Tuesday, 27 January 2026

TOON TUESDAY #88

This week's selection of Labour chaos includes the outrageous decision to allow the Chinese to build a 'super embassy' in London, alongside another potential u-turn and the Burnham conundrum...

Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Graeme Bandeira for The Northern Agenda
Christian Adams for The Sunday Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Times
Peter Brookes for The Times
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph

Morten Morland for The Times
Steve Bright for The Sun
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Pete Songi for The Guardian

Monday, 26 January 2026

MEME MONDAY #67

A quieter week, but we'll pick up again shortly...

Mon 19 Jan - 90 shares
Tue 20 Jan - 3,064 shares
Tue 20 Jan - 6 shares.  This photo is from a previous Davos, although Reeves did
attend this year.  The fact that the photo is from Davos 2023 - the year prior to their
general election victory - should give you some idea of the influence of the World
Economic Forum
Thu 22 Jan - 199 shares
Thu 22 Jan - 65 shares
Sun 25 Jan - 770 shares
Sun 25 Jan - 58 shares
Sun 25 Jan - 32 shares

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Sunday, 25 January 2026

BOATWATCH #43

The flurry of boats at the end of last continued into this week, before a five day lull ensued.  Raise the Colours activists arrived in Calais last week, reportedly to engage in direct action to stop the boats.  They are calling this 'Operation Overlord' (yes, seriously).  It's not clear if they have actually stopped any boats, but the French authorities have been quick to ban what they refer to as 'far right activists' from the region.  True to form for one half of the biggest people smuggling gang of them all (the other half being their British partners at the other end).

Also last week the French intercepted a waterborne small boat for the first time.  Let that sink in - the first time.  Small boat crossings began eight years ago, millions have been sent to France to stop the boats and this was only their first waterborne interception.  It's a scam that will never end.


Total = 413 (down 75 from previous week)

NEC BLOCKS BURNHAM BID


Labour's National Executive Committee has rejected Andy Burnham's request to be considered for the Gorton and Denton by-election.  The NEC took less than 24 hours to consider his request, which was blocked on the grounds of cost and unity.  The decision was reportedly put to a vote of ten members, which included Shabana Mahmood, Lucy Powell, Ellie Reeves (sister of Rachel) and the PM himself.  Mahmood abstained in her position as chair, while the vote went against Burnham almost unanimously by 8-1.  Powell voted in favour of Burnham, having publicly backed his candidacy.

Prior to the vote, Mahmood told reporters that allowing a directly elected mayor to vacate their post had 'organisational implications' for the party.  While allies of Starmer were keen to block Burnham as a defensive move in order to prevent him manoeuvring for a leadership challenge, party sources are briefing that the decision was primarily down to the cost of a mayoral election to replace Burnham were he to win the by-election.  However, another source was quoted as saying the decision was also motivated by the prospect of a 'divisive campaign'.  It is true that some MPs and activists have declared their reluctance to campaign in Gorton and Denton if Burnham was the candidate.

The move is likely to provoke anger among supporters of Burnham, which includes a significant number of MPs.

Saturday, 24 January 2026

BURNHAM GOES FOR IT


Andy Burnham has confirmed he has sought permission from Labour's National Executive Committee to seek the nomination for the forthcoming Gorton and Denton parliamentary by-election.  As a directly elected mayor, he must secure permission from the NEC to be considered for selection.

Burnham confirmed the news shortly after the 17:00 deadline he was given in order to make the request.  He will now have to wait for the decision, which could go either way.  Starmer allies on the NEC could deny Burnham's request, which will potentially cause friction among others, who are keen to see the Greater Manchester Mayor back in the Commons.  Lucy Powell, the party's deputy leader, sits on the NEC and has publicly backed Burnham for the seat.

Outside the NEC, Burnham has received public backing from both Sadiq Khan and Ed Miliband.  Angela Rayner is also thought to be on side.  MPs Ian Byrne (Liverpool West Derby) and Chris Hinchcliff (NE Herts) have expressed support.  Fellow MPs Karl Turner (Hull East), Chris Webb (Blackpool South) and Jo White (Bassetlaw) have cautioned against blocking Burnham's request.

Burnham announced his request on X, publishing his letter to the NEC.  His decision to choose X could be seen as a slight towards Starmer, who has made no secret of his contempt for the free speech platform.  Burnham's letter can be read below, in full.

Dear Chair

I write to seek the permission of the NEC to enter the process for the selection of Labour's candidate for the forthcoming Gorton and Denton by-election.

This has been a difficult decision for me to make and I thought it would help members of the NEC if I shared my reasoning in reaching it.

Of course, nobody wanted or expected a by-election at this time and I have given careful thought to what is in the best interests of our Party and the city-region I represent. With that in mind, I have come to the conclusion that this is the moment to mount the strongest possible defence of what we stand for and what we have built in this city over many generations.

Manchester inspires because it is a place that has always stood for the equality of all people, right back to the cotton workers of 1862 who refused to handle slave-picked cotton. In my time as Mayor, I have drawn strength from that tradition and worked hard to unite people. We are famous for our togetherness and, from that foundation, we are achieving huge success as the UK's fastest-growing city region.

And yet, there is now a direct threat to everything Greater Manchester has always been about from a brand of politics which seeks to pit people against each other. It brings with it a poison we should not let enter our city-region. I see this by-election as the frontline of that fight for the Manchester Way and I feel I owe it to a city which has given me so much to lead it from the front, despite the risks involved.

With your permission to stand, I would run a hopeful and unifying campaign with broad appeal to voters, focusing on the positivity around what we have achieved, whilst at the same time being honest about the alienation people feel from politics.

I left Westminster almost 10 years ago because I felt it too and had a strong sense that it wasn't working for people in our part of the world.

In my current job, I have tried to pioneer a different way of doing things with some success. But I have learnt in my nine years as Mayor that Manchester won't be able to be everything it should be without similar changes at a national level. This is why I feel the need to go back.

When so many people in a city-region like this are struggling to afford the daily basics, they are surely right to question why the country gave away control of them in the first place, in whose interests it is run and why no government of any colour has corrected these things for them.

I applaud this Government for being the first in a long time to face up to them and put people before profit. The progress already made on rail renationalisation, bus re-regulation, the housing crisis and devolution is truly impressive. My role in returning would be to use my experience to help it to go further and faster, as well as communicate the difference it is making. I would be there to support the work of the Government, not undermine it, and I have passed on this assurance to the Prime Minister.

I can assure the NEC that, if allowed to stand and successful in the by-election, I would give my all to the subsequent Greater Manchester Mayoral by-election. We have such a powerful story to tell of the change Greater Manchester Labour has brought to the city-region and I am confident we can win and take that success story into a new era.

I hope this makes my reasoning clear and I attach the required form with further information. Out of respect for this internal process, I will not be giving any further public statements until it is concluded beyond the release of this letter. I am sad at the circumstances in which all this has come about and, while he clearly made mistakes, I want to recognise the dedicated service of Andrew Gwynne to this area over many years.

Yours sincerely

Andy Burnham

RT HON ANDY BURNHAM

"I would be there to support the government, not undermine it".  Yeah, right.  Pull the other one.

There may be trouble ahead for the Parliamentary Labour Party and Starmer's leadership, but there are many hurdles to overcome before Burnham can even get close to his desired outcome of challenging the PM.

If he was selected for the by-election, he is by no means guaranteed victory.  Having previously been considered a safe seat, in the current climate it's all to play for and both Reform and the Greens will be looking to take the seat.

WILL HE, WON'T HE?


Andy Burnham has until 17:00 on Saturday to decide if he wants to stand for selection to the Gorton and Denton constituency, vacated by Labour MP Andrew Gwynne two days ago.  His first step towards his ultimate goal of dislodging Keir Starmer from Number Ten is to seek permission to contest the forthcoming by-election.  Labour's National Executive Committee stands in his way and reports suggest the NEC is split on its sympathies.  Some are said to favour the status quo and want to block Burnham's request, while others - like deputy leader Lucy Powell - are said to be in favour of his candidacy.

We suspect Mr Burnham will have been making plenty of phone calls in the last 48 hours, sounding out the potential pitfall of this first step.  He has so far said nothing publicly about his intentions.

Will he, won't he?

Friday, 23 January 2026

IS THIS REALLY BURNHAM'S CHANCE?


by Richey Edwards

Disgraced former minister Andrew Gwynne has sensationally decided to quit Westminster, ostensibly 'on doctor's orders' due to what he has strongly insinuated is a mental health problem.  He is reported to have quit only after he secured a lucrative pension deal with Commons authorities.  Gwynne's departure creates a potential route to the Labour leadership challenge prized by the Mayor of Greater Manchester.  On the face of it, Gwynne's Greater Manchester constituency of Gorton and Denton appears to be the perfect vehicle for Andy Burnham to achieve his ultimate goal of replacing Starmer in Number Ten.

However, it won't be that simple, and a significant amount of factors come into play before Burnham 
even gets close to challenging Starmer for the top job.

For Burnham to challenge Starmer, he firstly has to get himself back into the Commons as a Labour MP.  As the self-styled 'King in the North', Burnham will favour a northern seat in order to achieve this, and for a vacancy to arise in Greater Manchester - with a solid existing Labour majority of 13,413 - he is unlikely to get a better opportunity in this parliament.

This could end in humiliating fashion for Burnham, should he go for it.  Failing to get through the selection process wouldn't be the biggest embarrassment, but getting the nod and then failing to hold the seat would be truly humbling, potentially career ending.  What would traditionally be considered a Labour 'safe' seat is no longer safe.  The old political order is crumbling, the game has changed and there is every chance that either Reform or the Greens could dislodge Labour in this forthcoming by-election.

Gorton and Denton, 2024 general election

Andrew Gwynne (Lab) 18,555 (50.8%) -16.4%
Lee Moffitt (Ref) 5,142 (14.1%) +9.2%
Amanda Gardner (Grn) 4,810 (13.2%) +10.7%
Amir Burney (WPB) 3,766 (10.3%) New
Ruth Welsh (Con) 2,888 (7.9%) -11.0%
John Reid (LDm) 1,399 (3.8%) -2.0%

As you can see, there was already a swing away from Labour in 2024, with the benefactors being a combination of Reform, the Greens and Workers Party.  The swing will be even greater this time round, which will bring both Reform and the Greens closer to victory.  The seat is more likely to favour Reform and we would expect the contest to be very tight.

Failure to hold this seat would provide yet another example of how far Labour have slumped in less than two years of government.  Gorton and Denton was created by boundary changes in 2024, but most of the land from which it was amalgamated has been held by Labour for decades.  The new seat took around half of its territory from Manchester Gorton, a seat held by Labour since 1935.  Denton and Reddish - the seat held by Gwynne prior to the boundary change - was held by Labour since its own creation back in 1983.  Manchester Withington had a Lib Dem MP from 2005 to 2015, after which it was taken back by Labour, who had previously held the seat since 1987.

Losing a seat like Gorton and Denton would be hard to bear for such a high profile ego as the 'King in the North'.  The stakes could not be higher and Burnham's well publicised desire to challenge Starmer could rob him of vital activists during a campaign in which he would need to throw the kitchen sink.  A split in support could also prevent him from winning selection, but he may not even get that far.  An elected mayor has to get special permission from the party to contest a Westminster seat, which could be denied.  He could resign his mayoralty in order to work around this first obstacle, but that would be seen in a very poor light and could hinder him in later stages, when he will need to call upon the local CLP, MPs and party members for support.

Now let's say that Burnham gets approval to run, wins selection and then successfully holds the seat for Labour.  Having re-entered the House of Commons as an MP, he will have a new set of obstacles to get what he ultimately desires.  Firstly, there needs to be a will to replace Starmer.  While Starmer is perceived by the majority of the electorate as a catastrophic disaster, Labour's polling has improved in recent polls.  YouGov now has Labour back in second place behind Reform, having halved Reform's poll lead from 10 points to five in just a month.  It's doubtful that Starmer can keep up this momentum, and there is a potentially very embarrassing trial looming large in April, involving three young 'aspiring male models' from eastern Europe.

Leadership challenges are usually born out of discontent, much of which is orchestrated.  However, in order to sow dissent successfully, plotters need negative circumstances.  This wasn't a problem when Jeremy Corbyn's leadership was stumbling in 2016.  Negative publicity, poor polling and a desire to scapegoat Corbyn for the EU referendum result, all combined to create the negative circumstances required to launch a leadership challenge, aided by the loss of a no confidence vote and a string of resignations from his shadow front bench.

Corbyn easily survived the leadership challenge from little known backbencher Owen Smith and went on to exceed expectations in Theresa May's absurd snap general election of 2017.  Taking the Tory majority away meant that Brexit could be stalled indefinitely and this saved Corbyn's leadership from any further attempts to mount a challenge.

Burnham could try and mount a challenge without significant negative circumstances, but it would not be wise.  If Starmer is seen to have steadied the ship after a disastrous 2025, MPs would be less inclined to support a challenge.  Unpopular leaders are much easier to dislodge.  Burnham would be best equipped to bide his time, but not too much time as his slim chances of rescuing Labour's majority diminishes the closer the end of the parliamentary term.  He would need to sow a little dissent in the ranks, but not too much as no-one likes a concerted plotter.  It's a tightrope.

Alternatively, he could wait for another plotter to come along and allow them to do the ground work in triggering a challenge and then jump on the ballot paper.  Either way, Burnham would have to canvass and gain the support of 20 per cent of the Parliamentary Labour Party in order to get on the ballot.  This is double the threshold since the last leadership challenge, the party having voted to increase it from 10 per cent in 2021.  Having achieved that, the challenger then has to secure nominations from five per cent of Constituency Labour Parties and/or Labour affiliates such as trades unions.

If Burnham succeeded in mounting a solo challenge, the party would be entering new territory and the self-styled King would be making history, regardless of whether or not he defeats Starmer in the ballot.  No Labour Prime Minister has ever faced a leadership challenge, let alone one in which a fifth of Labour MPs are required to turn on the incumbent.

The ultimate question is then answered by the Labour membership and affiliate supporters - stick with Starmer or take the plunge with Burnham?  It's anyone's guess as to which way that would go.

The whole process from start to finish is an exceptionally tall order for Burnham and he may choose to duck out from the off.  The possibilities may be too tempting to miss out, but of course he would need to get that special permission first.  At the time of writing, he has said precisely nothing about Gwynne's departure.

As for Andrew Gwynne, he may still yet be remembered as the man who made it possible for Burnham to dislodge Starmer, but he is more likely to go down in history for the WhatsApp scandal.  And quite rightly so!

Thursday, 22 January 2026

COUNCIL BY-ELECTIONS 22.01.26


Five seats were contested on Thursday, with two additional by-elections held in Derbyshire on Tuesday.  In those earlier elections, the Greens finally got a result they could truly celebrate, with an impressive gain from Reform.  Tuesday was a mixed evening for Reform, with the party gaining from Labour in the other seat.  These were also the first electoral outings for Ben Habib's Advance UK, with mixed results.  They did not have a particularly damaging effect on Reform in either seat, but this could change over time.

Labour lost to Reform again on Thursday, losing a seat in north Wales.  Their vote share was down across the board, finishing last in Norfolk and pushed into distant third by Reform in an embarrassing result north of the border.

Despite their gain on Tuesday, the Greens failed to impress elsewhere and their vote share was down in the four other seats the party contested.  This included two wooden spoons that included a particularly disastrous result in which they lost a seat to the Lib Dems.

It was a better week for the Tories, despite the notion of their looming demise gaining traction.  They managed to hold onto two seats, in spite of a decreased vote share in both.  Straws clutched.

Willaston & Thornton, Cheshire West and Chester Council

Con: 997 (53.8%) -7.1%
Lab: 318 (17.2%) -9.3%
Ref: 299 (16.1%) New
LDm: 132 (7.1%) +2.4%
Grn: 107 (5.8%) -2.2%

Con HOLD

The Rissingtons, Cotswold District Council

LDm: 321 (37.5%) New
Con: 268 (31.3%) -11.5%
Ref: 221 (25.8%) New
Grn: 47 (5.5%) -51.7%

LDm GAIN from Grn

Glenrothes West & Kinglassie, Fife Council

(first preference votes)

SNP: 1,167 (44.3%) -5.3%
Ref: 725 (27.5%) New
Lab: 413 (15.7%) -16.8%
Con: 182 (6.9%) -4.7%
LDm: 125 (4.7%) +0.9%
SFP: 25 (0.9%) New

SNP HOLD

Leeswood, Flintshire County Council

Ref: 160 (22.3%) New
Ind: 138 (19.2%) -5.6%
Ind: 135 (18.8%) +4.3%
Lab: 87 (12.1%) -48.5%
Ind: 79 (11.0%) New
LDm: 68 (9.5%) New
Con: 34 (4.7%) New
Ind: 17 (2.4%) New

Ref GAIN from Lab

Central Wymondham, South Norfolk District Council

Con: 545 (31.1%) -4.6%
Grn: 454 (25.9%) -3.7%
Ref: 363 (20.7%) +15.1%
LDm: 211 (12.0%) New
Lab: 182 (10.4%) -18.8%

Con HOLD

The following contests were held on Tuesday.

Codnor, Langley Mill & Aldercar, Amber Valley Borough Council

Ref: 595 (45.6%) +24.1%
Lab: 249 (19.1%) -20.8%
Adv: 161 (12.3%) New
Con: 130 (10.0%) -15.3%
Grn: 77 (5.9%) -5.5%
Ind: 50 (3.8%) New
LDm: 42 (3.2%) New

Ref GAIN from Lab

Horsley, Derbyshire County Council

Grn: 1,341 (43.6%) +16.7%
Ref: 1,091 (35.5%) +0.6%
Con: 426 (13.9%) -8.9%
Lab: 116 (3.8%) -6.5%
Adv: 57 (1.9%) New
LDm: 43 (1.4%) -2.0%

Grn GAIN from Ref

Abbreviations

Con = Conservative
Lab = Labour
Ref = Reform UK
LDm = Liberal Democrat
Grn = Green
SNP = Scottish National Party
SFP = Scottish Family Party
Adv = Advance UK
Ind = Independents and local groups

Tuesday, 20 January 2026

TOON TUESDAY #87

This week's prominent theme is Starmer's increasing litany of u-turns.  There's also some cancelled elections, defections to Reform and a warmonger being appointed to a 'board of peace'...

Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Ben Garrison for The Guardian
Graeme Bandeira for The Northern Agenda
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Times
Peter Brookes for The Times
Stanley McMurtry for The Mail on Sunday
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Matt Pritchett for The Sunday Telegraph
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Christian Adams for The Sunday Telegraph

"NAB THE BASTARDS"

Cllr Susanna Pressel hates British flags

The left have some sinister priorities when it comes to policing.  This was exemplified recently by a Labour councillor in Oxford, who made it abundantly clear that she would like her local plod to target people who commit the heinous 'crime' of hanging flags from lamp posts!  In leaked audio from an internal council meeting, Cllr Susanna Pressel asks if police can trace the culprits through social media or, failing that, lie in wait and 'nab the bastards'.  "That's the sort of thing I would like to see from the police", she added.

She went on to describe flags placed outside the council building as 'appalling'.

Of course she was referring to her own national flags, which only the left appear to find abhorrent.  One wonders if she would feel the same way if local Muslims were erecting Pakistani or Palestinian flags?  Highly doubtful.  Oxford was the base for some of the most appalling Muslim rape gangs and with key members of one gang released early last year, there is little doubt that such activity is ongoing.  Cllr Pressel has served on the council for a whopping 32 years, during which time it's a safe bet she has not asked the police to 'lie in wait' for the gang rapists.

What about street theft and burglaries?  Violent crime?  All three categories are on the rise in Oxford, but Cllr Pressel thinks police time should be dedicated to 'catching' people erecting British flags on British streets.

Listen to her outburst below.


There has been a very fitting response to Cllr Pressel's remarks, very similar to that which met football commentator Gary Neville's own denunciation of the colours.  Activists have erected flags in the street where she lives!

If Pressel had any sense, she would have toned down the rhetoric after that, but instead she has complained that her neighbours are 'incensed'.  What she actually means is that she is incensed, as her intolerance to the flags is already well known.  Not all of her neighbours will share that hatred towards this country and our flag - if any at all.

She added: "I also hear complaints from a very large number of people who find the flags intimidating and, in fact, racist".  A very large number of people, or just one or two comments on social media?  The bottom of a barrel can be heard being scraped.  The only people who could possibly regard our own national flag 'racist' are treacherous leftist buffoons like Pressel.

Oxfordshire County Council has reportedly somehow spent £15,000 removing flags from lamp posts up to this point.  That is a colossal waste of taxpayers' money that could easily have been saved by simply leaving the flags where they are.

Monday, 19 January 2026

MEME MONDAY #66

The main thing to take away from last week's routine round of nanny state encroachment is this - the government is not abandoning plans for a digital ID.  The framework for digital ID was laid out in 2021 while the scamdemic was still in full swing, but the plans got kicked into the long grass until Keir Starmer resurrected it with his totalitarian announcement last September: "You will not be able to work in the United Kingdom if you do not have digital ID.  It's as simple as that".

Not so now it seems, but don't believe it for one second.  The mandatory aspect may have been removed - in order to appeal to our libertarian values - but it will simply be introduced another way.  It will be presented as a voluntary concept, but over time it will be required to access more and more services until one day you find it impossible to exist without the permission of the state.  Resist the implementation of a social credit system as if all your freedom and privacy depended on it, because it absolutely does.

Mon 12 Jan - 51 shares
Mon 12 Jan - 82 shares
Tue 13 Jan - 459 shares
Tue 13 Jan - 381 shares
Wed 14 Jan - 34 shares
Wed 14 Jan - 37 shares
Thu 15 Jan - 90 shares
Thu 15 Jan - 203 shares
Fri 16 Jan - 55 shares
Sat 17 Jan - 89 shares
Sat 17 Jan - 44 shares
Sun 18 Jan - 225 shares
Sun 18 Jan - 36 shares

Two Facebook Stories were published, including another edition of 'Diversity is Strength'


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