Friday, 12 June 2026

We Want Our Country Back

Scandalously, the Home Secretary may remove the British citizenship of anyone whom she merely thought ought to hold another nationality, even when, as in the case of Shamima Begum and Bangladesh, the state in question was adamant that no such entitlement existed.

But Stephen Yaxley-Lennon is an Irish citizen as well as a British one. He does not live in the United Kingdom. After first Southampton and now Belfast, why has he not been denaturalised, and when will he be? Isn't Shabana Mahmood supposed to be the hard one?

Assume Reponsibility

78 children, some as young as 12, were put on puberty blockers and hormone treatments by clinicians who "were not professionally competent to initiate or assume responsibility" at the WellBN GP practice in Brighton. But that is fine by the Green Party. Like the wholesale removal of, among other things, male children's genitalia.

Not so the medically unnecessary circumcision of children. While I am no defender of that, how can there be no problem with cutting off the lot, yet an absolute objection to cutting off a little bit? The Greens used to want to ban halal slaughter, until it was pointed out that that would have necessitated a ban on kosher as well. Perhaps the reverse will apply in this case? Still, at least the Greens are obviously not Islamists.

Rupert Lowe still does want to ban kosher and halal slaughter, so does he also want to ban this? If not, why not? Does his admirer, Kemi Badenoch? If not, why not? And does the Christopher Hitchens Fan Club, whose idol had very strong views indeed on this subject? Yesterday saw the publication of a report into the negative effects of smacking, a practice that in any case seems to be much less prevalent than it used to be. Are England and Northern Ireland going to follow Scotland and Wales in criminalising that while continuing to allow this, never mind chemical and surgical castration?

Witch On Watch

The overseas aid budget has already been cut by six billion pounds, to 0.3 per cent of Gross National Income by 2027, and the reason given has been to boost defence spending. Yesterday’s resignations made it clear that it had done no such thing. So, like the cuts to sickness and disability benefits, where has that money gone?

No Conservative Minister, including those who were now members of Reform UK, resigned over defence cuts, and no one has resigned from this Government over its failure to implement the Labour manifesto commitments to abolish leasehold, to make employment rights begin with employment and apply regardless of the number of hours worked, and to equalise the national minimum wage regardless of age. But for no possible reason except to launch a Leadership bid, rumour has it that Yvette Cooper is on resignation watch.

Cooper is evil. She introduced the intentionally mass murderous Work Capability Assessment. And in power or out of it, the North East remains a major centre of the right-wing machine within the Labour Party, so Cooper kept me in prison twice as long as I should have been. That cannot have made me anything special. It is just what she is. Anything could happen when the pint of the present party system was poured into the half pint pot of First Past the Post, and I may be no fan of Reform, but if it really did take Pontefract, Castleford and Knottingley, then it would have done the nation a favour.

Overshadows Every Other Scandal

John Pring writes:

Disabled people are being hurt, harmed and killed by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) at a scale that overshadows every other scandal in British society in recent decades, MPs have been told. Disabled activist Rick Burgess warned MPs on the Commons work and pensions committee that those at particular risk of harm were disabled people who have been unable to secure support from over-stretched welfare rights organisations.

Burgess was one of the disabled people whose activism led to groundbreaking research in 2015 by academics from Liverpool and Oxford universities that linked DWP’s work capability assessment with nearly 600 suicides in just three years. He told MPs yesterday (Wednesday) that DWP safeguarding “really only applies to people where there’s someone to notice” because there is a section of disabled people who are “under the radar” and there is “no-one to say they are at risk”. He said: “That’s where the risk cohort lives. That’s where the people who have died come from: that ‘under the radar’ section.” The evidence session was a follow-up to the committee’s report last year into safeguarding of “vulnerable” claimants, which called for deep-rooted cultural change across the department so it could address its current “deficient” approach to the issue.

Labour MP Debbie Abrahams, who chairs the committee, said the government had only accepted four of the report’s 21 recommendations. She said the driver for their inquiry had been the deaths of vulnerable claimants. And she said there had been more than 240 secret internal process reviews by DWP into deaths and serious harm of claimants since 2020, which the committee believed was “just the tip of the iceberg”. Only last week, Disability News Service (DNS) reported how an autistic circus skills teacher took his own life in January after weeks of mounting distress triggered by being left with a new £500 monthly charge for his social care package, after he was forced to migrate to universal credit from so-called legacy benefits.

Burgess, who is co-chair of DPO Forum England and facilitator of Greater Manchester Disabled People’s Panel, said DWP’s longstanding cultural problem persisted, with its “mindset of being disciplinarian or authoritarian”, and that disabled people were still feeling “very anxious, fearful and angry” despite some safeguarding improvements in recent years. He said that cultural change needed leadership, and he highlighted how a comment piece written by work and pensions secretary Pat McFadden had been headlined: “I’m sick of people taking advantage of fit notes who should be at work.” 

Burgess told the MPs: “That is not the leadership that will lead to culture change. “It’s just not going to work if that attitude continues, grabbing headlines, negative approaches – as we call it, ‘scrounger rhetoric’ – being pushed around.” He said disabled people have now faced nearly two decades of “perpetual slandering” by the press and figures in successive governments.

Burgess said McFadden’s comment breached article eight of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which imposes a duty to promote the rights of disabled people and combat stereotypes. But he welcomed the regular meetings that Dr Gail Allsopp, DWP’s chief medical adviser, has been holding with disabled people who have had long-term involvement in issues around the years of harm and deaths linked to DWP.

Burgess also drew the committee’s attention to a DNS news story which revealed that DWP had admitted in a secret paper that the cumulative effect of multiple errors or “inaction” on benefit claims caused situations to “spiral out of control for vulnerable customers” and even led to their deaths. DWP admitted in the paper that there was a risk that it had become “unintentionally desensitized” to such failures.

Burgess – who gave evidence virtually, with a copy of The Department, an exposé of the years of deaths linked to DWP, displayed prominently behind him – said: “They are self-aware to an extent, but they keep these reports secret. They are marking their own homework at the moment… would we accept that of most public bodies? The only organisations that get that level of secrecy or control are the intelligence services.” 

The evidence session focused heavily on safeguarding issues connected with DWP’s universal credit (UC) working-age benefits system. Burgess told the committee that about 23,000 ESA claimants had had their claims closed without moving onto UC as part of DWP’s process of “migrating” claimants from so-called legacy benefits onto the new system. He repeated the call made in a letter from disabled people’s organisations to disability minister Sir Stephen Timms in March for all those who failed to migrate onto UC to be automatically moved across because, Burgess said, this group includes “extremely at risk people”. He said the migration process had “cut loose” thousands of disabled people.

Burgess also pointed to the many disabled people facing increased council tax or care charges – and sometimes both – after being migrated onto universal credit. He said: “This has been raised with Stephen Timms. It is still happening to this day. Months and months are going by and people are still getting these huge bills, and the councils aren’t waiting for DWP to solve it – they are starting to move into debt recovery, bailiffs, court action. That is happening because of the actions of the DWP for not even thinking this through; at least, that’s what they claim.”

Liberal Democrat MP John Milne said this was “shocking”. Daphne Hall, vice-chair of the National Association of Welfare Rights Advisers, told the committee that problems with the universal credit migration process were “widespread across the UK”, with far too many cases where the multi-agency support that is supposed to be in place had “fallen through”. When people have had their legacy benefits ended by DWP because they missed their deadline to make a UC claim, a safeguarding referral is supposed to be sent to their local authority. 

But she said councils were saying that these referrals by DWP were “inadequate” for them to act on them, so “the concern is that those people are just slipping through the net completely and we don’t know what’s happening to them”. She said this could mean that between 15,000 and 20,000 people may have failed to migrate to UC safely. 

Hall also said that a UC computer system flaw meant that many disabled people who were previously in the employment and support allowance support group were still not being automatically placed in the UC limited capability for work-related activity group after migration, despite DWP being told repeatedly of the issue. This means that disabled people with high support needs are not receiving the extra benefits they are entitled to, are being wrongly forced to ask for fit notes, are being put through new and unnecessary work capability assessments, and are unfairly being subjected to strict conditions.

Caroline Selman, senior research fellow at Public Law Project, told the MPs that the key issue with the use of benefit sanctions by DWP to punish claimants was their “disproportionate” severity, with first-time relatively minor failings leading to 100 per cent of someone’s UC standard allowance being sanctioned, which she said was “a very severe income shock” for a claimant. Professor Michael Preston-Shoot, co-chair of the National Network of Adult Safeguarding Boards, told the committee: “We need DWP culturally to understand that DWP needs to engage with people, not simply to expect people to engage with them.” He said this was because “many people are unable rather than unwilling, but the assumption that they are unwilling means that they lose what they need to live, and I can’t understand how in a civilised society from a social justice point of view we do that”.

Thursday, 11 June 2026

The Threat We Face

If you want more wars, then you want an awful lot more both of physical disability and of lifelong mental illness. But the benefits for those go straight back into the real economy. Not so the money to the military-industrial complex, as President Eisenhower called it. For only the twenty-second highest population in the world, the sixth highest military spending is still not enough for those generous future employers, the arms companies. Therefore, with the resignation of Al Carns so soon after that of John Healey, and with Healey's job having had to go to Dan Jarvis, we are now in the throes of a military coup.

Still a Reserve Officer, nudge nudge wink wink, Carns was a Conservative-voting Colonel in the Special Forces, nudge nudge wink wink, until June 2024, when he resigned his commission and joined the Labour Party after the General Election had been called. He was then parachuted in a new sense, into the Birmingham Selly Oak seat that had been vacated at the last possible moment by Steve McCabe, Parliamentary Chair of Labour Friends of Israel. The General Election was on 4 July. On 9 July, Carns was made a Defence Minister.

But since last month, Labour has held only one council seat in Birmingham Selly Oak, the same number as the Conservatives. A ward of which a very small part was in that constituency returned two members of Reform UK, but every other councillor on Carns's patch is now a Green. Carns may be only 46, but time is not on his side.

The argument for military spending is conveniently easy to present as impossible to falsify, since if there never were an attack of the kind predicted, then that could be sold as successful deterrence. The arms companies are behind the political, civil and military top brass at the Ministry of Defence, and thus behind this putative putsch, but there are other forces at work. At seven o'clock on Tuesday evening, on the dot, there were 26 road closures in and around Belfast, and 70 demonstrations in Great Britain. The leaflet announcing the closures commanded: ALL BUSINESSES TO CLOSE AT 5:30 PM TONIGHT NO EXCUSES. Who says? Everyone knew. Or what? Likewise. Against that background, Kemi Badenoch offers something for each of Conservative, Reform, and Restore Britain supporters to chew over:

She already has a casual arrangement with Rupert Lowe, the leader of Restore Britain, who took a Tory seat on the public accounts committee. ‘Rupert Lowe wants to cut spending in a way that Nigel Farage doesn’t,’ she explains. ‘Reform has quite a lot of left-wing ideas. They want more benefits. They want more nationalisation. They want the big state. They just want to be in charge of it.’ Asked if she would accept Lowe as a Tory one day, she says: ‘I don’t think I would go that far.’ But she adds: ‘I respect the fact that he turns up for work, which Nigel Farage doesn’t do. He does policy. He doesn’t run away.’

Does Badenoch want to ban kosher slaughter? Does she consider the desire to do so to be within the bounds of acceptable opinion? The Green Party used to want to ban halal slaughter, until it was pointed out that that would have necessitated a ban on kosher as well. Now it wants to ban the medically unnecessary circumcision of children while permitting their castration. Are we to be treated in detail to the personal experience of Zack Polanski? By the way, that is his legal name, like Stephen Yaxley-Lennon. Still, at least the Greens are obviously not the Islamists of right-wing media hysteria. Does Rupert Lowe agree with them about circumcision? If not, why not? And if so, then does Badenoch? If not, why not? Nigeria is only half Muslim, but the infant male circumcision rate is as good as 100 per cent. Think on.

What Will Happen, Will Happen

In an unauthorised interview to say that he would resign if there were no increase in defence spending, Al Carns has just been on Sky News, daring Keir Starmer to sack him. Have we ever seen the like?

When the position of Secretary of State for Defence cannot be filled, then the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Armed Forces is unsackable. Even though he is only a fresher.

Starmer could not possibly still contest a Leadership Election. That would leave a vacancy for a candidate like, oh, John Healey? Who would then need a Defence Secretary such as, oh, Al Carns?

Increasing Operational Demands

We all wondered how long it would take John Healey to work out that he could make far more on OnlyFans. Pat McFadden will be next. Seriously, though, each of them fancies himself as a potential "common sense compromise" candidate for Leader, and Healey has moved first.

If the benefit cuts were for defence, then why has the Defence Secretary resigned? If they were to push people into work, then they would be aimed at the well and able-bodied. But instead, the Limited Capability for Work and Work-Related Activity component of Universal Credit has been halved, and then frozen until 2030. "Frozen" will be the word.

Yet benefit cuts do not magic up jobs, and those to the sick and disabled do not cure anyone. More of this is coming, ostensibly for defence. Well, defence has not seen a penny of the cuts that there have already been. Ask Healey. And where has that money gone?