The Jenkinsite case for fixing the Carer’s Allowance

Britain talks about family, community, and the dignity of work. But if you want to see what we truly value, look at how we treat carers.

Ed Davey has spoken about caring for his mother and caring for his disabled son today. That gives the Liberal Democrats credibility. Supporting carers is not a niche “nice-to-have”; it is the natural flagship for a liberal party that believes in dignity, family life, and a state that works.

Unpaid carers keep Britain afloat. They keep loved ones out of the hospital, stop social care from collapsing, and hold families together. Yet many live with exhaustion, paperwork, and the fear that one wrong payslip could trigger a demand for thousands in repayment.

A humane country does not punish people for taking responsibility.

A Jenkinsite approach is not nostalgia, but instead, a method: practical reform,
administrative competence, and compassion appropriately delivered. Carer’s Allowance is a test of whether the state can manage fundamental fairness.

Carer’s Allowance is £83.30 a week for those providing at least 35 hours of care to someone on a qualifying disability benefit. It rises to £86.45 from April 2026. Even then, it is a poor reward for work done under sustained pressure.

End the cliff-edge

Carers can earn up to £196 per week under the 2025/26 rules. Go even slightly over, and
you can lose the entire allowance. This is not a taper; it is a trap.

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Ed under attack

The Guardian reports significant numbers of Liberal Democrat MPs are becoming frustrated by what they view as an overly cautious approach under Ed Davey, and the party’s failure to spell out a national message to voters.

Shortly after merger I was working in the Liberal Whip’s Office alongside Ed, Olly (now Baroness) Grender and Norman Baker when we went up to 2% in the polls. We cheered while Paddy joked we are no longer an asterix! Today we are in double figures despite more competition from other parties and forces.

I can recall a Parliamentary party meeting immediately after the 2005 general election when we won 51 seats, where Lorely (now Baroness) Burt suggested that what we lacked was a narrative for what we stood for, and despite some excellent work by Alan (now Lord) Beith on the subject of Liberalism, it is still awaiting an answer we can unite around.

The Guardian also reported that some MPs felt the Party was too academic. Isn’t that a good thing, so long as we don’t lose sight of the fact we aim to serve an electorate dominated more by practical than academic considerations.

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Iran: back the people, isolate the regime

Britain should stand with Iran’s protesters, not the regime. That means targeted pressure, democratic solidarity, and practical steps that actually bite.

Here’s what those practical steps should look like:

Proscribe the IRGC

We must treat the Revolutionary Guard as the terrorist apparatus it is. This means proscribing the group and closing loopholes that allow intimidation and fundraising networks to operate in Britain.

Expand targeted sanctions and sanction evasion

Britain must pursue the asset freezes and travel bans of regime officials, security leaders, and enablers of the regime. To ensure these sanctions hit, greater emphasis must be placed on cracking down on attempts to evade them, including but not limited to shipping, insurers, shell companies, and financial networks facilitating revenue flows.

Supporting communication access

The UK government must work to ensure internet resilience across Iran by enabling access to satellite internet via lawful procurement routes, coordinating with international partners, and supporting trusted NGOs involved in distribution. The UK must also look into the use and funding of circumvention services that allow Iranians to continue using the internet, like Psiphon and Tor bridges. We must also look to pay for this infrastructure to keep it resilient against regime tampering and develop a rapid adaptation plan when the regime blocks a route.

Enabling NGOs to get the truth out

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Tom Arms’ World Review

Nuclear weapons

In a few weeks—on 5 February 2026, to be exact—the 2010 New START Treaty will expire. For the first time since the early days of the Cold War, the world will be without a binding agreement limiting the world’s two largest nuclear arsenals.

The main reason for the treaty’s impending expiration is that neither the US nor Russia trusts the other. All such treaties rely on inspections to verify that signatories are upholding their end of the bargain. START inspections have ceased.

Washington and Moscow agreed to a mutual suspension of inspections in March 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, before the health crisis ended, Russia invaded Ukraine and the US imposed sanctions and travel restrictions. Moscow argued that these measures made inspections impossible and in August 2022 blocked US inspections. In February 2023, Russia formally suspended its participation in New START, effectively rendering the treaty unenforceable.

Both sides will soon be legally free to expand and deploy additional nuclear weapons. This includes the option to increase the number of warheads deployed on existing delivery systems, although it should be noted that New START already allowed multiple independently targetable re-entry vehicles (MIRVs) within overall limits.

There are no restrictions on missile defense systems under New START, so the treaty’s expiration does not remove any formal limits in this area. However, the absence of arms control constraints may encourage renewed emphasis on missile defense projects, including Donald Trump’s proposed “Golden Dome.” Vladimir Putin is also free to expand deployment of Russia’s S-500 Prometheus air- and missile-defense system, which focuses on protecting key installations rather than national coverage.

The treaty did place limits on delivery systems and deployed warheads, which indirectly constrained the deployment of emerging technologies. While hypersonic glide vehicles are not explicitly banned, they are counted under New START limits when mounted on intercontinental ballistic missiles. Their speed is meant to render missile defense systems redundant.

The New START Treaty was imperfect. It needed—and still needs—to be renegotiated to account for new technologies such as cyber warfare, space-based systems, and novel delivery vehicles. Nevertheless, its existence provided an element of stability and transparency that helped restrain the dynamics of Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD) that once dominated nuclear strategy. MAD rules again.

Climate change

Slipping under the geopolitical radar at the start of 2026 was another major blow to climate change activists.

Venezuela, Epstein, Minneapolis and Iran meant that few noticed when Donald Trump signed a batch of 60 Executive Orders which included US withdrawal from the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC).

The UNFCC was adopted in 1992 at the Rio Earth Summit. It commits the signatories to limiting greenhouse gas emissions; introducing measures to adapt to climate change; sharing data and technology  and meeting regularly.

But perhaps most importantly, the UNFCC is the umbrella treaty under which all subsequent agreements are designed to sit. American withdrawal ensures non-US compliance in the 1997 Kyoto Protocol and the 2015 Paris Climate Change Accord.

Trump’s edirective, however, may not be the end of the matter. US law requires a one-year’s cooling off period before Congress approves withdrawal. Before the year is up the US will have held mid-term elections and the political complexion of Congress is likely to have changed.

By the way, the batch of 60 Executive Orders included issues related climate change, biodiversity, migration, fender, development and population changes.

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The day I met the President of Poland

Someone asked: how was it? Sometimes it is difficult to find a clear answer to such simple questions. Honour? Joy? Pride? Or perhaps embarrassment, because the opportunity to meet the President of Poland does not come often. Do we often see eye to eye on key political matters? No, most definitely not. 

Despite his very busy schedule, I am glad that President Karol Nawrocki found a few hours to meet with the Polish community on Monday evening. It is a great honour to be able to participate in such an event, although I know that many more invitations could have been sent out, because there are so many fantastic people who do a lot of good work across Britain. I attended the event as a Deputy Mayor of Welwyn Hatfield, and on behalf of my Borough Council. 

Poland and the United Kingdom have a lot in common, as the President mentioned in his speech. The Polish migration to Britain after the II World War. It was a very important moment in the history of our country, as London became effectively our capital city in exile. Both countries have been and continue to be allies, and our cooperation brings tangible benefits to both nations. The United Kingdom has become home to a Polish community of almost a million people on the islands, who have not forgotten their roots, their enormous heritage and their cultural background. 

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How could a coalition work?

Britain faces the grave threat of a Reform-led Trumpist Government in a hung parliament after the next election.  Lord William Wallace recently discussed a Labour / Lib Dem / Green Coalition as a potential winning alternative.  Many commenters on LDV supported the idea, while recognising substantial difficulties.  

Coalition won’t happen unless it is meticulously debated, planned, and wargamed in advance.  Here, I seek to start this ball rolling.

A first question: If a larger Party offers a smaller Party the Deputy Premiership, plus a key “Quad” Coalition Governing Committee with 2 members from each Party, is that fair?  The answer is no.  That’s what Clegg and Cameron agreed in 2010.  Cameron, as permanent PM, then ran rings around Clegg, trashing his voting-system referendum and much else, and leaving the Lib Dems the big losers in 2015.  Don’t let’s help Labour do likewise.

In Coalition, junior partner/s often get screwed.  That’s when they fail to play hardball, accept superficially fair deals which won’t work out that way, and stumble into under-planned agreements with a mishmash of “red” lines which only get overturned.  Let’s not do that.

Back in 2010, anti-Tory Lib Dems like myself pilloried Clegg for selling out principles for the sake of Ministerial limousines.  In hindsight, that particular criticism was wrong-headed.  Power is what matters.  When you have power, then you can insist on implementing your principles.  Not the other way round.

Spare a thought for the Greens, who might well out-poll Labour, yet win far fewer seats.  We need their enthusiasm, idealism, and drive.  Frankly, we also need Green supporters to vote tactically, secure in the belief that helping a prospective Coalition partner beat Reform will advance their own cause.  How can we persuade Polanski that this will also work well for him?  The answer must be – Offer him a decent deal.  

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Why Iran’s protesters matter for peace in the Middle East

Across Iran, brave men and women are once again risking their freedom – and their lives – to protest against one of the most repressive regimes in the world. Their demands are clear and unambiguous: basic liberty, accountability, and an end to rule by fear. These aspirations should resonate deeply with liberals everywhere. They also have far-reaching implications beyond Iran’s borders, including for the prospects of peace in the Middle East.

The Islamic Republic of Iran is not simply a domestic authoritarian state. It is a dangerous and insidious Islamist actor whose ideology and actions have destabilised the region for decades. The protesters on Iran’s streets understand that their struggle is not only about social or economic grievances, but about ending a system that represses its own people while exporting extremism abroad.

A fundamental change in Iran would be transformative for regional stability. Tehran has consistently worked to undermine any realistic prospect of peace between Israelis and Palestinians, not out of concern for Palestinian welfare, but because reconciliation would weaken its influence. Through sustained financial, military and ideological support for Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis, Iran has fuelled conflict, entrenched rejectionism and prolonged violence.

The removal of this malign influence would not in itself resolve the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, but it would eliminate one of its most determined spoilers. Without Iranian backing, armed groups dedicated to perpetual conflict would be significantly weakened, and the political space for dialogue, compromise and co-existence would expand. A Middle East less shaped by Tehran’s revolutionary agenda would be one with greater opportunity for peace.

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When discomfort becomes law

How an employment tribunal turned prejudice into principle and left trans workers with nowhere to go.

Friday’s employment tribunal judgment in Hutchison v County Durham NHS Trust should concern anyone who cares about liberty and equality. The tribunal found that allowing a trans woman to use the women’s changing room at work constituted harassment of her cisgender colleagues. The reasoning is sophisticated. The implications are dangerous.

Rose Henderson, a trans woman working as an NHS practitioner, used the women’s changing room in line with her employer’s policy. Eight nurses objected. The tribunal ruled the policy unlawful – not because Rose did anything wrong (they explicitly found no improper behaviour) but because her presence created a “hostile environment”.

If Rose’s conduct wasn’t harassing, how does permission for it become harassing? The tribunal never adequately explains because the honest answer is uncomfortable: trans women’s bodies in women’s spaces are treated as inherently violating.

The flawed legal reasoning

The judgment extends For Women Scotland – a narrow Supreme Court case about gender statistics – to workplace facilities without proper analysis. Different statutes serve different purposes. What works for data collection doesn’t necessarily work for changing rooms.

Worse, the tribunal gave Rose’s rights barely a sentence whilst devoting pages to the nurses’ distress. Rose’s dignity gets acknowledged in passing; the nurses’ discomfort gets elevated to legal harm.

Why liberals should be concerned

It confuses discomfort with harm. The nurses were uncomfortable with Rose’s “masculine appearance”, her “stubble”, her being “sexually active”. These are prejudiced judgments about whose bodies are acceptable. Liberalism doesn’t validate discomfort rooted in prejudice. If it did, every minority right would violate majority dignity.

It applies majoritarian logic to rights. The tribunal emphasises 300 women shared the changing room. But rights don’t work by counting heads. Numbers can measure impact, not legitimacy of objection. This judgment amplifies prejudice rather than assesses harm.

It leaves trans people nowhere to go. Trans women cannot use women’s facilities (violates regulations), cannot use men’s facilities (violates dignity), have no right to alternatives. Even alternatives would visibly out them. The judgment creates impossible situations.

The employer’s dilemma

Though not binding, this judgment shapes how employers understand risk. The message: inclusion is risky, exclusion is safe. Trans workers become problems to manage rather than colleagues with rights.

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Observations of an Expat: Iran

The US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRNA) reckons that since the start of the year 2,500 protesters have been killed in Iran.

Most of them have been shot on the street. Others have been dragged to hastily convened special courts and sentenced to hang.

In 2024, a relatively quiet year for Iranian protests, the regime strung up 1,000-plus people for the crime of vociferously expressing their views. Iran is only second behind China (several thousand) in the world execution stakes.

US President Donald Trump has promised action against the regime if the killings continue. He refuses to specify what action, but he has said that America is “locked and loaded.”  The US and Britain also withdrew all non-essential military personnel from the region.

Towards the end of the week, Trump appeared to back away from his earlier threats. Possibly because his military leaders were warning him about involvement in another Middle Eastern war and the fact that regional allies Qatar and Saudi Arabia have refused to support him.

The son of the late Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, has said he is planning a return to his country and demonstrators have been chanting his name. Pahlavi says he wants to organise a referendum on what type of government the Iranian people want.

The regime has imposed a complete internet blackout in an attempt to disrupt communications between protest groups and communications with the outside world.  Chief Justice Gholamhossain Mohseni-Ejei has threatened “swift and harsh” justice.

Many are predicting that the repressive theocracy that has ruled Iran for 47 years is about to end. Maybe, maybe not.

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The cancellation, not postponement, of local elections in Welwyn Hatfield

I simply can’t and I won’t accept it. In my view, cancelling elections is undemocratic, unrepresentative and illiberal.

As I was preparing for the Special Council meeting, which was organised in Welwyn Hatfield on Thursday, 15 January, to discuss and vote on a possible cancellation of the local elections in Welwyn Hatfield in May 2026, I received a text message from a friend of mine, who lives in London. It said:

“I feel moved to share my recent experience with you, Yesterday, the news from Iran left my wife totally devastated. Among 12,000 shot was one of her distant relatives, a 36 year women”. I responded immediately to say that my thoughts and prayers are with my friend, his wife and her family in Iran.

Also this week, I called my mum and I asked a rather unusual question. I wanted to know whether my mum remembers how she and others were able (or not) to vote in Poland during the years of communism. “Interestingly”, she was able to vote, however voting was almost always going one way. Non participation in an election could mean imprisonment, but also other consequences e.g. like in my father’s case threats and possible removal from University.

When I was 11 or 12, I remember the excitement of the first, free and open democratic elections in Poland, when the Berlin Wall collapsed. I don’t remember it vaguely, I remember it so well, almost like they happened yesterday.

I strongly believe that an ability for residents to cast their vote at the ballot box can’t be taken for granted, as it is one of the fundamental principles of any democracy. Moreover, democracy is a huge privilege and a massive responsibility.

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It’s time to get #RoyOnTheCard

For too long, a great injustice has existed within our party; some say, within our society. Across Britain, calls for reform on this issue have been dismissed. As a proud liberal and social democrat, I cannot sit back and allow it to go on any longer.

I am, of course, talking about the fact that Roy Jenkins isn’t an option for our membership cards.

On a more serious note, I would love to have Roy Jenkins added as an option. He’s a political hero of mine for the success he achieved as Home Secretary; decriminalising homosexuality, abolishing capital punishment, removing theatre censorship, liberalising abortion laws, to name just a few. But not only that, he took the brave step of leaving the Labour Party, helped found a new centre-left party, and played an integral role in the formation of the Liberal Democrats.

As it stands, the options for membership card covers we have are:

  • Voting at conference
  • Pride
  • Charles Kennedy
  • Dadabhai Naoroji
  • Ed Davey
  • Jane Dodds
  • Jo Swinson
  • Kirsty Williams
  • Layla Moran
  • Lynne Featherstone
  • Margaret Wintringham
  • Nick Clegg
  • Paddy Ashdown
  • Shirley Williams – one of the “Gang of Four” members who joined Roy Jenkins to break away from Labour!
  • Violet Bonham-Carter
  • Willie Rennie

With all these options, it would make perfect sense for arguably one of the most, if not the most, transformative Home Secretaries in modern history.

That’s why I’m launching an online campaign to get #RoyOnTheCard.

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ALDC by-election report, 15th January

This week saw the first principal authority by‑elections of 2026, with two contests taking place in England. Both carried more weight than a routine vacancy: in each case, the result would determine the balance of power within the council, giving these early‑year elections a significance well beyond the usual by-elections.

We start in the historic city of York, where Labour have successfully retained both this seat and overall control of the council.  However, their majority drastically decreased, as us, Reform and the Greens all improved on prior performances here. Well done to Ian Eiloart and the local team for improving our vote share by over 10 percent.

City of York Council, Heworth
Labour: 1,096 (36.7%, –27.5)
Reform UK: 601 (20.1%, new)
Green Party: 591 (19.8%, +4.4)
Liberal Democrats (Ian Eiloart): 528 (17.7%, +10.2)
Conservative: 118 (4.0%, –8.8)
Independent: 49 (1.6%, New)

Labour HOLD

Turnout: 31.6%

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Starmerism and the art of avoiding conflict

There is something corrosive happening in British politics. Not in any single policy decision, nor in any one government department, but in the way governing itself now seems to unfold with these latest U-turns. U-turns are not, in themselves, a sign of bad government. Sometimes they reflect learning, listening, or legitimate correction. But when reversals become habitual and almost ritual; they point to a more serious problem: a politics that has lost confidence in its own ability to persuade.

This provokes a very deep question: Are we becoming ungovernable?

In a country that feels increasingly fractious, and perhaps voters that might something you’d hear from a “Yes, Minister” episode ‘unreasonable’—but I think more broadly it comes down to this; politics has lost the art to argue, persuade, and inform.

With the latest U-turn on ID cards on top of the recent U-turn on business rates on pubs and then on the farmers tax; all policies I am glad they amended or dropped; much ink has been spilt on describing Starmerism as managerialism politics with seemingly lost the capacity to manage. Managerial politics, at least in its classic European technocratic sense, while yes technocratic all involved something crucial: the willingness to stick with unpopular decisions under the claim—sometimes arrogant, sometimes justified—that the experts knew best and benefits would follow in time.

Seeming here in the UK, we see not a technocracy but a politics hollowed out by hyper-responsiveness. A governing style so attuned to opinion polls, and social media sentiment that it has lost any sense of anchor. Policy announced, floated by rough seas of public reception, before immediately being parachuted out before the ship sailed—less like a programme for government and more like A/B test.

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The liberal case for BBC independence

The BBC faces two existential crises. The first is obvious: the licence fee is dying. Younger audiences don’t watch linear TV. Coverage is declining. Enforcement costs over £100m annually to prosecute people who can’t afford £174.50. Within a decade, the model collapses completely.

The second crisis is worse: nobody trusts the BBC’s independence anymore. And why would they? Ministers appoint the Board. The government sets funding levels. Every charter renewal becomes a hostage negotiation where editorial freedom trades for financial survival. Trust in BBC impartiality has fallen 15 points since 2018. The public sees the strings.

Charter renewal in 2027 offers the chance to fix both problems structurally. Not tinkering with board composition or modest fee reforms, but genuine liberal reform: progressive funding and democratic independence.

Replace the Poll Tax with progressive taxation

The licence fee is a regressive poll tax. A nurse and a banker pay the same £174.50 regardless of income. That’s illiberal and unsustainable. We should replace it with a Digital Services Tax on companies profiting from content infrastructure.

Netflix, YouTube, Meta, Amazon, Disney+, Spotify: these corporations extract billions from UK users whilst routing profits through tax havens. Make them contribute, with 3-5% on UK revenues over £25m, and infrastructure providers and device manufacturers paying lower rates.

This raises £2bn annually. Combined with BBC Studios’ commercial revenue (£1.5-2bn from international sales), that’s £3.5-4bn total, which maintains current funding levels.

The liberal case is straightforward: progressive taxation replacing regressive levies. Those with greatest capacity pay proportionally more. Nobody gets criminalised for being poor. Universal access replaces means-tested exclusion.

Plus, it’s popular. Taxing profitable tech corporations polls well across the spectrum. And it’s sustainable: revenue scales with the growth of the digital economy, with no political negotiations required.

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Iran: no more excuses

The Islamic Republic of Iran’s theocratic dictatorship has, so far, murdered at least 2,400 protestors. That is the latest report from human rights groups monitoring the situation. This is on top of the expected execution of 26-year-old Erfan Soltani for the crime of exercising his right to protest peacefully.

As previously stated in my piece, “In praise of destabilising tyranny“, it has been incredibly encouraging to see and hear Ed Davey be so vocal about his support for the Iranian protestors, as well as hearing the UK government voice its support and Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch, too. This is an issue that transcends political boundaries and strikes at the heart of our principles: democracy, human rights, and freedom.

It is with that same sentiment that I believe, on the matter of Iran, Donald Trump is right to strongarm the theocratic regime into backing down on executing citizens, and openly supporting Iranian citizens.

A jarring statement, for sure. There is so much that Trump has done and is doing that is beyond contempt, and he is by no means a good man. But multiple moralities can co-exist in the same space: Trump is wrong for his desire to capture Greenland, his isolationist approach to handling Venezuela, his appeasement of Russia, his multiple felonies, on top of literally everything else he has said and done. But on this particular issue, when it comes to tackling the Ayatollah’s dictatorship, he is right, and we would be right to stand with him.

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Beware the centre

I am allergic to attempts to define Liberalism and the role of Liberal Democrats in terms of “the centre”.  If I thought Liberal Democrats were only aspiring to be a centre party I would have left years ago. More than sixty years ago I joined a party whose leader regularly described the Liberals as a “non-socialist radical alternative.”

In recent years the left/right terminology (which goes back to the French Revolution in the late eighteenth century) has become even less useful than it was in the Grimond era. The same may be said of “centre-ism.” Even if we take seriously the old left/right spectrum, the centre is a slippery place for doing politics because it moves as parties move who may or may not see themselves as in the centre.

I think the “One Nation Conservatives” who are now becoming an endangered species, understand this. They see themselves as belonging to a mainstream Conservative tradition for whom crude populism is anathema whether it is expressed through Reform or from within their own Conservative party.

I suspect the temptation to want to occupy some sort of centre ground belongs to a pattern now coming to end in which politics was dominated by Labour and Conservative parties who expected to get their turn at governing. This went with a see-saw model. For a sizeable chunk of the electorate it was relatively easy to see Liberals as the party which was not Labour or Conservative.

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International law is broken

This week’s reports of Iranian security forces machine-gunning down scores of unarmed protestors, apparently including children and teenagers must surely strike a chill in the heart of any liberal.  How can this be allowed to happen in the 21st Century? Meanwhile, the US military action in Venezuela has attracted widespread condemnation as a breach of International Law, despite Maduro’s Government being widely recognised as authoritarian and morally illegitimate.

In moral terms, the Iranian regime is little different from a bunch of criminal thugs with guns, killing whomever they please. But in International Law, they are the legitimate Government (largely by virtue of, they are the ones who managed to seize control in the country), and therefore international law sides with the thugs, not with the people being killed.  Just as on the other side of the World in Venezuela, International law condemns the removal of a dictator who has driven a quarter of his own people into exile as refugees!

Why is this? Well, Article 2(4) of the UN Charter enshrines a near-absolute prohibition on the use of force, subject only to self-defence or Security Council authorisation, which is next to impossible to achieve under the veto system. It’s written that way because it’s designed to stop tanks crossing borders: to prevent wars between nations, reflecting the concerns of the 1940s, rather than to protect people from trigger-happy governments. The unfortunate upshot is that when a state massacres its own citizens, international law permits other states to do little more than investigate or condemn. And mere condemnation is impotence if the law does not permit any action that might actually be effective in protecting the people being massacred.

Worse still, the Security Council veto system is no accident. It was deliberately designed to give a handful of powerful states permanent control over when international law is enforced, thereby protecting the interests of those states.

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Bravery in the open

The plates of British politics are drifting like never before, populism on the right and the left  creating a chasm at the heart of the centre ground; now is the time to sprint towards it, claim it, and take the once in a generation opportunity to become the radical centre. Being noticed doesn’t need to be the next stunt, great ideas will suffice.

In an era defined by uncertainty, Liberal Democrats face a defining challenge: whether to speak plainly and bravely about the issues that most shape people’s lives and suggest radical reforms, even when those issues are complex, controversial, politically challenging, or indeed, a combination of these. Immigration, the economy, defence, health and yes – the welfare state, are not easy topics. They provoke strong emotions, expose internal disagreements, and invite fierce scrutiny. But they are precisely the areas where clear, liberal values are most needed in today’s Britain, and where populism is currently winning on messaging.

For too long, politics has rewarded evasion in a world dominated by the boiled down semblance of detail. Soundbites replace substance, and difficult trade-offs are glossed over in favour of comforting slogans. Yet voters are not naïve. They understand that governing a modern country involves choices, compromises, and sometimes uncomfortable truths. A party that is honest about this can earn trust—even from those who disagree. However, clarity and decisiveness are imperative in the face of populism, messaging on the country’s biggest issues is where we are often left wanting.

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Scottish Liberal Democrats set out stall ahead of Budget

Speaking ahead of the Scottish Budget, Scottish Liberal Democrat economy and finance spokesperson Jamie Greene MSP said:

The Scottish Liberal Democrats get stuff done, so we will always act responsibly and pragmatically in a parliament of minorities. We have been absolutely clear with the SNP about what we want to see in this year’s budget if they’re after cross-party support for it.

We’ve highlighted in our discussions with ministers the perilous state of Scotland’s colleges, councils being forced to cut services that people rely on, the barriers facing people with ADHD and autism, the cost of childcare preventing mums and dads from

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Mathew on Monday: why X must be held to account over Grok

I was on GB News early this morning, setting out why I agree with Ed Davey that X should be suspended, pending an investigation into Grok.

Some readers may not relish the idea of me appearing on GB News. It is a channel many liberals feel uncomfortable with, and not without reason, but liberal voices simply cannot afford to be absent from platforms we find awkward, or from debates where the loudest contributions too often go unchallenged. If we genuinely believe in open argument, democratic accountability, and the contest of ideas, which I hope we do, then we have to be prepared to show up-not just where it is easy to do so, but where it is difficult.

That is why I’m grateful to have appeared on The Late Show Live with Ben Leo a little after midnight, debating with the IEA’s Reem Ibrahim to make the calm, liberal case for why X should indeed be temporarily suspended until it gets its house in order over Grok.

Predictably, the response from some was to cry “censorship” and invoke “free speech” as though it were an absolute trump card.

But liberalism is not libertarianism and has never meant free speech without responsibility. Free expression does not exist in a vacuum. It sits alongside other liberal values: consent, dignity, accountability, and the rule of law. When powerful actors ignore these values, it is not illiberal to respond – it is necessary.

At the heart of the current controversy is Grok, X’s AI system, and the way it has been rolled out without adequate safeguards, transparency, or ethical restraint. This is not about being hostile to technology. Liberalism does not fear innovation. But it does insist that power – whether political, corporate, or technological – is exercised responsibly and is subject to scrutiny.

What makes the Grok issue particularly disturbing is what it allows in practice. Users are able to generate/change/distort images of real people (of all ages) without any meaningful form of consent from those being depicted. These images can be misleading, degrading, or sexualised. This is not a hypothetical concern or a fringe misuse. It is exploitation, plain and simple-the digital appropriation of people’s likenesses without their permission, control, or recourse.

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The Uprating Asymmetry: a case for consistent protection

Last week, I opined in these pages that intergenerational fairness should be a liberal priority. A commenter rightly challenged my suggestion that pensions be linked to CPI: poverty is measured relative to median earnings, not inflation. CPI-linking would let pensioners fall below the poverty line even as their purchasing power held steady — precisely what happened after 1980.

The correction clarified my thinking. If relative poverty matters — and it does — then benefits should track earnings, not just prices. The triple lock gets this right for pensioners. We should extend the same logic to everyone else.

* * *

I should acknowledge I muddled two concepts worth distinguishing. Destitution is absolute — the inability to afford essentials like heating, food, and shelter. Poverty, as officially measured, is relative — household income below 60% of the median. A person whose basic bills are covered is not destitute. But fall below that threshold and you are, by definition, poor: unable to afford what society considers normal.

That exclusion is real. It shows up as hesitation over a grandchild’s birthday present, or quiet withdrawal from social life. The triple lock exists because we decided pensioners should not face exclusion.

The mechanism embodies a sound principle: benefits should keep pace with living standards, not merely with prices. The earnings link achieves this. The CPI floor provides protection against inflation shocks. These two elements — earnings-tracking with inflation protection — form defensible policy.

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Urgent provision of UK housing is now required

We will be fighting for the young people of our country if we demand that the government declare this year a national emergency to provide thousands of new houses, especially affordable homes, before the next General Election.

The house price-to-earnings ratio shows that in 2024-25 a home cost roughly 8 to 9 times the average individual wage to buy, compared to about 5 to 6 times twenty years ago. With private rents additionally being so high now, it is small wonder that, even if they are working full-time, many young people in Britain are these days remaining in their parental home into their 20s and even 30s. With house prices only reducing slightly recently, the need for rapid provision of more small affordable homes for young people, whether for single people or couples, is evident. But much more evident are three or four-bedroom Executive-type houses being built on new estates country-wide.

The government after its election promised to build 1.5 million new homes by 2029, and pledged in July it would build up to 300,000 affordable homes over a decade, 60% of them for social rent. Our own party’s policy, passed at the Bournemouth Conference in September 2023, is for 150,000 social homes (that is, homes costing less than 50% of current market value) to be built every year by the end of the next Parliament. Neither the government’s pledge nor our own party’s policy look at present remotely attainable.

Posted in Op-eds | Tagged | 38 Comments

In praise of destabilising tyranny

As we speak, for the 15th consecutive day, Iranians are protesting the Islamic Republic and its tyrannical leader, Ayatollah Khamenei.

Iran was once a society that embraced egalitarianism, was open to working with the West, and boasted natural resources that made countries like Japan reliant on partnerships to secure national energy security. The Pahlavi dynasty, albeit an absolute monarchy, oversaw this modernisation against a backdrop of press repression and the use of secret police to suppress opposition against its rule.

While some claimed victory over the Monarchy following the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the reality of what this theocratic regime has delivered upon Iran is beyond inhumane. In 2025 alone, 1,922 executions were carried out by the Islamic Republic, with Ayatollah Khamenei threatening the use of the death penalty against protestors.

Posted in Europe / International and Op-eds | Tagged | 18 Comments

Time for Lib Dems to stop using X/Twitter?

Back in 2008 when I first joined, Twitter was a lifeline for me. I had Glandular Fever which knocked me out for months and it was incredibly isolating. But here was a community of people I could communicate with in real time, many of whom became friends in real life.

There was the Formula 1 crowd. My life was made when then Brawn driver Rubens Barrichello replied to me.

Of course there were the growing community of Lib Dems – and Jo Swinson was quickly recognised for her authentic use of the platform not just as a broadcast mechanism, but a means of engagement.

Back then, it was truly fun, though looking back, I can’t believe I did one of these things:

Where else, before you’ve even got out of bed in the morning can you:

discover that the Lib Dems have won a by election in St Austell and Newquay, where Tory PPC Caroline Righton recently smeared Liberal Democrat candidate Stephen Gilbert;

give Nadine Dorries some advice on how to tweet pictures from her Blackberry (not in the same league as my friend Sarah (@soggous) who recently helped Jenson Button’s girlfriend fix her Mac, mind you);

engage in intelligent discourse about the relative merits and demerits of Google Wave which included the phrase, from Charlotte Gore, “It’s collaborative, rich media, non-linear communications!”?

However, in recent years, it has become a much darker, more sinister place where dangerous misinformation and prejudice is spread with impunity.  This week, confirmation of a new low came.

From The Guardian:

The posts offer a new level of detail on how the images are generated and shared on X, with users coaching one another on prompts; suggesting iterations on Grok’s presentations of women in lingerie or swimsuits, or with areas of their body covered in semen; and asking Grok to remove outer clothing in replies to posts containing self-portraits by female users.

Among hundreds of posts identified by Nana Nwachukwu as direct, nonconsensual requests for Grok to remove or replace clothing, dozens reviewed by the Guardian show users posting pictures of women including celebrities, models, stock photos and women who are not public figures posing in snapshots.

While the platform later clarified it would limit this facility to paid users, this really is not enough. Think about it? You can abuse women’s privacy if you can afford to pay a relatively small sum per month.  That is not ok.

All this was too much for the UK Parliament’s Women and Equalities Committee who announced that it would be withdrawing from the site. The Committee’s vice chair, our own Christine Jardine has also left as reported in The Guardian:

Another, the Liberal Democrat MP Christine Jardine, said she was leaving the platform, calling the images generated by Grok “the last straw”.

Jardine said she had taken the view that X was a good way to communicate with constituents. “But I cannot in all conscience continue to use a platform which seems unwilling to act against this grossly offensive and abusive online behaviour towards women and girls,” she said.

In the past couple of days, Lib Dem MPs including Lee Dillon, Martin Wrigley, Tom Morrison, Vikki Slade, Caroline Voaden, Danny Chambers have said that they won’t be posting any more.

Our Mark Pack used a House of Lords question tochallenge the Government to reduce its use of X.

This is the first post in probably 15 years where my Twitter profile has not been linked to my profile on here. I have severely cut back on my Twitter use in recent years and hardly ever post, preferring Bluesky instead.Similarly, at Lib Dem Voice we have been winding down our use of X and preferring our Bluesky profile instead.

Posted in Op-eds | Tagged , , , and | 20 Comments

Tom Arms’ World Review

USA – Minneapolis

The shooting of young mother Renee Good this week in Minneapolis has further exposed the divisions in a fractured American society and President Trump’s determination to exacerbate rather than heal them.

Anyone who watches one of the many videos—or reads the eyewitness accounts—can only conclude that Ms Good was murdered by an ICE agent.

She was clearly driving away from a confrontation with the agents who were in Minneapolis as part of a politically motivated round-up of ethnic Somalis. As she was turning away from the armed agents, one of them fired through the car window and shot Ms Good in the head. A doctor then rushed forward to try and administer first aid but was blocked by the agents.

President Trump, Homeland Security Secretary Kirsti Noem, Vice President J.D. Vance and Attorney General Pam Bondi have rushed forward to claim that the agent fired in self-defense because Ms Good was trying to run him over. They have also claimed—without any evidence—that Ms Good was a professional left-wing agitator. Vice President Vance has gone so far as to falsely claim that the ICE agents are protected by absolute immunity because they are federal agents.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt increased the attack on Good even more by telling White House correspondents: “The deadly incident that took place in Minnesota yesterday occurred as a result of a larger, sinister left-wing movement that has spread across our country, where our brave men and women of federal law enforcement are under organized attack.”

The administration’s line has been picked up and repeated parrot-fashion by Fox News and the Republicans in Congress. Democrats and the bulk of the rest of the media have attacked ICE and the administration. The people of Minneapolis have taken to the streets in their thousands. Their action is being mirrored in other US cities. In Portland, Oregon two more people have been wounded.

President Trump had a personal message for ICE agents in the wake of the shootings: “It’s time to get rough.”

Iran

The Iranian authorities have shut down the country’s internet. The reason is quite simple: they don’t want people—inside and outside Iran—to know how many protesters they are about to kill.

And they are killing them. After protests in 2019 several hundred protesters ended up in their coffins. Human rights organisations reckon that 40 were killed before the internet was shut. The BBC has confirmed 20 of the deaths.

The country’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khameinei, has said that the thousands who have taken to the streets of Tehran, and at least 50 other towns and cities, are a “bunch of vandals” trying “to please” the US.

Posted in Op-eds | Tagged , and | 33 Comments

The Importance of ‘Red Sea Jigsaw Puzzle’ (Part 2)

Source: Horn of Africa Simple Map

Part 1 was published yesterday.

DJIBOUTI

This small but strategic former French colony sits at the Red Sea gateway to the Suez Canal, overlooking the narrow Straights of Mandeb. It is famously home to a port serving Ethiopia and hosting the huge multi-agency Camp Lemonnier base for the US and in part the UK, with 4000 staff. However over the last 15 years Chinese companies have dominated and they also have a large Red Sea military base there, a short drive from Lemonnier, allegedly staffing up to 10,000 personnel.

Proposals for a bridge between Djibouti and Yemen, enriching this poverty-stricken area, have been many times scuppered by conflict. The Chinese take over of port facilities prompted DP World (Dubai, UAE) to develop the Berbera port in Somaliland, and potentially the small Bosaso Port in Puntland.

SOMALIA

After achieving independence in 1960 from Britain (Somaliland) and Italy (Puntland, South-Central Somalia), Somalia has been riven with conflict, especially since the collapse of the ‘unified’ government in 1991. There has been no stable government since, although Somaliland has been somewhat less in turmoil. A local movement emerged to settle local disputes, the Islamic Courts Union, but after 9/11 in the US this was seen as problematic.

With Western encouragement Ethiopia invaded in 2006, but were repelled in 2009 by a nationalist tribal movement, Al Shabab, which still controls much of ‘South-Central’ today, despite monthly US bombing. Right wing factions in the US have lobbied for recognition of Somaliland after 2009, but this came to nothing until December 2025 when Israel recognised Somaliland as a separate country, gaining a series of beneficial concessions. This had added to tensions between the UAE and Saudi Arabia, with the latter ‘less enthusiastic’ about such recognition, notably concerned about the possibility of Israeli bases both at the north and south ends of the Red Sea, inter alia.

ETHIOPIA

Apart from the Afar and Somalia regions in the East, Ethiopia is a landlocked, fertile, mountainous country, reliant on Djibouti for external trade. The country is divided into regions based on different ethnicities and their languages, which has led to ethnic-based internal conflict in the post-Italian-colonial-era, hindering development. Nearly two thirds are either Omoro or Amhara. One in eight Ethiopians is either Tigrayan or Somalian with affiliations to Eritrea and Somalia respectively.

Posted in Op-eds | Tagged , , and | 3 Comments

Observations of an Expat: What’s Next

The rules-based world order has been the cornerstone of international diplomacy since the end of World War Two. It is surviving by the friction of inertia alone, and many argue that we have already slipped into the abyss of the unknown.

The ancien régime depended heavily on American support and direction. Donald Trump has indicated that providing that support is no longer in America’s interests. According to Stephen Miller, Deputy Chief of Staff in the White House and a Key Trump adviser, what counts now is not law, but raw power.

As he told CNN: “We live in a world… that is governed by strength. That is governed by force. That is governed by power.”

In early January, Trump demonstrated this approach when he effectively kidnapped Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro and announced the takeover of the country’s oil reserves for the “foreseeable future.” In a separate move, he appears to be moving quickly to gain control of Greenland.

This coming week Secretary of State Marco Rubio is expected to fly to Copenhagen with a firm offer to buy Greenland. Trump has made it clear that if the Danes refuse to cooperate, he might consider “military intervention,”  raising the prospect of conflict with a fellow member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).

Greenland is a self-governing territory of Denmark, which retains responsibility for Greenland’s defense and foreign affairs. The Danish government has emphasized that any decision regarding U.S. ownership would ultimately rest with Greenland’s 57,000 residents. The mainly Inuit population has said that it wants nothing to do with America and, in fact, seeks independence from Denmark. However, a country with such a small population would face significant challenges in defending itself.

A U.S. invasion of Greenland would be a serious blow to the international order. One of NATO’s  fundamental principles is that allies respect each other’s territorial integrity. They certainly do not attack one another. An attack on, or annexation of, Greenland—a territory of NATO ally Denmark—would seriously undermine the credibility of the alliance. Since the end of World War Two, American leadership of NATO has helped sustain one of the longest periods of relative peace and prosperity in modern history. Peace in Europe has spread ripple-like throughout the rest of the world.

Oddly enough, there is no need for a clash over Greenland. Under the 1951 U.S.-Danish Defense Agreement, the United States can base as many troops as needed in Greenland, and Denmark has indicated it may also allow American access to Greenland’s mineral resources, although this could face resistance from environmentally-conscious Greenlanders.

Posted in Op-eds | Tagged , and | 4 Comments

The Importance of ‘Red Sea Jigsaw Puzzle’ (Part 1)

Source: Horn of Africa Simple Map

While foreign policy circles in London are focused on Ukraine, the Middle East/Iran and now Venezuela, as well as the dramatic new US National Security Strategy,  a set of interconnected lower key conflicts around the Red Sea are escalating. This has global ramifications, especially in relation to the two Red Sea ‘pinch points’ for Europe; the Suez Canal and the Straights of Mandeb.

These conflicts involve Saudi Arabia, UAE, Sudan, South Sudan, Somalia, Turkey, Israel, Yemen, Egypt, Ethiopia, Libya … and Eastern and Western land gateways to …

Posted in Op-eds | Tagged , , , and | 3 Comments

Why Principles matter more than Policies

I have a dark and deeply embarrassing confession to make.

I once voted for Margaret Thatcher.

Please don’t rush to judge me just yet. I’m sharing this not to shock, but because it contains an uncomfortable truth about how people really make political choices – and what liberals ignore at our peril.

When I cast that vote, I was young and foolish – and politically uninformed. I didn’t grow up in a household where politics was discussed. My parents voted, but never said who for. Politics wasn’t taught in school, at least not in any meaningful way. I didn’t yet have the tools to ask the most basic questions of power: who funds this party? What does the leader actually believe? Who benefits from their policies – and who pays the price?

That leads to the first lesson. Citizenship education matters. Democracy only works if people are equipped with critical thinking skills, not just facts, but the habit of interrogation. Without that, voters are left to rely on shortcuts or haphazard choices.

Which brings me to the second lesson: visibility matters. At the time, Thatcher was already Prime Minister. She was familiar. I felt I knew her. And the human brain, wired as it is to minimise risk, usually prefers the known to the unknown.

We see the same dynamic today. Donald Trump’s rise was not just about ideology; it was about exposure. He was ubiquitous long before he entered politics. People felt they knew him, and familiarity breeds a misplaced sense of safety.

I hear a similar pattern emerging among younger voters in the UK. Many are gravitating towards Reform or the Greens, not because they’ve exhaustively compared manifestos, but because those are the voices that dominate their digital world. The larger parties are simply absent from their daily reality.

Ask yourself honestly: are you more likely to trust a party that speaks directly into the spaces you inhabit, or one whose existence barely registers?

The third lesson is the most uncomfortable of all. Voters are drawn to leaders with clear, coherent principles – even when those principles are deeply flawed.

The brain is a prediction machine. It wants to know what comes next. Leaders who behave erratically feel unsafe, in the same way an unpredictable caregiver feels unsafe. Consistency, even toxic consistency, can be reassuring.

For all his many faults, Trump usually tells us what he intends to do. He may not deliver on everything, but his underlying themes – self-interest, deal-making, aggression – form a grimly coherent worldview.

Posted in Op-eds | 29 Comments

Beyond 2026: how the Liberal Democrats can win a post-Labour Neath

With the 2026 Senedd election now around four months away, Welsh politics has entered a new phase. Campaigns are taking shape, narratives are hardening, and for the first time since devolution, both the electoral map and the voting system have fundamentally changed. Old assumptions about “safe seats” no longer apply.

In Neath, that shift is particularly stark. Under the new boundaries, Neath now sits within the Brycheiniog Tawe Nedd, combining Brecon, Radnor and Cwm Tawe, Neath, and Swansea East into a single six-member constituency elected by closed-list proportional representation.

Recent polling for this new constituency points to a fragmented outcome: two Reform UK seats, two Labour seats, one Plaid Cymru seat, and one Green seat, with the Green replacing what had previously been grouped under a generic “Other” category. This is not a two-party contest, and it is not a temporary anomaly. It is a snapshot of a post-Labour political landscape beginning to take shape.

For the Liberal Democrats, the strategic question is therefore not how to force a late breakthrough in the final months before 2026. It is about positioning the party to inherit trust once the first wave of volatility has passed.

2026 is not the realignment; it is the signal

What is happening in Neath is not simply electoral churn. It is the slow unravelling of a political settlement that once bound work, unions, public services, and Labour representation together into a single political home.

That settlement is weakening, not because Neath has rejected centre-left values, but because Labour increasingly feels distant, defensive, and managerial in devolved government. The new voting system has not caused this; it has merely exposed it.

Plaid Cymru and Reform UK are the immediate beneficiaries of that break. Plaid offers national confidence and Welsh self-assertion. Reform offers anger, disruption, and a rejection of politics as it is. Both speak to frustration. Neither yet represents a settled governing alternative for towns like Neath.

Realignments rarely resolve themselves in a single election. Protest comes first. Consolidation comes later. The next Senedd election after 2026 is where voters will begin looking for a new political anchor.

The work of earning that role must start now.

Posted in Op-eds | Tagged and | 2 Comments
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