The King’s Fund.

    Back in 1945, when writing about working class England, Friedrich Engels wrote:

    [Society] has placed the workers under conditions in which they can neither retain health nor live long…society knows how injurious such conditions are to the health and the life of the workers, and yet does nothing to improve these conditions. That it knows the consequences of its deeds; that its act is, therefore, not mere manslaughter, but murder.

    Almost 80 years on, society is working in much the same way. In fact, earlier this month the chancellor, and former health secretary, Jeremy Hunt admitted that the NHS:

    is on the brink of collapse.

    Those in government know, then, that underfunding and mismanagement of the NHS is costing lives. They simply don’t care. Yusuf, and many others like him, have been socially murdered by the state. Their deaths could have been, and should have been, avoided.

    Featured image via YouTube screenshot/Sky News

    By Maryam Jameela

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The Commons has passed the Public Order Bill, which is now with the House of Lords at committee stage. It’s probably one of the most dangerous pieces of legislation to have ever passed through parliament. Because, once it’s law, every protest in the country will be threatened with penalties more likely to be found in a authoritarian regime.

    Government justification

    The government explains that the Public Order Bill:

    builds on the public order measures in Part 3 of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 which, amongst other things, updates the powers in the 1986 [Public Order] Act enabling the police to impose conditions on a protest, provides for a statutory offence of intentionally or recklessly causing public nuisance and increases the maximum penalty for the offence of wilful obstruction of a highway.

    The government admits that the Public Order Bill is but another attempt at getting through legislation previously blocked by the upper house:

    The government had originally sought to include the majority of the measures provided for in the Public Order Bill in the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill, but the government’s amendments to that Bill were blocked by the House of Lords.

    The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act (PCSC Act) became law in April. At the time, the Canary published an article summarising its key points.

    New offences

    The Public Order Bill introduces several new offences.

    They include “locking-on” and going equipped to lock-on, thus criminalising “the protest tactic of individuals attaching themselves to others, objects or buildings to cause serious disruption”. The penalty for locking-on is a maximum “of six months’ imprisonment, an unlimited fine, or both”. And “the maximum penalty for the offence of going equipped to lock-on will be an unlimited fine”.

    “Tunnelling” is also criminalised. This includes “creating a tunnel, participating in creating a tunnel and being present in a tunnel”. The “maximum penalties for these offences will be 3 years imprisonment, an unlimited fine or both”. Going equipped for tunnelling is also an offence, leading up to “6-months imprisonment, an unlimited fine or both”.

    The bill also extends stop and search powers. This will enable police to search for and seize “items which are made, adapted or intended to be used in connection with protest-related offences”. They include items that can be used for tunnelling or locking-on. The police may also be authorised to “conduct a stop and search without the need for suspicion”.

    Other measures

    Even more controversially, the new legislation will reverse the presumption of innocence in certain instances. Parliament’s Joint Committee for Human Rights observed that this contravenes European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR) article 6:

    By imposing an unnecessary reversal of the burden of proof they also appear to be inconsistent with the presumption of innocence and the Article 6 ECHR right to a fair trial.

    Then there’s clause 6 of the bill, which criminalises any attempt to obstruct transport works. Clause 7, meanwhile, states it’s an offence to “interfere with the use or operation of key national infrastructure”.

    Serious Disruption Prevention Orders

    Perhaps one of the more draconian parts of the bill concerns Serious Disruption Prevention Orders (SDPOS). These will be used to prevent people from taking part in a protest, including forcing them to wear electronic tags.

    The government explains:

    [SDPOS] may include prohibiting an individual from being in a particular place, being with particular people, having particular articles in their possession and using the internet to facilitate or encourage person to commit a protest-related offence

    Netpol observed that SDPOS can be used:

    to seek out and target people whom the police perceive as key organisers and to potentially ban them from attending, organising, or promoting protests seen as “disruptive to two or more individuals or to an organisation” for two years or more, even if they have never been convicted of a crime.

    Furthermore, the state may decide they become guilty of a crime if they break the rules of the order in any way – or even fail to notify the police that they are staying somewhere else.

    Netpol added that SDPO-imposed conditions can include:

    • Not associating with named people
    • Not going to certain areas
    • Banning people from attending protests
    • Reporting to a police station at certain times
    • Not participating in certain activities
    • Not using the internet to commit a protest-related offence or to “carry out activities related to a protest that result in, or are likely to result in, serious disruption to two or more individuals, or to an organisation, in England and Wales”.

    Criticisms of the bill

    In a video, journalist George Monbiot bluntly described the bill as a “tool of dictators”:

    And Greens leader Caroline Lucas described the bill as heralding “a police state by stealth”:

    Moreover, Jeremy Corbyn said he would vote against the “draconian” bill:

    Comparisons with authoritarian regimes

    Unsurprisingly, provisions in the bill have been compared with civil liberties’ restrictions normally found in authoritarian regimes.

    Legal rights charity Justice commented:

    The Bill is unlikely to be compliant with the European Convention on Human Rights, in particular Article 10 ECHR (freedom of expression) and Article 11 ECHR (freedom of assembly and association)

    It adds:

    In sum, the Bill would serve to give the police carte blanche to target protesters – similar laws can be found in Russia and Belarus.

    Tory MP Charles Walker made a comparable observation:

    The idea that in this country, we are going to ankle tag someone who has not been convicted in a court of law… I mean, I tell you what, those Chinese in their embassy will be watching this very closely at the moment, they might actually be applying for some of this stuff when we pass it in this place as I suspect we will.

    There’s also this comment from the South China Morning Post:

    The UK government’s tougher measures against disruptive protests stands in contrast to its critical position of Beijing’s policies on Hong Kong, and the Hong Kong government’s response to the social unrest of 2019.

    Politicised law

    Amnesty International summed up the dangers presented by the proposed legislation:

    Granting powers to seek sweeping injunctions against peaceful protest activity to government ministers is particularly concerning, as these powers will inevitably be used in politicised and knee-jerk ways. The government of the day will be able to pick and choose which protests it does and doesn’t approve of and seek sweeping banning orders, backed up by the prospect of hefty prison sentences, to stop them.

    Elsewhere in the document, Amnesty made clear its view of the bill:

    Amnesty’s assessment is that the PO Bill would leave the UK in breach of international human rights law.

    Though the current government may not care a whit about that.

    Featured image via Unsplash cropped 770×403 pixels

    By Tom Coburg

  • The Canary is excited to launch our members’ letters page. This is where we publish people’s responses to the news, politics, or anything else they want to get off their chest. However, this is a members-only benefit! If you’d like to subscribe monthly to the Canary – starting from just £1 – and get a letter published, then you can do that here:

    Subscribe here

    This week’s letters

    This week we’ve got an open letter from a postal worker, debate around Scottish independence, and some thoughts on Don’t Pay UK.



    Royal Mail

    Hi guys, postie here,

    As you have seen over the past few days, the Communication Workers’ Union (CWU) has announced more strikes over the Christmas period. We do not want to do that.

    I myself have a one-year-old baby, a mortgage, am the only earner in my household, and have lost hundreds of pounds because of the strikes.

    I love my job at Royal Mail, and wish to continue loving it.

    But as you have seen, the CEO of the company does not care about us, and does not care about the great service we provide. Our terms and conditions are already being broken across the country. We are being told we are not working hard enough, not working fast enough – but I am doing 50, 60, 70 hours a week. How much more can I do? Royal Mail gave away £500m in bonuses to shareholders and then announced a £219m loss. They are hiring 11,000 agency staff at a higher rate than what posties get. Yet they want to make 10k redundancies? Management have been offered £1k bribes to break the strike and work through it, while also getting food vouchers and extra holidays. But Simon Thompson CEO is saying there is no money?

    Now they have told Parcelforce members – who are struggling financially – that they will receive a £300 payment if they break strikes over Christmas. Yet they are telling the public that they want an agreement with the CWU, and that they are in deep talks. Yet all their actions are showing they are not:

    They want to change our sickness terms so we do not get sick pay for first three days of being off sick. They want us to do silly hours of 9-5. But if we cannot finish our duty in those hours, we cannot cut off until we deliver every parcel and letter – and we will not get paid for going over. They are telling you that letters are just as important as parcels. But we are being told in our offices ‘don’t worry about the letters, just get all the parcels done and bring letters back for next day if you cannot finish’. Postal workers are not allowed to do overtime during strikes to help cover the £150-£200 they are taking out on a weekly basis.

    It’s not even about a pay rise for us. It’s the terms that make this job, this service, invaluable for the country. They are literally ripping up our terms and conditions and nothing is getting done about it.

    They want to destroy Royal Mail. They don’t care about us. They care about profits.

    I don’t know if you will read this. I don’t know if you will publish it.

    All I know is Royal Mail is a national service that is being destroyed by people who will be leaving in a couple of years.

    Anonymous


    Don’t Pay UK

    We need enough ‘flame-proof’ people to withhold payment from 1 December on behalf of all those who cannot: pre-pay meter folk, younger people worried about their manufactured ‘credit scores’ (a ruse to keep people scared), and those who fell for the ‘install a smart meter to save the planet’ when those same bits of kit will enable energy companies to remotely disconnect!

    I am off to a training session in Manchester so I will know my rights. I consider myself flame proof: I have old-style meters, I will not give permission for anyone to enter my home; at 67 I have no need to worry about my ‘credit score’, and as a pensioner I am considered ‘vulnerable’ so cannot be cut off from October to March!

    Caroline Wilkinson, grandmother of 6


    Scottish independence

    There’s a lot of confusion on whether Scots want independence. It is true, as your article states, that a majority of independence-supporting “lawmakers” were elected in Scotland at the last election, but anti-independence candidates from Labour, Tory, and LibDem parties received more votes in total. The SNP benefited enormously from first-past-the post, and Sturgeon is relying on this in her nonsensical claim that the next general election will be an independence referendum.

    The Supreme Court was right to state that Scotland was not an oppressed nation (unlike, say, Ireland) when it joined the union. Scottish regiments provided the backbone of the imperialist British army across the globe. But if the Scottish government votes for a referendum on independence, then it should be allowed to have one, and socialists should then campaign vigorously against the dead-end of nationalism.

    Everything that can be devolved to Holyrood should be, which is the point of “devo-max”, a concept that is popular with many Scots, and that is why Alex Salmond was so desperate to keep it off the ballot paper in the last referendum in 2014. Self-determination, yes; nationalism, no. The SNP thrives under a Conservative government in Westminster, which is why it refused to support a vote of no confidence in Boris Johnson in 2019, as it could’ve led to Jeremy Corbyn becoming interim Prime Minister.

    David Carter, Dunfermline, Fife



    Want to get involved? Support the Canary here and we’ll publish your letters, too! Terms and conditions of publication apply.

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • For the first time, a former British soldier has been convicted of a killing during the Troubles in the North of Ireland. A Belfast court found David Holden guilty of the 1988 manslaughter of Aidan McAnespie. The killing occurred at a checkpoint when Holden was an 18-year-old soldier. McAnespie was 23.

    Holden claimed that his wet trigger finger slipped. However, the judge was withering in his comments, saying Holden had given a “deliberately false account”.

    Legacy of war

    As Sky News mentioned in their tweeted clip, only six soldiers have ever been charged, with two of those cases collapsing, and another accused veteran dying before a judge could rule:

    Such a tiny numbers of cases coming before a judge are a stark contrast to the amount of coverage and outcry generated. For many years there have been right-wing cries of a witch hunt and suggestions of large-scale investigations ruining honourable men’s lives.

    And yet, there has been only one single conviction.

    The truth is there was no witch hunt. There is just an attempt at a basic process of justice repeatedly hindered and shouted down by the British authorities and their cronies in the press and ex-forces community.

    Just this week, a step towards the permanent denial of justice and transparency has been taken in the Lords.

    Legacy and Reconciliation Bill

    As the Canary reported on 24 November, the new Legacy and Reconciliation Bill has had its second reading in the Lords. The bill, if passed, would make convictions – already extremely unlikely – even more difficult. Instead, it would replace judicial processes with a committee, which are likely to be little more than a history reading group.

    Dubbed the Bill of Shame, former Northern Ireland secretary Peter Hain said of the proposals:

    By offering a low-bar immunity to the perpetrators of some of the most horrific crimes imaginable it is telling them that what they did no longer matters.

    This, then, is British justice in Ireland. Its implications for the families of those killed, and for stability and reconciliation in a country which has known too little of either, are as dark as the legacy of occupation itself.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons/Jeanne Boleyn, cropped to 770 x 403.

    By Joe Glenton

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Rail, Transport and Maritime union (RMT) general secretary Mick Lynch is back on the war path. The straight-talking trade union leader did another round of the TV studios ahead of planned strikes. The results were predictable: posh, smug TV presenters left gaping.

    Strikes have been set for multiple days in December and January. The Morning Star reported:

    The warning came after the Rail Delivery Group, which represents train operating companies, refused “without any credible explanation to make promised written proposals” which could have ended the six-month dispute, [RMT] said on Monday.

    They added:

    The walkouts, due to hit on December 13, 14, 16 and 17 and January 3, 4, 6 and 7, will take place alongside an overtime ban across the railways between December 18 and January 2, RMT confirmed.

    Liars!

    Among Lynch’s victims was shrieking Tory rent-a-gob Richard Madeley, to whom Lynch gave both barrels after being asked if the government was simply lying:

    One attack line being used against the workers of the RMT is that they are trying to wreck Christmas. Earlier in the week, Lynch took down a Daily Mail journalist who called him “Mick Grinch”. Lynch responded by reminding those present that the Daily Mail was deeply fond of Oswald Mosley’s fascist pro-Hitler Blackshirts, endorsing them in the 1930s:

    Elsewhere, journalist and satirist David Osland pointed out that while right-wing journalists liked to attack Lynch over his pay, they themselves weren’t doing much to justify their (much larger) salaries when they encountered him:

    And even BBC Question Time – supposedly a flagship debate show – let its mask slip to reveal its anti-working-class politics. In a contender for reach of the century, an audience question tried to conflate the RMT with the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic:

    In fact, it’s notable how many media outlets follow in the footsteps of the Daily Mail when anything about workers being treated properly comes up. Fortunately, Mick Lynch was happy to point this out when one particularly inept interviewer suggested that the RMT, rather than fat cat bosses, were holding the public to ransom:

    Festive feelings

    There’s few better sights than that of Mick Lynch destroying the media representatives of the boss class. We can only hope the RMT get their pay and conditions met in full for the sacrifices they are making on behalf of the public. That would be a worthy Christmas present.

    Featured image via Wikimedia Commons/Steve Eason, cropped to 770 x 402, licenced under CC BY-SA 2.0.

    By Joe Glenton

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Sadiq Khan has condemned the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) for banning footballers from wearing One Love armbands. He called FIFA “weak” in the face of pressure from World Cup host Qatar, as England heads into its second match. Meanwhile, Iranian authorities have arrested a footballer for speaking out against their killing of civilians and crackdowns on protests, all while Iranian fans continue to protest in Qatar.

    England and Iran: variations on protest

    As the Canary previously reported, the England players did not wear their One Love armbands in their first match of the World Cup against Iran. These armbands are designed to show footballers’ support for LGBTQIA+ people’s rights. This is currently of note in Qatar, where being LGBTQIA+ is punishable by death. BBC News reported that:

    England, Wales and other European nations will not wear the OneLove armband at the World Cup in Qatar because of the threat of players being booked. The captains, including England’s Harry Kane and Gareth Bale of Wales, had planned to wear the armband during matches to promote diversity and inclusion.

    A joint statement from seven football associations said they could not put their players “in a position where they could face sporting sanctions”.

    “We are very frustrated by the Fifa decision, which we believe is unprecedented”…

    However, as the Canary wrote, Iran’s captain Ehsan Hajsafi spoke out about his country’s authorities’ violence and repression. He could face arrest – while the England players would only face a yellow card for wearing armbands. Meanwhile, Iran’s 2-0 victory against Wales on Friday 25 November was an emotional event. Fans took an active stance against their authoritarian government. One supporter had Kurdish-Iranian woman Jîna Mahsa Amini‘s name on a shirt. Mahsa died at the hands of Iranian authorities, after they arrested her for breaching strict dress code rules:

    Fans booed Iran’s national anthem, amongst other protests:

    Iran: arresting footballers

    Fans’ protests and Hajsafi’s bold speaking out could have very real consequences for them – as the arrest of another Iranian footballer showed. As the Guardian reported:

    Iranian security forces on Thursday arrested one of the country’s most famous footballers, accusing him of spreading propaganda against the Islamic republic and seeking to undermine the national World Cup team.

    Voria Ghafouri, a former member of the national football team and once a captain of the Tehran club Esteghlal, has been outspoken in his defence of Iranian Kurds, telling the government on social media to stop killing Kurdish people. He has previously been detained for criticising the former Iranian foreign minister Javad Zarif.

    The Iranians who are protesting face very severe consequences for it. This highlights why FIFA’s pathetic adherence to Qatar’s internal rules around LGBTQIA+ rights is unacceptable. The football body looks ridiculous because footballers wearing armbands is about as weak a protest as it gets – especially compared to Iranian players and fans’ actions. Meanwhile, Khan has come out and condemned FIFA.

    Khan: FIFA are “weak”

    In an interview with Gaydio, the London mayor said:

    I’m so angry at FIFA, for basically being weak when it comes to standing up for our values. Listen, I understand why in certain cultures drinking is not encouraged. I don’t drink, alright. But for me, there’s a red line when it comes to people not being able to celebrate who they are. I think, you know, we should have stood up to FIFA a bit more. I think FIFA will, in hindsight, be embarrassed by their stance. I said the same thing about Russia. So, I’m not being inconsistent; I’m not picking on Qatar…

    The upshot of all this is that FIFA has now said rainbow items will be allowed into matches. Meanwhile, Iran will be taking on the USA in its next match – and England will also face the latter on Friday 25 November. It’s unlikely England’s players will wear their One Love armbands in that game, either – even while Iranian fans, and players, risk their freedoms to protest.

    Featured image via Gaydio, ITV Sport – YouTube and Washington Post – YouTube

    Video courtesy of Gaydio

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The Royal College of Nurses (RCN) has announced the first two dates its members will be striking on. Predictably, the right-wing media has already worked itself up into a cliché-driven frenzy – with the fear factor headlines coming thick and fast.

    Nurses: everybody out

    As the Canary previously reported, the RCN’s industrial action is over appalling pay and working conditions. Successive Tory governments have slashed nurses’ real-terms pay by around £4,300 a year since 2010. This year, the government has capped NHS pay rises at 4% for most staff, while inflation is over 11%. So, the RCN balloted its members on strike action – and they overwhelmingly voted ‘yes’.

    The union has now said the first walk outs will be on Thursday 15 and Tuesday 20 December. As the Canary previously reported, the RCN will ensure that it protects life-critical services such as A&E. The union said in a statement that:

    Strike action will happen in phases, meaning more strike dates could be announced after initial action in December, if governments fail to enter into formal negotiations. They have the power and means to stop strikes at any point but have chosen to go down this route.

    Not all members at employers where there is a mandate to strike will be called to strike on these first two dates. Phase one could be just the beginning of a longer period of strike action.

    The strikes are the RCN’s first ever national walk out. So, the right-wing media’s response has been true-to-form for trade union coverage.

    ‘Sick grannies stuck in hospital’

    The Telegraph ran with the headline:

    Nurse strike risks elderly stuck in hospital for Christmas as union targets key dates

    It noted that the RCN strikes could mean backlogs in discharging older people from hospital. The Telegraph quoted one NHS source as saying:

    it’s inevitable that more people will be left in pain and discomfort, and it will be harder to transfer elderly people out of hospital.

    Of course, the idea that the NHS is transferring older people out of hospital in a timely manner anyway is a nonsense. As the Telegraph itself reported in October record numbers of people are stuck in hospital when they’re well enough to be at home – because of the government-created crisis in social care. So, if you think nurses fighting for their rights will stop your sick granny coming home for Christmas – then wake up. She was unlikely to be coming home, anyway.

    ‘Ruining YOUR Christmas!’

    Then, the Daily Mail was equally rabid (don’t click the link!). It too ran with the ‘save granny’s Christmas’ line – but threw in a big old ‘CANCER’ just to stoke people’s fear even more:

    NHS nurse strike threatens Christmas chaos: Fears for cancer appointments and elderly patients stuck in hospital over festive period as thousands of nurses walk out for two days in historic national strike

    • Health insiders have warned the NHS disruption this winter will cost lives
    • NHS bosses say the health service faces ‘its most challenging winter ever’
    • Health Secretary Steve Barclay said that he ‘deeply regrets’ the walk-outs

    Of course, like the Telegraph, the Daily Mail omits the fact that cancer treatment waiting times are dire due to successive Tory government cuts – and that these times have been a problem for years.

    A nurse says…

    Nurse Holly Turner from campaign group NHS Workers Say No told the Canary:

    Within the first few hours of strike dates for nurses being announced, the right-wing attacks have begun. Lies and spin, with attempts to demonise us and turn public opinion against hardworking staff by invoking fear in response to our action.

    The focus should be around WHY nursing staff have been forced to take this decision. The highest waiting lists on record and a national staffing and bed crisis are not our fault, we have been raising the alarm for years with the government refusing to listen. It is not right that nurses are being driven into poverty, whilst working days of unpaid overtime a month in a desperate attempt to plug the gap of 135,000 vacancies across the service.

    Turner also had a rallying-cry for fellow NHS workers:

    We are urging all staff to stay angry, stay focused, and stay united as the attacks on each other and our profession heat up. Striking staff will be seen on the right side of history, not the right winger media and commentators, who are enabling the decimation of our national health service, and costing lives in the process.

    Nurses would not carry out a national strike for the first time in their union’s history without good reason. Their fight is for all of us who use the NHS. While the right-wing media uses tired tropes against industrial action, the reality is the NHS is broken – and its staff, such as nurses, are desperately trying to fix it. Striking is a last resort – but that’s the position nurses are now at.

    Featured image via Unsplash/Ehimetalor Akhere Unuabona

    By Steve Topple

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • The European Union has come under fire from wildlife charities, among others, for some of its actions at the World Wildlife Conference. Not everyone is displeased with the trade bloc, however. According to attendees of a meeting at the conference on 21 November, a consultant for a trophy hunting advocacy group sang the EU’s praises.

    CoP19: EU on sharks and elephants

    The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora’s (CITES) conference of the parties (CoP19) is taking place in Panama from 14 to 25 November. CITES oversees the trade in a number of species considered at risk of extinction. Governments are making decisions at the event that will determine the fate of hundreds of species.

    The EU is to some extent a kingmaker at the conference. This is because it has a 28-bloc-strong vote. In other words, the bloc can oftentimes make or break a proposal that parties – meaning governments – put forward for consideration.

    The EU has supported, and indeed championed, some proposals to increase species protections at CoP19. Sharks are a prime example. But it has also opposed raising other safeguards.

    The bloc failed to back a proposal from eight elephant range state countries to ensure that all live African elephants captured in the wild – such as for export to zoos – remain in-situ, meaning in Africa. Southern African countries have exported over 200 wild elephants to countries outside their natural range since 2010.

    The EU put forward a counter proposal which essentially called for CITES to delay a decision on live elephant exports. The European Commission’s CITES team indicated to the Canary that its proposal gave time for:

    a dialogue among range states to harmonise the conditions for that trade and ensure it supports conservation, transparency and scientific oversight.

    Ultimately, the conference agreed a temporary moratorium on exports of live African elephants outside of their natural range while an agreement on the matter is reached, potentially at the next CoP, which the EU supported.

    EU and UK oppose hippo proposal

    Along with the UK, the EU also opposed a proposal to increase protections for the common hippopotamus by banning the international commercial trade in hippo products.

    10 African countries proposed measures that would secure the ban, as the species has faced significant declines in its total population in recent decades. Habitat loss and illegal hunting for their ivory – i.e., their teeth – and meat are the two primary drivers of their demise.

    Hippo population sizes and their declines vary in different countries, which was why some countries opposed the trade ban. Asked by the Canary about its opposition, for example, a spokesperson for the UK’s Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs indicated that it had:

    supported a proposal that no hippo populations of concern should be allowed to be exported for commercial purposes

    The spokesperson also insisted that the UK is “supporting efforts” to tackle illegal trade in wildlife, including hippos, particularly through its commitment of over £3.2m to projects through the Illegal Wildlife Trade (IWT) Challenge Fund.

    Poached hippo ivory laundered through legal trade

    The EU put forward the proposal that the UK spokesperson referred to. The European Commission told the Canary that it first requested that all range states “set sustainable export quotas” in line with their hippo population’s status. It then called for different trading rules for different hippo range countries, with a commercial trade ban only applying to the countries that proposed the ban. Europe is a major importer of hippo ivory.

    The commission argued that banning trade from countries with “large populations that are stable or increasing” wasn’t “justified”. It also said that banning trade in those countries would carry “serious risks” for the conservation of hippos there because it would reduce communities’ “tolerance” of living alongside hippos. “They would lose income generated through sustainable trade”, the commission said, adding that:

    we would have risked an increase in illegal poaching and that hippo habitat is converted into grazing land for cattle.

    Some dispute these assertions. South African author and journalist Dr Adam Cruise has investigated the purported benefits that communities get from the wildlife trade in Namibia and Botswana, particularly in relation to trophy hunting. He described the idea that communities benefit from the hippo trade as “rubbish”, saying:

    Nobody is benefiting from the trade in hippos other than those who are selling and laundering ivory.

    Moreover, the countries that proposed the ban argue that the legal trade is itself driving illegal poaching. In an EUobserver article, they pointed to large discrepancies in CITES records for trade in the species. For example, Hong Kong recorded over 14,000kg more imports of hippo teeth from Uganda between 1995 and 2013 than the latter reported exporting. They warned that:

    This strongly suggests that ivory from poached hippos is being laundered into legal trade.

    Program coordinator of wildlife for Humane Society International (HSI) Sophie Nazeri agrees. In comments after the CoP19 votes on the matter, she said:

    Although hippos live in 38 African countries, 31 of these countries have small, meaning less than 5,000, or very small, meaning less than 500. These populations are threatened by poaching for their teeth which are laundered into the legal ivory trade. Unfortunately, the Parties, especially the EU which cast its 28 votes against the proposal, have ignored the pleas of hippo range States for help and left open an avenue used by wildlife traffickers.

    EU on trade in Namibia’s white rhinos

    Other EU positions have raised concern among wildlife groups too, such as its partial support for reducing protections from trade for white rhinos. Namibia proposed to downlist its white rhino population from Appendix I to Appendix II so it could trade them more easily for in-situ conservation purposes and trophy hunting. The government has said that this will “enhance the conservation of the species and its habitat”.

    CITES lists the species it oversees in three appendices. These listings ostensibly relate to how at risk the included species are, and the trading rules differ accordingly.

    According to the International Rhino Foundation, there are around 1,200 white rhinos in Namibia. The country has had a surge in poaching in 2022, with 57 rhinos killed by October.

    The EU supported Namibia’s bid to trade in live white rhinos for in-situ conservation for reintroduction programmes in Africa, but not the trophy hunting element. However, ProWildlife’s Daniela Freyer told the Canary that:

    Downlisting rhinos in Namibia sends the wrong message, is unjustified and unnecessary if the true goal is indeed the transfer of live animals to conservation programmes – which is already permitted under Appendix I.

    CITES also permits the trophy hunting of Appendix I species, subject to the trade meeting certain conditions.

    Criticism at CoP19

    Wildlife groups got the chance to raise their concerns with the EU at a stakeholder meeting at the conference on 21 November. Groups in attendance included HSI, Born Free, ProWildlife, and Fondation Franz Weber.

    They commended the EU for supporting the moratorium on the trade in live elephants, but took issue with the EU’s contradictory positions on different matters, such as supporting Namibia’s in-situ proposal for trade in white rhinos and opposing countries’ in-situ proposal for trade in live elephants.

    Both Born Free and ProWildlife raised concerns over a lack of transparency from the bloc, at least in relation to countries whose proposals it opposes. Fryer said:

    We understand that a lack of transparency and dialogue is resulting in disappointment and frustration – especially given the fact that the EU is a main market for many species.

    She further urged the EU to “apply the precautionary principle” in its decision making, as the CITES criteria for species listings demand. This means erring on the side of the animals when there is any doubt regarding their conservation status or what impact trade could have on them.

    The European Commission told the Canary that is has “extensively engaged and exchanged positions” before and during CoP19, via stakeholder and regional meetings, along with “bilaterals with partner countries”. It said it had met “numerous times” with non-governmental organisations (NGOs) that represent “all positions and interest relevant to CITES matters”. The commission commented:

    The EU and its MS [member states] based their positions on the CITES provisions and in the best available science. We are committed to work with partner countries to find the best way to ensure species conservation.

    Support from right-wing of conservation

    According to South African journalist Adam Cruise, who also attended the meeting, NGOs that tend to favour pro-trade positions at CoP19 appear content with the EU’s moves. Cruise said that Marco Pani, a consultant for the trophy hunting advocacy group Conservation Force, congratulated the EU emphatically on its stance on most proposals at the meeting.

    The European Commission told the Canary that it is “not responsible of [sic] the praise or criticism by stakeholders” and treats them all equally in terms of access to meetings. But Cruise argued that Pani’s praise “says it all”, as it indicates that “the pro-trade stance of the EU is in line with the thinking” of the trophy hunting advocates and the right-wing of the conservation world.

    Featured image via CITES / YouTube screenshot

    By Tracy Keeling

    This post was originally published on Canary.