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News Round-Up

by Toby Young
2 April 2025 12:56 AM

  • “The US is right about free speech in Britain” – The US government’s threat to scupper any trade deal with the UK unless we commit to widening free speech is not based on a faulty premise, writes law prof Andrew Tettenborn in the Spectator. Free Speech really is on life support.
  • “The White House is right: freedom of speech is under threat in Britain like never before” – Every day there is another betrayal of our wartime generation and the values which they fought for, says Allison Pearson in the Telegraph.
  • “Six cases that convinced the Trump White House the UK doesn’t have free speech” – As America raises concerns about “freedom of expression in the UK”, the Telegraph takes a look at the cases that have sparked transatlantic tensions.
  • “Free speech at risk amid abortion row, Badenoch warns” – The Conservative leader has spoken out as the US Vice-President’s objections to the silent prayer ban in abortion clinic buffer zones looks set to scupper Starmer’s tariff talks, reports the Telegraph.
  • “I criticised Labour and the thought police came for me” – “The attempt to remove my OBE was politically driven and mean-spirited,” writes Charlie Mullins in the Telegraph, who’s announced he’s joined the Free Speech Union.
  • “There’ll be no liberty on Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’” – Beware the words ‘liberty’ and ‘liberation’. There are no end of evils committed in their names, writes Ross Clark in the Spectator.
  • “Sorry Sir Keir, Trump’s just not that into you” – Soft power is no substitute for hard power, and the goodwill of the Global South is worth nothing, says Madeline Grant in the Telegraph.
  • “Trump signs off Keir Starmer’s Chagos Islands deal” – A treaty between the UK and Mauritius is imminent after the US president approved the agreement, reports the Times.
  • “Don’t assume Trump is joking about a third term” – Trump really is looking into how he can remain in office for a third term, says Sam Kahn in Persuasion.
  • “Delusional media ask whether a new wave of American refugees will flee Trump’s pending “fascist dictatorship” for that bastion of freedom and democracy known as the Federal Republic of Germany” – On his Substack, Eugyppius is unconvinced by German press reports that Americans are fleeing Trump’s America for the progressive Shangri-La of Germany.
  • “Russia warns Trump against striking Iran’s nuclear facilities” – The Kremlin has expressed concern after Donald Trump vowed to bomb Iran unless it agrees to a new nuclear deal with Washington, according to the Mail.
  • “The billionaire battle to swing a local election that could derail Trump” – A Democratic win in Wisconsin could lay the ground for the party to retake control of the House of Representatives, reports the Telegraph.
  • “French accuse Trump of interference in business over DEI demands” – The US embassy in France has issued a letter stating that companies that supply goods and services to America must comply with its ban on diversity programmes, sparking outrage, according to the Times.
  • “Is France still a democracy?” – Can France still call itself a democracy after Marine Le Pen has been declared ineligible to run for president? asks Jonathan Miller in the Spectator.
  • “Outrage grows over Marine Le Pen’s blocked presidential run” – Le Pen has pledged to fight the court-imposed prohibition stopping her from running for the French presidency in 2027, says the Mail.
  • “Those who fear the judgment of the people favour the judgment of the courts” – In a leading article, the Telegraph condemns the lawfare used against Marine Le Pen.
  • “Macron urged to pardon Le Pen and let her run for president” – The French President is being told to overturn the court ruling that means Marine Le Pen cannot run in the 2027 French presidential election, reports the Telegraph.
  • “The left again tries to use the courts to thwart democracy” – This time, the “elections are too important to let voters decide” moment happened in France, writes Alex Berenson on his Substack. It’ll probably go about as well as the Democratic attacks on Donald Trump did last year.
  • “The hypocrisy behind Le Pen’s disqualification” – In the Spectator, James Tidmarsh says every single political group, every single national delegation, has violated the same rule that Ms Le Pen has – so why are the courts punishing her and her alone?
  • “Marine Le Pen’s ‘martyrdom’ plays into the hands of the hard Right” – Banning the National Rally figurehead from the 2027 French presidential race will just play into her hands, enabling her to pose as a political martyr, says Bruno Waterfield in the Times.
  • “I don’t believe a word that Starmer says about ‘smashing the gangs’” – Promising to lead a “global crackdown” on illegal migrants, Sir Keir Starmer wrote in yesterday’s Mail: “Believe me, I get it.” But Alp Mehmet, writing in the Mail, doesn’t believe a word of it.
  • “Albanian dinghy migrants boast of luxury in TikTok advertising” – Videos posted on TikTok show Albanian migrants bragging about making it to the UK after paying £3,000 to cross the Channel. The caption advertises the route as “100 per cent guaranteed”, according to the Mail.
  • “Judges ‘told too late’ about delay to ‘two-tier justice’ guidelines” – Even though the Sentencing Council has agreed to put its new guidelines on hold, Shadow Justice Secretary Robert Jenrick told MPs yesterday there was a “very real prospect” that offenders were handled under the discredited Sentencing Council rules yesterday morning, since judges weren’t told to ignore the new rules until two hours they’d come into force, says the Mail.
  • “Why are ethnic minorities being prioritised for bail?” – When the Ministry of Justice announced that the government would introduce emergency legislation this week to stop ‘two tier’ Sentencing Council guidelines being implemented, the Lord Chancellor may have hoped that her swift action would bring this story to a close. But yesterday the debate over ‘two-tier’ justice widened, says the Spectator.
  • “Two tier justice cannot be countenanced” – The idea that everyone is equal before the law should be axiomatic, thunders a leading article in the Telegraph.
  • “Police chief defends arresting parents in school WhatsApp row but says it could have been ‘lower key’” – A police chief has defended arresting two parents in a school dispute, but admitted a lower key approach might have been better than sending three police cars, a van and six uniformed officers to their door, according to LBC.
  • “Why I’m crowdfunding a proper inquiry into the rape gang horror” – We will not be deterred by allegations of ‘racism’ – we will hound down the truth, however vile it may be, writes Rupert Lowe in the Telegraph, announcing that he’s crowdfunding a public inquiry in the rape gang scandal.
  • “Legal challenge over VAT on private school fees for SEN children” – The judicial review against the Government’s decision to impose VAT on independent school fees began in the High Court yesterday, reports the Times.
  • “Reeves was officially warned private school tax raid would harm poorer families” – Claimants in the VAT trial argue that the Government’s tax policy interferes with the fundamental right to education, says the Telegraph.
  • “Net Zero nutjob Ed Miliband could wipe out Britain’s factories” – The Government is considering using emergency powers to renationalise British Steel and save the Scunthorpe works from closure, writes Richard Littlejohn in the Mail, taking aim at Ed – ‘Mad Monk’ – Milliband.
  • “Unpopular but unsackable: Starmer’s Marmite Miliband problem” – The Energy Secretary seems out-of-step with Downing Street and has been tipped for the chop, but remains highly popular among Labour members, writes Tony Diver in the Telegraph.
  • “Green Hydrogen to increase gas bills” – Green hydrogen is expensive and the Government is planning to increase your gas bill to pay for it, says David Turver on his Substack.
  • “The electric car honeymoon is over” – From today, electric cars will become liable for road tax, writes Ross Clark in the Spectator. Will this be the death knell for electric vehicles?
  • “Atlantic Shores wind project sinks – and with it, a green illusion” – In Wattsupwiththat? Charles Rotter says that there are few things more satisfying than watching a multi-billion-dollar boondoggle collapse under the weight of its own bureaucratic absurdity and scientific sloppiness – which is exactly what’s happened to the Atlantic Shores wind project.
  • “Professor William Happer on climate crisis: it’s all a made-up scare story” – “If you read about climate in the newspapers or listen to some talk about climate on television, it will be very, very far from the truth,” says Dr William Happer in an interview for Freedom Research. Dr Happer is a Professor Emeritus at Princeton University, a renowned physicist, member of the US National Academy of Sciences as well as American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and winner of several prestigious scientific awards.
  • “Climate change is not the main cause of floods, scientists say” – Despite the common narrative, recent flooding events cannot solely be attributed to climate change, reveals a new study led by the University of Exeter, according to the Mail.
  • “Almost half of Britain cannot browse internet because of poor mobile signal” – Patchy connectivity is frustrating network customers and undermining productivity, according to research by the mobile data firm Streetwave, says the Telegraph.
  • “The Drenching Arms: rebirth through landfill” – Read Paul Sutton’s latest in his ongoing Drenching Arms series on his Substack.
  • “Pull Britain out of this ‘normie doom spiral’” – One of the biggest threats to our institutions is mediocrities at the top such as Justin Welby and Paula Vennells, writes James Marriott in the Times.
  • “Civil servants offered £95k to quit in Musk-style crackdown” – Thousands of Civil Servants could step down as a scheme is rolled out across Whitehall to reduce waste, according to the Telegraph.
  • “KFC advert sparks hundreds of complaints for ‘mocking’ Christianity” – The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has received almost 1,000 complaints about a new KFC commercial that appears to be mocking religion, including from angry Catholics and Protestants, reports the Mail.
  • “New Doctor Who star hits back at ‘woke’ claims” – “I just think we’re doing the right thing,” says the Time Lord’s latest companion Varada Sethu, says the Telegraph.
  • “Police shoot and kill armed man at busy railway station” – Officers were called to Milton Keynes station at around lunchtime on Tuesday after reports that a man was carrying a gun, reports the Telegraph. He was, so they shot him.
  • “The Fitzwilliam Museum, fact and propaganda” – The Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge – a part of the University – has mounted an exhibition making serious allegations against the University, many of its historic personalities, and against the founder of the Museum itself, Viscount Fitzwilliam, according to a panel of experts at History Reclaimed.
  • “‘No injuries reported’ in crash believed to involve Prince Andrew accuser, say police” – Virginia Giuffre said on Sunday that she was dying from kidney renal failure after being hit by a school bus travelling at nearly 70mph. But her story looks a bit fishy, says the Telegraph.
  • “We need to talk about femcels” – In the Spectator, Ella Dorn says the Netflix show Adolescence ignores a growing problem among young women: they’re coming to increasingly hate men.
  • “The Great Repeal Act” – Listen to David Starkey, Robert Jenrick and Rupert Lowe argue for a Great Repeal Act to restore the English constitution to its former glory.

The Great Repeal Act@RupertLowe10, @RobertJenrick, and @DrDStarkeyCBE explain how to restore Great Britain. pic.twitter.com/3gWVq8VOB0

— Brewgalowe (@Brewgaloo_) April 1, 2025

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24 Comments
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stewart
stewart
1 month ago

You can sign me up to the “great repeal act” if it is as they advertise it.

4
0
ellie-em
ellie-em
1 month ago

https://www.lbc.co.uk/news/uk/school-whatsapp-row-police-chief-defends-arrests/

Talk about stating the obvious!! The overkill stance taken was clearly to frighten and demean the parents. Isn’t that known as malicious intent? Was the inspector who signed off the bully boy tactics subjected to having three police cars, a van and six uniformed officers knocking on their door to investigate why they deliberately chose that particular ‘planned’ harassment of the parents?

13
0
Mrs Bunty
Mrs Bunty
1 month ago
Reply to  ellie-em

I find it sad that the police nowadays are so captured by wokeness that they think this disproportionate response is ok. Not one copper seems to be embarrassed at intimidating people for writing something that another is ‘offended’ by.

8
0
Lockdown Sceptic
Lockdown Sceptic
1 month ago

Tuesday Morning London Rd, Broad Lane
Lily Hill Drive Bracknell

101
12
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
1 month ago

I find it interesting and encouraging that the Telegraph is condemning what happened to Le Pen. The paper seems to want to be the cuddly face of “conservatism” and I doubt they have much time for her. I think her conviction might end up playing into her hands.

8
0
Monro
Monro
1 month ago

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/independent-review-of-the-uk-statistics-authority-uksa-2023/independent-review-of-the-uk-statistics-authority-by-professor-denise-lievesley-cbe-html

Today’s compare and contrast exercise (completion time: thirty seconds)

‘In July 2017 pre-release access (the practice of sharing statistics and their commentary pre-publication, most commonly to Government Ministers and their advisers) to ONS statistics was removed in all but exceptional circumstances. The Review was surprised to learn that this is not the case with other departments, including across the Devolved Administrations. This is out of step with international good practice and pre-release access should be removed across all government departments.’

And

‘This morning, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) received a request from the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) for pre-release access to the weekly deaths data that are being published at 09:30 this morning (Tuesday 31 March 2020). Approval was given at 08:29 for today’s date only on specific grounds relating to the need for ministers to better understand the spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19) across non-hospital settings, as today’s release is the first of its kind.’

https://www.ons.gov.uk/news/statementsandletters/prereleaseaccesstodeathsregisteredweeklyinenglandandwalesprovisional

Today’s topical question:

Was Mr Hancock well named?

Last edited 1 month ago by Monro
1
-1
Grahamb
Grahamb
1 month ago

This should say Rupert Lowe. Not Robert Jenrick

  • “Why I’m crowdfunding a proper inquiry into the rape gang horror” – We will not be deterred by allegations of ‘racism’ – we will hound down the truth, however vile it may be, writes Robert Jenrick in the Telegraph, announcing that he’s crowdfunding a public inquiry in the rape gang scandal.
8
0
Heretic
Heretic
1 month ago
Reply to  Grahamb

Well done to you for pointing that out. Here is the link to Rupert Lowe’s Crowdfunding site for the Rape Gang Inquiry, which has already reached £437,474:

The Rape Gang Inquiry – a Politics crowdfunding project in London by Rupert Lowe

0
-1
Art Simtotic
Art Simtotic
1 month ago

“The Fitzwilliam Museum, fact and propaganda” The Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge – a part of the University – has mounted an exhibition making serious allegations against the University, many of its historic personalities, and against the founder of the Museum itself, Viscount Fitzwilliam, according to a panel of experts at History Reclaimed.

Bust-up in Fenland Poly cloisters – Long and scholarly correspondence, which boils down to Progressives tell Porkies.

Same-old, same-old.

Last edited 1 month ago by Art Simtotic
4
0
Jon Garvey
Jon Garvey
1 month ago

“Marine Le Pen’s ‘martyrdom’ plays into the hands of the hard Right”

“…enabling her to pose as a political martyr…” says the writer. As far as the facts have appeared, she is a political martyr. This conversion of fact to “misinformation” seems to be a common progressive tactic.

One must suppress evidence that mRNA vaccines cause harm, in case it causes vaccine hesitancy (amongst those who believe they cause harm because of that evidence).

One must hide strong evidence against Neodarwinism so as not to encourage the “Creationists” (ie all who believe there is strong evidence against Neodarwinism).

One must jail those who expose rape gangs (to prevent the public believing there are rape gangs).

One must censor all news from Russia (whilst Russians retain access to ours) in case people believe Western censorship to be a Putin talking point.

Etc.

11
0
Jon Garvey
Jon Garvey
1 month ago

“Police chief defends arresting parents in school WhatsApp row but says it could have been ‘lower key’”

Because arrest without evidence achieves intimidation of both detainee and the public, whereas discreet enquiry merely ascertains the truth. Ergo the police are now social engineers, not law enforcers.

18
0
Art Simtotic
Art Simtotic
1 month ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

Agreed, succinctly put.

9
0
Dinger64
Dinger64
1 month ago

“The electric car honeymoon is over”

It never even got engaged as far as I’m concerned!

9
0
EppingBlogger
EppingBlogger
1 month ago

It will do Rupert Lowe’s reputation no good among his former enthusiasts to be see in the company of Conservatives.

0
-1
Heretic
Heretic
1 month ago
Reply to  EppingBlogger

Wrong. That video is MAGNIFICENT, giving strength and new hope to Patriots everywhere.

Surely you can see that, Epping, normally so sensible.

Last edited 1 month ago by Heretic
0
-1
Heretic
Heretic
1 month ago

“Judges ‘told too late’ about delay to ‘two-tier justice’ guidelines” says Robert Jenrick in the Daily Mail…

Well done to Lord Toby and the DS for highlighting this excellent speech by Robert Jenrick, which can be read in full here:

Sentencing Council Guidelines: 1 Apr 2025: House of Commons debates – TheyWorkForYou

“The Lord Chancellor must be living in a parallel universe if she is giving herself a pat on the back today. The truth is she has completely lost control of the justice system. She sat on her hands for weeks and took seven days to gather her thoughts and put her views in writing to the Sentencing Council. Her incompetence took this down to the wire.”

“Confusion reigns. Judges are being told one thing by the Lord Chancellor and another by the Sentencing Council. Who really is in charge here? YET AGAIN, THE JUSTICE SECRETARY HAS BEEN HUMILIATED AND UNDERMINED BY ACTIVIST JUDGES SEEKING TO UNDERMINE THE WILL OF THIS PLACE—OUR PARLIAMENT. Her authority has been shredded—she is being treated as a two-tier, second-tier Justice Secretary.”

1
-1
Heretic
Heretic
1 month ago

“KFC advert sparks hundreds of complaints for ‘mocking’ Christianity”

This advert is horrific, showing the depths of depravity to which the advertising world has sunk.

Now let’s see the advertising agency “Mother London” run by Robert Saville produce a similar advert mocking Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs, and Buddhists.

3
-1
Jon Garvey
Jon Garvey
1 month ago
Reply to  Heretic

I’d settle for mocking atheists.

1
0
Heretic
Heretic
1 month ago
Reply to  Jon Garvey

Good idea. Them as well as all the others.

0
-1
Heretic
Heretic
1 month ago
  • “The Great Repeal Act” – Listen to David Starkey, Robert Jenrick and Rupert Lowe argue for a Great Repeal Act to restore the English constitution to its former glory.”

This video is MAGNIFICENT! What a wonderful surprise for the Indigenous People of Great Britain: the English, Scots, Welsh, Irish and their descendants around the world.

Rupert Lowe is the kind of leader people around the world think of when they think of British Prime Ministers.

Last edited 1 month ago by Heretic
3
-1
Heretic
Heretic
1 month ago
Reply to  Heretic

Did you notice, at the very end of that video, the clever plug for Britain’s Dairy Farmers, showing a white milk bottle pouring the white into the Union Jack???
Brilliant!

0
0
klf
klf
1 month ago

Trump really is looking into how he can remain in office for a third term, says Sam Kahn in Persuasion.

I doubt this very much. But even if he was looking to extend his presidency, Vance and others won’t let him get away with it.

1
0
Heretic
Heretic
1 month ago
Reply to  klf

Says Sam Kahn, the Indian Muslim from Delhi, still Indian by nationality, who also wrote:

The Case Against Drinking – by Sam Kahn – Persuasion

Woke Is Here To Stay – by Sam Kahn – Persuasion

His Persian name “Sam” is used by Muslims because it means “gold coins”.

0
-1
JeremyP99
JeremyP99
1 month ago
  • ““There’ll be no liberty on Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’” – Beware the words ‘liberty’ and ‘liberation’. There are no end of evils committed in their names, writes Ross Clark in the Spectator.”

Cue Robert Hunter, the Grateful Dead’s lyricist, in his song “Liberty”. He’s right. They can fuck off with their “Liberty”

Ooo, Freedom
Ooo, Liberty
O… Leave me alone
To find my own way home

To find my own way home

0
0

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