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George Galloway launches Workers Party campaign with attack on Labour
  • The bellend unfortunately has a point. Labour has declared a number of ultra-safe seats battlegrounds due to how much they've fucked up on Gaza. We're probably stuck hearing from this raging bigot for some years to come.

  • British ambassador to Mexico 'sacked for pointing assault rifle at staff'

    > Video footage shows Jon Benjamin sitting in the front seat of a car and directing the weapon towards a person sitting in the back in what appears to be a joke. > > Laughter and music can be heard in the background as the employee makes a hand gesture suggesting they’re uncomfortable. > > At the time of the incident, sometime earlier this year, Mr Benjamin was on an official trip to two Mexican states where there is a high presence of drug cartels, the Financial Times reports. > […] > The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) has not officially announced that Mr Benjamin was removed from his position. > > However, the government’s official website states that he ‘was UK Ambassador to Mexico between 2021 and 2024’.

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    Sunscreen PSA rule
  • No, you can't tell me or my skin cancer what to do!

  • UK government bans private puberty blocker prescriptions for trans youth
  • No new patients under the age of 18 in England, Wales and Scotland will be given hormones to suppress puberty if they are experiencing gender dysphoria

    Puberty blockers sure are funny old things, somehow they're safe to prescribe to cis kids, but when prescribed to trans kids they suddenly become dangerous. I'm sure this is a purely evidence based policy. It must be. Wes Streeting has already endorsed it and, as people on here keep saying, Labour are the trans-friendly™ option. They wouldn't just throw trans kids under the bus.

  • Media Companies Like Vox Are Feeding Their Journalists' Work Into An AI Wood Chipper
  • If our politicians are already bought and sold to the point that calling for these industries to be regulated is pointless, then why would politicians listen to our calls for 'open weights by default'.

  • Media Companies Like Vox Are Feeding Their Journalists' Work Into An AI Wood Chipper
  • If we don't have the power to stop generative AI, then what makes you think we have the power the change copyright law? Generative AI uses up huge amount of power and water to the point of causing issues for national infrastructure. There is a clear climate case to be made against generative AI and unlike copyright law the public actually care about climate change.

  • Labour deselecting left-wing candidates and women of colour in first week of campaign
  • I was making my own post about this, but I'll just post what I was going to write here instead of having two posts about the same thing.

    Labour deselects left-wing candidates

    Two Corbynist have been barred from standing by Labour party, with a third suspected to be also soon be barred.

    Lloyd Russell-Moyle, MP for Brighton Kemptown, has had what he described as a 'politically motivated' complaint made about his behaviour eight years ago. He notes that the complaint being made so close to the election that there isn't time for him to clear his name before then.

    Meanwhile, Faiza Shaheen, candidate for Chingford and Woodford Green, announced on Newsnight that she had been deselected over a collection posts and likes she made on Twitter. She says one of the tweets brought up is one describing her experiences of Islamophobia within the Labour Party.

    One that she apologised directly for is this tweet of a John Steward sketch captioned with "every time you say something even mildly critical of Israel, you're immediately assailed by scores of hysterical people".

    Leaked Whatsapp messages have revealed that Poplar and Limehouse MP Apsana Begum has had a complaint made to the NEC about her by her CLP calling for a selection vote, supposedly from friends of her abusive ex-husband.

    These announcements come on that back of Starmer allies being parachuted into seats, including director of think tank Labour Together Josh Simons, and NEC member and director of Labour First and We Believe in Israel Luke Akehurst.

  • GRRATEST ALLY PORSTGUEL
  • Can you change the title to not reference a racist 4chan meme.

  • There's little enthusiasm for Labour. Does it matter?
  • The point is to ask whether or not it matters if there’s little enthusiasm for Labour and to make a historical comparison suggesting that it doesn’t.

    Again, what conclusion are we suppose to draw from this? Because the one I draw to is that the political platform doesn't matter, that the reason Miliband and Corbyn failed to unseat the Conservatives is not because of any policy or political failings, but because they weren't against a sufficiently unpopular government.

  • There's little enthusiasm for Labour. Does it matter?
  • What's the point of this comparison? Starmer's government isn't going to be like Blair's, Blair inherited a good economy. Is the point that we shouldn't bother with policies because the only way to get elected is for the sitting government to become unpopular?

  • Half of Britons wouldn't take a trip to the the moon, even in guaranteed safety
  • How dare you! You're right, but how dare you.

  • Who says southerners are soft?
  • The north has fallen on hard time. Well, not hard times but rather um… Well, you get the idea.

  • Spectrum rule
  • God, your profile picture is ominous.

  • Reform UK's Nigel Farage challenged over his claim that Muslims are against British values
  • I like the implication at the start where he implies Reform voters are a bit thick.

  • Labour’s Plan to Make Work Pay: Delivering A New Deal for Working People
  • Update, Sharon Graham, head of Unite, has released a statment criticising this. Important to note that Labour had met with unions before and promised not to water down worker rights reform any more after u-turning on a number of policies back in September. The main point of criticism is the number of caveats that accompany many of the proposals.

  • Labour’s Plan to Make Work Pay: Delivering A New Deal for Working People
  • Positivity? In a UK politics community??? What is the world coming to.

  • Labour’s Plan to Make Work Pay: Delivering A New Deal for Working People
    labour.org.uk Labour’s Plan to Make Work Pay: Delivering A New Deal for Working People

    Labour’s New Deal for Working People is our plan to make work pay. It’s how we’ll boost wages, make work more secure and support working people to thrive – delivering a genuine living wage, banning exploitative zero hour contracts, and ending fire and rehire.

    Labour’s Plan to Make Work Pay: Delivering A New Deal for Working People

    Direct PDF Link, PDF archive. I'd suggest bookmarking the archive as parties have a habit of deleting stuff from past elections (e.g. Labour have deleted the PDF for their 2019 manifesto).

    Lot's of waffling but here are the key policies I managed to pick out:

    • Ban 0-hour contracts, "ensuring everyone has the right to have a contract that reflects the number of hours they regularly work, based on a twelve-week reference period"
    • End the practice of fire-and-rehire
    • Worker protections from day one
    • Merge the current three-tier employment status into two categories of 'worker' and 'genuinely self-employed'
    • Strengthen redundancy rights
    • Strengthen protections for the self-employed
    • Family working
      • Make 'flexi-time' contracts the default (work hours that fit around children)
      • Ban firing women for six months after returning from maternity leave
      • Review the parental leave system within the first year of government
      • Right to bereavement leave for all workers
    • Ensure that surveillance technology can't be introduced without consultation
    • Make it so minimum wage considers the cost of living when calculating it
    • Remove age brackets from minimum wage
    • Remove the lower earnings limit and waiting period for statutory sick pay
    • Ensure hospitality workers receive the tips they earn
    • Ban unpaid internships, except when part of education or training course
    • Establish a new 'Fair Pay Agreement' for adult social care workers
    • Reinstate the School Support Staff Negotiating Body
    • Remove "unnecessary restrictions on trade union activity and ensuring industrial relations are based around good faith negotiation and bargaining"
      • Repeal the Trade Union Act 2016 and Minimum Service Levels (Strikes) Bill and the Conduct of Employment Agencies and Employment Businesses (Amendment) Regulations 2022
      • Allow electronic and workplace balloting for union votes
      • Remove the requirement for unions to prove at least 50% employee support to be recognised and make final ballot a simple majority
      • Give unions the right to access the workplace for recruitment and organising purposes
      • Strengthen protection for trade union reps
    • Close the gender pay gap
      • Include outsourced workers in calculations
      • Require firms with >250 staff to publish ethnicity and disability pay gaps
      • Require employers to provide support to employees going through menopause
    • Establish a single enforcement body for worker rights to replace the current fragmented system
    • Double the time limit where employees can bring a claim to an employment tribunal to six months
    • Allow workers to raise grievances to ACAS collectively
    • Extent the Freedom of Information Act to companies that have public contracts and publicly funded associations
    • Require public bodies to asses if work can be done more efficiently in-house before outsourcing to the private sector
    • Ensure public contract take into account 'social value' when being given out (e.g. local jobs, pay, trade union recognition)

    Promises with no real policy attached:

    • Strengthen protections for whistleblowers
    • Help carers in the workforce
    • Give rights to people who work from home to be able to separate life from work
    • Ensure "regulations on travel time in sectors with multiple working sites is enforced and that workers’ contracts reflect the law" (this is copied verbatim twice across the document)
    • Bring employment tribunals 'up to standard'
    • Review health and safety regulations
      • Review guidance on working in extreme temperatures
      • Protections for people with long Covid
      • Increased legal duty for employers to tackle sexual harassment

    They also say the terminally ill deserve "security and decency", but don't actually propose anything other than encouraging employers and trade unions to sign the Dying to Work Charter.

    A thing not picked up above, but this document spends a lot of time batting for employers. Every mention of improving protections or abusive practices is accompanied with some statement along the lines of "most employers are already really good to their employees" or "ensure there is a good talent pool for employers".

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    richard entice
  • Can someone get me some of whatever Nichi's on.

  • Lemmy Development Update 2024-05-24
  • I don't believe this is mine or Mat's first time making it onto this (I also only changed a number, hardly work).

  • The Walney Report Is a Threat to Democracy
    tribunemag.co.uk The Walney Report Is a Threat to Democracy

    Former Labour MP John Woodcock has published a report calling for a clampdown on protest to safeguard democracy. What it really means is making war criminals and climate profiteers immune from political accountability.

    The Walney Report Is a Threat to Democracy

    Archive

    > The last few years have seen a sustained effort on the part of the UK government to clamp down on protest labelled ‘disruptive’ and ‘illegal’. After the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act of 2022 and the Public Order Act 2023, we are now presented with John Woodcock’s ominously titled report Protecting our Democracy from Coercion. It targets not just certain activist groups but our understanding of democracy itself. Emphasising the ‘rule of law’, the report imagines a democracy reduced to a fixed set of rules and institutions insulated from popular control and contestation. > > […] [John Woodcock's] 291-page report focuses particularly on non-violent activists on the left, such as climate and pro-Palestine groups, who employ strategies of disruption and lawbreaking. The threat of these, Woodcock claims, lies in the economic damage they may cause, in the draining of police resources, and in their potential ‘to undermine faith in our parliamentary democracy and the rule of law.’ Although recent changes in policy would suggest otherwise, he insists that these dangers have so far been overlooked and little understood. The recommendations of Woodcock’s report range from establishing channels for businesses to claim compensation from protest organisers, charging them for the cost of policing, and calling on governments and elected representatives not to engage with or consult any activists employing strategies of lawbreaking. > > […] Championing ‘the rule of law’, he writes ‘that if a movement advocates systematic law-breaking as the means for political change, then that organisation crosses a line for what is and is not acceptable.’ This disregards the fact that protests that involve lawbreaking and civil disobedience have a historical legacy of democratisation that extends from the suffragettes to the US civil rights movement — and are recognised as democratic practices by liberal democratic theorists such as John Rawls and Jürgen Habermas. > > Woodcock, in contrast, insists that all this is obsolete because ‘the UK’s liberal democracy’ guarantees citizens’ right to vote. This reduces the people to an audience allowed to express their consent or disapproval every few years on the invitation of the government. It also disguises the reality of a corporate lobby drowning out electoral voice. The ‘independent advisor’ Woodcock is himself a case in point: it is difficult to believe that his activity as a paid lobbyist for arms manufacturers and fossil fuel companies did not affect his report’s recommendations to constrain climate and pro-Palestine activist groups in particular. Making acts of popular protest more and more difficult ultimately also makes it easier for corporate power to shape government policy in its interest.

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    Microblog Memes @lemmy.world flamingos-cant @feddit.uk
    Serbia moment
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    Government tells Britons to stockpile as part of emergency planning

    Archive

    > Britons will be urged to stockpile tinned food, batteries and bottled water under a new campaign launched by the UK government to encourage the public to prepare for emergencies. > > Oliver Dowden, deputy prime minister, will on Wednesday unveil a new website designed to help households mitigate potential harm from an array of risks, ranging from flooding and power outages to biosecurity crises such as another pandemic. > […] > The “Prepare” website launched on Wednesday calls on households to stock up on bottled water. It suggests a minimum supply of about three litres of drinking water per person per day, but recommends 10 litres per person per day — to aid basic cooking and hygiene needs — as a more comfortable level of supplies. > > It also urges people to buy and store non-perishable food that “doesn’t need cooking, such as ready-to-eat tinned meat, fruit or vegetables”, as well as a tin opener, plus baby supplies and pet food where relevant. > > Battery or wind-up torches and radios, a first aid kit, and wet wipes are among other emergency supplies detailed on the government checklist. > > Speaking at the London Defence Conference, Dowden will say “resilience begins at home” and cite polling by the conference showing that only 15 per cent of people have an emergency supply kit in their homes, while more than 40 per cent of people do not have three days’ supplies of non-perishable food and water. > > Government officials said the advice would bring Britain in line with nations such as Finland and Japan, which are regarded as leaders in citizen resilience.

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    Streeting explains why Labour disagrees with Braverman on ending child benefit cap
    www.independent.co.uk Streeting explains why Labour disagrees with Braverman on ending child benefit cap

    Rightwing Tory MP Suella Braverman has surprised many by demanding an end to the two child benefit cap to tackle poverty - but despite internal party pressure it is not a policy Labour will pursue

    Streeting explains why Labour disagrees with Braverman on ending child benefit cap

    Archive

    > Wes Streeting has defended his party’s policy not to scrap the cap on child benefit for just two children in each household. > […] > Labour had been in favour of scrapping the child benefit cap but reversed on the proposal late last summer because shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said it was unaffordable, provoking huge anger and debate in the party. > […] > [Ms Braverman wrote in The Daily Telegraph]: "The truth is that Conservatives should do more to support families and children on lower incomes... A crucial reform that Frank [Field] advocated was to scrap the two-child benefits limit, restricting child tax credits and universal credit to the first two children in a family. If they have a third or fourth child, a low-income family will lose about £3,200 per year. > > "Over 400,000 families are affected and all the evidence suggests that it is not having the effect of increasing employment or alleviating poverty. Instead, it’s aggravating child poverty." > > Mr Streeting told The Independent that poverty in the UK is forcing women to choose to have abortions because they cannot aford to keep the child. > > But when The Independent asked him about Labour’s U-turn on scrapping the two child benefit cap, he insisisted that dealing with child poverty was “more than just about handouts”. > […] > [He said]: "I also know that that the answer to child poverty, ultimately, is not simply about handouts, it is about a social security safety net, that also acts as a springboard that helps people into work and with good work that makes the cost of living affordable for everyone. > > "That means that if you aren't doing the right thing, and earning a living and playing by the rules, that you don't just have enough to make ends meet, but you have enough to do the things that make life worth living. And we’re some way from that from that now."

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    flamingos flamingos-cant @feddit.uk
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