Global prices for fossil fuels are soaring again, our energy bills will follow, inflation and lending rates ditto - and levels of poverty.
It didn’t have the be this way.
We could have 'broken the link' after the last big price shock, the Ukraine/Russia war. The link between global gas prices and homemade green energy.
It’s absurd, anti competitive and we need to break it.
The Green Party has won more elections than Reform have.
Why are Reform constantly on TV and the Green Party is ignored?
The electorate says it should be the other way around.
Today, as Lent begins, I’m sending my best wishes to Christians in the UK and around the world.
As you follow Christ’s example of sacrifice and renewal, you embody the spirit of public service that strengthens our communities.
Thank you for all you do.
Reform pledge to scrap the Equality act.
If they do so you can be discriminated against or abused at work, in education or in the public.
For Age, Disability, Gender reassignment, Marriage status, Pregnancy, Race, Religion. Sex or Sexual orientation.
Doesn't sound good to me.
If you want to know what Reform stand for look at their voting record NOT what they say.
Reform are against your workers' rights, against the NHS, against welfare benefits, against protecting children, against environmental protection, against people who rent, against consumer rights.
Never Vote Reform
Fancy that.
Andrew Neil blames high energy bills on Net Zero when it’s our reliance on fossil fuels that really keeps bills high.
And most of the media won’t say so because it’s one of the main grifts that keeps Reform high in the polls.
Sharing a passion with others is one of the most powerful ways to fight loneliness.
Our Culture, Media and Sport Spokesperson Anna Sabine calls for hobby hubs across the country, making use of third spaces and rebuilding communities.
🚨 Another day, another batch of misleading, polarising, and irresponsible anti-immigrant headlines from the usual suspects that need debunking and contextualising...
The Sun has splashed a story claiming asylum seekers were receiving “£6,500 each” in compensation for seized mobile phones, complete with dramatic small-boat imagery and outrage-stoking headlines like “FURY AS THEY POCKET £6,500 EACH.”
At first glance, it appears shocking: a supposed massive taxpayer-funded giveaway to migrants. In reality, the story obscures the true context and misrepresents both the scale of payments and the responsibilities behind them.
The policy that led to these payouts originated entirely under the previous Conservative Government. Between April and November 2020 (during Priti Patel’s tenure as Home Secretary) the Home Office implemented a blanket seizure of mobile phones and SIM cards from small boat arrivals. Devices were often held for months, sometimes permanently, and used to extract data to investigate people-smuggling networks.
This was done without proper parliamentary authority, violating privacy rights under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), and representing what the High Court described in March 2022 as a “failure of governance.” Follow-up rulings confirmed the policy’s unlawfulness and established that affected individuals were entitled to compensation.
Key figures overseeing immigration and border policy at the time included Robert Jenrick, who served as Immigration Minister from 2019–2021, and Suella Braverman, Attorney General in 2020 before later becoming Home Secretary. Both played central roles in the legal and operational frameworks surrounding the phone seizures. Notably, both have now defected to Reform UK: Jenrick on January 15, 2026, after being sacked from the Conservative shadow cabinet, and Braverman on January 26, 2026, amid a wave of Tory exits to Nigel Farage’s party.
The irony is stark: figures directly tied to the unlawful policy now present themselves as anti-establishment, while media coverage largely omits their responsibility when amplifying outrage over the resulting compensation.
The actual payouts are modest and tightly limited. As of February 2026, 32 claimants have received £210,800, averaging roughly £6,587 each. Another 41 cases are pending; if settled at similar rates, the total for this group will reach roughly £480,000–£500,000. These payments cover only dozens of individuals affected in that specific 2020 window.
While earlier High Court estimates suggested 1,300–2,000 people could potentially qualify, no evidence indicates mass payouts have occurred, so the media focus is on this narrow batch. The Home Office also spent £735,000 defending the litigation, meaning much of the taxpayer cost went to legal fees rather than individual settlements.
These payouts are entirely routine under UK law. When the state unlawfully breaches rights, compensation follows, protecting citizens and non-citizens alike from government overreach.
As Margaret Thatcher said in a 1975 speech: “The first duty of Government is to uphold the law. If it tries to bob and weave and duck around that duty when its inconvenient, if government does that, then so will the governed, and then nothing is safe—not home, not liberty, not life itself.”
The modest awards reflect the real harm caused (lost family contacts, evidence for asylum claims, photos, and vital apps) making the payments proportionate and legally appropriate.
What is misleading is the framing. Enormous bolded figures (£500,000), emotive words like “fury” and “pocketing,” boat photos, and scare-quoted references to “human rights” suggest extravagant handouts to hordes of migrants.
Qualifiers such as the small number of claimants, the projected totals, and the fact that the policy was implemented years ago are concealed or minimized.
By omitting salient context and history, such reporting shifts blame away from the Tory-era government toward current authorities or asylum seekers themselves, inflaming polarization in an already heated immigration debate.
Right-leaning outlets, including the billionaire-owned Sun, billionaire-owned Mail, billionaire-owned GB “News”, and the increasingly unhinged Telegraph, all amplified similar angles, often using Freedom of Information requests for sourcing, while neutral or left-leaning sources gave it less prominence, likely viewing it as a recycled 2020–2022 issue.
Sensationalism here is not harmless: it erodes trust in law, accountability, and journalism by transforming principled legal redress into a partisan scandal.
In truth, this story is about governance failure under the previous Conservative administration, judicial enforcement of rights, and limited, lawful compensation, and NOT about being over generous, having lax borders, or contemporary policy failures.
Accurate context matters far more than outrage clicks, especially on issues as sensitive as migration. I find the current (and previous) Government’s reluctance to take measures to ensure British people are protected from profoundly misleading propaganda, pushed by billionaires, one of the biggest reoccurring policy failures over the last century.
The public deserves to understand who was responsible, why the payments are being made, and how the figures actually break down: basic facts that are all too often obscured by sensationalist front pages and headlines.
@dsmiffy55@DeborahMeaden@AllisonPearson And we don’t “rage”, “fume” or express “fury” that often either. Oh, and what’s all this with “caved”? Have you ever heard anyone say that in real life?