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News Round-Up

by Toby Young
22 January 2025 2:29 AM

  • “Donald Trump reinstates Winston Churchill bust in Oval Office” – Joe Biden removed Churchill’s statue from the Oval Office, but Trump has restored it to pride of place, reports the Telegraph.
  • “Trump is humiliating his woke enemies – and it’s a joy to watch” – In the U.S., the Donald has declared that progressive dogma has had its day. But it lives on unchallenged in the U.K., writes Annabel Denham in the Telegraph.
  • “Trump 2.0 will leave Europe looking like a basket case” – If the President is as good as his word on deregulation we can expect another Roaring Twenties, predicts Jeremy Warner in the Telegraph.
  • “Trump turns tables on Biden with ‘broad investigation’ into censorship” – Donald Trump issued two executive orders launching investigations into Joe Biden’s White House over institutional censorship and weaponisation of law enforcement, says the Mail.
  • “If President Trump can order government staff back to work so can we” – All that it takes to get a country moving again is a government willing to take tough decisions and push them through regardless of the trade union backlash, according to Matthew Lynn in the Telegraph.
  • “What’s wrong with the British Left? It has to take feminism lessons from Donald Trump” – Don’t be fooled, the President dislikes gender ideology in exactly the same way other misogynists don’t like it: the most regressive way, says Julie Bindel in the Telegraph.
  • “‘That’s a big one’: Trump orders US to leave the WHO” – One of Trump’s first Executive Orders was to leave the World Health Organisation, according to the Telegraph. Public health ‘experts’ are up in arms!
  • “Trump sacks coast guard leader over ‘excessive diversity focus’” – Adml Linda Fagan, the diversity-obsessed head of the U.S. Coast Guard, has been fired by Trump, says the Telegraph.
  • “What Executive Orders has Trump signed? A full list” – The Times has a run-down of all the Executive Orders Trump signed on his first day.
  • “No, Elon Musk didn’t make a fascist salute” – At Donald Trump’s inauguration, a giddy Elon Musk gave a speech during which he gave the crowd what some are claiming was a Nazi salute. It was no such thing, writes Brendan O’Neill in the Spectator.
  • “No, Elon Musk did not give a ‘Nazi salute’” – Are the media really going to start this nonsense all over again? asks Andrew Doyle on his Substack.
  • “Now the hysterical liberal media is branding Elon Musk a NAZI!” – The 45th and now 47th President took the oath of office on Monday promising a “revolution of common sense”. Predictably, says the Mail, the mainstream media punditry cannot contain their disgust.
  • “Trump purges thousands of White House staff not aligned with MAGA” – Taking to his social media platform, Truth Social, the newly appointed President publicly fired several senior workers in an unprecedented White House shake-up, reports the Mail.
  • “Who’s who in Trump’s tech bro club” – Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos and more stepped out to show allegiance to the new President on Monday. Who are they and what does their presence at the inauguration mean? asks the Times.
  • “Trump exposes the madness of Ed Miliband’s energy plans” – In the Spectator, Ross Clark celebrates Trump’s rejection of the climate change boondoggle and wonders if it could ever happen here.
  • “Ed Miliband warns Trump that Net Zero is ‘unstoppable’” – The Energy Secretary is unimpressed by Trump’s scepticism about the ‘climate emergency’ and and has doubled down on Britain’s suicidal energy policies, according to the Telegraph.
  • “Starmer says there was NO Southport ‘cover-up’ but condemns ‘failings’” – The PM told a press conference in Downing Street yesterday that people were right to “demand answers” over “failings” in the case of Axel Rudakubana, reports the Mail.
  • “When will Keir Starmer tell us everything about Southport?” – Yesterday, Starmer implied but did not categorically say that Islamist ideology was not the motivation of the dreadful Axel Rudakubana, says Patrick O’Flynn in the Spectator.
  • “Cuper-up Keir at his finest” – Sir Keir Starmer is hiding behind bogus arguments on prejudicing trials to justify not disclosing more about the Southport killer, writes Paul Sutton on his Substack.
  • “Police were ‘gagged’ by CPS over Southport killer” – Merseyside detectives were warned to hold back from releasing information about Axel Rudakubana, according to the Telegraph.
  • “Starmer ‘hid Southport terror link by cynical use of contempt law’” – Nick Timothy, Theresa May’s former Joint Chief of Staff, has accused the PM of a cover-up, claiming the justice system was used to hide details of Axel Rudakubana’s past, reports the Times.
  • “The flaws in the counter-terrorism scheme that helped Axel Rudakubana slip through the cracks” – The teenager who murdered three girls in Southport was referred to Prevent three times – but it’s been failing for years, says Danny Shaw in the Telegraph.
  • “Starmer’s mealy-mouthed statement shows he’s no leader” – The public deserves to know everything about Axel Rudakubana and the Southport attacks – there must be no cover-up, writes Allison Pearson in the Telegraph.
  • “‘Disgrace’ that Axel Rudakubana could buy a knife on Amazon” – Yvette Cooper has told MPs that Prevent failed to stop the Southport attacker despite his “obsession” with violence and a criminal conviction, reports the Times.
  • “The ‘15 missed opportunities’ to stop Axel Rudakubana” – The teenager who carried out the Southport atrocity was brought to the attention of multiple state institutions that failed Britain and its children, says the Times.
  • “Axel Rudakubana researched self-driving car bombs” – The 18-year-old, who pleaded guilty yesterday to three counts of murder, was found in possession of articles and books that sources said proved he had an “obsession with violence”, according to the Mail.
  • “The grooming gang perpetrators who are never convicted” – In the Spectator, Julie Bindel says there are thousands of men involved in the mass rape of children who haven’t been brought to justice.
  • “The Grooming Gangs Cover-Up” – Watch Dominic Frisby reading the words of the judge in one of the most notorious grooming gang trials.
  • “Reeves’ attempt to derail car finance compensation puts £30 billion at risk” – A Supreme Court ruling could “adversely affect U.K.’s reputation as place to do business”, according to the Telegraph.
  • “Embattled Rachel Reeves jets off to World Economic Forum in Davos” – Ms. Reeves jetted off to the World Economic Forum yesterday as the U.K. heads for a “debt death spiral”, reports the Mail.
  • “Employment suffers largest fall since pandemic” – Rachel Reeve’s £25 billion National Insurance rise is beginning to bite, says Michael Simmons in the Spectator. According to the latest ONS data, payrolled employment fell by 47,000 last month — the sharpest fall since the pandemic.
  • “Cut Net Zero burden to grow economy, Bank tells Reeves” – The Bank of England has warned the Chancellor that the thicket of climate regulations makes City risk-taking harder, according to the Telegraph.
  • “Labour cannot agree that economic growth is a good thing” – The conflict between Net Zero and avoiding recession is becoming clearer and clearer, says a Telegraph leader.
  • “Wanted – a politically and economically viable path to low emissions” – In ConservativeHome, ex-MP Steve Baker says we should repeal the Climate Change Act, ditch Net Zero and work out how to transition from gas to nuclear.
  • “Britain’s soaring sickness bill is leaving experts baffled” – Broken system serves neither neither taxpayers nor those it is intended to help, reports the Telegraph.
  • “Labour strips environmental quangos of powers to delay housebuilding” – The removal of powers to delay developments will help up to 150 major road, rail and energy projects, the Government claims, according to the Times.
  • “Rishi Sunak lands  jobs at Oxford and Stanford universities” – The former prime minister will return to his alma maters while staying on as an MP, says the Times.
  • “Government to investigate cancel culture after death of Oxford student” – The death of Alexander Rogers has prompted an inquiry into cancel culture by the Department for Education, reports the Times.
  • “Assisted dying row as patients given six months to live often survive for three years” – One in five people given six months by NHS doctors is still alive three years later, figures show, says the Telegraph.
  • “Common sense prevails in FSU’s battle with Wikipedia” – In Anglican Ink, Julian Mann writes about my successful battle to get Wikipedia to remove its description of the Free Speech Union as “far-Right”.
  • “75 years after Orwell, one man is still fighting for free speech” – In Gript, Laura Perrins interviews yours truly about the never-ending battle to defend free speech in the U.K.
  • “NHS cleaner who took 400 sick days in four years wins £50,000 compensation” – Managers failed to recognise employee as disabled despite her struggling with “complex mental health issues”, the Employment Tribunal hears, according to the Telegraph.
  • “Sacked for Wrongthink is launched” – Daily Sceptic contributor C.J. Strachan has launched a Substack to draw attention to all the people losing their jobs for expressing heterodox opinions. Please subscribe and help him get the word out.
  • “Only Fools And Horses outrage as sitcom slapped with trigger warning” – Only Fools and Horses has been slapped with a trigger warning that some fans have deemed “excessively woke”, reports the Mail.
  • “NHS tries to ban nurse from calling trans doctor a man” – Sandie Peggie refuses to use gender-neutral pronouns when addressing Beth Upton, a biologically male doctor who identifies as female – and got into trouble for it, according to the Telegraph.
  • “Oxfam ‘weaponising history’ with claim Britain owes India £52 trillion” – Oxfam’s batty report argues that the U.K. owes reparations to India of £52 trillion, says the Telegraph.
  • “‘Pioneering’ literary agency that promoted diversity forced to close” – The Good Literary Agency had vowed to “blow open the pipeline” for minority writers. But it’s gone belly-up because no one wanted to publish their books, according to the Times.
  • “Watch: Shoppers ram vegan protesters with trolleys in Sainsbury’s meat aisle” – A vegan protest staged by Animal Rising at a store near Southampton on Saturday left shoppers visibly angry, reports the Telegraph.
  • “Is Prince Harry really this deluded?” – Vanity Fair claims he wanted to host a podcast in which he would interview the world’s most powerful men and ask them how their life experiences had “made them into sociopaths”. Not surprisingly, it didn’t get off the ground, writes Michael Deacon in the Telegraph.
  • “Harry ‘very close’ to striking last-minute deal with Sun publisher” – In a day of high drama, the Duke of Sussex was said yesterday to be “very close” to clinching an out-of-court settlement with the newspaper group, reports the Mail.
  • “Attorney General suggested Israel is enforcing apartheid” – Lord Hermer signed a letter claiming Netanyahu’s government is led by a ‘far-Right’ coalition seeking formal annexation of West Bank, says the Telegraph.
  • “Her name is Emily Damari” – The left will never live down the shame of staying silent on the racist kidnapping of a British Jew, writes Brendan O’Neill in Spiked.
  • “Hong Kong activist, 19, fears kidnap by bounty hunters” – Chloe Cheung, who lives in the U.K., is on a wanted list issued by China, but says the police have offered her minimal protection, reports the Times.
  • “Why has Biden pardoned Anthony Fauci?” – In the Spectator, Matt Ridley asks why Joe Biden’s pre-emptive pardon for Fauci covers anything he might have done since 2014. Surely, Covid started in 2019, not 2014?
  • “Chris Whitty was ‘sceptical’ about mandatory Covid jabs for healthcare workers” – The decision to introduce Covid mandates for healthcare workers was “100% a political one”, Chris Whitty has told the Covid inquiry, according to the Telegraph.
  • “At last the truth” – On X, Nigel Farage says the cover-up surrounding the Southport attacker is a disgrace.

At last the truth.

The Southport murderer was reported to Prevent three times.

The cover-up has been a disgrace. I was right all along. pic.twitter.com/wxiQkSH0kO

— Nigel Farage MP (@Nigel_Farage) January 20, 2025

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23 Comments
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Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
3 months ago

Things that go Trump in the Night 
Tuesday Morning A329 & A322 Downshire Way  
Bracknell

101
Last edited 3 months ago by Lockdown Sceptic
7
0
Monro
Monro
3 months ago

Donald Trump reinstates Winston Churchill bust in Oval Office

“Telegram from the Admiralty, sir!’

‘Winston is back!’

Last edited 3 months ago by Monro
4
0
Monro
Monro
3 months ago

Oxfam ‘weaponising history’ with claim Britain owes India £52 trillion

The British rule in India lasted from the mid-18th century until 1947.

Benefits:

Infrastructure Development:

The British established a vast network of railways, roads, and ports, which facilitated trade and movement across the subcontinent. The Indian Railways, in particular, became one of the largest railway networks in the world.

Education System:

The British introduced a formal education system, including universities and colleges, which laid the foundation for modern education in India. English became a medium of instruction, which helped create a class of educated Indians who later played crucial roles in the independence movement. There are now 88 million pupils in India enjoying a private education because it is a great deal better than that provided by the State.

Legal and Administrative Reforms:

The British established a structured legal system and administrative framework, including codified laws and a judiciary. This helped in standardizing laws and promoting a sense of order and governance.

Economic Changes:

Britain integrated India into the global economy. The introduction of cash crops and new agricultural practices changed the economic landscape, leading to increased agricultural productivity in some regions.

Public Health Initiatives:

Britain implemented public health measures in India, including the establishment of hospitals and vaccination programs, which improved health standards in some areas. This included efforts to combat diseases like cholera and smallpox.

Transport and Communication:

Britain improved communication systems by introducing telegraphs and postal services, which connected different parts of the country and facilitated faster communication.

Cultural Exchange:

Britain led a cultural exchange that influenced art, literature, and architecture. The fusion of British and Indian styles produced unique forms of art and architecture, such as Indo-Saracenic architecture.

Social Reform Movements:

Britain also sparked social reform movements within India. Reformers like Raja Ram Mohan Roy and others advocated for social changes, such as the abolition of sati (the practice of widow immolation) and child marriage, influenced by Western ideas of rights and freedoms.

Lalbagh Botanical Gardens, Bangalore

Government Museum, Madras

Hodson’s Horse

The Lahore Hunt

The Kadir Cup

Etc., etc…..and so on and so forth

Using the future value formula is FV=PV*(1+r)^n, where PV is the present value of the investment, r is the annual interest rate, and n is the number of years the money is invested, that comes out at approximately…….a great deal more than ‘£52 dillions’

When may we expect our money back?

Last edited 3 months ago by Monro
7
0
soundofreason
soundofreason
3 months ago
Reply to  Monro

On the downside we let the subcontinent partition itself again.

2
0
Monro
Monro
3 months ago
Reply to  soundofreason

‘The question of a division of India, as proposed by the Muslim League, is based on the fundamental fact that there are two nations- Hindus and Muslims- and the underlying principle is that we want a national home and a national state in our homelands which are predominately Muslim and compromise the six units of the Punjab, the N.W.F.P., Sind, Baluchistan, Bengal and Assam. This will give the Hindus their national home and a national state of Hindustan, which means three-fourths of British India.’

Muhammad Jinnah, 04 May 1947

Quite so, but I don’t believe that a united ‘Greater India’ was, by that stage, any longer in our gift.

3
0
soundofreason
soundofreason
3 months ago
Reply to  Monro

Totally agree. ‘We’ had made a right hash of abandoning Empire well before partition.

That said: I’ve briefly visited many countries on business trips (though not India or Pakistan) and it strikes me that ‘we’ left behind better functioning bureaucracies than other European ‘powers’.

4
0
For a fist full of roubles
For a fist full of roubles
3 months ago
Reply to  Monro

So Muslims wanted their own Muslim state, and yet we accused of racism for wanting a Christian or secular state. Shame on them.

2
0
EppingBlogger
EppingBlogger
3 months ago
Reply to  Monro

Why bother to argue these issues. The UK is broke. No money.

4
0
soundofreason
soundofreason
3 months ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Worse than broke – in hock.

2
0
Sepulchrave
Sepulchrave
3 months ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Indeed, and I now believe that the UK will continue to worsen and this condition will persist for decades if not permanently.

0
0
Monro
Monro
3 months ago
Reply to  Monro

My apologies. The Lahore Hunt is, of course, now in Pakistan. I think they still exist. The PVH is still going.

https://m.facebook.com/pvhpak/

Last edited 3 months ago by Monro
0
0
soundofreason
soundofreason
3 months ago

“Wanted – a politically and economically viable path to low emissions”

I read the opening paragraph and decided the rest could wait until I have nothing better to do.

No serious person doubts that CO2 is a greenhouse gas or that human emissions of it have contributed to our changing climate.

Know your enemy.

7
0
Mrs Bunty
Mrs Bunty
3 months ago

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/01/21/british-left-has-to-take-feminism-lessons-donald-trump/

Julie Bindel has had an undeserved rough time and bravo for her to be still standing. I’m of a generation out of time with the mores of today but let’s not fall for the media version of Trump she outlines:

”He doesn’t like gender ideology in exactly the same way as other misogynists don’t like it – because women should be in the kitchen, barefoot, preferably pregnant, and men are men and women are women, in the most traditional and regressive way.”

Traditional doesn’t mean regressive. I worked then when I had our children Mr B worked while I stayed home with our children, that’s not regressive and I certainly wasn’t subjugated, we were and are still equal partners. I’ve worked with tradesmen who could curse and catcall with the best of them who when they swore in front of me they apologised, they were who would be called misogynists today but were just normal men. Trump doesn’t talk down to them.

Trump has stayed on good terms with his wives and his children respect him and work with him. He wasn’t the most articulate of people but seems to have calmed more listening to his inauguration.

Broad brushes don’t help anyone and the left seem to have the broadest brushes to tar people with.

6
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
3 months ago
Reply to  Mrs Bunty

Indeed. How on earth does Bindel presume to know that Trump thinks women should be barefoot in the kitchen? Where is her evidence for this? There’s some evidence that one way Trump sees women is as sex objects. Breaking news – that’s not uncommon (biology) but it doesn’t mean that is the ONLY way he sees them. I have the impression it’s not uncommon for women to sometimes view men as sex objects.

3
0
Mrs Bunty
Mrs Bunty
3 months ago
Reply to  transmissionofflame

Exactly, but it’s typical nowadays. It puzzles me how people are absolutely certain of their viewpoint and won’t believe or listen to alternatives. I admit I have bias myself (being a Conservative) but if someone showed me that my viewpoint on anything was wrong without stooping to emotions I’m open to changing my mind, these people aren’t.

Are they’re not teaching critical thinking nowadays but motivated reasoning, appealing to feelings and emotions? Is education just indoctrination of the herd?

3
0
EppingBlogger
EppingBlogger
3 months ago

So the elites want us to believe that if this bloke had been told by Amazon “you’re too young to buy a knife” he would instead have gone back to his homework.

He wouldn’t have used the same ingenuity that he applied to manufacture ricin or travel to Southport or get the terrorist training manuals.

Meanwhile, Labour want to give him the vote.

6
0
NickR
NickR
3 months ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Or, walked down to kitchen, open the cutlery drawer & take out a knife. Is there a home in Britain that doesn’t have carving knives, bread knives, vegetable knives, chisels, craft knives?

5
0
Sepulchrave
Sepulchrave
3 months ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Classic misdirection by Yvette Cooper.

1
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
3 months ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Indeed, what a crock of crap. Problem-reaction-solution. Import violent people, then stop everyone buying knives online.

1
0
soundofreason
soundofreason
3 months ago

Ed Miliband warns Trump that Net Zero is ‘unstoppable’”

Trump: ‘Who?’

8
0
Andy A
Andy A
3 months ago

‘Disgrace’ that Axel Rudakubana could buy a knife on Amazon’ says the brain dead Home Secretary. I wonder what conclusion she have come to if he’d gone into his parents kitchen and grabbed a knife from the cutlery draw?

6
0
For a fist full of roubles
For a fist full of roubles
3 months ago

Biden has done a great job confirming the guilt of all the crooks by pardoning them.

6
0
Mrs Bunty
Mrs Bunty
3 months ago

https://www.spiked-online.com/2025/01/20/her-name-is-emily-damari/ The left will never live down the shame of staying silent on the racist kidnapping of a British Jew, writes Brendan O’Neill in Spiked.

Silly Brendan hasn’t he learned? The left don’t feel shame.

2
0

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