Friday, 14 November 2025

Sovereign Wealth?

Then they came for the Telegraph, and there was no one left to speak out. Did Margaret Thatcher license Militant, or even The Guardian? Would a Government veto over the ownership of newspapers be an acceptable proposition in the United States? If there is a Labour Government, then what is so "influential" about the Telegraph?

If the Emiratis and the Chinese can own absolutely anything else that they happened to fancy in Britain, soon to include even England's NHS, then why not a couple of small circulation newspapers? Of which other private business might the staff be allowed to choose the owners? I had heard that we now had a King Charles, but who died and made Charles Moore King? And if the Telegraph is this important, then why not save the indispensable voice of the "free" market by nationalising it?

Not Even Basic

No increase in the basic or top rate of income tax after all? Your Party has split before it even had a name, but that pales into insignificance next to the Government's public abandonment of the central measure in a Budget that had not yet been delivered. It is less than two weeks away, yet it is being rewritten from scratch. Might Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves lower the thresholds, thereby keeping the letter if not the spirit of the manifesto? They ought to restore the taxation of capital gains at the same rate as earnings, as obtained under Margaret Thatcher and Nigel Lawson, but do not hold your breath for that.

It beggars belief, as they themselves beggared so many people, that by far the longest tenures as First and Second Lords of the Treasury in the last 15 years have been those of David Cameron and George Osborne. During a General Election night when it looked as if those Great Offices might have passed to Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell, the likes of Wes Streeting, Peter Mandelson and Morgan McSweeney would have communicated to Buckingham Palace that such appointments would not have commanded a parliamentary majority. But if Corbyn and McDonnell had indeed made it to Downing Street, then while plenty of people would have disagreed with a lot of what they would have done, there would have been nothing remotely comparable to this chaos.

Thursday, 13 November 2025

Test and Refine

At Second Reading in the House of Lords, the speeches on the Assisted Suicide Bill were heavily against it.

As that Bill's committee stage begins tomorrow, there is no convention that that House should pretty much wave through even a Private Member's Bill if the Commons had already passed it.

A record 942 amendments have been tabled, more than half of them by seven Peers. If this is not what they are for, then what is?

Perverse Impacts?

What goes around, comes around. As the Greater London Council and the Metropolitan County Councils were abolished because Labour kept winning them, so Police and Crime Commissioners are to be abolished because, as was the reason for their creation, Conservatives have tended to win them.

And because Reform UK had been on course to win a lot of them, which might have caused it to rethink its policy of abolition. Reform no longer talks about Proportional Representation for the House of Commons, does it? That's politics. 

Full and Fair

The BBC has apologised and made the misedited Panorama disappear, but it was not shown in the United States, and days after it was shown anywhere, Donald Trump won the election.

So Trump was misrepresented, but how was he injured? He should take the win here, because it looks like the best that he is going to get.

Our Focus Remains

An hour from now, Zarah Sultana will be on Question Time. About 20 minutes ago, Your Party tweeted the following:

Statement from the Independent Alliance of MPs

Your Party’s founding purpose is to stand for the many against the few who hold the wealth and power in our country. Thousands of ordinary people have given their time and money to build a real alternative to endless cuts and endless war.

A dedicated team of volunteers has been working on a shoestring budget to deliver a founding conference at the end of the month. Their efforts are heroic, but without funding Your Party’s capacity has been severely restricted. Hundreds of thousands of pounds were donated to the party by supporters in good faith, but have since remained beyond its reach. This has been extremely frustrating and disheartening.

A small portion of these funds was today transferred to Your Party. This is insufficient. We will continue to pursue the immediate transfer of all the money that was donated by supporters to get a new party off the ground, alongside a resolution to outstanding legal issues.

Building a democratic party from the ground up was never going to be smooth sailing. Some of the difficulties we have faced were inevitable, but others were deliberate acts.

Our focus remains on delivering a historic founding conference, so we can turn outward to offer a popular alternative based on public ownership, wealth taxes and solidarity. There’s no time to lose.

Shockat Adam MP 
Jeremy Corbyn MP
Adnan Hussain MP
Ayoub Khan MP
Iqbal Mohamed MP

Hussain is a solicitor, Khan is a barrister, and Corbyn is a Privy Counsellor, so this is not going to go away.

The Opposite of Sectarian Politics


From time to time in politics a word or phrase suddenly becomes fashionable. One famous example concerns the term “weapons of mass destruction”, which became ubiquitous in early 2003. This pseudo-scientific formulation sounded impressive. The media bought into it. It gave credibility to the false claims made by George W Bush and Tony Blair to justify the invasion of Iraq. In the aftermath of the invasion the world learnt that there had been no weapons of mass destruction. Blair and Bush had deployed the term to give a spurious legitimacy to an illegal war. 

There’s a lesson here. We need to pay attention when a novel word or phrase enters the national conversation. To ask who put it there, and why, and whether the term means what it claims. In this article we examine one such term that has recently emerged in the British political lexicon: the word “sectarian”. It is not a new word, but it has been directed towards a new target. It’s being used to stigmatise British Muslim politicians.

According to the Oxford English Dictionary sectarianism is a “narrow‐minded adherence to a particular sect (political, ethnic, or religious), often leading to conflict with those of different sects or possessing different beliefs.” Synonyms for sectarian include “bigot”, “separatist”, “extremist”, “narrow-minded”, “fanatic” and “intolerant”. In the past in the UK, the word has been applied to rival sides in the Northern Irish conflict. But over the last 18 months, as deployed by prominent journalists and politicians, it has become central to a new and hostile discourse about Islam in Britain. It has been turned into a weapon to categorise political opponents who are Muslim as separatist, illegitimate, and dangerous. Not as normal participants in British public life, but a frightening and alien presence.

The principal targets are the four Muslim independents who entered parliament at the last election. But who is responsible for introducing this new usage? To find out we employed the search machine for Hansard, the official record of parliamentary debates. Hansard shows that the first example of the new application of the term inside Parliament dates back to a speech by the Tory peer Lord Godson in July 2024. In the debate that followed the King’s Speech, Godson raised the alarm about “rising extremism” and “the rise of explicitly communalist appeals”. Godson warned that “too many candidates in this month’s general election have sought to ride this sectarian tiger”.

Increasing use of the sectarian label

Tory politicians were quick to follow Godson’s adaptation of the term to create a discourse which paints Muslim participation in democratic politics as a threat. Within weeks Robert Jenrick, an early challenger in the Tory leadership contest, was attacking “sectarian gangs who have been causing disruption, violence and intimidation”. His rival for the leadership, Kemi Badenoch, followed suit, condemning MPs “elected on the back of sectarian Islamist politics; alien ideas that have no place here”.  The future Tory leader was making a direct attack on the four Muslim Independents elected two months earlier.

Since then, senior Tories have deployed this attack line with increasing ferocity. In October Jenrick claimed that the “House of Commons is being despoiled by these sectarian MPs”. In a column for The Sun he said “sectarian MPs” have “polluted our politics”. Likewise Nigel Farage, the leader of Reform UK, has repeatedly decried “sectarian politics” and warned against “those of the Islamic faith that want to push and push and push – and in some cases overtake the existing culture”.

Journalists have since echoed this language. In a recent column for The Spectator, Douglas Murray wrote that the notoriously racist Tory politician Enoch Powell had “understated our current problems”. Murray told readers that if Powell had “predicted that by the 2020s, significant numbers of Birmingham voters would vote in a Pakistani-born Muslim [a reference to the MP Ayoub Khan] on specifically sectarian, racial, religious lines… he would most likely have been deemed certifiable”. He claimed that “Khan is one of a number of MPs voted in at the last election solely because of their appeal to the sectarian Muslim vote and specifically its obsession with Israel and Gaza”.

Are the claims accurate?

It is all too easy to see what is going on here: a campaign is underway to paint Muslim MPs as bigoted, extremist, intolerant and anti-British. The enemy within, to employ the phrase disgracefully used by Margaret Thatcher against striking miners.  This is reckless and inflammatory. Let’s pause a moment and ask a question. Are the claims made by Badenoch, Godson, Jenrick and Murray accurate? Or are they another example of the racism and prejudice that have become commonplace on the British right?

Middle East Eye has closely followed the careers of the four Muslim Independent MPs since before they entered Parliament. During the general election we joined Adnan Hussain as he campaigned against Labour in the northern industrial town of Blackburn. “I was raised in this community,” he told us when we visited him at his legal practice. “I talk their language. I know their struggles.” He stressed that “Gaza is important and it’s the reason why I stood”.  But he added that “poverty is a massive issue too, and so is healthcare”. This wider vision helps explain why he won a seat held by Labour since 1955. Hussain would never have been able to appeal to a wide group of voters - only one third of the constituency are Muslim - had he run a “sectarian” campaign.

'Representing the working class'

We interviewed Hussain again once he became an MP. He gave us an insight into the agenda of the Independent Alliance that the four MPs formed with former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn. Speaking in his Commons office he told us: “We have been at the centre of pushing for traditionally Labour policies, representing a demographic, the working class, that the Labour party no longer does.” The Independent Alliance, now crucial to the formation of a new left-wing political party, has campaigned on a range of policy issues, including opposing the government's two-child benefits cap and its welfare reform bill. For the new party to succeed it will need to draw together voters of different backgrounds and political priorities, precisely the opposite of sectarian politics.

Since winning his seat Hussain’s own politics have been hard to classify. Again and again he has defied expectations and stereotypes. He responded to January’s furore over grooming gangs by backing a public inquiry into the crisis - then opposed by the Starmer government.  He called for the perpetrators to be “made an example of as a strong deterrence and warning to others”.  In December 2024, he took to social media to announce that “I chose a photograph inside Blackburn Cathedral for my Christmas card this year as it reflects the heart of everything that Blackburn is and can be”. Recently Hussain criticised Muslims in East London who protested against a planned far-right demonstration wearing balaclavas and chanting Islamic slogans, warning it was “exacerbating a situation which was already extremely volatile”. Perhaps Kemi Badenoch is right to say that Hussain and his colleagues represent alien ideas. Or more likely she doesn’t know what she is talking about.

Representing diverse communities

We also followed Shockat Adam, the Independent MP for Leicester South who unseated Labour’s shadow cabinet minister, Jonathan Ashworth, during the general election. We watched him campaign in a popular Portuguese cafe in his constituency.  “We are living in a world now where people sometimes try to divide us,” he told a crowd, adding: “That’s why it’s so important that we all work together to make sure we all stay united.”

Sift through Shockat Adam’s X account since he became MP and photos of him appear at events hosted by every religious community in Leicester. In one post he marked Rosh Hashanah by wishing “renewal, joy and peace” for the city’s Jewish community, posting an Instagram reminder of the “rich Jewish culture within Leicester”. Earlier this year, Adam defended the traditional Christian prayers that are read at the start of Commons sittings, after Labour MPs called for the practice to end. “Prayers in the House of Commons are part of our Christian heritage and Parliament’s traditions,” he insisted.  When we spoke to him in August he told us he was “proud” to advocate for "the removal of VAT on the refurbishment of our historic churches”.

Ayoub Khan, who unseated Labour’s Khalid Mahmood in Birmingham Perry Barr, has been photographed as MP in churches and other places of worship. Iqbal Mohamed, MP for Dewsbury and Batley, told the North Kirklees Interfaith annual general meeting in June that he was “honoured to represent a diverse constituency like Dewsbury and Batley”. He urged the assembled faith leaders to focus on more than religion, saying “we need to focus our interfaith activities firstly on humanity, and to then move onto issues affecting the environment and the climate”. Yet Hussain, Adam, Khan and Mohamed are regularly smeared as sectarian. They were depicted on the front cover of a recent Spectator issue as part of an “Islamo-socialist alliance”. These incendiary claims don’t stand up.

In step with public opinion

Use of the term sectarianism implies the existence of a coordinated bloc of Muslim voters driven by separatist concerns. The 2024 election actually saw the collapse of the Muslim bloc vote, which had long been exploited by Labour. Last year, Muslims voted for a diverse range of parties and candidates. One poll before the election found that an unprecedented 29 percent of Bangladeshi and Pakistani heritage voters intended to vote for Green Party candidates, with 44 percent opting for Labour.

The two most salient issues for British Muslims in the election were the cost of living and the NHS - like British voters in general. There’s no doubt that Gaza was also important. The media has widely painted this issue as a sectarian, niche and purely Muslim concern. This claim has always been nonsense. From the early weeks of the Israeli assault on Gaza, the majority of British public opinion has supported a ceasefire. In London’s regular pro-ceasefire marches, the most visibly distinctive group was always the large Jewish bloc.

Defending the rules-based order

It is the two main British political parties which have been out of step with public opinion on Gaza. A majority of ordinary voters are on the same side as the independent Muslim MPs. For example, the Green Party campaigned heavily for the suspension of arms sales to Israel. Carla Denyer, then the party’s co-leader, won in Bristol Central on a pro-Palestinian platform. Keir Starmer, even as he was elected into Downing Street as Labour leader, saw his vote share slashed in his Holborn and St Pancras constituency, where Jewish South African independent and former Nelson Mandela ally Andrew Feinstein campaigned heavily on Gaza. Neither Denyer nor Feinstein is Muslim.

While it is certainly true that independents have consistently opposed Israeli actions in Gaza, they have done so on the same basis - support for international law and human rights - as non-Muslim politicians. This means they have been standing up for the rules-based order promoted by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and US President Franklin Roosevelt when they agreed to the Atlantic Charter in 1941.  Perversely it is the Tories and Reform, for whom support for Israel has entailed hostility to the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court, which have failed to do so. In a bleak irony, the four Muslim independent MPs are being denounced as sectarian for standing up for the institutions enshrined in Churchill's vision of a post-war international order. Ayoub Khan told MEE: “We are being singled out only because we are Muslims.”  He has a point.

Echoes of the Trojan Horse affair

It comes as no surprise that Dean Godson should have been the first to use the term sectarian in parliament. He is director of the neoconservative Policy Exchange think tank, which has sought to frame the official narrative about British Muslims to create a new relationship between the British state and Muslims.  Crucially, Policy Exchange was a significant promoter of the so-called “Trojan Horse” plot of 2014, the now discredited narrative that a tightly knit group of Muslim teachers and governors with an Islamist agenda plotted the takeover of Birmingham schools. Then-education secretary Michael Gove, now the editor of The Spectator, was privately told by officials that counterterror police had decided the letter claiming there was a takeover plot was a hoax.

But Gove reportedly “used the letter to sanction numerous high-level investigations into potential extremism in Birmingham schools anyway”. A number of successful Muslim teachers were wrongly targeted and smeared, with misconduct cases brought against them collapsing in 2017. There has been no inquiry into the handling of the Trojan Horse affair and those behind the false narrative – including Policy Exchange – have doubled down on the claim that “hard-line activists Islamised state schools in Birmingham”. There are clear echoes of Trojan Horse in the demonisation of the Independent MPs. Both cases have seen Muslims participating in British life as normal democratic citizens falsely smeared as threatening and un-British.

The real bigots 

Many of those who deploy the term sectarian are the real bigots. Look at the chilling parallels. In Germany, the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party rails against the “Islamisation of the West” and claims “Islam does not belong to Germany”. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán declared in 2018 that the West had “opened the way for the decline of Christian culture and … Islamic expansion” while his government had “prevented the Islamic world from flooding us from the south”. He describes Muslim refugees as “Muslim invaders”.

In India, known as the world’s largest democracy, Muslims are lynched on a regular basis and see their homes bulldozed arbitrarily.  Researchers estimate that tens of thousands of Muslim homes, businesses and places of worship have been destroyed in the past several years. Meanwhile Prime Minister Narendra Modi denounces the country’s 200 million Muslims as “infiltrators”. Hindu nationalism frames Muslims as a foreign intrusion and demographic threat. 

The attack on British parliamentarians, while far less extreme, nonetheless fits within the same bigoted paradigm. It’s approaching 25 years since Blair and Bush deployed the term weapons of mass destruction to justify the illegal invasion of Iraq. That led to catastrophe. Now the term sectarian is being used as part of a culture war in Britain. This attack on minorities is un-British and wrong.

Who’s Governing? Them Or Us?

Mark Wilding writes:

Palantir seemed an obvious contender to implement the government’s digital ID plans, but the company’s UK chief was adamant he didn’t want the job. At the start of October, less than a week after Keir Starmer announced proposals for mandatory ID for UK workers, Louis Mosley told Times Radio his firm wouldn’t be bidding for the contract. In a video of the interview posted online, Mosley, a clean-cut and boyish 42-year-old, appeared earnest as he raised his “personal concerns” about the Labour government’s policy. “But also it’s a problem on a corporate level,” he said. Digital ID had not been tested at the last election. “It wasn’t in the manifesto.”

Opting out of a major government data project was, on the face of it, a surprising move for Palantir. The American data analysis firm has spent the past decade lobbying for and winning UK government contracts, with clients ranging from the Ministry of Defence to the Cabinet Office and the NHS. Days before Starmer’s digital ID plans were set out, the government triumphantly announced that Palantir was entering into a £1.5bn “strategic partnership” with the British state. In a podcast appearance that day, Mosley said: “We’re only just getting started. We’ll look back in five years’ time and we’ll think those were small deals.”

Furthermore, Palantir was seen as a frontrunner to work on digital ID precisely because the proposal was controversial. In the United States, its software has reportedly been used as part of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency’s deportations programme, allowing agents to use cellphone data to track individuals in real time. For six years, the company worked on a secret programme in New Orleans, combining police data with public records and social media analysis to predict future perpetrators of crime. Critics alleged this tool had entrenched racial bias and discrimination, claims Palantir denied. Since the 7th October terror attacks and the start of the Gaza war, Palantir has emerged as a particularly vocal supporter of Israel, entering into an agreement for the country to “harness Palantir’s advanced technology in support of war-related missions”. In 2020, the company’s chief operating officer Shyam Sankar predicted a world in which Palantir’s software will be “inside every missile, inside every drone”.

As Palantir has expanded its influence over the UK public sector, critics have repeatedly pointed to the company’s more morally ambiguous work as evidence that it is unsuitable as a government partner. The Labour MP Clive Lewis, who campaigned against Palantir’s work with the NHS, told me: “Its business is death and destruction. This is not an organisation you want running the democratic jewel of the postwar period.” Faced with such criticisms, Palantir has consistently adopted the argument made by Mosley when he appeared before British MPs in July this year. “We do not—unlike some tech companies, I am afraid—pick and choose which government policies we will support and which ones we will not,” he said. “We are here to support democratically elected governments in delivering the mandate that they have been elected to deliver.”

Speaking on Times Radio, Mosley was unequivocal that digital ID was one government policy Palantir had no interest in delivering. “We’re seeing a wide divergence of views and a lot of controversy around it,” he said. “So, it isn’t one for us.” When pressed as to whether this did, in fact, represent a political position, Mosley insisted Palantir’s stance was consistent with the company’s long-standing policy. Digital ID, he said, was “a programme that needs to be decided at the ballot box, not in the company boardroom”.

Mosley’s own rise to the company boardroom followed a mixed experience at the ballot box. After graduating from Oxford University in 2006, he embarked on a career in politics, perhaps following in the early footsteps of his grandfather Oswald Mosley, who served as both a Conservative and Labour MP before founding the British Union of Fascists in 1932. After a stint as a researcher at the Centre for Global Studies, a thinktank chaired by his grandfather’s biographer Robert Skidelsky, Mosley went to work for Rory Stewart, who had just been elected as a Tory MP. There, he was involved in rolling out broadband internet in Stewart’s rural Cumbria constituency. Libby Bateman, a campaigner who worked with Mosley on the rollout (and who, in October, was selected as the Liberal Democrat candidate for mayor of Cumbria), describes him as smart and charismatic. “People like Louis, they have empathy with people from all walks of life,” she says.

In June 2011, aged just 28, Mosley stood successfully for the Conservatives in a Kensington and Chelsea council byelection. Noting Mosley’s youth, the Evening Standard drew comparisons with Oswald, who was once the youngest MP in the House of Commons. “I really don’t know much about my grandfather’s career,” Mosley told the paper. He served as a councillor until 2014 and, for a time, looked on course for the Commons himself after being shortlisted as a Conservative candidate for the 2017 general election. Although party members opted for a different candidate, the local paper described him as “high flying”. Later that year he addressed the Tory conference, warning his colleagues about the stigmatising nature of language such as “the loony left”. Shortly afterwards, his political momentum stalled: in the 2018 local elections, Mosley came 12th out of 13 candidates in the staunchly Labour borough of Hackney. By this time, however, he had begun working in Palantir’s London office, the company having set its sights firmly on UK expansion.

Palantir was founded 15 years earlier, the brainchild of the PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel. When Thiel sold PayPal to eBay for $1.5bn in 2002, the company had only just become profitable after implementing an automated system to identify credit card fraud. It was the year after 9/11, when civil liberties were being rapidly dismantled in pursuit of the War on Terror. Thiel identified as a libertarian and, as he later told Bloomberg, wanted the US government to have the best surveillance tools available while building in safeguards against abuse. In 2004, he recruited his former Stanford University classmate Alex Karp to run a new company, based on the fraud detection technology developed at PayPal, to mine government data and track down terrorists. Early investors included In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital arm.

Karp was an intriguing choice to lead Palantir. Thiel was a right-wing provocateur who, after leaving Stanford, wrote a book with fellow graduate David O Sacks. The Diversity Myth argued that multiculturalism and political correctness were debilitating academic institutions. Thiel has since gone much further. In 2009 he wrote: “I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.” In recent months, he has warned that attempts to regulate technology could be the work of the antichrist, who he has suggested could take the form of climate activist Greta Thunberg.

Karp was similarly eccentric but saw himself as a progressive. After graduation, he’d moved to Germany to pursue a doctorate in neoclassical social theory. According to The Contrarian, a biography of Thiel by the journalist Max Chafkin, it was Karp who insisted Palantir adopt safeguards to protect privacy, offering controls over who could access different types of data and keeping a log of searches. Thiel was initially sceptical, but Palantir has referred to these audit functions and access controls repeatedly over the years as evidence of its commitment to privacy and civil liberties; their efficacy as a bulwark against misuse remains unclear. Chafkin spoke to a former Palantir engineer who recalled government clients suggesting the company’s software could be used to look up ex-girlfriends. “They would remind the clients that searches were logged,” he wrote, “and then allow them to look up whoever they wanted.”

Palantir is named after the mystical “seeing stones” in the Lord of the Rings novels: the palantiri allowed users to see into the past and across the world—an immense power that could be used for good or evil. As if to reassure them which side they were on, Palantir employees were told their mission was to “save the Shire”, a reference to the hobbit homeland in Tolkien’s fantasy world. Several of the ex-staffers I spoke to for this article—all of whom requested anonymity—told me Palantir encouraged internal debate and disagreement. Others said the Shire narrative was rarely questioned. “There were a lot of people who bought into this whole hobbit thing,” one says. “That was a bit too much, without any level of reflection.”

Combined with Palantir’s non-hierarchical structure, under which employees were expected to be entrepreneurial, this sometimes led to work that pushed ethical boundaries. In 2011, it emerged that Palantir engineers were considering ways to work with two other intelligence firms to discredit Wikileaks and its supporters, including the journalist Glenn Greenwald. Palantir-branded slides referred to plans for a disinformation campaign and cyber attacks. When the slides were obtained by the hacking group Anonymous, Karp apologised to Greenwald. One of the engineers involved was later appointed Palantir’s head of business operations.

This was not an isolated incident. Through 2013 and 2014, a Palantir employee in London worked with data analytics firm Cambridge Analytica to create an app that would harvest the personal data of more than 50m Facebook users, with the aim of influencing American voters. When the scandal broke years later, Palantir blamed an employee “engaged in an entirely personal capacity” and said it would take “appropriate action”. That narrative appeared to be contradicted by the Cambridge Analytica whistleblower Christopher Wylie, who told British MPs: “There were senior Palantir employees that were also working on the Facebook data.”

These episodes illustrated a tension that would become more pronounced as Palantir sought to expand its UK business. In certain domains, a reputation as a shadowy, CIA-funded corporation staffed by ruthless bastards can really open doors. As Chafkin reports in The Contrarian, Thiel once told a friend: “I’d rather be seen as evil than incompetent.” But, as Karp had perhaps recognised when making the case for privacy safeguarding features, there were times when that kind of notoriety could be a liability.

Mosley joined Palantir at a pivotal time. The firm had recently opened a new office in central London’s Soho Square and was exploring opportunities beyond defence and intelligence. The people skills Mosley had shown in politics proved an even greater asset at Palantir. “I don’t think I’ve met anyone as well networked as him,” a former colleague says. “He’s very good at understanding the political landscape and power structures, and has a very uncanny ability to know exactly the right person to be going to.” Another ex-colleague remembers Mosley identifying the NHS as a key potential client—albeit one he knew might remain out of reach. Paraphrasing, he recalls Mosley saying: “Our reputation as a ‘scary American data company’ will certainly not make it easier to build the trust we need to work with the cherished NHS.”

Then the pandemic hit. In March 2020, prime minister Boris Johnson summoned more than 20 tech leaders to Downing Street for an emergency summit, in what was described as a “digital Dunkirk”. Attendees, including representatives from Palantir, were asked how they could support the national effort to tackle Covid-19. According to a Guardian report, Uber proposed free taxi rides for medical workers and Deliveroo offered to help keep hospital workers fed. Palantir, naturally, suggested helping with data analytics.

Here was an opening into Whitehall, though Palantir already had a foot wedged firmly in the door. Documents released by whistleblower Edward Snowden and published by the Intercept in 2017 revealed the company was courting UK government clients as early as 2008, when Palantir invited the UK intelligence agency GCHQ to visit its Palo Alto office “any time”. Just as it had in the US, Palantir cultivated well-connected advisers and admirers. By 2014, former British Army field commander Graeme Lamb had joined the firm and was telling a parliamentary select committee that Palantir’s technology had “saved numerous lives”. The following year, Palantir met twice with Matt Hancock, then a junior Cabinet Office minister, who would go on to become health secretary overseeing the NHS pandemic response. Not long after those meetings, Palantir won its first public UK government contract—with the Cabinet Office. (Hancock tells me he could not remember those early meetings with the company: “What I do remember is that Palantir did amazing work in the pandemic, building dashboards to help manage NHS capacity.”)

While it was no doubt fortuitous that Palantir met Hancock several years before he took charge at the health department, it also points to the company’s shrewd approach to cultivating relationships. Government transparency records indicate that Palantir employees met with UK ministers and senior officials almost 90 times over a 10-year period, a figure that seems likely to be an underestimate. The Guardian recently reported on leaked documents that reveal Johnson and chief aide Dominic Cummings had met Thiel in August 2019, an encounter never officially disclosed via the Number 10 meeting log, for reasons that remain unclear.

It was by fostering government connections that Mosley began making headway with his plans for the NHS. Documents obtained by Politico in 2021 reveal that Mosley and Karp met with then trade secretary Liam Fox at the World Economic Forum in Davos, where Fox’s briefing notes indicate he described the NHS as a “huge and as yet untapped resource”. Later that year, the Bureau for Investigative Journalism obtained documents that show Mosley hosting an event attended by the NHS England chair, David Prior. The next day, Prior emailed Mosley: “Thank you for hosting such an interesting dinner and also for the water melon cocktails! If you can see ways where you could help us structure and curate our data so that it helps us deliver better care and provides a more insightful data base for medical research do be in touch.”

Mosley’s efforts meant ministers and NHS officials were well versed in Palantir’s capabilities when the pandemic hit. After Johnson’s “digital Dunkirk” summit, Palantir was enlisted to build the NHS Covid-19 Data Store, helping to protect the NHS from being overwhelmed. As Mosley later told a parliamentary select committee: “We offered, because it was a national emergency, to provide our support free.” It was both a philanthropic gesture and, as Mosley acknowledged during the select committee, a sales strategy the company had adopted before. Mosley compared the practice to a magazine subscription: “You get the first few issues discounted or free and then, if you like what you read, you sign up for full price.” Gareth Rhys Williams, the government’s chief commercial officer at the time, took a different view of such practices. “It leads to all sorts of future problems,” he told MPs in 2023. “It is tempting at the time, but it is usually a mistake that we repent of later.”

In December 2020, nine months after offering its services to the NHS, free of charge, Palantir landed a two-year £23.5m contract with the service to continue its work on the Covid Data Store. This sparked a backlash, including a lawsuit from legal campaign group Foxglove and independent media organisation openDemocracy, which alleged the contract had been a stitch-up. “No to Palantir in Our NHS”, a campaign backed by Foxglove and dozens of other advocacy groups, warned the public: “Palantir is a US tech and security corporation with a terrible track record. They help governments, intelligence agencies, and border forces to spy on innocent citizens and target minorities and the poor. We don’t trust them with our health data, and we don’t trust them to respect the values of our NHS.”

As the controversy raged on, Mosley continued to work on building the NHS relationship. Documents seen by Bloomberg show that Mosley sent an email to colleagues in September 2021 titled “Buying our way in…!”, suggesting that “hoovering up” existing NHS suppliers could “take a lot of ground and take down a lot of political resistance”. (Palantir spokesperson and former Conservative government adviser Ben Mascall told Bloomberg that Mosley’s language was “regrettable” and “not an accurate characterisation of our relationship with the NHS”.) In the end, the strategy wasn’t necessary. In November 2023, the NHS awarded a Palantir-led consortium a contract worth an estimated £330m to build the Federated Data Platform (FDP), linking up data from NHS trusts across the country. Through a combination of relentless networking, astute sales tactics and the fortuitous arrival of a pandemic, Mosley had landed his white whale.

In his bestselling entrepreneurship manifesto Zero to One, written with US venture capitalist Blake Masters, Thiel claimed: “Every great business is built around a secret… A great company is a conspiracy to change the world.” Palantir’s secret was the realisation that governments and corporations were sitting on mountains of poorly organised data, with the potential to unlock enormous value and insights. But the company’s critics fear the secrets and conspiracies may run much deeper.

NHS patient data, spanning more than seven decades and covering most of the UK population, is a trove of potential medical and demographic insights that may be unrivalled anywhere in the world. Opponents of the FDP contract have questioned whether private companies can be trusted with such sensitive personal data and whether it could be used to develop profitable products that benefit Palantir shareholders rather than the British taxpayer. Duncan McCann, head of tech and data at the Good Law Project, believes Palantir’s controversial reputation presents risks for the NHS when it comes to accessing important health data. “The more Palantir gets into our system, the more I think they’ll see people opting out of having their data used and shared,” he says.

Both Palantir and the NHS are at pains to point out that the company has no rights to the data under the contract. Several ex-Palantir staffers draw comparisons with Microsoft, observing that few worry about Bill Gates stealing their spreadsheet data. The analogy came up frequently enough to suggest it was a common refrain among Palantirians frustrated at public perceptions of the company. But the comparison ignores a key element of the Palantir operation, embedding engineers in its client organisations to identify and implement solutions. Microsoft doesn’t tend to send engineers to peer over clients’ shoulders as they operate Excel.

One way in which the analogy does work is to highlight Palantir’s march to ubiquity. According to the procurement analyst Tussell, Palantir was the second largest supplier of AI to the UK’s public sector by contract value between 2018 and 2025, behind only Microsoft. As well as the NHS, it has held contracts with government departments including the Cabinet Office, the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, and the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, engaged in discussions about working for the Ministry of Justice, and lobbied for work with the Department for Work and Pensions. It has also worked with local authorities in Barnsley and Coventry and, earlier this year, I revealed how Palantir’s contract with Bedfordshire Police was serving as a pilot for a national rollout of the company’s software to establish a national intelligence database.

While much of the firm’s UK government expansion took place under a Conservative administration, there is little sign that growth is slowing under Labour. As the financial analyst Hargreaves Lansdown has written: “Once customers are ensnared in the Palantir world, it’s very hard to give up the data insights and get out of its web.” Palantir also enjoys strong connections throughout Whitehall, due in part to the number of senior officials the company has hired from the civil service.

Clive Lewis believes the health service should be investing in its own systems. “And I know people will say, ‘the NHS had a terrible history with IT systems’,” he says. “Well, change that.” In Lewis’s view, ministers and civil servants dazzled by Palantir’s technological prowess would do well to remember the way corporations operate: “They’re not investing in us for our benefit, they’re investing in us for their benefit, and that goes against the very founding principles of the NHS.” Lewis makes the same argument about the increasing number of other state functions being handed over to Big Tech. “This is bigger than just Palantir,” he says. “There is no real programme for government other than handing over an ever greater share of our democracy, our national institutions, our data and our economic capabilities to these organisations.”

In the parlance favoured by Silicon Valley and popularised by Thiel, to “steelman” an argument is to construct the strongest possible version of an intellectual position. “We should steelman the people we disagree with,” Thiel told an audience in 2018. “We should try to think about, how can we make their arguments even better than they make them?” To steelman the Palantir position: it is a company that helps organisations unlock unprecedented insights from data, at scale and at speed. Palantir played a crucial role in the UK’s pandemic response, demonstrating how its software can help the government work more efficiently. Just as we want the civil service to function well—to impartially enact government policy swiftly and effectively—we should want public servants to have the best technology at their disposal.

But Palantir’s sinister reputation means there will always be those who counter the steelman argument, much to the frustration of some ex-staffers. Recalling the firm’s work during the pandemic, one tells me: “I glow with pride when I think of the incredible work my colleagues did… But I think they’ll always be a pantomime villain, whatever they try and do.” When I suggest that Palantir’s image has not always been helped by its leadership, he laughs. Recalling a 2023 speech at the Oxford Union, when Thiel described the UK’s affection for the NHS as a form of “Stockholm syndrome”, this ex-staffer says: “You have moments like that where you’re like, fuck my life, kill me, did he really have to say that at this moment in time?” Of Karp, who still seems to identify as a “progressive” despite increasingly embracing a muscular brand of nationalism, he says: “He’s a very opinionated guy and he won’t moderate those opinions for anyone. There’s part of me that goes: ‘At least I know you actually mean the things that you say.’” For Lewis, that’s exactly the problem. Quoting the poet and civil rights activist Maya Angelou, he tells me: “When someone shows you who they are, believe them.”

As Palantir notes in its own code of conduct, “technology is not ethically neutral”, leading the company to acknowledge its “ever-present responsibility to strive to ensure that our software is used for good”. What constitutes “good”, of course, depends entirely on your point of view. In The Technological Republic, his recent book written with Palantir colleague Nicholas W Zamiska, Karp called on Silicon Valley “to participate in the defense of the nation and the articulation of a national project—what is this country, what are our values, and for what do we stand”. In a recent letter to investors, he quoted the political scientist Samuel Huntington, who wrote that the rise of the west was not made possible “by the superiority of its ideas or values or religion... but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence”. The shape of Donald Trump’s national project, and his willingness to apply organised violence, is becoming increasingly clear. The US president recently warned the country was “under invasion from within” and said American cities should be used as military “training grounds”.

In May this year, the New York Times reported on fears that Trump could use Palantir’s technology to “compile a master list of personal information on Americans that could give him untold surveillance power”. Critics say this could allow the president to weaponise personal data to police immigrants and punish his critics. Palantir responded with a blog post accusing the paper of publishing “falsehoods and misleading statements”, rebutting any assertion that the company has the ability to compile data on US citizens for its own purposes or proactively share it among government agencies. But the fears raised in the New York Times were really about another possibility: that the Trump administration could pursue those policies, enabled by a company whose software is already used to identify migrants, criminal suspects and military targets.

Earlier this year, Mosley joined speakers including Nigel Farage and GB News co-owner Paul Marshall at the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship conference in London. Speaking as a tech leader, he struck a different tone from his 2017 Tory conference appearance when, as a politician, he called out stigmatising language. This time, Mosley heralded the end of an age of censorship and the freedom to challenge the official narrative on issues such as mass migration. “In the US, we are seeing government reforms that will change the lives of everyone in that country for the better,” Mosley said. “There is no reason we cannot do the same here in Britain and elsewhere across Europe.”

Palantir has said it wants to become the “default operating system for data across the US government”. It appears to be pursuing the same ambition in the UK. In a submission to the UK government’s Covid inquiry, Mosley urged ministers to invest in a “common operating system” that would draw together data from “across the local and central government, healthcare and other bodies of national strategic importance”. A registry of such a wide range of personal data would be a powerful resource, opening up the possibility of improved government efficiency but also fears about the loss of privacy and an age of mass surveillance. Palantir says this operating system would not take the form of a master database and, at any rate, has argued it will be for elected representatives to decide how it should be used. Martin Wrigley, a Liberal Democrat MP who worked in the tech industry for 30 years, questions that assertion. “If they are controlling all of that, and making moral judgements on what they will and will not implement, who’s governing?” he asks. “Them or us?”

When asked to comment in response to this article, Palantir said its work in the UK included helping the NHS schedule 80,000 more operations, working with the police to identify young people at risk of abuse, and allowing Royal Navy ships to stay at sea for longer. “We are proud of its impact in all these settings and many more,” a spokesman said. “Yet, whatever the context, three immutable facts always hold. Firstly, we have no interest in mining or selling data—we simply provide software that helps organisations better manage the information they already hold. Secondly, as a matter of law, we can only process data strictly in accordance with the instructions of the customer—they are in control. Thirdly, Palantir software is built with extremely granular access controls so that customers using it are able to see the information they need to do their jobs, but only the information they need to do their jobs.”

During his recent appearance on Times Radio, Mosley explained his scepticism over digital ID, doubting the “technical necessity” of the policy. “We have passports, we have driving licences, we have unique tax codes, we have National Insurance numbers… Now, each of these sits in a silo and doesn’t talk to the other, isn’t harmonised. There’s no way for government to easily jump from one to another. That could be achieved in the backend with relatively little effort.” The implication was clear: that Palantir was ready to build such a system. Mosley didn’t clarify whether the decision to do so should be made at the ballot box or in the boardroom.

The Churchill of History


Historian and culture warrior Andrew Roberts is right to rebuke the MAGA fringe and its line of attack on mid-century British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, now a figure of legend and myth. Roberts warns against the claims of historian Darryl Cooper and fellow cranks, their distorted and sinister revival of World War Two revisionism, their downplaying of Nazi atrocities and their attempt to shift blame onto Winston Churchill, the “chief villain” of World War Two. The prime mover of that war and its industrial scale genocide was Germany’s despot Adolf Hitler and his Axis bedfellows. No amount of relativism about the British empire, naive speculation about cutting a deal with Hitler in 1940, or sympathy for the suffering and grievances of Weimar-era Germany changes that. So far, so good.

Alas, Roberts also falls prey to a distortion of his own. At stake in the Churchill argument, he argues, is the whole direction of Western foreign policy. The ultra-rightists’ assaults on the great man are intended to supplant a noble “internationalism and interventionism” with “isolationism and nativism.” At stake is the “postwar international order that Churchill helped build.” MAGAs yearn for authoritarian strongmen, and by attacking Churchill, they really seek to undermine “the cause of anti-totalitarianism.”

In other words, Roberts projects his own preferred policy vision, of muscular Atlanticism and the eternal struggle of democracy versus dictatorship onto Churchill, notably with the theme of empire turned down. Churchill in his account emerges as a kind of early Tony Blair.

We can do better than that. Once we replace Churchill, a more complex man of many parts with large general “isms”, once we reduce postwar history to a static, virtuous and regular “order”, we do violence not only to history, but to the vital task of thinking prudently about foreign policy.

To put it bluntly, Churchill was not uniformly or consistently an internationalist or an interventionist. Even in his famous “wilderness” period, now recalled for his Cassandra-like warnings against the unchecked rise of totalitarians, his positions varied and at times, meandered. He emphatically did not call for intervention over Manchuria after Imperial Japan’s invasion in 1931. In that case, he instinctively sympathised with the idea of Japan bringing order into a chaotic periphery and valued Tokyo as an anti-communist and Britain-friendly bulwark. Besides, it was too far away for British entanglement at a time of scarcity, it would paralyse the League of Nations if they tried to intervene, and Japan posed little threat to the stronghold at Singapore. He was not always prescient. But he tried to think prudentially. 

Neither did Churchill support British intervention in the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s. He feared both sides. Initially he sympathised more with Franco. But later with the power balance tipping under German rearmament in 1938-9, he saw fascist victory in Spain as more threatening to the British empire. He endorsed British non-intervention throughout, given all else Britain had on its hands. Ironically, in our own time when hawks invoked Churchill to denounce western passivity in the Syrian civil war, they knew not of what they spoke.

A similar reticence marked Churchill’s responses to Benito Mussolini’s rape of Abyssinia. Here is the case that Churchill and others later recalled as an early warning and a missed opportunity to intervene and roll back the coming of fascism (in the optimistic hope that Hitler would be so easily discouraged). Yet at the time, Churchill was all over the shop. As one historian noted, “Churchill delivered strong speeches on every side of the question.” While at times privately he was “gung ho” for weighing in militarily, in public he spoke in favour of the abortive Hoare-Laval plan of Dec 1935, which proposed to reward Mussolini’s aggression with territorial concessions at Abyssinia’s expense. Personal ambition also contributed to his caution, given he wanted to return to the Admiralty.

Above all, Churchill’s world view centred not on the general rise of dictators but specifically on the revival of Germany and the need to rearm to counter it. Regarding Abyssinia, it was partly a matter of Realpolitik. Italy was a potential counterweight and Churchill was anxious to help maintain the anti-German front. And it was partly Churchill’s romantic commitment to the League of Nations, which a strike on Italy might have ruptured. This was an internationalism of sorts, but not the internationalism of the neoconservatives imaginations. Even when Nazi Germany reoccupied the Rhineland, Churchill’s response was muted, urging at most for the two parties to have the issue litigated before a world court.

With regard to totalitarians in wartime, the history is also fraught. Churchill’s statecraft was more measured and prioritised. To combat or resist one totalitarian, one might have to help and appease another. Churchill’s sustained appeasement of Stalin — and Stalinism — from the day Hitler launched Operation Barbarossa is a central part of his tragic premiership. He chose to acquiesce publicly over Moscow’s lies about the Katyn massacre, to maintain the wartime alliance. “[T]here is no use prowling morbidly round the three year old graves of Smolensk”, as he wrote privately to his Foreign Secretary.

Likewise, Churchill was not straightforwardly the “internationalist” that many admirers presume. When admirers invoke the high-minded Atlantic Charter he co-created with President Franklin Roosevelt in 1941, for instance, or speak of Churchill’s principled stands for democracy versus dictatorship, they leave out other central elements. Churchill energetically tried to exempt the British Empire from the Charter’s anticolonial principles.

And Churchill’s commitments to political liberty and to peace were in conflict, as they often are for all of us. It was Churchill who strived in vain to prevent or de-escalate the Cold War that followed via personal détente, by seeking a bargain and a compromise, especially after Stalin successfully tested the bomb in 1949. Indeed, men from Washington to Westminster accused him of trying “another Munich”, equating even face-to-face talks with capitulation and collapse.

In advocating German reunification in the early 1950s and seeking Moscow’s support for it, he resented Britain’s Foreign Office for its denunciations of the Soviet crackdown on the East German uprising of 1953. Where at other times he appealed to democracy over totalitarianism, on this occasion he regarded the act of Soviet suppression as a restrained police action against “anarchy and riot” in the Eastern zone. Churchill the visionary of democratic freedom collided with Churchill the figure of imperial order. This is not a simple story.

In pursuit of West German postwar rearmament, Churchill played his part in supporting the movement to rehabilitate its armed forces’ public image. Sympathisers recast the Wehrmacht as the honourable upright institution and assigned all culpability to the Nazis and the SS. Churchill interceded personally on behalf of Field Marshal Albert Kesselring, author of massacres in Italy. In the Commons, Churchill denounced the “trial of aged and decrepit German field-marshals” as a pettiness that got in the way of rebuilding western Europe as an anti-Soviet bulwark. There was a better “order” erected on the rubble of World War Two. Yet it was built not only with the Marshall Plan and NATO, but with the sanitisation of history and the reputations and fates of war criminals, whether in Berlin or Tokyo. Peace, as Churchill believed, had a price.

Churchill of course contributed to the mythologising. In his memoirs, he initially encouraged the mytho-history of resolute Churchillians never giving an inch, in volume one, “The Gathering Storm,” written during the Berlin airlift crisis. But by the time of volume six, “Triumph and Tragedy”, while he advocated détente with the Soviet Union, he depicted his pursuit of negotiation from strength, centred on the examples of talks in Moscow and Yalta. To uncover the historical Churchill one must battle with the man himself.

If there is greatness to be found in Churchill, it is not that he stood for “steadfast leadership”, as Roberts tells it. Steadfastness implies constancy and an unyielding, consistent posture. Rather, it is that he tried to link means with ends and adjust his calculations accordingly, even while appealing to others’ spirit of righteous endurance. In other words, he sought out prudence, a more practical wisdom, as the only way to create and sustain power, and forge a decent peace. Foreign policy is more a tragedy than a morality play, and in practice lacks the bright clear lines of hagiographers’ depictions. That is not to suggest he was always judicious. He was not, whether in the Dardanelles or Singapore. But he was more substantial than the loveable bulldog of popular imagination. There was a time to fight. And a time to accommodate. To defend everything was to defend nothing. As we wrestle with our own predicaments abroad, the Churchill of history is a better guide than the Disney version.

A Trick Missed

It has always surprised me that Police and Crime Commissioners had not been taken over by organised crime.

Turnout was always going to be very low, and any syndicate contains people who have never had so much as a parking ticket.

This would have been easy to pull off. Yet they never even tried.

Kiddies Fiddling While Britain Burns

Prison could sometimes be like a youth club or even a crèche, but it had nothing on Downing Street. The last lot had all-night raves at which ostensibly grown men played on swings. And now, this.

Far too many of these people are either in their twenties, or have been doing this since they were. They think that they are in a student union. But they are not even in a party office. They are in government. People’s livelihoods and services. Grow up, or get out.

Wednesday, 12 November 2025

Down The Golden Toilet

As 50 per cent of the prostitutes in Berlin’s brothels turn out to be Ukrainian, even Michael Gove is publishing this, by Owen Matthews:

A solid gold toilet and cupboards loaded with bagfuls of €200 bills are among the treasures linked to the prominent Ukrainian businessman Timur Mindich, after an investigation by Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau (Nabu). Mindich is big in real estate, fertilisers, banking and diamond trading – but he is best known as a long-time co-owner of Volodymyr Zelensky’s Kvartal 95 television production company. Nabu’s 15-month long investigation into what it describes as ‘high level’ corruption at the top of Ukraine’s political elite is likely to have momentous consequences for Zelensky’s political future.

According to a YouTube video put out by Nabu, their investigation has focused on alleged ‘kickbacks’ from contractors hired to build fortifications to defend energy infrastructure against Russian missiles and drones. The $100 million corruption scheme involved major public enterprises including Ukraine’s national nuclear power company Energoatom, alleges Nabu. As well as Mindich, former energy minister and justice minister Herman Halushchenko is among the suspects. Halushchenko has been suspended as justice minister, but says he will ‘defend myself in the legal domain and prove my position.’ Seventy searches have been carried out with serious charges to follow – though Mindich and several other leading suspects fled Ukraine just hours before the raids.

Zelensky himself publicly supported the anticorruption crackdown, telling the nation in his nightly address that ‘there must be sentences’ and urging government officials to ‘work together with Nabu and law enforcement agencies.’ But Zelensky will inevitably face serious questions as his close political and business allies fall under suspicion. And it’s also very fishy that just four months ago Zelensky attempted to bring Nabu and its sister agency Sapo under direct government control, forcing through quickly-drafted legislation to scrap the agencies’ operational independence. Zelensky’s move shocked Ukraine’s international allies and prompted major street demonstrations in central Kyiv, the first public protests against the government since the beginning of the war. Under intense back-room pressure from Brussels and Washington, as well as from the Kyiv street, Zelensky eventually backed down. Nabu and Sapo’s interrupted investigations continued – culminating in this week’s politically damaging raids.

A full-scale war seems to be about to break between independent anticorruption agencies and Zelensky’s inner circle, and the consequences are likely to be ugly. Ukraine’s National Security Service, known as the SBU, is loyal to Zelensky and wields considerable domestic power through its control of the judicial system and prisons. Nabu and Sapo, on the other hand, are heavily backed politically and financially by European and US governments and helped operationally by Western security agencies. That perceived nexus of notional independence and de facto Western control has prompted some Ukrainian politicians to denounce Nabu as a tool of foreign domination. Ukraine is turning into a ‘disenfranchised colony that is losing its sovereignty,’ complained former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko in August after she backed attempts to scrap Nabu’s independence.

So far the full extent of Nabu’s investigation remains officially confidential. But a slew of recent reports, including in the New York Times, suggest that corruption runs deep and far and involves many figures linked to Zelensky and to Kvartal 95. Questions have been raised over how Fire Point, a casting agency for Zelensky’s films before the war, came to acquire multi-million dollar government contracts to produce drones for the Ukrainian army. Fire Point – which has not been charged with any wrongdoing – also produces a newly-developed Flamingo long-range cruise missile.

During their searches, Nabu officers discovered over 1,000 hours of audio recordings that Mindich allegedly made of his conversations with business partners. A short teaser trailer put out on social media by Nabu featured a series of clips from different conversations between two men identified by code names who converse in Russian. The recordings don’t make much sense to outsiders – but their publication appears to a warning shot aimed at a very specific audience at the top of Ukraine’s political establishment.

One sad takeaway of this murky story is that in many ways Ukraine continues to live by the same rules as prevailed in the wild 1990s under Leonid Kuchma or in Boris Yeltsin’s Russia. In the aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet Union it became commonplace for wealthy businessmen to buy control over elements of the security forces and put them to work recording private conversations between leading politicians or business rivals and use the resulting ‘kompromat’ as a political tool. This time round the players are the Western-backed Nabu duking it out with the Zelensky-backed SBU – but the crossover of corruption and high-level politics feels depressingly like a trip back to the future.

The go-to response for many Zelensky loyalists will be to write the allegations off as Kremlin smears. Indeed Zelensky’s justification for his attempt to bring Nabu under his control back in July were vague and never substantiated allegations of Russian penetration of Nabu. But with the West watching closely, Zelensky has little choice but to endorse Nabu’s takedown of his closest allies and business partners and deal with the consequences for his reputation and political career.

The image of a golden toilet which was discovered in former president Viktor Yanukovych’s luxurious suburban mansion became an iconic emblem of the corruption that led to 2014’s momentous Maidan protests. It’s a supreme irony that the revolution against those golden toilet-owners led eventually to a full-scale war with Russia – the profits from which, it seems, have been used to buy yet more golden toilets.

Where The Labour Right Went Wrong


The leadership rumours are back. Not against the hapless Kemi Badenoch — but against the Prime Minister, a man who swept to power on the back of a mammoth majority and a desperate need for change less than 18 months ago. Number 10, for its part, is panicking, with “friends” of Keir Starmer frantically briefing about the looming treachery of Wes Streeting — to go alongside that of Andy Burnham, even as Shabana Mahmood and Ed Miliband may yet make their own moves.

For a prime minister who won bigger than Thatcher to now be more Frank Spencer than Frank Underwood feels remarkable. Yet if you understand Starmer, and the wing of the Labour Party from which he comes, the explanation is actually quite simple: the Labour Right has always been allowed to play on “easy mode”. Rather than their inter-party disputes and policy integrity being scrutinised, they are, more often than not, given an easy ride — allowed to come to power without offering an actual plan for government.

This might seem surprising. After all, the Conservatives have always enjoyed greater support from the rich and powerful. And theirs is, since its inception, the party of the landed interest. Why would the “establishment”, as broadly conceived, have more sympathy with a nominally socialist party they don’t actively support?

The answer is structural: while the Tories are expected to generally run things, and guarantee a low-tax, low-regulation economy, the Labour Right is the linchpin holding the national stage of politics together; the metaphorical policeman enforcing an ideally static Overton Window. It undermines, and subverts, the Labour Left, so it can never exert any real power (though the Labour Left does its bit in this regard as well), while ensuring the Tories never swing too far to the Right — particularly on migration — especially if this conflicts with the perceived interests of business.

Rather than standing for anything, then, the Labour Right represents resistance. The triumph of Thatcherism, and the end of the Cold War, dissolved the old truths, so now their politics is one of negation — Tories to their Right, socialists to their Left. This is why “stop Corbyn” and “stop Brexit” will inevitably become “stop Farage” at the next election. The Labour Right defines itself against propositional politics.

That posture makes for a puerile relationship to enterprise. In the mind of the Labour Right, the definitive “‘voice of business” is an investor on Dragon’s Den. The reality of commerce, to them, isn’t family firms, high street independents, or even manufacturing, but big supermarkets and “consultants” with large followings on LinkedIn. These are people who wax lyrical about business, and yet rarely seem to have worked in it themselves.

It wasn’t always like this. Before the triumph of Thatcherism, the term Labour Right referred to social democrats who were socially conservative and vehemently anti-communist: Ernest Bevin and Hugh Gaitskell being the tendency’s standard-bearers. Now, it simply means the microwaved imitators of Blairism: Liz Kendall, Peter Kyle, Wes Streeting, Labour Together. For these figures, anyone to the Left of Gordon Brown is considered untouchable, with even the former chancellor often under suspicion.

Despite not being the default party of government, then, the Labour Right is more important in holding the national “consensus” together than anyone else. It is this quality which endows it with a certain goodwill from much of the media. Nobody seriously thinks a Tory with Peter Mandelson’s rap sheet could have become the ambassador to Washington. The temptation might be to punish the transgressions of such people — but if the likes of Jonathan Powell, Mandelson and Alastair Campbell were discarded, then the party of labour might actually represent the working class. And of course that can’t happen.

This arrangement functioned for as long as the economy grew and the fundamentals of political life — like membership of the EU, or subordination to Washington on foreign policy — were settled. Under such conditions, which prevailed between the fall of the Soviet Union and the financial crash of 2008, the Labour Right didn’t need to offer intellectual leadership to the country. Indeed, the very essence of Blairism was to intensify what preceded it, from PFI to privatisations and an emphasis on finance and real estate as the country’s economic engines. But in 2024, after 16 years of economic stagnation and growing political discontent — from Brexit to asylum policy, and even the very idea of what it means to be British — that was precisely what the moment demanded.

Writing in the Financial Times earlier this week, Martin Wolf observed the “disturbing victory of Old Labour over New Labour”. A rise in the basic rate of income tax, almost certain to be announced in the budget later this month, will mean others diagnose Starmer’s as a Left-wing project. But that is to misread what is happening. The Labour Right didn’t do any original thinking in its wilderness years. Not even Jeremy Corbyn stuffing them twice provided pause for thought, apparently. They believed — correctly as it turns out — that they simply needed to wrestle the party’s leadership back and wait their turn.

An attendant assumption was that the economy could manage itself, and growth would inevitably come back, a premise resulting from that same ideological capitulation of the Eighties. Its task was simply to be a more competent, humane administrator of a model not of their design. But that model is now broken, from migration to productivity, compounded by a crisis in elderly care: which means that taxes are ratcheting up. None of this has been the result of ideology, as Wolf might insinuate, for there is none. Their pitch was merely competence — and that has been thrown to the wind, as Starmer scrambles wildly for support, scrapping the two-child benefit cap, and even reconsidering compensating the WASPI women. It has no answers for a low-growth world; hence its disastrous first 18 months in office.

Unlike Blair, who inherited fiscal surpluses and rising productivity in 1997, Starmer really did have to make “difficult choices” on tax and spending. He swerved them and no one asked him the hard questions.

We can blame Britain’s electoral system for his easy ride: our two-party battles necessarily obscure political alternatives. The baton is simply passed back and forth, with the Labour Right operating as a “B team” for the Tories when they flounder. But rather than provide stability, this setup is now generating the opposite. The Labour Right openly defines itself against heterodoxy, self-criticism and dissent. So when it is wrong, like on Iraq or light-touch regulation with financial services before 2008, the consequences are uniquely disastrous. Something similar again appears to be unfolding.

Small wonder, then, that just as Labour is looking at other leaders, the public is looking for other parties. Last week one pollster, FindOutNow, gave a combined vote of more than 50% to Reform UK and the Greens. While the media might focus on both Farage and Polanski as talented communicators,, that shouldn’t obscure the fact that each is offering distinctive alternatives to the rinsed-out status quo. Polanski wants to equalise capital gains and income tax; Farage wants to drill, baby, drill and leave the ECHR.

Britain no longer benefits from how the establishment treats the Blairite wing. The old mechanisms of stability — with the market disciplining Westminster, the two parties disciplining one another, and unelected Quangos whatever’s left — has led to a dysfunctional politics which delivers us the worst people, at the worst moment.

No Noose Is Good News

Rupert Lowe could not be more wrong about capital punishment, but we have nothing to fear from the debate, although there should not be a referendum. This is a matter for Parliament, where Lee Anderson likes to suggest that his two previous parties left him. Yet there is no way that he was in favour of the death penalty in 2018 as a 51-year-old Labour councillor on the staff of a Labour MP.

The restoration of capital punishment would effectively decriminalise murder. Even if the legislation provided for it, then no judge could conceivably accept a majority verdict in a capital trial. In the Britain of the twenty-first century, there would always be at least one of 12 randomly assembled members of the general public who would vote to acquit anyone rather than risk the imposition of the death penalty. Those who wanted to bring back what they saw as higher qualifications for jurors would, if anything, increase that number.

If there were never any realistic possibility of a conviction for murder, then no one would ever be charged with it. Instead, ways would be found of convicting murderers of manslaughter, which already gives rise to resentment. So convicted, they would almost certainly be released earlier than if their records were of intentional homicide. Britain would become a very much more dangerous place.

Who among the kind of people who became judges in today's Britain would ever impose the death penalty? Who among the kind of people who became prosecutors in today's Britain would ever seek its imposition, or chance that by bringing a charge of murder? Elect them, you say? Elected Members of Parliament rejected capital punishment by 403 votes to 159 the last time that the House of Commons divided on it at all. Under a Conservative Government. 31 years ago.

The remaining proponents of the death penalty would support it only for certain classes of murder. Yet that whole concept was used in 1969 as the definitive argument for making permanent its 1965 suspension. The alternative, it was argued, would have been a reversion to the 1957 Homicide Act, with its intolerable obscenity of, yes, different classes of murder, some of which were capital offences while others were not.  Thus was it declared better, or at least not as bad, to murder one person rather than another. Between 1957 and 1965, there were two executions per year, a kind of symbolic blood sacrifice return to which would have been, and would be, grotesque. That was the knockdown argument for getting rid of the whole thing forever, and it still is.

That, and the suggestion from Willie Ross, Harold Wilson's only ever Secretary of State for Scotland, that if execution were to be retained, then it ought to be carried out on television. That unanswerable line shocked a number of waverers into the Aye Lobby. Ross, who was also a staunch opponent both of devolution and of EEC membership, was no liberal, having tried to ban ITV from carrying advertisements on Sundays, Christmas Day and Good Friday.

Nor was the Home Secretary in 1969 Roy Jenkins, but Jim Callaghan, who had previously been Parliamentary Adviser to the Police Federation. Callaghan pointed out that there had been no increase in the murder rate since the suspension. If the figures for violent crime are much higher today, then that is because all sorts of extreme violence is no longer tolerated, or at least not as much as it was. In the days that half or more of the remaining supporters of the death penalty were coming of age, then those acts might officially have been illegal, although even that was not always the case, but they were treated in most or all ways as if they were perfectly within the law.

People were formed by the brutality of daily school violence (including corporal punishment, which was so ubiquitous that it was obviously a complete failure in its own terms), of socially respectable domestic violence, of regular fights at work, of routine fights of what would now be a very uncommon ferocity in and around pubs, of National Service, and so on, all against the ever-present societal memory of the War and of mass pre-War deaths from poverty-related illnesses or from the lack of workers' protection. That made them, well, how does one put this nicely? One cannot. At some level, life was just cheaper to them.

"Centrist" opponents of the death penalty nevertheless have their wars, their self-indulgent refusal to enforce the drug laws, their Police brutality and other street violence, their numerous life-shortening consequences of economic inequality, their abortions, at least putatively their euthanasia, and so on. They must answer for themselves on those points, as must opponents of those things who would support capital punishment, although in my 30-year experience in the pro-life movement that oft-alleged position is practically unheard of. We have no case to answer to either of those charges. Axel Rudakubana had in any case pleaded guilty to something that he had done when he was 17, so he would never have been executed, but the argument made in January that that would have been cheaper was and is Kit Malthouse's argument for assisted suicide.

Enoch Powell always did oppose the death penalty, and I have found that, perhaps in reaction to neoconservative bloodthirstiness, American paleoconservatives are at least as likely to oppose it as to support it. Traditional conservatives may be, with Muslims, the people most likely to think that there were an argument in favour of the principle, but those would also be two of the three groups most likely to be on the receiving end if it were ever brought back. The Old Right may talk about safeguards of this, that or the other variety, but they know that if those had been possible, then there would never have been abolition. They themselves would not have been executed in those days, but that just made them privileged, and they are more and more conscious of being from the other side of the tracks these days. Who among them would not be branded a "misfit" or a "loner" by Keir Starmer?

The third category of likely victims of restored capital punishment would be the Left, a section of which, on this as on the nuclear weapons to which Powell was also implacably opposed, used to be open to the charge of hypocrisy on this matter, since it did not seem to mind either of them in countries of which it approved. Still, that was only ever a section of the Left, even if it was quite a large section at one time, and on both points it would be vanishingly small now. There are some Muslims against whom the claim could be made, but the screaming hypocrites about the death penalty are still the liberal supporters of military interventionism, and now also of assisted suicide.

Mister Mystery

Nowhere near as long ago as it seems, I first heard that someone had been misgendered, and I thought, "Gosh, that does sound painful." I have had a similar reaction, which I am told was exactly the wrong one, to the news that the former Andrew Mountbatten Windsor had been hyphenated. He has now had three names in well under a fortnight. Or possibly four, since on Monday's Newsnight, Victoria Derbyshire twice called him "Andrew Windsor" before someone had clearly been in her ear and she called him "Andrew Mountbatten Windsor" the third time.

The lack of the hyphen made "Mountbatten" look like a middle name, as if, like Elizabeth II, he had been only distantly related to the old Duke of Edinburgh, while "Windsor" might have suggested that his parents had not been married to each other. But "Mountbatten-Windsor" was the surname that, in 1960, the then Queen conferred on those needing such a thing among her descendants, so here we are. Yet her third child remains a Mister, and not Lord Firstname Surname, as would befit the younger son of a Duke. Whatever does it all mean?

On Reflection

Barry Gardiner is a class act, having told Newsnight that Keir Starmer versus Wes Streeting would be, “an argument between Narcissus and his reflection.” The challenger was always going to be Streeting, and the announcement has been made formally in and by, of course, The Guardian, which insults its readers with the assertion that Streeting, “has shifted away from the right of the Labour party on key issues.”

Streeting has brought back Alan Milburn as part of his life’s work of completing the privatisation of England’s NHS, a process begun by Milburn and by Paul Corrigan under Tony Blair. He is firmly with almost all Labour and other MPs in regarding five per cent unemployment as neither a failure nor an accident, but as something to be engineered and celebrated, as it has been and as it is being, since the fear of destitution is fundamental to their control of the rest of us. Tell us again how there cannot be both mass unemployment and galloping inflation. There can be, there is, and from the point of view of the people responsible, there is supposed to be. They are the Heirs to Blair, whom Margaret Thatcher identified as her greatest achievement.

There can be opportunistic departures from all that, but only temporarily. Labour MPs executed 180-degree turns, first on the withdrawal of the Winter Fuel Payment, and then on the cuts to sickness and disability benefits, at least for now. Those were non-negotiable until they were not. MPs are preparing to do the same on the two-child benefit cap, and apparently also on the WASPI women, since there is only one politically feasible outcome to that “review”. All those carefully practised sad faces for nothing. But they will have to get them out again soon enough, although not on increasing the basic rate of income tax, which the Conservatives, the Liberal Democrats, and Reform UK should all be asked, not whether they would oppose, but whether they would reverse in office. We know what the answer would be, and it would probably be the same from the sitting Green MPs.

Tuesday, 11 November 2025

Indefinite Leave?

I spent three months of this summer in Britain's most overcrowded prison, HMP Durham. For frankly political reasons, I was kept in twice as long as I had twice been told in writing that I would be. But I did not hear of anyone's having been released by accident. So many inmates were one, two or all three of very young, drugged out of their minds, and with nothing left to lose, that if people had thought that they could just have walked out, then a lot of them would have done. Nationally, 91 prisoners did precisely that between April and October. Ninety-one.

"Don't worry, Dickie's on the case," the Royal Family used to exclaim sarcastically whenever this or that responsibility was entrusted to Lord Mountbatten, always with predictably disastrous results. And now, don't worry, Lammy's on the case, with, on top of everything else, one in 25 Prison Service staff facing deportation because they had indefinite leave to remain but earned less than £41,700 per year. That report is ITV, saving which is at least as important as saving the BBC.

Breaking Ranks: Inside Israel's War

ITV was John Pilger’s network, and it can still do it when it wants to. The BBC would no longer have broadcast that, and it would now have removed it if it had done so in the past. Saving ITV is a great deal more urgent than saving the BBC. As Julian Borger writes:

Israeli soldiers have described a free-for-all in Gaza and a breakdown in norms and legal constraints, with civilians killed at the whim of individual officers, according to testimony in a TV documentary.

“If you want to shoot without restraint, you can,” Daniel, the commander of an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) tank unit, says in Breaking Ranks: Inside Israel’s War, due to be broadcast in the UK on ITV on Monday evening.

Some of the IDF soldiers who talked to the programme requested anonymity while others spoke on the record. All pointed to the evaporation of the official code of conduct concerning civilians.

The soldiers who agreed to talk confirmed the IDF’s routine use of human shields, contradicting official denials, and gave details of Israeli troops opening fire unprovoked on civilians racing to reach food handouts at the militarised distribution points set up by the US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

“In basic training for the army, we all chanted ‘means, intent and ability’,” Capt Yotam Vilk, an armoured corps officer, says in reference to the official IDF training guidelines stipulating that a soldier can fire only if the target has the means, shows intent and has the ability to cause harm.

“There’s no such thing as ‘means, intent and ability’ in Gaza,” Vilk says. “No soldier ever mentions ‘means, intent, and ability’. It’s just: a suspicion of walking where it’s not allowed. A man aged between 20 and 40.”

Another soldier, identified in the programme only as Eli, says: “Life and death isn’t determined by procedures or opening fire regulations. It’s the conscience of the commander on the ground that decides.”

In those circumstances, the designation of who is an enemy or terrorist becomes arbitrary, Eli says in the documentary. “If they’re walking too fast, they’re suspicious. If they’re walking too slow, they’re suspicious. They’re plotting something. If three men are walking and one of them lags behind, it’s a two-to-one infantry formation – it’s a military formation,” he says.

Eli describes an incident in which a senior officer ordered a tank to demolish a building in an area designated as safe for civilians. “A man was standing on the roof, hanging laundry, and the officer decided that he was a spotter. He’s not a spotter. He’s hanging his laundry. You can see that he’s hanging laundry,” he says.

“Now, it’s not as if this man had binoculars or weapons. The closest military force was 600-700 metres away. So unless he had eagle eyes, how could he possibly be a spotter? And the tank fired a shell. The building half collapsed. And the result was many dead and wounded.”

Palestinians carry supplies from a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation site in the central Gaza Strip. Photograph: Reuters Guardian analysis in August of the IDF’s intelligence data showed that by the reckoning of Israeli military officials, 83% of those killed in Gaza were civilians, a historic high for modern conflicts, though the IDF disputed the analysis. More than 69,000 Palestinians have been killed since the war started and more continue to die despite a ceasefire that began a month ago.

In a written statement, the IDF said: “The IDF remains committed to the rule of law and continues to operate in accordance with its legal and ethical obligations, despite the unprecedented operational complexity posed by Hamas’s systematic embedding within civilian infrastructure and its use of civilian sites for military purposes.”

Some of the soldiers interviewed in the Breaking Ranks programme said they were influenced by the language of Israeli politicians and religious leaders suggesting that after the Hamas attack of 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 Israelis and foreign nationals were killed, every Palestinian was a legitimate target.

A UN commission concluded in September that Israel had committed genocide in Gaza. On the question of intent, it pointed to incitement from Israeli leaders such as the president, Isaac Herzog, who shortly after the 7 October attack said: “It is an entire nation out there that is responsible. It is not true, this rhetoric about civilians not aware, not involved, it’s absolutely not true.”

Daniel, the tank unit commander, says in the documentary that the rhetoric declaring there was no such thing as an innocent in Gaza seeped down into army ranks. “You hear that all the time, so you start to believe it,” he says.

A spokesperson for Herzog said the Israeli president had been an outspoken voice for humanitarian causes and the protection of innocents.

The programme also provides evidence that such views have been propagated by some rabbis in the ranks. “One time, the brigade rabbi sat down next to me and spent half an hour explaining why we must be just like they were on October 7. That we must take revenge on all of them, including civilians. That we shouldn’t discriminate, and that this is the only way,” says Maj Neta Caspin.

Rabbi Avraham Zarbiv, an extremist Jewish cleric who served more than 500 days in Gaza, says in the programme: “Everything there is one big terrorist infrastructure.”

Zarbiv has not only given religious legitimacy to the mass demolition of Palestinian neighbourhoods but drove military bulldozers himself and claims credit for pioneering a tactic that had been adopted by the IDF as a whole, pointing to the mass purchase of armoured bulldozers.

“The IDF invests hundreds of thousands of shekels to destroy the Gaza Strip. We changed the conduct of an entire army,” Zarbiv says in the programme.

The soldiers giving their accounts in Breaking Ranks also confirm consistent reports throughout the two-year conflict of the use of Palestinian civilians as human shields, a practice informally known as the “mosquito protocol”.

“You send the human shield underground. As he walks down the tunnel, he maps it all for you. He has an iPhone in his vest and as he walks it sends back GPS information,” says Daniel, the tank commander, says in the documentary. “The commanders saw how it works. And the practice spread like wildfire. After about a week, every company was operating its own mosquito.”

The IDF said in a statement that “the IDF prohibits the use of civilians as human shields or coercing them in any way to participate in military operations. These orders have been routinely emphasized to forces throughout the war.”

“Allegations of misconduct are thoroughly examined, and when identifying details are provided, the matter is investigated in depth,” the IDF said. “In several cases, investigations have been opened by the Military Police Criminal Investigation Division (MPCID) following suspicions involving Palestinians in military missions. These investigations remain ongoing.”

The makers of Breaking Ranks spoke to a contractor identified only as Sam who worked at food distribution sites run by the GHF, who says he witnessed the IDF killing unarmed civilians.

He describes an incident at one distribution site where two young men were running in the general rush to get aid. “You could just see two soldiers run after them. They drop on to their knees and they just take two shots, and you could just see … two heads snap backwards and just drop,” Sam says. He recounts another incident in which an IDF tank in the vicinity of one of the distribution sites destroys “a normal car … just four normal people sat inside it”.

According to UN figures, at least 944 Palestinian civilians were killed while seeking aid in the vicinity of GHF aid sites. GHF and the IDF have denied targeting civilians seeking food at aid distribution sites, and the IDF has denied the allegations of systematic war crimes, insisting it operates in accordance with international law and takes measures to minimise civilian harm in its operations against Hamas. Internal investigations of incidents involving the killing of civilians have led to virtually no disciplinary or legal accountability. 

Breaking Ranks shows the mental strain on at least some of the soldiers in Gaza.

“I feel like they’ve destroyed all my pride in being an Israeli – in being an IDF officer,” Daniel says in the programme. “All that’s left is shame.”