Monday, 8 June 2026

Prophet Margins

There are quotations from Shakespeare in the Book of Mormon because Joseph Smith thought that they were from the Bible, but Pete Hegseth has been known to quote Pulp Fiction on the same misapprehension, which made some of us feel our age as surely as the forthcoming induction of Oasis into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Why does Hegseth’s Department of Defense, which is its name, not list everyone in alphabetical order? And how many Jehovah’s Witnesses, Quakers, or members of the Church of the Brethren, are there there in the United States Military? They must have to do a lot of explaining.

Still, that is not for the rest of us to judge, any more than it is for us to judge Hegseth for being on his third marriage, for having impregnated his present wife while still married to his last one, for having had several other affairs, and for having settled a sexual assault lawsuit for $50,000. Or any more than it is for the Secretary of Defense, as such, to judge what is or is not a Christian church. Again I say that he should just have stuck to alphabetical order, and again I ask why he did not.

As to Mormonism itself, the fullness of Christianity does indeed include priesthood, a high theology of baptism, the living Teaching Office of a person on this Earth, an intercessory relationship between those on either side of bodily death, and much else besides.

Sunday, 7 June 2026

Righteous Anger

How scintillating must be the conversation between David Lammy and JD Vance. Lammy’s words will no doubt be as effective on Vance as were the Pope’s, while Vance’s intervention will no doubt be as effective in Britain as it was in Hungary. Still, Vance and Lammy could both discuss their mixed-race children, the knowledge of whose existence would presumably cause the combustion of those who were posting on Twitter against the mixed-race nephew of Henry Nowak, who was himself a British-Polish dual national through his father, a Polish immigrant such as they vocally disdained a decade ago.

A similar shift is manifest in the response to the publication in 5Pillars of “A practical guide for Muslims on how to navigate LGBTQ Pride month”. Not very long ago, many of those denouncing that would have agreed with every word of it, albeit while possibly accusing its author and publisher of taqiyya. Nowadays, though, on this as on so many other issues, Eastern European and Latin American Far Rightists have been proved right all along that those in Western Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand were really liberals with what were once the unremarkable Boomer liberal objections to Islam.

Likewise, if the Telegraph Tendency is now opposed to a blasphemy law per se, then it has changed its tune. The old one achieved absolutely nothing, but its abolition in England and Wales as recently as 2008 was decried as the end of civilisation by those who, not without cause, berated today’s South Wales Police for having instructed its Officers to record anti-Islamic conversations as antisocial behaviour incidents. Though again to no effect, there was a blasphemy law in Scotland until 2024, and there is one in Northern Ireland to this day.

Hamit Coskun appealed from the Magistrates’ Court to the Crown Court, which quashed his conviction. Lammy wants to abolish that right. In February, the High Court rejected the Crown Prosecution Service’s appeal to reinstate that conviction. But that was about a blasphemy law only if you worshipped Margaret Thatcher. Rather, the success of Coskun’s first appeal was a good result against the Public Order Act 1986. Who was the Prime Minister in 1986? A couple of years later, her supporters wanted to use that very Act to prosecute people who had set fire to copies of The Satanic Verses. They are very recent converts to free speech, and very selective about it.

Although she has not modified her claim to have participated in Islamic prayers at school, Kemi Badenoch no longer professes to have been “born in a country that was 50 per cent Muslim”, presumably Nigeria, having lately told both Piers Morgan and Nick Robinson that she had been born in London. Her British citizenship depended on her having been born in the United Kingdom before Thatcher had abolished birthright citizenship. Badenoch may have been naturalised, and as a Commonwealth citizen she would be eligible to vote and stand in elections in this country and to hold office all the way up to Prime Minister. But that was not how she presented herself until 28 April.

Far from the Conservatives’ having any objection to Commonwealth voting, their only gain in 2024 was Leicester East, Bob Blackman at Harrow East received the highest vote share for any Conservative candidate in the country, he was the only Conservative elected with an absolute majority, and he was one of only three Conservative MPs to be re-elected with increased majorities. Blackman has repeatedly been sworn in as an MP on the Bhagavad Gita, and at the House of Commons he hosted Tapan Ghosh, who was at least as violently opposed to Christians in Bengal as he was to Muslims.

Both Reform UK and Stephen Yaxley-Lennon have also assiduously courted both Hindus and Sikhs as bulwarks against Islam, and Yaxley-Lennon, at least, is still at it from the home in Spain that his Irish passport enabled him to keep without complication. Elon Musk, Rupert Lowe and Restore Britain might consider that there were no stronger opponents of halal meat than the Sikhs, and that the original kirpan was a real sword used defensively against Mughal persecution. In wearing the kirpan today, a Sikh still declares such readiness, willingness and ability in principle, all else having failed. But as carried in Britain today, it literally could not cut cheese, and it is rarely even visible. A desire to criminalise it cannot consistently be articulated by those who would wish the United Kingdom to adopt the laws of the United States with regard to firearms. There is no known case in which the kirpan has been used as an offensive weapon in this country.

Vickrum Digwa’s murder weapon was just one of his and his family’s extensive collection of non-ceremonial bladed articles. Families like that are not peculiar to any one community. That said, the family does belong to the Akali-Nihang warrior order within Sikhism, though not at all essential to it. With its obvious attraction to Digwa’s type of weapons-obsessed young man such as might accrue to Active Clubs and the like, many members of that order reject the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee’s 2001 ban on shaheedi degh, their traditional drink to aid meditation and, interestingly, to make them fiercer in battle. Interestingly, because its base is cannabis.

Yaxley-Lennon and his motley crew visibly prefer cocaine, as was yet again evident at Southampton, where Yaxley-Lennon addressed the same riotous crowd as Laurence Fox, who then proceeded to join Restore, which must now account for him. In between complaining about having been refused service in a pub despite banging on about the fact that he was only 17, Gregory Moffitt has done sterling work in filming the Southampton rioters and posting the footage to social media. Several convictions have already resulted from that. No doubt, there will be more. In England, you have to stay in some form of education or training until you are 18. What form does Moffitt’s take?

In view of the attacks on Sikhs up and down the country, when may we expect a COBRA meeting, and the declaration of a national emergency, as happened in response to two nonfatal stabbings out of the 150 to 212 knife attacks committed per day in the United Kingdom, leading to the deployment of an extra 100 Police Officers who had apparently had nothing else to do, as well as the imposition of further obligations on universities and on cultural institutions, obligations of the kind that otherwise inspired derision from the quarters that were lauding them in that case? At least two gurdwaras in Britain are former synagogues, so perhaps there would be action if someone set fire to those?

It ought not to be a numbers game, but as in the world, there are in this country far more Sikhs than Jews. Yet no one outside their community has grifted himself all the way to the House of Lords as their self-appointed champion. Jews, though, must endure three of those, Rapey Woodcock, Fido Austin (check his hard drive), and John Mann, whose proposed ban on Palestinian flag badges and what-not in the NHS would ban poppies and all sorts, but was really designed to prevent the impactful wearing of NHS uniforms on picket lines and at other demonstrations. That would call for mass defiance.

Distilled Public Disillusion

Steph Spyro writes:

A suspended Labour peer was welcomed to drinks with No 10 staff last week, it has emerged.

Sir Keir Starmer's former director of communications was welcomed into a gathering of senior No 10 officials and party staff last week despite being suspended as a Labour peer.

Lord Doyle was ousted from the party for his links to a convicted sex offender.

The former aide had previously supported Sean Morton, a former Labour councillor in Moray, northeast Scotland, after he was charged with possessing and distributing indecent images of children in December 2016.

Despite the charges, Doyle campaigned for Morton when he ran as an independent in May 2017, knocking on doors wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the slogan “Re-elect Sean Morton”.

Despite the suspension, Doyle attended leaving drinks briefly at Labour HQ attended by Jill Cuthbertson, the acting Downing Street chief of staff, Lord Alli, the Labour donor, and former Health Secretary Wes Streeting.

The Times, who first reported the story, said the gathering was held for Marianna McFadden, the party’s deputy general-secretary and wife of work and pensions secretary Pat McFadden, who is exiting her role.

MPs reacted with fury earlier this month after the disgraced peer was spotted attending the House of Lords.

Lord Doyle's suspension from the upper chamber in February coincided with Lord Mandelson's sacking as US ambassador, and saw Kemi Badenoch accuse the Prime Minister of "stuffing government with hypocrites and paedophile apologists".

Messages between Doyle and Mandelson were released in the latest tranche of documents published by the government in relation to the latter's appointment to the top job in Washington.

Doyle said: "Mandelson's appointment should never have happened and I regret the message it sent to Epstein's victims and beyond.

"It was clearly wrong and I apologise for any part I played in that process."


Potentially explosive evidence about Peter Mandelson's alleged efforts to influence a Cabinet reshuffle to secure more political influence for his allies has been kept out of the public eye.

Messages between the disgraced former ambassador to the US and Sir Keir Starmer's one-time chief of staff Morgan McSweeney were expected to be released as part of a second tranche of documents made public last week.

But their absence has sparked mystery in Whitehall, with suggestions they were being held back as the police probe into Mandleson's alleged misconduct in public office widens its scope. However, that was dismissed by a Met source last night.

The messages are understood to show that while in his Washington job, the Labour grandee lobbied for Peter Kyle to be made business secretary – a role he was duly given in last September's shake-up.

In his previous job as science and technology secretary, Mr Kyle had been a cheerleader for the artificial intelligence sector that had been a lucrative source of income for Lord Mandelson's consultancy business.

Messages show he publicly spoke out in support of the controversial technology after Mandelson suggested he should.

One minister told The Mail on Sunday last night: 'Peter thought it was impossible to properly promote the AI agenda unless Kyle was business secretary.'

In one message, Mandelson is thought to have said to Mr McSweeney: 'Are you taking Peter away from me?'

A senior Government source last night told the MoS that the reshuffle messages had not been published because police 'have held [them] back' so as not to prejudice the ongoing criminal investigation into the peer's communications with paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein when Mandelson was in Gordon Brown's government.

However, a senior source involved in the investigation told the MoS the messages were not currently part of the probe and had not been held back at their request. But they did say the messages might be 'reviewed' later.

Mandelson co-founded an advisory firm called Global Counsel which had commercial dealings with AI giants OpenAI and Palantir.

In February 2025 – two days before Mandelson took up his role as US ambassador – the peer told Mr Kyle that his keynote speech to the Munich Security Conference would 'benefit from more positive language about AI upfront'. Mr Kyle responded: 'That's all v good advice which I'll action.'

Six days later, Mr Kyle used his address to welcome a 'new era of wealth and prosperity' aided by the technology.

By that point, Mandelson had stepped down as a director of Global Counsel, but still retained a large shareholding.

A Cabinet Minister told the MoS: 'Peter had been working closely with Kyle. He had been lobbying for him to [be] business secretary.'

The withheld messages from Mandelson to Mr McSweeney are understood to include the line: 'Have you solved the Darren problem?', relating to Darren Jones, chief secretary to the Treasury at the time. He was made chief secretary to the PM in the reshuffle.

Mr Jones was revealed last week to have contacted Mandelson when he was sacked over his Epstein links with the fawning words: 'You've been doing such a great job, and you worked wonders with Trump. I'm so sorry about today.' The disclosure came after Mr Jones had denied sending such a message.

Last week's tranche of messages also showed Mandelson apparently lobbied on behalf of Jon Garvie, a former colleague at Global Counsel who is now strategy director of the government's National Security Secretariat.

Mr McSweeney told MPs this year that Mandelson had not influenced the reshuffle, insisting: 'I did not respond to any of Mandelson's texts. None of his suggestions actually came out to be the case, so his ideas were not followed up.'

However a Cabinet source said: '[Mandelson] was directly involved. The messages show the people he was expressing an interest in were the same people who did actually get moved'.

No 10 declined to comment last night. A Met Police source said their inquiry is still ongoing.

Mandelson strongly denies claims of misconduct in public office or that he was motivated by financial gain.

And Nick Cohen writes:

The UK has one of the few centre-left governments in the West, and it is failing.

We know what the consequences of failure will be. The US Democrats failed in 2024 and Trump returned. His second term may yet destroy America as a great power and endanger democracy in Ukraine and Europe. In the UK, Nigel Farage and the British friends of Musk and Trump are licking their lips at the prospect of doing the same to the UK.

The reasons for Labour’s collapse are necessarily complicated. But if you wanted to distil public disillusion into one human form, you could say that the British government failed when it embraced Peter Mandelson.

The baffling deference Labour politicians show to this brutal and mercenary old man has caused the biggest scandal of Keir Starmer’s premiership.

If Starmer is forced from power later this year, his appointment of Mandelson as Britain’s ambassador to Trump’s Washington will be a part of the reason why.

In Anne Applebaum’s grimly resonant phrase, “every election is now existential”. Mandelson may have blown the next one for Labour.

Mainstream commentators have concentrated on the disgrace of Starmer sending Mandelson to Washington in 2024, even though he knew about his association with Jeffrey Epstein. Starmer and his advisors did not know the full gory detail about Mandelson’s closeness to the child sex offender. Or about how he had leaked confidential information from Cabinet meetings to Epstein and JP Morgan.

But they knew enough.

The second aspect of the scandal is barely discussed but is equally telling.

Starmer, along with his chief advisor, Morgan McSweeney, and half the cabinet, treated Mandelson as their mentor.

They did not seek guidance from Peter Mandelson in spite of his embrace of corrupt oligarchs but because of it.

They believed the vicious masters he served made him a “player” with a seat at the table in the “room where it happens” rather than a liability.

Everyone now says that the Starmer government did not have a plan for power. Nothing better illustrates the intellectual vacuity and political insecurity of so many of today’s Labour politicians than their belief that Peter Mandelson, of all people, could fill the void by telling them how to govern.

Facing the threat of the far-right, the first centre-left government in a generation turned for political direction to a 72-year-old, whose heyday was in the 1990s, and who has spent his twilight years as an obsequious servant of the superrich.

The 1990s could not be less like the 2020s, which is why Tony Blair’s interventions in today’s politics are so anachronistic. We had continuous economic growth then. We have stagnation now. We had no external enemies then. We have Putin now. America was a reliable ally then. We have Trump now.

Seeking the advice of Peter Mandelson is as pointless as seeking the advice of Bonnie Prince Charlie or the Archduke Franz Ferdinand. 

Not that it stopped the Labour party.

This morning’s Mail on Sunday has a piece by Glen Owen and Dan Hodges describing how Mandelson used his influence over Morgan McSweeney to reward his favoured candidates– Peter Kyle and Darren Jones. And indeed, they were promoted in the next reshuffle.

Mandelson also accompanied Keir Starmer to a meeting at the Washington offices of Palantir – the data and analytics firm at the centre of half the conspiracy theories on the planet.

On Thursday, Tim Shipman of The Spectator revealed WhatsApp messages between Darren Jones, the Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister, and Mandelson.

They were from September 2025, when the latest revelations in the Epstein Files had forced Starmer to fire Mandelson.

The files showed that Mandelson had comforted Epstein by saying he was “furious” that the billionaire had been convicted for soliciting a child for prostitution. Far from being shocked by Mandelson’s behaviour Darren Jones was sympathy personified. He was, he told Mandelson, “so sorry” that his ambassadorial career was over.

Jones, who looked like one of Labour’s most competent ministers, was so lacking in self-confidence that he treated Mandelson as a political genius and private confidante.

To understand how bizarre his choice was, consider that Jones was 11 when Tony Blair took power in 1997. He was 12 when Peter Mandelson resigned from government in a financial scandal in 1998 – and perhaps that should that have been a warning – and 16 when he resigned from government yet again in another financial scandal in 2001.

Jones was wasting his time on a man out of time.

He was hardly alone in that.

Pat McFadden, the Work and Pensions Secretary, who I have known for years and thought had more common sense, gave Mandelson the killer line in a message that:

“Every meeting I have is ‘who can we tax in order to pay benefits to others’. They’re asking the wrong questions.”

Now it’s out in the open, Labour’s opponents are using it with absolute relish and will continue using it for – oh I don’t know – decades to come.

Labour politicians and, to be fair, much of the London media, bought into the myth that Mandelson was the supreme political operator.

If that was ever true, it stopped being true before many readers of this piece were born. Since the early 2000s, Mandelson has not guided the Labour party to victory or advised its sister parties in Europe and Australia, or gone to help Democrats fight Trump in the US.

He has served the global oligarchy. And was amply rewarded for his pains.

The Epstein files showed that he leaked market-sensitive secrets from Gordon Brown’s cabinet for money – the most shocking breach of trust I have seen in British politics. He followed that stunt up by lobbying on behalf of Epstein and JP Morgan to stop Brown and his chancellor, Alistair Darling, taxing bankers’ bonuses. (Mandelson recommended the use of “mild threats” to intimidate his own government.)

He worked for the Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, and stayed on Deripaska’s superyacht off the coast of Corfu in 2008 when he was EU Trade Commissioner. He was on the board of the Russian conglomerate AFK Sistema, and lobbied Putin.

Meanwhile, as if to ensure that he spread his favours globally without fear or favour, Mandelson also befriended the Chinese finance minister Lan Fo’an.

It wasn’t just the money that appealed. You can make money without grovelling to Epstein and Russia. It is perfectly clear from his messages that Mandelson is a power worshiper of the most brutish kind.

Look at the way he talked about Wes Streeting. The then health secretary was appalled by the destruction of Gaza and the terror attacks on Palestinians living in the West Bank.

He told Mandelson that Israel is “committing war crimes before our eyes.”

Mandelson treated him as a virtue-signalling bleeding heart.

“It is pathetic. I think Wes is experiencing an early mid-life crisis,” he told Pat McFadden.

This isn’t the voice of a mere money grubber. It is the authentic snarl of the power worshipper who revels in the supposed necessity of slaughter and turns, not on the war criminals, but on anyone who raises the smallest humanitarian concern.

Mandelson was not an operator in the world of democratic politics, as his sneers about Streeting proved.

He belonged in the world of autocracy and plutocracy. By embracing Mandelson, and for God’s sake, by trusting him, it was as if Labour ministers were living up to every cliché about the naivety of centre-left politicians, who know only academia and campaign groups, and nothing about the hard business of government.

For what good has Mandelson done the Labour party?

While ministers and advisors treated him as if he were a sage rather than a grifter, the party’s opinion poll rating collapsed to the lowest level in its history.

So much for the acumen of the “supreme political strategist”.

Meanwhile, the public could look at this government and despise it for promising “change” while promoting the friends of the Epstein class and the Russian oligarchy.

I normally dismiss conspiracy theorists. But the worst thing you can say about the dismal story of Peter Mandelson and the Starmer administration is that it justifies every last one of them.

On 20 March, the convicted paedophile Liron Woodcock-Velleman was given eight months, suspended for 15 months. His past service” as a councillor, and the ruination of his promising” political career, were accepted in mitigation. No wonder he and his parents were celebrating. Like you, I have never met a paedophile. I mean, we may have done, in the way that we may have met a Muggletonian. But we are wholly unaware of having done so, you and I both. I apologise to any Muggletonian reading this. Yet this country’s cultural and political elite cannot get out of bed, if that, without tripping over one or more nonces. And every single time, our betters had had no idea. Or so we are invariably expected to believe. Last May, the supposedly hard-as-nails Shabana Mahmood tried to give nonces “chemical castration” instead of prison, where that proposal was received, not only by the inmates, as well as one might have expected. As an old lag, the word “nonce” is part of my culture. In that culture’s citadels, nonces are given the suspended sentences that we were not, or they are given the cushiest jobs inside, they are housed in the newest or the most recently refurbished wings, they have gym when ours has been cancelled, and so on. Why?

At committee stage of what has become the Online Safety Act, Woodcock-Velleman gave the evidence of Hope Not Hate. When Labour returned to office in 2024, then Anna Turley was both a Director and a Trustee of Hope Not Hate. As an ultimately successful parliamentary candidate in 2015, the then Ruth Smeeth described herself as the Deputy Director of Hope Not Hate. The American Embassy classified her as strictly protect”. As Baroness Anderson of Stoke-on-Trent, she was recently made a Parliamentary Secretary in the Cabinet Office while remaining a Whip. Not bad for having lost her Commons seat to Jonathan Gullis. Even with the departure of Josh Simons, there are now four Parliamentary Secretaries under Darren Jones, and three Ministers of State. That amounts to a Prime Ministers Department with, including Keir Starmer, nine Ministers, the most of any Department. They must do something. What is it?

Woodcock-Velleman’s offences were strikingly similar to those of another Labour councillor in London, Sam Gould, who offended while on the staff Wes Streeting. Streeting would have become Leader when, as expected in 2019, the Conservative majority had been much reduced in 2024 but Boris Johnson had remained Prime Minister. Yes, that was not much more than six years ago. But in 2015, Streeting had chaired the Leadership campaign of Jess Phillips. On Tuesday 2 September last year, Phillips told the House of Commons that, “South Yorkshire police should never have been left to investigate themselves in this matter, and moving those investigations to the NCA is absolutely the right thing to do. I would be lying if I said that over the years I had not met girls who talked to me about how police were part of not just the cover-up but the perpetration.” Read again those words of the Minister who refused a statutory inquiry, an inquiry that had been, and still is, demanded by the Muslim candidate whom she had beaten by only 693 votes at Birmingham Yardley, which he intends to contest again, the wonderful investigative journalist Jody McIntyre. Then read the Epstein Files and worry about inferior cultures with no respect for women and with endemic predation on young girls.

Phillips had been supported for Leader by Hilary Armstrong and by Armstrong’s erstwhile staffer, Peter Kyle. Both Joe Docherty and Matthew Doyle were introduced to the House of Lords by Armstrong, whose Whips’ Office in the Commons had included all three of Phil Woolas, Ivor Caplin and Dan Norris. All three were made Ministers soon after the vote for the Iraq War. Norris does not turn up to Parliament, but he has one of the best voting records, because despite his own suspension from the Labour whip, his proxy vote is cast every single time by the Labour Whips; there was a blip on 10 March, but normal service was restored from the next day. Armstrong was the political patroness, both of Turley, and of Caplin’s close friend, closest ally, former lover, and constituency successor, Kyle. Armstrong remains an active Labour member of the Lords, giving it as her institutional affiliation when she endorsed a mercifully ignored book that claimed that the accused of the Cleveland child abuse scandal had been guilty all along. Every accusation is a confession.

Beware The British ICE

This is called losing your core supporters, as Daniel Johnson writes:

Ever since their exiles in Egypt and Babylon, Jews have lived with the fear of displacement and deportation. Twice the Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed. Twice the Romans sought to scatter them to the winds. Neither in the Christian nor the Muslim worlds have Jews ever felt entirely secure. Wherever Jews were allowed to put down roots, they have flourished. All too often, their success has bred envy and enmity, often lethal. And yet they have survived.

In the history of the 20th century, mass deportations and antisemitism were inextricably linked. In Berlin, for example, the Gleis 17 memorial at Grünewald station commemorates 55,000 Jews of the German capital, many of whom were deported from that platform. Hitler’s “Final Solution” involved the deportation of the great majority of the 9.5 million Jews living in Nazi-occupied Europe. Two thirds were murdered.

The Nazi Holocaust is at least well documented. We are less familiar with other mass deportations of Jews. The Ottoman Empire had a long-standing policy of deporting ethnic minorities, known as sürgün. During the harsh winter of 1917-18, the mainly Jewish population of Jaffa and Tel Aviv was expelled: of some 10,000 people, about 1,500 died. This was a small number compared to the concurrent genocides of Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians, but it was motivated by similar accusations of collaboration with the British.

Then there was the often terrible fate of Jews under Russian and Soviet rule. In the years before 1914, about two million Jews fled pogroms in the Russian Empire. Pogroms resumed during the Russian Civil War, in which about 100,000 Jews perished.

Then came Stalin. For most of his long rule, though many Jews were deported and killed, they were not singled out. As he aged, however, Stalin’s antisemitism became as paranoid and poisonous as Hitler’s. By 1953, convinced there was a “Doctors’ Plot” against him, he was planning to deport up to three million Soviet Jews to Siberia — a plan that was interrupted only by his death in 1953. Stalin’s antisemitism outlived him: once Jews were allowed to emigrate from the Soviet Union, an exodus of two million Jews took place, mostly to Israel.

The ordeal of the European Jews was followed by the expulsion of Jews from the Islamic world. After Israel’s creation in 1948, the Arabs and Iranians deported, dispossessed and displaced a total of 850,000 Jews.

This exodus was almost entirely ignored by NGOs at the time and the world at large has forgotten them, even in the places whence they fled. In Israel, however, these refugees are remembered: a large proportion of the population is descended from them.

And now history is repeating itself. In the past quarter of a century, more than a third of a million Jews have emigrated from Europe to Israel. The trend is accelerating: in 2025, 5,103 European Jews made aliyah (emigrated to Israel), an increase of 138 per cent since 2023. And last year 742 British Jews were amongst them — the highest number in more than 40 years.

It should not surprise us if even more of our Jewish fellow citizens vote with their feet in 2026. Who could blame them for feeling intimidated by the ascendancy of an array of antisemitic forces and betrayed by authorities that seem at best supine, at worst complicit?

I grew up believing that the comparative absence of antisemitism from post-17th-century British history was one of the glories of our island story. Whilst our Continental neighbours had almost all descended into the abyss of Jew-hatred, from the Dreyfus Affair to Auschwitz, we British could boast of the Balfour Declaration, the Kindertransport and our lone defiance of Nazi Germany, from the Fall of France to Operation Barbarossa.

As the son of the author of A History of the Jews, I seldom encountered antisemitism until I went up to Oxford in 1975. At an Oxford Union event, I asked the then editor of Private Eye — a figure then idolised by fogeyish undergraduates — how he could justify his all-too-obvious hostility, not just towards Israel, but to its Jewish supporters.

His response was ad hominem: “Is that Dave Spart I see up there?” he inquired, to a gale of guffaws from his adulatory audience. My abiding memory is the contrast between this illiberal appeal to the mob and the unashamed intellectualism of the Oxford dons, some of whom were Jewish refugees from the Nazis.

In 1977, at the end of my second year at Oxford, I spent the summer in Israel, working on a kibbutz and travelling around the country. Ever since, I have understood why the vast majority of Jews in the diaspora feel strongly about Israel. The very existence of a Jewish state means that the threat of deportation, or worse, has lost much of its sting. There is a tiny corner of the earth where Jews will always be welcomed. Israel is the antidote to the poison of antisemitism.

Uncomfortable as it may be for an Englishman to admit it, antisemitism, or at least anti-Judaism, has an ancient lineage on these shores. In 1290 Edward I expelled the Jews from England — an unspeakably cruel edict that resulted in the deaths of many of the 3,000 members of the community.

The mass deportation of the English Jews had a wider significance for two reasons. This, the first such atrocity by a European monarch, paved the way for others on a larger scale, culminating in the edict of expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492, later extended to include Portugal.

Second, the expulsion followed the emergence of the Blood Libel in Norwich around 1155 — the most monstrous of lies, which was then repeated many times, first in England but later across Christendom. Today, versions of this libel are recycled endlessly, reinforcing the narrative of Jews as the source of all evil. Only against this background is it comprehensible that the monstrous and mendacious allegation of genocide by Israel could gain traction, even amongst mainstream politicians and media organisations.

But the fate of the English Jews in the 13th century shows how the connection between antisemitism and mass deportation was established. From a philosemitic standpoint, therefore, any proposal to deport hundreds of thousands or even millions of people from Britain should be treated with suspicion, if not outright indignation. Yet deportations on an unprecedented scale are the centrepiece of Reform UK’s putative programme.

Only last year, Nigel Farage ruled out such a policy on grounds of impracticality. Now Zia Yusuf, one of his party’s largest donors and now its “shadow Home Secretary”, has pledged to remove at least 288,000 migrants a year — a Financial Times analysis claims that the criteria could put up to two million at risk — and to set up detention centres in areas that did not elect Reform candidates. The human scale of this policy is unprecedented in British history. In 1940, there was a panic about “enemy aliens” (mainly German-Jewish refugees from the Nazis) and Churchill ordered the authorities to “collar the lot”. About 30,000 men and women were interned on the Isle of Man, in conditions that had scarcely improved since the camps were set up in the First World War.

As a teenager, I was a Schachfreund (“chess friend”) of Heinrich Fraenkel, a historian and sometime screenwriter in the Weimar cinema. He had the dubious distinction of having been interned on the Isle of Man in both world wars. Whilst the harsh treatment of Jewish victims of Nazi persecution offended against their idealised view of British “fair play”, they trusted that the threat of Nazi espionage was genuine and not a pretext for antisemitism. Protests in Parliament brought relief; within a year most internees had been released. Many later devoted themselves to defeating Hitler.

The detention centres that Reform would need for their mass deportations would be at least ten times the size of the wartime internment camps.

Arresting hundreds of thousands would also necessitate an army of snatch squads on the lines of Trump’s ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) — an agency that has lost more than 10,000 court cases but that arbitrarily extended its own remit to arrest and incarcerate millions of people who had lived, worked and paid taxes for years. We should not deceive ourselves that the methods of a British equivalent of ICE would be very different.

Most people would support the deportation of foreign criminals and those whose claims to asylum have been rejected by the courts. Last year the Home Office deported 38,000 migrants and the numbers will continue to rise as legal obstacles are removed. But the introduction of mass deportations would normalise miscarriages of justice and change British society very much for the worse. There is no doubt that the present wave of antisemitism in Britain is partly an import from the Muslim world. Yet it does not follow that the answer is therefore to deport vast numbers of Muslims. By all means deport those who are convicted of antisemitic crimes, including hate preachers and other extremists. 

But a policy of mass deportations based on a presumption of Muslim guilt would be disastrously counterproductive. It would feed the narrative of alienation rather than that of integration. I am sure that my friend, the late, great, Jonathan Sacks, would have thundered against this diabolical engine of division — the antithesis of the “covenantal” politics he professed.

Mass deportations are never the solution to antisemitism; they are part of the problem. There is no more potent symbol of the radical evil that is Jew-hatred than the cattle-truck crammed with dead, dying and desperate human beings.

Andy Burnham: Labour’s Pantomime Horse

Paul Knaggs writes:

There is something deeply revealing about the Makerfield by-election, and it has nothing to do with who wins it.

This is not an ordinary contest. No member has died. No scandal has forced a resignation of conscience. A sitting MP, Josh Simons, stood down on 14 May for the express purpose of vacating his seat, and he said so plainly. A constituency has been placed on the board so that one man can move from a mayoralty back into Parliament and, from there, into a leadership contest he cannot otherwise enter. You have to go back to the 1965 Leyton by-election to find the last time the country manufactured a vacancy to import a particular figure into the Commons. Makerfield, in other words, has become less a constituency than a rescue mission for a sinking Labour Party.

The trappings are all there: the candidates, the boards, the activists bussed in from safer seats, the media vans, the rehearsed concern for towns nobody in Westminster could find on a map a year ago. Fourteen names will sit on the ballot on 18 June. Labour wants you to see a fresh horse led into the stalls, a thoroughbred ready to run a race the old nag could not finish. What is actually being led out is the other half of the pantomime horse: the back end to Keir Starmer’s front, waiting to swap places in a seamless transition, act two of the farce the party has made of itself. You can turn the costume around as often as you like. It is still the same horse, and it still shuffles in the same direction.

So the only question worth asking is the one the whole production is staged to discourage. Does Andy Burnham offer a new politics, or the same play and the same production of decline and decay?

Andy Burnham: A Better Actor in the Same Bad Play 

For all the northern soul, the open collar, the warmth that Keir Starmer could never fake if he rehearsed for a decade, Burnham’s politics are strangely familiar. He is more human than the Prime Minister. He is, without question, a better actor. But a better actor in the same bad play does not give you a different play. He gives you the same lines, delivered with feeling. 

This is the pantomime horse. One half has swapped places with the other, and the crowd is invited to cheer because the back end is now the front end. It is still the same horse, and it still walks in the same direction.

The proof arrived this week, and it arrived twice.

Burnham’s Fiscal Rules Dodge: What Are the Rules? 

On Friday, BBC Newsnight’s Victoria Derbyshire put a simple question to the man whose team had confirmed he would keep the Prime Minister and Chancellor’s self-imposed fiscal rules. Could he say what those rules are? Burnham declined. He compared the question to sitting an exam. Pressed, he offered only that he knew what the rules were, and that he would set out a plan within them so as to “keep the discipline.”

He was asked to name the rules he would bind the country to. He could not, or would not. That is not a gaffe. That is the whole policy.

He was asked to name the rules he would bind the country to. He could not, or would not. That is not a gaffe. That is the entire policy.

It is worth saying clearly what these rules are, since the candidate would not. They sit in the Charter for Budget Responsibility, and they come to two. The first, the Stability Rule, demands that the government’s day-to-day spending be paid for entirely out of its revenues, so that the state may borrow only to invest. The second, the Investment Rule, demands that public sector net financial liabilities, the Treasury’s preferred measure of debt, be falling as a share of the economy. That is the machine in two sentences. It is not a law of nature. It is a political choice dressed as economic necessity.

And here is a question Burnham has never been asked, because the entire Westminster class shares the assumption behind it. What if the rules themselves are the problem? Britain’s self-imposed limits are cousins to the European Union’s own fiscal theology, the Maastricht commandments of deficits below three per cent and debt below sixty, the same belief that democratic economic choice must be fenced inside a number agreed in advance and policed by people no one elected. We were told for years that leaving the EU would free us from that cage. We left, and our own Treasury built a smaller one and locked us in voluntarily.

A government that issues its own currency is not a household balancing a chequebook. Its real limits are inflation, labour, skills, materials and productive capacity, not some invented morality of the family budget. The honest question is never “where will the money come from.” It is what we need to build, who has the power to build it, and what real resources we can command to do it. Burnham had the chance to challenge that frame on national television. He accepted it instead, and asked only for better lighting in the cell.

Understand how the thing actually works and the rules look stranger still. Taxation does not fund spending; it drains money out of circulation. Public spending does not wait for tax receipts; it puts money in. The gap between the two is the deficit, financed by a state creating its own currency, and the country has already watched that happen on a heroic scale. The Bank of England conjured eight hundred and ninety-five billion pounds out of nothing through quantitative easing to steady the financial system. The money was there. It was found in an afternoon, when it was the City that needed saving. It is only ever missing when the queue is made of nurses, councils, bus routes and disabled people.

Look, then, at the arithmetic the rules actually produce. In the year to March 2026 the government borrowed around a hundred and thirty billion pounds, with day-to-day spending alone running some fifty billion beyond what tax brought in. Rachel Reeves is not living inside her own Stability Rule now; she is promising to reach it by the end of the decade. There are only three ways to close a gap that size while the rule stays sacred: cut welfare again, cut the NHS and the services and the defence budget, or tax the wealth that has spent forty years floating free of the bill. Burnham has pledged himself to the same rule. So one of those three doors is his future, whatever warmth he brings to the announcement, because he has bolted the only other exit shut. That is the choice the bluster on Newsnight was built to hide.

And here is the tell that should trouble anyone tempted by him. To the New Statesman, Burnham says Britain must get beyond being “in hock to the bond markets” and floats nationalising key industries, a 50p top rate, tens of billions borrowed for council housing. To the markets, his spokesman says he supports the rules and has no plans to change them, and one of his backing MPs tells Times Radio there would be no trouble from the markets under him at all. Both audiences are meant to believe him. That is not a programme. That is a man facing two ways at once, which is precisely what a pantomime horse is built to do.

Tell them what they want to hear: To the people, he says, we must stop being in hock to the bond markets. To the markets, his team says nothing will change. Both audiences are meant to believe him.

Burnham on Europe: From Rejoin to Retreat in One Week

The second proof is Europe. At Labour conference last autumn, Burnham said he hoped to see Britain rejoin the European Union in his lifetime. It was bold, it was honest, and it was the kind of thing Starmer would never risk. Then the by-election arrived. Makerfield voted around 65 per cent to Leave in 2016, one of the most strongly Leave constituencies in the country. And so the conviction went back in the drawer. Burnham now says Britain should not seek to rejoin, a line he drew specifically to separate himself from Wes Streeting.

Set the two performances side by side. A man who sells himself as the alternative to Starmer’s hollow triangulation spent a single week triangulating on the two largest questions in front of him: the economy and Europe. He blustered past the rules he claims to honour, and abandoned the position he claims to hold. The repositioning he condemns in the Prime Minister is the thing he does most fluently. That is not an alternative path. It is the same path, walked with a warmer voice.

CONTROL, NOT OWNERSHIP

His admirers have a strongest card, and it is worth meeting honestly. The Bee Network, Greater Manchester’s yellow buses, brought local services back under public control for the first time since deregulation, the first city region outside London to manage it. The flat fares, the integrated ticketing, the single map across bus and tram: this is a genuine improvement, and it is genuinely his. Credit where it is due.

But look hard at what it is, and what it is not. The Bee Network is franchising. The public authority sets the routes, the fares and the standards, and then private operators bid, through competitive tender, for the contracts to run the buses and take a fee. It is the model Transport for London has used for decades, the model Ken Livingstone reached for before the courts struck his cheap fares down in 1981. It is public control. It is not public ownership. The wheels still turn for private profit; the public sets the timetable, carries the revenue risk and paints the buses a cheerful colour. The deeper thing, a publicly owned operator running buses for need rather than margin, the model South Yorkshire built when its own buses ran on fares held down to a few pence, is exactly the thing the Bee Network stops short of.

Press him on what “public control” means beyond the buses and the same fog rolls in. Burnham talks of bringing water and energy back under public control, and the phrase does a great deal of warm work. But asked about Thames Water, the most scandal-ridden of the lot, he reaches not for ownership but for a “localised public control option,” a form of words that answers none of the questions that matter: who owns it, who runs it, who carries the debt, and where the profit goes. The Guardian’s own City commentator, no one’s idea of a firebrand, looked at the same proposals and concluded simply that Burnham was too vague to judge. And the reason for the fog is the reason for all of it. Speaking to the Institute for Fiscal Studies, he said his economic vision was built to reassure bond investors, that restoring public control would lower the state’s long-term costs, and that this was “the way to reassure markets.” There it is once more. The public-ownership music is played to the members; the reassurance is played quietly to the City. The vagueness is not a lapse in preparation. It is the seam where the two costumes are stitched together.

And here the two halves of the horse meet again. To the New Statesman, Burnham talks of nationalising key industries. To the country, he pledges to take Britain back into the European Union. Those two promises are not friends. Franchising survives in Brussels happily enough; London ran it inside the EU for years. But genuine public ownership outside a tendering framework is, as one study of EU competition law and public transport put it, virtually impossible to sustain. The “level playing field” we were sold as fairness is the same cage as the fiscal rules, built to turn every public good into a market and every act of common provision into a contract put out to bid. The man who would lead us back into it is the same man who says he wants to break free of the markets. Front end, back end, one horse.

In fairness, the wall around full public ownership was not built in Brussels alone. The ban on councils founding new municipal bus companies was written into a British Act in 2017, by a Conservative government, and Labour is repealing it only now. The cage has more than one architect. What should trouble us is that Burnham has spent an entire career comfortable inside it, and proposes to walk us back through a door he calls an escape.

A Man of The Machine

None of this makes Burnham Starmer’s clone. He is not. He talks the language of place better than anyone in the Cabinet. He broke with the leadership over Gaza, calling early for a ceasefire when his party was offering Israel unqualified support. He backs proportional representation and deeper devolution. But notice where the divergence stops. A Blairite-era minister who voted for the Iraq war, a member of Labour Friends of Israel since 2015 who once said his first state visit would be to Israel, he has spent his entire career inside the machine that built the politics he now critiques. His instincts run with institutional power even where his rhetoric softens against it. He is not a tribune who arrived from the shop floor with dust on his boots. He is the system’s most sympathetic representative, which is a different thing entirely.

It is worth being concrete about what that career did, and did not, do. Burnham now speaks with real feeling about Thatcher’s neoliberalism and the wreckage it left in towns like these, and he is right to. But he sat in Parliament for sixteen years and did nothing to shift the model; on the evidence, he made his peace with it. The clearest test came in July 2015. George Osborne’s Welfare Reform and Work Bill, twelve billion pounds of cuts, carried the two-child limit and the lowered benefit cap, the very measures Burnham now campaigns to scrap. Harriet Harman ordered Labour to abstain. Of the four leadership candidates, only Jeremy Corbyn defied the whip and voted against. Burnham abstained, alongside Yvette Cooper and Liz Kendall. He said afterward that he would have opposed the bill outright “if I was leader,” but that as a member of the shadow cabinet he would not split the party. There, in one evening, is the whole man. He knew the right thing. He could even name it. And when it cost something, he chose the institution over the instinct. That is not a tribune. That is a manager who regrets the policy and votes for the quiet life.

Makerfield a Political Stage

Let us not forget what Makerfield has been turned into: a political stage on which Labour’s civil war can be acted out while the audience is encouraged to forget what created the present crisis in the first place. This is not simply two years of mismanagement under Starmer. It is the tangled web of power, patronage and elite entitlement, exposed most clearly in the Mandelson affair: the same old world of access, favour, appointment and consequence-free failure. Makerfield is not just a by-election. It is misdirection. It is an attempted resuscitation of a party whose lungs are full of the very politics that poisoned it.

This is what makes the contest hollow rather than merely cynical. Communities like Makerfield have been ignored, hollowed out and managed for forty years. The industry was stripped, the services stretched, the high streets abandoned. Then, the moment Westminster needs them, they are rediscovered as “proud working-class communities,” their neglect repurposed as scenery for a leadership drama. First they took the jobs. Then they took the services. Now they want the symbolism.

And they want it on a knife edge. Survation’s polling has Labour ahead Burnham 49, Kenyon 39, a ten-point gap, but inside a genuine fight, with Reform’s Robert Kenyon, a local councillor who came second here in 2024. Reform took seven of the eight Wigan council wards in May and leads on the generic question by double digits. Labour’s own people are blunt about why Burnham might just hold it. As one MP put it to The Independent, the Labour brand is not just bad, it is toxic; Andy isn’t toxic, Labour is, and that is the only reason they might get over the line. There is the strategy in a sentence. Not a new politics. A single name not yet poisoned by association with the government it intends to inherit.

The party did not run out of candidates. It ran out of conviction, and then went looking for a face.

That is the deeper indictment. Labour holds more than four hundred seats. The bench is crowded. Streeting has resigned and declared. Rayner, cleared at last by HMRC, is circling. Miliband is briefed as the soft-left option. Burnham has launched a group, Mainstream, promising “radical realists” a “democratic socialist future,” a phrase that performs the same trick as the man: radical at the front, realist at the back. The party does not lack names. It lacks leaders. It spent a decade driving working-class candidates and the dissident left out of its selections, built the desert with its own hands, and now presents a single drop of water as an oasis. Burnham is not the answer to that. He is its symptom.

Abandoned Again Tomorrow

Britain does not need a smoother manager of decline. It does not need Starmer with a regional accent, a warmer delivery, or the same character performed by a better actor. It does not need a new cast climbing into the same old costume. It needs a politics prepared to say, without apology, that the economy exists to serve the people and not the other way round. A politics willing to rebuild industry, restore public ownership where it matters, invest in council housing, defend wages, revive local government, and break with the permanent austerity that has been sold to us as prudence. It needs, in short, not a change of performer, but a change of play. And no one on that ballot is offering one.

So the people of Makerfield should put the same question to every candidate who knocks, Burnham included, and they should keep asking it long after the cameras have packed up, the activists have gone home, and the posters have peeled from the windows.

Are you here to represent us, or are we here to advance you?

That is the question the whole performance is staged to prevent them asking. 

Andy Burnham loves his Shakespeare. He quotes the Bard in his set-piece speeches and credits the Collected Works with giving him his love of English itself. So he will know A Midsummer Night’s Dream. He will know Nick Bottom, the overconfident weaver whom Puck fits with the head of an ass, before the enchanted Titania sinks adoringly at his feet, garlanding the donkey, cradling him, and mistaking the grotesque for the beloved.

There is the scene Labour is now performing.

The party is Titania, bewitched and breathless, crowning the transformation, certain at last that it has found something worth adoring. Burnham is its Bottom, fitted with a new head for an old performance. And Bottom was a weaver, fittingly enough, in a constituency whose looms and pits were carried off long ago.

But enchantment is not love. It is a spell. And every spell in that play is broken by morning.

The pantomime horse will not be replaced. It will only be turned around. The back is now the front, the front is now the back, and the crowd will be told to applaud a fresh beginning. But at the end of the day, it remains the same pantomime horse: same costume, same players, same farce, trotting in circles while the scenery collapses behind it.

And that is the final insult.

The people of Makerfield are not the audience this play was written for. They are the scenery. They are the borrowed backdrop, the honest faces in the campaign footage, the doorstep testimonials, the local colour, the necessary props in someone else’s leadership drama.

Their town has been turned into a stage. Their vote has been turned into a vehicle.

And their by-election has been turned into a coronation rehearsal for a party still too cowardly to admit that changing the front end of a pantomime horse is still a pantomime horse.

Vital To Confront

I had been waiting for Kenan Malik, and he does not disappoint:

For many black and Asian Britons of my generation, the Henry Nowak bodycam footage would have appeared tragically familiar. In the 1970s and 1980s not only was racism viscerally woven into the fabric of British society but the police were complicit in enforcing it. Few victims of racist attacks would have turned to the police for support because they knew they were more likely to be arrested than the racists.

Two-tier policing existed long before rightwing commentators discovered it. Certain groups have always been singled out as particular threats to social order and subject to differential treatment. When the targets of excessive policing were almost exclusively black people, or Irish republicans or working-class militants, many on the right celebrated it as the necessary enforcement of law and order.

What has changed in recent years is that the boundaries have shifted. The authorities have become more sensitive to issues of race and identity, while the policing of sections of the working class deemed to be racist has become more assertive.

When police officers arrived at the scene of Nowak’s murder, they took killer Vickrum Digwa’s claims of having been racially attacked as the truth, rather than as an allegation to be investigated, and refused initially to heed Nowak’s distress. For many on the right, the breakdown in the basics of policing was the consequence of wokeness and of DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) policies, and in particular the malign influence the Black Lives Matter movement gained after the murder of George Floyd in America in 2020. The assumption that an Asian man must be the victim and a white man the racist assailant was, according to one commentator, the product of an institution “reformed” to be “openly racist against white people”.

This makes little sense either factually or historically. Black people remain proportionately more likely to face police violence, to be tasered and to die following police restraint; Black children are more likely to be strip-searched.

At the same time DEI is not the start but the end point of a complex set of changes that began much earlier. In the 1980s, in response to the inner-city riots and widespread anger at racist policing, the authorities drew antiracist activists into the state system, providing funding and resources. Through this process, the goal of equality became redefined as a drive for diversity, while “racism awareness training” became entrenched, a development that, as long ago as 1985, the radical antiracist Ambalavaner Sivanandan described as “catharsis for guilt-stricken whites” and a “degradation” of the antiracist struggle.

As independent antiracist movements decayed, “antiracism” became identified with bureaucratised forms of diversity training, including within the police. It also became more Americanised. The “Police Anti-Racism Commitment”, a document that stirred much debate last week, is a good example. A flimsy piece of work, it seems to have been written mainly to showcase performative phrases like “it is not enough for us to not be racist” that echo American writers such as Ibram X Kendi.

The document also draws on British multicultural ideas. “Our commitment to racial equity,” it insists, “does not mean treating everyone ‘the same’.” It’s a phrase that reflects how, in the shift from equality to diversity, the very meaning of equality became transformed from signifying the right to be treated the same to denoting the right to be treated differently. Equality, as the influential Parekh Report on The Future of Multi-Ethnic Britain, published in 2000, put it, “must be defined in a culturally sensitive way”.

This is the backstory to contemporary debates about DEI. The bureaucratisation of antiracism helped degrade the meaning of equality and reinforced identitarian politics, on both left and right. It has also allowed racism to become rebranded in the language of white identity.

When rightwing politicians claim that “white people are now demonstrably the biggest victims of racism in Britain” or that, in the words of Nigel Farage, “the rights and privileges of white people matter less than those of ethnic minorities”, they are appealing not to the facts but to the emotional import of identitarian politics. Politicians who have been vocal in criticising “victim culture” are now at the forefront of promoting white victimhood.

It’s an approach that bleeds into straightforward racism, as in calls to “deport all Sikhs”, or American vice-president JD Vance’s surreal tweet claiming that Nowak was a victim of “the mass invasion of migrants” and that he “died the same way a civilization dies”. Those exploiting the tragedy to demonise immigration seem to forget that Nowak himself was of migrant descent and held dual British-Polish nationality. A decade ago, in the context of Brexit, there was often racist hostility towards Poles. Today, their whiteness has made them an acceptable foil to Black and Asian migrants.

The decay of antiracism into bureaucratic forms has warped the struggle for equality. It has also instilled a nervousness in talking about race that can, as one report put it, make people “reluctant to act” for fear of being called racist. We can see this in the grooming gangs scandal, and in the cases of the Southport killer Axel Rudakubana and Valdo Calocane, who murdered three people in Nottingham. It’s an issue that needs urgently addressing. That is very different, though, from claiming that white people are now the real victims or embracing the politics of white identity.

In his 1968 “Rivers of Blood” speech, Enoch Powell recounted a constituent’s prophecy that soon “the Black man will have the whip hand over the white man”. The contemporary version is: “They have more rights than us.”

It is a perspective as pernicious now as it was then. It is vital to confront it.

Gen Z In Revolt


Since the autumn of 2025, a wave of youth-led uprisings has spread across South Asia and beyond. The protests have had different triggers, but they are unified by a striking consistency of grievance: political corruption, economic exclusion and police repression. They are driven by a sense prevalent among Generation Z that today’s young people lack a political voice, and have been saddled with exceptional economic hardship.

Initiated and coordinated by digitally connected youth, these movements also share a common visual language: the One Piece pirate flag, which first emerged in Eiichiro Oda’s manga series in the late 1990s, and is one of the most popular anime franchises in the world. In the same way the pirates in the series raise the flag as a symbol of freedom against their corrupt government, protesters state that the flag is a ‘symbol of liberation against oppression’ – a message that has resonated across borders. As 23-year-old Eugero Vincent Liberato, a protester in Manila, put it: ‘Even though we have different languages and cultures, we speak the same language of oppression… that we should always fight for the future we deserve.’

This current wave of youth-led rebellion began in Indonesia in late August 2025. It was prompted by the news that Indonesian MPs were set to receive a monthly housing allowance of around $3,000. This is roughly 10 times the minimum wage in Jakarta, and many times more than the minimum wage in the poorer regions outside the capital. Many of these MPs were already earning well over $5,500 a month, placing them in a different financial universe to most Indonesians.

The news of the MPs’ housing allowance came against the background of the growing scandal of the government’s flagship free-school-meals programme. Launched in 2023 to tackle Indonesia’s severe child malnutrition crisis, the programme had, by 2025, been plunged into chaos. Contaminated meals had led to the poisoning of more than 9,000 children, with at least one child reported to have died. For many Indonesians, the contrast was impossible to ignore: a political class enriching itself while a programme meant to feed children had left thousands seriously ill.

What started as peaceful demonstrations led by the Indonesian Student Executive Board soon snowballed into a full-blown nationwide uprising against a self-serving political elite. Protests soon spread to 32 out of Indonesia’s 38 provinces. Rioters stormed parliament complexes, torched government buildings and police stations. Amid looting and arson, the violence left around 10 people dead, nearly 500 injured and led to the arrest of over 1,000 protesters. Following nationwide workers’ protests across all 38 provinces on 1 May this year, tensions show little sign of easing.

Shortly after the Indonesian unrest began, Nepal’s youth-led uprising erupted on 4 September last year. Referred to by the media as ‘Gen Z demonstrations‘, their initial trigger was the government’s decision to block access to several social-media platforms, as part of a campaign to crack down on ‘misuse’. Dominated by students in their twenties and teens, the protests quickly escalated. Protesters stormed and set fire to government buildings in Kathmandu, including parts of the prime minister’s office complex, while police headquarters and ministry offices were attacked in coordinated unrest across the capital. In total, 76 people were killed and more than 2,500 injured. Within days of the uprising beginning, the government had been forced from office and the prime minister, Khadga Prasad Oli, had been toppled.

The government’s attempt to regulate online expression may have been the trigger for the protests. But the core grievances in Nepal were, like those in Indonesia, elite corruption and youth poverty. As 22-year-old protester Ranjana Kami explained to one media outlet, ‘politicians are unchanged, unaccountable and corrupt’. Indeed, Nepal has cycled through 32 governments since 1990, and ranks 109 out of 182 countries on Transparency International’s corruption index. Youth unemployment stands at 21 per cent, the highest in South and Southeast Asia. Perhaps most tellingly, around 1,500 people leave the country every day in search of work abroad. ‘I hope the future will be free from corruption… I want the youth who have gone abroad to return’, said 19-year-old Srijana Bhujel, a garment factory worker and protester.

This wave of youthful protest soon spread beyond Indonesia and Nepal and into the Philippines. On 21 September last year, tens of thousands of mostly young demonstrators flooded Manila, Cebu and Davao in anti-corruption protests over the multibillion-dollar flood-control scandal, with officials and politicians accused of pocketing funds designated for vital flood defences. These were explicitly youth-led rallies, organised largely through TikTok, Facebook and Telegram networks. As in Indonesia and Nepal, the One Piece pirate flag was prominent among the crowds at Luneta Park and at the EDSA shrine in Manila. What began as outrage over an embezzlement scandal became a broader youth revolt against elite impunity.

The youth-led revolts soon extended westward, across the Indian Ocean. The protests in Madagascar, in late 2025, began over water shortages and rolling blackouts, but quickly escalated – as they had done elsewhere – into a broader rejection of corrupt governance. One young activist told The Guardian that the protesters wanted ‘radical change of the system‘ because it maintained ‘corruption and oppression of the poorest’. The One Piece flag again appeared, this time outside South Asia, and was even adapted into a localised Malagasy version.

What has been happening in South Asia and its near abroad has also been happening elsewhere, too. In Peru, in Latin America, youth-led protests, ignited by a succession of corruption scandals, erupted in late September 2025. Police fired rubber pellets and tear gas, leaving one dead and hundreds injured.

Tensions flared again on 28 January this year. Thousands of National University of San Marcos students were joined by other student groups, the relatives of those killed in a 2023 wave of state repression and public-transport workers, on a march toward Peru’s national congress. Protesters repeatedly described the state in now familiar terms, claiming it had ‘normalised corruption and extortion’. And as elsewhere, the One Piece flag was fluttered above the insurgent crowds.

In late 2025, Mexico had also erupted in youthful rage. The protests were triggered by the assassination of Uruapan mayor Carlos Manzo, a killing linked to the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. The murder served as a flashpoint for wider anger at president Claudia Sheinbaum’s government for its inability to confront organised crime. Thousands marched under One Piece flags, as protesters stormed buildings and confronted security forces.

We’ve seen evidence that young people’s dissatisfaction and anger are congealing into a political force in parts of Africa, too. After Uganda’s disputed presidential election on 15 January this year, violent protests erupted on to the streets of the capital, Kampala. The demonstrators, in their teens and early twenties, had been mobilised by popstar Bobi Wine’s unsuccessful opposition campaign. This was focussed, as Wine himself put it, on corruption: ‘Corruption is Uganda’s greatest evil… It is corruption that has stolen the future of the people of Uganda. Many of you… have seen corruption rob all your youthful and useful days.’

Wine had touched a nerve. With more than 75 per cent of the population under 30 and youth unemployment running at nearly 50 per cent, demographic pressure and economic exclusion once again proved a combustible mix. On the first night of the protests, at least seven people were killed in clashes between police and opposition supporters. Reuters later reported that, by 23 January, 2,000 opposition supporters had been detained, while army chief Muhoozi Kainerugaba said 30 had been killed in the crackdown.

In Kenya, the same demographic and economic tensions have been at play. Young people have been squeezed by a deepening cost-of-living crisis and a labour market unable to absorb the 800,000 young people entering the workforce each year. The result has been ever-rising levels of youth poverty and unemployment. Little wonder that in June 2024, it was Generation Z at the forefront of large-scale protests against tax and price rises. ‘We are the Gen Zs, we were able to mobilise ourselves’, protester Zaha Indimuli told journalists. ‘We use TikTok as a space to be able to not only have young people come to protest but to educate them on the why.’

And in Morocco last October, similar grievances culminated in large youth-led protests. These once again spiralled into violent clashes with the authorities.

The generational uprisings in Uganda, Kenya and Morocco do not share the One Piece iconography with their equivalents in South Asia and Latin America. But they do draw their youthful energy from the same socio-economic source – that is, the economic and political exclusion of swathes of older teenagers and younger twentysomethings. They are increasingly distrustful of those in power and are beginning to push back. The protests are not coordinated between countries. But they are recognisable expressions of the same emerging Gen Z populism.

It may be tempting to dismiss this generational instability as something that afflicts poorer or less developed countries in South Asia, Latin America and Africa. After all, most of the societies affected are experiencing a demographic ‘youth bulge’ – that is, they have a far larger proportion of people in the younger age brackets than the global average. In Nepal, 21 per cent of the population are aged between 16 and 25, compared with the global average of 15 per cent. Likewise, Indonesia has unusually large Generation Z and Millennial cohorts – 52 per cent of Indonesians are aged between 18 and 39 years old. Sociologists have shown that youth bulges in societies that are unable to incorporate a large influx of young adults, economically and politically, have long been associated with far greater instability.

Developed nations have very different demographic profiles. They tend to be aging societies, with higher proportions of people in the older age brackets than in the younger. Yet the underlying problems that have ignited the insurrections in less developed nations are increasingly present in the West, too. Western youngsters face similar problems and have similar grievances to their peers in South Asia or Latin America.

Across Europe, young people are experiencing economic and political marginalisation. They are certainly finding it increasingly difficult to enter the labour market. As of February 2026, Eurostat recorded 2.9 million unemployed under-25s in the European Union – which puts the youth unemployment rate at over 15 per cent. At the same time as work is becoming harder to come by, the cost of living is becoming prohibitive. The European Parliament’s youth survey found that 40 per cent of Europeans aged 16 to 30 cite rising prices as their biggest concern, with a further 31 per cent stating governments need to focus more on providing economic opportunities.

In Britain, the problems are just as acute. Between December 2025 and February 2026, 713,000 young people aged 16 to 24 were unemployed – 70,000 more than the previous year. The unemployment rate for young people at the start of the year was at 15.8 per cent, up from 14.6 per cent the year before. Add in exorbitant housing prices (the median home in England now costs nearly eight times the median annual earnings) and record levels of student debt (the average graduate leaves university with around £53,000 in debt) and you have conditions in which generational grievance and anger can easily flourish.

This is all aggravated by a rapidly declining sense of trust in the political system – a sense, in short, that it is incapable of responding to young people’s demands. The evidence is all about us. Keir Starmer is historically the most unpopular prime minister in history. And he’s just the tip of the iceberg. The consequences of successive Conservative government failures to live up manifesto promises on everything from Brexit to immigration, and the constant scandals involving both Tory and Labour administrations have cemented a perception of the political establishment as incompetent and duplicitous. This is not dissimilar to the view held by young people elsewhere of their own governments as corrupt. Indeed, Transparency International says the UK has fallen to its lowest ever corruption perception score.

Young Brits’ anger is certainly transforming their political outlook. As polling from Find Out Now shows, young people’s loathing of the political establishment is prompting a shift in their voting intentions. Many are now moving away from traditional party politics towards more radical solutions – 41 per cent of under-30s intend to vote for the Green Party, with Reform UK and Restore Britain both at around 10 per cent each. This more radical sentiment is reinforced by Channel 4 research from last year, which found that 47 per cent of Gen Z agreed with the statement ‘the entire way our society is organised must be radically changed through revolution’.

All that said, neither the UK nor the EU are Indonesia or Nepal. The middle-class student bodies of Cambridge or Bristol are unlikely to kickstart a street-focussed uprising. If your sensibilities are inflamed by micro-aggressions and misgendering, you are unlikely to face down riot shields and tear gas.

But something is undeniably stirring. With the looming economic consequences of the Iran War set to hit the UK and EU this summer, the actions of South Asian youngsters should serve as a loud warning shot to any Western government that thinks it can continue to ignore youth immobility and perceived elite corruption.

At best, the West may discover it has incubated a generation indifferent to the collapse of its institutions. At worst, it could face a reckoning similar to that faced by governments elsewhere.

Young people’s demands are clear. They want the opportunities and the political voice that have been denied to them for too long. The consequences of failing to respond to young people’s needs could be dire for society as a whole.