Wednesday, 1 July 2026

The Dangers of Devolution


The political temperaments of Keir Starmer and Andy Burnham couldn’t be more different. While the current prime minister is a sober, plodding proceduralist, whose worldview has been forged by decades of litigation, Burnham’s approach is based on instinct. Yet if media attention, perhaps understandably, has focused on how they speak, or how they dress — no suits for the constantly t-shirted Burnham — their substantive differences are clearest in how both think about devolution. That feels particularly pertinent given how loudly the incoming PM has asserted his localist credentials. Beyond announcing a “No. 10 North”, and hinting he wouldn’t even live in Downing Street, Andy Burnham has already promised the biggest “rebalancing of power our country has ever seen”.

In theory, of course, we’ve been here before, with Starmer also trying to connect English devolution with a post-Brexit politics. In 2023, while still in opposition and riding high in the polls, Burnham’s soon-to-be predecessor said his plans for devolution would transform “‘take back control”’ from a slogan into a solution. Alas, things turned out rather differently. Indeed, if a single issue encapsulates the pathologies of the Starmer regime, it is local government reorganisation (LGR) — the outgoing PM’s plan to streamline councils — as well as the introduction of more metro mayors. In the two years since 2024, when a flagship white paper was published to address both, quiet constitutional radicalism has met with ever more farcical incompetence. This is Starmerism: triple-distilled.

Because so much else has happened, it’s easy to forget just how ludicrous parts of that agenda are. From 2028, for instance, the largest city-region in Europe will be the combined “metro area” of Norfolk and Suffolk. Feted to have a single mayor overseeing a fiefdom of some 9,200 square kilometres, that mayoral authority will be around the same size as Cyprus — and six times larger than Greater London. The idea of Norwich being the administrative capital of a city-state, eclipsing Madrid or Paris in scope, sounds like something from an Alan Partridge fever dream. For Keir Starmer, it was simply part of re-forging the British state.

Almost as bad is the proposal for a single mayor to cover the whole of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. Given the uproar when Emirates sponsored the Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth, and planned to paint the iconic building in the same colours as Southampton football club, it’ll be interesting to see how the two places integrate. In Portsmouth, the nickname for the denizens of Southampton, some 17 miles away, is “scum”. Those who live in the home of the Royal Navy, meanwhile, enjoy the nickname “skates” (you’ll have to Google why). There is no history of collaboration between the two cities — both of which enjoy almost 1,000 years of continuous history. It’s a similar story with Cumbria, soon to be a metro area as well as a county, with the authority forecast to be over twice as large as France’s largest municipality. That’s despite the fact that Carlisle, Cumbria’s largest city, has a population of just 100,000, and the region is best known for the empty Lake District.

Would Burnham repeat such bizarre absurdities? There are grounds for cautious optimism. In February 2023, Burnham spoke to the journalist Steve Richards. There’s little reason to be cynical about his remarks at the time, not least because his chances of a national comeback seemed negligible, with Starmer riding high in the polls. And yet, for more than half an hour, the then-mayor for Greater Manchester spoke convincingly of a “place first” approach to devolution. “In a post-Brexit, post-pandemic world,” Burnham intoned, isn’t it clear “that Whitehall can’t cope with this? It’s struggling, and it’s because the wiring of the county isn’t right.”

Throughout that conversation two things stood out. The first is how, for Burnham, any localist agenda must fit the needs of communities which already exist. “Legitimacy comes from the people and the place,” as he puts it. Which makes you wonder whether plans for an East Anglia super-region, let alone a South Coast version of Neom, will truly come to pass in his premiership. The second is how devolution isn’t merely a means to rewire Britain’s economy, but to determine which issues matter in the first place. Whitehall’s inability to craft solutions partially stems from the fact it has little idea what the problems are. Policy-making, in the argot of the former Manchester mayor, is thus divorced from place.

Three years on and it’s clear that, in other ways too, Starmer has continued with the very approach Burnham was sceptical of. For all Starmer’s talk of dispersing power away from London, and the public really taking back control, his faction essentially selected the Labour candidate for the west of England mayor (the now disgraced Dan Norris), while blocking Jamie Driscoll from standing in the North East. Then there were the times the leadership’s retinue made Richard Leonard resign as the party’s Scottish leader, and steered the controversial Vaughan Gething to the role of first minister in Cardiff. Starmer, and much of the Labour Right, were comfortable with devolution, and “giving power away”, so long as those who received it agreed with them.

That hints at another divide with Burnham, who, whatever his other faults, seems to have shed any factionalist baggage. He was certainly a Blairite upon entering Parliament in 2001. Yet in his speech on Monday, he took aim at the whipping system and its tendency to foreclose political debate. Looking further ahead, of course, it’s hard to see how a “place first” approach won’t clash with the political management of the Labour establishment: including its propensity to parachute in preferred candidates for “safe seats”.

Still, it’s a start, especially when you consider that Starmer’s approach to local politics — arrogant, entitled and defined from the centre — was so inept that it actively undermined confidence in the need for reform. Starmer’s LGR was meant to be the biggest shake-up of local politics in England since the Sixties. If more mayors, furnished with greater powers, is about enhancing democracy, then LGR was about delivering a more standardised bureaucracy across England. Fair enough: my home county of Hampshire presently boasts 15 different authorities, including “two-tier” district and county councils. LGR means that number will fall to five unitary authorities, all enjoying the same range of competences.

While the changes make sense in theory, as has often been the case with Starmer the execution has been disastrous. Why? Because reforming ambition was encumbered by hubris, which in turn fed incompetence, something extending far beyond ambitions of conjoining old rivals like Southampton and Portsmouth. Starmer’s government, with its enormous majority, sought to remake key parts of national life at breakneck speed. As a result, many councils regarded the timetable as unrealistic, with authorities expected to develop new unitary structures, governance arrangements and financial models within months. It often felt like No. 10 was applying the principles of DIY SOS to the biggest overhaul of local government in over half a century.

Alongside the rush, far-reaching questions remain unanswered. For instance, will newly integrated authorities have to pool historic debts? Would a council broadly in the black (such as Portsmouth) have to absorb liabilities from another in the red (like Hampshire County Council)? And if an authority that runs surpluses integrates with another that runs crippling deficits, what help is on offer from the Treasury? These are, understandably, huge points of contention for council leaders across the country. Yet they have been met with little more than hand-waving and vague promises of things being alright in the end. Speak to almost any council leader, and you’ll likely hear shock at how blasé and reckless London has been throughout.

Which brings us to another major difference between our prime ministers, present and future. While Starmer viewed local government reorganisation, and more metro mayors, as a means of achieving growth within the existing model, Burnham regards empowering city-regions as a way of bypassing No. 11 and the most dysfunctional parts of Whitehall. That is, after all, the subtext of him opening an office in Manchester. While the primary aim is to take power out of Westminster and, as Burnham put it this week, create a political “circuit-breaker”, a secondary aspect would be to strengthen the role of the prime minister himself.

Whatever you think of it, at least that’s a vision. Compare it to the LGR, whose preference for a “unitary layer” for local government emerged from a single paper published by PWC. The ultimate argument for those vast mayoral authorities from Hampshire to East Anglia, meanwhile, can be found in a report compiled by McKinsey. Why the need for such scale? Because, in order for regional governments to compete for investment, that’s what’s required — with two million inhabitants apparently the starting point to create sufficient capacity, generate adequate brand recognition, and access the right tier of investors.

In other words, those new mayors up for election two years from now are less about empowering local people, or reviving England’s smaller cities, than ensuring creditworthiness. This is why somewhere like Cumbria is suddenly expected to become a city-region. And while this again may sound coherent in principle, you have to question whether such contrived and synthetic entities will garner sufficient democratic legitimacy in the long-term. History and tradition — Portsmouth’s star-and-crescent flag goes back to the Third Crusade — is apparently irrelevant to a Treasury that regards city-regions as little more than economic zones. In a way, it’s strangely reminiscent of arguments for greater European integration made by liberals in recent decades. Reducing transaction costs matters more than anything else. For Burnham, though, if cities are certainly a locus for policy experimentation, they are also places with heritage, history and a continuous culture. His passion for Manchester makes that clear enough.

Ultimately, the two men view devolution as a path to different things — which makes you wonder whether Burnham as prime minister will move to re-assess LGR, let alone oddities like a city-region for Norfolk and Suffolk. And, while we’re at it, why not give the Southampton and Portsmouth city-regions a mayor each? That’s what would happen in any vaguely sane polity.

Which leads us to yet another major fissure between the current prime minister and his successor, with Burnham repeatedly criticising much of the devolution agenda since 1997. He expressed as much in Monday’s speech, when he promised to offer “new opportunities to extend devolution” in the Celtic fringe by taking power “deeper down”. In words intended for the SNP and Welsh Labour, as much as the inhabitants of such places, Burnham remarked how the “people of Dundee and Bangor feel just as distant from Holyrood and the Senedd as they do from Westminster”.

Now, you might point out, Holyrood and the Senedd are consequences of Blairite reforms. Does Burnham, a former New Labour minister, think they were a mistake? The answer appears to be yes, with Burnham admitting as much while speaking on that podcast with Richards. The original sin of Scottish and Welsh devolution, according to our next prime minister, was the “same Westminster approach… where it’s all national and there isn’t that routing of power at the local level”. Rather than truly empower voters in Wales and Scotland, the Blair government created dysfunctional mini-mes in Edinburgh and Cardiff: places whose political cultures are every bit as complacent as London.

Starmer, by virtue of his connection to Morgan McSweeney and the Labour Right, could never voice such a critique. In theory, the same should be true of Burnham, given his past or present ties to Blair, David Miliband and James Purnell. Yet he’s broken ranks with his old comrades in stating that the city-based approach of the English North — whose champion is none other than George Osborne — has proven more successful.

Perhaps that’s exactly the kind of mould-breaking that’s needed. After all, the historic party of social democracy is betting the house on something which hasn’t worked for a century: pushing power to towns and cities far beyond the M25. Given Westminster’s tendency to hoard power, that’s a huge ask. Burnham’s localism agenda may ultimately end up giving him more influence — not least if he becomes ally-in-chief to existing mayors and council leaders, especially if he spikes the worst aspects of LGR — all while he undermines both the Civil Service and Parliament. As the incoming PM ominously added in Monday’s speech, the political direction he will set “will not be up for negotiation”. Still, even a President Burnham would probably be better than what we have now: spreadsheet devolution with voters a mere afterthought.

What You Would Expect In An Apartheid State


Israel’s supporters have gone apoplectic over a short post on X from the journalist Mehdi Hasan, highlighting Israel’s peculiar marriage laws. Hasan asks: “Did you know that you can’t have a civil or secular marriage in Israel?” He’s not wrong. Israel has banned civil marriage. You can wed only in a ceremony strictly controlled by religious authorities. If you want a civil marriage, you have to travel to another country.

Why, you might reasonably wonder. Isn’t Israel a modern, secular, western-style liberal democracy? After all, that’s what our politicians and media keep telling us. The most popular rejoinder to Hasan from Israel’s apologists – that the situation is no better in Saudi Arabia – is not quite the flex they seem to imagine. So Israel offers the same human rights protections as Saudi Arabia? Impressive. Others have pointed out that Israel inherited the so-called “millet” system from the Ottoman empire, which gave the leaders of each confessional group across the Middle East autonomous control over their community’s religious affairs.

Doubtless, 150 years ago the system worked relatively well in reducing communal tensions in religiously diverse parts of a large empire. It prevented officials in Constantinople – modern-day Istanbul – from getting dragged deeply into the day-to-day affairs of its often distant subjects. But 150 years ago, Britain sent children up chimneys to sweep them. The law was changed around that time to stop this abusive and dangerous practice. Israel was established nearly eight decades ago, supposedly as a secular, western-style liberal democracy. It has had 78 years to change those archaic Ottoman marriage laws. Why hasn’t it done so?

All the bluster decrying Hasan’s post is a desperate attempt to deflect attention away from the fact that Israel’s antiquated marriage laws survive because they are useful to Israel. In fact, they are more than that. They are a core component of Israel’s version of apartheid – a racist system of segregation Israel has successfully shielded from the view of western publics with the help of western politicians and media.

‘Demographic threat’ 

Israel’s ban on civil marriage is central to its efforts to prevent what past racist societies, such as apartheid South Africa and the American Deep South, termed “miscegenation” – that is, sexual relations between different ethnic groups. You might remember that the Nazis had unpleasant views on this subject too. Here is the current finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, opposing miscegenation in 2016:

Preventing assimilation in the Jewish state is completely legitimate and not at all racist. You are assuming as a basis for the discussion that preventing intermarriage is wrong, while ignoring the fact that most [Jewish] girls who go with Arabs are poor girls who are being used.

Former education minister Rafi Peretz called mixed marriages involving Jews a “second Holocaust”. In Israel, such views are entirely mainstream. In 2018, Yitzhak Herzog, Israel’s current president and the former leader of an ostensible leftwing Israeli party, described mixed marriages among American Jews as a “plague” for which a “solution” had to be found – presumably by copying Israel’s approach.

In Israel, the chief concern is not about marriages between Jews and the Palestinians under occupation – which Israel and its supporters like to present, bogusly, as a straightforward “security” matter. In the occupied territories, Israel uses far blunter methods than laws to prevent any kind of intimate relations developing between Jews and a captive Palestinian population. It prefers physical containment and violence.

Palestinians under occupation are forcibly separated from Israeli Jews. They are hemmed into their own tightly confined ghettoes by Israel’s network of steel and concrete barriers; by the Israeli army; by checkpoints; by separate, apartheid roads in the West Bank; and by Jewish militias living on stolen lands in so-called “settlements”.

There is little chance of interaction, let alone intermarriage, in such circumstances – except when Israeli soldiers or armed Jewish settlers come rampaging into Palestinian communities to destroy crops, kill livestock, poison wells, torch homes and cars, and beat up – and sometimes kill – the inhabitants.

Nonetheless, there is still a potential vulnerability in Israel’s system of segregation. In 1948, Israel expelled 80 per cent of the Palestinian population from their homes and lands in an area that was henceforth to be called, not Palestine, but the “Jewish” state of Israel. A few Palestinians remained, however, inside those borders – mostly from oversight or error. Despite covert efforts by Israel for several years after the 1948 war to force them out of the state, its officials soon came under international pressure to give these stranded Palestinians citizenship – even if in practice, as we shall see, this conferred on them very inferior rights.

Even today, Israel is extremely worried about a supposed threat from its third-class Palestinian “citizens” – officially termed “Israel’s Arabs”. Given a higher birth rate, their numbers have grown exponentially over eight decades. They now comprise a fifth of Israel’s population. Israeli journalists, academics and politicians, including prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, regularly call the country’s Palestinian citizens a “demographic threat”, and endlessly worry about the “Palestinian womb”.

No state of all its citizens

But Israel faces a countervailing pressure. If it makes its treatment of Palestinian citizens too obviously racist and oppressive, some outsiders might start to realise it is not the secular western-style liberal democracy it claims to be. You will hear the pro-Israel lobby in the West tell you that so-called “Israeli Arabs” have exactly the same rights as Israel’s Jewish population, guaranteed by Israel’s Declaration of Independence. That is not even remotely true.

Adalah, a leading legal rights group in Israel, has a database showing more than 70 laws that explicitly discriminate between Jewish citizens and Palestinian citizens. These laws form the core of Israel’s apartheid system. Israel’s Basic Laws, a sort of constitution, explicitly exclude any principle of civic equality. Every attempt by a Palestinian party in Israel to get a debate in the parliament on Israel becoming a “state of all its citizens” – that is, a liberal democracy – is barred from discussion. And in 2018 the Israeli government passed a Nation-State Law declaring that Israel belongs exclusively to the Jewish people, not to all citizens who live there.

As with Palestinians under occupation, Israel has almost entirely confined its Palestinian citizens to their own segregated, underfunded, under-resourced communities (townships) on less than three per cent of the country’s territory. A small minority of Palestinian citizens inside Israel live in segregated, deprived neighbourhoods of what are misleadingly termed “mixed” cities. Other Palestinian citizens, the most oppressed of all, live in communities inhabited by their families for centuries but which have been criminalised by an Israeli state that refuses to recognise them. Many hundreds of Jewish rural communities, by contrast, operate effectively as exclusive membership clubs. They have the power to exclude Palestinian citizens – a right they take full advantage of.

Separate planning structures ensure massively overcrowded Palestinian communities inside Israel are unable to build new homes and expand. Palestinian children are schooled in a separate and much inferior education system. For those who wish to dig deeper, I have written a lengthy essay setting out the details of Israel’s apartheid system here.

The ban on civil marriage inside Israel’s borders is not usually cited, even by critics, as an example of its apartheid system of rule. But the ban persists because it is the ideal way to conceal segregation under the veneer of equal treatment. Israel’s Palestinian citizens must marry in ceremonies conducted by their religious community’s leaders: by Muslim clerics, or by various Christian churches, or by the Druze clergy. It is the same for Jews in Israel. They must be married by an Orthodox rabbi. So everyone faces the same restrictions. But the point is this: the equality of treatment ensures very unequal outcomes. It is designed that way.

Fascist thugs

Inside Israel, intermarriage is only possible if one party can convert to their partner’s religion. Israel’s Orthodox rabbinate makes it impossible for Palestinians under occupation to convert to Judaism in Israel, with the head of its conversion authority stating in 2016 that any such applicants are rejected “without review because of their ethnic origin”. Meanwhile, Israel makes it almost as difficult for anyone else considered a non-Jew to convert to Judaism, most especially Palestinian citizens. Over decades, there have been only a handful of such cases.

In practice, this means that in any relationship between a Palestinian citizen of Israel and an Israeli Jew, it almost always falls to the Israeli Jew to convert to the religion of the Palestinian citizen, whether a Muslim, Christian or Druze. That entails the Jewish partner losing their Jewish status and the many consequential privileges inside Israel that derive from that status. Israel has found this is a much better solution than apartheid South Africa’s, where blacks and whites were explicitly barred by law from marrying. Israel can achieve the same result more quietly.

Given the entirely segregated structure of Israeli society, and the strong social taboos among Israeli Jews on “miscegenation”, the number of intermarriages in Israel between Jews and Palestinian citizens barely reaches double digits each year. There are even groups like Lehava – Israel’s version of the Ku Klux Klan – that go around beating up Palestinians caught anywhere near the Jewish neighbourhoods of Jerusalem and terrorising any young Jewish women suspected of being romantically involved with a Palestinian. Lehava hold noisy and disruptive protests to shame the odd Jewish woman who converts and marries a Palestinian citizen.

All of this happens with a quiet wink from the authorities. The current police minister, Itamar Ben Gvir, has long been a patron of the fascist, Jewish supremacist thugs of Lehava. In the rare cases of a Jew converting and marrying a Palestinian citizen, the Palestinian partner faces innumerable legal and social obstacles to integrating into a Jewish community to which they do not belong.

Instead, the Jewish partner moves to a Palestinian community – an Israeli version of a township like Soweto – and educates their children inside the vastly inferior “Arab” school system. The former Jew loses most of the ethnic privileges they previously enjoyed inside the world’s only “Jewish” state. Faced with this as their future, such couples often seize the opportunity for neither to convert and instead marry and live abroad.

Unwelcome guests

None of these difficulties are accidental. It is exactly how you would expect an apartheid system that prefers to obscure its apartheid character to structure its laws – and thereby help its lobby in the West, including the western political and media class, to claim that Israel is “the only democracy in the Middle East”. Israel learnt from the mistakes of the old South Africa. It mastered the modern arts of public relations – or at least it did until Benjamin Netanyahu tore up the script by erasing Gaza. Inside Israel, the apartheid system extends far beyond marriage laws to touch all areas of life.

Here is another way Israel has obscured its apartheid system – again not in the occupied territories, but inside Israel itself. The same system that denies Israelis the possibility of a civil or secular marriage also refuses to recognise that they have any kind of civil or secular identity, simply as Israelis. By law, everyone in Israel must belong to a confessional group, identified as a Jew, Muslim, Christian or Druze.

Which makes sense of another little-known fact about Israel: Israel is the only country in the world that does not recognise its own – in this case, Israeli – nationality. Why? For the simple reason that, were Israelis to share a common national identity, it would be much harder for the Israeli state to operate its apartheid system. Israeli nationality exists only as a fiction on Israeli passports to allow the population to travel internationally. Inside Israel, everyone is identified by their confessional group.

In Israel, “Jewish” is treated as a nationality. Remember the 2018 Nation State Law. What it declared is that the state of Israel belongs exclusively to the “nation” of Jews – that is, to every Jew around the globe, not just those living in Israel. Muslims and Christians are lumped together into a similarly artificial “Arab” nationality, while the Druze have their own, different nationality. The same Nation State Law makes clear that the state of Israel does not belong to these other, non-Jewish “nations”, despite their families having lived on the same lands for centuries. Palestinian citizens are nothing more than guests – and unwelcome ones at that.

This segregation carries through to Israel’s ID cards. These cards, which must be carried at all times, used to include a section that expressly showed the “nationality” of each Israeli. But this section attracted uncomfortable scrutiny during a lengthy and ultimately unsuccessful legal battle by a group of dissident Israelis seeking recognition of an Israeli nationality. Officials removed the category from the card. However, Israel’s population register still includes a nationality classification.

In addition to Jew, Arab and Druze, there are more than 120 other categories to deal with all the anomalies. I was just one such anomaly after I married a Palestinian Christian and entered a lengthy and difficult naturalisation process. My nationality was classed as “British”. Why all this complexity? Why all this unique weirdness? Because Israel needs to conceal its system of apartheid. The old South Africa simply said: one law for whites and another for blacks. Israel knows this no longer plays well. So it has devised a convoluted, baffling system that few understand as a way to avoid attracting attention and criticism.

Special Jewish rights

So let’s end with just one example of how Israel’s apartheid system works in practice. Notionally, Israel confers on all its citizens – Jews, Muslims, Christians, Druze – equal rights as citizens. But with a sleight of hand, it then undermines those equal rights by conferring superior “national” rights on one group only, Jews. If there is a conflict between a citizenship right and a Jewish “national” right, you’ve probably already guessed that the Jewish national right takes precedence.

Education is a good illustration. All Israeli citizens enjoy a right to have their children educated, because education is a citizenship right. But lots of veiled manoeuvres – like extra budgets for National Priority Areas, special subsidies for Jewish religious schools, funding from the diaspora, and bigger tax disbursements from central government for Jewish local authorities – mean Jewish schools are far better funded than “Arab” schools.

Education for Israel’s Palestinian citizens has been underfunded for eight decades. So even though Israel’s apologists will claim the funding gaps are slowly narrowing, the continuing shortfall simply compounds a decades-long historical injustice. Arab schools are so far behind they can never catch up without aggressive additional funding Israel clearly has no intention of ever providing them with.

There are massive shortages of classrooms and staff in dilapidated school buildings. Old books are often grossly outdated and poorly translated into Arabic by the state. Palestinian educational leaders have no input into the curriculum the community’s children are taught. There are strict controls by Jewish (usually racist) officials over what can be taught and who can teach. And on top of all this, huge cultural biases in qualifying tests make it far harder for Palestinian citizens to gain entry to universities in Israel.

There are many other problems in education. For example, nearly one in 10 Palestinian children in Israel live in historic communities built on lands that the Israeli state now wishes to “Judaise” – reserve for the Jewish population – and are therefore denied all recognition. Treated like criminals, these children rarely have schools in their communities because no permanent buildings are allowed. What buildings there are cannot be connected to the electricity or water grids. Even children of kindergarten age must typically travel long distances – sometimes close to 60 km a day – to get to a licensed school.

The forms of discrimination in education alone are endless. But they do not stop there. The discrimination is replicated in all major facets of life for Israel’s more than two million Palestinian citizens through these conceptual and legal contortions over religion, citizenship and nationality. None of this should be a surprise. It is exactly what you would expect in an apartheid state like Israel.

Sabotaged That Dream For A Massive Payoff

Proponents of Scottish or Welsh independence, would you want to end up, or very possibly to start out, like this? Jonny Ryan writes:

On the face of it, Ireland behaves like a good European by being a staunch advocate of human rights and a beacon of progressivism on the western edge of the continent. But there is one vital area in which its record is less than perfect – one that should cause concern when the Irish government takes over the rotating six-month presidency of the EU on 1 July. The EU’s tech and AI rulebook will be renegotiated during the same period, but the Irish state and economy have been captured by big tech. Ireland is so compromised that as president of the Council of the EU, it should recuse itself from all tech and digital sovereignty negotiations.

The last time Ireland held the EU presidency was in 2013, during negotiations on the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). A leaked Facebook memo describes a 2013 meeting where the company’s executives met Ireland’s then prime minister to complain about the proposed data privacy rules. They left understanding they had Enda Kenny’s assurance that Ireland would use its “significant influence” as EU Council president to deliver what Facebook called a “positive outcome”. The executives also attended “a dinner hosted by senior Irish politicians to work through the various ways that the Irish could be helpful”.

The 27 EU member states take it in turns to hold the presidency. The presiding country chairs meetings and in effect controls the pace of negotiations on EU legislation. It can prioritise some topics and allow others to slide. For example, Cyprus, a small and vulnerable country in a volatile region, was able to use its presidency from January to June of this year to put mutual defence commitments on Europe’s agenda.

Lured by tax breaks and a culture of gentle persiflage, giants such as Google, Meta, Apple, Microsoft, OpenAI, TikTok and X all established their European headquarters in Ireland. The EU’s “country of origin” principle determines that the country that hosts a company’s European HQ is the country responsible for regulating it across the EU. This legal quirk has turned the Irish data protection commission (DPC) into Europe’s primary watchdog for the tech sector: Ireland pushed to make this happen as council president in 2013.

The effects of this arrangement are staggering. The DPC’s chairperson recently admitted that apart from “amicable resolutions” on trivial issues, Ireland has not completed a single EU inquiry into Google or any of its subsidiaries in the 10 years since the GDPR was enacted. EU-wide protections are paralysed because every other member state must wait for Ireland to act in an EU-wide response.

When the DPC has enforced against big tech firms, it has done so poorly and under duress from other European regulators. It did move with uncharacteristic speed in one instance, against Elon Musk’s Grok AI, but then accepted a settlement that appears to have collapsed. Ireland’s media regulator, Coimisiún na Mean, enjoys a better reputation but has far weaker powers. For a decade now, Ireland has held open the regulatory back door that allows giant US and Chinese companies to operate with impunity across Europe. It has become not only a tax haven, but a haven from regulation.

The economic dependency is stark. Three US firms accounted for almost half of Ireland’s corporate tax revenue in 2024. In 2022, Ireland collected almost five times more corporate tax per person than France or Germany. You may admire a once small, poor and un-industrialised country for having won the race to the bottom and becoming rich. But the consequences have been grim for European democracy, competitiveness, security – and particularly for children.

The 2026 film Molly v the Machines tells the story of how social media algorithms pushed suicidal content into the feed of 14-year-old Molly Russell, who took her own life in 2017. There are and will be more Mollys across Europe unless Ireland starts to enforce EU data rules that require “recommender algorithms” to be switched off by default, because they draw upon particularly intimate data.

Ireland may no longer even be keeping up appearances. The country’s newest data protection commissioner, Niamh Sweeney, was previously Meta’ senior lobbyist in Ireland during the Cambridge Analytica scandal and the grim period covered by whistleblower Frances Haugen’s revelations. The Irish government’s process to recruit Sweeney was absurd: the only tech expert on the selection panel was a lawyer for big tech. The selection criteria focused on generic skills such as “managing relationships”, rather than trying to hire an enforcer capable of investigating the world’s most technologically sophisticated companies. No one checked during the hiring process if the appointee was bound by Meta’s notorious practice of barring ex-employees from criticising it, which gagged the former Meta executive and whistleblower Sarah Wynn-Williams so thoroughly. Ireland gives the DPC tens of millions of euros to operate, but lobotomises it.

And the doors keep revolving: the previous data protection commissioner, Helen Dixon, has just started working for Meta’s law firm. The firm continues to act in many live cases for Meta against the DPC. Under Dixon, the DPC sued other European data authorities at the EU’s top court because they had voted that the DPC must investigate Meta’s use of people’s most intimate data. While the case was dismissed, Dixon’s action granted Meta a year’s reprieve from an investigation even starting.

In the book Careless People by Wynn-Williams, she articulates the Meta view of the DPC as a “lapdog”. This eerily mirrors the Irish financial regulator’s hesitancy and deference to Irish banks in the years leading up to the 2008 banking crisis. Earlier this month, Ireland’s foreign minister posted a photo posing with a Meta lobbyist on her LinkedIn profile. “Great to meet with Meta yesterday to discuss priorities for Ireland’s upcoming presidency,” said the caption, along with various talking points from Meta’s 2013 memo that in 2026 appear to have become Irish government policy.

Ireland is even accused of “blocking” class actions from being filed against tech firms on behalf of children by prohibiting commercial funding, even though it permits such funding for commercial arbitration. According to the EU’s Eurobarometer poll this month, 92% of Europeans want the EU to deliver better protection for their children online. Ireland will not deliver such protection unless other EU governments start insisting on it. How much longer will European leaders tolerate Ireland selling out the mental health of their countries’ children?

There was a time when Europe looked like the world’s answer to the worst excesses of big tech. Ireland has sabotaged that dream for a massive payoff. If it will not recuse itself from all tech discussions during its six-month presidency, then Berlin, Paris, Warsaw, Madrid and Brussels should pile the same kind of pressure on Ireland some of them did after the banking crisis. What was unfair then would be entirely fair this time.

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

Ireland: A French Military Protectorate

Why did England ever want Ireland? To prevent almost exactly that of which Eoin Drea writes:

Ireland has long been a free rider in security and defense. Officially neutral and spending an infinitesimal 0.22 percent of GDP on its military in 2025, the country is literally defenseless. With only four naval vessels available on a rotational basis, patrol ships that lack technicians to operate weapons, and zero fighter jets, Ireland is incapable of protecting itself, its waters, and the undersea infrastructure that surrounds the island and on which trans-Atlantic communications depend. Even today—in an era of heightened geopolitical threats—Dublin remains devoid of any coherent long-term security strategy.

Dublin has an immediate security problem to deal with: Embarrassed by its inability to deal with a drone incursion during a visit by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky last December, Ireland is desperate to avoid similar incidents when it assumes the rotating presidency of the European Council—the intergovernmental body that is the true locus of power behind the European Union—with its summits and ministerial meetings, next month. Since it has little hope of handling security on its own, Dublin recently announced that it was seeking to engage the French Navy to provide temporary air defense during important European Council meetings.

Facing pressure from both the EU and the United States, Ireland has also embarked on a defense-spending program to start addressing its most grievous shortcomings. Here, too, Ireland is partnering with France. In January, Dublin and Paris signed a joint strategic framework that will run until 2030. In February, there followed a military cooperation agreement covering joint training, intelligence sharing, and other areas. Most significantly, Ireland has outsourced its military procurement, including legal, administrative, and logistical control, almost entirely to France.

Under the umbrella of the new treaties, Ireland and France are finalizing a series of individual government-to-government (G2G) procurement agreements. In effect, the Irish government is commissioning France to negotiate, execute, and sign contracts for critical military equipment on its behalf. France will choose the supplier, determine timelines, and set pricing terms—without any competitive tender, independent Irish technical assessment, or mechanism to verify that Ireland is receiving value for money. Paris will also control the maintenance and supply chains required for the long-term use of this equipment, while simultaneously commanding the training of relevant Irish troops.

France’s Direction Générale de l’Armement (DGA), whose official stated purpose is to equip the French military and promote French arms exports, is now managing Ireland’s rearmament. Given the French state’s deep tradition of using defense procurement as industrial policy—reflected to this day by government shareholdings in Thales, Safran, and other arms conglomerates—French firms will likely be the exclusive beneficiaries of Dublin’s blank check.

Even before the latest round of Franco-Irish agreements, Thales was chosen in June 2025 to provide the Irish navy with its first-ever towed sonar, which is used by naval vessels to detect intruding submarines, in a 60-million-euro deal. In December 2025, the Irish government also approved the opening of negotiations with Paris for a 500-million-euro radar system. The Irish Times described this as Ireland “effectively outsourcing the procurement of the system to officials in Paris.” Irish Defense Minister Helen McEntee said that the French proposal was accepted because it “substantially fulfils Ireland’s capability requirements.” What she didn’t say was that this vast amount will be spent without public tender or competitive bidding. In essence, the French government decides which radar system suits Ireland best and which French supplier should get the contract.

In February, a further G2G agreement was signed with France over Ireland’s purchase of up to 800 million euros’ worth of Griffon, Jaguar, and Serval armored vehicles, the largest investment in the history of the Irish Army. Negotiations are due to finish in the coming months.

Ireland’s dependence on France has become almost exclusive. Between 2015 and 2024, Ireland ordered French military equipment worth a total of 53 million euros. Since 2025, Dublin has either signed contracts or opened negotiations with the French government for more than 1.4 billion euros. To put these numbers into perspective: Ireland’s total 2026 defense budget is only 1.5 billion euros.

Ireland’s defense marriage to France is transformational, but the dependency risks undermining Ireland’s military and strategic independence. The fixation on France is already undercutting relations with Britain, Ireland’s hitherto closest defense partner and most important neighbor—an effect that may very well have played a part in French overtures. (Ireland has relied on a secret 1950s arrangement in which Britain’s Royal Air Force monitors and intercepts hostile aircraft in Irish airspace.)

Dublin’s unprecedented dependency could also erode trans-Atlantic relations by handing France leverage over Ireland to challenge, for example, Dublin’s free-market, low-tax, U.S.-oriented economic model. France need not threaten Ireland explicitly. When Ireland next blocks a French priority at the European Council, Paris could slow-walk an arms maintenance contract or delay an upgrade cycle. For France, Ireland is also a useful client state to advance its long-held strategic objective of European defense sovereignty under French leadership.

Ireland fits into French efforts to build a network of bilateral defense partnerships parallel to NATO based on French leadership, French equipment, and French military doctrine. The template here is Capacité Motorisée, France’s 2019 strategic partnership with Belgium that was subsequently expanded to include Luxembourg. The partnership standardizes doctrine, command and control, equipment, and maintenance across their land forces. The three countries use France’s proprietary networked digital battle system—called Scorpion— for their armoured vehicles. This system will now incorporate Ireland as well. Although Scorpion is compatible with NATO networks, the software is owned by French company Eviden, hardware is supplied by Thales and other French companies, and all access and upgrades are controlled exclusively by Paris. Belgian industry has to make do with vehicle assembly and producing some add-on weapons.

Already, France, Belgium, and Luxembourg have the Scorpion-enabled ability to fight as one cohesive force, independently of NATO. Ireland will now join the Scorpion platform as a non-NATO member.

Belgium’s experience should provide a sobering warning to Dublin. In April 2025, the Belgian Court of Audit found that a contract for 442 French-made armored vehicles will end up costing almost 10 times the initial estimate—14.4 billion euros instead of 1.5 billion euros. Belgian media also reported various other contract discrepancies, in addition to intransparency over prices and conditions on the French side.

A protectorate is a state that maintains nominal sovereignty while ceding control of its security to a more powerful patron. Having reached the dead end of free riding on defense, a French protectorate is what Ireland has now chosen to become.

Contempt, Proceedings


A silk accused of misleading the jury and ignoring the judge’s directions during his closing speech has been summoned to a hearing at which the court will decide whether his conduct amounted to contempt of court.

Rajiv Menon KC, called in 1993, faces allegations of contempt of court over his closing speech in a trial at Woolwich Crown Court. Menon represented one of six activists accused of breaking into the Elbit Systems Factory, near Bristol, causing an estimated £1m of damage. None of the defendants was convicted. Following a retrial, a jury found four of the defendants, including Menon’s client Charlotte Head, guilty of criminal damage.

Woolwich Crown Court decided of its own motion to proceed against Menon and referred the matter to a divisional court. The Court of Appeal found there was no jurisdiction for the Administrative Court to initiate contempt proceedings of its own motion and referred the case back to the Crown court. Last week, Mr Justice Johnson found Menon should face summary proceedings for contempt.

In a summons published today and circulated to the press, Mr Justice Nicklin orders Menon to attend the Royal Courts of Justice on 28 July for a hearing before Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb, sitting as judge of the Crown court at Woolwich.

The summons states that evidence ‘raises a prima facie case that the respondent may have acted in contempt of court and that it is in the public interest for contempt proceedings to be instituted by the court’.

Menon will be entitled to give evidence at the hearing, which has been listed with an initial time estimate of two days.

In his reasons, Mr Justice Nicklin acknowledged he was not determining if Menon had committed contempt but only ‘deciding whether there is sufficient material to justify the institution of contempt proceedings and whether it is in the public interest to do so’.

He added: ‘I am satisfied that there is sufficient material to justify the institution of contempt proceedings against Mr Menon KC in respect of parts of his closing address to the jury. That material is capable of supporting allegations that, in identified respects, the address departed from rulings made by the trial judge, or was in disobedience of them, in a manner arguably capable of interfering with, or creating a real risk of impeding, the due administration of justice.’

In considering the case, Nicklin said he bore ‘fully in mind the importance of fearless advocacy’ but ‘at the same time, it is fundamental to the rule of law that orders and rulings made by a judge in the course of a criminal trial are obeyed by those participating in the proceedings’.

He said: ‘If a ruling is said to be wrong in law, or otherwise open to challenge, the law provides means by which that may be corrected. It is not for those participating in the proceedings to decide with which rulings they will comply and which they will not.

‘Where there is sufficient material to support allegations that rulings and directions given by the trial judge were disobeyed in a manner capable of affecting the due administration of justice, I am satisfied it is in the public interest that contempt proceedings be instituted so that the matter can be adjudicated in accordance with law.’

Manufacturing Necessity


Peter Thiel is an empire builder. He doesn’t just build companies, he sets the narratives that make them inevitable and indispensable.

For two decades, he has argued that liberal democracies are entering an age of permanent instability: geopolitical conflict, technological upheaval and institutional decline. In his book - governments need AI, surveillance and defence tech. Conveniently, those are the products he sells.

His companies are portrayed as islands of coherence in a sea of chaos. It’s hard to see, from dry land, that Thiel is the one making the waters rise. Palantir is the clearest expression of this strategy. Born with backing from the CIA’s venture arm, it has spent years embedding itself inside the US national security state. Having become central to America’s military and intelligence apparatus, it is now seeking to do the same across the West.

Palantir’s expansion depends on more than good software. It relies on cultivating a permanent state of crisis, convincing governments that the world is becoming too dangerous to rely on anyone or anything else. Every geopolitical warning of an AI arms race or an inevitable Third World War reinforces the idea that only Palantir can keep democratic states safe. By framing global instability as an existential threat, the company creates the political demand for its own permanent solutions, positioning itself as a fundamental force for good.

When these are called out, Palantir gets nasty, launching lawsuits and attacking critics through the media - terrified of losing its grip, especially as public backlash intensifies over its close proximity to the Trump administration, ICE and Israel.

Here’s what that looks like:

1/ The secret networks

A recently reported leak revealed attendees and agenda topics of a secretive organisation, the ‘Dialog’ society, a networking retreat for influential tech billionaires, high-profile politicians, journalists, authors and members of the intelligence community worldwide.

Dialog was co-founded by Peter Thiel and angel investor Auren Hoffman, and the leak exposed that more than 200 of the world’s most rich and powerful individuals registered for the exclusive getaway - described as a kind of ‘Bilderberg meets Silicon Valley’ phenomenon - with topics ranging from sex lives and cult-building, to “Bringing Back Nuclear”, “Battlefield Technologies” and, strikingly, “Navigating WWIII”.

Palantir, of course, has been the tip of Trump’s spear. They helped him find and capture Maduro, provided intelligence that reportedly aided in the bombardment of Iran and built AI tools for both bombing and managing the infamous aid delivery stations in Palestine. For companies whose fastest-growing markets are in defence, intelligence and national security, a world defined by permanent geopolitical emergency is also a world of permanent commercial opportunity.

Some of Dialog’s listed attendees are US military leaders, as well as foreign senior defence politicians like NATO’s supreme allied commander Europe General Alexus Grynkewich and former UK security minister Tom Tugendhat, as well Matt Clifford, who currently chairs the UK’s Advanced Research and Invention Agency (ARIA) - the UK’s answer to DARPA. Both NATO and the UK’s Ministry of defence are spending hundreds of millions of pounds on Palantir’s AI war tools.

2/ The self fulfilling prophecies

Among Silicon Valley elites, the prospect of WWIII, something they frequently cite, often circles back to more investment in AI and resurrecting America’s military industrial base, perhaps unsurprising for a series of individuals who would stand to, and already have, gained substantially from militarism. Palantir’s CTO Shyam Sankar even includes the term “WWIII” in the subtitle of his recently published book.

The CEO of Thiel-backed military tech company Anduril, Palmer Luckey, has stated that the firm has a strategy that guides everything it does; “China27”, whereby “anything we are working on, anything that we are investing in, needs to be built with the assumption that sometime in 2027, China is going to move on Taiwan”.

On Monday, Anduril and Palantir were announced as the architects of a new program called Next Gen C2 - intended to act as the foundational data layer for all battlefield decisions.

But while their stranglehold on the US seems almost total, the future of these firms elsewhere is less certain. The erratic nature of Trump’s second term and reported controversies surrounding Palantir and its efficacy are spurring on calls for increased digital sovereignty.

Don’t let the power go unwatched. Max and Charlie will be back in your inbox next week tracking the forces reshaping our democracy.

3/ The growing resistance

Attempts to resist Palantir’s push into European states, are however increasingly being met with pushback; sometimes rhetorical, sometimes legal, sometimes thinly veiled threats.

As reported last week, France’s domestic intelligence agency is now ditching Palantir’s AI tools from the US, in favour of a domestic provider, to avoid “strategic dependency”, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu has said.

In response, Palantir’s executives lashed out against the decision, claiming “normally, we never react, but hearing this from the prime minister on social media, I never imagined that could happen. You can’t do this on Instagram. This isn’t a Hollywood spat between an actor and his girlfriend. This is a very serious matter.”

In Germany, a similar situation played out, where a top Berlin official said that the country doesn’t plan to award military contracts to the company. Palantir CEO Alex Karp hit back, criticizing the country’s decision, saying “I don’t understand how Germany believes it can afford this” and that “Every serious battlefield in the world uses parts of Palantir. There’s a reason for that”.

In England, London’s mayor Sadiq Khan, recently blocked a deal between Palantir and the Metropolitan Police, citing an alleged breach of procurement rules. His spokesperson said that Londoners wished to see public money being spent on firms that “share the values of our city”.

In this instance, Palantir was even more aggressive, and is now reportedly suing Khan over the block of the £50m contract. Its UK lead, Louis Mosley, has hit out at the Mayor, accusing him of “putting politics over public safety”.

But opposition to Palantir’s expanding influence is nevertheless becoming more pronounced at both a national and local level, as exposure to and scrutiny of the company increases.

On Thursday, the FT published NHS England’s acknowledgement that some of the claims the public body made regarding the benefits of Palantir’s now infamous Federated Data Platform contract are not ‘causationally robust’, something which has prompted MPs to call for an audit of the system, as ministers are reportedly considering ending the contract next year.

Louis Mosley has spent weeks, true to Palantir form, repeatedly claiming that Palantir has provided huge savings, increased efficiency and saved lives. He has appeared on TV and written articles in national papers calling Palantir’s detractors “ideologically motivated campaigners” and casting concerned NHS staff as a “noisy minority.”

Yet, two petitions calling on ministers to end NHSE’s Palantir contracts have attracted over 250,000 signatures while the cross-party Science, Innovation and Technology committee warn that Palantir has expanded its presence across the UK despite what it called a “clear mismatch with UK values”.

The UK is by far Palantir’s biggest foothold outside of the US, accounting for, at least, 10% of their global revenue. This isn’t just about cash, it’s also a strategic outpost for Palantir to reach much of the rest of the world. Losing the UK could be a terrifying prospect for Palantir.

This week saw another backlash. In a first for a local authority, a cross-party group from Sheffield City Council have passed an England-first motion opposing Palantir’s involvement in the NHS, backed by Medact Sheffield.

In response to the passing, Medact Sheffield’s Dr Rory Gibson said that:

“This motion passing is a heartening reminder of the power of community organising. Community organising has the power to influence decisions far beyond Sheffield and contribute to the national conversation about the future of the NHS.”

Sheffield is a small council. France is a major military strength. Germany is the EU’s largest economy and London one of the world’s biggest cities. Perhaps Palantir is losing the argument they so desperately cultivated of themselves as an essential asset to key state infrastructure.

While the future remains uncertain, for both Palantir and its client states, calls for resistance seem to be growing louder.

In The Coalmine


The attempts to dismiss an undeclared £5 million “gift” are falling flat, and Reform UK leader Nigel Farage is under more pressure than ever.

The party’s largest donor, Christopher Harborne, is showing no signs of backing away from political donations. Farage says that he would “gladly” accept further contributions from the billionaire.

Although Farage has long said that his priority is putting Britain first, his main backer is a Thai citizen with shares in an arms firm that exports components to the Israeli military. Indeed, Harborne is the largest shareholder in weapons manufacturer QinetiQ. In 2022, QinetiQ were granted licenses to export over £13 million worth of aerial target and military training equipment to the Israeli state, as well as over £700,000 of military guidance/navigation equipment.

Reform, Friends of Israel

Reform have followed Labour and the Conservatives in pledging their support to the Israeli state during the assault on Gaza.

Like Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Farage has denied that a genocide is taking place. He also declared that a future Reform government would keep exporting weapons to Israel. After what we now know about his links to Harborne and QinetiQ – a company that profits from military aggression – perhaps these sentiments should not come as a surprise.

Last September, at Reform UK’s conference in Birmingham, Israeli deputy ambassador Daniela Grudsky declared: 

We do believe that we have friends here.

It was the first time an Israeli government official had attended.

Just weeks later, deputy leader Richard Tice was in occupied Palestine on a trip paid for by the newly-formed Reform Friends of Israel (RFOI), which Tice funds himself.

Reform’s deputy leader was met with Israeli president Isaac Herzog and foreign affairs minister Gideon Sa’ar, telling them that his party would:

stand rock solid with Israel.

Upon his return to the UK, Tice explained that the Israeli politicians “recognised and appreciated” Reform’s position.

Not so anti-establishment

Farage tries to portray himself as an anti-establishment figure, but Tice and Harborne are two of a host of former Conservative Party donors who have switched to his Reform project.

Millions have been raised from other sources, including Nick Candy, Jeremy Hosking, and Paul Sykes amongst others.

According to one investigation, 81% of Reform’s funding comes from current or former Tory funders.

Harborne and the Conservatives

Like Farage, former Conservative Prime Minister Boris Johnson has also been accused of concealing a “gift” from Harborne. In his case, this came in the form of a private jet and pilot in January 2023 for a flight to Poland. Johnson was on his way to meet Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

An earlier £1 million donation from Harborne to the Office of Boris Johnson had been declared in December 2022. Johnson, a long-standing supporter of Conservative Friends of Israel, refuses to say what the money was for. However, we do know that, in the run up to the 2019 general election, Farage stood down over 300 Brexit Party candidates to ensure a Johnson victory.

According to leaked documents, Harborne was travelling with Johnson on the Ukraine trip, with the schedule documenting that the former Prime Minister transferred from the private jet to an overnight sleeper train to Kyiv “with CH”. That same month, a QinetiQ-led consortium signed an £80-million, ten-year deal with the Ministry of Defence.

Worrying influence

This was not the first time QinetiQ had secured a major government contract.

In November 2021, QinetiQ were part of a Babcock-led consortium, which also included the UK-based subsidiary of Israeli arms firm Elbit Systems, awarded a £100 million contract to work on the MEWSIC electronic-warfare programme.

Then Conservative Party Defence Minister Ben Wallace described the companies involved as “key industry partners”. What Wallace did not mention was that he was previously QinetiQ’s overseas director, resigning from their board the same month as becoming an MP.

Whether Labour, the Conservatives, or Reform are in power, the arms industry continues to have a worrying influence on the political establishment. Farage claims that “no-one cares” about the £5 million he received from Harborne. However, successive by-election defeats and a challenge from ex-Reform MP Rupert Lowe have put his position in jeopardy.

Andy Burnham has the marketing and media to take the reins of power, for now. However, there remains a cache of wealthy donors determined to get Farage into No. 10.

And Skwawkbox writes:

UK ‘counter-terror’ police have detained distinguished US human rights professor and international law expert, Dan Kovalik, at Liverpool’s John Lennon Airport.

Kovalik, a well-known author and activist, said on X that he had been grilled about his opposition to Israel’s Gaza genocide and to the illegal war on Iran.

In the height of irony, I was detained at John Lennon International AirPort in Liverpool, England by anti-terrorism police concerned about my opposition to the Genocide on Gaza and the war on Iran. They seized my phone, computer, fingerprints and DNA sample. More to come . . . pic.twitter.com/WOtXQLjjO2

— Dan Kovalik (@danielmkovalik) June 29, 2026

Human rights threatened under authoritarian war on speech

The Starmer regime extensively abuses anti-terror laws to detain — not arrest — journalists, activists and others who speak out against Israel’s crimes and the UK’s collaboration. By avoiding arrest and seizing victims at ports or airports, the state denies the detainee access to lawyers and the right to silence.

Refusal to disclose passwords is punishable by two years in jail. Devices are routinely seized, as in Kovalik’s case.

All these abuses are perpetrated by a regime seeking to protect Israel from scrutiny and criticism, despite wholesale condemnation from the UN, human rights groups and international law experts. None have so far been charged, but multiple UK journalists and authors have been targeted.

One journalist, Asa Winstanley, refused to disclose passwords to protect sources, but he was raided at home where protections are greater. Winstanley has not, so far, been prosecuted. A court ruled the seizure of his devices unlawful.

Liverpool stands with Kovalik

Scousers reacted furiously to the war on free speech on their ‘patch’ and were quick to express solidarity with Kovalik against the shameful detention.

Apologies@danielmkovalik The people of #Liverpool have a proud tradition of welcoming our guests, unlike our government and security services who should frankly be prosecuted for not preventing a genocide. Hope the rest of your stay is filled with peace and love.

— Liverpool Riverside Left (@LivRivLeft) June 30, 2026

National Security (State Threats) Bill

Not satisfied with abusing anti-terror laws to wage war on UK rights for Israel, the Starmer regime is ramming through further legislation allowing it to quickly designate any group it doesn’t like as ‘terrorist’.

Starmer is pushing the National Security (State Threats) Bill through Parliament in a single day without scrutiny. The bill puts the onus on its victims to prove they didn’t know a group the government later ‘designates’ was going to be banned.

Using information is included as a crime and there are no protections, even for journalists, who quote facts obtained from sources the UK government dislikes.

Craig Murray, himself a victim of an airport detention, pointed this out:

New Labour is rushing its new National Security State Threats bill through parliament in just one day.

It will be illegal to publish TRUE casualty information from Iran, from Hamas-run hospitals in Gaza, or IDF assault details from the resistance in Lebanon.

14 years in jail.

— Craig Murray (@CraigMurrayOrg) June 29, 2026

Britain is an authoritarian terror state. Shamefully, presumptive new PM, Andy Burnham, has given no indication he intends to end this reign of state terror. In fact, Burnham has accepted funds from the director of an arms firm involved in the genocide.

Making this no surprise:

The Canary has been debanked by Lloyds. Despite banking with them for almost a decade they are currently withholding a substantial amount of our money. We are left with barely any funds. / Lloyds has not explained why it has taken this action. Despite multiple communications from us, the bank has not been forthcoming with its reasoning.

The Canary is now in a financially precarious situation. We do not know when our money that Lloyds is holding will be returned. Moreover, we do not know how it will affect our ability to get another bank account in the future. 

Lloyds give no explanation

We do know that multiple other politically engaged people have suffered similar actions by other banks in recent times. It is not lost on us that powerful banks are able to restrict the financial activity of anti-Zionist and pro-Palestine organisations and individuals. Whilst we do not currently know the reasons behind our debanking, we cannot afford to be naive about this.

It is an outrage that The Canary has been unceremoniously dropped into financial instability with no notice or explanation from Lloyds.

Independent media targeted

Our situation is a damning indictment of the treatment of independent media in this country – whereby you can be potentially ruined without recourse by banking giants like Lloyds.

At this moment, we do not have enough cash to pay all our staff – again, because Lloyds is holding so much of our money.

Our situation highlights just how at risk independent media is at all times. We need your support constantly. But we also need it now more than ever. If you can donate to keep The Canary afloat while we resolve our debanking crisis, then you can do so here.