Saturday, 18 July 2026

I Used To Think That The Day Would Never Come

After Andy Burnham’s entrance to New Order’s True Faith, all Party Leaders should be made to come on stage to tracks about heroin. But which one for which Leader, and why? With the same question, the practice might be extended to the taking of seats in the House of Lords. Which one for Sadiq Khan, and why? He would have been given a peerage anyway, but it is still a pointed statement that he will never be returning to the Commons and can never become Prime Minister.

Why is there no one from Reform UK on the new list of peerages? Reform only had one name and, well, here we are. While they might usefully have said nothing at all, that there was no sign of a political motive for the murder of Ann Widdecombe was true when the Police said it. That they have since found the possibility of one only reinforces the point that that sort of running commentary was a bad idea.

How Nigel Farage must wish that he had ennobled Count Binface, the only other candidate with any serious chance of winning the Clacton by-election, and for the moment the candidate with the most chance of doing so out of the 34 on the ballot paper. Many years ago, in circumstances best left undisclosed, I was told that a party could legally nominate more candidates than there were seats to fill. At Clacton, the Official Monster Raving Loony Party has three. As Screaming Lord Sutch used to ask, “Why is there only one Monopolies Commission?”

Even or especially in the absence of a Restore Britain standard-bearer, several of the other candidates have emerged from the cesspit that the young of that tribe now preferred to Reform. Last weekend, that subculture did more damage in Northern Ireland than the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia and the GRU Volunteer Corps put together will ever do in the United Kingdom. Whose house here has any of those ever burned down? Notice that none of the newly proscribed organisations is linked to China, which makes the British Army’s uniforms. Yet if you oppose the renationalisation of British Steel, even if that does not quite mean what it sounds like, then you are siding with the Chinese Communist Party.

The Loyalists brought over French Nazis, who are many things but who are not Protestants, and who graffitied Belfast in support of Dominique Pelicot. So much for protecting women. When are Rightists going to be visited, and their devices searched, over their enthusiasm for Javier Milei, and for the Trump Administration that now explicitly supported Argentina, as of course Israel always had? As Margaret Thatcher might have put it, the Enemy Within. Yet who is Burnham bringing in? Matthew McGregor and Alison Phillips of Hope Not Hate, which published this about Widdecombe, and whose evidence at committee stage of what became the Online Safety Act was given by a paedophile.

Friday, 17 July 2026

Israel’s Continued Support For Argentina

I have no idea how this got into The Spectator these days, but Gus Carter writes:

Israel armed Argentina during the Falklands. That is a fact. Between the 2 April and 14 June 1982, Israel sold Argentina air-to-air missiles, anti-personnel mines, anti-tank weapons, replacement parts for jets, radar and communications equipment and fuel. Nesher fighter jets, supplied by Israel, were part of the air attack that destroyed the RFA Sir Galahad in Bluff Cove. Fifty-six British sailors and soldiers died in that raid.

So when Israel’s foreign minister Gideon Sa’ar taunted England for our 2-1 World Cup defeat, that was a continuation of traditional Israeli foreign policy. ‘How does the song go?’ Sa’ar posted. ‘It’s coming home. Yes it is. It’s coming home to Argentina. Vamos Argentina!’ On the pitch, Argentine footballers unfurled a flag that read ‘Las Malvinas son Argentinas’.

Defenders of Israel claim we somehow deserve their ire. Stephen Daisley argues on Coffee House that Britain has antagonised Israel in recent years by not being sufficiently supportive following 7 October. ‘After constant provocation, it was inevitable that Israel would lose its patience with Britain,’ he writes. We have apparently ‘got off pretty lightly’ in their support for Argentina in the World Cup.

I don’t care all that much about football, so Israel’s support for Messi & Co doesn’t really matter to me. But I do care about those who fight for our country. And that phrase ‘got off pretty lightly’ rankles. Israeli support for Argentina is not simply a story of jovial football rivalry.

During the Falklands invasion, Israel supplied larger fuel tanks so bombers and fighters could more easily reach British territory. This wasn’t just completion of contracts signed before the invasion – and in any case, these contracts could have been suspended, which both France and West Germany did the moment the invasion began. Israel, meanwhile, funnelled further arms to Argentina via Peru, in order to avoid detection by the United States, Europe and Britain, which had all sanctioned the Junta. Israel profited from the attempted annexation of British territory by a dictatorial regime.

I emailed Stephen pointing out this fact. He very courteously replied: ‘The British severely restricted Jewish migration to Palestine during the Holocaust and formally recognised Transjordan’s 1948 seizure of Judea and Samaria, in which the Hashemites and their allies slaughtered hundreds of Jews and expelled thousands more.’ His reply deserves a thoughtful response.

First, even if those historical grievances are valid, none of them excuse the arming of our enemies in a time of war. What happened in the messy, confusing years surrounding the foundation of a Jewish state does not permit Israel’s actions decades later. But I do think it’s worth addressing his points directly.

On the restriction of Jewish migration to Palestine during the second world war, that does indeed look very different in hindsight. But those fighting wars don’t have the luxury of hindsight. At the time, Palestine was under British mandate. Allowing Jews to settle in Palestine mid-war would have risked yet more conflict in the Middle East, drawing resources from the much larger fight against Germany. Defeating Nazism ended the Holocaust and some 30,000 Palestinian Jews fought with Britain. We should remember and honour their sacrifice. But allowing Jews to settle and potentially rise up in the Middle East would have made the defeat of Nazism harder.

For one thing, a large number of Jewish refugees could have reignited the recently suppressed Arab revolt. There was also a risk of those refugees taking up arms to found a homeland. That would have diverted troops and attention to Palestine. You can support the creation of the state of Israel, as I do, and still recognise that it risked destabilisation at a crucial moment.

Once the war was over, that is precisely what happened. Jewish fighters killed 28 Britons at the King David Hotel attack in 1946. That attack was led by a future Israeli Prime Minister, Menachem Begin, who was the one selling arms to Argentina in 1982. Many Zionists explicitly wanted to degrade British control over the region; how else could they establish their homeland? But was that a risk worth taking at a time when Britain stood alone against Nazism?

Britain tried to protect the Jews of Europe. Nearly 100,000 refugees came to our shores between the rise of Hitler and his demise. No doubt we should have taken more. But given the wider context, the restrictions on Jewish settlement of Palestine is understandable.

The second point is the recognition of Transjordan’s 1948 seizure of Judea and Samaria. That occurred in 1950, when Britain recognised both Israel and Jordan’s capture of the West Bank on the same day, while withholding recognition of Jordanian sovereignty over Jerusalem. We also, it should be said, treated the armistice lines as provisional. That was an acknowledgement of what was actually happening, rather than using recognition as some abstract moral tool.

Whatever the facts of the recognition, there is clearly a difference between accepting territorial changes after the fact and arming the Argentinian Junta as they attempted to kill British soldiers. Israel could have taken a position of neutrality in the unprovoked invasion, but they chose to side with our enemies.

Perhaps you think this is all rather silly blather about a football match. But how our supposed allies behave matters. Israel’s continued support for Argentina is a threat to Falklanders, those British citizens who live with the prospect of aggression every day. Israelis know better than most how that feels.

Unconventional

Of the 246 Conservative members of the House of Lords, almost all hold positions well to the right of Margaret Thatcher, but most would be classified as “wets” by the people who now decided these things, yet none has resigned the whip in support of Gavin Barwell. Everyone knows that there are at least 146 reasons why Barwell ought to be a pariah, 72 deaths and 74 injuries that required hospital treatment, after the then Housing Minister had been given, “clear warnings to review fire safety rules in the months leading up to Grenfell, but failed to reply to letters or meet with the MPs raising concerns.”

Not that that is why Kemi Badenoch has withdrawn the whip. Rather, she has done so because of Barwell’s support for Net Zero and for British membership of the European Convention on Human Rights, principles on which Badenoch has been elected to Parliament on all three occasions that she ever has been. Svante Arrhenius first theorised about anthropogenic global warming in 1896, and Margaret Thatcher was briefed about it by Sir Crispin Tickell, the then Deputy Under-Secretary of State for Economic Affairs at the Foreign Office. Thatcher always credited Tickell with having convinced her, leading to her speech on the subject to the Royal Society in 27 September 1988, the point at which the agenda of his 1977 Climatic Change and World Affairs entered the political mainstream. Tickell’s briefing of Thatcher was in 1984, tellingly the year that the Miners’ Strike began.

Thatcher began to blather on about environmentalism as a means of Socialist control once she had the dementia that also turned her into a born again Eurosceptic, but she was very Green indeed as Prime Minister, shocking first the Royal Society, and then the United Nations General Assembly, with her passion on the subject. By the time of her speech to the UN on 8 November 1989, she had made Tickell the British Ambassador to it, and the United Kingdom’s Permanent Representative on its Security Council. Boris Johnson described her destruction of the coal industry as “a big early start” towards Net Zero. Her milk-snatching is now held up as a pioneering strike against the wicked dairy industry, as I had been predicting for many years.

As for the ECHR, it did nothing for the residents of Grenfell Tower, as it had nothing for the miners. In the last 10 years alone, the ECHR also did not prevent the enactment of the Trade Union Act, or of the Covert Human Intelligence Sources (Criminal Conduct) Act, or of the Overseas Operations (Service Personnel and Veterans) Act, or of the Nationality and Borders Act, or of the Elections Act, or of the Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Act, or of the National Security Act, or of the Public Order Act, or of the Online Safety Act, or of the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act, or of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act, or now of the National Security (State Threats) Act.

Barwell is about to be joined in the Upper House by Brian Leveson, and nothing in the ECHR would have precluded the implementation of the original Leveson requirements, nor has anything prevented the novel approach to safeguarding the Free Press that is the requirement of Government permission to acquire a newspaper. The same would have been true of David Lammy’s attempted abolition of almost all trial by jury and of the automatic right of appeal from the Magistrates’ Court to the Crown Court, again going back to the newly ennobled Leveson.

The ECHR will not save us from digital ID or from facial recognition, of which the former will be necessary both to enforce a social media ban on under-16s and to impose a curfew on what were to be 16 and 17-year-old voters. The ECHR does not protect cash. It is not helping the Palestine Action defendants. It does not preclude the Home Secretary from stripping people of their British citizenship, now without even having to tell them. It does not prevent a judge from sentencing absolutely anything as terrorism, and that without even having informed the jury of that possibility before it considered its verdict. 

The ECHR presented no obstacle to vaccine passports. It did nothing for Julian Assange, Vanessa Beeley, Craig Murray, Kit Klarenberg, Richard Medhurst, George Galloway, or the late Professor Robert Skidelsky FBA, Lord Skidelsky. Most countries that subscribe to it already have identity cards. And when Badenoch and Robert Jenrick were in office, then there was no section 35 order to prevent Royal Assent of the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Bill that banned nothing for which people were not already being arrested in England, complete with records of non-crime hate incidents on DBS checks.

Nothing that had largely been written by David Maxwell Fyfe ever did have anything to do with those of us who sought to strengthen families and communities by securing economic equality and international peace through the democratic political control of the means to those ends, including national and parliamentary sovereignty. Not the European Union into which he castigated Anthony Eden for not having taken the United Kingdom at the start. And not the ECHR, either.

There was a reason why the ECHR’s incorporation into British domestic law was never attempted by any Labour Government until Tony Blair’s. It duly proved useless as civil liberties were shredded; it was the House of Commons that stopped the detention of people for 90 days without charge. And it duly proved useless as the poor, the sick and the disabled were persecuted on a scale and with a venom that had not been seen since before the War, if ever. That persecution continued into and as the age of austerity. Long before Brexit, Covid-19, or the invasion of Ukraine, even as Red Cross food parcels were distributed to our starving compatriots, human rights legislation was of only the most occasional use, if any. That has always been the intention.

In May 1948, the pompously self-styled Congress of Europe assembled in the Hall of Knights, in The Hague. Addressing that assembly, Winston Churchill called it “the Voice of Europe”. But in fact it was mostly made up of politicians who had recently been defeated at the polls, of the representatives of Royal and Noble Houses that had fairly recently been dispossessed at least in political terms, of the likes of Churchill who fell into both categories, and of people whose lives’ work was trying to delude themselves that so did they.

In the name of the order that had held sway for a century between the defeat of Napoleon and the First World War, the order to which the Reichsbürger would wish to return, their aim was very explicitly to check the social democracy that was sweeping Western Europe at the time. The material that they produced had that intention, and it has had that effect. Lo and behold, Blair had it written into British domestic law. And lo and behold, the body that he created for its enforcement, when it has not been sacking its black and disabled staff first, and when it has not been failing to find anything wrong with the Government’s handling of the Windrush scandal, played a key role in bringing down Jeremy Corbyn. Not that he helped himself by backing down when he ought to have been fighting back. But “Equality and Human Rights”? What equality, exactly? Which human’s rights?

Good Riddance

Peter Oborne cuts through the cant:

The most serious parliamentary misdemeanour that a minister can commit is to deceive MPs.

That is exactly what Keir Starmer did when he answered questions, for his last time as prime minister, on Wednesday.

Exploiting the occasion to justify his record, he told MPs that when he became UK Labour leader, “we had just lost the 2019 election, which nearly broke my party. It was the worst result since 1935, and we were found to be institutionally antisemitic.”

This statement contained a serious falsehood. Many would call it a lie.

Starmer’s predecessor, Jeremy Corbyn, swiftly issued a statement in response: “The prime minister today falsely claimed that Labour was found to be ‘institutionally antisemitic’ under my leadership. There was no such finding.”

It’s not difficult to guess why Starmer levied such a damaging - and false - allegation against Corbyn. He has been driven out of office by parliamentary colleagues who did not like or trust him, and who thought he was useless at his job. It has been a terrible humiliation.

It’s human, natural and entirely forgivable that Starmer should seek to boast of his achievements in office. But it’s despicable to justify those claims by making false insinuations about a former colleague. 

Ugly questions

Starmer repeated the falsehood on his trip to Kyiv on Thursday, telling Sky News that he wished to be remembered “as the person that saved the Labour Party, turned it into a party that could face the public again.”

He added: “We were a party that were found to be institutionally antisemitic, that was not fit to actually face the country and the electorate.”

A month ago, as part of his mission to restore his reputation by trashing Corbyn, he claimed that he had “inherited a Labour Party that was politically, financially and morally bankrupt”.

This was another fabrication. Corbyn’s Labour was nowhere near bankruptcy; in fact, the party’s 2020 annual report noted that the party had emerged from the 2019 election campaign “with our finances intact”.

Starmer, who served as a senior member of Corbyn’s shadow cabinet, must have known that his statement about Labour’s finances was false - but he made it anyway.

I have written two books about lying in British public life. One book, The Rise of Political Lying, focused on former Prime Minister Tony Blair and his deceitful inner circle. The second, The Assault on Truth, dealt with former Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the sordid coterie that surrounded him.

I don’t think Starmer was as serious a liar as Blair (remember weapons of mass destruction and the Iraq War) or as habitual an offender as Johnson. But ugly questions surround his personal integrity, especially his dealings with Corbyn.

Seven years ago, Starmer actually went on record dismissing claims that Labour was institutionally antisemitic. Now he’s saying the opposite. This kind of double dealing is typical of Starmer.

Back then, Starmer described Corbyn as a “friend” of his. Three years later, he insisted that Corbyn was “never a friend”.

Structural dishonesty

Consider, too, Starmer’s campaign for the Labour leadership at the start of 2020. He presented himself as a radical politician who would build on the best elements of the Corbyn era, end factionalism and unite the party.

In an interview with Jamie Driscoll, then Labour’s popular mayor for the North of Tyne region, he said: “If you’re going to go for unity, you’ve got to inspire people to come together. You can’t force them to come together. Disciplining people to be united is going nowhere.”

In his campaign launch, Starmer described the party’s 2017 manifesto as a benchmark and said: “We are not going to trash the last Labour government … nor are we going to trash the last four years.”

He presented the party membership with 10 policy “pledges”, which included a hike in taxes for higher earners and taking “rail, mail, energy and water” into public ownership. He went on to abandon almost all of these pledges.

It’s impossible to avoid the conclusion that in 2020, Starmer ran a leadership campaign that was deliberately dishonest. Needing to gain the support of Labour’s left-wing membership, he presented a pitch that was entirely at variance with the way he subsequently ran the party.

This structural dishonesty helps to explain why Starmer went on to be held in such contempt not just by Labour Party members, but also by so many British voters.

Twisting the truth

To sum up, Starmer rose to power by twisting and distorting the truth - and he leaves office in exactly the same fashion.

In October 2020, the UK government’s equalities watchdog published its investigation into antisemitism in the Labour Party. It found “specific examples of harassment, discrimination and political interference”, and said that Labour could have tackled antisemitism more effectively “if the leadership had chosen to do so”.

At no point did the report deem Labour under Corbyn to be “institutionally antisemitic”. That claim was made by Alan Johnson, a senior research fellow at the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre.

On Thursday, I approached Starmer’s media office with a question. I pointed out that the ministerial code, signed off on personally by Starmer, insists that “it is of paramount importance that ministers give accurate and truthful information to Parliament, correcting any inadvertent error at the earliest opportunity”.

I asked a media officer whether the prime minister would return to parliament to correct the record, as the ministerial code demands. The officer heard me out, then asked me to put my request in writing - so I did. No answer. I chased the office for a response. Still no answer.

After Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday, Starmer received a standing ovation from colleagues. He was widely praised for a dignified performance. Meanwhile, British journalists have been writing kind articles, saying what a decent man he was.

I can’t agree. Starmer is a fabricator and a fraud - a thoroughly nasty piece of work who has inflicted deep damage on the Labour Party and dishonoured British public life. Good riddance.

Not For Turning?

Andy Burnham is recanting his own record in office at Westminster by decrying Margaret Thatcher. But there was some improvement while he was in Manchester. That anyone using a bus after the age of 25 had failed in life was coined by Brian Howard, a poet who wrote for the New Statesman, since Tories may be better born, but Liberals are born better. It was popularised by Howard’s friend, Loelia, Duchess of Westminster. Yet even if Thatcher never said it, beyond doubt she thought it, as her successors in all parties have done ever since.

The only organisation that ever succeeded in getting rid of Thatcher was the Conservative Party. If it loved her in life as much as it loves in her death, then it had a very, very, very strange way of showing it. In her memoirs, the extremely bitter chapter on the Poll Tax makes it clear that she laboured under no delusion that she had been removed because of “Europe”. That was the cover story, but “Europe” had not been the reason why scores of Conservative MPs had been on course to lose their seats. The content, rather than the tone, of that policy did not change under her successor. By contrast, the Poll Tax was abolished completely, with a reversion in all but name to the previous system of domestic rates. The Conservatives then unexpectedly won the General Election of 1992, when Thatcher retired from the House of Commons.

Thatcher’s humble origins are greatly exaggerated. She was the daughter of a major local businessman and politician who ran most of the committees and charities for miles around. Even the people who love her can see why the people who hate her do so; they just do not agree. But why the people who love her do so is, in their own terms, a complete mystery. She gave Britain the Single European Act, the Anglo-Irish Agreement, the Exchange Rate Mechanism, the Police and Criminal Evidence Act, the Children Act, the replacement of O-levels with GCSEs, the destruction of the economic basis of paternal authority in the stockades of male employment, the massive increase in benefit dependency, the rise of Political Correctness, the general moral chaos of the 1980s, the legalisation of abortion up to birth for “severe fetal abnormality” that did not have to be specified, and that is just the start.

Thatcher’s only Commons defeat was when she tried to make Sunday just another shopping day. The basis of the lockdowns was the Public Health (Control of Disease) Act 1984. Who was the Prime Minister in 1984? For having publicly set fire to the Quran, Martin Frost and Hamit Coskun were both charged under section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986. Who was the Prime Minister in 1986? Three years later, Thatcher’s supporters wanted to use that provision against those who had publicly set fire to The Satanic Verses. The exemption of the kirpan from the ban on bladed articles in public places is one of the expressly intended effects of section 139 (5) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988. Thatcher’s replacement of household taxation with individual taxation made it impossible for most families to depend on a single income, thereby requiring that even tiny children be farmed out.

Thatcher knew about Cyril Smith when she arranged his knighthood. Jimmy Savile’s knighthood was rejected four times by the relevant committee, but she insisted upon it for the man with whom she spent every New Year’s Eve, and on whose programmes she was so obsessed with appearing that her staff had to ration those appearances. Her closest lieutenant was Peter Morrison. Smith was a highly eccentric and largely absentee MP for a tiny party, but he was a Thatcherite avant la lettre, who had left the Labour Party when he had started to see cars outside council houses. Thatcher’s father was a Liberal until that fell apart between the Wars, and never a member of the Conservative Party. He, she and Smith were politically indistinguishable.

That the Radical Right put out pamphlets demanding the legalisation of paedophile activity was mentioned in Our Friends in the North. That Thatcherite MPs were likely to commit sexual violence against boys with the full knowledge of the party hierarchy formed a subplot in To Play the King, the middle series of the original House of Cards trilogy. The Thatcher Government secured a judicial fiat that, without bothering to ask Parliament, abolished the age of consent altogether. Gillick competence ought instead to be called Thatcher competence. The Major Government did write Thatcher competence into the Age of Legal Capacity (Scotland) Act 1991. But it is applied in Northern Ireland on no apparent authority. Even in England and Wales, it has never been subject to a parliamentary vote. Let there be one now.

The stockades of working-class male employment were destroyed, and a new ruling elite of middle-class women funded and empowered by the State was created, by the politician who proclaimed the self-made man and the self-made woman, a proclamation of which the inexorable logic is gender self-identification. Just as Thatcher emerged in the Britain of everything from Danny La Rue and Dick Emery to David Bowie and The Rocky Horror Show, so a comparable figure, emerging in the Britain of the 2020s, would be assumed to be a transwoman. Thatcher has already been played by a drag queen at least once on British television, and specifically on Channel 4, which she created, meaning that one of her most abiding legacies is that Britain has two state broadcasters, one of which nevertheless carries advertisements. Thatcherism in a nutshell, as has always been clear from the output.

Was Thatcher “the Iron Lady” when, in early 1981, her initial pit closure programme was abandoned within two days of a walkout by the miners? Was she “the Iron Lady” when she had Nicholas Ridley negotiate a transfer of sovereignty over the Falkland Islands to Argentina, to be followed by a leaseback arrangement, until the Islanders, the Labour Party and Conservative backbenchers forced her to back down? Was she “the Iron Lady” when, within a few months of election on clear commitments with regard to Rhodesia, she simply abandoned them at the Commonwealth Conference in Lusaka? Was she “the Iron Lady” when, having claimed that Britain would never give up Hong Kong, she took barely 24 hours to return to Planet Earth by effecting a complete U-turn? Was she “the Iron Lady” when she took just as little time to move from public opposition to public support of Spanish accession to the Western European Union?

In the Budget of December 1976, Denis Healey and Jim Callaghan had delighted Thatcher by blindsiding the critics of monetarism on the Conservative benches, but was she “the Iron Lady” when she gave up monetarism completely during her second term? Thatcher’s continuous contact with the IRA, universally assumed at the time, has long since been confirmed. Four of the Hunger Strikers’ Five Demands were granted on 6 October 1981, and by 1983 even the right not to do prison work had been conceded. The Lady was as Iron about that as she was about most other things, namely not at all.

Thatcher was, though, true to her assurance in 1979 and in 1983 that, although until 1985 the Ulster Unionist Party remained affiliated to the National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations, there would be no return to office for Enoch Powell. But then, when told that Thatcher professed to have been influenced by his books on economics, Powell replied that, “She couldn’t have understood them, then.” He baffled her by telling her that he would have fought in the Second World War even if Britain had had a Communist Government. He would still have fought for his country. With no Tory roots, that was beyond her. With deep Liberal roots, she thought that wars were about “values”. That wider conversation was about what was then the recent Falklands War. While Powell had supported it on his own principles, Thatcher had seen it as an example of her dictum that, “If I send British troops abroad, it will be to defend our values.” Many years later, when asked her greatest achievement, she replied, “New Labour.” Quite. Thatcher has been named as her political heroine by Shabana Mahmood, who would issue us all with digital ID, and who would make people who had lived here for at least 10 years earn indefinite leave to remain by performing both paid and unpaid work to her satisfaction.

In 1981, Thatcher did impose an absolute ban on all government work for Andersen in view of its role in the DeLorean fraud, a ban that lasted until the General Election of 1997, when Patricia Hewitt was made Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, having only just entered Parliament from her position as Head of Research at Andersen Consulting. And in 1988, Thatcher and Nigel Lawson did correct the taxation of wealth at a lower rate than earnings until, in 1998, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown put the clock back to the Chancellor of the Exchequer who had gone on, as First Lord of the Treasury, to introduce monetarism to Britain and vice versa. But if those moves made Thatcher a better social democrat than New Labour, then their reversal made New Labour better Thatcherites than Thatcher or even Lawson.

The middle classes were transformed from people like Thatcher’s father into people like her son. She told us, and she really did, that “there is no such thing as society”, in which case there cannot be any such thing as the society that is the family, or the society that is the nation. Even more damagingly, and that is quite a feat, she endorsed the vugar illiteracy that the currency-issuing State had no money of its own, and could therefore “run out of other people’s money”. All in all, she turned Britain into the country that Marxists had always said that it was, even though before her, it never had been. Specifically, Thatcher sold off national assets at obscenely undervalued prices, while subjecting the rest of the public sector, fully 40 per cent of the British economy, to an unprecedented level of central dirigisme.

Thatcher continued public subsidies to private schools, to agriculture, to nuclear power, and to mortgage-holders. Without those public subsidies, the fourth would hardly have existed, and the other three, then as now, would not have existed at all. So much for “You can’t buck the market”. You can now, as you could then, and as she did then. The issue is not whether private schooling, agriculture, nuclear power, or mortgage-holding is a good or a bad thing in itself. The issue is whether “Thatcherism” was compatible with their continuation by means of “market-bucking” public subsidies. It simply was not, and is not.

Thatcher’s assault on council housing created the Housing Benefit racket, and it used the gigantic gifting of capital assets by the State to enable the beneficiaries to enter the property market ahead of private tenants, or of people still living at home, who in either case had saved for their deposits. What, exactly, was or is conservative or Tory about that? Or about moving in the characters from Shameless either alongside, or even in place of, the respectable working class?

It is thanks to Thatcher that the Conservatives have been the party of Net Zero for 40 years. Svante Arrhenius first theorised about anthropogenic global warming in 1896, and Thatcher was briefed about it by Sir Crispin Tickell, the then Deputy Under-Secretary of State for Economic Affairs at the Foreign Office. Thatcher always credited Tickell with having convinced her, leading to her speech on the subject to the Royal Society in 27 September 1988, the point at which the agenda of his 1977 Climatic Change and World Affairs entered the political mainstream. Tickell’s briefing of Thatcher was in 1984, tellingly the year that the Miners’ Strike began.

Thatcher began to blather on about environmentalism as a means of Socialist control once she had the dementia that also turned her into a born again Eurosceptic, but she was very Green indeed as Prime Minister, shocking first the Royal Society, and then the United Nations General Assembly, with her passion on the subject. By the time of her speech to the UN on 8 November 1989, she had made Tickell the British Ambassador to it, and the United Kingdom’s Permanent Representative on its Security Council. Boris Johnson described her destruction of the coal industry as “a big early start” towards Net Zero. Her milk-snatching is now held up as a pioneering strike against the wicked dairy industry, as I had been predicting for many years.

In 1979, Thatcher had not initially wanted to meet Menachem Begin in London, since her generation remembered what he was, and afterwards she expressed her regret at not having stuck to her guns. In 1980, she signed the Venice Declaration of nine European countries against Israeli settlements on the West Bank. In 1981, she denounced the Israeli bombing of Iraq’s Osirak nuclear reactor, calling it illegal. In 1982, she responded to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon by imposing an arms embargo on Israel that remained in force until 1994; when Begin wrote to ask her to reconsider, then she did not even reply. What says Melanie Phillips, in whose ideological odyssey that war looms large? In 1988, Thatcher expelled two Israeli diplomats and closed the London Mossad station when one of its double agents had been convicted of terrorism in Britain and when that station had been caught for a second time forging British passports, a practice that was to resurface, with similar but notably less severe consequences, in 2010; no Israeli diplomat had ever before been deported from a friendly state.

While all of that was to her credit, that would not be the view of her flamekeepers today, any more than they would approve of her attitude when visiting Kiev in June 1990, when she said that Britain would no more open an embassy in Ukraine than in California or Quebec. When the Soviet Union did collapse anyway, then she ludicrously pretended to have brought it down merely because she had happened to be in office at the time. But she did make a difference internationally where it was possible to do so, by providing aid and succour to Augusto Pinochet’s Chile and to apartheid South Africa, and by refusing to recognize either the Muzorewa-Smith Government or Joshua Nkomo, thereby paving the way for Robert Mugabe. Known as “the Peking Plotter”, she never saw a Maoist whom she did not like, from Mugabe, to Nicolae Ceaușescu, to Pol Pot. She even sent the SAS to train the Khmer Rouge, putting her in the same boat as Noam Chomsky, but making her worse, since he had no power to deploy Special Forces. Like every Prime Minister from Winston Churchill onwards, she knew the truth about the nuclear test veterans and the local indigenous peoples.

And it was Thatcher who issued what amounted to the open invitation to Argentina, armed by Begin’s Israel, to invade the Falkland Islands, followed by the starved Royal Navy’s having to behave as if the hopelessly out-of-her-depth Prime Minister did not exist, a sort of coup without which those Islands would be Argentine to this day. Until the eve of the invasion, Thatcher had been about to sell the ships that then had to be deployed. At a bargain basement price. To Argentina.

Some Chicken, Some Neck?

Andy Burnham’s self-denouncing denunciation of Margaret Thatcher has brought out the people who shriek that she was “the best Prime Minister since Churchill”. But unlike Thatcher, although like the American Old Right, when the British New Right was still new, then it had little or no time for Winston Churchill. Andrew Roberts devoted much of Eminent Churchillians to criticising Churchill’s Indian Summer Premiership of 1951 to 1955 as a period of betrayal on immigration and on relations with the trade unions, by a Government with scarcely a proper Tory in it, effectively a continuation of the Wartime Coalition. Rightly or wrongly, that was the view of the intellectual founders of the post-Thatcher Conservative Party.

In Great Contemporaries, published in 1937, two years after he had called Hitler’s achievements “among the most remarkable in the whole history of the world”, Churchill wrote that, “Those who have met Herr Hitler face to face in public business or on social terms have found a highly competent, cool, well-informed functionary with an agreeable manner, a disarming smile, and few have been unaffected by a subtle personal magnetism.” That passage was not removed from the book’s reprint in 1941. Great Contemporaries was reissued in 2024.

In May 1940, Churchill had been all ready to give Gibraltar, Malta, Suez, Somaliland, Kenya and Uganda to Mussolini, whom he had called “the greatest living legislator”. Gibraltar is still under British sovereignty only because Labour won the 1945 Election. After Franco had refused to let Hitler use Spain in order to invade Gibraltar and thus seize control of the Strait, Churchill had promised him Gibraltar once the War was safely won. That would have been just another colonial transfer in those days. But Churchill lost at the ballot box. In the meantime, over one thousand Spanish Republicans had fought the Second World War in the British Army. What do Churchill’s noisiest partisans think of that? It ranks with last September, when Konstantin Malofeev and Aleksandr Dugin played host to the Falange Española de las JONS, annual wreath-layers in memory of the Blue Legion.

So much for those who would use Churchill to make the case for continued support of the Ukraine of Svoboda, Pravy Sektor, the National Corps, C14, the Azov Brigade, the Aidar Battalion, the Donbas Battalion, the Dnipro-1 Battalion, the Dnipro-2 Battalion, the Kraken Regiment, and all the rest of them, including the Freedom of Russia Legion and the Russian Volunteer Corps. The Ukraine that in Ternopil  has named a football stadium after Roman Shukhevych, on a street named after Stepan Bandera. The Ukraine of Andriy Biletsky, to whom “the mission of Ukraine is to lead the White Races of the world in a final crusade for their survival against the Semite-led Untermenschen”. The Ukraine of Pavlo Lapshyn, who is still in His Majestys Prison, and who will be there for decades yet, because of his 2013 murder of 82-year-old Mohammed Saleem in Birmingham. Lapshyn went on to put bombs outside three mosques in this country. He belonged, and presumably still does belong, to the Wotanjugend, which is closely allied to the Azov Brigade, being led by its political ideologist, Alexey Levkin. In August 2020, Lapshyn pleaded guilty to a count of preparing an explosive substance in his cell.

All sorts of things about Churchill are simply ignored. Gallipoli. The miners. The Suffragettes. The refusal to bomb the railway lines to Auschwitz. His dishonest and self-serving memoirs. The truth about the catastrophic humiliation at Dunkirk. The other one, at Singapore, for which Australians and New Zealanders have never forgiven Britain. The Lancastria. The men left behind in France. Both the fact and the sheer scale of his 1945 defeat while the War with Japan was still going on, when Labour won half of his newly divided seat, and an Independent did very well in the other half after Labour and the Liberals had disgracefully refused to field candidates against him. His deselection by his local Conservative Association just before he died. And not least, his carve-up of Eastern Europe with Stalin, so very reminiscent of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. He borrowed the phrase “the Iron Curtain” from Goebbels and used it to mean exactly what Goebbels had meant by it. Broken by the War, the Soviet Union had neither the means nor the will to invade Western Europe, or the Red Army would have carried on marching in the summer of 1945. Still less was the USSR willing or able to cross either the Atlantic or the Pacific. Like every Prime Minister since, Churchill knew the truth about the nuclear test veterans and the indigenous peoples, lying to the House of Commons that only “some local rats” had been killed. Then again, in his own mind, was that a lie? Churchill’s role in the coup of 1953 makes him the last Briton who should ever be invoked in relation to Iran.

The electorate was under no illusions while Churchill was still alive. His image was booed and hissed when it appeared on newsreels. He led the Conservative Party into three General Elections, he lost the first two, and he only returned to office on the third occasion with the support of the National Liberals, having lost the popular vote. In the course of that Parliament, he had to be removed by his own party. It comfortably won the subsequent General Election. We have not forgotten the truth about him in the old mining areas. Nor have they in the places that he signed away to Stalin, including the country for whose freedom the War was fought. Churchill coined the nickname “Uncle Joe” for Stalin.

Churchill presided over the famine in Bengal. His views on race shocked his younger colleagues even in the Conservative Party of the 1950s. He wanted to transport the Jews to Palestine, since he saw them as not really British. Having deployed the Black and Tans to Ireland, he redeployed them to Palestine in that Zionist cause. The Zionists later expressed their gratitude by plotting to kill him and by murdering his friend, Lord Moyne, as well as sending letter-bombs to the White House of his ally, Harry S. Truman. In the meantime, they had contracted the Haavara Agreement, fought against Britain throughout the Second World War, allied with Fascist Italy, twice sought an alliance with Nazi Germany on the grounds that it was a lesser evil than Britain, hanged the boobytrapped bodies of Sergeants Clifford Martin and Mervyn Paice and photographed them, and bombed the King David Hotel. By contrast, before anyone brings him up, Haj Amin al-Husseini was holed up in Berlin with no practical influence in the Middle East, being instead a kind of mascot for the recruitment of Balkan, Caucasian and Central Asian Muslims into the predecessor organisations of those which now controlled Ukraine and of those for which the New Right campaigned during the collapse of Yugoslavia.

In such circles, the great cause of the moment is withdrawal from the European Convention on Human Rights. Yet in May 1948, when the pompously self-styled Congress of Europe assembled in the Hall of Knights in The Hague, then it was Churchill who dubbed “the Voice of Europe” that assembly of politicians who had recently been defeated at the polls, of the representatives of Royal and Noble Houses that had fairly recently been dispossessed at least in political terms, of the likes of Churchill who fell into both categories, and of people whose lives’ work was trying to delude themselves that so did they. In the name of the order that had held sway for a century between the defeat of Napoleon and the First World War, their aim was very explicitly to check the social democracy that was sweeping Western Europe at the time. The material that they produced had that intention, and it has had that effect. It was written into British domestic law by Tony Blair, whom Thatcher identified as her own greatest achievement.

The famous dipping of the cranes for Churchill’s coffin occurred only because the London dockers, who despised him, had been paid to do it. Churchill’s cult seems to have begun only once he was dead, or at least so old as to have been politically as good as dead. It never translated into votes. But it is equally true that once the Attlee Government had a record on which to be judged, then it was barely reelected in 1950, and although it did win the popular vote, it lost office in 1951. For 75 years and counting, the Labour Party has dined out on a mere six years that did not impress the electorate at the time. If Churchill and Clement Attlee were the twin giants of the Golden Age, then that was lost on the voters who lived through it. They did not think much of either of them.

And Now Heads Must Roll

Susie Boniface is magnificent:

This newspaper fought for the nuclear veterans for 40 years when others forgot their story.

This review, snuck out with callous cynicism as the nation watched the World Cup semi-final, is vindication of their testimony. And now heads must roll.

In 2018, Parliament was told the Ministry of Defence was “unable to locate any information” about blood testing of troops at nuclear weapon tests. It has now been forced to publish 315 pages of information it had all along, hidden behind state secrecy.

There is confirmation of another 50,000 files, owned by the MoD, which the MoD has not given itself permission to search. There may also be 5,339 veterans who were deliberately excluded from health studies.

Medical records were deliberately and unlawfully destroyed up to September last year, when the review was drawing to a close.Yet ministers were repeatedly briefed, and courts repeatedly told, there was no blood testing programme.

These are not small matters. Criminal allegations are under review by Thames Valley Police. Rightly so: this cover-up has cost thousands of service families their lives, their health, and their sanity.

In 1983, the legendary Paul Foot first reported in these pages of “The Curse of Christmas Island”. A few months later, our sister paper, the Sunday People, launched its investigation into the “Atom Bomb Kids” born with birth defects.

From that day to this, the British government has lied and denied what happened to the troops sent to Montebello, Emu Field, Maralinga and Christmas Island - and to the indigenous people who called those places home.

Winston Churchill told Parliament no-one was killed “apart from some local rats”. Anthony Eden, privately warned of the genetic hazards, said: “It’s a pity, but we cannot help it.” Margaret Thatcher said there were only 12,000 troops were involved, when the true figure now appears to be more than 26,000.

I have been the veterans’ champion for two decades, first winning the Nuclear Test Medal then uncovering the Nuked Blood Scandal. I repeatedly revealed human experiments, secret documents, and genetic research which proved the veterans’ case. Time and again, the MoD gave off-the-record briefings to other media denying it all.

To their unending shame, editors, reporters and defence specialists believed them. They never looked those veterans in the eye and hear what they had to say.

It was I who first approached Andy Burnham with a request to meet the veterans in 2021, and now the incoming Prime Minister has told campaigners he will begin work this summer on a special tribunal. We believe it is the only way to end the cover-up and gather evidence for prosecutions.

Through decades of trauma and grief, the veterans have shown nothing but courage. The MoD displayed nothing but cowardice. To the government, these brave servicemen were simply guinea pigs. To us, they were heroes.