Saturday, 17 January 2026

Tariffs, Threats, and Farage on a Lead

Tariffs. That is the story. Not Greenland, not Arctic maps, not “national security”, but the fact the President of the United States is now openly using tariffs as a punishment for political disobedience.


And not just against Denmark. The threat, as reported, is aimed at any country that refuses to “go along” with his plan to control Greenland. In other words: if you oppose me, you pay. That is not how alliances work. That is how protection rackets work.

This matters for Britain because it blows up the last surviving Brexit fairytale: that we could drift away from Europe and thrive by cuddling up to America instead. Under Trump, America is not a partner. It is a lever. If he is willing to threaten tariffs against countries for refusing a territorial grab, he will use the same weapon for food standards, medicines pricing, digital tax, defence procurement, anything where he wants submission.

Tariffs are not clever, either. They are a tax on consumers and businesses, sold as patriotism. They trigger retaliation, distort supply chains, and make trade less predictable. Big economies can swagger through that sort of self harm for a while. Medium sized ones get battered.

So Britain’s interest is obvious. We need to be anchored to the EU, because that is where our trade actually is, and because the EU is the only structure in our neighbourhood with the economic weight to resist this kind of nonsense. You do not counter a bully by standing alone in the playground. You do it by standing with the other kids who can hit back.

And then there is Nigel Farage, standing in the corner like a man who has just realised the dog he has been praising is not a noble wolf but a guard dog that bites everyone, including the owner.

Farage has spent years selling Trump as Britain’s great ally and a US trade deal as the Brexit jackpot. Now Trump is threatening tariffs against any country that refuses to fall in line over Greenland. That is the model Farage admires: sovereignty for America, obedience for everyone else.

It is humiliating. Not just for Farage, but for anyone who swallowed the idea that “taking back control” meant swapping Brussels for Washington. If Trump can economically threaten allies over a land grab, Britain is not going to be treated as an equal partner. We are going to be treated as a client.

So yes, Greenland matters. But the bigger point is the tariff threat itself. It tells you exactly what Trumpism is: power without restraint, deals without loyalty, and punishment as policy.

If Farage still wants to hitch Britain to that, he should at least have the honesty to call it what it is. Not independence. Not sovereignty.


Trans Rights - Allegedly

I have a trans friend and I have been watching the Darlington NHS Trust case with interest. Honestly, it is the perfect example of how Britain now handles anything remotely complicated. We take a real, messy clash of rights, we refuse to admit it is a clash of rights, and then we act shocked when it ends up in court and everyone is furious.


Because that is what this was. Not a pantomime villain story. Not a purity test. Not a chance for Twitter to scream “Nazi!” at strangers. It was two sets of people saying something completely normal, but we treat the answer as binary because we're led to believe it's a binary world - it's not.

The nurses were saying: this is a women’s changing room. It exists for a reason. I should not have to undress in a space I understand to be single sex, and then be told I am some sort of medieval bigot for wanting privacy. That is not an exotic demand. It is the baseline expectation that created female facilities in the first place.

And the trans woman, meanwhile, was saying: I am a colleague. I am here to do my job. I should not be treated as a threat just for existing, and I should not be shoved into the men’s changing room where I am more exposed to humiliation, hostility, or worse. Again, not exotic. Just basic dignity.

So what did the Trust do? It did the classic modern institutional thing. It picked one answer, declared it morally superior, and treated everyone who had a problem with it as a nuisance. Then it looked baffled when the nuisance turned into a tribunal.

This is where people start doing the lazy comparisons. “Well you’re no more naked than at a beach.” Fine. But nobody is being ordered by HR to go to the beach at 7am with their colleagues and a manager hovering nearby. Context matters. A workplace changing room is not a leisure space, it is a functional space where privacy expectations are baked in.

Equally, the other lazy move is to say “single sex means single sex, end of story.” But if your solution to every trans person is “use the other room”, you are not creating inclusion. You are creating a daily ritual of exclusion, and then congratulating yourself for being practical.

The truth is that both sides are right about the bit they are talking about, and wrong about the bit they are pretending does not exist. Women’s privacy matters. Trans dignity matters. You cannot solve that by shouting one of them off the stage.

The synthesis is painfully simple, and that is why it drives everyone mad. This is not mainly a philosophical problem. It is a design problem. You stop treating changing rooms like a battlefield and you build privacy in by default.

Lockable single occupant changing rooms. Proper cubicles. A genuinely separate option. The kind of thing that would make the whole argument evaporate overnight. It protects women’s privacy without turning trans staff into a permanent exception, and it stops managers trying to do equality policy with slogans and a straight face.

Because that is what went wrong here. Not that people had feelings. People always have feelings. What went wrong is that the employer acted as if only one set of feelings counted, then discovered that the law is not a customer satisfaction survey.

And that is the wider lesson. If you want a functioning workplace, you do not force colleagues into a moral cage fight in a changing room and then call it “inclusion”. You design the space so nobody has to surrender their dignity for someone else’s comfort.

It is not hard. It is just more effort than issuing a policy memo and hoping everyone shuts up.


If Youre Not Orange, Youre a Target

I heard it on LBC, and I nearly spat my tea out.

Sadiq Khan was having another pop at Trump and said something along the lines of: if your skin colour is different to President Trump’s, you might feel nervous about “a tap on the shoulder” from the authorities.


Now, I get what he meant. Under Trump, plenty of non-white people and immigrants feel more exposed. The rhetoric shifts, the enforcement gets nastier, and suddenly the state feels less like a referee and more like a bouncer with a grudge.

But “different to Trump’s skin colour” is a magnificent choice of words, because Trump’s skin colour isn’t even the same as most white people. He’s not a reference point for whiteness. He’s a reference point for whatever happens when you let a man marinate in fake tan for forty years and then put him under studio lighting.

So you end up with the accidental truth hiding inside the joke: if you’re not orange, you’re a target.

Not literally, obviously. ICE aren’t wandering about with a colour chart like they’re choosing tiles for a bathroom. But politically, that’s what Trumpism does. It draws a circle round “people like him”, then treats everyone else as suspicious, expendable, or useful as a warning to the rest. It’s not really about legality, it’s about hierarchy.

And that’s the bit people miss when they try to sanitise it as “just enforcing the rules”. When enforcement becomes theatre, it stops being precise. It becomes a performance of power. It sweeps wider than it needs to, it makes mistakes, and it creates fear as a feature, not a bug.

So yes, laugh at Khan’s line. You should. It’s genuinely funny. But it also lands, by accident, on the reality: Trump’s politics isn’t a careful system of law. It’s a loyalty test with uniforms.

And somehow, in all this, it’s never the orange bloke who gets the tap on the shoulder.


UK Peacekeeping Force

The comforting fiction was always that British troops could be sent to Ukraine as “peacekeepers” and that this would somehow avoid the risk of fighting. That illusion barely survived contact with reality when imagined as a purely British deployment, and once a multinational coalition is added it collapses entirely. A coalition presence does not soften enforcement, it sharpens it, because any breach immediately carries wider political consequences whether ministers like it or not.


If a peace deal is broken, the most likely culprit is obvious. Russia probes, tests, and pushes just far enough to see who blinks. The real question is not whether that happens, but how the response is structured so that it deters escalation rather than inviting it. The least dangerous model is also the least sentimental. Ukraine holds the line, and coalition forces sit behind it.

Ukraine already has what Britain and others largely lack: mass, experience, and unquestioned legitimacy to defend its own territory. Asking foreign troops to take the first hit would be politically explosive and militarily unnecessary. Ukrainian forces would remain on the frontline, responding immediately to any breach. That keeps responsibility clear and denies Moscow its favourite propaganda trick, because it cannot plausibly claim it is “fighting NATO” if Ukrainian soldiers are doing the fighting on Ukrainian soil.

Behind them sits the coalition as a strategic reserve, and this is where euphemism becomes dangerous. A reserve is not a decorative afterthought. It exists to move. Its purpose is to plug gaps, reinforce weak sectors, stabilise breakthroughs, protect key infrastructure, and ensure that a local Russian success does not remain local for long. The signal is deliberately blunt: you may test Ukraine, but you will not be allowed to exploit Ukraine.

This structure has real advantages if people are honest about them. It preserves escalation control by ensuring coalition forces are not dragged into firefights by accident or provocation, but move forward deliberately, on pre agreed triggers, with political authority already baked in. It denies Moscow the fog of ambiguity it thrives on. It also matches capability to role. Ukraine supplies the manpower and resilience. The coalition supplies intelligence fusion, ISR, air and missile warning, logistics depth, cyber attribution, and command integration. Britain’s asymmetric strengths finally make sense in this framework, amplifying Ukrainian power rather than pretending to substitute for it.

It also raises the cost of a breach without the theatrical exposure of lining foreign troops along the contact line. A reserve that can move is often more stabilising than troops permanently in the trenches, because it tells Russia that any attempt to widen a breach risks immediate internationalisation of the conflict, without handing it the easy headline of foreign soldiers firing first.

None of this removes risk, and pretending otherwise would be negligent. A reserve that deploys becomes a fighting force. If coalition units move forward, they become combatants. Casualties become possible and escalation becomes real. The distinction here is not between war and peace, but between controlled response and chaotic drift.

That in turn places a hard requirement on the coalition itself. This only works if everyone involved stops lying to themselves. Shared rules of engagement. Pre agreed triggers. Integrated command. No decorative contingents with caveats so tight they turn into liabilities the moment anything happens. A coalition that mixes enforcers and observers is not a deterrent, it is an invitation.

There is also a political trap waiting to be sprung. Governments will be tempted to sell this model as safe. It is safer than pretending peacekeeping means observation, and safer than scattering flags along a frontline, but it is not safe. A reserve that is never allowed to deploy is a bluff. One that deploys too late because politicians hesitate arrives not as deterrence, but as crisis management.

So if Britain and others are serious about enforcing a settlement in Ukraine, this is the only credible architecture. Ukraine fights first. The coalition stands behind it, integrated, loaded, and unmistakable. Call it what it is, not peacekeeping, but peace enforcement with escalation control. Anything else is theatre, and theatre has a habit of getting people killed.


Friday, 16 January 2026

One Nation or Oblivion: The Tory Choice

Robert Jenrick is a neat little case study in modern Tory politics. He came up through the “serious” briefs - Treasury, then Housing and Local Government - the sort of jobs where you might actually fix something tangible, like planning or housing supply.


Then the party ran out of results and doubled down on performance. Jenrick pivoted accordingly, reinventing himself as an immigration hardliner. That’s not a personal quirk, it’s the Conservative Party’s default setting now. When governing fails, they don’t change policy, they change the volume and hope nobody notices the difference.

Now he’s been kicked out of the shadow cabinet, with the whip removed and his membership suspended, on the claim he was plotting to defect in a way designed to do maximum damage. Which tells you everything about the state of the party. They’re not rebuilding, they’re eating their own, in public, again. It’s less “government in waiting” and more “WhatsApp group that’s gone feral”.

As expected he's ended up in Reform, and it wasn't a principled conversion. It’s a career move. Reform is where discarded Conservatives go when they still want airtime but no longer have a route back through their own party. Farage doesn’t mind because he’s not building a normal party, he’s building a brand, and defectors are basically free advertising with a human face. Kemi, however, shot his Fox.

The bigger problem for the Conservatives is that chasing Reform is suicide. “Reform Lite” doesn’t win Reform voters because they can always get the full-fat version from Farage, now with extra shouting and fewer numbers that add up. But it does repel the people the Conservatives actually need: the boring, pragmatic centre-right who want competence, stability, and a government that doesn’t behave like a comment thread under a Daily Mail story.

Their only hope is to put clear blue water between themselves and Reform. Drop the culture-war cosplay, stop trying to out-Farage Farage, and go back to something vaguely recognisable as One Nation Conservatism: grown-up economics, functional public services, and immigration policy that’s firm but sane. Otherwise they’ll just keep shrinking until they’re reduced to a recruitment agency for Reform with a nice logo and a long memory of better days.

The decline of the Tory party can be laid at the feet of a certain Boris Johnson, who purged the sensible, One Nation Tories and replaced them with incompetents who were loyal.  

Breaking news, 2026: Kemi Badenoch defects to Reform, citing “principle”, “common sense”, and a sudden desire to never answer a serious question ever again. However, Farage has rejected her as she hasn't failed seriously  - yet. "A financial scandal would help though," a close associate of Farage told this reporter.

You have to laugh.


A Trap of His Own Making

Elon Musk has a problem, and it’s one he created by trying to sell two incompatible ideas at the same time. He champions nationalism, borders, sovereignty, and the idea that nations should control their own rules and destiny. Fine. But he also runs a supranational communications platform and markets it as the “global town square” (more like a global Wetherspoons), meaning one borderless space where his definition of free speech applies to everyone.


Those two things can’t both be true. Sovereignty doesn’t just mean waving flags and feeling important. It means each country gets to make and enforce its own laws, including laws about harassment, intimidation, incitement, and criminal content. If you genuinely support sovereignty, you don’t get to squeal when sovereign states insist your platform follows their rules.

And this isn’t theoretical anymore. The UK is probing X under the Online Safety Act over AI deepfake content, and X is moving to comply with UK law. Musk has basically said he’ll comply where things are illegal. Which is an odd thing to present as a concession, because that’s what “law” means. It’s not an optional extra like heated seats. You don’t get to run a platform in a country and then act surprised when the country expects you to obey its laws.

What makes it funnier is that he’s complaining about censorship at the same time. So he’s demanding sovereignty for nations, while fuming when sovereign nations enforce it on him. It’s like insisting everyone should have their own front door key, then having a tantrum because you can’t wander into their kitchen whenever you fancy.

That’s the trap. “Free speech within the law” sounds perfectly reasonable until you remember there isn’t one law. There are hundreds. What’s protected speech in the US can be unlawful in Germany, actionable in the UK, and politically explosive elsewhere. So “free speech” stops being a principle and turns into a compliance spreadsheet, with inconsistent enforcement and permanent accusations of bias. The more “global” you are, the less coherent your rules become.

The pantomime ends completely when the platform is implicated in something plainly criminal. AI generated sexualised imagery, including minors, isn’t “debate”. It’s police work, liability, and enforcement. There’s no heroic free speech posture that survives contact with criminal reality, and Musk has already had to do public damage control on that front because even his most loyal fans tend to go a bit quiet when the subject is child abuse material.

Then there’s the grooming gangs rhetoric, which he’s leaned into because it’s the perfect culture war accelerant. “Protect the children” is emotionally irresistible, and it’s also the oldest censorship lever in the book. Once you start swinging that hammer, you don’t get to act shocked when governments pick it up and use it on your platform, especially when the harm is real and the law is engaged.

So Musk ends up trapped between two outcomes. If he complies with national law, his free speech fans call it censorship. If he refuses, he’s effectively claiming a private company can override sovereign democratic states, which is political authority without consent. Either way, the “global town square” fantasy collapses into what it always was: a private power deciding what speech gets amplified, then pretending it’s neutral because it sounds nicer.

Musk wanted to be the man who liberated speech. Instead he’s discovered the oldest political fact there is. Once you control the biggest megaphone on earth, you don’t get to pretend you’re not part of the state. You’re just doing politics in a hoodie, with a ban button.


Supersonic, Uneconomic, Unrepeatable - Very British

A new 50p to celebrate Concorde. Very British. We’ve always loved commemorating the magnificent failure. We don’t do triumph in this country unless it’s slightly haunted, faintly uneconomic, and wrapped in nostalgia.


Concorde was an engineering miracle. Needle nose, supersonic, and completely uninterested in what accountants think. Britain and France basically saying, if the Americans can put a man on the moon, we can at least get a businessman to New York before his drink warms up and he starts asking questions.

And it worked. That’s the irritating bit. It wasn’t one of those “great idea, shame about physics” projects. It actually flew, it was safe, it looked magnificent, and it made a noise that suggested it was personally offended by the concept of quiet. If you lived under the flight path you didn’t need an alarm clock, you needed ear defenders and a sense of humour.

It also didn’t make any money. Or not enough money to justify the whole thing, anyway. Which is where it becomes properly British. A beautiful, expensive, impractical triumph that turns out to be a commercial disaster. The sort of thing we’re brilliant at, right up until we have to pay for it.

Concorde was the perfect machine for a world that never quite arrived. Too costly, too noisy, too politically awkward, and too early. The future took one look and said, “Yes, lovely, but can you do it with budget airlines, plastic seats, and a sandwich that tastes of damp regret?”

So now we’re minting a coin. Of course we are. We can’t resist turning a mad, glamorous, slightly embarrassing chapter of history into something you can lose in the washing machine.

And I don’t even mean that entirely as a dig. It’s not just nostalgia, although there’s plenty of that. It’s the fact Concorde reminds us we used to do big things without immediately asking if they’d pay for themselves by Tuesday. We’d argue, we’d overspend, we’d get stroppy with each other, and then we’d build something astonishing anyway.

These days we still talk about being “world-leading” at everything, but mostly we mean “world-leading at announcing things”. We’ll spend a decade arguing about a railway line, or a reservoir, or whether a town is allowed a bypass without upsetting a badger, a hedge, and three different committees. Meanwhile the big ideas get filed under “too difficult” and quietly die of paperwork.

So yes, Concorde failed as a business model. But as a statement of intent it was magnificent. It was Britain and France doing something hard and glamorous because it could be done, not because it made sense on a spreadsheet.

Now it’s on a 50p. Which feels about right for modern Britain. Something extraordinary, reduced to something you find down the back of the sofa while looking for the remote.



Thursday, 15 January 2026

The Least Bad Decision - and the Worst Paperwork

West Midlands Police banned Maccabi Tel Aviv fans from the Villa match, and the country immediately did what it always does: it argued about the morality, the politics, and whether the police are secretly Nazis or secretly Hamas, depending on which end of Twitter you fell out of this morning.


Here is the boring truth. It was probably the most pragmatic decision available.

If you genuinely believe there’s a credible risk of serious violence, and you don’t have the resources or certainty to control it, you don’t “stand firm” for the cameras. You remove the flashpoint. It’s standard military logic. Deny the engagement. Don’t offer the enemy a target. Live to fight another day. Not because a football match is a battlefield, but because the risk maths is the same.

That’s not cowardice. It’s force protection. It’s the difference between a controlled operation and an inquiry with a lot of candles and a photograph on the news.

The scandal isn’t that the police made a hard call. The scandal is that they tried to justify it with material that turned out to be a dog’s breakfast, including an AI-generated false claim that should never have made it into anything with a crest on the letterhead. If your decision is driven by uncertainty and capacity, be honest about that. Don’t pretend you’ve got a watertight evidential case when you haven’t.

And this is where the modern stupidity kicks in: the transactional AI trap. Which, as it happens, I’d only just been banging on about a few days ago, because it’s become the default failure mode of modern institutions.

Someone, somewhere, has treated Copilot like a vending machine for facts. Put question in. Get answer out. Paste into a report. Job done. No checking. No primary source. No adult supervision. Just a nice confident paragraph that looks official enough to survive a meeting.

Except AI doesn’t “know” anything. It predicts plausible text. And when you use it transactionally, it will happily invent a supporting example with the same calm authority it uses to recommend a Malbec you should only drink chilled. The result is what we got here: an official justification padded with a hallucination, like a school essay written at 2am by a teenager who hasn’t read the book.

AI didn’t sabotage the process. The process sabotaged itself by treating AI output as evidence.

Then Chris Philp - the cosplay Farage of the Tory Party - wades in, declaring there would have been violence from “Islamist extremists”. Not “there was a risk”, not “there were concerns”, but effectively “it was going to happen”. With no public evidence. No chain of reasoning. No operational detail. Just certainty, served hot.

And here’s the thing. Philp isn’t in government. He doesn’t have access to live intelligence. So when he declares that violence was inevitable, he isn’t briefing the public from the inside. He’s guessing from the outside, using the scariest label available, and presenting it as certainty.

Which is classic Philp. He’s always struck me as the sort of man who is permanently auditioning for his next job. I’m fully expecting him either to challenge Badenoch for the leadership, or to defect to Reform and start talking about “common sense policing” from a lectern in Clacton.

Fine. Let’s take him at his word. If violence was inevitable, how exactly would he have policed it?

Because once you declare inevitability, you inherit responsibility for the counter-plan. And the options are brutally limited.

Option one: remove the target. That means excluding the away fans. It collapses the whole thing because there is no objective. No target, no spectacle, no confrontation.

Option two: remove the crowd. Play behind closed doors. Ban the home fans as well. Reduce it to a televised training session with stewards and a lot of empty plastic seats. That might reduce the risk inside the ground, but it doesn’t stop trouble elsewhere in the city. And if the target is still in Birmingham after full time, you’ve still got the same problem, just with different timings.

Option three: throw vast resources at it. Mutual aid. Public order units. Sterile routes. Transport hub control. Escorts. Rapid arrest teams. A full-scale operation. Eye-wateringly expensive, massively disruptive, and still with no cast-iron guarantee that you’ve stopped the one determined actor who only needs one gap.

That’s the real world. That’s what policing looks like when you’re dealing with a politically charged threat in a crowd of tens of thousands. It’s not solved by saying “extremists” louder.

So yes, banning the Israeli fans “worked”. Of course it did. It didn’t solve extremism. It just stopped this particular match becoming a stage for it. Removing the target reduces the likelihood of confrontation. It denies the hostile actors their moment. Remove the objective and the operation collapses.

A decision can be operationally correct and administratively indefensible at the same time. That’s what happened here.

And this brings us to the simple question everyone is now dancing around: should the Chief Constable be sacked?

On the facts in the public domain, yes. Not because the force made a hard decision under pressure, but because the leadership allowed that decision to be justified with sloppy, inaccurate material that collapsed under scrutiny. That is a failure of competence and a failure of standards. If you can’t trust the evidential basis for a major public order call, you can’t trust the leadership that signed it off.

There is one complication, and it matters. The Home Secretary can say she has “no confidence” until she runs out of breath, but she cannot just fire him. Under the current rules, that power sits with the local Police and Crime Commissioner. So the political theatre will continue, but the actual decision rests locally.

Sometimes the least bad decision is the only one left. But don’t pad it with AI hallucinations and then act surprised when the paperwork collapses in public.


Compulsory? No. Just “Voluntary” - Until It Isn’t

I'm on my favourite hobby-horse again - strategic overreach to get what you want.

Starmer has “backtracked” on compulsory digital ID. Or, more accurately, he’s stopped saying the quiet bit out loud. Because if you want to introduce a mandatory ID system in Britain, the quickest way to kill it is to announce a mandatory ID system in Britain. The country goes into instant civil liberties panic, the newspapers do their “internal passport” routine, and half the population suddenly remembers the Blair-era ID cards fiasco with the clarity of a war veteran. So the clever move isn’t to charge straight at compulsion. It’s to step back, call it voluntary, and let the thing walk in through the front door like a harmless convenience.


And to be clear, a voluntary digital ID could be genuinely useful. Less paperwork, fewer admin errors, quicker checks, easier access to services, less of that uniquely British misery where you spend forty minutes proving you’re you to a system that still thinks fax machines are cutting-edge. If it works properly, people will adopt it because it saves time and hassle. Not because they’ve suddenly become keen on government databases, but because most of us would rather not spend our remaining years wrestling with identity checks that feel like they were designed by a committee of damp cardboard.

But that’s exactly why my theory of strategic overreach makes sense. Labour reached too far by floating a compulsory use case, hit the predictable backlash, then “retreated” to voluntary while still achieving the practical effect: building the infrastructure and normalising the idea. It’s tactical in the short term, strategic in the long term, because once the system exists and uptake is high, it becomes far easier to turn it into a default and later argue for it to become a requirement, than to try to impose compulsion from day one.

Once the infrastructure exists and uptake is high, the argument changes. It stops being “should we have this at all?” and becomes “why wouldn’t we standardise it?” The opposition starts to look like it’s blocking something that works, rather than defending a principle. And once employers, landlords, banks and service providers start designing their processes around it, “voluntary” begins to mean what it always means in modern Britain: technically optional, practically unavoidable. Like self-checkouts. Yes, you can always go to a human till. If you can find one. If it’s open. If it’s staffed. If the queue isn’t halfway to Wales.

That’s where the civil liberties concerns aren’t melodrama, they’re realism. Mission creep isn’t a conspiracy theory, it’s a predictable pattern. Once you’ve built a national identity rail, every department will want to run something on it, and every contractor will want to sell something through it. Today it’s right-to-work checks. Tomorrow it’s right-to-rent, age verification, benefits access, healthcare, travel, who knows what else. Each step will be sold as “common sense”, and each step will be easier because the system is already there, already normalised, already embedded.

There are also hard practical risks that don’t vanish just because the intention is benign. A big identity system becomes a very attractive target. It’s a honeypot for hackers, scammers, hostile states, and anyone who fancies making money out of other people’s lives. Even if the technology is solid, the prize is enormous, and when it goes wrong it won’t go wrong politely, one person at a time. It will go wrong at scale. Then there’s exclusion. Britain isn’t made up entirely of people with the latest phone, stable housing, tidy paperwork, and the patience to navigate apps and verification loops. If “voluntary” becomes the default route, those who can’t or won’t use it don’t get freedom, they get friction. They get delays, suspicion, and the slow punishment of being permanently on the awkward path.

So yes, in the narrow sense it’s a backtrack, because the compulsory framing was politically toxic and they’ve pulled it back. But it’s also the smarter route if the long-term ambition is to build a system that can later be made mandatory, or at least become mandatory in practice without ever needing to say so. That’s why “voluntary” is not the reassuring end of the story. It’s the beginning of the normalisation phase.

If Labour want to prove they’re not playing that game, the test is simple: keep genuine non-digital alternatives, keep strict limits on scope, and make any expansion require explicit primary legislation rather than being expanded quietly as “just an upgrade”. Otherwise voluntary is just the warm-up act, and the main event will arrive the moment the public stops paying attention.


Border Bollocks

The modern obsession with borders is routinely presented as timeless. Every country, we are told, has always guarded its frontiers. Human beings have always needed permission to move. None of this is true.


For most of history, movement was normal and paperwork was exceptional. Borders existed, but they were not gates. They were vague zones where authority thinned out rather than hard lines where it stopped. People moved because work required it, because land failed, because wars displaced them, because trade depended on it. States noticed when movement threatened taxation, conscription or control. Otherwise, they largely ignored it.

Documents did exist, but they were not what we now imagine. Safe conducts, letters of passage, seals and introductions were about protection, not permission. They said “do not harm this person” rather than “this person is allowed to cross”. The assumption was mobility. Restriction was the anomaly.

Even rulers were largely indifferent. Medieval kings could not have cared less who crossed into their domains unless they arrived with an army at their back. A handful of labourers, traders or refugees posed no threat and might even be useful. What mattered was force, loyalty and revenue, not the quiet movement of ordinary people.

This becomes brutally clear when people point to historic expulsions as supposed evidence of ancient border control. Take the expulsion of Jews from England in 1290. It is often imagined as a managed removal, enforced by some medieval equivalent of border checks. Nothing of the sort existed. There were no identity papers, no exit controls, no way to track who had left and who had not.

The Crown issued an edict. After a certain date, Jews remaining were outside the law. Enforcement relied on proclamation, intimidation, denunciation and fear. Ports were watched not to ensure departure but to seize property. Inland, there was no systematic monitoring at all. Some converted and stayed. Some left quietly. Some almost certainly never left. The state lacked both the means and the interest to track individuals.

Expulsion worked not because borders were controlled, but because life was made unlivable. Legal protection was withdrawn. Violence was tolerated. Property was seized. The mechanism was terror and dispossession, not surveillance. To cite this as evidence of historic border enforcement is to misunderstand how power functioned before bureaucracy existed.

Even the emergence of the modern state did not immediately change this. The system of sovereign states that crystallised in early modern Europe was about rulers recognising one another, not monitoring the feet of peasants and sailors. Borders mattered diplomatically. They mattered militarily. They did not yet matter administratively.

What hardened borders was not tradition but crisis.

The turning point comes in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and decisively with the First World War. States at war wanted to know who was inside, who was leaving, who might be a spy, who might refuse to fight. Passports, visas and controls were introduced as emergency measures. Temporary tools for extraordinary times.

They were never rolled back.

Once states discovered that movement could be monitored, categorised and restricted, the apparatus became self justifying. Bureaucracy does not voluntarily dismantle itself. What began as an exception was normalised. What was once a human default became a regulated privilege.

By the interwar period, identity papers were standardised. Borders were no longer lines on maps but systems. Migration was reframed as a problem. Mobility became suspect. The language shifted from people moving to people being “managed”.

This is where today’s arguments collapse. When politicians invoke historic borders, ancestral caution or ancient instincts, they are projecting a twentieth century security regime backwards and calling it heritage. The modern border is not old. It is barely a hundred years old. It is the child of war, paperwork and fear.

The irony is universal. The wealth of most modern states was built on circulation. Trade, labour, ideas, skills and people moving. Roads, rivers, ports and markets mattered far more than barriers. States that grew powerful did so by managing movement, not by pretending it could be frozen.

Today’s border panic is not history speaking. It is insecurity masquerading as tradition. It confuses paperwork with permanence and emergency measures with timeless truth. Medieval rulers did not control borders. They controlled force. When they wanted people gone, they did not monitor exits. They made life unbearable.

Borders exist. States draw lines. None of that is new. What is new is the insistence that human beings require constant permission to cross them, and the claim that this arrangement is how it has always been.

It is not.

Movement came first. The forms came later.