These are the people whom Starmer, Rayner, Sarwar, Sturgeon, Swinney, Yousaf and other virtue signallers want to reward by recognising their murderous kind of terrorist state.
Hamas Leader calls for a genocide against Jewish people worldwide.
“We must attack every Jew on the face of the plane. How much is a Jews throat worth? 5 sheckles? Or even less. All of our people are ready to blow up.”
This is why Israel must destroy Hamas.
John Swinney is handling the Murrell affair very badly.
So badly, in fact, that we are left to conclude he opposes a new inquiry because he fears what it might find.
At some point, SNP people are going to start wondering if he is part of the problem…
https://t.co/zsxYAQG8Ul
The SNP Government has now been found in contempt over FOI practice. Let that sink in.
An SNP obsessed with secrecy, hostile to scrutiny and forever trying to hide behind delay, redaction and obstruction.
Delay. Deflect. Redact. Deny.
The SNP do not fear failure - they fear being found out. They fear the truth.
And now even the courts are exposing how this Government operates.
So independence supporters were basically defrauded?! That's what this comes down to!
The leaflets were clear. Two funds. One general. The other ringfenced.
Remember the SNP said the Indyref2 money had been 'ringfenced'? John Swinney now confirming it's been used for 'ongoing activities', including elections
Starmer is in breach of UK Government policy if messages breach conditions of significance. Messages must be exported and stored in relevant government systems or switch to NCCC messaging.
https://t.co/0Pi9MwkM3A
Andy Burnham cancelled a call with hedge fund managers this week at short notice, in a stumbling start to the Labour leadership favourite’s efforts to reassure nervous City of London investors about his borrowing plans https://t.co/3jThSYRYvw
Why so dismayed and horrified today? I mean, nothing should have come as a shock to him, given he was receiving briefings from Scotland’s prosecutors …
The government t appears to be u-turning this morning on the Police Anti Racsim Commitment (via Sarah Jones on the morning round). I have been calling out this nonsense for the last year
The Police Anti Racism Commitment is immoral and dangerous, and is itself racist. It expressly calls for different ethnic groups to be treated different to artificially engineer the same arrest rates.
I have been calling out this nonsense for the last year and the Home Secretary repeatedly ignored me - including yesterday in Parliament. And yesterday Number 10 were still denying there is two tier policing.
Now we are witnessing yet another u-turn from this weak government. It should not have taken the tragic death of Henry Nowak to make Labour finally see sense. But given Keir Starmer’s enthusiasm for taking the knee, it is not surprising.
This divisive and dangerous so-called anti racist ideology now needs to be rooted from all of policing and the whole public sector
You don't need orders to help a dying man. That is called being human.
Before training, before policy, before race action plans, there's an eighteen year old boy on the ground telling you nine times he has been stabbed. The most basic human instinct is to help him. The ideology embedded in those officers over years of diversity training, equity frameworks and institutional conditioning was powerful enough to override that instinct. That is not a defence of obeying orders. That is an indictment of what those orders had done to them.
Henry needed a human being. He got a framework.
Multiculturalism Built The Training That Killed Henry Nowak. Nobody Is Investigating That.
The Home Secretary stood at the despatch box today and said there must be no two tier policing in Britain. The police have a sacred duty to act without fear or favour. Everyone is equal before the law.
Shabana Mahmood said this the day after the body cam footage of Henry Nowak's final minutes was released. A boy who told officers nine times he could not breathe and had been stabbed. An officer who replied I don't think you have, mate. A killer who was never handcuffed and was taken to choose his food while his victim died in the street. A government whose spokesman said, while that footage existed, that there is no such thing as two tier policing.
That statement lasted hours before political pressure made it untenable. It was withdrawn. Not because the government had examined the evidence. It was withdrawn because the evidence had become impossible to ignore. The Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle had to order the government to make a statement to MPs. A government that requires a Speaker's instruction to respond to one of the most disturbing pieces of body cam footage in British policing history does not take two tier policing seriously. It manages it.
Mahmood warned that anyone using this tragedy to stoke division should be rejected. But the division was not created by those naming it. It was created by decades of multicultural policy, progressive institutional capture and DEI training frameworks that systematically prioritised community cohesion over equal treatment under the law. Rotherham. Rochdale. Oldham. The Batley teacher still in hiding five years later. The Bradford hate crime scrutiny panel chairman sacked for naming the elephant in the room. And now Henry Nowak. The same cause. Different victims. Different towns. The same silence from the same institutions until silence became politically impossible.
The training that conditioned those officers to treat a racism accusation as more urgent than a dying boy's pleas was not an accident. It was built by the Police Race Action Plan, the National Police Chiefs Council's institutional racism declarations, the College of Policing's redesigned disciplinary framework and fifty years of DEI ideology embedded across policing, education, the civil service, HR departments, universities and every institution that shapes how Britain's public servants think and act. Gramsci theorised it. Dutschke operationalised it. Mahmood is now standing at the despatch box condemning its most visible consequence while her government continues to fund and embed its causes.
Kemi Badenoch said something that has been absent from mainstream British political discourse for thirty years. That Britain should be a multi-racial country not a multicultural country. One shared culture. One shared set of values. One law applied equally to everyone regardless of which community they belong to or which accusation they make. That distinction is the most important observation produced by any politician in response to Henry's death. Multiculturalism as a policy framework assumes that multiple incompatible value systems can coexist indefinitely in the same civic space without consequence. Henry's death is one of the most documented consequences of that assumption failing.
The powder keg that has been building for decades across Britain's towns and cities was not created by those asking the questions that Mahmood calls divisive. It was created by the political class that spent fifty years refusing to ask them. The IOPC will investigate the officers. Nobody is investigating the ideology that produced them. That is the conversation Mahmood is determined to prevent. It is the only conversation that matters.
"The powder keg that has been building for decades [...] was not created by those asking the questions that Mahmood calls divisive. It was created by the political class that spent fifty years refusing to ask them."
£700,000 for Migrants. 18,000 Homeless in Manchester. That's the Burnham Method.
Andy Burnham is asking the voters of Makerfield to send him to Westminster. Before they do, they should know what he has been doing with their money in Manchester.
This week it emerged that Burnham's Greater Manchester Combined Authority is spending £722,685 on schemes to help migrants navigate the British welfare system. The Safe Transitions programme will provide guidance in multiple languages helping refugees understand their rights, entitlements and access to housing, benefits and public services. A Refugee Lodging Scheme will match refugees with resident landlords who will support them to access housing, benefits, employment, education and community networks. Greater Manchester already hosts more than 8,500 people in asylum support accommodation. More than 18,000 people across the region have no permanent address. One in every 61 people in Manchester alone is homeless. The £700,000 is not going to them.
This is not a one-off decision. It is the visible expression of a consistent set of political instincts that Burnham has spent years developing and is now quietly concealing ahead of June 18.
Since 2019 he has repeatedly called for the abolition of the No Recourse to Public Funds policy, the rule that prevents migrants from immediately accessing Britain's welfare state and social housing. He called for it on his mayoral website in 2019. He signed a joint letter demanding it in 2023. He launched a pilot programme in Manchester called the Living Income Campaign, designed to top up the incomes of those living under NRPF conditions and build the case for scrapping the rule nationally. He has now quietly dropped that position. Not because he has changed his mind. Because he is campaigning in Makerfield.
His allies have confirmed that as Prime Minister he would tear up the multi-billion pound Home Office contracts with private asylum accommodation providers and hand responsibility to local councils. Dispersal housing rather than hotels. The saving is real. Hotel rooms cost £145 per person per night against £23.25 for dispersal housing. But dispersal housing means more migrants placed directly into communities like Makerfield, Wigan and the surrounding boroughs, without the visibility of a hotel that can be identified and closed. The cost saving comes with a community cost that nobody is discussing.
Meanwhile Makerfield itself tells a different story to the one Burnham is presenting on the doorstep. The constituency sits within a region where Reform won all eight council wards in May's local elections with around fifty percent of the vote. Around two thirds of the constituency voted Leave in 2016. The voters who went to Reform did so because they feel their communities have been transformed without consent, their housing lists lengthened, their public services stretched and their concerns dismissed. Burnham's answer to those concerns is to spend £700,000 helping more migrants access the same overstretched system.
The repositioning on NRPF is the tell. A politician who held a position for six years, built a pilot programme around it and signed letters demanding it nationally does not abandon it because he has been persuaded by the evidence. He abandons it because the polling in Makerfield made it electorally inconvenient. The same thing happened with his position on EU rejoining, held on Saturday and walked back by Sunday when his team realised around two thirds of the constituency voted Leave.
The voters of Makerfield are not being asked to elect a mayor. They are being asked to send a potential Prime Minister to Westminster. The £700,000 tells them more about what that Prime Minister would do than any doorstep conversation. It tells them what he does when nobody in Makerfield is watching.
"One in every 61 people in Manchester alone is homeless. The £700,000 is not going to them."
Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary published this Race Action Plan covering 2024 to 2026. It is the operational document of the force that handcuffed Henry Nowak as he died.
Read it carefully because every element of what happened on that Southampton street in December 2025 is visible in its priorities, its language and its omissions.
The plan states the force will pursue offenders and deal with offences that cause the most harm to ethnic minority communities. Not all communities. Ethnic minority communities specifically. The document that is supposed to govern equal policing contains within it an explicit hierarchy of whose harm the force prioritises.
The plan commits to training officers on the history of policing minority ethnic communities to understand the trauma and failings of the past. Officers are to be trained in the grievances of specific communities. They are not trained to treat every member of the public as an equal before the law regardless of which community makes an accusation against them. The consequence of that training is documented on body cam footage that the Prime Minister described as making him feel sick.
The plan establishes a Black and Ethnic Minority network called BEAM with scrutiny powers over the Chief Constable's Legitimacy Board. A community network defined by ethnicity has institutional oversight of the force's legitimacy decisions. The force that handcuffed Henry Nowak built that oversight structure into its own governance framework.
The plan commits to making the force anti-discriminatory and to explaining or reforming any disproportionality. Disproportionality in policing is the term used when members of one community are stopped, searched or arrested at higher rates than their population share. The entire framework of anti-racism training in British policing is built around reducing that disproportionality. The officers who arrested Henry Nowak and did not arrest his killer were acting within a framework designed to avoid exactly the kind of disproportionality that arresting a Sikh man on the word of a white victim might have produced.
Shabana Mahmood said there must be no two tier policing. This is the document that built it. It is Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary's own Race Action Plan. It is publicly available. It was in force on December 4th 2025. Nobody is investigating it.
https://t.co/cV7UOuRkXn
@RealStephenKerr@Haitch7 Many Scots never bought it in the first place and wouldn't have trusted Sturgeon to run a raffle even at her 'peak'. The fact a dwindling few cult followers still take everything she says as gospel, just shows how incredibly gullible some people can be.
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Refugee families are facing their greatest threat yet.
But we know another way is possible, and that's what we will stand for together.
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