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Joy Crookes says UK and Ireland in ‘dark time’ amid rise of far-right politics

about 5 hours ago
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The UK and Ireland are entering a “dark time”, according to the singer Joy Crookes, who said the influence of far-right ideology on mainstream politics was comparable to the 1970s when the National Front was at its peak.Crookes, who has just played two sold-out shows at the O2 Academy in Brixton, said the recent wave of nationalism and the far-right march through central London in September made her feel unsafe in the UK.“I’m not blind to the political kind of landscape that we’re living in right now and I myself am a child of immigrants,” she said.“I travelled to central London to go shopping and ran into a bunch of St George’s flags.It doesn’t make me feel safe.

”The singer said that when she was shooting her debut acting role in the coming-of-age story Ish, in Luton, the mostly black and brown crew and cast became worried after rumours of a Tommy Robinson rally in the town.“We were wondering on one of the days whether it was safe to go into work because we heard that there would be mass protests in Luton with Tommy Robinson and his mates,” she said.When asked if the current situation was comparable to the 1970s when the National Front regularly held marches in immigrant areas, she said: “In my opinion it’s completely comparable.It’s terrifying … I am really, really concerned.It feels like we are entering a dark time.

”Crookes’ Brixton performances went viral after a clip of her playing a cover of Sinéad O’Connor’s anti-racism anthem Black Boys on Mopeds surfaced online,O’Connor wrote the song after the deaths of Nicholas Bramble, who was killed while being pursued by the police on a moped they assumed he’d stolen, and Colin Roach, a black teenager who died under suspicious circumstances while inside Stoke Newington police station,The inside sleeve of O’Connor’s hit album I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got, which the song was on, also featured an image of Colin Roach’s parents protesting, alongside the caption: “God’s place is the world but the world is not God’s place,”While the song referenced police violence and racism, it also spoke to what O’Connor saw as the hypocrisy of political leaders, including Margaret Thatcher who was referenced in the song and had been accused of flirting with extreme-right rhetoric during her rise to power,While introducing the song on stage in Brixton, Crookes said: “I don’t want to sing this song, but 35 years ago, Sinead wrote this and it’s still relevant and I feel like it’s probably necessary.

”Crookes, who has Irish and Bangladeshi heritage, said the idea to play O’Connor’s song came after driving around Dublin with her cousins and seeing dozens of Irish tricolour flags, which are part of a nationalist, anti-immigrant movement.“I realised at that moment that this is an issue that’s happening in the west and it’s becoming more and more rife because of the big F, fascism, and the rise of the right,” she said.After the Dublin concert, where the song received an ovation, her team said she should play the song on every leg of her tour because it was “relevant everywhere in the UK”.Crookes said she was playing the song to encourage “solidarity” between communities directly affected by far-right rhetoric but also as a reminder to musicians to use their voices.“Maybe I’m singing that song as a small nod to my community to say we also have to take some responsibility and speak out,” she said.

“I think my peers are definitely willing to talk about Palestine but when it comes to the big R word [racism], it’s a bit scary.”
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Reform’s Welsh hopes damaged after Senedd member suspended for ‘vile’ racial slur

Reform UK’s only member of the Welsh parliament has been suspended for two weeks over a racial slur she posted in an office WhatsApp group.Laura Anne Jones used an offensive Chinese slur in a discussion about the threat of the Chinese government utilising TikTok for espionage.On Wednesday evening, the Welsh parliament voted for Jones, who defected from the Tories to Reform in the summer, to be suspended for a fortnight without pay.Jones’s suspension is a blow for Reform, which has high hopes of making dramatic gains in next year’s Senedd elections.When Jones joined Reform, its leader, Nigel Farage, said the party was confident the allegations against her would “all go away”

about 22 hours ago
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No 10 calls on Farage to urgently address ‘disturbing allegations’ of past racist behaviour

Keir Starmer has called on Nigel Farage to urgently address multiple and detailed allegations of racist behaviour during his teenage years, as the Reform leader attempted to dismiss the claims as “one person’s word against another”.Pressure was put on Farage by the prime minister over what Downing Street said were “disturbing allegations” after the Guardian reported the testimony of more than a dozen school contemporaries, including an award-winning director who claimed to have been targeted with antisemitic abuse.In the face of concerns raised by Labour, the Liberal Democrats and an extremism adviser to the last Conservative government, Farage’s spokesperson on Wednesday appeared to question whether it would be possible to remember events from the 1970s and early 1980s.“If things like this happened a very, very long time ago, you can’t necessarily recollect what happened,” the spokesperson claimed.Speaking in the Commons after a question from the Reform MP Lee Anderson at prime minister’s questions, Starmer said Farage needed to personally explain himself in the light of the Guardian’s reporting

about 23 hours ago
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China’s power play: MI5 warns of relentless espionage attempts in Britain

An unexpected connection on LinkedIn. An offer of work from a headhunter, most likely a young woman, based in China. The chance to earn perhaps £20,000 part-time writing a handful of geopolitical reports for a Chinese company peppered with “non-public” or “insider” insights. Payment in cryptocurrency or cash preferred.It may seem obvious, on this telling, that something about this approach would be amiss

about 24 hours ago
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A guttural groan in an energy-free zone: sullen resignation haunts PMQs

It’s like watching dead men walking. Or, to be accurate, a dead man and a dead woman walking. Ghosts of Christmas parties past, haunting the dispatch box. Cast your mind forward to a year from now. It’s more than likely that prime minister’s questions will look very different

about 24 hours ago
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‘He used to say things like ‘Hitler was right’’: Farage faces more allegations of racist behaviour at school

It had been a fun sleepover at Nigel Farage’s house and Jean-Pierre Lihou, a teenager with an appetite, was delighted with his schoolfriend’s mother’s hospitality. “I remember the fantastic cooked English breakfast, as opposed to what you get at a boarding house on a morning,” Lihou recalled. “I was a boarder and he was a day boy,” he said of their education at Dulwich college in south-east London.Farage was a great mimic, and funny with it, Lihou said. But over time he found there was a darker side to his 14-year-old friend

1 day ago
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Uk politics: Streeting defends asylum policy, but says he’s not ‘comfortable’ with forced removal of children – as it happened

Wes Streeting, the health secretary, has defended the government’s new asylum policy – while admitting that he would not be “comfortable” about seeing families with small children deported.One feature of the plan is to increase the number of removals involving children. The Home Office says there has been too much “hesitancy” in this regard in the past.In an interview with LBC, asked if he would be happy to see families with young children forcibly removed from the country, Streeting said that the plan also involved encouraging people to leave voluntarily, and so the number of forced removals should be “low”.Streeting said that he supported forced removals because there was no point having a policy that was not enforced

1 day ago
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US added 119,000 jobs in September in report delayed by federal shutdown

about 4 hours ago
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Hospitals and clinics are shutting down due to Trump’s healthcare cuts. Here’s where

about 7 hours ago
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Nvidia earnings: Wall Street sighs with relief after AI wave doesn’t crash

about 19 hours ago
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Uber hit with legal demands to halt use of AI-driven pay systems

1 day ago
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Silly point or square leg: how well do you know your way around a cricket field?

about 5 hours ago
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Ashes 2025-26: key battles that could decide the urn’s next destination

about 7 hours ago