Thursday, 18 June 2026

Memorandum of Understanding

Is there any way that we might goad the United States into launching a war against the United Kingdom? After a little less than four months, and having changed absolutely nothing, that would end with the Americans' agreement to pay us $300 billion on condition that we promised not to acquire a weapon that we did not want in the first place. That could be something out of science fiction, or something made up for the paperwork. Or Donald Trump could do us another favour and order us to scrap Trident, pretty much doubling our money.

Such fantastic sums might almost be enough even for the BBC. Simulcasting Newshour on Radio Four and the World Service could be worse as a replacement for The World Tonight, but they are different programmes for different audiences. In place of the Midnight News, or Crossing Continents, or Money Box Live, or AntiSocial, or The Law Show, how will the airtime be filled? With yet more drivel about how the 23-year-old son of a Russian diplomat had the codename El Money, spoke fluent Ukrainian (in the real world, while almost all Ukrainians speak Russian, almost no Russians speak Ukrainian), was in a position to dole out Russian passports, was astroturfing both Islamist and neo-Nazi activities on the streets of London, and was hiring Ukrainian rent boys to execute incompetent arson attacks on Keir Starmer's old car, his flat from long ago, and the house that he owned but which was inhabited by his sister-in-law, all properties known to the rent boys?

Not even in Russia, nor in China or Iran, are Verified Private Networks illegal outright. Next month, Starmer will announce that Britain was joining the ranks of Belarus, North Korea, Turkmenistan, and the Iraq that I vaguely recall that we were supposed to have liberated at some point in the distant past, in the way that I vaguely recall an Online Safety Act that was supposed to have solved all of these problems. Anything, absolutely anything at all, to force everyone to have digital ID from the Tony Blair Institute and from the Palantir that meant ICE and the IDF, while preventing the young and the poor from coming across any political opinion other than those of the Epstein Class.

Wall Games

Those suggesting that Prince George should be sent to a state grammar school are assuming that he would get into one, effectively conceding that the offspring of the right families had always been guaranteed a place. Perhaps he would have passed the 11 plus, but how do you know?

And those wondering why the Royal Family was sending the future King to Eton when the old aristocracy had long since been priced out of it in favour of the global superclass, you have answered your own question. Indeed, although Prince George does also come off the old aristocracy through the Queen Mother and through the sometime Princess Diana, the Royal Family itself is the last great bastion of a European superclass that barely noticed national borders.

State Threats

Shabana Mahmood should check her spam folder more often. The National Security (State Threats) Bill has been overtaken by the defeat of the United States by Iran, a defeat so total that, while allowed the dignity of not having to use the word, the US was to pay reparations to a regime that, far from having been changed, was Supremely Led by the even more hardline son of the slain Supreme Leader.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps has vast interests in energy, engineering, construction, shipbuilding, automation and telecommunications, and enormous influence over the bonyads, which are fabulously rich and economically pivotal religious charities. Therefore, the Guards will soon be the business partners of Donald Trump, of his dynasty, and of its courtiers. A Britain that proscribed the IRGC would have Trump to answer to, and he still has well over two years to go as the President of the United States.

But as the proscription of Palestine Action was an all-or-nothing measure that also banned the Russian Imperial Movement and the Maniacs Murder Cult (and how are the presumably urgent battles against those progressing?), so the proscription of the IRGC should be an all-or-nothing measure that also banned ICE and the IDF. Palantir is embedded in both, and it is one of several means of enmeshing them with each other, so if they were banned in Britain, then it could not possibly have any part in our NHS or anything else.

Weigh This Record

Only 16 days after I first mentioned the Nihangs below the line on UnHerd, it has noticed them, although it has still not noticed their use of cannabis to make them fiercer in battle. If the fragrant Lady Donaldson is unfit to stand trial, then what about Hadi Alodid? And while we continue to await either a COBRA meeting or the declaration of a national emergency either over Southampton or over Belfast, Sunday Life Investigations brings us this:

Knife attack victim Stephen Ogilvie — whose stabbing sparked two days of race-hate rioting — was previously tortured by a UVF-linked gang led by a double killer and overseen by a Shankill Butcher.

Loyalists explained how Ogilvie moved to Edinburgh more than 20 years ago after falling foul of paramilitaries in the Rathcoole estate in Newtownabbey.

Once across the Irish Sea, the 44-year-old was targeted by UVF killer Mark ‘Gutsy’ Campbell, who was the gunman who shot dead Protestants Cecil Dougherty and William Corrigan in 1994.

The victims were gunned down at a Newtownabbey building site having been mistaken for Catholics.

After being kneecapped by the UVF for this ‘error’, Campbell relocated to Scotland where he was joined by a group of pals including Stephen Ogilvie.

Campbell set up a heroin dealing gang which a court later heard claimed to be members of the UVF and had links to Shankill Butcher William Moore, who visited Edinburgh to oversee the racket.

Ogilvie was not part of this drug dealing group, or involved in criminality, but would sometimes be in Campbell’s company as he knew him from back home.

The mob spray-painted ‘UVF’ around the Broomhouse estate and dealt out vicious beatings to anyone who crossed them, including Ogilvie who was described as their “punchbag”.

Gang member David McCleave ended up being jailed for 14 years for spiking the Rathcoole man with a date rape drug and putting lit cigarettes between his toes.

Ogilvie was then stripped, beaten with a baton, had aftershave poured on him and then set on fire.

VULNERABLE

Gutsy Campbell also exploited him, with reports in Scotland revealing at the time how he was picked on because he was vulnerable.

The UVF killer cruelly nicknamed Ogilvie ‘Hokey Cokey’ because his hands fidgeted so much as a result of an earlier paramilitary hammer attack.

Ogilvie ended up returning to Northern Ireland after giving evidence against his tormentors, with six men jailed for more than 60 years.

In 2016 Campbell died of a drugs overdose while awaiting trial for the UVF murders of Catholics Gary Convie and Eamon Fox in 1994.

Ogilvie entered into a life of petty crime and when he last appeared in court in 2020 for assault on police and disorderly behaviour, it was revealed he has 161 convictions.

District Judge Fiona Bagnall remarked: “You weigh this record, you don’t read it.”

It was also revealed that Ogilvie is a diagnosed schizophrenic who was attempting to turn his life around.

Loyalist sources say the irony of paramilitaries using the attack on him as an excuse for race-hate rioting — given they had spent decades torturing him — is stark.

One told us: “Stephen Ogilvie had to leave Northern Ireland because of the UVF, he had his hands broken by them, and he was the victim of a torture attack in Scotland by a gang led by UVF gunman Gutsy Campbell.

“Now you have the UVF exploiting the stabbing and using it as an excuse to start riots in Newtownabbey and Belfast.

“The UVF couldn’t care less about Stephen Ogilvie, if it did it wouldn’t have forced him out of Northern Ireland in the first place, and Gutsy Camp­bell wouldn’t have had him tortured in Scotland.”

Stephen Ogilvie is now in a stable condition in hospital, recovering from the horrific wounds inflicted on him after he was stabbed multiple times in north Belfast last Monday.

Sudanese national Hadi Alodid (30) appeared in court two days later accused of attempted murder and possessing a knife.

Graphic footage of the attack on Ogilvie, showing him being stabbed multiple times, has been widely shared on social media.

The recording sparked two days of race-hate rioting in loyalist areas of Belfast and Newtownabbey.

WRECKED

Dozens of innocent foreign national families, many with young children who have lived in Northern Ireland for years, had their homes wrecked and burned by masked men.

Police were also attacked by thugs who tried to storm a hotel in Newtownabbey that has housed immigrants.

Despite a PSNI assessment that the rioting is not being organised by the UVF and UDA, known loyalist paramilitaries have been witnessed taking part. The gang’s leaders have also been deciding where any trouble takes place.

Sources say this is evidenced by the fact Carrickfergus escaped widespread violence after the UDA and UVF banned any trouble due to the town hosting Saturday’s annual Royal Landing pageant, which commemorates King William’s arrival in Ireland in 1690.

Loyalist sources say paramilitary chiefs did not want to see the place wrecked ahead of the well-attended festival, and troublemakers were instead told to go to Newtownabbey to riot.

A small number of teenagers ignored the order and threw masonry and a petrol bomb at police, however the trouble ended quickly.

In east Belfast, senior UVF figures encouraged rioting, a situation that was mirrored in the Woodvale, Tigers Bay and Crumlin Road areas where African nationals were burnt out of their homes.

Assistant Chief Constable Ryan Henderson said: “At this stage we have no evidence to say that the violence is being coordinated by loyalist paramilitaries.”

Well, I mean, who in turn coordinates them? Meanwhile, over on the Other Side, “It is not unreasonable to suggest (as the IRSP do) that migration into Ireland generally and into working class communities in particular, must not occur in a fashion which is detrimental to the interests of the Irish working class itself.” It was grimly amusing to imagine Irish-Americans thinking that they were upping the ’RA by sending money that ended up in the hands of the UVF and its ilk. It is if anything even more to imagine that the ultimate destination might be the INLA. But might the IRSP be positioning itself as the voice of the anti-woke Left? It would have some work to do, but stranger things have happened. Now, since this has always slightly baffled me, where does that Costelloite tradition believe that sovereignty resided?

The Bets Have All Been Covered

Against electoral pacts and the like, I firmly maintain that votes do not belong to political parties. They belong to us, the voters. In similar vein, Paul Knaggs writes:

A seat in Parliament is not a man’s to give away. It belongs to the people who live in it. Yet on 14 May, a Labour MP named Josh Simons stood up and announced he was handing his over. He did not resign because he was ill, or disgraced beyond endurance, or weary of public life. He resigned so that Andy Burnham, the Mayor of Greater Manchester, could take his place, return to the Commons, and from there mount a challenge for the leadership of a party the country has already stopped listening to. Tomorrow the voters of Makerfield are asked to ratify a decision taken without them. They are the turnstile, not the destination.

Before we ask what kind of man accepts a donated seat, we should ask what kind of man was in a position to donate it. Josh Simons was the director of Labour Together. If that name means nothing to you, it should. It is the think tank built to engineer Keir Starmer’s Labour, the apparatus at the centre of the undeclared-donations scandal, the outfit that, on Simons’s own watch, commissioned a private firm to dig into the journalists reporting on its finances. He was parachuted into Makerfield in 2024, a place with which he had no connection, and by his own cheerful admission there was no real selection contest. The machine wanted him there, so there he went. He resigned from Starmer’s government this March, when the surveillance of reporters grew too loud to ignore. Cleared, he said, but a distraction. Ten weeks later he gave the seat to Burnham.

So the gift Burnham is about to accept was itself a gift. The seat was manufactured for one machine man and is now passed to another, like a signet ring handed down a line of succession the public was never invited to join. Whatever else Andy Burnham is, he is walking into Westminster through the machine’s own front door, on the machine’s own terms. Hold that thought. We will need it.

We have seen an engineered seat before, and it is worth remembering how it ended. In 1965, Harold Wilson had a Foreign Secretary, Patrick Gordon Walker, who had lost his constituency at the general election. The remedy was simple. A loyal MP in the safe London seat of Leyton was eased into the House of Lords, the vacancy was arranged, and the great man was sent to collect what the party assumed was his. The voters of Leyton refused the script. They returned a Conservative by 205 votes. Gordon Walker resigned as Foreign Secretary the next morning, and Wilson’s majority fell to three. Until this week, it was the last time a by-election had been manufactured purely to seat a politician the electorate had not asked for. Safe seats are only ever as safe as the contempt the voters are willing to swallow. That lesson sits quietly behind everything that follows.

Starmer’s Ten Pledges: Why Burnham’s Promises Won’t Hold

Burnham, it must be granted, performs the part beautifully. On the eve of the poll he apologised to the voters for the leaflets and the knocking, then made his offer: a vote for him would end forty years of trickle-down economics, lower water and energy bills, re-industrialise the North, and hand power to the people Westminster forgot. Change was coming, he said. The only question was what kind. It is the right question. He should have put it to the last man who made him this promise.

Because we have heard every word of this before, from Keir Starmer, in a leadership campaign built on ten pledges. Public ownership. An end to Westminster cruelty. A politics for the people the system left behind. Then office arrived, the pledges were buried, and what we received was a grey and suspicious managerialism that treats the working class as a problem to be policed rather than a people to be served. The promises did not survive contact with power. They were never built to. / Now the identical offer returns in a warmer accent.

Here we should be fair, because the case for Burnham is not nothing, and his defenders are not fools. In Greater Manchester he brought the buses back into public control, the first English region to undo Thatcher’s deregulation, and the Bee Network actually runs. His A Bed Every Night scheme put roofs over rough sleepers while Westminster offered sympathy. He stood against Downing Street during the pandemic and earned the title King of the North the hard way. A genuine devolver, his supporters say, a man who has governed against the centre, finally handed the chance to govern from it.

It is the strongest argument available. It still does not hold, and the reason it does not hold is the reason this whole affair matters. A mayor with a devolved budget works in the one corner of British politics the Treasury’s grip and the party whip cannot quite reach. That is precisely why he could be bold. Return the same man to the Parliamentary Labour Party, inside Rachel Reeves’s fiscal rules, inside the machine that strangled Starmer’s identical promises within months, and nothing structural has changed. The face on the poster is more likeable. The animal behind it is the same.

Which brings us to the role Burnham is being invited to play, because it is not a new one. Every system under strain keeps a designated dissenter. It tolerates one prominent figure who gives the discontented a voice, who lets them believe change is still possible from the inside, and who therefore keeps them from walking out toward a genuine alternative. The grievance is heard. The grievance is flattered. The grievance is folded gently back into the structure that produced it. Nancy Fraser gave this arrangement a name. The rest of us have simply lived inside it.

The post was occupied until recently, and we should say by whom. Angela Rayner held it. The council-estate care worker who left school at sixteen, the trade unionist, the authentic working-class voice carried all the way to Deputy Prime Minister as living proof that Labour still belonged to the people who built it. She was the figure the membership pointed to when they wanted to believe the project still had a soul. She voiced the dissent. She stayed inside. And when she went last September, over a stamp-duty bill on a flat in Hove, the structure she had decorated did not so much as tremble. The orthodoxy carried on without her, exactly as it was always going to. The valve closes, and the pressure simply finds the next one.

Burnham is the next one. He is the leader the soft left has dreamed of for fifteen years, the one who is always about to arrive and somehow never does. His function, whether he intends it or not, is to make people stay. Even installed in a cabinet, the part would be the same: to voice the dissent and then deliver the orthodoxy, to complain in public while implementing in private, to be the conscience that changes nothing. The man who keeps the dissent inside the tent so that it never becomes a party of its own. This is the pantomime horse we wrote about before. The country has tired of the front half, so it is being shown the back half and told it is a different beast. Starmer and Burnham are not so much rivals as the two ends of the same animal, and the same hands work the strings on both.

You may think this too neat. So let me put the other readings, because cleverer heads than ours have plainly war-gamed all of them. Perhaps it is a true insurgency, Burnham’s people moving against a leadership that blocked him in February and briefed against him for months. Perhaps it is a managed succession, the apparatus sensing Starmer is finished and choosing the safest possible face to absorb the anger of the left and the Reform-curious alike. Or perhaps, coldest of all, he is being set up to fall. They stopped him in February, in a seat where Labour came third behind the Greens and Reform. They waved him through in May, into a borough where Reform had just taken twenty-four of twenty-five council seats. Give the insurgent enough rope. If he loses, the leadership challenge dies the moment the count is read, exactly as Gordon Walker’s did at Leyton.

Here is the thing. It does not matter which is true. Every road leads to the same place. Insurgent, safety valve, or sacrificial lamb, each path leaves the apparatus intact, the economics untouched, and the Labour Together party still standing. The bets have all been covered. The house has built a table at which it cannot lose. We are invited only to choose which way it wins. Even the victory, if it comes, will be a borrowed one.

THE STATE OF THE POLLS

Five constituency polls put Burnham ahead by anything from five points to twelve, which already tells you the picture is softer than the headlines pretend. What none of them shows is a surge of Labour enthusiasm. In a seat Reform dominated only weeks ago, Labour is not winning hearts. It is being kept afloat by a divided enemy. Rupert Lowe’s Restore Britain is running a candidate pulling somewhere between five and eight percent, almost all of it stripped straight from Reform. On the closest polls, that split is the whole story. Labour’s lifeline tomorrow is not its own virtue. It is a civil war on the right, and a win delivered by your opponent’s quarrels is not a mandate. It is a reprieve.

And the ship Burnham is so keen to board is going down faster than he can climb the gangway. More than ninety Labour MPs have called on Starmer to go. A Health Secretary walked. Last week the Defence Secretary, John Healey, resigned with a letter accusing the Treasury of refusing to fund the nation’s own defence. This is not a government in difficulty. It is a government coming apart, and the scramble to inherit the wreckage is already under way.

So here is what tomorrow actually settles, and it is not the condition of the working class. If Burnham wins, the prize is a leadership war, a vacant mayoralty, and a useful distraction. If he loses, he returns to Manchester with his ambitions buried. Either way, the public interest never appeared on the ballot. Nobody asked the country whether it wanted Burnham in Parliament, or Starmer gone, or this endless exchange of captains while the vessel holds its course. The machine decided, arranged the seat, and now requests our signature on a choice already made.

The remedy is not a better-loved manager. It is the one thing the machine is built to prevent: a politics that answers to the people who fund it, lose under it, and are governed by it, rather than to the network that passes the leadership between its own like an heirloom. Until that arrives, every coronation is a confidence trick, however good the singing. They are changing the face because the country grew tired of the last one. They are not changing the machine. And safe seats, like safe promises, stay safe only until the people in them refuse to play along. Ask Patrick Gordon Walker.

Wednesday, 17 June 2026

Crowning Glory

On 17 April, David Lammy, as Lord Chancellor, declined to recommend Royal Assent to a Bill to legalise assisted suicide on the Isle of Man.

Yesterday, that Bill was amended and resubmitted. Lammy should again say no, as he should to the Bill from Jersey, on the grounds that he was opposed to the principle.

If either of those Crown Dependencies did not like that, then it would be free to become independent.

Defying Expectations?

I was born in September 1977, so I shall be in the first year to have to wait until we were 68 before qualifying for our state pensions. My father died when he was 68. I shall be that old, if I made it, before I got what, if I had it now, would be the lowest pension of any comparable country, but which is nevertheless routinely described without challenge as "unaffordable". Heaven knows what little will remain even of that by 2045. But then, heaven knows what little will remain of me.

That inflation has remained at 2.8 per cent does not mean that prices are staying the same. It means only that they are going up at the same rate as they were the last time that anyone officially checked. They are still going up. A lot. Whatever happened to the impossibility of mass unemployment and galloping inflation at the same time?

Will there be any improvement once the Strait of Hormuz had reopened? Things were bad before it closed. But I was 24 on 11 November 2001, and I am 48 now, so for half my lifetime I have been told that the big one was going to be Iran. That war has now been fought, Iran has defeated the United States, and they have both defeated Israel to the point of humiliation. Reza Pahlavi and his entourage are back to being a joke, while the PMOI/MEK is back to being a lot worse than that, though not so as to constitute a serious threat. Benjamin Netanyahu must now get out of Lebanon with his tail between his legs, or face the wrath of Donald Trump, who has deals to do on behalf of himself, his family, and his made men.