Woman, 80, Blocked From Ascending Stairs

This is the outrageous moment a man rudely blocked an 80-year-old woman who was trying to go up the stairs at a Tube station.

The altercation, which is thought to have happened at Harrow and Wealdstone station, featured the man filming the elderly woman on the stairs while refusing to get out of her way.

The lady told the man at the start of the video that she “wants to get up the stairs” while clinging to the railing for assistance.

Blocking her path, the man quickly responded by telling her that he was recording and asked her not to touch him, putting his hand in front of her face.

He told her that he’s ‘here relaxing’ and that she could simply just ‘go round’ to which she said: ‘I can’t.’

The younger man then snapped back and said, ‘You can, you’ve got legs,’ before she told him that she is 80 years old, but the man did not care and ignored the elderly woman’s age and said, ‘So?’ and told her again that he was recording.

Tired of being blocked and filmed by the man, she said, ‘I don’t give a damn what you’re doing, you are extremely rude and arrogant.’

As the video came to a conclusion, the lady on the steps turned to a guy dressed in high-visibility clothes to protest that she was being rudely obstructed as other passengers passed by.

Since the video went viral, the man who recorded the elderly woman has been the target of intense criticism on social media.

One Facebook user said: ‘Does he not understand that she needs to hold onto the handrail for her mobility and stability. “I’m recording” and “You’ve got legs” hasn’t landed how he thought it would.’

Another frustrated user remarked: ‘He should not be blocking the stairs, the rail is there for a reason, and all she wants to do is get past. Whatever happened to having respect for your elders.’

While a third said: ‘Poor woman. She needs to hold on to the handrail for stability and doesn’t want to let go. It would have taken him 2 seconds to move to one side and let her pass! He has zero respect for others!’

British Transport Police told the Daily Mail that it is looking into the video, but believes no criminal offence has been committed. 

A request for comment has been sent to Transport for London.

The lady obviously needed the stability of the handrail, and I can guarantee that this man wouldn’t have approached a 6-foot-tall man. He wouldn’t have had the bottle for that, but this sad man had to pick on a defenceless woman, and the entitlement of this man is appalling. Anyone who treats an older person with such indifference is beneath contempt.

Well, I do hope he felt superior after winning his pathetic battle, and you really do have to wonder at the guy’s mentality. He’s the one filming himself being an utter idiot, and then puts it out to the public for ‘likes’, he’s certainly not the sharpest knife in the drawer.

He’s an arrogant child, and listen to that horrible put-on accent he’s using – he says he’s relaxing but can’t work out that an 80-year-old might need an easier route (and use of the handrail) when taking a flight of stairs. Good for her for standing up to him, but it’s a huge risk to do that these days.

That’s not a man, that’s a lowlife who believes he is better than everyone else, and to be like that with an old lady actually shows how low he has gone.

Andy Burnham Facing Fresh Pressure

Voters disapprove of plans to crown Andy Burnham as Prime Minister without a contest, new polls have revealed.

One survey found that barely one-in-five voters – just 21 per cent – believe he should be installed immediately as Prime Minister.

By contrast, 54 per cent think he should first face a Labour leadership contest.

The Public First poll for Politico found the desire for a leadership contest was even stronger among Labour voters, with 57 per cent saying Mr Burnham should seek a mandate of his own. 

Mr Burnham looks set to sweep to power on 17 July in a Labour ‘coronation’ just weeks after winning a by-election in Makerfield that made him eligible to stand for the Labour leadership.   

A separate YouGov poll found that the public favour a General Election by a margin of 48:36.

The survey found that just 18 per cent of people believe Mr Burnham will make a good PM, with 20 per cent who believe he will be average and 26 per cent who predict he will be poor or ‘terrible’.

This week, Sir Keir announced he would give in to pressure from Labour MPs to step down as party leader, sparking a leadership election.

Nominations for the position will open on 9 July and close a week later, with possible contenders requiring the support of at least 80 MPs, but Mr Burnham now looks set to be the only candidate, paving the way for him to become PM on 17 July, the day after nominations close.

Just days after stating that a contest was necessary, former health secretary Wes Streeting cleared the way for a coronation on Monday by declaring he would now support Mr Burnham.

Despite being encouraged to run by certain pro-Starmer MPs, Cabinet Office minister Darren Jones officially withdrew on Wednesday. Al Carns, a former special forces officer, has stated that he is still considering his options, but the majority of MPs do not think he has sufficient support.

Several hard-Left MPs have called for a contest, but do not have a credible contender to rally behind.

Nigel Farage has called for an immediate General Election, saying it was ‘ridiculous to pretend that Andy Burnham has any kind of meaningful mandate to lead the country’.

‘If Labour thinks it can shove another professional politician into No 10, it has another think coming.’

Mr Burnham would have the poorest mandate of any prime minister in history if he takes office next month without a challenge, and the calls for a General Election will only continue to grow. Burnham will only anger people the longer he is Prime Minister.

Naturally, Burnham is not yet prime minister, and the fact that just 0.0357 per cent of the electorate supported him—all of whom reside in Makerfield—is a coup.

He won’t last 5 minutes. Absolutely delusional Labour. Nobody wants him apart from hard socialist and extreme left Labour MPs.

There should be an immediate demand for a General Election. Andy Burnham’s leadership of Labour is acceptable, but he shouldn’t be allowed to become prime minister out of the blue.

He has been allowed to just waltz in; not one of 400 MPs can step up. What a damning verdict of the Labour Party, and he will be as popular as Smarmer by the end of the summer, and to be honest, I wouldn’t give it that long. This is the man who has failed twice to become Labour leader and, on one occasion, got fewer votes than Diane Abbott.

He lacks both ideas and answers. This was not supported by any votes, and a General Election would give the people a say in Britain’s future.

Maternity Scandal Inquiry

The biggest maternity inquiry in NHS history has found that hundreds of mothers and babies died or were harmed due to failures at Nottingham University Hospitals trust. Grieving families have demanded a public inquiry.

The Nottingham maternity scandal has now been laid out in full — and it is every bit as catastrophic as one would expect. The inquiry chair, Donna Ockenden, has told the government to act now, after her investigation exposed hundreds of avoidable deaths and life‑altering injuries at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust.

Hundreds of mothers and babies died or were harmed due to substandard care, and in 444 maternity cases and 76 newborn cases, outcomes were considered “potentially avoidable”.

155 babies died, and 105 suffered severe injury, including brain damage.

Women were constantly ignored, neglected, or not believed, even when in pain or reporting danger signs.

Staff were chronically understaffed, inadequately trained, and working in a toxic, bullying culture, and the trust had known about many of these problems since at least 2010 and failed to act.

Ockenden’s words were blunt: “This report is about what it costs when systems fail. It costs lives. It costs futures, and it costs families everything.”

Ockenden has made it clear that this cannot be another report that collects dust. She is calling for immediate national action because the failures in Nottingham are not isolated — they reflect a wider UK maternity problem.

UK maternal mortality is now higher than the rest of Europe, and worse than it was in 1985, and harm and poor care are at risk of becoming normalised in the maternity system.

This is precisely the pattern we should be furious about: women not listened to, families ignored, and preventable deaths brushed aside.

Grieving families say the current review — despite its scale — lacked legal powers, and around half of senior executives refused to answer questions.

Families want a full statutory inquiry with the power to compel witnesses and force disclosure of documents.

Michelle Welsh MP, the government’s new maternity adviser (and herself a victim of Nottingham’s failings), is pushing the government to consider this.

The government says “nothing is off the table”, but families want accountability, not platitudes.

Women experienced cruel and dangerously poor care. Staff formed bullying cliques that shut down concerns. Lessons were not learned, even after deaths, and babies were treated with an “absence of dignity”.

This wasn’t a few bad apples — it was a systemic collapse.

Michelle Welsh has also said the General Medical Council must be investigated for what it knew — and allegedly denied knowing — about unsafe doctors working in Nottingham.

Ockenden’s message is clear: Act decisively, or more mothers and babies will die. Her report calls for mandatory listening to women and families, proper staffing and training, national oversight of maternity safety, and a cultural reset across NHS maternity services. She emphasises that the voices of families must drive the change.

A statutory maternity inquiry is the highest‑powered form of investigation the UK can launch — and it is precisely what many Nottingham families are now demanding because the existing Ockenden review could not compel witnesses or force disclosure of documents.

A statutory inquiry is established under the Inquiries Act 2005. It has full legal powers to uncover the truth, force cooperation, and hold institutions to account. It is the same mechanism used for the Mid Staffordshire scandal, the Post Office Horizon inquiry, and the Covid Inquiry.

Unlike the Nottingham review — where half of senior executives refused to answer questions — a statutory inquiry can compel individuals to attend and testify honestly, with no option to refuse; lying becomes a criminal offence, and senior clinicians, managers, board members, and regulators can all be compelled.

This is the single biggest reason families are demanding it.

A statutory inquiry can legally require internal trust emails, incident reports, board minutes, risk assessments, and communications with regulators (GMC, CQC, NHS England).

This is important because families believe failures were allowed to continue “in plain sight of the state”.

Families and campaigners argue Nottingham is not an isolated case. The Guardian reports that families want a statutory inquiry to look at maternity and neonatal care across England, because safe care “can only be consistently delivered when the full truth is known.”

A statutory inquiry could therefore investigate staffing levels, training failures, toxic cultures, racial disparities, national oversight failures, and
regulator performance (CQC, GMC, NHS England).

A statutory inquiry can name trust executives, senior clinicians, regulators, government departments, and professional bodies.

This is something non‑statutory reviews avoid because they lack legal protection for making such findings.

While statutory inquiries cannot prosecute, their findings hold major legal and political weight. They can recommend national reforms, mandatory staffing ratios, new safety standards, regulatory changes, and criminal investigations (if evidence suggests wrongdoing).

The government is then under extreme pressure to enforce these recommendations.

A statutory inquiry produces a public report, archived permanently, ensuring families get the truth, the public understands what went wrong, parliament can act, and prospective scandals can be prevented.

Misinformation

In the news, it said that Labour reveals plans to force “state-approved” BBC News onto your social media feeds. Ministers claim it’s to fight “misinformation,” but critics warn of government-controlled narratives being pushed onto your phone.

Labour has not announced a plan to “force state‑approved BBC News onto your social media feeds.”

What has happened is the publication of a Green Paper proposing that social media platforms may be required to give greater prominence to public service broadcasters (BBC, ITV, Channel 4, etc.) in news search results, formulated as a response to online misinformation. It is not law, and it is not a mandate to infiltrate BBC content into your feed without choice. It is a consultation, not a done deal. That said, critics are absolutely warning that this could drift into government‑steered information control.

According to multiple reports, the UK Government (under Labour) has published a Green Paper titled Watch This Space: A new strategic direction for UK media. It proposes that platforms like Facebook, YouTube, TikTok should make BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Channel 5, S4C, STV and other “trusted” outlets more prominent in news searches and recommendations, and the stated purpose is to allow users to “discover trusted news sources” and reduce misinformation.

This is not a requirement to push BBC posts into your feed uninvited — it is about algorithmic prominence, not forced content injection.

Critics across the political spectrum have raised concerns. GB News and others warn this could mean mainstream outlets pushed to the top of feeds “regardless of whether people want to read them.”  

Commentators claim it risks creating a government‑approved hierarchy of news, disadvantaging independent or alternative media, and some critics liken it to a “Ministry of Truth” approach, saying it gives the state indirect control over what information people see.

Social media companies are expected to resist, arguing that it overrides user choice and interferes with platform neutrality.

These criticisms are real — but they are interpretations, not descriptions of the policy itself.

The government argues that social media is now the primary news source for most adults and 75 per cent of 16–24s. Misinformation spreads faster than regulated journalism, and public service broadcasters need visibility in an algorithm‑driven environment.

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy says it’s about ensuring people have “better access to trusted and accurate news.”

The real issue: who decides what counts as “trusted”? This is the core tension. The government says “trusted” = regulated public service broadcasters. Critics say “trusted” becomes whatever the government approves, and independent outlets fear being pushed down the algorithmic ladder. This is why the debate is so heated — it’s not about the BBC specifically, but about state‑defined information priority.

Critics fear that UK “news prominence” rules could let the government shape what information people see online, create a state‑approved hierarchy of news, and squeeze out independent or dissenting voices.

However, engagement can’t be forced. A government can try to shove something to the top of your feed, but it can’t make you care. Visibility is not persuasion.

It’s about shaping the information environment around you, even if you ignore it, because algorithms determine what most people see first, and even if you scroll past it, millions won’t.

So the fear isn’t that you’ll be forced to read it — it’s that the entire information landscape tilts toward state‑approved sources, and that alters what the average person sees, believes, or even knows exists.

It’s like this. You can put a billboard outside your house, but people don’t have to look at it,” and that is technically true, but the billboard still shapes the neighbourhood, and if the government decides which billboards get the best spots, that’s a different conversation.

Siesta Time!

Other countries do it, and so should the UK, because we are not used to this intense heat, and it should be made law that when the temperature goes above a certain temperature, we have Siesta time!

A mandatory siesta law in extreme heat isn’t as far‑fetched as it sounds — and honestly, with the temperatures London has been hitting, it’s starting to look like basic common sense rather than some Mediterranean fantasy.

The UK’s working culture was built for a cool, grey climate that no longer exists. Our laws haven’t caught up with the reality that people are collapsing on buses, drivers can’t safely operate vehicles, and indoor workplaces routinely hit 30–35°C with no legal maximum.

A siesta system — a legally mandated break in the hottest part of the day — would protect workers, lower accidents, and frankly stop employers pretending “just drink water” is a safety plan.

Countries that already use heat‑based rest systems include:

  • Spain — traditional siesta culture, plus heat‑alert protocols for outdoor workers
  • Greece — bans outdoor labour during red alerts
  • Italy — regional restrictions on heavy labour in extreme heat
  • Australia — strict heat‑stress management in mining and construction
  • UAE — a legally enforced midday break from 12:30–3 pm for outdoor workers every summer

These aren’t “nice ideas”. They’re public safety laws.

By 2 pm, UK temperatures often peak. A mandated break would:

  • Reduce heatstroke risk — especially for outdoor workers, drivers, warehouse staff
  • Cut accidents — heat reduces reaction time, concentration, and judgment
  • Protect public services — bus drivers, train operators, emergency workers
  • Support parents — kids in boiling classrooms are not learning, they’re suffering

And let’s be frank: productivity collapses in severe heat anyway. A siesta doesn’t decrease output — it redirects it to safer hours.

The UK’s current law is embarrassingly flawed. There is no legal maximum indoor temperature, no required heat‑stress plan, no requirement for employers to stop work, and no obligation to provide cool spaces.

Employers can — and do — force people to work in 32°C offices or 40°C buses with no consequences, and a heat‑triggered siesta law would finally give workers a non‑negotiable right to safety.

What a UK heat‑siesta law could look like

A realistic model might include:

  • Heat thresholds — e.g., mandatory break when the Met Office issues amber/red heat alerts
  • 2 pm–4 pm rest window — no heavy labour, driving, or high‑risk work
  • Cooling requirements — shaded areas, ventilation, hydration
  • Flexible hours — start earlier, finish later
  • Transport protections — because London drivers are already suffering

This isn’t radical. It’s overdue.

The UK still acts like heatwaves are freak occurrences. They’re not. They’re annual, predictable, and deadly, and a siesta law would be a sign that the government finally accepts the climate we really live in — not the one we nostalgically imagine.

If the UK actually implemented strong, enforced heat‑adaptation measures—like a legal siesta‑style break during peak heat, plus proper workplace protections—you’re realistically talking about hundreds to over a thousand deaths prevented in bad years, not a handful.

This Week’s Heatwave Makes Bus Drivers Afraid To Drink Water

Bus drivers are avoiding drinking water because the working conditions make it physically difficult to stay hydrated.

Drivers say their cabs routinely hit 40°C or more, effectively turning into greenhouses when the air‑cooling or air‑conditioning systems fail — which, according to numerous drivers, is frequent.

Because numerous bus routes do not have toilets at either end, drivers can go two to three hours without access to a bathroom. That means if they drink water, they risk being stuck in a cab with no safe way to relieve themselves.

Unite the Union confirms that this lack of facilities is a long‑standing problem, and drivers have even reported resorting to bottles or jars when desperate.

Cabs can surpass 40°C, particularly when cooling systems are broken, and heat causes tiredness, dizziness, slower reaction times, and even fainting at the wheel. Dehydration — which drivers risk by avoiding water — worsens all of the above.

Drivers say they feel pressure to keep buses in service even when the cooling systems fail, and fear repercussions if they report dangerous conditions.

Drivers have been protesting for years about no toilets at route ends, no proper rest facilities, long shifts with nowhere to sit or cool down, and breaks taken “on the roadside” because there’s nowhere else to go.

One driver told ITV they had to use a jar because they “didn’t want to lose the mileage for the company.”

Unite says TfL’s contracting system rewards mileage, not safety — meaning operators are incentivised to keep buses running even in unsafe conditions.

TfL insists it has a “comprehensive hot weather plan,” but drivers say the reality on the ground is broken cooling systems, no toilets, and no protection from heat‑related fatigue.

Heat makes drivers less safe behind the wheel because it directly impairs the body’s ability to perform, slows cognitive processing, and raises the risk of sudden medical collapse. The scientific proof is quite clear on this.

Heat stress happens when the body can no longer regulate its internal temperature. As temperature increases, the body’s cooling mechanisms begin to fail, leading to a cascade of effects that directly undermine safe driving.

The inability to focus, dizziness, tiredness, muscle cramps, extreme thirst, heat exhaustion, and then heatstroke.

For a driver, even the early symptoms (fatigue, dizziness, impaired concentration) are enough to make driving a vehicle hazardous.

UK employers must protect workers from heat stress — even though there is no legal maximum temperature. The law focuses on risk control, not a specific number. Employers have clear, enforceable duties under multiple regulations to assess heat risks, lower them, and keep workers safe. These duties apply to all employers, including transport operators like bus companies.

Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974

Employers must ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and welfare of workers. This explicitly includes managing dangers from high temperatures.

Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 – Regulation 7

Employers must risk‑assess heat stress and put controls in place. This includes considering humidity, workload, ventilation, PPE, and vulnerable workers.

Equality Act 2010

If heat worsens a disability or affects pregnancy, employers must make reasonable adjustments.

What HSE says employers must do

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) is very clear: Heat is a workplace hazard and must be assessed and controlled like any other risk.

Employers must:

  • Assess heat‑stress risks (temperature, humidity, workload, clothing).
  • Provide ventilation, cooling, or shade where needed.
  • Provide cold drinking water and ensure workers can hydrate safely.
  • Allow more frequent breaks to cool down.
  • Adjust work patterns (e.g., reschedule heavy tasks to cooler times).
  • Protect vulnerable workers (pregnant, disabled, medical conditions).
  • Consult workers and review conditions during extreme weather.

What employers cannot do

Employers cannot:

  • Ignore broken cooling or ventilation systems
  • Force workers to continue in unsafe heat
  • Deny access to drinking water
  • Prevent adequate rest breaks
  • Fail to provide toilets or rest facilities where required
  • Treat heat as “just discomfort” — HSE classifies it as a health risk

Bottom line — UK employers have a legal duty to assess heat risks, control them, provide hydration, ventilation, breaks, and safe working conditions. If they fail to do so, they are breaching the Health and Safety at Work Act and HSE regulations.

Mum ‘Forgot’ Kids, 2 and 4, Found Dead In Car

Two toddlers — just 2 and 4 years old — were found dead in their mother’s car in Carpentras, south‑eastern France, during an extreme 40°C heatwave. The case is now the subject of a manslaughter inquiry, and the mother has reportedly given numerous interpretations of events to police.

The children are thought to have climbed into the car themselves without their mother noticing, becoming trapped as temperatures soared.

A police source told Le Parisien that the mother claimed she had “forgotten her children” while shopping, though this remains under investigation.

Emergency services found both children in cardiac arrest around 1.20 pm; despite attempts to resuscitate them, they died at the scene.

The mother, 33, has been taken into care and has not yet been formally questioned due to her condition.

France is experiencing one of its most extreme heatwaves on record. Up to 54 departments are on high‑alert heat warnings. Temperatures have hit 41–43°C in several regions. At least 18 heat‑related deaths have already been reported nationwide, and thousands of schools have been forced to close or shorten hours.

Residents told reporters the family had recently moved to the area, and some think the children may have been playing hide‑and‑seek or returning from shopping before entering the car. Regardless of the exact sequence, locals described the situation as “terrifying” and urged parents to stay vigilant in extreme heat.

This is one of those stories that strikes like a punch to the chest — two small children, a blistering heatwave, and a moment of inattention with irreversible consequences. It’s devastating, and it’s part of a wider pattern of heat‑related emergencies across Europe this week.

A parked car becomes lethal within minutes, even in moderate heat. A vehicle can reach lethal temperatures within minutes. On average, 37 children a year die from vehicular heatstroke, and in more than half of cases, the child was forgotten in the vehicle.

Cars act like greenhouses: the interior temperature rises far faster than the outside air. Even at 95°F (35°C), the interior can exceed 50°C in under 20 minutes. (This is a well‑established pattern across heat‑stroke research; the cited cases confirm the “minutes to lethal” risk.)

Based on patterns in similar cases and what’s already known from the French incident, investigators generally examine when the children were last seen alive. How long the car was parked, and whether the mother entered shops, returned home, or made any stops.

Two main possibilities are that they were left in the car (intentional or accidental), or the children climbed in themselves (common in “gained access” cases). Kids and Car Safety data shows numerous fatalities where children gained access on their own.

Investigators will compare her versions of events with CCTV, shop receipts, phone data, and witness accounts. This is standard in all active hot‑car death investigations.

They will examine whether the car was locked, whether the windows were open, internal temperature estimates, and whether the car seats were in use. This is routine in heat‑stroke death investigations.

Depending on findings, outcomes vary from no charges (if children gained access and no negligence is proven) to negligence or manslaughter charges (if left unattended in extreme heat).

Parents forget children in cars because of predictable, well‑documented failures in the brain’s memory systems, not because they don’t care. The science is brutally clear: this can happen to anyone, including loving, attentive parents.

Prospective memory is the brain’s ability to remember to perform an intended action later — e.g., “drop the baby at nursery before work.” When this system fails, the brain does not deliver the reminder, even for something as important as a child.

Research from the University of Notre Dame shows that these lapses happen when environmental cues fail to trigger the intention at the right moment. This is the same mechanism behind forgetting your phone or leaving the oven on — but with disastrous results.

Another brain system, the basal ganglia, controls habitual, well‑worn routines — the routes you drive every day without thinking. When this system dominates, it can override the plan involving the child.

Dr David Diamond, a leading memory researcher, explains that the basal ganglia can take over the drive, causing a parent to follow their usual route (e.g., straight to work). At the same time, the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus — the planning centres — fail to activate the “drop off the child” intention. This is why parents can go about their day utterly clueless; the child is still in the car.

These memory errors are not linked to negligence or lack of love. They occur across genders, ages, and backgrounds. Even highly motivated individuals forget critical items when cues fail, and in experiments, 5–7 per cent of adults forgot their own phones when leaving a room — even with reminders.

If people can forget something as personally important as a phone, the same mechanism can tragically apply to a child.

A mental‑models study found that most parents do not believe they themselves could ever forget their child, even though experts stress that anyone is vulnerable.

Six Prime Ministers, Nine Lives: Downing Street’s ‘Chief Mouser’ Larry The Cat Outlasts Another Leader

Larry the Cat has once again demonstrated he’s the most stable figure in British public life. With Sir Keir Starmer’s resignation, Larry has now officially survived six UK prime ministers, cementing his position as the true long‑term resident of No. 10 Downing Street.

Larry arrived at No. 10 in 2011, adopted from Battersea Dogs & Cats Home to deal with a rodent problem. Since then, he has calmly watched the political circus unfold around him while maintaining his post as Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office.

Larry has served under:

  • David Cameron (2010–2016)
  • Theresa May (2016–2019)
  • Boris Johnson (2019–2022)
  • Liz Truss (2022)
  • Rishi Sunak (2022–2024)
  • Keir Starmer (2024–2026)

That’s more leaders than most civil servants ever see — and Larry isn’t retiring any time soon.

While governments collapse, parties implode, and leaders resign at record speed, Larry remains a fixture in official photos, a favourite of the public, a running joke about who actually runs Downing Street, and a 19‑year‑old survivor with an international fanbase.

He’s even had diplomatic moments — welcoming Barack Obama, staring down Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and famously chasing off a fox.

Six Prime Ministers, nine lives — and Larry is still in charge. Downing Street may change hands again soon, but the Chief Mouser stays put.

Larry the Cat is a cultural icon because he sits at the crossroads of politics, media, national humour, and genuine public affection — and he’s done it for more than a decade; he’s not just a cat; he’s a fixture of modern British political life.

Larry was a stray from Battersea Dogs & Cats Home before being chosen for Downing Street. His adoption story — from Wandsworth streets to the heart of government — gives him a mythical, fairy‑tale quality that the public loves.

From the moment he arrived, the media latched onto him. photos, videos, and even scratch‑related anecdotes made him a global sensation within hours. Multiple parody Twitter accounts sprang up, and gifts poured into No. 10.

In a period of rapid leadership turnover, Larry symbolises continuity. Scholars have even noted that his “approval ratings” would beat most Prime Ministers, because he represents reliability and calm in tumultuous times.

Larry has a talent for upstaging world leaders, strolling into photo ops, blocking motorcades, charming Barack Obama, making Zelenskyy smile, and snoozing under Donald Trump’s armoured car. These moments humanise politics and entertain the public.

Larry’s official duties include “greeting guests, inspecting security defences, and testing antique furniture for napping quality.” This tongue‑in‑cheek description from the government itself helped cement his comedic, beloved persona.

Larry’s fame boosted cat adoptions at Battersea by 15 per cent, and he remains a mascot for rescue animals and animal welfare conversations. He also trends on social media during major political events, acting as a bridge between the public and Westminster.

Larry has had so many iconic moments that he’s essentially the main symbol of Westminster. These are the ones that turned him from “the Downing Street cat” into a national institution.

When Barack Obama visited in 2011, Larry refused to move from his sunspot on the doorstep. Staff had to step around him while the world’s media watched. It immediately cemented his “I run this place” reputation.

Larry famously chased a fox off Downing Street in 2020. The fox looked terrified; Larry looked bored. It became one of the most‑shared political clips of the year.

During Donald Trump’s 2019 visit, Larry lay under the presidential car (“The Beast”) and refused to move. Staff had to delay the motorcade. Larry remained asleep.

The Cabinet Office Turf War — His rivalry with Palmerston, the Foreign Office cat, became a full‑blown media saga. There were images of them fighting, staring each other down, and even “peace talks” announced on Twitter.

When Liz Truss resigned after 49 days, Larry’s parody accounts quipped that he’d “outlasted another one” and that he was “the only stable leadership option left”.

When Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited in 2023, Larry strolled over and charmed him. The picture went viral worldwide.

Larry regularly photobombs Prime Ministers, foreign dignitaries, and journalists. One of the most notable moments was his refusal to come inside during a rainstorm, forcing staff to coax him in while cameras rolled.

When a journalist asked if Larry would move out after a change of PM, Downing Street clarified: “Larry is a civil servant. He stays.” That line became legendary.

Larry isn’t just adorable — he’s a symbol of continuity in a political era defined by chaos. His capers cut through the noise, humanise the news, and give the public something to smile about even during grim political cycles.

Burham Says He’ll Cut Benefits – Will This Be His Downfall?

Andy Burnham has spoken about lowering the welfare bill, but he has not proposed crude cuts to benefits. In fact, his record shows he has frequently criticised harsh benefit cuts and warned that they push people into poverty.

Burnham has said he wants to reduce the overall welfare bill, but not by cutting people’s payments. Instead, he frames it as “No crude cuts.” Reform through prevention, especially helping young people into work, rethinking education and employment support, and avoiding the mistakes of past cuts like the bedroom tax.

This is directly from his interview, where he said he is “not squeamish” about lowering the welfare bill, but only through long‑term structural reform, not cutting entitlements.

Economists say this approach won’t produce big savings, because it avoids cutting eligibility or payments.

When Rachel Reeves announced £5 billion of cuts to PIP, Carer’s Allowance and Universal Credit, Burnham publicly slammed the plan as “The wrong choice.” Likely to push 250,000 people into poverty, and harmful to disabled people already in “punishing poverty.”

He said the system already leaves people “trapped in poverty” and warned the cuts would make disabled people’s lives harder. This is a very clear stance against benefit cuts.

So is he planning cuts or not? He does say he wants the welfare bill lower, but through long-term investment, not by reducing payments.

He does not support the kind of cuts Reeves proposed. He explicitly condemned them, and he links welfare savings to defence spending…but again, only through structural reform, not slashing benefits.

However, he has no clear plan yet. Even Labour MPs say they don’t know what his welfare reform would look like. However, Andy Burnham is not the Prime Minister, and he cannot “cut benefits”.

Keir Starmer might have resigned, and of course, that triggers a Labour leadership contest, not an automatic handover to Burnham or anyone else.

Until Labour elects a new leader, the UK has no new Prime Minister yet. Burnham holds no executive power. He cannot implement policy, and he cannot cut or change benefits.

So, where did the “Burnham will cut benefits” line come from?

It comes from commentary, not policy. Burnham said he wants to reduce the welfare bill in the long term, but he did not announce cuts, he did not publish a plan, and he cannot implement anything until he wins the leadership.

This is why it’s misleading when headlines imply he’s about to cut benefits.

However, if Andy Burnham does become Prime Minister, he has already U‑turned, but people don’t want to hear about cuts; they don’t want to hear about austerity, and if he carries on with this mantra, he will be finished before he even started.

The elites need to be taking from the rich, not taking from the poor, because every time there’s a crisis, every time the country needs money, every time the books “need balancing”, the instinct of the political class is always, take from the people with the least power, not the people with the most money.

Why leadership candidates keep drifting toward “take from the poor”

Because they think it sounds “responsible” to the media and the markets. Because they fear headlines more than they fear public suffering. Because they assume the poor will absorb the hit quietly, and because the rich — donors, financiers, corporate interests — are the ones they’re scared of upsetting.

I’m not being cynical. Britain has spent 14 years taking from the poor:

Cuts to disability benefits

Cuts to local councils

Cuts to social care

Cuts to housing support

Cuts to youth services

Cuts to legal aid

Cuts to the NHS

Cuts to education

Meanwhile:

  • Billionaires doubled their wealth
  • Corporate profits soared
  • Tax avoidance flourished
  • Private equity bought up housing
  • Energy companies posted record profits

This isn’t “inevitable economics”. It’s political choice.

Keir Starmer’s Resignation Speech

Good Morning Britain viewers were distracted during Keir Starmer’s resignation coverage — but not by anything he said. The disruption came from blasting music outside Downing Street, which repeatedly cut through the broadcast and drew attention away from the address itself.

A well‑known anti‑Brexit activist, Steve Bray, blasted Beethoven’s Ode to Joy — the EU anthem — throughout Starmer’s speech.

The volume was so high that many viewers said they couldn’t hear the speech clearly, including those watching on Good Morning Britain.

After Starmer finished, Bray switched to a satirical “Brexit Song” with the chorus “We all live in a Brexit tragedy.”

The interruption created a surreal contrast with the gravity of a Prime Minister’s resignation, and viewers took to social media saying the broadcast felt “chaotic” and “impossible to follow.”

The choice of Ode to Joy was especially pointed because Starmer had previously said the piece “best summed up” the Labour Party — something that already irritated some Brexit‑supporting viewers.

Starmer’s address itself was emotional and focused on his party’s loss of confidence in his leadership, his achievements, and his gratitude to his wife, Victoria — but for many watching live, the soundtrack overshadowed the importance of the address.

Steve Bray is a British anti‑Brexit activist best known for his loud, persistent, and deliberately disruptive protests outside Parliament — especially those involving music blasted through powerful speakers. He became a political fixture during and after the Brexit years, earning the nickname “Stop Brexit Man.”

He became widely recognised for appearing behind live TV broadcasts at Westminster in bright blue EU‑themed outfits, waving placards and shouting slogans.

Bray began daily protests in 2018–2019 on College Green, Westminster, shouting “Stop Brexit!” and using placards and megaphones to disrupt political messaging. He sees Brexit as a historic mistake and uses high‑visibility, high‑volume tactics to keep the issue in the public eye.

He claims that playing music is part of his basic right to protest, a claim he has defended successfully in court, and although he began as an anti‑Brexit protester, Bray later widened his activism to protest against Conservative governments more generally.

Bray’s protests often disrupt major political moments, provoking strong reactions from politicians, journalists, and the public.

Critics call him rude, antisocial, or attention‑seeking; supporters defend him as a symbol of free expression resisting an increasingly authoritarian climate. He has had equipment seized, been temporarily barred from areas around Parliament, and frequently clashed with police — but continues to protest.

Bray says he protests because Brexit was a national mistake. Politicians must be held accountable in public view. Noise and disruption are necessary to cut through political spin, and protest is a democratic right, even if it annoys people.

The police can limit Steve Bray, but they cannot realistically prevent him long‑term unless Parliament alters the law in a very specific and much more restrictive way. Every time authorities have tried to shut him down, he has found a lawful workaround — and courts have frequently sided with him.

The police cannot ban him from protesting altogether. Under the Human Rights Act 1998, Bray has protected rights to freedom of expression and freedom of peaceful assembly. These rights apply even if the protest is annoying, loud, or politically inconvenient.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started