Friday, 28 March 2025

Dry Your Tiers

According to the last census, all religions are now minority religions.

And white men have always been a minority, outnumbered by white women if by nobody else.

A good barrister could have a field day with the Sentencing Council's new guidelines. Find yourself one.

This Aggressive Violation


Quakers in Britain strongly condemned the violation of their place of worship which they say is a direct result of stricter protest laws removing virtually all routes to challenge the status quo.

Just before 7.15pm more than 20 uniformed police, some equipped with tasers, forced their way into Westminster Meeting House.

They broke open the front door without warning or ringing the bell first, searching the whole building and arresting six women attending the meeting in a hired room.

The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 and the Public Order Act 2023 have criminalised many forms of protest and allow police to halt actions deemed too disruptive.

Meanwhile, changes in judicial procedures limit protesters' ability to defend their actions in court. All this means that there are fewer and fewer ways to speak truth to power.

Quakers support the right to nonviolent public protest, acting themselves from a deep moral imperative to stand up against injustice and for our planet.

Many have taken nonviolent direct action over the centuries from the abolition of slavery to women's suffrage and prison reform.

Paul Parker, recording clerk for Quakers in Britain, said: “No-one has been arrested in a Quaker meeting house in living memory.

“This aggressive violation of our place of worship and the forceful removal of young people holding a protest group meeting clearly shows what happens when a society criminalises protest.

“Freedom of speech, assembly, and fair trials are an essential part of free public debate which underpins democracy."

Thursday, 27 March 2025

Resolution, Foundation

How have the privatisation of water and steel worked out? Several Conservatives stood up in the House of Commons today to call for steel renationalisation, as did Richard Tice. And why not? In Britain and Canada, this is the age of Liberals for tariffs. Donald Trump may be many things, but he has undeniably changed the world.

Speaking of Tice, though, let me assure him, as someone who has both back pain and mental health issues, that it is perfectly possible to do so, and that they are both very real indeed. When the non-doms stamped their feet, then Rachel Reeves largely backed down. Yet there is no sign of any of that for the people who did not buy her clothes, although, unlike her, they did buy their own.

And as for this suddenly prominent thing, the Resolution Foundation, it has spawned not only Torsten Bell, but also Dan Tomlinson, who has today graced us with the wisdom that billionaires cannot be taxed but cripples can because cripples cannot move. Beware of wolves in sheep's clothing. Oh, and of course the likes of Reeves and of Darren Jones privately compare disability benefits to children's pocket money. They thought that everyone did. They administer PIP without knowing that it is an in-work benefit. Take it away from a worker, and you cut that worker's income by that much. Moreover, if a policy were going to push 50,000 children into poverty, then that should be the end of it.

Let Them Eat Bullets


So, a Labour government is prepared to push another 250,000 people into poverty by 2029-30, according to the Department for Work and Pensions’ own figures. The welfare cuts will leave 3.2 million families worse off, and a study in the British Medical Journal warns of a further decline in the health of the country. Based on the impact of austerity over the last fourteen years, this renewed onslaught of austerity directed against the most vulnerable members of society will mean a still further rise in premature deaths.

Even apart from this government’s willingness to commit social murder, the cuts aren’t going to save the money they want to save. Restrictions on Pip payments will likely drive disabled people out of work and onto benefits, and will certainly not succeed in forcing people into work. The loss of benefits income will certainly drive more people not just into relative poverty, but outright destitution. These measures, notably the cut to and then freezing of the universal credit health element, will hardly help the health of the working population, which, unlike for most of the G7, has not recovered from the pandemic.

There is apparently going to be £1bn in funds for helping people into work, but this is just a redeployment from the £4.8bn worth of cuts, so is desperately unlikely to make up for what is lost, even if we knew the details of upon what it will be spent. When Reeves in her press conference claimed that she is ‘confident that the changes that we are making and the support that we’re providing to get people into work, will result in more people having fulfilling careers paying decent wages’, this is a direct denial of the figures presented by the government’s own Department for Work and Pensions. This suggests a level of delusion on Reeves’ part about the nature of the impact of austerity measures since 2011.

Among the various bits of smoke and mirrors in the presentation of the impact of the autumn budget is the claim that only top 10% of earners will be worse off by 2028-9. This is based on the assumption that the rest of us benefit in kind from public services. If the NHS is burdened still further by the increase in poverty, which is a certainty, and public services remain in crisis, then this is unlikely to be right.

There are, of course, any number of measures the government could take to raise more money and avoid cuts, but they would involve taxing the rich. At the very least, equalising capital gains tax with income tax would raise £14bn, and probably not hurt private investment. Even if it did, Britain has suffered from a huge chronic shortfall in private investment for decades, so we wouldn’t be losing anything much from there anyway. 

Where is growth coming from?

The big bet is that growth will improve after this year. The Office of Budgetary Responsibility claims it will, but this again is a matter of assumptions about the nature of growth, and what will drive it. Government policy remains focused around making investment cheaper and easier for private capital, for example by easing planning regulations. In housing, this is unlikely to result in more ‘affordable’ homes, since there is no sign of any concerted effort to create more council housing. The benefits are likely to accrue to the house-building industry, which is notorious for failing to provide the ‘affordable’ housing it promises. In sum, the government is performing a watered-down version of the same ‘supply-side’ economics in which the hapless Liz Truss indulged. The results are unlikely to be as immediately catastrophic, but the long-term impact will not solve Britain’s infrastructure and investment problems.

Of course, the other new hope for growth comes from military spending, which has partly been stolen from the international aid budget, and partly raised by fudging fiscal rules. It is counted as investment, for which the government allows itself to borrow. The £2.2bn increase in defence spending, only the beginning of a massive increase to come to 2.5% of GDP, is not going to act as any kind of military Keynesian stimulus to growth. Firstly, it is well known that defence spending provides fewer jobs, relative to money invested, than would the equivalent spent on public services. In any case it is likely that much of the funding will end up in the hands of the US defence industry, which has the greater capacity, rather than fuelling growth in British industry.

The sadistic benefit cuts do not just offset the increase in defence spending, but are meant to reassure the bond markets that the government is ‘fiscally responsible’. For the capital markets that fund government debt spending, apparently, a commitment to slash the standard of living of your country’s workforce, even to the point of a rise in the death rate, is necessary to keep them willing to continue to lend money to the safest possible creditor that exists. Reeves and Starmer may be genuinely too frightened by the Truss debacle to test this, or at least to mount an argument that investment through borrowing will result in a better economy than the doom-loop of austerity. More likely, they are actually committed to the strictest of neoliberal doctrines. The result also seems to have kicked any commitments to dealing with the climate crisis into the long grass.

There does seem to be an emerging consensus that the increases in defence spending require a dismantling of the welfare state. Thus several influential commentators have written variations on the theme that ‘Europe must trim its welfare state to build a warfare state. There is no way of defending the continent without cuts to social spending.’ The problem here is not just the entirely false proposition that our economies need to move onto a war footing to confront Russia, but that the dismantling what remains of the welfare state to pay for an entirely avoidable war is not going to work in capitalist terms either.

We are still in the doldrums from the crash of 2008, since when growth rates in Western economies in general have not recovered. The response to this long depression has been austerity, but that has not worked to rejuvenate either investment or profit rates, so now capital hawks want to go even further towards reducing the overheads on capital profitability by shrinking the state. The problem is that capital does need labour in order to realise profit from its investments, and what it is cutting when it takes the axe to public spending is the social reproduction of labour. This has now reached dangerous proportions, with education, the NHS and housing all deep in crisis.

As the workforce declines in productivity, due to ill-health, bad housing, failing public transport, and collapsing education systems, it becomes ever more difficult for capital to invest profitably. The creaking state of infrastructure is also a deadly problem for capital, with the fire which closed Heathrow last week just another straw in the wind of what happens when there is inadequate infrastructure investment. Austerity has brought us here, and if Labour are determined to stick to that policy, it stands no chance of getting the magic growth tree from sprouting again.

The Labour government was elected on the basis of ‘change’, but they have stuck rigidly close to a needlessly debilitating version of capitalist orthodoxy, showing nothing but cowardice when it comes to arguing for any kind of different approach to the economy. If capitalism can provide no solution but an accelerating programme of social murder and ecocide, then the anti-war and anti-austerity movements need to organise to demand an entirely different economic model.

The Dignity Declaration

Sign here:

Some lives matter more than others. That’s the message the political-media class sends us every day.

How else can we explain a government that pushes disabled people into poverty, allows 4.3 million children to live in deprivation, and leaves a quarter of a million people homeless? How else can we accept that two in three people worry about heating their homes, while the number of billionaires in Britain reaches record highs?

This wretched state of affairs, of course, horrifies the millions who are treated as less than fully human. It frightens and disciplines tens of millions more who are one accident, one misstep, one piece of bad luck away from disaster. And it offends the common human dignity of us all. How can we allow this systematic enrichment of the few at the expense of the many to continue?

The government claims there is no money to lift people out of poverty, yet it finds billions for war and weapons. We believe there is an alternative. If you do too, please join other prominent figures across progressive politics, the trade unions and social movements by signing the Dignity Declaration below.

The government claims there is no money to lift people out of poverty, yet it finds billions for war and weapons. This isn’t about scarcity—it’s about priorities. And their priorities are clear: no money for us all, endless money for war.

Real security isn’t the ability to destroy whole regions of the world or line the pockets of arms dealers. Real security is having a roof over your head, food on your table, and a future for our children.

We were told it was a “tough” choice to cut the winter fuel allowance for millions of pensioners. The same excuse was used to justify keeping the two-child benefit cap, slashing disability benefits, scrapping the £2 bus fare cap, and betraying the WASPI women. Why do the tough choices always hurt ordinary people, while the richest are let off the hook?

Parroting the rhetoric of Reform UK on migrants, minorities and Muslims just endorses their scapegoating and makes society worse for us all.

The government could lift children out of poverty by scrapping the two-child benefit cap. It could reduce energy and water bills by bringing failing companies into public ownership. It could end homelessness by investing in a massive council-house-building programme.

This is set to be the first Labour government in history under which child poverty increases. Labour’s failure has paved the way for Reform. We need an alternative path.

There is an alternative path: a society where every life is valued, and dignity is guaranteed for all. There is no law of nature that says we can’t shape our world based on human need, not corporate greed.

That would start by properly taxing multinational corporations and those with assets over £10 million so we can rebuild our schools and hospitals. That means bringing in rent controls to tackle the housing emergency. That means ending the disaster of privatisation in energy, water, rail and healthcare. That means protecting our planet by standing up to fossil fuel giants and building a new green energy system. That means investing in welfare, not warfare.

Rising rents. Soaring bills. Crushing inequality. People were promised change, but their patience is running out. Our people cannot endure another round of cuts. Our NHS cannot survive more privatisation. And our economy cannot thrive when millions are trapped in poverty.

The people of this country have the power to turn things around. We are the ones who create the wealth—let’s invest it in a future that respects our planet, nurtures hope in our children, and guarantees dignity for all.

Kill This Bill

The Times editorialises:

Sir Keir Starmer likes to see himself as a serious prime minister for serious times. On occasion the actions of his government measure up to his self-regard. To say he had approached the torturous and unseemly debate on assisted dying legislation with due seriousness, however, would be darkly amusing were the matter at hand not so consequential.

It is often said that Sir Keir is deeply invested in the passage of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill, the legislation brought forward by the Labour MP Kim Leadbeater. If that is the case, it is difficult to take his government seriously on that most vital question: the right of the state to sanction medically-assisted suicide.

This week, as a legislative process that has revealed both the best and worst of parliament dragged on, it emerged that assisted dying may not be introduced in England and Wales until 2029, two years later than promised by Ms Leadbeater. The Department of Health and Social Care fears that it is unworkable. Of course, 2029 will be an election year, and supporters of the bill fear it will politicise the legislation and put paid to its chances of ever taking effect. Those opposed to state-sanctioned suicide may be forgiven a bittersweet sense of vindication. The delay is nothing if not a tacit admission that the bill is not fit for purpose, its provisions a mess, and its journey through parliament an unconscionable waste of time.

For this, much of the blame must lie with Ms Leadbeater, the hapless pilot of the bill during its choppy passage, and those who egged her on. Attempting to establish a state suicide service via a private member’s bill was always wildly inappropriate. The committee scrutinising its provisions has left itself open to accusations of bias as expert witnesses opposed to the measure have been ignored or demeaned. And, of course, this dog’s breakfast of a process was initiated with the connivance of Downing Street.

If Labour wished to rewrite Britain’s social contract in such a profound way (it was Sir Keir who relaxed prosecution guidelines for those involved in assisted suicide when he was head of the Crown Prosecution Service), then it should have had the guts to put the issue to the electorate last year. Instead, an unqualified backbencher found herself being used as a stalking horse, introducing assisted suicide through the legislative back door to satisfy a personal promise made by the prime minister to a former television presenter.

Patching up the bill on the hoof, as Ms Leadbeater has done repeatedly, is not serious politics. Allowing Dame Esther Rantzen to become the ­arbiter of public policy on such a vital issue, as Sir Keir has done, is equally unserious. Citing Canada, the Netherlands and Oregon as models for a British system, when all three are now permitting the depressed and the anorexic to kill themselves courtesy of the state, is positively chilling. Cheerleaders for this looming horror, like the Royal ­College of GPs, which switched from opposition to neutrality despite increasing numbers of its members declaring themselves opposed to the bill, have done themselves no credit.

The thankless task of scrutinising this sinister and half-baked proposal has fallen to a few brave MPs on the committee, among them Labour’s Naz Shah, the Conservatives’ Danny Kruger and the Liberal Democrats’ Sarah Olney. Thanks to them its flaws have been fatally exposed. It remains only to administer the coup de grâce and kill this bill.

Wednesday, 26 March 2025

No Spring In These Steps

The cuts had to be rewritten because the Chancellor of the Exchequer was innumerate, but that experience has chastened neither Rachel Reeves nor her minions. First Torsten Bell, and now Darren Jones. They even look the same as that sort in the Blair years. Callous, and dependent on the assumption that, "They're Labour, so they must be all right basically." They weren't then, and they're not now. Now as then, they are barefaced liars, this time claiming, for example, that PIP was devised "as a top-up to the health top-up to Universal Credit".

As for the rest of us, an extra £500 by 2029? Let joy be unconfined. But even that is only an average figure. It will not apply to every household. Not only are sums negligible to our overlords but catastrophic to those affected going to be taken away from the already most desperate, but a further quarter of a million people, including 50,000 children, are going to be pushed into poverty. Meaning that they will not be spending anything. When has austerity ever caused economic growth? That is not a rhetorical question. When, exactly, has it?

Tuesday, 25 March 2025

With Crushing Inevitability

Archie Bland writes:

Motability really ought to be a boring subject: a government scheme helping people with serious disabilities get a car by using a portion of their benefits to pay for the lease. But over the past week, anyone who had never heard of Motability would have got a more lurid impression.

First reported in the Daily Mail, and then in a string of follow-up stories, Motability was portrayed not as a useful mechanism for helping people with disabilities but an outrageous example of con artists milking the taxpayer.

The claim is that many Motability customers do not really need a car at all: that, in the words of the shadow welfare secretary, Helen Whately, this is “a classic case of a well-intentioned initiative that has got way out of hand”. So how much of that is true?

How does the Motability scheme work?

As a parliamentary report noted last week, 29% of disabled adults do not have access to a car, against 16% of non-disabled adults. They are more likely to be struggling financially, and to need help from a family member or carer to travel. The Motability scheme is intended to help mitigate those problems.

“Disabled people face so many barriers in accessing transport,” said Dr Mark Carew, of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine’s International Centre for Evidence in Disability. (He co-wrote a report that received funding from Motability in 2023.) “Whether it’s train stations that aren’t wheelchair accessible, or no ramp available when you’ve booked it, or other travellers refusing to get out of the wheelchair space – there are lots of reasons Motability is important.”

The scheme is run by a private company, overseen by a charitable foundation, that buys new cars then leases them to claimants for three years before selling them on. The payments come from government benefits, usually a portion of the personal independence payment, the main working-age benefit for people with disabilities. The recent scrutiny is based partly on the remarkable growth in eligibility – with the customer base rising by about 200,000 in two years, to 815,000.

There have been reasonable criticisms over high executive pay and warnings that Motability is sitting on excessive reserves – £4bn in September last year. But the money made from used cars goes back into the scheme, not to shareholders – and, all in all, Carew says, “it clearly delivers value for the taxpayer.

“But it’s not just about that. People with disabilities aren’t aliens – we’re the friends and family of everyone else. This is a powerful way for them to make choices that go some way to level the playing field.” 

Why should people with disabilities get a new car for free on top of their benefits?

A common refrain in the coverage – “Do you want a free new car?” The Times’s Alice Thomson asked – but one which misses a central point: the Pip (personal independence payment) funding that goes to Motability is money customers would have been getting anyway.

If they were not getting a car, they would have it to spend on something else. And if they want a more expensive car – perhaps needing a larger vehicle for essential equipment, perhaps shockingly able to have preferences despite also having a disability – they have to make a down payment of up to £8,000 themselves.

The cars are new, meanwhile, and retain a significant resale value at the end of the lease. Scrapping Motability would not save a penny from the benefits bill.

Shouldn’t prestige brands be excluded?

Another prominent claim: Motability is giving “subsidised BMWs” and “50-grand Mercs” to people who do not need them. And it’s true that if you search the Motability website, you can find premium cars.

But the vast majority are much more ordinary: economy brands make up 94% of Motability’s fleet. And there’s a ceiling of £45,000 on petrol and diesel cars (£55,000 for electric), because cars costing more than that depreciate too fast to be viable.

The cost to the taxpayer of the more expensive models is exactly the same. The fact that the lease only lasts three years is, likewise, motivated by the fact that selling on older cars would mean a worse return. The cherrypicking coverage implies that disabled people should not get a choice: instead, they should exist in a state of constant gratitude, and piss off in their wonky three-wheeler.

But aren’t people who wet the bed or who have Munchausen syndrome taking advantage of the scheme?

This is perhaps the most misleading claim, visible in many variants. Cars are going to “bed-wetting boy racers”, said the Reform MP Richard Tice. In the Daily Mail, Richard Littlejohn asked: “Why should you get a free car simply because you’re fat?” And in the Daily Telegraph, Allison Pearson told us: “If I said I felt depressed or constipated … [the government] might give me a BMW.”

These claims can be traced to the Daily Mail’s first article. “Pip ‘mobility’ claimants do not actually have to have a physical disability to qualify for a Motability vehicle,” it said. “Claimants with a mental health condition, such as anxiety, can also apply.” It cited approval rates for bedwetting, or enuresis (35%), ADHD (49%), obesity (77%), agoraphobia (66%), and Munchausen syndrome, a condition where the sufferer fakes a medical condition for attention (54%).

But those figures cover any level of Pip, not the higher mobility payment needed for Motability. Yes, 54% of people who claimed Pip with Munchausen syndrome in October 2024 were accepted – but that amounted to six successful claimants. There were 41 with enuresis. Those figures tell us nothing about how many got the higher rate. But the scoring system would not typically put them in that category without a significant physical impairment.

There were likely more for some of the other categories, which have a much larger base – but what is certain is that the vast majority who get a car through Motability have a significant physical disability. “It’s very tough to qualify for Pip’s higher mobility award,” Carew said. “Plenty of people who struggle making journeys don’t qualify.”

Accompanying this legend is the idea that online “sickfluencers” are teaching people how to game the system. But these videos are often unreliable. The social media accounts of a teenager who posted about getting a car because he was autistic, which featured prominently in the outrage, carried enough information for Motability to look into his case: he turned out to have been rejected.

So where did this story come from?

Allegations that Motability is infested with people making bogus claims have existed for many years. Part of the timeline is routine: first a fascinating Bloomberg piece focusing on Motability’s impact on the car market, then the Daily Mail, then everyone else.

Before that, though, the story gained momentum in a stranger corner of the internet – through a couple of rightwing X accounts, @loftussteve and @maxtempers. The anonymous user behind Max Tempers has been banging the drum since at least December, when he suggested that claimants should only be allowed to drive a hideous old car with MOTABILITY written on it. A few weeks later, a post of his about grooming gangs was shared by Elon Musk, and became the ground zero of a whole other dodgy social media frenzy.

The Motability story got picked up by various accounts including Politics UK, a popular X news source, and later by prominent users such as GB News’s deputy political editor, Tom Harwood, who even borrowed Max Tempers’ idea for a car of shame. With crushing inevitability, after the Daily Mail piece, the health secretary, Wes Streeting, told GB News the story showed why the welfare system needed reform.

As the Motability myth went mainstream, Max Tempers celebrated it as proof of the “posting-to-papers pipeline”. It’s hard to disagree. But it doesn’t seem too much to ask that, somewhere along the way, those laundering it into the mainstream might display some curiosity about whether it is actually true.

Agency, Work

In Birmingham, a Labour council is breaking the ILO Convention on Private Employment Agencies by using agency workers to break a strike, in this case a strike by the members of a trade union affiliated to the Labour Party. At Westminster, Rachel Reeves is muddying the waters by promising that PIP would remain available "to those genuinely unable to work", a condition to which it is in fact irrelevant, as part of a general cultivation of all manner of misconception about PIP, the Motability scheme, the Blue Badge, and much else besides.

Would you fight for that? Conscription it is, then. The same individuals who, during the Brexit referendum campaign, called us every name under the Sun for merely reproducing the EU's own words about its desire for direct control over defence, are now saying that we have to rejoin the EU precisely in order to be part of that arrangement. There is to be an EU Army after all, with our youths compelled to enlist in it.

And amidst it all, MPs' pay is going up, because of course it is. Every family in the country will be worse off by 2030, but some will be a lot worse off than others. Even passport fees are to increase again next month, meaning that they will have risen by 25 per cent in two years, lest the sick and the disabled, the starving children and the freezing pensioners, the workers priced off the buses and the farmers forced to sell up, attempt to access British public support by fleeing to Ukraine.

After all, who is going to fight for them here? Reform UK's candidate at Runcorn and Helsby is one Sarah Pochin, who was expelled from the Conservative Group on Cheshire East Council in 2020 when she became Mayor on the votes of Labour and Independent councillors against the Conservative candidate, and who was expelled from the Independent Group in 2022 when she rejoined the Conservative Party to vote in its Leadership Election. Does anyone know for whom?

If Labour won at Runcorn and Helsby, then all of the above would get even worse, and very considerably so. The first candidate to declare there was Peter Ford of the Workers Party of Britain. The BBC still refuses to list that former Ambassador to Bahrain and to Syria, but everyone should put aside any reservation about that party, or about its Leader, or about anything else, and do everything to get Ford elected.

Monday, 24 March 2025

92 Weeks On

Nominations have been closed for 92 weeks, so when is the election?

If I sought election to any other public position now, then I would rapidly find myself just another death in custody under a Starmer or post-Starmer Government, and most especially if Labour had also taken back control of Durham County Council this year.

But I was a public governor of County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust from 2017 to 2020, having been elected unopposed, an extremely unusual occurrence. Unopposed among the 90,000 or more people in the part of County Durham that I was elected to represent. I failed to be re-elected by three votes, on a recount. Yet I was again elected unopposed not far off two years ago, a double feat that I am not aware that anyone else has ever managed, and which has caused the position to be kept vacant ever since. I am determined to have it for at least as long as I was elected to it. Do your worst. As, now under both parties, you are already doing to far better than I.

National Insurance?

The hospice movement is one of the glories of Britain. But not for much longer. Last week, the House of Commons voted against exempting hospices from the increase in employers' National Insurance contributions, and voted to require them to offer assisted suicide.

Pharmacies and care homes were also denied exemptions to the NI increase, but the National Health Service has been spared it. Kim Leadbeater, however, has proposed an amendment to her own Bill, to change the statutory basis of the NHS to include "the provision of voluntary assisted dying services". The envy of the world no more.

Fiscal Rules

The economy is positively shrinking, and borrowing is not far off double what had been expected, but Rachel Reeves is still there. There really must be no one else. Well, no one else who usefully did not understand the money supply, anyway.

The issuing of currency is an act of the State, which is literally the creator of all money. As a sovereign state with its own free-floating, fiat currency, the United Kingdom has as much of that currency as it chooses to issue to itself, with readily available fiscal and monetary means of controlling any inflationary effect, means that therefore need to be under democratic political control. The responsibility of the Government is to ensure the supply of goods and services to be purchased with that currency.

It is impossible for the currency-issuing State to run out of money. Money “lent” to the Treasury by the Bank of England is money “lent” to the State by the State; such “debt” will never be called in, much less will bailiffs be sent round. Call this “the Magic Money Tree” if you will. There is no comparison between running the economy and managing a household budget, or even a business. There is no “national credit card” to “max out”. “Fiscal headroom” is only the gap between the Government’s tax and spending plans and what would be allowed under the fiscal rules that it sets for itself and changes frequently.

That is what both fiscal policy and monetary policy are for: to give the currency its value by controlling inflation to a politically chosen extent while discouraging certain politically chosen forms of behaviour, and while encouraging others, including economic equality, which is fundamental to social cohesion and thus to patriotism. There is no debt. It is an accounting trick. The Treasury, which is the State, has issued bonds to the Bank of England, which is the State. Even if those bonds were held by anyone else, then the State could simply issue itself with enough of its own free-floating, fiat currency to redeem them. Say it again that there is no debt.

Taxation is not where the State’s money comes from. Nothing is “unaffordable”, every recession is discretionary on the part of the Government, and there is no such thing as “taxpayers’ money”. Within and under that understanding, a tax of one to two per cent on assets above £10 million could abolish the two-child benefit cap 17 times over, while merely taxing each of Britain’s 173 billionaires down to one billion pounds per head would raise £1.1 trillion, an entire year’s tax take. The taxation of unearned income at the same rate as earnings, as was the case under Margaret Thatcher and Nigel Lawson, could easily abolish the two-child benefit cap as advocated by Nigel Farage and Suella Braverman, restore the £20 per week uplift to the Universal Credit two in five claimants of which were in work, and extend that uplift to disability benefits, all of which would inject money directly into the consumer economy. And so on.

There is no case whatever for cutting the benefits of the sick and disabled as if that would cure them or find them jobs, for retaining the two-child benefit cap, for withdrawing the Winter Fuel Payment from anyone, for increasing workers’ bus fares by 50 per cent, for failing to freeze Council Tax, for threatening to abolish the single person discount, for increasing employers’ National Insurance contributions so as to destroy charities and small businesses while making it impossible for big businesses to take on staff or to increase wages, for forcing working farmers of many decades’ standing who formally inherited their parents’ farms to sell them to giant American agribusinesses, or for any other form of austerity. There is an unanswerable economic and moral case for the full compensation of, among others, the victims of Orgreave, Grenfell Tower, the Windrush scandal, the Post Office scandal, and the contaminated blood scandal, as well as the WASPI women.

Sunday, 23 March 2025

Lucky Every Time

On Thursday, less than an hour after an email exchange with one of those tiresome little people with whom I am afflicted, the following anonymous comment was posted under this: "Don't you dare show your face at the exhibition in Consett. Safeguarding will have you. As you know better than anybody liberal Catholic=right-wing Labour=Mossad. After you humiliated them in court last Monday they want you dead even more than ever."

Having gone delightfully deviceless for the afternoon, first at this and then, on Saint Cuthbert's Day and thus County Durham Day, in the Grey Horse, I did not read that until I had already got back. The old lady praying by the door had not attempted a sniper attack. But I am quite aware that the forces of evil are as active as ever. Half an hour after the comment above, I had been sent the following email:

From: [the usual]
To: heritageanddestiny@yahoo.com; editorial@mankindquarterly.org; info@ulsterinstitute.org; contact@britishdems.co.uk; enquiries@homelandparty.org; info@rootsofradicalism.com; chairman@ukip.org; press@ukip.org; ResistanceGB@protonmail.com; press@tpointuk.co.uk; press@reclaimparty.co.uk; admin@workersofengland.co.uk; support@britishfreedomparty.com; northeast@patrioticalternative.org.uk; enquiries@natfront.info; info@traditionalbritain.org; editor@traditionalbritain.org; LgeStGeorge@aol.com; candourwebmaster@yahoo.co.uk; info@blackhousepublishing.com; info@irvingbooks.com;
Cc: davidaslindsay@hotmail.com
Subject: David Lindsay in court again

He's got to be lucky every time, we've only got to be lucky once.

Monday April 7.

Assemble in Durham market place, 9 o'clock (am).

March to Durham Crown Court. Rally on the steps at 10 o'clock to demand Lindsay's imprisonment, pursuit of the new charges against him, release of Tommy Robinson and all our prisoners.

See all patriots there and let him know we're coming.

Well, so far as I could tell, none of them turned up on Monday 10 March, but that may have been because they had had advance knowledge that no sentence was going to be passed, as none was or has been. That morning, a judge refused to remand me on the new charges even though I had pleaded guilty to two of the three old ones, yet with a recorded verdict of not guilty of the third, which logically should have been put first, but of which the Crown simply admitted to having had no evidence once I had pleaded guilty to the others. That afternoon, another judge refused to intensify my bail conditions. In view of how the Crown Prosecution Service had chosen to go about its campaign against me, then our scorecard will soon enough read, in chronological order, two convictions, four guilty pleas, and 10 recorded verdicts of not guilty, either by jury acquittal or otherwise. There is something else, too. The other side is now very, very, very rattled, indeed.

Bringing us to Thursday's original email. As I replied to it, "You already know that you are siding with practising Satanists against me, but that is your choice, with consequences beyond this life." Baphomet noticed. By eight o'clock on Friday evening, my physical illnesses had attacked with a vengeance not known this year, accompanied by chest pains, heavy shaking, and trouble breathing. I am still not restored even to my merely usual state of ill health. Had another sacrifice been offered? The events of recent years would make perfect sense if a certain Office were indeed literally a coven, although its Macbeth-like coup has failed. In any event, there is clearly some connection, as there is to everyone else described in this post. And to those who have announced that, "£25,000 has been paid for your conviction, £50,000 will be paid for your imprisonment, £100,000 will be paid for your death in prison"?

But several major national and international projects will go live in 2025, and those who chose to declare me their enemy will therefore find me the least of their worries. The pursuit of my suicide as a form of Satanic ritual sacrifice is proving no more successful than ever, and the consolation prize of my murder in prison as such an offering is also sliding out of view. Find a new hobby. You know who you are.

Saturday, 22 March 2025

Overwhelming Anxiety


There is no doubt that the disability benefits system is broken – but not in the ways the government suggests. The current system is hostile, inefficient and difficult to navigate – often worsening the physical and mental health of claimants, through energy-depleting assessment and appeal processes, gaslighting and having to fight to be seen.

The government suggests that the way to get disabled people into work is to invest more in job coaches – as though the disabled community simply lack confidence to hunt for jobs. In reality, it is employers who lack confidence to take us on. To find one that can offer minimal hours (for someone with long Covid) or provide multiple sick days a month (for regular hospital visits) is almost impossible.

If the government is serious about improving access to work for the disabled community, this is where investment needs to happen. We need something like the apprenticeship scheme, whereby employers would receive financial support to employ people with limited capacity for work – providing us with a fair living wage on reduced hours. This could unlock the talents of the educated and brilliant disabled community.

Name and address supplied

These proposed changes to personal independence payment (Pip) must be opposed. I feel overwhelming anxiety whenever I get a letter from the Department for Work and Pensions. Living with epilepsy, an unpredictable, life-limiting condition, impacts every aspect of my life. My DWP daily living score reflects this; I receive 13 points and qualify for the enhanced rate of Pip. Under the proposed “four points in one category” system, I would lose my Pip entirely.

About 90% of the time, I function well, but for the other 10%, I don’t know who or where I am, and am profoundly vulnerable. This reform ignores disabilities like mine where, to stay safe, I need help across the board, all the time. I support welfare reform, but not at the expense of disabled people. These proposals will have devastating effects on their lives.

Jo Mackenzie
Ventnor, Isle of Wight

Why is the government waging a vindictive vendetta against disabled people? I claim universal credit and Pip. Without Pip I would become homeless. Is this appropriate for a 62-year-old who has paid taxes for over 40 years and has a body now disfigured by working on building sites? I had to wait over 18 months to receive Pip and go through hell with the DWP, which refused countless times to accept I had a long-term disability. I am now expected to find appropriate employment when I’m unable to, and will end up having to accept a low-paid, unskilled job. If I don’t, all my benefits will be stopped.

Rachel Reeves, the Treasury and Liz Kendall should ask themselves why this Labour government can find £200bn for nuclear weapons, plus over £14bn extra on defence spending, but is more worried about disabled people having half a decent life with Pip payments.

Mark Sayers 
Keighley, West Yorkshire

The government’s proposal to restrict the health element of universal credit for those aged under 22 will have a devastating impact on young care leavers. These are more likely than other young people to have health conditions or disabilities due to early trauma and a care system that fails to provide the support they need. Many have no family to turn to for financial or emotional assistance.

This cut will reduce their already limited incomes by nearly £5,000 a year. Without this lifeline, more young care leavers will struggle to afford essentials like food, rent and transport, increasing their risk of homelessness, mental health crises and long-term unemployment. Instead of helping them build a future, this policy will push them further to the margins of society.

We urge ministers to reconsider before it causes lasting damage to some of the most disadvantaged young people in our communities.

Katharine Sacks-Jones 
Chief executive, Become charity

I’m writing this as a disabled guy in his late 30s. I have now been job-hunting for 13 months since I moved closer to family, previously having worked in a part-time office job. The last few years have been challenging due to my conditions deteriorating. This means I now use a wheelchair, when I used to walk.

Pip is not a means to not work. Being disabled is exhausting and it is about constantly juggling our finite energy resources with wanting to be part of society. Often this means only being able to work part-time, which doesn’t provide enough income on its own.

Pip is a benefit to support the extra costs of being disabled, so we may have some quality of life. My wheelchair-accessible vehicle is expensive to run as it is a van with specialised heavy adaptations. Accessible sports are often miles away and not easily accessible by public transport. I need help cutting my nails – this costs at least £30 per session. I need a care worker to support me daily – this costs a minimum of £80 a week.

This is just a small snapshot of the extra costs of being disabled. Freezing and cutting Pip means we will be going back in time and ignoring all the hard work of disability rights legislation over the years. This year is the 30th anniversary of the Disability Discrimination Act – yet who has cause to celebrate?

David Slater
Saffron Walden, Cambridgeshire

This is going to be remembered in the same way as the poll tax for Margaret Thatcher and tuition fees for Nick Clegg. Those caused riots. This won’t, but demonising disabled people will not be forgiven. 

James Unvala
Ramsgate, Kent

Sufficient Number


Amidst the economic gloom, there is one piece of good news. The minimum wage rate for nearly 2 million UK workers is rising from 1 April 2025. This will also have a positive effect on workers immediately above the minimum wage as they will seek to maintain wage differentials. Higher wages improve people’s material conditions and reduce spending on welfare benefits.

The new rate for full-time workers over the age of 21 will be £12.21 an hour, a 6.7% increase over the previous year’s rate. For 18–20-year-olds, the rate rises from £8.60 to £10.00 per hour. There are lower rates for the under-18s and apprentices.

The 6.7% headline rate increase appears high to some, but its real value has already been eroded by the rise in the price of energy, water, food, transport, housing, Wi-Fi, council tax and other essentials. Workers are merely catching-up. There is little real-term gain, or reset of the relationship between capital and labour. As a percentage of median earnings, the UK minimum wage is lower than in Colombia, Costa Rica, Chile, Mexico, Portugal, Turkiye, Slovenia, France and South Korea.

The new rates mean that a worker over the age of twenty-one working a 35-hour week will earn £22,222 a year. After income tax and national insurance deductions of £2,703, the take-home pay will be £19,519 a year. Median pay for FTSE 100 chief executives is £4.22m.

The Joseph Rowntree Foundation estimated that a single person needed to earn £28,000 a year to reach a minimum acceptable standard of living in 2024. A couple with 2 children needed to earn £69,400 a year between them. Higher minimum wage still won’t give millions of people a minimum standard of living, even when two members of the family work. Most will still not be able to save for a decent pension or buy a home.

Many poorly paid workers hold multiple jobs to make ends meet, far less start a family or a business. Many are on insecure zero-hour contracts. Too many rely on foodbanks and charities for survival. Around 38% of the claimants of Universal Credit are at work. Tax policy does not help the poor either. In 2024-25, the richest fifth paid 30% of gross household income in direct taxes, compared to 16% for the poorest fifth. The richest fifth paid 11% of disposable income in indirect taxes, compared to 27% by the poorest fifth. Altogether, the poorest pay a higher proportion of income in taxes.

The law denies the full minimum wage rate to workers below the age of twenty-one. The under-twenty-ones do not pay a lower rate of income tax and national insurance. They pay full price for housing, food, shoes, clothes, transport, medicines, internet or other goods and services but are condemned to receive a lower wage. Successive governments have assumed that the under-twenty-ones are funded by the bank of Mum and Dad but that is not necessarily so, especially as parents too are buffeted by never-ending austerity and real wage cuts. The government has proposed a cut in the disability benefits for people under the age of 22.

The under-twenty-ones are paid a lower wage rate but the product of their labour whether at restaurants, fast food outlets, supermarkets, offices, factories, fields or building sites does not carry a lower price. Companies do not sell the products and services produced by low-paid workers at a discount. The denial of the full minimum wage to under-twenty-ones is legalised exploitation.

Over the years, the typical government response has been that low wages create and preserve employment opportunities for young workers. Yet young people work long hours and do multiple jobs to meet living costs.

Young people on low wages are trapped into low-paid jobs. Many would like to undertake part-time education to improve qualifications and skills but can’t do this alongside multiple jobs. Many do not have the resources, and there is no government help.

Henry Ford famously increased the wages of his workers to reduce staff turnover and efficiency, and enabled workers to buy more of his automobiles. But in contemporary Britain some employers complain that higher minimum wage has a negative impact on their business, without saying much about how they would expect workers to survive and buy their goods and services. Companies like Currys have opposed the rise in minimum wage on the grounds that this increases business costs, but the same objections are not raised against executive pay, dividends and share buybacks. Research shows that rising minimum wage had an impact on firms’ hiring behaviour but there is little evidence of any negative impact on employment or hours, especially as many businesses can pass on higher costs to customers.

Some employers resent paying even the minimum wage to their workers. In the years 2019, 2023 and 2024, 428,000, 351,000 and 371,000 workers respectively were estimated to have been robbed of the minimum wage. Rather than prosecutions, governments have opted for a ‘naming and shaming’ regime on the assumption that this would enhance compliance with regulation. In 2022, 202 businesses were named for failing to pay £7m of minimum wage to 63,000 workers. In 2023, 524 businesses were named for denying £16m statutory minimum wage to 172,000 workers. Some highly well-known companies, such as Staffline Recruitment Limited, Rank Group Gaming, Mitchells & Butlers PLC, Easyjet Airline Company Limited, Greggs Plc, Moss Bros Group PLC, WH Smith Retail Holdings Limited, Lloyds Pharmacy Limited, Marks and Spencer PLC and Argos Limited have failed to pay the required minimum wage to their employees.

The offending organisations do not make material errors or forget to pay the right sums to bosses. They only forget to pay the right rate to their lowest-paid workers. Denial of wages to workers boosts profits and fuels executive bonuses.

The enforcement process needs improvement. Unions have brought successful court cases against employers though individual workers lack resources to enforce their rights. The chances of being caught for violation of the wage laws are low. The International Labour Organization Convention No. 81, which is signed by the UK, calls for countries to ensure that there are a “sufficient number” of labour market inspectors to monitor and enforce worker rights. This is interpreted as one labour market inspector per 10,000 workers in industrial market economies. With a workforce of 36.9m the UK has only 1,490 labour market inspectors. With these resources, employers can expect a visit about once every five hundred years. And the government is promoting deregulation.

The potential fines for non-compliance with the minimum wage laws are up to 200% of the underpayment of the wage and a maximum fine of £20,000 per worker. Such levels of fines are rarely invoked. Directors don’t face any personal penalties for inflicting hardship on workers.

There is no minimum penalty. One-size fits all can be difficult as small and large businesses may have different capacities to absorb fines. So, one solution is that the minimum penalty should equal the remuneration of the entire board of directors. This would result in proportionately higher fines on large companies. At least 50% of the fine should be directly borne by directors. Thus, they will have economic incentives for ensuring that workers are not deprived on the statutory minimum wage.

Despite the increase, the minimum wage will still be comparatively low, and millions will live below the minimum acceptable standard of living. Equitable distribution of income is needed. Stronger trade unions are essential. Worker elected directors on the boards of large companies can help to secure equitable distribution of income. The government can improve purchasing power of low-paid workers by abolishing VAT on domestic fuel, cutting the standard rate of VAT and increasing tax-free personal allowance. As part of redistribution it can also provide free school meals and childcare to lift low-paid workers and their families out of poverty. The net benefit is that the spending of the less well-off will boost local economies and fuel economic growth.

How The Right Sold Out

I take no end of pleasure in the progress of Sohrab Ahmari since 10 October 2014, when he seconded Kevan Jones in a debate against me at Durham. We had a grand time at the drinks afterwards. As a convert myself, I knew then that he would become a Catholic and a Postliberal, although of course I was too polite to say it. He is now doing sterling work. God is good. Mind you, in his new capacity as Lord Beamish, even Kevan is socking it to the unaccountability of the intelligence and security agencies. More joy in Heaven:

Everyone knows about the transformation of Che Guevara from a murderous Marxist militant into a T-shirt icon. In recent years, Western elites did something similar to political movements from the Left and the Right, only on a much grander scale.

Around a decade ago, in the fallout from the financial crisis, some of the world’s wealthiest individuals and biggest corporations started deploying the Left’s “woke” tropes to legitimise their own power and to disarm popular grievances. Since then, and especially in the wake of last year’s election, they have adopted the edgy aesthetics and rhetoric of the online Right in service of the same ends.

In both cases, the underlying message is remarkably similar, notwithstanding the enmity between Left and Right, between woke and anti-woke. The message is that all collective action is ultimately in vain; the individual — be he the anti-racist HR specialist of the Left or the heroic gym bro of the online Right — is the only realistic locus of change.

Take wokeness, which roughly emerged back in 2013, when George Zimmerman was acquitted for the killing of an African-American teen, Trayvon Martin, in Florida. This triggered the first Black Lives Matter protests. It was also the year a PR exec named Justine Sacco tweeted a tasteless joke before hopping on a flight to South Africa (“Hope I don’t get AIDS”), only to be fired before the plane hit the Capetown tarmac. In the ensuing years, wokeness and all the adjacent movements, from DEI to #MeToo, swept through and took hold of our mainstream institutions, reaching a fever pitch in 2020.

Most conservatives associate wokeness with progressive utopianism, only the most recent attempt to revive Marxism. But this is a mistake. The woke, to be sure, demanded dramatic changes to our public language, monuments, and institutional practices: “unconscious-bias” trainings became de rigueur at workplaces; newspapers began to capitalise the races; Churchill statues were vandalised. But wokeness was far from utopian — quite the contrary, it amounted to an intensely pessimistic worldview. Drawing from the academic tradition of Afro-pessimism, as the scholar Geoff Shullenberger has pointed out, wokeness ended up “inscribing black oppression into the very fabric of reality”.

In the American context, this served an immediate purpose for a Democratic Party seeking to displace blame for the devastation of the black middle class in the Great Recession. It wasn’t that neoliberal Democrats had bailed out big banks while abandoning African-American homeowners to the vagaries of the market. Rather, blacks were immiserated because racial tyranny was and remains “a metaphysical — even ontological — condition”, as Shullenberger neatly puts it. A metaphysical crisis can’t be blamed on any one policy mix or even remedied by normal politics, and that was the point.

Woke cultural actors thus dismissed the legitimate achievements of civil rights and similar movements in Britain and elsewhere: colourblind justice — the ideal that inspired the likes of Martin Luther King Jr. — was framed as racist. Future progress was similarly foreclosed by the racism that stamped the modern West at its material and psychic origins. Even (and especially) those who denied harboring racial animus were, in fact, irredeemably racist.

The only thing left to do was for people to “work” on themselves as individuals: to “unpack” hidden biases, confess their role in structures of “supremacy”, and lower their expectations regarding things such as objectivity and punctuality, now condescendingly recast as white values. Crises which had concrete fixes, such as chronically low wages, were ditched in favour of vaguely defined ones such as “racial capitalism”, with US firms like American Express and CVS lining up to self-flagellate — even as they resisted antitrust, unionisation, caps on interest rates, and other tangible reforms as ferociously as ever.

Who could fail to notice this dynamic when Hillary Clinton assailed Bernie Sanders by suggesting that the Vermont socialist’s proposed bank regulations wouldn’t undo “systemic racism”? Or when the chief diversity officer at the US outdoor-gear chain REI opened a company podcast by making a land acknowledgment — before launching into an anti-union tirade? Or when a vegan-food firm warned its diverse workforce that unions are for “old white guys”?

The role of wokeness as a prop for institutional power is so familiar now as to be cliché, even among many progressives. Much less understood, however, is how corporate power is putting the edgy online Right to the same use today.

The online Right took shape amid the stresses of lockdown and corporate-approved race riots in 2020 and 2021. The streams that fed it included Right-wing populism; the manosphere starring Andrew Tate; crunchy moms, vaccine skeptics, and “chemtrail” watchers; along with sundry edgelords whose anti-woke provocations soon gave way to overt racism, among other tendencies.

There was always an element of bootstrapping individualism here, especially in the American variety of the online Right. Yet in their more productive forms, these subcultures mounted systemic critiques of oligarchy and a “deep state” that included not just government actors, but also corporate power. Pervasive censorship — carried out not by governmental agencies, but Silicon Valley firms — had alerted them to how overweening private actors can imperil freedom. Ditto so-called debanking, a sinister new private-censorship method road-tested on Right-wing populists such as Nigel Farage.

As a result, taming “Big Tech” censorship was all the rage among Right-wing populists on both sides of the Atlantic. Republican lawmakers, for example, took up Section 230 reform, threatening to revoke the special legislative licence that permits social-media platforms to censor or promote content but without the defamation liabilities that traditional publishers carry.

Other conservatives, most notably Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, mused about treating such platforms as “common carriers”, the ancient common-law doctrine that bars firms operating things like public toll roads and rail lines from discriminating against customers. Just as your land-line provider can’t drop you based on what you say on the phone, the argument goes, so the likes of Facebook should be barred from un-personing users based on their viewpoints.

It wasn’t just social media. If Silicon Valley giants could amass a vast and unaccountable power, some on the Right wondered, were there other market actors that deserved similar scrutiny? When he was still a relatively sane anchor on Fox News, for example, Tucker Carlson devoted a long and penetrating segment to the asset-stripping of a beloved Midwestern sport-goods chain by Elliott Management, the hedge fund controlled by the uber-hawkish GOP donor Paul Singer. Some on the populist Right in America even took to calling themselves “Khan-servatives” in homage to Lina Khan, then-President Joe Biden’s crusading anti-monopoly czar.

But it all came to naught. That’s because, beginning in 2022 with Elon Musk’s takeover of Twitter (now X), the oligarchy pulled off a rapid and astoundingly successful ideological shape-shift: rebranding itself as the enemy, and the chief victim, of woke middle managers.

Musk is, of course, the figure who best embodies this alchemy of corporate power. Having once promoted DEI in his own firms, he now routinely and positively interacts with X accounts that traffic in explicit racism and antisemitism — agreeing with one, for example, that Jews are behind multiculturalism.

Spicy stuff. But take a closer look: his purchase of X and, I suspect, his toying with edgy memes motivated the Right to abandon Big Tech reform. One of “their own”, after all, was now in charge of the most politically sensitive platform. It didn’t matter that the basic power asymmetry between platform and user remained unchanged. Indeed, censorship still goes on — only now it takes place at the behest of one man, rather than being directed by a bureaucratic class with a clear set of rules and an appeals process with a human being (rather than a robot) on the other end.

Nor were many on the Right bothered by Musk’s blending of governmental authority (the Department of Government Efficiency) and private power (X) that so alarmed them when the ancien régime did the same thing during the pandemic. Seen this way, it becomes clear that Musk rescued not so much free speech as the very narrow class of men who own the social-media platforms.

Musk is far from alone. Another richly instructive example is Jeff Bezos. Not too long ago, the Amazon boss placed his firm at the forefront of corporate America’s Black Lives Matter push. Moreover, Amazon for years banned When Harry Became Sally, a scholarly critique of gender ideology by the conservative thinker Ryan Anderson.

Yet now Bezos has inexplicably un-banned Anderson’s book and directed The Washington Post, the newspaper he owns, to promote free-market and libertarian ideology. His new friendliness with Donald Trump’s GOP earned him and his fiancée an invitation to join the 45th and 47th President on the inauguration dais. The new administration has also handed Amazon a raft of deregulatory wins, not least an early attempt to cripple the National Labor Relations Board, the New Deal agency tasked with enforcing collective bargaining, including at Bezos’s Dickensian warehouses.

Again, the power asymmetry between Amazon and its workers remains unchanged under the firm’s new ideological dispensation. But with rare exceptions, the Right has ceased to speak out about workers oppressed by his mega-firm.

Perhaps most astonishing is how the oligarchs managed to reframe even populist regulators as agents of a woke deep state. Soon after the election, tech oligarchs led by Musk and Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg (another censorious wokester-turned-Trump bestie) began to complain about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, or CFPB, established in the wake of the financial crisis to combat banking scams, especially those targeting downscale customers, the type who tend to pull for Trump at the ballot box.

Sure enough, one of the new administration’s first steps was to “delete CFPB” (as Musk had called for), compelling it to drop its legal cases — including against banks that insisted on the right to debank customers — and putting the agency under Office of Management and Budget director Russell Vought, an old-school pro-business Republican.

In a memo setting out its reasoning, the White House described the CFPB as a “woke, weaponized arm” of the deep state that had given “itself the right to regulate Americans’ checking accounts”. Which sounds pretty bad — until you realise that by regulating checking accounts, they meant banning banks from piling on fee after fee on low-income customers who overdraw their accounts. Also cited as an example of the CFPB’s “woke” tyranny was a rule requiring the removal of medical debt from credit reports.

In short, the populist Right’s anti-woke edginess and solicitude for the put-upon “anon” was absorbed, commodified, and elevated into a new “dialect of power”. In the bargain, the movement was divested of its radical policy energies. Much as the Left had cashiered its more radical economic demands for more diversity training, so the Right learned to content itself with CEOs who would “own the libs”.

All that remains now of the online Right is the bootstrapping self-help element: bodybuilding; the consumption of raw milk and animal protein; “trad” marriages that smack of kink; vaccine avoidance; and the like. But here, too, the movement has been of service to the oligarchs, by generating fantasies of the genetically superior CEO or entrepreneur onto whom millions of temporarily embarrassed non-CEOs could project themselves.

The fate of woke and anti-woke alike is a testament to corporate elites’ capacity for absorbing oppositional trends, symbols, and ideals, thus turning potential threats into a means for the upkeep of institutional power. It’s also a reminder of the limits of culture-centric politics for confronting the power differentials generated by markets. Not to put too fine a point on it: capital is happy to grant your pronoun requests — and equally happy to throw Roman salutes — so long as wages and unions are kept down and antitrust regulators are brought to heel.

The Bedrock of a Stable Society


This week marks five years since the UK went into lockdown, a moment that has prompted widespread reflection on how much has changed since 2020. But it also marks another significant anniversary—one that has reshaped British society in quieter yet perhaps even more profound ways.

This year will also mark half a decade since the government announced plans to introduce “No-Fault” divorce in England and Wales, with the law coming into effect in April 2022. This was presented as a victory for the vulnerable, a way to make separation “less painful” and remove unnecessary conflict between separating spouses.

When these reforms were first proposed by the Conservatives, I was firmly opposed.

Three years and three more Prime Ministers on, I remain just as skeptical.

These reforms prize the wishes of adults over the needs of children. The vast array of studies that indicate children benefit from an intact family—unless abuse is involved—were ignored in favour of making marriage easier to walk away from.

Other research has concluded that some half of people who chose to divorce admitted to regretting the decision once the dust had settled. You can bet before ending the marriage, they were 100% convinced it was the only way forward, later realising their mistake.

Prior to 2022, divorce required proof of “unreasonable behaviour” such as abandonment or adultery, or a two to five-year separation. Now, the lifelong contract of marriage can be ended in just six months, without a single reason given.

This is not progress. It is the denigration of marriage into a form of government-regulated cohabitation, leaving spouses with less legal protection in their own homes than tenants in rented accommodation.

It is now completely legal for one spouse to unilaterally abandon a marriage without citing any grievance. This permission can easily be used as a psychological weapon, particularly by abusive partners.

While no-fault campaigners complain that the old system was “vindictive,” what if legitimate grievances do need to be aired? Under this new framework, spouses who have suffered real harm lose their ability to formally present this in court.

In particular, these changes put those vulnerable due to health issues or finances at heightened risk. The obvious example is when one half of a marriage—usually the wife—has given up employment to raise children. In the past, the legal recognition of fault meant that a spouse who had been abandoned had some ability to contest the terms of the divorce.

Now, this has been erased.

This concern was serious enough that even feminist groups in the US protested against No-Fault divorce. The National Organisation for Women objected that the law permitted an “at-fault” party to obtain a marital dissolution where alimony, maintenance, and property division would be decided by a judge—without considering “the facts, behaviour, and circumstances that led to the break-up of the marriage.”

A Richmond School of Law review into the US system concluded that No-Fault divorce “has failed,” producing both a higher divorce rate and fewer safeguards for dependent women and children. Yet, instead of learning from these failures, the UK government eagerly imported them.

Those celebrating this legal watershed presume that claiming “fault” in divorce proceedings was an unnecessary source of conflict between separated couples. But this overlooks a basic reality: divorce is inherently painful. The breaching of such an intimate commitment—especially when children are involved—suggests two people with inherently conflicting or diverging priorities.

Moreover, there is no evidence that reducing the barriers to divorce improves children’s well-being. Quite the opposite. A vast array of studies indicate that fractured families are more likely to experience poverty, alongside mental and physical health issues.

A 1994 study found that children of separated parents had lower self-esteem than those whose parents sometimes argued but remained a couple. It noted that: “Separation and divorce do not necessarily reduce damaging conflict… as a generality, the reverse may be true.” Not to mention the fact that family breakdown already costs the British taxpayer an estimated £51 billion per year.

The new system also reduced the minimum time frame between the start of proceedings and a conditional divorce application to 20 weeks. Yet, since records on the matter began in 2003, around 10 per cent of couples who begin divorce proceedings do not complete them in any given year.

Out of parents who said they were unhappy after the birth of their first child, over two-thirds reported being happy a decade later, with 27 per cent admitting to being “extremely happy.” If this many marriages were saved by longer reflection periods, surely reducing the time frame is not in society’s best interest?

Even putting aside the financial and moral defects of No-Fault divorce, it is striking how out of step these reforms were with public opinion.

Polling done before the laws were proposed in 2020 showed that seven in ten Brits were in favour of maintaining fault grounds, while three in five agreed that “divorce is too easy.”

Yet, like so many post-war cultural innovations, No-Fault divorce prioritised the desires of adults over the well-being of children.

Three years in, it is clear that these changes have not improved family stability, nor have they made divorce any less painful. If the goal was to make marriage easier to leave, it has certainly succeeded.

But at what cost?

Marriage is not simply a private arrangement between two completely independent individuals; it is the bedrock of a stable society. The idea that making divorce easier would somehow lead to better marriages was always a fantasy. As a culture, we should not be making it easier to dissolve lifelong commitments.

Campaigners on the left and the libertarian right alike claimed that the previous system unjustly stigmatised divorce. But the truth is, we need more divorce stigma, not less.

Like the bloodthirsty Bolsheviks, who introduced No-Fault divorce upon the birth of the USSR, our government has cut a great road through our law without considering the consequences.

Who knows what further damage to our social fabric will unravel in the years to come?

Never having needed to be consummated, civil partnerships ought not to be confined to unrelated couples. But now that they are available to opposite-sex couples, then divorce can and should be made far more difficult, since anyone who had not wanted that could always have had a civil partnership instead.

Any marrying couple should be entitled to register their marriage as bound by the law prior to 1969 with regard to grounds and procedures for divorce. Entitlement upon divorce should in any case be fixed by Statute at one per cent of the other party’s estate for each year of marriage, up to 50 per cent, with no entitlement for the petitioning party unless the other party’s fault were proved.

Furthermore any religious organisation should be enabled to specify that any marriage that it conducted would be so bound, requiring it to counsel couples accordingly. Statute should specify that the Church of England and the Church in Wales each be such a body unless, respectively, the General Synod and the Governing Body specifically resolved the contrary by a two-thirds majority in all three Houses. There should be similar provision relating to the Methodist and United Reformed Churches, which also exist pursuant to Acts of Parliament, as well as by amendment to the legislation relating to the restoration of the Catholic hierarchy.