Friday, 8 May 2026

No More Bunkups In The Bunker

Days later, she was dead. Elena Ceaușescu, 1919-1989.


Lord Alli will no doubt find someone else to whom to give bras and knickers from Calvin Klein, Christian Dior, and Dolce and Gabbana. There is no reason to assume that those were for Lady Starmer.

Like "Lady Thatcher", "Lady Starmer" sounds like a female grooming device. What might it mean to say, "I used my ladythatcher"? And what might it mean to say, "I used my ladystarmer"? To the latter question, we should soon have an answer, since a girl has to eat. In some venture or other, the lovely Victoria should team up with Sarah Ferguson.

Mark Rowley’s Right-Wing Crusade

John Rees writes:

Over the last week, the head of the Metropolitan Police, Sir Mark Rowley, made a series of unprecedented interventions, taking aim at the left and spreading disinformation about the Palestine movement in the run-up to the local elections. In so doing, he revealed an uncomfortable truth about contemporary Britain: our security state is now so powerful, and so radicalised, that it has dropped its pretence of neutrality. It is happy to be seen as an active political force, allied with some of the most reactionary elements in the country.

On 30 April, in the final stages of the election campaign, Rowley issued an open letter lambasting Green Party leader Zack Polanski, who had shared a tweet after the Golders Green stabbings questioning why the police had repeatedly kicked the attacker in the head while he lay on the ground convulsing from being tasered. Rowley claimed that Polanski’s retweet was ‘contributing to the rising tensions we are seeing in society’ and that it would have a ‘chilling effect’ in a context where ‘Jewish communities are scared’.

Of course, debate about that incident is a legitimate part of political discussion, and naturally many Tory and Labour politicians criticised Polanski for his post. What is not legitimate — which is why it has never happened before — is for a public servant to use his authority to undermine a leading politician at such a pivotal moment.

This was not simply a matter of Rowley defending his officers. The Commissioner has never made any equivalent criticism of Nigel Farage, despite the Reform leader’s repeated claims that the Met is engaged in ‘two-tier policing’ or failing to tackle grooming gangs. The double-standards speak for themselves. This was nothing less than a targeted attack on the Greens, and a cynical attempt to frame their progressive politics as a threat to Jewish people.

Rowley Versus Palestine

Even before that intervention, Rowley had already launched an extraordinary broadside against Palestine solidarity protests, suggesting in a round of media interviews that protesters set out with a deliberate ‘intent’ to assemble at, or march past, synagogues. ‘I think that sends a message’, he told ITV, ‘that feels like antisemitism’. The accusation was designed to bolster the right-wing Zionist narrative that Palestine national demonstrations are ‘hate marches’ that aim to instil fear in the Jewish community.

Needless to say, Rowley’s statement has no basis in fact. The Palestine Coalition has never requested that a march assemble at or march past a synagogue. Given the number of synagogues in central London and the location of various politically significant buildings, any march is likely to take place somewhere in the vicinity of one. ‘Why have we assembled or tried to assemble on Park Lane?’, wrote Stop the War Coalition national officer Shabbir Lakha in response to Rowley. ‘A clue might be found in the fact that so many big demonstrations historically have assembled there, from the Chartists to the Suffragettes right up to the Together Against the Far Right demonstration. Could this have something to do with the logistics of assembling hundreds of thousands of people, ability for coaches to drop off, and the length of the route to places like Downing Street?’

Rowley knows all this, but he has nonetheless decided to spread this defamatory and malicious claim. Its effect is to conflate Jews with supporters of the Israeli state — a reckless move which, in itself, risks fuelling antisemitism. A legal letter has now been sent to the Commissioner on behalf of the Palestine Coalition demanding a retraction.

It is worth noting that Rowley himself is highly politically engaged, especially with supporters of Israel. He has held private meetings with the Israeli ambassador Tzipi Hotovely. He has spoken at the annual conference of an Israeli think tank linked to the country’s military and intelligence services. He recently attended a dinner hosted by the Community Security Trust (CST), a group that equates anti-Zionism with antisemitism and aggressively targets critics of Israel. On his watch, the Met has invited the CST into its special operations room during the monitoring of pro-Palestine protests.

Sir Mark has every right to practice his politics as a private citizen. But if he wants to make them part of his public role, then he is obliged to resign as a police officer — given the legal requirement of political neutrality — and run for elected office himself. Weaponising his position at the Met to score points against politicians and movements he dislikes is a deeply disturbing trend.

Arbiters of Racism

Beyond the absurdity of Rowley’s comments, there is something more structural and serious at work here. The Met now have an array of powers to limit freedom of assembly and speech: either placing strict controls on these civil liberties or banning them outright. In exercising this authority, the force is increasingly being made the arbiters of what is and is not racist. In other words, the legal definition of racism is in the hands of an institution that was first found to be ‘institutionally racist’ by the 1999 Macpherson Inquiry into the death of Stephen Lawrence, and has since been found to be systemically racist by a series of official inquiries, reports, and reviews in 2010, 2014, 2016, 2020, 2023, and twice in 2024.

We are already beginning to see the results. Late last year, the Met made a summary decision that the slogan ‘Globalise the Intifada’ is now illegal, and began to detain activists for uttering the words. Overnight, a perfectly legal chant suddenly became an arrestable offense, with no recourse to new legislation nor even a court ruling. The police have become the authors of the law as well as its enforcer.

At the same time as it hauls in peaceful protesters, the Met has refused to investigate British nationals who face credible accusations of committing war crimes while fighting with the Israeli military in Gaza. After reviewing a meticulous 240-page report from human rights groups providing evidence of ‘targeted killings of civilians and aid workers, indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas, attacks on hospitals and protected sites, and the forced transfer and displacement of civilians’, the police force announced that it would take no action — claiming, without explanation, that it could not conduct an effective investigation.

Crossroads

We have reached a dangerous moment. Political freedoms are under greater threat than at any time since at least the miners’ strike. The political establishment is hell-bent on suppressing the left, while at best tolerating and at worst encouraging the hard right: not only the electoral-populist wing led by Farage, but also the street movement led by the openly fascist Tommy Robinson. 

You don’t need to be a scholar of twentieth-century history to see where this could lead. The expansion of anti-terrorism policing to stamp out direct action protests may be the beginning of a wider process. So far, the ban on Palestine Action has triggered a 660 percent increase in arrests for ‘terrorism’, mostly people nabbed for holding a sign supporting the proscribed group. If the more than 3,000 arrestees are convicted, there will be more political prisoners in the UK than in Putin’s Russia. Confronting the extremity of this situation is the first step. Resisting it with all our strength is the next.

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Enforcement Undertaking

In the first three months of last year, Shell made profits of $5.58 billion. In the first three months of this year, it made $6.92 billion. In the first three months of last year, BP made profits of $1.38 billion. In the first three months of this year, it made $3.2 billion. Thank you, Donald Trump. And for allowing him to use Diego Garcia and RAF Lakenheath, thank you, Keir Starmer. This is the damage being done on our streets by the Iran War. It has been extended until 2030, but the Energy Profits Levy that was imposed in 2022 over Ukraine applies only to profits made from extracting oil and gas in the United Kingdom, extraction to which the Government is actively hostile.

Meanwhile, here in England and Wales, we have the only fully privatised water in the world apart from the system imposed on Chile by General Pinochet, and we pay ludicrous amounts of money for that most basic of resources, yet our rivers, lakes, seas and sometimes even streets run with sewage because the Environment Agency allows the water monopolies, 70 per cent of the shares in which are foreign-owned with a considerable number owned by foreign states as such, to avoid prosecution by making donations to environmental charities that therefore had a vested interest in there being as much pollution as possible. Only half of one per cent of complaints against the water monopolies lead to a prosecution, and even of those none has been completed in years. Those charities should take the money and pool it, so to speak, with a view to launching private prosecutions.

Scotch Missed

And The New World Struggles To Be Born

Paul Knaggs writes:

The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters.

Antonio Gramsci, Prison Notebooks

Antonio Gramsci wrote those words in a Fascist prison cell, somewhere between despair and defiance. He was describing a structural moment in history, not a passing inconvenience. He meant that when the dominant order loses its authority but has not yet collapsed, and when the forces that might replace it have not yet found their form, the space between is filled with something dangerous, something distorted, something that feeds on the hunger for change without satisfying it. He was writing about Italy in the 1930s. He might as well have been writing about Britain today.

The political commentator John McTernan, hardly a revolutionary, put it plainly enough in a recent broadcast. Look at the voters, he said. For a decade they have been voting for change: Brexit, then Corbyn, then Johnson, then Starmer, then Farage and Polanski. They are not stupid. They are not fickle. They are hungry, and they have not been fed.

They are not stupid. They are not fickle. They are hungry, and they have not been fed.

That hunger is what walks into the polling station today. It is what shapes the pencil mark on the ballot. And the question that will define British politics for a generation is not which party wins the most council seats, but whether what emerges from this moment is genuinely new, or merely a new label on the same old bottle.

THE RECKONING FOR LABOUR 

Let us be direct about Keir Starmer’s position. The evidence, across every credible poll and every reliable projection, points toward a set of losses so severe that the question after tonight will not be whether Labour can recover, but whether it can survive in its present form. YouGov’s final Westminster voting intention, conducted on the 4th and 5th of May, placed Labour on 18 percent, trailing Reform UK by seven points and barely a percentage point ahead of the Conservatives. One projection has the party losing close to two thousand of the roughly two thousand five hundred council seats it is currently defending across England.

Forecasters point to councils such as Sunderland, Barnsley, and Wakefield as virtually certain to fall to Reform. The eastern counties, Essex and Norfolk especially, are projected to shift from Conservative to Reform control, completing a realignment that began with Brexit and has been accelerating ever since. In London, where Labour once enjoyed near-total dominance, the Greens are mounting credible challenges in inner boroughs such as Hackney, while Reform is expected to outperform the Conservatives in swathes of outer London.

Former frontbencher Richard Burgon has said plainly what many in the parliamentary party dare only whisper: if tonight goes as the polls predict, Starmer will be gone. Labour MP Helen Hayes has added that serious questions about the leadership will become unavoidable. Prediction markets have placed the probability of Starmer departing before the year is out at over sixty-five percent. These are not the sounds of a governing party with confidence in its course. They are the sounds of a party waiting to see how bad the damage is before deciding whether to act.

The deeper problem for Labour is not merely the scale of the loss but its geometry. The party is losing simultaneously to its left and to its right. Reform is taking the post-industrial working class. The Greens are taking progressive urban and younger voters. The Liberal Democrats are picking off the professional suburban vote. There is no single counter-move to that kind of dispersal. It represents a coalition that was never really held together by ideological conviction, only by the absence of credible alternatives, and the alternatives have arrived.

Reform is taking the post-industrial working class. The Greens are taking progressive urban and younger voters. The coalition is dispersing in every direction at once.

WALES: A CENTURY ENDS TONIGHT

If there is a single result tonight that ought to stop the entire political class in its tracks, it will come from Wales. For over a century, Welsh politics has functioned on a simple if depressing axiom: Labour governs in Cardiff Bay as surely as rain falls on the Beacons. The final YouGov MRP poll for ITV Cymru Wales placed Plaid Cymru on 33 percent and Reform UK on 29 percent, with Welsh Labour collapsed to 12 percent, its worst performance in any major Welsh election since 1906. Under the new proportional Senedd system, that translates into a chamber where Labour may hold as few as twelve seats.

The structural change here is crucial and too often missed in the commentary. Wales is using a closed-list proportional system for the first time, expanding the Senedd to 96 members. The old constituency-based mechanics that allowed Labour to entrench itself even when its vote was hollowing out have been stripped away. What remains is something closer to an honest arithmetic of Welsh opinion, and that arithmetic is brutal for the party that built the NHS, won the Attlee landslide, and has treated the Welsh valleys as a rotten borough for the best part of thirty years.

Our prediction: Plaid Cymru will emerge as the largest party, almost certainly led by Rhun ap Iorwerth toward some form of coalition or confidence arrangement, most likely with a depleted Welsh Labour as a junior partner. The arrangement would be uncomfortable and fragile, but it would hold a left-to-centre-left majority in the chamber against Reform’s challenge. Reform itself, we predict, will finish as a strong second force with somewhere between 28 and 34 seats, a dramatic entry into Welsh devolved politics but not enough to govern, and, crucially, with every other party on record as unwilling to enable them.

This is not primarily a story about Plaid Cymru’s strength. It is a story about Labour’s failure to remain the vehicle for Welsh working-class aspiration. That failure belongs to the party’s machine in Cardiff Bay and in Westminster equally.

SCOTLAND: MAJORITY DENIED, QUESTIONS MULTIPLIED

In Scotland, the story is different in character but similar in structure. The SNP will almost certainly remain the largest party in Holyrood, but both Survation’s final MRP, placing them at 59 seats, and YouGov’s comparable modelling suggest they will fall short of the 65 required for a majority. That shortfall matters enormously. It transforms the independence question from a clean parliamentary mandate into a piece of political arithmetic requiring negotiation, compromise, and coalition.

The rise of Reform in Scotland is the most arresting subplot of the evening north of the border. A party that held no seats and polled a fraction of one percent in 2021 is now projected to win upwards of 17 seats, competing for second place with Scottish Labour on the regional list. The party’s appeal in Scotland is not purely about immigration or culture war positioning. It is drawing on a deep current of disillusionment with devolution itself among a section of the unionist working class who feel the Scottish Parliament has delivered them nothing except progressive social policies they never asked for and a prolonged argument about independence they have not wanted to have.

Our prediction for Scotland: SNP largest party, short of majority, most likely continuing as a minority administration or in loose arrangement with the Scottish Greens on confidence and supply. Reform will finish a credible third or second on the list vote, representing a genuine parliamentary presence where none existed before. Scottish Labour will continue its long managed decline, unable to escape the shadow of the Westminster government it is nominally part of. 

ENGLAND: THE MOSAIC AND THE MESSAGE 

Across England, over five thousand council seats in 136 local authorities are up for election. The projections here are more volatile, because Reform is contesting wards at scale for the first time, and first-past-the-post in multi-candidate contests is notoriously resistant to clean modelling. What we can say with reasonable confidence is this: Reform will make historic gains in post-industrial northern towns and in rural county councils across the east. Labour’s defending position, built on the extraordinary circumstances of Partygate in 2022 when it polled 35 percent, simply cannot hold against a party now polling around 20 percent.

The Greens, under Zack Polanski’s leadership, are the progressive wildcard. The party is polling at levels it has never reached before, and the inner London contests, Hackney most prominently, represent a genuine test of whether that polling momentum translates into organised local wins. We expect the Greens to take Hackney and to make significant inroads in Haringey, Lewisham, and parts of Sheffield and Norwich. Whether they can do so at sufficient scale to reshape the narrative of the night remains to be seen. 

A note of caution on Reform’s ground operation: translating 27 percent national polling into council seats under first-past-the-post requires disciplined candidate selection, ward-level organisation, and the ability to concentrate votes efficiently. These are things that established parties have built over decades. Reform has built them, if at all, in months. The gap between their polling ceiling and their actual seat yield may be larger than their supporters expect. We still expect them to top the National Equivalent Vote Share when it is calculated from tonight’s results, but the headline seat total may feel anticlimactic by comparison.

Translating 27 percent into council seats requires organisation built over decades. Reform has built it, if at all, in months.

MONSTERS, AND WHAT THEY FEED ON 

Gramsci’s monsters emerge in an interregnum. They fill the space that legitimate, confident power has vacated. The question worth asking today, as polls open across Britain, is not simply which monsters are winning but what they are feeding on, and whether any force exists that can offer something better than what the old world provided.

Reform UK is feeding on genuine, material grievance: stagnant wages, deteriorating public services, housing that a generation cannot afford, an NHS that cannot function. It channels that grievance through the politics of spectacle, scapegoat, and personality. Farage has never governed anything at scale, and the councils and Senedd blocs he is about to inherit will require him to do precisely that. The contradiction between populist promise and administrative reality tends to express itself, in time, as disappointment of a particularly bitter kind.

The Greens represent a different possibility. They are drawing, particularly among younger voters, on the same underlying frustration but offering a structural analysis rather than a scapegoat. Their weaknesses are real: limited geographic reach, dependence on the political weather, and a media environment that is not yet sure whether to take them seriously as a governing force or dismiss them as a protest phenomenon. But they are growing, and they are growing in the right direction for a left that has spent thirty years searching for its post-Thatcherite form.

For Labour Heartlands, the honest assessment is this: the working class that built the Labour movement did not abandon it out of spite or confusion. It abandoned it because the party that claimed to represent them made a series of choices, over many years, that prioritised the management of capitalism over the challenge to it. Tonight’s results are the compounding interest on that debt. The question now is whether anyone in what remains of the Labour Party understands that, or whether the response to tonight will be another round of repositioning, rebranding, and managed retreat.

We do not know who wins tonight. Nobody does. British voters have a long and honourable history of making fools of the forecasters. But the structural reality beneath tonight’s numbers is not in doubt: the old world is dying, and it deserves to. The only question that matters is what is born to replace it.

“The old parties are not losing to new ideas. They are losing to old hunger. And hunger, unaddressed long enough, does not ask questions about the menu.”

PREDICTION SUMMARY

Scotland: SNP largest party, short of majority (57-62 seats projected). Reform UK breaks through as a significant list presence. SNP minority government or confidence arrangement with Greens most likely outcome.

Wales: Plaid Cymru largest party on approximately 33 percent. Reform UK second on approximately 29 percent. Welsh Labour historic collapse to around 12 percent. Most likely outcome: Plaid-led administration, requiring coalition or supply arrangement.

England: Reform UK tops NEVS, projected historic gains in northern councils and eastern counties. Labour loses the bulk of its 2022 Partygate-era seat gains. Greens take Hackney, strong urban showings elsewhere. Conservative squeeze from both flanks continues.

National Equivalent Vote Share prediction: Reform 25-27 percent, Labour 18-20 percent, Conservatives 17-19 percent, Greens 13-16 percent, Liberal Democrats 12-14 percent.

All predictions carry the standard caveat: British voters have consistently surprised everyone, and first-past-the-post in multi-candidate contests is structurally resistant to precision forecasting. These are directional assessments grounded in the best available pre-election intelligence.

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Eve of Poll Cards

That phone is not plugged in. This picture certainly gives me Pride in Britain. How about you? All that, and although it was mostly procedural matters today, Roman Lavrynovych told the court that he had never heard of Keir Starmer. As well as what I had told you, that since El Money spoke both Russian and Ukrainian, then he was almost certainly a Ukrainian, since hardly any Russians spoke Ukrainian.


Now, there will have been no tax on Christopher Harborne's undeclared personal gift to Nigel Farage. Of five million pounds. Five million pounds. Five million pounds. And what if Reform UK did indeed come second both in Scotland and in Wales? In particular, have you ever heard its English Nationalist base on the subject of the Welsh? Moreover, a Scotland in which Reform could be the Official Opposition, while no surprise to many of us, would cut to shreds everything that the SNP had always told both itself and everyone else.

Zack Polanski, Toolmaker’s Apprentice

Paul Knaggs writes:

Modern British politics runs on backstory. Not policy. Not record. Not the hard, testable evidence of what a person has done with power or sought to do with the power they were denied. Backstory. The distilled personal mythology that a political operation constructs, tests in focus groups, and then releases into the world as though it were the spontaneous expression of an authentic life.

Sir Keir Starmer’s handlers understood this with considerable precision. As Labour Heartlands documented in our 2024 investigation into the prime minister’s manufactured working-class credentials, Starmer mentioned his father’s occupation as a toolmaker so many times across so many interviews, speeches, and campaign events that the repetition itself became a form of revelation. Not revelation of working-class roots, but revelation of a communications strategy. Genuine working-class politicians do not catalogue their backgrounds with that kind of metronomic discipline. They mention it once, because it is simply who they are, and then they move on to what they think. The repeated invocation of the toolmaker was the tell: here was a man, or the team around him, who had identified working-class origin as the credential most needed for the electoral task at hand, and had decided to deploy it, again and again, until it was indistinguishable from instinct.

The toolmaker’s son became prime minister. The toolmaker himself, Rodney Starmer, ran a small factory that made specialist components. He was, by any reasonable account, a skilled small businessman rather than a factory floor worker. The distinction matters not because it diminishes Rodney Starmer in any way, but because the word toolmaker was chosen precisely for the associations it carries: the overalls, the lathe, the calloused hands, the honest manual labour that the professional class has always found it useful to claim proximity to when seeking the votes of people who actually do it. The truth of the father’s life was quietly promoted into a more useful version of itself.

The trade in manufactured origin stories is not confined to Labour. It is the operating system of managed politics across the spectrum. What changes is only the specific credential being inflated, and the specific audience it is calibrated to reach. Starmer needed working-class authenticity, so his father’s factory became a badge. Nick Clegg needed principled insurgency, so his tuition fee pledge was scripted as the statement of a man who meant every word, right up until the moment he voted the other way. The origin story and the policy promise perform the same function: they construct the impression of a self that the actual record does not fully support.

Starmer had the toolmaker’s son. Polanski has the reluctant activist. Both are confections. Both were manufactured in the same political workshop, and both serve the same purpose: to give the audience a story it wants to believe, for long enough to win whatever is currently being sought.

Zack Polanski’s contribution to this tradition is the reluctant politician. A man who never planned to enter public life, who was dragged in by conscience rather than pulled in by ambition, who would rather have been anywhere else but found himself unable to look away from injustice. Politics Was Never Part of the Plan, as he titled the 2019 Medium essay in which he constructed this persona with some care. It is, as origin stories go, rather well made. It has the right texture: the drama school in Atlanta, the gig economy jobs, the hypnotherapy clinic, the accidental convergence of a life lived away from Westminster with the moment when the world demands something of you. It reads like the opening pages of a political memoir that has not yet been written. It is also, when set against the documented record, largely a fiction.

What follows is not merely the chronicle of a man who told some lies. It is the chronicle of a system that rewards the lie, selects for it, and then expresses surprise when the lies keep coming. Starmer was that system’s product. Polanski is its latest apprentice.

THE RED CROSS: SPOKESMAN FOR AN ORGANISATION THAT SAYS HE NEVER WAS

The breaking story today is the most straightforward of Polanski’s documented fabrications, and for that reason the most damaging. In a CrowdFunder appeal published in 2022, as he campaigned to become the Green Party’s deputy leader, Polanski described himself in the following terms: as a spokesperson for the British Red Cross, I care deeply about ending racialised policing and have been calling for an end to the phoney war on drugs.

The British Red Cross has confirmed, without qualification, that Polanski has never been an official spokesperson. He was a host at several fundraising events. The charity is scrupulously non-partisan. It does not lend its name to politicians for use in political fundraising appeals. It raised the issue with Polanski’s team. The claim had also appeared on his personal website in 2020, where he wrote that he worked as a spokesman for the British Red Cross and added that he was really proud of the work we do. A man who was really proud of the work we do was, on the charity’s own account, someone who hosted a few events. He was not someone who did it.

Confronted on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Polanski said he had hosted various fundraisers for the British Red Cross, that he would go on stage and speak for them about the amazing work they do, and that he had used the wrong word. The word he used was not spokesman at an event, however. It was spokesperson for an organisation, deployed on a political fundraising page specifically designed to establish his credentials before party members deciding whether to elect him. You do not reach for the wrong word in that context by accident. You reach for it because it carries more authority than the true one.

He told a political fundraising audience he was a Red Cross spokesman. The Red Cross says he never was. That is not imprecise language. That is a fabrication deployed to acquire authority he had not earned.

The Green Party’s initial response was not to address the substance but to attack The Times for having published a cartoon of Polanski that the party considered antisemitic. That is not a defence. It is misdirection. The response to one alleged wrong does not extinguish the other. Observing that both things can be true simultaneously is not difficult. It simply requires honesty, which appears to be the quality currently in shortest supply at the top of the Green Party. 

The same investigation raised a second allegation: that Polanski was not a full member of the National Council of Hypnotherapy while practising professionally and charging clients approximately two hundred and twenty pounds per ninety-minute session, despite representing himself to those clients as if he were. The Green Party has not rebutted this. Polanski has not directly addressed it. A silence of that quality tends to speak for itself. 

THE MAKE VOTES MATTER OVERCLAIM: SMALLER LIE, IDENTICAL HABIT

In the same 2022 CrowdFunder page that falsely named him a Red Cross spokesman, Polanski also described himself as a spokesman for Make Votes Matter, the proportional representation campaign. Make Votes Matter clarified that while Polanski had spoken in support of a cause it championed, he was not a spokesman for the wider organisation. The Green Party, when pressed, said he had served as a representative rather than a spokesman.

Representative. Spokesman. Spokesperson. Host. These words are not interchangeable, and political candidates understand that perfectly well. Spokesman implies institutional standing: that an organisation has chosen you, authorised your voice, and stands behind your public statements. Host means you stood on a stage at someone else’s event and spoke warmly about the work. The upgrade from host to spokesman is the kind of inflation that constructs an impression of seriousness and consequence without the underlying substance that would justify it. Applied once, it might be imprecision. Applied across multiple organisations over multiple years, it is a system.

THE HYPNOTHERAPY LIE: AND THE LIE ABOUT THE LIE

In 2013, Polanski offered a session to a Sun journalist at his Harley Street hypnotherapy clinic. The journalist claimed her measurements subsequently increased. He charged the clinic rate. He failed to disclose the resulting article in his Green Party candidate declaration when standing for office in 2019. When it resurfaced during his 2025 leadership campaign, he told LBC and then Good Morning Britain that he had never believed breast enlargement through hypnotherapy was possible, that he had been misrepresented, and that he had gone on the BBC the following day to apologise and correct the record.

The BBC investigated and found no record of any such interview. What they found was a BBC Radio Humberside recording made six days after the Sun piece, in which Polanski described the session as a successful project, cited anecdotal evidence at least of a growth in breast size, and, when asked directly whether he believed hypnotherapy could achieve this, replied: I believe that it can happen in theory. Those are not the words of a man who had rushed to apologise for a misrepresentation the previous day. They are the words of a man defending and extending the original claim.

Against this background, the allegation that he was not a full member of the National Council of Hypnotherapy while charging clients for his professional services assumes a particular weight. It suggests the misrepresentation of his standing was not confined to a tabloid article or an election platform, but extended to the private relationship between a practitioner and the people paying him, who had every right to accurate information about his qualifications. That is more serious than embarrassment. It is a professional claim made to paying clients that may not have been true.

THE POLITICAL BIOGRAPHY: THE YEARS THAT VANISHED

His foundational 2019 Medium essay, Politics Was Never Part of the Plan, presents a man pulled into public life by conscience rather than design. The paper trail tells a different story. By 2014, the reluctant politician had joined the Liberal Democrats.

In 2015, the year Jeremy Corbyn was rebuilding the socialist left and drawing hundreds of thousands of new members into Labour, Polanski was standing as a Lib Dem council candidate in Camden, singing songs on stage at the Liberal Democrat conference, and writing for Lib Dem Voice in praise of Nick Clegg’s coalition record.

A man who wrote that he wanted a leader who remains immensely proud of what Nick and our colleagues achieved in office was not stumbling into politics by accident. He was a disciplined partisan of the party that had provided parliamentary cover for an austerity programme from which this country’s public services have never recovered. 

Polanski Campaigning Against Climate Change — January 2019

In 2016, he stood as the Liberal Democrat candidate for Barnet and Camden at the London Assembly elections. He put his name forward for the Richmond Park by-election candidate selection. When he was not shortlisted, he wrote a public blog post objecting bitterly. According to Private Eye, a senior Green later told reporters he had quit the Lib Dems in a strop. The sequence, a failed selection fight followed by a public grievance campaign and rapid departure, fits that description rather well.

His stated reason for leaving, delivered in 2019, was deep unhappiness with the Lib Dems’ support for airstrikes in Syria. The party had backed military action in Syria in 2013 and again in 2015. Polanski joined after those votes, stood for office under the banner, praised the leadership, and agitated for a winnable seat. The Syria explanation does not survive contact with the chronology. What does survive contact with the chronology is the Richmond Park rejection and the grievance blog that followed it.

In June 2016, as an active Lib Dem operative, he heckled Jeremy Corbyn at a Momentum rally over Europe. In 2025, he auditioned to inherit Corbyn’s voters using Corbyn’s own vocabulary.

And then there is the heckling. BuzzFeed News identified the lone heckler who interrupted Jeremy Corbyn at a Momentum rally in June 2016 as Liberal Democrat activist Zack Polanski, who had gone specifically to denounce what he called Corbyn’s passivity and ambivalence for Europe. Corbyn told the crowd to let his friend stay. Fast forward to 2025, and the same man presents himself as the natural heir to the Corbynite left, delivering speeches that borrow the rhythms, the language, and the thematic architecture of 2017-era socialism with considerable fidelity.

THE CORBYN RECANTATION: CALIBRATED TO THE AVAILABLE AUDIENCE 

In 2018, Polanski wrote publicly that Corbyn’s complicity was an existential threat to the Jewish community, and that being a pro-European Jew gave him two reasons he could not vote for Labour under Corbyn. These were public positions taken at the precise moment when the antisemitism smear campaign was being used most aggressively to destroy Corbyn’s leadership. Polanski was lending his voice to that campaign.

By June 2025, with the Corbynite constituency available and the Green leadership race underway, he told Novara Media it had not been helpful for him to assume Labour was rife with antisemitism, when we now know that blatantly was not true. He added that Corbyn had not dealt with it perfectly. The timing of the recantation tracks the available electoral constituency with suspicious precision. In 2018, the incentive was to align with the anti-Corbyn consensus. In 2025, the incentive was to attract the Corbynite left. The position changed when the calculation changed. That is not moral evolution. It is audience management.

The left, which suffered genuinely from the antisemitism smear campaign and knows precisely how it was manufactured, should be slow to forgive the man who helped give it credibility, and slower still to trust the recantation of a man who has demonstrated, repeatedly, that his positions are audience-dependent.

FROM ECOLOGY TO IDENTITY POLITICS: THE PARTY THEY USED TO BE 

There is a broader and more lasting damage that this chronicle illuminates, and it deserves honest statement: the damage done to the Green Party itself.

The Green Party was built over decades as the political home of ecologists, scientists, conservationists, and those who understood that the health of the natural world is not one item on a list of political concerns but the condition on which all other political concerns depend. That seriousness was real and it was earned. The Greens spoke about climate, about soil, about water, about the systemic consequences of industrial capitalism for the living world with a depth of knowledge that the established parties have never matched. They commanded a cross-spectrum respect that no other party in British politics could claim, precisely because they were not a faction of any existing political tradition. They were ecologists, and in a political culture saturated with opportunism, that independence had genuine value.

That party is now largely unrecognisable. Under Polanski’s tenure, the Green Party has undergone what its own internal critics describe as a fundamental mutation. The environment remains on the letterhead. It is no longer the animating principle. In its place has come an omnicause radicalism in which gender ideology, identitarian politics, and the cultural preoccupations of the urban professional class have been elevated above the material concerns of ecology, and well above the material concerns of the working class whose cause is rhetorically performed at every opportunity.

The Greens once held credibility because they placed the planet above the parliamentary game. That seriousness has been traded for a bouquet of identitarian causes that the party’s founding generation neither recognises nor voted for. The ecologists have been replaced by the culture warriors.

The exclusion of groups like the Green Women’s Declaration from party conference marked this transformation. Women who have spent years defending the material reality of biological sex found themselves unwelcome in the party of ecological materialism. The Darren Johnson case made the cost of principled internal dissent explicit. Johnson served the Green Party for twenty-four years, was a London Assembly Member and the party’s London Mayoral candidate, and was suspended after criticising the party’s response to the Cass Review. He eventually left and joined Labour. The biological had become negotiable. The ideological had become mandatory.

The Green surge in membership since Polanski’s election has been remarkable. The question nobody in the party leadership wants to sit with is who those new members are and what they have joined. A party whose membership has trebled in under a year, that cannot prevent candidates who call for the killing of Zionists from appearing on ballot papers, that has a deputy leader who privately advises candidates accused of antisemitism to seek legal advice, is not a party whose vetting procedures have kept pace with its ambitions.

The working-class communities whose names appear in every Polanski speech about wealth and power are not joining the Greens in any significant numbers. The ecological movement at its most serious was always capable of speaking to those communities, because the people most exposed to environmental degradation, to industrial pollution, to the poisoning of air and water, are not the urban professional class. They are the people at the bottom of every economic hierarchy. A serious Green politics would have built from there. The Polanski Greens have built instead from the student union and the identity politics seminar.

GOLDERS GREEN: WHERE POLANSKI WAS RIGHT, AND THEN WAS NOT 

Labour Heartlands examined the Golders Green attack in detail in our piece Fitting the Narrative: Ishmail Hussein, the Inconvenient Victim, published 3 May 2026. The full account, including the first victim the official narrative erased, is there. Readers owed the complete picture should read it.

When Polanski shared a social media post questioning police conduct during the arrest of Essa Suleiman, the man charged with the Golders Green stabbings, the question he raised was not, on its merits, an unreasonable one. Footage appeared to show officers kicking a man who had already been tasered and was on the ground. The post condemned the attack itself as horrendous. It did not defend the attacker.

Labour Heartlands went further than Polanski dared. We reported what the official narrative systematically omitted: that the first victim of Essa Suleiman that morning was Ishmail Hussein, a Muslim man, a friend of the attacker’s for two decades, stabbed in his Southwark flat hours before the Golders Green incident and erased from the story because his existence complicated the clean ideological account the government needed to tell. We reported that Suleiman had been recently discharged from psychiatric care, that his Prevent referral had been closed with no terrorist ideology identified, and that the speed with which the government raised the terror threat level and threatened to ban pro-Palestine marches owed more to political opportunity than proportionate response. Those observations remain on the record.

The question Polanski raised about police conduct was legitimate. The problem was what came next. When Starmer turned on him, calling him disgraceful and not fit to lead any political party, Polanski apologised. He said he had shared the post in haste. He retreated from a defensible position under political pressure because the electoral cost of standing his ground felt too high. A leader who abandons a correct position the moment it becomes costly is not offering the left reliable ground. The courage of conviction holds when the pressure comes. The performance of radicalism dissolves. Polanski demonstrated, in the most public possible way, which of the two he has available.

THE CANDIDATE VETTING CATASTROPHE 

The Green Party’s candidate failures in the week before the May 2026 local elections are a direct consequence of a leadership choice: to grow a party from sixty-five thousand to over two hundred thousand members in under a year, apparently without the institutional machinery to determine who was joining or standing.

Among the candidates whose social media posts were exposed: a Lambeth candidate who had shared a post reading Ramming a synagogue isn’t antisemitism. It’s revenge; a Camden candidate who shared content attributing the September 11 attacks to Zionists; a Newcastle candidate who wrote that it takes serious effort not to be a tiny bit antisemitic; and a candidate operating an account under the name thereal.anne.frank who called for every single Zionist to be killed. Polanski said those messages are all unacceptable and expressed confidence in ninety-nine per cent of his candidates. He had himself acknowledged, during the campaign period, that vetting was a real challenge for the Greens. It was a challenge he had not met before those candidates were placed on ballots that cannot now be legally altered.

THE PATTERN THAT CONNECTS EVERYTHING 

It is worth mapping the territory plainly, because the cumulative picture is considerably more damaging than any individual element.

In his professional life, Polanski apparently told paying clients he held a professional membership he may not have possessed, then lied to national broadcasters about his response to a story about that professional work, a lie contradicted by audio evidence that remains on the public record. In his voluntary and advocacy roles, he described himself as a spokesman for the British Red Cross, a claim the organisation denies, and overclaimed a parallel status with Make Votes Matter, which also corrected the record. In his political biography, he erased a two-year period of active Liberal Democrat partisanship, obscured the personal disappointment that drove his departure, aligned himself with the antisemitism smear campaign against Corbyn before reversing when the Corbynite constituency became electorally valuable, and has presented a series of career reverses and opportunistic pivots as a narrative of continuous principled evolution.

Under his leadership, a party that once commanded genuine cross-spectrum respect for its ecological seriousness has become the vehicle of an identitarian politics that its founding generation does not recognise, whose candidate roster has required suspension after suspension in the days before a major election, and whose deputy leader responds to antisemitism allegations by advising accused candidates to seek legal counsel.

The Toolmaker’s Apprentice has performed his role with considerable skill. The reluctant politician who never planned to enter public life has, by the documented record, been planning to enter public life since at least 2014. The man who borrowed Corbyn’s language once called Corbyn an existential threat. The Red Cross spokesman never held the role. The hypnotherapy apology was never made. The professional membership may never have existed. And the green party beneath all of this is no longer, in any meaningful sense, a green party.

Starmer was the system’s product. Polanski is its latest model. The system does not produce these figures by accident. It produces them because it rewards the biography that moves the target audience, the credential that fills the authority gap, the recantation that unlocks the next constituency. It produces them because the alternative, honest politics prosecuted at personal cost, does not reliably win. Until the left builds structures that reward substance over performance, it will keep receiving performances.

The working class of this country has been offered the performance before. It recognises it now, even when the stage lighting is better than usual. 

Manufacturing Backories and CVs 

In late 2007 Reeves moved to become Head of Business Planning in the Customer Relations department, which handled complaints. Rachel Reeves claimed a decade at the Bank of England; she actually spent roughly four and a half years in employment there, with nearly a year of that spent studying. She left the Bank nine months earlier than her LinkedIn stated, and left HBOS more than six months earlier than she claimed. Her LinkedIn had her listed as an “economist” at the Bank of Scotland; she was in fact running a small complaints team managing administration, IT matters, and small projects and planning. The explanation for all of this was, in every case, administrative error.

Farage’s Mass Deportation Fantasy 

Farage, the self-styled anti-establishment man of the people, attended Dulwich College, one of Britain’s most elite private schools, and the FT reported that his City career was considerably more modest than the image suggested, with colleagues saying his suggestion of wealth was “probably a bit of a misnomer.” One of his metals broking companies went insolvent.

Jonathan Reynolds described himself as a solicitor who worked in the Manchester branch of Addleshaw Goddard on his website and told the Commons in 2014 that he had worked as a solicitor in Manchester city centre. He was never qualified, having quit his training contract to run for Parliament in 2010. His LinkedIn simultaneously listed him as both “solicitor” and “trainee solicitor.” His explanation: inadvertent error.

Credibility, once cracked, spreads like a fracture through glass. Pull one thread and the whole garment comes apart. Zack Polanski has been pulling his own threads all week, and the garment is now showing the Liberal Democrat lining beneath the socialist weave.