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Labour anxiety and accusations after big shift in Muslim vote to Greens

about 19 hours ago
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The Green party’s success at winning Muslim votes in Gorton and Denton has sent tremors through Westminster, prompting recriminations and accusations from opposition parties, who sense another major realignment in British politics.Experts say Hannah Spencer’s unexpectedly wide margin of victory was delivered in part by a significant shift of Muslim voters from Labour to the Greens.Labour and Reform UK have accused the Greens of playing sectarian politics, highlighting the party’s use of the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, in campaign materials, its endorsement by George Galloway and accusations of voter manipulation.Keir Starmer wrote to Labour MPs on Friday telling them: “[Their] divisive, sectarian politics is a sign that the Greens are not the harmless environmentalists they pretend to be.”But senior figures within Labour admit that the Greens’ ability to turn out the Muslim vote shows the leftwing party is starting to build the kind of finely tuned political machine on which they themselves have relied for years.

“The Greens were doing a lot of stuff with the mosques, persuading people there they were best placed to defeat Reform,” said one Labour source.“When progressive voters were looking for a party to coalesce around, persuading the networks in the Muslim community that you were the party best placed to win made a huge difference.”Labour has traditionally relied heavily on Muslim voters.Shortly before the last election, a poll by Savanta found that nearly two-thirds of the UK’s nearly 4 million Muslims intended to vote Labour.Since the election, anger at the party’s stance on Gaza has been exacerbated by fury at its approach to immigration.

Labour MPs say they found many Muslim voters mentioning the name of Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary and one of the country’s most prominent Muslim politicians – and not in a good way.“Lots of people were angry at Shabana and our approach to immigration in general,” said one MP.The person added they had encountered a lot of hostility to the government’s plans to make it harder for migrants to earn settled status in the UK.“Several people said these rules would not have allowed their parents to make their lives here.”Accusations from Labour and Reform of sectarian campaigning have focused on a few details.

The first is a Green campaign video in Urdu that accused the government of being too close to Modi, the Hindu nationalist prime minister of India, who is a particularly polarising figure for many from Pakistani backgrounds.The second is the last-minute endorsement of the Greens by Galloway, the firebrand former MP who has previously been accused of running divisive campaigns in areas with high Muslim populations.Finally, Reform and the Conservatives have highlighted a report by election observers warning of widespread “family voting”, where one member of a family accompanies another into the ballot box with the intention of influencing their vote.The Democracy Volunteers report does not provide any detail on the identities of those its observers saw apparently colluding on votes.Matt Goodwin, Reform’s candidate for the seat, claimed a “dangerous Muslim sectarianism” had emerged and said there was “one general election left to save Britain”.

Nigel Farage made a broad claim of “serious questions about the integrity of the democratic process in predominantly Muslim areas”,Those accusations have prompted anger among prominent British Muslims, who accuse Reform of trying to deny the legitimacy of an entire community by linking the “family voting” report to the wider legitimate effort to court Muslim voters,They point out that shaping messages to a particularly demographic group is a universal feature of political campaigns,Wajid Akhter, the secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain, condemned what he called “gutter” rhetoric from “a desperate political class not willing to give ordinary British voters the dignity they deserve”,Shaista Gohir, who leads the national charity Muslim Women’s Network UK, said: “Muslims have every right to vote for the party that listens to them and is most aligned with their issues just as many voters now seem to be aligned with the Reform party.

”It is not the first time concerns have been raised about the way in which family and religious networks can influence votes among British Muslim voters,A report by academics at Manchester and Liverpool universities in 2015 found: “These networks tend to be reciprocal, and are hierarchical and patriarchal, which may undermine the principle of voters’ individual and free choice,”Green officials point out that voter fraud tends to be most prominent in postal ballots, and that on this occasion Labour won the postal vote,Experts also say any voter manipulation is unlikely to have been so widespread as to call into doubt Spencer’s 4,402-vote majority,A Green spokesperson said: “The scale of our victory shows that the Green party has picked up substantial support in all parts of the constituency, in all areas, among all people.

It was a victory for unity over division, for hope over hate.”One thing Labour and Green sources agree on is that in an election where progressive voters were seeking credible information for how to block Reform, Muslim community networks proved vital messaging tools.They add that this could be even more important at the next general election if it becomes a de facto referendum on Reform and its leader, Farage.“At some point you reach a tipping point where Labour’s most traditional voters realise they can depart the party en masse and still keep out Reform,” said one Labour source.“That’s the real danger for us at the next election.

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Mental health units discharging eating disorder patients with ‘dangerously low’ BMIs

Patients with eating disorders are being discharged from mental health units even though they are still very thin and have “dangerously low” body mass index levels.Some hospitals are sending home people whose BMIs are as low as 12.5, despite usual clinical practice in the NHS seeking to wait until a BMI of 18 or 19 has been achieved.The early discharges were revealed through freedom of information requests to NHS mental health trusts in England submitted by Hope Virgo, a prominent eating disorders campaigner.Experts said the revelation was “horrifying” and was probably linked to NHS services struggling to cope with a rise in demand

1 day ago
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Diagnosing mental health conditions need not be a case of yes/no | Letters

Lucy Foulkes explores the possibility that the rising numbers of young people receiving a diagnosis of mental illness or ADHD are subjects of overdiagnosis (Are we really overdiagnosing mental illness?, 22 February). She posits that changes in terminology, increasing societal awareness and reductions in stigma are all factors in the increase in diagnoses.However, there is another way of looking at this issue. If we treat ADHD as binary (you have it or you do not), we are missing the possibility that we all lie somewhere on a continuum with diagnosed ADHD towards one end (and perhaps an ability to focus and concentrate at the other). A diagnosis of ADHD then depends on where the line is drawn

1 day ago
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‘Violent bully’ who broke partner’s neck and left her paralysed jailed for 16 years

A “violent and controlling bully” who broke his partner’s neck, leaving her paralysed and her life “destroyed”, has been sentenced to 16 years in prison.Robert Easom, a landscape gardener, violently assaulted Trudi Burgess, a schoolteacher and former singer, when she threatened to leave him after enduring eight years of coercive, controlling behaviour.A court heard that Easom, 57, pinned Burgess down in a rage and pushed her head into her body until her neck snapped. He denied a charge of causing grievous bodily harm with intent but was found guilty after 27 minutes of deliberation by a jury at Preston crown court in November.He had admitted causing the injury but denied intending to cause her serious harm

1 day ago
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European girls aged 13-15 have world’s highest rate of tobacco use for age group

Teenage girls in Europe have the highest rate of tobacco use in their age group around the world, while one in seven adolescents across the continent use vapes and e-cigarettes, figures show.The data, based on analysis by the World Health Organization (WHO), shows that Europe is on course to maintain its status as the world’s biggest consumer of tobacco up to 2030, and reveals “particularly concerning” trends of tobacco use among women and young people.Four in 10 adult female smokers around the world – about 62 million women – live in Europe, while 4 million teenagers aged 13 to 15 across the continent use tobacco products.For vapes and e-cigarettes, Europe has the highest prevalence of teenage regular users, at 14.3% of children aged between 13 and 15

1 day ago
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Vegetarians have ‘substantially lower risk’ of five types of cancer

Vegetarians have a substantially lower risk of five types of cancer, a landmark study on the role of diet has revealed.The research, using data from more than 1.8 million people who were tracked over many years, found that vegetarians had a 21% lower risk of pancreatic cancer, a 12% lower risk of prostate cancer and a 9% lower risk of breast cancer compared with meat eaters. Combined, these cancers account for around a fifth of cancer deaths in the UK.Vegetarians also had a 28% lower risk of kidney cancer and a 31% lower risk of multiple myeloma, according to the study published in the British Journal of Cancer

2 days ago
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Kinship carers in England to be given financial support in government pilot

Grandparents who step in to provide full-time care for their grandchildren to prevent them being taken into care will be given guaranteed financial support under a government pilot scheme.Charities welcomed the trial as groundbreaking and said if fully rolled out across England it had the potential to transform the lives of tens of thousands of children looked after under “kinship care” arrangements.Kinship carers are grandparents, aunts and uncles, older siblings or close family friends who take on full parental responsibility when a child loses their birth parents as a result of death, a family court order, severe illness or imprisonment.Campaigners have fought for more than two decades to establish financial recognition of the role and personal sacrifices that kinship carers make. Some carers say they have felt ignored and exploited as a “cheap option” despite saving the state billions it would otherwise have had to spend on foster or residential care

2 days ago
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Square Mile strikes back: how the City of London is fighting disinformation about crime

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OpenAI to work with Pentagon after Anthropic dropped by Trump over company’s ethics concerns

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Suicide forum found to be in breach of Online Safety Act after failing to block UK users

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Formula One to revise controversial rule at centre of Mercedes engine row

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Oleksandr Usyk to defend title against kickboxer at Pyramids of Giza in Egypt

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