Friday, January 30, 2026

Labour’s hypocrisy on Iran is sickening

 




Good morning.

Our Left-wing elites would like us to believe that they are opposed to oppression and tyranny, yet many are infected by a two-tier morality. It would seem that, for Labour, the Iranian dissidents fall into the wrong category of victim.

Please send me your thoughts on this newsletter. You can email me here.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

Labour’s hypocrisy on Iran is sickening

Demonstrators set fire to official buildings and chanted ‘death to Khamenei’ as they marched in Tehran Credit: UGC/AFP via Getty Images

There are double standards, and then there is the Labour Government’s despicable insouciance towards the suffering of the Iranian people.

For the past two weeks, brave protesters across the long-suffering Persian nation have been standing up, in ever greater numbers, to the mullahs’ evil Islamist regime. For their heroism, many protesters have been massacred, and yet they have kept fighting for freedom, against fascistic rule and for real, tangible human rights.

The total collapse of the regime would be an extraordinary event: it would surely deal Islamist extremism a blow equivalent to that suffered by communism when the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 and the Soviet empire imploded in 1991.

The stakes are thus extremely high, and this story ought to concern everybody in the Western world who has had to battle the growth of Islamism, extremism, sectarianism and terrorism, as we have had to in the UK.

The Iranian regime is also extremely active in intelligence and spying, and is a close ally of Moscow. Tehran describes Britain as the Little Satan to America’s Great Satan, a moniker also extended to Israel, a country the anti-Semitic regime in Iran has vowed to obliterate. Iran’s proxies include Hamas, Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Houthis and various groups in Iraq. Regime change in Tehran is overwhelmingly in the British national interest.

Under such circumstances, were you a little naive, you might have expected Labour and its celebrity allies to go all out in defence of the Iranian dissidents. Many Leftists are obsessed with the Middle East, after all, and “never here Keir” (as his enemies dub him because of his endless foreign jaunts) clearly cares greatly about foreign affairs. He has spoken twice in recent days to Trump about Venezuela. He also wants to fix Greenland.

Why, then, does the Labour Government seem so uninterested in Iran? Why is the Left so ambivalent? Where is the solidarity, the avatars, the flags, the level of support that Ukraine has seen, the actors and musicians? Just like when Israel was attacked by the savages of Hamas, and many stayed silent or condemned Israel even before it had time to defend itself, it would seem that the Iranian dissidents fall into the wrong category of victim.

The hypocrisy is sickening. Starmer, Lord Hermer and the other Left-wing lawyers would love us to believe that they have dedicated their careers to justice and fighting for the underdog, so why don’t they fight for the Iranians? We are supposed to believe that the Government’s commitment to international law is what guides its approach to immigration, to Chagos, to prisons and policing, yet those sorts of rules don’t seem to animate them when it comes to Tehran’s atrocities.

We are meant to think that our Left-wing elites are implacably opposed to systemic oppression and persecution, especially when it is being meted out by a deranged, theocratic tyranny, but apparently not when it emanates from this particular totalitarian regime. There was a time when they claimed to care about women’s rights (though they have gone quiet on that front over the past few years); they are certainly still meant to oppose police brutality and any instance of authorities killing protesters (and they are genuinely upset at the death of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis).

Yet when faced with a truly evil regime, an actual police state that kills and tortures dissidents, that has a record of genuine mass abuse of human rights, they have sat on their hands. Much of the activist Left has ignored or downplayed the events in Iran, proving one devastating truth: the Labour Party and its ideological fellow travellers are infected by a two-tier morality. They pick and they choose. They rightly hate Putin, so they defend Ukraine; they wrongly despise Israel, so they behave abominably after Oct 7; now they appear confused at best, or downright hostile at worst, towards Iran’s wonderful freedom fighters.

This reality is deeply distressing. The same people who were obsessed with the conflict in Gaza and all too often gave succour to a radically anti-Western movement couldn’t give two hoots about the fate of the Iranian protesters, a radically pro-Western and anti-Islamist movement. The activists who detest everything Trump does cannot be bothered to speak out against the Ayatollahs, the real anti-democratic strongmen.

Too many people on the Left have an existential problem: they can no longer tell the good guys apart from the bad guys. They are morally confused. They conflate the oppressors and the oppressed. They shouted “Free Palestine”, but cannot call for a “Free Iran”. Where are the mass condemnations of the killings, of the kidnappings, of the beatings? For shame.

Roland Oliphant: The key signs the Islamic Republic is about to fall ➤







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Thursday, January 29, 2026

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

A brazen attack on democracy

 

A brazen attack on democracy






Good morning.

The cancellation of local elections is an attack on the rights of 4.5 million people to choose their own representatives. A political elite that looks down upon ordinary people has no interest in anything other than power.

Please send me your thoughts on this newsletter. You can email me here.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

A brazen attack on democracy

Cartoon showing a ballot box with the word "democracy" crossed out

Great Britain is a democracy, or we are nothing. It beggars belief that the Labour Government – and to a lesser but still scandalous extent, some Tories – are willing to undermine such a central part of our identity. The wanton cancellation of local elections is a disgrace, a stain on our history, a repudiation of a core part of British tradition. Nigel Farage’s Reform UK is right to challenge this outrage in a judicial review. Let’s hope he wins.

A common thread connecting our past to our present, starting with Magna Carta in 1215 and moving on to the Bill of Rights of 1689, was the limitation of the arbitrary powers of the monarch – or in today’s terms, the executive, the Government – and the protection of individual liberties.

Magna Carta confirmed, inter alia, trial by jury, that the King must obey the law and the protection of private property; the Bill of Rights established parliamentary supremacy, free parliamentary speech and protection from cruel and unusual punishment. Democracy and individual rights progressed in the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries, culminating in mass universal suffrage for all adults and the elimination of legal discrimination against Catholics and Jews.

Brexit in 2016 was a democratic restoration: the end of the nostrum that we could and should be governed by Brussels rather than by our own MPs. There would be no more taxation and regulation and administration without genuine representation.

Even though we remain a constitutional monarchy, our culture is strikingly democratic and anti-deferential, and the Anglosphere offshoots we spawned, starting with America, are also imbued with a version of this spirit and adopted the common law and trial by jury.
Democracy is at the heart of the WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic) psychology identified by Joseph Henrich, and which England pioneered.

Ordinarily, Labour pretends to want to extend democracy by giving 16-year-olds the vote (although this particular expansion is an error), and yet it clearly has no real interest in people power when it doesn’t suit its interests. It hopes that the young will vote for it, and likes that idea, and it assumes that it would lose the forthcoming local elections, and doesn’t relish that prospect. Its attachment to democracy is merely instrumental: it no longer believes in anything other than power (even if it doesn’t actually know how to exercise it).

What started with a cross-party refusal to accept Brexit and an attempt to undo or ignore the result of the referendum – a bid that has been reignited since Sir Keir Starmer’s election – has now been extended much more broadly. When you defy democracy once, ignoring voters becomes normalised and cancelling elections becomes easier psychologically. It’s a calamitous, ruinous development that must be fought all the way. Violating democracy must once again become taboo, unthinkable, not a tool of first resort by a political elite that looks down upon ordinary people.

All of this helps to explain why Labour’s announcement that 4.5 million people would be denied a vote at the forthcoming local elections is so outrageous, so important. Infuriatingly, Tory-controlled Suffolk and Norfolk were among 29 authorities given permission to cancel May’s ballot. The Telegraph has been running its Campaign for Democracy on this issue, and many of our readers are furious.

The excuse for the Government’s despicable, regressive attack on the rights of free people to choose their own representatives is pathetically weak. We keep being told that it’s all because of a restructuring of local government under which district councils are set to be abolished and merged into new unitary authorities. This shake-up is taking ages and would, supposedly, be delayed further were elections to be held.

So what? Why can’t these incompetent and cowardly councils walk and chew gum at the same time? And who cares if we need to hold another election in a year or two’s time when the new authorities are up and running? Members of the US House of Representatives stand for election every two years.

Restructuring local government – in a way nobody asked for, and wasting money and ruining local identities in the process – cannot be seen as a case of force majeure. This is not WWIII or a massive pandemic, the only valid reasons to delay elections. In any case, the (delayed) general election of 1945 (the first since 1935) was held after VE-Day but before VJ-Day, while the Second World War was far from over.

The present scandal thus keeps getting worse. Norfolk and Suffolk, which ordinarily hold elections every four years, also cancelled their elections in 2025 and last held a ballot in 2021, as did Tory-controlled East Sussex and West Sussex. How long will this madness go on for? The new unitary councils may not be “ready” until 2028 or even later, which means that a four-year term for many councillors may end up turning into a seven-year stint, the sort of time in office French presidents once enjoyed.

This is unfathomable. The real reason for these delays, surely, is that councils are running scared. Reform would undoubtedly sweep away many Labour and Tory councils. The Greens would also pick up some seats. Our political elites, and especially the Labour Party but, tragically, also some Tories, are running away from democracy. They do not deserve to be forgiven for this latest betrayal.

4.5m people denied vote as more polls axed ➤

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drink up... the natural way

 


drink up... the natural way