Thursday, 21 May 2026

The Hiding Is Over

Paul Knaggs is rightly delighted:

The EHRC Code Ends Eight Months of Confusion: But Will Labour Act?

After eight months of delay, the Equality and Human Rights Commission’s statutory Code of Practice has been formally laid before Parliament. For every NHS trust, council, charity and quango that has spent years hiding behind confusion, the hiding is over.

The code of practice is not a pamphlet. It is not a recommendation. It is not a consultation exercise or a diversity working group’s output. Laid before Parliament on 21 May 2026, it is statutory guidance, approved by the Secretary of State, carrying the weight of the Equality Act 2010, and grounded in the Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling in For Women Scotland v Scottish Ministers. Courts and tribunals must take it into account. Lawyers must advise their clients by it. Service providers ignore it at their legal peril.

This publication should not require celebration. It should have been obvious from the moment of the Supreme Court judgment more than a year ago. But in a country where obvious things are routinely made obscure when they inconvenience the right people, it is worth stating plainly: “The law has been confirmed, the Code has been laid, and the age of institutional excuse has ended.”

Every organisation that spent the last year hiding behind “confusion” now has nothing left to hide behind. That is not a culture war. That is the law.

WHAT THE CODE ACTUALLY SAYS

The Code runs to more than three hundred pages. Its core meaning fits in a paragraph. Sex, in the Equality Act 2010, means biological sex. Not certificated sex. Not self-declared identity. Biological sex: the material, observable, unchosen fact of what a human being is. The Code states plainly that a person’s sex remains their biological sex whether or not they hold a Gender Recognition Certificate. A trans man is, in Equality Act terms, female. A trans woman is, in Equality Act terms, male.

Service providers can lawfully provide single-sex services where doing so is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim. The Code gives examples: a women-only hospital ward, a women-only changing room, a domestic abuse refuge. It sets out the factors a provider must weigh: whether users may be undressed, whether they can leave or access an alternative, whether the service is connected to male violence against women, whether physical differences between the sexes are relevant to the delivery of that service.

On sport, the Code is equally clear. Sex-based rules in gender-affected activities should be applied on the basis of biological sex. Trans people should not be included in single-sex competitions for the sex with which they identify.

And on the question many providers have been quietly banking on, the Code is blunt. If a provider admits trans people to a service intended for the opposite sex, that service can no longer rely on the Equality Act’s single-sex exceptions. A women-only service that admits males is not a women-only service. The legal fiction collapses. The exception evaporates.

A women-only service that admits males is not a women-only service. The Code does not say this diplomatically. It says it legally.

THE COST OF EIGHT MONTHS 

The Code was not published in September 2025, when the Supreme Court’s judgment was already settled law. It was not published in October, or November, or through the winter months that followed. For eight months, public bodies were left in a state of manufactured uncertainty, and a good many of them used that uncertainty as cover to maintain policies that had no legal foundation.

The Watershed Arts Cinema in Bristol told the BBC it had already installed gender-neutral facilities with full floor-to-ceiling cubicles. Its chief executive described the long wait for guidance as “confusing and toxic,” adding that changes would be costly for organisations like theirs. That is a candid admission, and it deserves a candid response: the cost of confusion is always borne by someone. In this case, as in most cases, it has been borne by women.

The organisations that used the delay as cover are not all arts centres trying to be inclusive. Some are NHS trusts that placed biological males in female wards. Some are local councils that gutted the single-sex character of their services in compliance with Stonewall’s now-discredited Workplace Equality Index. Some are universities. Some are charities, including domestic abuse charities, funded by the public to serve women who have survived male violence, which opened their services to men on the basis of self-declaration alone.

Those organisations were not confused. They made choices. They will now have to answer for them.

THE CLASS DIMENSION THAT NEVER GETS NAMED 

There is something that the gender ideology debate almost never confronts, something that Labour Heartlands has consistently placed at the centre of its analysis: this is a class question.

The women most affected by the erosion of single-sex spaces are not the women with platforms, not the women who can afford private healthcare, not the women who work in organisations progressive enough to offer multiple facility options and enough staff to enforce them. They are the women who use public changing rooms because they cannot afford a gym with private cubicles. They are the women who depend on NHS wards because they have no private health insurance. They are the women in prisons. They are the women in refuges. They are the women at the bottom of the income distribution, who cannot opt out of shared spaces because they have no alternative.

For those women, the principle is not abstract. The changing room, the hospital ward, the refuge room: these are not theoretical rights. They are the material conditions of ordinary life. And when institutions strip those spaces of their single-sex character in the name of inclusion, the cost is not distributed equally. It falls on the women who can least afford to bear it.

The women who can least afford to bear the cost are the ones who have been made to bear it. That is not progress. That is a betrayal dressed in progressive language.

LABOUR’S RECKONING WITH ITSELF 

This publication has made no secret of its view that the Labour Party under Keir Starmer failed women on this question. The failure was not accidental. It was ideological, in the precise sense that word deserves: a preference for the comfort of certain political networks over the material interests of the working-class women Labour claims to represent.

Starmer’s equivocation over whether trans women are women was not a clumsy answer in a difficult interview. It was a studied response calibrated for a particular political audience. His government’s delay in publishing EHRC guidance was not administrative slowness. Baroness Falkner, Chair of the EHRC, made public what she observed: that the government was dragging its feet, that there was reluctance at ministerial level, that the pressure of trans rights organisations was being weighed against the Supreme Court’s unanimous judgment.

This is what ideological capture looks like in practice. Not jackboots. Not a single dramatic betrayal. A series of reasonable-sounding delays, all pointing in the same direction, all serving the same interest, and none of them serving working-class women.

The Code is now before Parliament. Labour MPs will have 40 days to pray against it if they choose. Any attempt to dilute, delay, or discard the Code through the parliamentary process will be a public act, on the record, attributable to named individuals. Women will be watching. 

TRANS RIGHTS AND MATERIAL REALITY: THEY ARE NOT THE SAME ARGUMENT 

Labour Heartlands has said this before and will say it again, because it bears repetition in a debate that generates more heat than light. Nobody serious argues that trans people should be harassed, abused, or left without facilities. Trans people have rights in law. Those rights are real and they should be protected.

What the gender lobby has demanded, however, is not equal provision. It has demanded access to women’s provision. The Code now makes the distinction explicit. Where trans people cannot access a service as currently constituted, providers are expected to consider whether a third or gender-neutral option can be offered. The BBC’s own broadcast coverage of the Code’s publication stated this plainly: providers should ensure trans people are not left without services, while single-sex services must operate on the basis of biological sex.

That is the balance. It is not complicated. It requires only that institutions stop pretending the law says something it does not say, and start applying the law as it actually stands. 

PARLIAMENT’S CHOICE 

The Code now sits before the House of Commons and the House of Lords for a statutory period of 40 days. If neither House rejects it, the Secretary of State can bring it into force. This is the parliamentary process working as it should: transparency, scrutiny, accountability.

What it requires of Parliament is something in increasingly short supply: the courage to let a plain legal reality stand without hedging, qualifying, or manoeuvring around it for the benefit of lobby groups with more social media presence than democratic legitimacy.

Women’s rights campaigners, who won the Supreme Court case and have waited patiently while institutions dithered and ministers equivocated, have said it themselves: organisations that have been holding on to their old policies have been breaching the law. There is no reason to delay further. That includes employers and service providers alike.

The Code confirms that providing only mixed-sex services, without any separate or single-sex option, could amount to direct or indirect sex discrimination against women, and unlawful harassment in contexts involving undress, vulnerability, privacy, dignity, or male violence. That is not a political opinion. It is a legal finding, set out in statutory guidance, laid before Parliament. 

Parliament now faces a simple choice: let the law stand, or explain to the women of this country why it should not. 

THE FAILURE OF THE UNIONS

The arrival of the Code is not the end of the story. It is the beginning of a new phase: enforcement, litigation, and institutional accountability. The organisations that spent years running policies incompatible with the law will now face legal exposure. Women who were excluded from services they were entitled to will have clearer grounds for complaint and legal action. Employers who maintained self-identification policies as if the Supreme Court had never spoken will need to reckon with what they have been doing.

Nowhere has the betrayal been more complete, or more instructive, than in the trade union movement. Unions exist to protect workers. That is their single, irreducible purpose. Yet when women workers needed them most, many chose ideology over membership. The Royal College of Nursing did not defend Sandie Peggie, the Scottish nurse suspended by NHS Fife after she objected to changing alongside a biological male colleague: her own lawyer argued the RCN had contributed to her mistreatment across an eighteen-month disciplinary ordeal that cost Peggie her health and her livelihood, and which NHS Fife ultimately resolved by conceding there was insufficient evidence of any misconduct.

Peggie is now suing the RCN for that failure. The same RCN had, tellingly, written to County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust to inform the trust it was breaking the law by failing to provide single-sex changing facilities for its female staff, after eight nurses at Darlington Memorial Hospital were left sharing a changing room with a biological male who allegedly watched them undress. The union found its voice in England while staying silent in Scotland.

The incoming General Secretary of Unison, the largest healthcare union in the country with half a million NHS members, then announced she would not feel comfortable representing a member with gender-critical beliefs; a legal expert noted that such a refusal would itself constitute unlawful discrimination under the Equality Act.

And in Leeds, a Muslim woman and senior programme manager at NHS England, who holds gender-critical beliefs and suffers from PTSD resulting from male sexual violence, has just won an employment tribunal against her employer after NHS England’s 2017 Trans Equality Policy required her to share single-sex toilet and changing facilities with biological males.

The tribunal found the policy amounted to indirect sex discrimination; NHS England had itself acknowledged that Muslim women, women with PTSD, and women in general suffered a disadvantage as a result. The Code now lays down what unions should always have defended. The question is whether they will defend it going forward, or continue to privilege the demands of trans activist networks over the elementary rights of their female members.

The answer to those questions has never changed. The Code simply makes it harder to pretend otherwise.

Non Sanz Droict?

Despite having received a tax-free gift of five million pounds either for his security or as his reward for Brexit, Nigel Farage has managed to acquire a County Court Judgment for an unpaid bill of £9,400. He claims that until Channel 4 News approached him about it, then he had not known. He had not known that he had a CCJ against his name, and that for nearly 10 grand? Pull the other one. Or he had not known that he had ever owed the money? Pull the first one again.

Thankfully, Reform UK has a positive embarrassment of talent. Last year, Reform's George Finch became the Leader of Warwickshire County Council, with its budget of two billion pounds. Two weeks ago, he was also elected to Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council. Last week, he became Leader of the 15-strong Reform Group, which had become the largest on the council. And yesterday, he became the Leader of Nuneaton and Bedworth, while remaining Leader of Warwickshire. He is 19 years old. Nineteen.

Five Go Adventuring Again?

Labour in these parts has periodically been running decoy candidates since time immemorial. If dominant parties in other parts of the country have not also been doing so, then my respect for them has been diminished accordingly. But there is no danger of that in Tameside, as Alec Herron writes:

The Mill can reveal that five arrests have been made following our investigation into claims that fake independents were put forward by Tameside Labour in May’s local elections, in order to split opposition votes.

Four men and a woman aged between 23 and 47 were arrested this morning in the Ashton-under-Lyne area, as a result of what the police are calling ‘illegality and criminality’ in the run up to the St Peter’s ward election on May 7th. The arrests were made on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud, and police investigations are ongoing.

Our investigation heard that internal messages had been circulated in Labour WhatsApp groups leading to the election, discussing the tactic of planting stooge Independents in order to split the vote of opposition candidates who could benefit from defecting Labour supporters. The messages were allegedly instantly deleted by other group members, and instructions sent to not discuss the topic in that forum. The Mill investigation linked three of the four official backers of alleged ‘fake’ Independent candidates in St Peter’s – Marie Fairhurst and Muhammad Ali – to the campaign launch party of Labour candidate Atta Ul-Rasool.

Read our full investigation here.


Angela Rayner has become embroiled in a row linked to alleged electoral fraud at her local council.

Four men and a woman, all aged between 23 and 47, were arrested on Thursday morning on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud, Greater Manchester Police said.

It follows claims that fake independent candidates were entered on the ballot for Tameside borough council, in the heart of Ms Rayner’s constituency of Ashton-under-Lyne, to split votes for opposition parties.

The alleged plot was reportedly carried out by people associated with Tameside Labour group, with one discussion said to have taken place in Ms Rayner’s kitchen.

Labour candidate Atta ul-Rasool, the former vice-chairman of the Ashton-under-Lyne Labour branch, was elected after beating the second-placed candidate, Ahmed Mehmood, an independent, by 177 votes.

The two alleged fake candidates received 291 votes between them. St Peter’s ward was the only one in Tameside to return a Labour councillor on May 7, with the remaining 18 being won by Reform UK, resulting in no single party having overall control of the council.

The Telegraph understands that the former deputy prime minister says the developments have nothing to do with her, and that any suggestion she has been involved in or aware of any alleged wrongdoing is baseless.

The arrests come at a critical time for the Labour Party in Manchester. It is less than four weeks before a crucial by-election in Makerfield in which Andy Burnham, the Mayor of Greater Manchester, will seek to become the MP and then challenge Sir Keir Starmer for the party leadership.

An investigation by the Manchester Mill website reported claims that the fake independents were put forward by people associated with the Tameside Labour group. Philip Wilson-Marks, the former vice-chairman of the Ashton-under-Lyne Community Labour Party, allegedly told the Mill that he was approached twice to propose the fake independent tactic, with one of these approaches taking place in Ms Rayner’s kitchen.

A woman in the area with the same name as one of the alleged fake candidates had no idea she was on the ballot paper, according to the Tameside Correspondent, a local media outlet, which approached her.

Fake candidates ‘discussed on WhatsApp groups’

Manchester Mill reported allegations that internal messages had been posted in WhatsApp groups connected to the Labour Party, discussing planting fake independent candidates on the ballot paper.

The tactic would split the votes going against the Labour candidate. The messages were allegedly deleted instantly by other members of the group, with instructions not to discuss the topic in the chat.

A spokesman for Greater Manchester Police said: “This morning, officers in Tameside arrested five people on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud as part of an investigation into alleged offences committed leading up to the local elections.

“In the days leading up to and following the election on May 7, we received reports surrounding concerns about candidates within the St Peter’s ward.

“Following initial enquiries last week, we have launched a full investigation into the allegations.

“The work is specifically investigating the process of how candidates were put forward and represented in the ward, and if this adhered to the relevant legislation and electoral procedures.

“The five people – four men and a woman aged between 23 and 47 – were arrested at addresses in Tameside this morning. They remain in custody for questioning.

“We are working closely with the Electoral Commission and local partners as part of our enquiries.”

The Telegraph understands that Labour is not aware that any of the individuals arrested are party figures.

A Labour Party spokesman said: “No evidence has been presented of any Labour Party involvement in these allegations. We categorically reject any suggestion that the party was involved.

“The local Labour team is focused on what really matters – delivering for residents and protecting services, not playing political games. We are unable to provide any further comment while police inquiries are underway.”

While Sundus Abdi writes:

Five people have been arrested as part of a police investigation into allegations that fake independent candidates were used to influence the outcome of a local election in Tameside.

Greater Manchester police said four men and a woman, aged between 23 and 47, were arrested on suspicion of fraud offences on Thursday morning in the Ashton-under-Lyne area.

The force said the arrests related to the “process of how candidates were put forward and represented in the ward, and if this adhered to the relevant legislation and electoral procedures”.

The Mill, a Manchester-based publication, had investigated claims that individuals were encouraged to stand as independent candidates in the St Peter’s ward election in May to split opposition votes and benefit Labour.

Atta Ul-Rasool, the Labour candidate, won the St Peter’s ward seat with 177 votes more than Ahmed Mehmood, an independent candidate, and was the only Labour candidate to win a seat in Tameside.

Two other independent candidates, Marie Fairhurst and Muhammad Ali, received a combined 291 votes. The Mill reported that both candidates had little visible campaign presence and did not respond to attempts to contact them during the election campaign.

After the result, the Tameside Correspondent reported that Fairhurst said she had not been aware she was standing as a candidate.

Kaleel Khan, a councillor who managed Mehmood’s campaign, told The Mill he intended to challenge the election result at Tameside council.

No charges have been brought. The police investigation continues.

A Wealth of Opportunities

In 1988, the taxation of wealth at a lower rate than earnings was corrected by Margaret Thatcher and Nigel Lawson. But 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 50 years ago this December. Now, though, even Wes Streeting wants to tax capital gains at the same rate as earnings.

Yet Thatcher must never have seen a banknote, since she thought that the State had no money of its own. In reality, the issuing of currency is an act of the State, which is literally the creator of all money. As a sovereign state with its own free-floating, fiat currency, the United Kingdom has as much of that currency as it chooses to issue to itself, with readily available fiscal and monetary means of controlling any inflationary effect, means that therefore need to be under democratic political control. The responsibility of the Government is to ensure the supply of goods and services to be purchased with that currency.

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

That is what both fiscal policy and monetary policy are for: to give the currency its value by controlling inflation to a politically chosen extent while discouraging certain politically chosen forms of behaviour, and while encouraging others, including economic equality, which is fundamental to social cohesion and thus to patriotism. If there were “no such thing as society”, and Thatcher really did say that, then there could be no such thing as the society that was the family, or the society that was the nation. But there is no debt. It is an accounting trick. The Treasury, which is the State, has mostly issued bonds to the Bank of England, which is the State. Even when those bonds were held by the big scary “bond market”, then the State could simply issue itself with enough of its own free-floating, fiat currency to redeem them. Say it again that there is no debt. There is no debt. There is no debt.

The money can always be found for wars. But taxation is not where the State’s money comes from. Nothing is “unaffordable”, every recession is discretionary on the part of the Government, and there is no such thing as “taxpayers’ money”. Within and under that understanding, a tax of one to two per cent on assets above £10 million could make up the abolition of the two-child benefit cap 17 times over, while merely taxing each of Britain’s 173 billionaires down to one billion pounds per head would raise £1.1 trillion, an entire year’s tax take. And so on. With the Gulf looking a lot less attractive, the tiny numbers of people directly affected would not get a better deal anywhere where they might ever wish to live. Even the putative Iranian nuclear cloud has a silver lining.

There was never any case for retaining the two-child benefit cap or for withdrawing the Winter Fuel Payment from anyone, and there is none for cutting the benefits of the sick and disabled as if that would cure them or find them jobs,  or for increasing workers’ bus fares by 50 per cent, or for failing to freeze Council Tax, or for threatening to abolish the single person discount, or for increasing employers’ National Insurance contributions so as to destroy charities and small businesses while making it impossible for big businesses to take on staff or to increase wages, or for forcing working farmers of many decades’ standing who formally inherited their parents’ farms to sell them to giant American agribusinesses, or for any other form of austerity.

There is an unanswerable economic and moral case for the full compensation of, among others, the victims of Orgreave, Grenfell Tower, the Windrush scandal, the Post Office scandal, and the contaminated blood scandal, as well as the nuclear test veterans, the WASPI women, and those, such as Andrew Malkinson, who had been wrongfully imprisoned. All while renationalising the railways, the water companies, the Royal Mail that pretty much seems to have given up, and the energy companies that have tripled their standing charges since 2021 while their captive “regulator” increased their cap to order.

Declined To Avoid

Ethan Shone writes:

The government has no official records of meetings that top civil servants held with senior figures and clients from Peter Mandelson’s lobbying firm last year, including an undeclared meeting with oil giants and private equity firms, openDemocracy can reveal.

Global Counsel went into administration earlier this year after details of Mandelson’s close relationship with Jeffrey Epstein were revealed in the Epstein Files, including emails showing how he sought the billionaire paedophile’s advice on establishing the firm.

But before its collapse, Global Counsel’s business was booming as it and its founder established close ties to Keir Starmer’s Labour Party.

Ahead of the 2024 election, the company donated a member of staff to support Labour’s work on financial services policy development and produced promotional materials, which openDemocracy has seen, touting its significant access to the party. “Our clients’ engagement pays dividends in the long run,” it promised, adding that it was “uniquely placed” to help corporate clients “establish relationships that outlive the election and deliver policy dividends on the other side”.

By the end of that year, Starmer had appointed Mandelson as the UK’s US ambassador, and Global Counsel had seen its UK revenue surge by 75% since 2022, from £7.9m to £13.9m. The business also took on over 20 new clients in the first quarter after Labour’s win – more than in the previous five years combined – including Palantir, Shell and TikTok.

Now, openDemocracy can reveal that the most senior civil servant from the Department for Business and Trade and a senior Treasury official met with Global Counsel’s representatives several times last year, including at a roundtable the firm hosted for its clients.

No records from the discussions – including notes or minutes – exist, the government told openDemocracy in response to a Freedom of Information request.

Our investigation comes as parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee takes the rare step of voicing “grave concerns” about the government’s failure to keep proper records from official meetings, following its review of documents set to be published relating to Mandelson's time as US ambassador.

ISC chair Lord Beamish wrote to the government expressing a number of concerns, including over a “lack of an audit trail – in terms of agendas, minutes and records of conversations,” which he described as “unacceptable in government.”

Shadowy meetings

In January last year, Gareth Davies, then permanent secretary at the Department for Business and Trade, met Global Counsel’s most senior adviser on business and trade, Geoffrey Norris, at the exclusive Royal Horseguards Hotel in Whitehall.

The meeting was useful enough that four months later, in May 2025, the pair returned to the same hotel to chat some more.

Yet little is known about what they discussed. The department quite vaguely recorded the purpose of these meetings as “to discuss latest business updates” and “discussion on growth”, respectively.

When openDemocracy asked for more information, the government said it had none.

Davies then spoke at a Global Counsel dinner event in early June and attended a client roundtable event that the firm hosted, which Norris chaired, at its offices weeks later.

There, the senior civil servant spoke with executives from several Global Counsel clients, including oil giants Shell and Equinor, plus JP Morgan and Blackstone. But you wouldn’t know that from the government’s published transparency requests, which fail to mention that clients were present. Their attendance was revealed to openDemocracy only in documents obtained via Freedom of Information requests.

Norris was not the only Global Counsel member Davies was in touch with. In July last year, he met with Benjamin Wegg-Prosser, the company’s co-founder and CEO, “to discuss the industrial strategy”.

Both Norris and Wegg-Prosser are New Labour alumni. Norris was a top business aide in Tony Blair and Gordon Brown’s governments, and later advised Mandelson while he was business secretary, while Wegg-Prosser worked as an adviser to Mandelson before becoming Blair’s director of strategic communications.

When Labour lost power at the 2010 election, Mandelson and Wegg-Prosser established Global Counsel, which Norris joined soon afterwards, remaining at the company until its collapse in February.

Wegg-Prosser was reportedly offered a peerage and a role as Labour’s investment minister in September 2024, but declined to avoid stepping down as Global Counsel’s CEO. He eventually quit in February of this year after it was revealed that he’d had extensive contact with Jeffrey Epstein, including traveling to New York to meet Epstein in 2010, two years after Epstein was convicted for soliciting prostitution from a minor. Global Counsel went into administration weeks after Wegg-Prosser’s exit.

Davies is a long-serving civil servant who recently left DBT to become the top official at the Home Office. He began his career in government alongside Davies, Wegg Prosser and Mandelson, as a Downing Street adviser during the New Labour years.

A DBT spokesperson said: “Transparency returns are published in line with Cabinet Office guidance, and the Civil Service Code has not been broken.”

‘We need full transparency’

Global Counsel also enjoyed significant access to the Treasury under Labour – in some cases with no record of what it lobbied ministers and officials about.

A Global Counsel lobbyist specialising in financial services was seconded to the office of Labour’s first City minister, Tulip Siddiq, before she resigned in January 2025 over alleged corruption links to her aunt’s ousted government in Bangladesh. The staffer’s secondment was a registrable donation-in-kind valued at more than £35,000, and not against parliament’s rules.

In November 2024, Siddiq, who was also economic secretary to the Treasury, met with one of Global Counsel’s most senior figures, its financial services lead, Rebecca Park, to discuss “growth and competitiveness of the financial services sector”. The government declined to provide any details of what was discussed after openDemocracy submitted an FOI request last year.

Later, in July 2025, the Treasury’s director general of financial services, Gwyneth Nurse, met Global Counsel’s Benedict Brogan, a former journalist-turned banking lobbyist, at the Wolseley to “discuss the UK regulatory environment”. Again, the government told openDemocracy it held no further record of what was discussed at the meeting.

Follow-up correspondence obtained by openDemocracy shows Brogan invited Nurse to a client roundtable event in the autumn, with the suggested date of 20 October. Government transparency data shows Nurse attended a Global Counsel dinner event on 20 October, though the records do not show which of the firm’s clients were in attendance.

Financial deregulation has been a significant feature of Labour’s policy offering to the City, which has won the party rare public shows of support from some of the world’s most influential financiers, notably JP Morgan’s Jamie Dimon and Jon Gray of Blackstone. Both firms have, incidentally, worked with Global Counsel.

The lobbying firm was also reportedly contracted by other financial giants as part of an ultimately successful campaign against an increase in ‘carried interest,’ the reduced rate of tax that dealmakers pay on their profits from private equity deals, which can often save them millions.

Mick McAteer, a former regulator and the director of the Financial Inclusion and Markets Centre, said the finance sector should “serve the interests of the real economy, environment, and society”.

“But, finance sector lobbyists now exercise undue influence over finance sector policy. As a result, we are seeing a programme of deregulation and corporate welfare designed to promote finance sector growth, which could ultimately harm our interests. We need full transparency on meetings between policymakers and finance lobbyists.”

The government has previously faced significant criticism over its failure to declare a meeting in early 2025 between Starmer, Mandelson and Palantir.

Now, its failure to keep records of the meetings it has had with Global Counsel and its clients appears to breach the Civil Service Code, under which all civil servants are legally required to “keep accurate official records”.

Separate guidance on managing records in ministers' private offices states explicitly that officials are “bound by the government's commitment to keep records of meetings with outside interest groups”.

Duncan Hames, senior director of policy at Transparency UK, said: “When government transparency is treated as a tick-box exercise, or ignored altogether, this undermines our right to know how decisions are made and leaves room for undue influence.

“In this case, as in so many others, it is clear that the current system is not working as it should. It's time for the UK government to follow Scotland's lead and publish a comprehensive register of those lobbying government.”

openDemocracy contacted Ben Wegg Prosser and Benedict Brogan but neither responded.

Summer Lightening?

Free bus rides for children aged 15 and under during August, the fuel duty increase pushed back from September to December, and a 12-month vehicle tax holiday for hauliers. All well and good, but you would have got more out of Boris Johnson, whose Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, went on as Prime Minister to try to get the supermarkets to sign up to voluntary caps on the price of staple foods.

I am not keen on giving control of food prices to Rachel Reeves. But in the last couple of days, and in the midst of considerably worse food inflation than three years ago, such caps have been screamed down as the end of civilisation, and those howls from the seven-figure salaried bosses of supposedly barely profitable corporations have carried the day. If their market were as cutthroat as they claimed, then no such measure would ever have occurred to anyone.

And how many of their employees are paid in-work benefits to be able to buy the products that they handled? Two out of five Universal Credit claimants are in work, even though there should be no such thing as in-work poverty, the mere existence of which proves that the economic system needs to be replaced. At the very least, no one with a full-time job should be poor. How can that be a controversial thing to say?

Not In His Place?

This year, the late May Bank Holiday does in fact fall on the real Whit Monday, so Nigel Farage has only today to turn up to Parliament before what is still called the Whitsun recess.

Farage has not voted since 18 March, he has not spoken since 25 March, and he has not tabled a written question since as long ago as 10 February last year. He is regularly mentioned on the floor of the House, when it is always necessary to add that he is "not in his place".

It is not as if he is in Clacton. Yet Keir Starmer effectively gave that seat to Farage, with the ghoulish Labour Party staff ordering Jovan Owusu-Nepaul not even to set foot there, much less to campaign. He still took almost as many votes as Farage's margin of victory, so who knows what might have happened if he had been allowed out on the stump?