Sunday, 17 May 2026

The Politics of Instant Gratification and the Arithmetic of Reality

People keep talking about replacing Keir Starmer as though Britain is a football club trapped in a disappointing mid-table season and all we need is a fresh face in the dugout shouting a bit more enthusiastically from the touchline.


That rather assumes the problem is motivational. That Britain is basically sound underneath, but lacking vibes.

Wes Streeting and Andy Burnham have both been making leadership noises, although in the modern Labour Party this takes the form of saying things like, "I fully support the Prime Minister," while standing next to a petrol can and a box of matches. Streeting has at least started edging towards saying aloud what much of business quietly concluded some time ago: Brexit was economically catastrophic.

Burnham's line is more emotional. Labour must reconnect. Labour must feel more like the party of working people. Labour must show visible change.

All true, in a sense.

The trouble is that visible change generally requires actual change underneath it. Politics eventually collides with arithmetic. You can only emotionally engage people with empty wallets for so long before they notice the emotional engagement appears to have cost £9.80 for a loaf of bread and a packet of ham.

This is the trap.

Starmer, for all his faults, may actually understand the trap better than his critics. Britain is not recovering from a normal cyclical downturn. It is trying to recover from Brexit friction, underinvestment, collapsing infrastructure, local authority exhaustion, NHS backlogs, housing shortages, productivity stagnation and the Liz Truss experiment in discovering whether pension funds could be set on fire remotely.

None of this repairs quickly.

Streeting and Burnham seem to think Labour's problem is substantially communicative. Starmer thinks the problem is structural. I increasingly suspect Starmer is closer to reality, however emotionally unsatisfying that may be.

And there is another possibility. Some of the things Streeting and Burnham are hinting at may materialise anyway over the next few weeks and months, not because they are leadership challengers, but because Labour itself may gradually pivot in that direction. Closer European cooperation, more visible regional investment, a more emotionally literate presentation, perhaps even a slightly less frightened tone about Brexit itself. The argument may ultimately turn out to be less about destination than tempo and political packaging.

Because what exactly is the alternative?

They cannot borrow recklessly. The bond markets already demonstrated, during the Truss period, that they are perfectly capable of introducing Britain to gravity at speed. The era of pretending interest rates do not matter has ended rather abruptly.

They can tax the wealthy more heavily, which is probably the most Labour-ish option available, and in moderation there is a perfectly respectable argument for it. Britain taxes work heavily while often treating accumulated wealth with the sort of tender respect usually reserved for Faberge eggs.

But there are risks there too. Capital is mobile. Wealthy people become astonishingly international the moment someone mentions capital gains tax. Men who have not knowingly eaten foreign food since 1987 suddenly start discussing residency options in Monaco with surprising urgency.

The other option is raiding the vulnerable, which is politically poisonous for Labour and economically marginal anyway.

So that leaves growth.

And Starmer appears to have concluded, correctly in my view, that the only realistic medium-term growth route is gradual re-alignment with Europe while trying not to restart the Brexit psychodrama. Hence the oddly cautious approach. Veterinary agreements. Regulatory cooperation. Security partnerships. Quiet friction reduction.

It infuriates committed Remainers because it feels timid.

But Starmer probably understands something many activists still do not. Britain has a remarkable tendency to avoid admitting error cleanly. We do not reverse course dramatically. We shuffle backwards while insisting we are boldly moving forwards. We are a nation that will drive thirty miles in the wrong direction rather than admit we missed the turning.

More importantly, he probably understands that openly campaigning for EU re-entry now would unleash a right wing press torrent capable of dominating the national conversation for years. And unlike many people on the centre left like to pretend, that torrent matters. Not because newspapers hypnotise the public like a 1950s science fiction film, but because repetition shapes atmosphere. It shapes what feels patriotic, suspect, normal or taboo.

Britain spent years marinating in headlines equating Europe with surrender, humiliation and foreign control. That leaves a residue.

So Starmer's strategy appears to be to get Britain quietly into a position where much closer European integration becomes economically obvious and emotionally less explosive before anyone openly uses the word "rejoin". Even getting to that position is dangerous. Declaring it openly now would probably be political suicide.

Which means Labour is trying to edge Britain back towards Europe without saying, "You remember that thing everyone screamed about for a decade? It turned out to be economically idiotic."

The deeper problem is that much of the electorate still wants emotionally satisfying politics. Reform offers exactly that. It offers catharsis. It offers blame. It offers simple answers to complex decline. What it does not offer is a workable growth model for a medium-sized trading nation sitting beside the largest market on Earth while deliberately complicating trade with it.

But emotionally satisfying politics has already brought Britain Brexit, Johnson and Truss. We have had years of national therapy sessions disguised as economic policy.

And now voters are demanding instant repair from the people clearing up the debris.

That is why I increasingly suspect Starmer's dullness is partly deliberate. He may genuinely believe Britain needs a prolonged reintroduction to boring reality. Stable finances. Slow institutional repair. Incremental growth. Reduced friction with Europe. Functional government. No giant patriotic moonshots involving exploding pension funds.

The irony is that he may be strategically right and still lose.

Because electorates rarely reward delayed competence. Especially electorates accustomed to political sugar rushes and emotionally satisfying nonsense. Structural decline accumulated over years cannot be reversed in eighteen months, particularly when many of the same voters helped create the underlying conditions in the first place.

The man quietly rebuilding the foundations is always less exciting than the man promising a rooftop infinity pool by Thursday.

Still, foundations matter. Particularly after years spent removing load-bearing walls because Nigel Farage said the damp was caused by Brussels.


From £75 Seats to a £1400 Idea.

I have done a perfectly sensible thing. I have bought two tan Mazda MX-5 seats for a Triumph GT6, on the entirely rational basis that I am about to add more power to a lightweight car that was originally designed in an era when “head restraint” was more of a philosophical position than a physical object.


This is how these decisions unfold.

The GT6, lovely though it is, comes with seats that belong to a time when a brisk rear-end shunt was considered character building. They are low, charming, and about as useful for neck support as a folded newspaper. Now, if you are planning to potter about with the original straight six and a gentle right foot, you can probably live with that.

If, however, you have the faint intention of introducing a turbocharged Mazda engine into the equation, you start to think that perhaps your cervical spine deserves a bit more consideration.

At this point, there are two routes.

Route one is to keep the original seats and fit headrests. This sounds simple, until you look at the structure and realise that what you are really proposing is a small fabrication project involving brackets, reinforcements, and a level of confidence that your handiwork will behave sensibly in an accident. There is a moment where you find yourself thinking, “I could just weld something here,” and then, quite rightly, you pause and make a cup of tea instead.

Route two is to find seats that already have proper headrests built in, designed by people who have thought about such things professionally and would quite like to avoid being sued.

Enter Recaro.

Recaro seats are, without question, the correct answer if money is no object. They look right, they feel right, and they carry with them a sort of quiet authority, as if they have been fitted to cars that do serious things at speed. Unfortunately, they also cost the sort of money that makes you briefly reconsider whether your neck is, in fact, that important.

You start browsing. You find a set. You look at the price. You assume it is for the pair. It is not. It is for one seat. Without trimming. You close the tab and go back to your tea.

Which is how you arrive at the MX-5.

MX-5 seats are the great compromise of the automotive world. They are plentiful, reasonably priced, and crucially, they come with integrated headrests that have been tested in the real world by people who would prefer not to suffer whiplash. They are also, with a bit of imagination, adaptable enough to sit in something older without causing immediate offence.

So you buy a pair. Tan, as it happens, which is a perfectly respectable colour in isolation but entirely unsuited to a car that is destined to be Aston Martin California Sage. The plastic bits, naturally, are black, just to ensure that nothing matches anything else.

They cost £75 for the pair. Which feels like a triumph, right up to the point you remember that you are about to spend something approaching £1400 having them retrimmed. Not because anyone is taking the mickey, but because this is no longer a straightforward retrim. It’s a slightly specialised job, and the seats themselves need a bit of persuasion. The bases will have to be resculpted so that one’s bonce doesn’t bounce off the roof every time the road undulates or enthusiasm gets the better of one. By the time foam, shaping and proper trimming are factored in, the arithmetic becomes less heroic, but it still feels like a bargain, and that is the important thing.

And this is where the project takes on a life of its own. Because now you are not just fitting seats. You are designing an interior. The tan will go. It has to. It’s been replaced, in theory at least, with something that began life as “mint” and has since been argued over to the point where it is now “light, warm, greyed sage pretending to be mint”, which is not a phrase anyone sensible would use, but here we are.

There will be dark green stitching, because apparently that’s what gives it “definition”, although one has to be careful not to get carried away or it starts looking like a motorbike jacket. There will be piping, but only on the seat edges, because we are exercising restraint. The headrests, having justified their existence on safety grounds, are now expected to sit quietly and not draw attention to themselves.

The black plastic will be painted. Of course it will. In dark green, satin finish, properly prepared, because leaving it black would be to admit that these seats once belonged to a different car, and we cannot have that.

At some point, you stand back and realise that you have taken a pragmatic decision about headrests and turned it into a full-scale aesthetic doctrine involving colour theory, material hierarchy, and the moral limits of piping.

And, in a moment of either modern efficiency or mild folly, I even had ChatGPT render the whole plan into a mock-up, just to see what it might look like before committing several hundred pounds’ worth of leather to something that, at this stage, exists largely in my head. Which is reassuring, right up to the point you remember that it’s very good at making things look plausible and can hallucinate.



And yet, there is a certain logic to it.

The original problem was simple: a lightweight car, more power, and a desire not to have one’s head flicked backwards every time things get a bit lively, or worse, when they stop being lively rather suddenly. Everything since then has been an attempt to solve that problem without ending up with something that looks as though it was assembled from whatever was cheapest on eBay that week.

Will it work? Almost certainly. Will anyone else notice the precise shade of sage, the restraint shown on the headrests, or the careful decision to paint the plastic? Probably not. But they might look in, pause for a moment, and think, “That looks right.” Which, given where this started, will probably do.


Saturday, 16 May 2026

The Market for Everything (Eventually)

There is a moment in every shed clear-out where you realise you are not sorting objects so much as confronting earlier versions of yourself. Ours was a strong field.


There were the bikes. Not just any bikes, but the full spectrum. One was my son’s once-cherished £1000 machine, now looking faintly betrayed at having been downgraded from prized possession to mild inconvenience. The other was my own creation, an electric bike built with what might politely be described as an enthusiastic interpretation of the regulations. It went rather well. Possibly too well. The sort of thing that makes you grin on a quiet lane and then, later that evening, read a news story about an e-bike setting fire to a terrace house and wonder if perhaps you’ve built a small mobile insurance complication.

That one, I decided, needed to go. Not because it didn’t work, but because it worked in a way that increasingly felt like tempting fate.

Up they went on Facebook Marketplace. The bikes drew the usual sort of interest. Short messages, straight to the point, people who clearly knew what they were looking at and had already decided what it was worth to them. Even a tired bike has a future. It might be transport, it might be a project, but it has a role.

I had a separate go at selling a tandem as well. We have two, because apparently one tandem is not quite enough absurdity for a household. The spare one is a Dawes with drop handlebars, which I have never really agreed with. A tandem already contains enough scope for disagreement without adding the riding position of a minor Alpine stage. I much prefer the other one, which has normal handlebars and therefore feels less like a joint application for divorce with pedals.

I priced the Dawes at £125, which felt fair to the point of generosity. Within minutes, a message: “What’s your best price?”

It’s an odd way to start. Not an offer, not a question about condition, just a gentle nudge to see if you’ll knock money off before anything has actually been said. I replied, “the advertised price,” and left it at that. If someone doesn’t make an offer, there isn’t really a negotiation going on, just a bit of hopeful fishing.

Meanwhile, back in the shed, there was the composting toilet.

Listed with the same optimism, it produced a completely different sort of response. Messages were longer, more tentative, as though people were thinking out loud. You could almost hear the kettle boiling while they tried to work out whether they were ready to take full personal responsibility for the end stage of their own digestion.

Because a composting toilet is not quite like the other things. You’re not just buying a bit of kit, you’re signing up to the idea of it. We had tried it in one of the cabins. On paper it was flawless. Eco friendly, efficient, and capable of producing what the brochure described, with admirable restraint, as “valuable compost”. In practice, it turned out that not everyone shares the same enthusiasm for closing that particular loop. Some guests took to it gamely. Others approached it with the air of someone being asked to participate in a slightly experimental pilot scheme.

After five years in the shed, it had acquired a sort of moral authority. The bikes looked tired. The pond pumps looked obsolete. The composting toilet looked as though it was quietly judging us.

At one point I suggested we might struggle to sell it because the obvious buyers would be off grid and therefore not on Facebook. It sounded plausible for about ten seconds.

In reality, it was simpler than that. Anyone properly off grid has already sorted this sort of thing out for themselves. The rest of us are still close enough to civilisation to have a choice, and most people, when it comes down to it, quite like flushing and forgetting.

So in the end, we gave it away. A £1600 piece of eco engineering, offered for free, which rather focuses the mind. Not so much a sale as an admission.

And then, somewhat unexpectedly, it went. A perfectly pleasant person turns up, asks sensible questions, loads it into the back of a car and drives off, apparently entirely comfortable with the arrangement. No manifesto, no lifestyle declaration, no visible hesitation. Just a straightforward transaction, as though we’d been giving away a lawnmower.

Which rather undermines the theory. It turns out the market does exist after all. Not a tribe of off grid purists living beyond the reach of WiFi, but someone local, practical, and evidently untroubled by the finer details of waste management. Different bits of clutter seem to summon entirely different tribes, though you only really notice it when you try to get rid of them.

The toilet’s quiet authority disappears down the drive, and the shed looks suddenly more like a shed again. Less a shrine to good ideas, more a place where things end up when you’re not quite ready to admit you don’t need them anymore.


Friday, 15 May 2026

Labour and the Fear of Stability

There is something magnificently Labour about finally crawling back into government after fourteen years in the wilderness, inheriting an economy held together with expired cable ties and optimistic Treasury spreadsheets, beginning - just beginning - to show signs of stabilisation, and then immediately deciding the real priority is to start plotting against your own Prime Minister because the vibes are off.


One can almost hear the ghost of the SDP gently clearing its throat in the distance.

GDP ticks upward for the first quarter. Inflation starts easing. The adult supervision, while hardly thrilling television, appears to be functioning. Britain has not exactly become Singapore-on-Thames overnight, but the ship has at least stopped making the alarming noises associated with bulkheads separating. And Labour MPs, rather than quietly allowing the machinery time to work, have collectively decided this is the ideal moment to start crawling over one another like rats in a sack looking for a leadership election.

The challengers are not even united. That is the funniest part.

Streeting increasingly gives the impression of a man who has rehearsed his first conference speech as Prime Minister several hundred times in the shower. Rayner appears to be maintaining the traditional deputy leader role of hovering just behind the mutiny with the careful expression of somebody wanting the benefits of regime change without technically being seen climbing through the palace window. Andy Burnham is being discussed as a sort of northern saviour figure despite already losing to Starmer once and currently occupying one of the safest and most influential jobs outside Westminster.

And Burnham’s route back appears to involve a by-election in terrain where Reform UK has just been stomping around in steel-capped boots kicking chunks out of the old Labour vote.

Excellent plan.

Because voters famously adore carpet-bagging politicians suddenly developing a spiritual attachment to a constituency the precise moment there is a leadership opportunity available. Nothing says "man of the people" quite like a carefully choreographed Westminster insertion operation involving an MP nobly sacrificing themselves in the hope of perhaps receiving a consolation seat in the House of Lords later. Assuming, of course, the whole thing does not detonate in their faces first.

And that is before one gets to the central absurdity of the entire exercise.

What exactly changes?

This is the bit nobody seems terribly keen to explain. The Treasury arithmetic does not magically disappear because the person at the dispatch box has different hair. Britain still has weak productivity, ageing demographics, strained public services, high taxation, welfare pressures and markets which remain deeply allergic to politicians pretending money is a fictional concept.

So whichever poor soul takes over still arrives at precisely the same conclusion: if you want visible improvement quickly without detonating borrowing costs, you end up squeezing welfare, restraining spending or finding taxes somewhere.

At which point the very same Labour backbenchers currently hyperventilating about Starmer will rediscover their moral objections to arithmetic.

One suspects some MPs imagine there exists, hidden somewhere in Whitehall, a secret room labelled "Good Policies We Chose Not To Use". A replacement leader merely has to find the correct key and Britain immediately transforms into a Scandinavian social democracy with Italian weather and German productivity.

Sadly the real state of the nation is less Nordic utopia and more "provincial leisure centre changing room after a flood".

Meanwhile Reform watches all this with growing delight. Because Reform does not need detailed governing plans. It merely needs the governing party to resemble participants in a committee room coup at a failing golf club while ordinary voters worry about mortgages, rent, energy bills and whether the GP surgery will answer the telephone before retirement age.

Labour’s genius has always been its ability to confuse emotional discomfort with imminent collapse.

The economy is weak? Replace the leader.

The polls wobble? Replace the leader.

Voters are impatient eighteen months into repairing fourteen years of drift? Replace the leader.

Never mind whether the replacement has a coherent alternative. Never mind whether the public even wants another Westminster psychodrama. Never mind whether changing captain during the first signs of calmer water might be politically idiotic.

No. The important thing is that MPs feel restless.

It is all very British. Not in the Churchillian sense. More in the sense of a parish council launching a bitter procedural dispute over the village fete while the church roof quietly catches fire in the background.

And Keir Starmer, for all his faults, should probably do the one thing Labour MPs historically struggle to do themselves.

Hold the line.

Because if the economy continues to improve, even modestly, this entire episode may end up looking less like democratic renewal and more like a group of MPs trying to change drivers while the car had finally, after fourteen years, started moving again.


Nature Found Outdoors in Major Camping Scandal

I was researching the campsite we’re at in the New Forest and stumbled across a couple of reviews which initially made me think, “Good grief, what sort of place have we booked?” 

Then I kept reading and gradually realised the reviewers were essentially furious about having encountered countryside.

One reviewer wrote: 

“The biggest drawback, however, is the animal excrement. The site allows farm animals to roam freely - which means the ground is littered with droppings everywhere you walk.”


Another added:

“Bizarrely the entire camping area is freely accessed by New Forest ponies/horses.”

Bizarrely.

Like arriving in Venice and lodging a complaint about all the canals.

About halfway through reading these reviews I suddenly realised the core issue here was not poor campsite management. It was shock that horses, when left outdoors in fields for extended periods, behave in a recognisably horse-like manner.

There is something wonderfully modern about visiting one of the oldest surviving common grazing landscapes in Europe and reacting as though the presence of animals is some sort of catastrophic management failure.

“Is this even legal?” asks the reviewer.

Yes. Fairly certain the ponies have more historical rights there than most of the visitors.

I also began forming a mental picture of the reviewers. The sort of people who probably live in a city suburb with a motorhome or caravan squeezed onto a tiny resin driveway between the recycling bins and the neighbour’s fence, then venture into the “real countryside” twice a year only to discover, with mounting horror, that the countryside contains actual countryside.

The New Forest is not Centre Parcs. It is not one of those immaculate continental campsites where every hedge is clipped to within a millimetre of its life and the shower block resembles a private hospital. It is an ancient landscape full of semi-wild ponies, cattle, donkeys and pigs wandering about with the quiet confidence of creatures that know they were there first.

And, inevitably, they leave evidence.


You cannot really demand authenticity and then become upset that authenticity smells faintly of horse.

I particularly enjoyed the complaint that the area was “scrubby and overgrazed”.

Again, yes.

That is why it looks like that. If you remove the grazing animals, the landscape changes completely. The reviewer seems to have expected some sort of lush cinematic wilderness and instead discovered an actual bit of southern England with livestock in it.

The complaint about “a definite whiff of horse urine in the air” after rain was also rather splendid. Well yes. Wet horses and damp earth do tend to smell somewhat... horse-adjacent once the rain starts. That is not really a campsite defect so much as biology carrying on in the usual way.

Then there was the criticism of the shower block being “shipping container variety”.

Oddly, that made me feel slightly patriotic because British campsites often do have that faintly improvised atmosphere. The showers usually look as though they were originally intended for either roadworks or military exercises, yet somehow function perfectly adequately while a retired bloke in sandals nearby explains to somebody the exact noseweight limit of his Bailey caravan and whether diesel heaters flatten leisure batteries overnight.

What really struck me, though, was the underlying contradiction. People increasingly say they want nature, authenticity and rustic experiences, but only if nature has first been carefully pressure washed and deodorised.

They want wild ponies, but apparently operating under strict waste-management protocols.

Personally, I now rather like the sound of the place. If a pony wanders past the motorhome looking faintly judgemental while I’m drinking tea outside, I shall consider the holiday a success.

Though admittedly I reserve the right to revisit that position after stepping barefoot into something warm on the way to the showers.


Doctoring the Titles

There is something quietly odd about the way we hand out titles in this country. A chap can spend years learning how to rebuild an engine by ear, coax life out of something most of us would have written off, and keep half the nation moving with a box of spanners and a cup of tea, and what do we call him? Dave.


Meanwhile, someone else disappears into a lab for years, emerges with a thesis on the finer points of biochemistry that only a small circle can fully follow, and from that day forward it’s Doctor. Not Dave. Not even Dave-with-a-PhD. Just Doctor, as if he might prescribe antibiotics at any moment. It is not that the title is undeserved, it is the inconsistency that gives it a slightly comic edge.

We have, over time, elevated certain professions into a sort of social nobility, while leaving others, arguably more immediately useful, firmly on first-name terms. Take Doctor. If someone is about to cut you open or decide whether you live to see Tuesday, a bit of deference seems reasonable and you rather want the room to go slightly quiet when they speak.

And then, just to keep things interesting, the moment a doctor becomes a surgeon, we quietly revert to calling them “Mr”, in a nod to a time when they were essentially barbers with ambition. The training has improved somewhat since then, but the title has remained.

Dentists sit awkwardly somewhere in the middle. Some are “Dr”, some are not, and most people would struggle to tell you which is which without looking at the brass plate. Which again suggests that whatever this is, it is not a system so much as a collection of habits that nobody has quite got round to sorting out.

But then along comes Professor. A title so carefully guarded in Britain that you can spend decades teaching at a university and still not be allowed to use it, and once you have it, it follows you everywhere. Dinner parties, bank forms, probably the odd parking ticket appeal. One imagines it helps.

Then we wander into the clergy, where titles multiply like rabbits and you can address the same man in half a dozen ways depending on his denomination and how much incense is involved. It all feels faintly medieval, which is probably the point. The legal system, never knowingly under-formal, insists on Judge or Justice, and you do not pop into court and say, “Morning, Steve,” even if his name is Steve, because the whole system would likely collapse on the spot.

And then there is the military and maritime world, where Captain, Major, and Sergeant do at least serve a practical purpose because it is genuinely useful to know who is in charge without a committee meeting. Calling someone “Captain” is not a courtesy, it is a survival mechanism, and everyone understands that without needing it explained.

Step outside these little islands of tradition, though, and the whole thing falls apart rather quickly. We do not say “Accountant Brown,” even though he may be the only thing standing between you and a tax investigation, and we do not say “Engineer Smith,” despite the fact he probably understands more about how the modern world actually functions than most of the titled classes put together.

Which is slightly ironic, because on the Continent and in a fair few other places, Engineer is exactly the sort of title you would use. In Germany you will happily address someone as “Ingenieur”, and in various other places “Engineer” is used with a straight face. The person who can actually make things work is given the title.

Here, by contrast, the person who fixes your heating is still just Kevin. And then there is the plumber, who can arrive at your house at two in the morning, stop your ceilings collapsing, restore hot water, and quite possibly save your marriage in the process, yet remains stubbornly just Kevin. Try greeting him with, “Ah, Plumber, thank goodness you’re here,” and you will either get a look or a revised invoice, neither of which improves the situation.

Then you get Hayley, which is where the whole system starts to creak a bit.

Hayley is a Doctor, with a doctorate in biochemistry earned through years in a lab rather than a clinic. She is not a medical doctor and she is not a nurse, but she is, in the precise and correct sense of the word, Doctor. She has, in the most literal sense, added to the sum of human knowledge, which is supposed to be the entire point of the exercise.

Put her in a health practice, though, in scrubs, and something quietly revealing happens. The title evaporates and then reappears in the wrong form, because scrubs plus female still nudges people towards “Nurse” without much conscious thought. No one checks, no one asks, and the brain fills in the blank and carries on.

Even when corrected, it does not quite stick, because “Doctor” in that setting has been quietly annexed by medicine. Medical doctors use it as a working title, which is fair enough, but it does mean that anyone else using it looks faintly out of place, like they have wandered into the wrong club wearing the right badge.

That leaves Hayley in a neat little trap. Outside, she is Doctor without question. Inside a health practice, calling her Doctor risks confusion. Not calling her Doctor is simply wrong, and the fallback, rather lazily, is to call her Nurse.

She is not unqualified, quite the opposite, and has spent years acquiring expertise that most people would struggle to follow even if they tried.

There is also the usual nudge of assumption ticking away in the background, where men in scrubs drift towards “Doctor” and women towards “Nurse” often enough to be noticeable. No conspiracy is required for that, just habit doing what habit does.

All of which rather undermines the idea that these titles are precise markers of anything. In practice they are handed out based on clothing, setting, and who looks like they fit the part. Which is how you end up with a biochemist with a doctorate being called Nurse, a medical doctor being called Doctor as a matter of routine, a surgeon being called “Mr” out of tradition, and Kevin still being Kevin.

Kevin, who can actually fix the boiler, remains Kevin, with no title, no deference, and no small hush when he walks in. If we were designing this from scratch, you might give him something grand or at least say “Engineer” with a bit of intent, but instead we have inherited a system where prestige and practicality parted company somewhere in the 18th century and never quite reconciled.

Still, it ticks along well enough, and most of the time nobody notices. Until the heating fails, the titles get muddled, and Kevin disappears for a part just when you thought he was about to fix it.



Thursday, 14 May 2026

The Electorate Wants Honesty. Just Not That Much

Britain increasingly feels like a country demanding adult outcomes while behaving like a child who wants pudding before finishing the vegetables.

We need houses, apparently. Young people cannot afford homes. Rent is absurd. Adult children are living with parents into their thirties.

Then somebody proposes building twelve houses near a market town and the church hall fills with retired couples explaining why it would destroy “the character of the village”, despite the village now largely consisting of Range Rovers, hanging baskets and “Save Our Community” signs attached to hedges outside houses worth £850,000 because Britain stopped building enough homes sometime around the peak years of Dire Straits.

The contradictions appear everywhere.

“We need cheaper electricity.”
Not if there are pylons.

“We need energy security.”
Not if there are wind farms.

“We need growth.”
Not if there is construction.

“We need stronger defence.”
Not if taxes rise.

The country increasingly behaves as though all the benefits of modern civilisation should somehow be provided invisibly by magic.

Part of the problem is generational memory. A great many boomers grew up during an unusually favourable economic period and gradually came to see it as normal rather than historically exceptional. Cheap housing, expanding industries, strong growth, reliable pensions, abundant energy and steadily rising prosperity became the assumed background condition of life.

But those conditions were not normal. They were the product of a very particular historical moment. Britain was still living partly off the accumulated advantages of empire, post-war industrial strength, North Sea oil, expanding global trade and a younger population supporting a smaller retired population.

Over time, however, Britain gradually shifted away from building and making things towards an economy increasingly dependent upon finance, property inflation and consumer spending. Rising house prices quietly became a substitute for long-term economic strategy.

Council houses were sold off without equivalent replacement. Infrastructure investment was repeatedly delayed. Productivity stalled. Cheap credit and rising asset values papered over deeper weaknesses for years.

Britain is now drifting quietly from a society where prosperity mainly came from earnings towards one where inheritance increasingly determines who gets ahead. Some people will eventually inherit a house in Surrey and think they are Warren Buffett. Others will inherit a sofa, a box of tangled cables and possibly a commemorative mug from the Isle of Wight.

And much of this supposed wealth transfer will arrive when recipients are already middle-aged, long after the years they actually needed help buying a home or raising children.

Yet politically, much of the country still behaves as though the boom years should somehow continue through sheer inertia, provided nobody builds too much, changes too much, taxes too much or puts a pylon anywhere near the Cotswold stone.

The same newspapers demanding Britain “rearm urgently” are usually also demanding tax cuts, lower borrowing, protected pensions and more spending on everything else. The arithmetic evaporates in a cloud of patriotic headlines and archive footage of Spitfires.

Whenever a politician points out that maintaining a serious military might involve paying for it, people react as though he has proposed selling Stonehenge on eBay.

Which brings us neatly to politics itself.

People constantly say they want honesty from politicians. But what many actually mean is that they want comforting lies delivered more convincingly.

Because genuinely honest politics sounds awful.

A truly honest politician would stand up and say:
“No, you cannot have permanently rising house prices and affordable homes simultaneously.”
“No, you cannot have Scandinavian public services with American tax levels.”
“No, Britain cannot dramatically rearm while cutting taxes and increasing spending elsewhere.”
“No, major infrastructure cannot appear magically without upsetting somebody’s view or increasing somebody’s bill.”

Voters would punish that honesty almost immediately.

That is why simplistic populism works so well. It removes arithmetic from politics.

You can have lower taxes and higher spending.
Affordable homes and permanently rising house prices.
Cheap energy and no infrastructure.
Economic growth without development.
Military strength without paying for it.

Brexit itself was perhaps the purest example. Britain was told it could reduce immigration, cut bureaucracy, increase spending, maintain frictionless trade and negotiate from overwhelming strength simultaneously. Much of the rhetoric was emotionally satisfying but economically divorced nonsense, because it deliberately removed trade-offs from the discussion.

Had Nigel Farage actually been Prime Minister immediately afterwards, his rhetoric would very quickly have collided with the same stubborn realities that later consumed successive Conservative governments. Populism is often most politically effective just before implementation.

The bill simply gets shoved forward until it lands on younger people, future taxpayers or the next government.

This is where many of Keir Starmer’s problems come from. Britain’s problems are structural and decades in the making, but modern politics expects instant visible transformation. Governments are treated like takeaway deliveries. If the country does not feel palpably better within six months, people start demanding refunds.

Labour backbenchers are often just as guilty of this childishness as the electorate itself. Some already behave as though if housebuilding, NHS reform and economic growth have not visibly transformed Britain within a year then the answer must be panic and replacing the leader.

Which rather misses the point that Britain’s addiction to short-termism is part of what created the mess in the first place.

In many ways this may simply be democracy’s Achilles heel. Even Athenian democracy struggled with it. Athens wanted prosperity, military strength and imperial influence while rewarding persuasive rhetoric and emotionally satisfying promises. Cautious voices warning about limits and consequences were often ignored in favour of optimism and flattery, right up until catastrophes like the Sicilian Expedition.

Even Themistocles, the architect of Athenian naval power and victory at Salamis, eventually ended up ostracised and exiled by the democracy he helped save. Electorates have never been especially reliable at rewarding long-term strategic thinking.

The technology has changed slightly since then, admittedly. Athens did not have GB News, Facebook groups or furious parish council WhatsApp chats about bypasses.

But the underlying problem looks remarkably familiar.

Democracy functions best when electorates are willing to hear things they do not like. The trouble is that electorates often demand honesty in theory while voting against it in practice.

Britain increasingly resembles a country demanding hard truths while repeatedly voting for whoever promises there are not any.


In Defence of Cyclists - a Bit

There is a particular irony in finding yourself defending cyclists when, for years, you have regarded many of them as a sort of mobile religious movement. Usually dressed head to toe in black lycra like bargain-bin ninja commandos, travelling in tightly packed pelotons, speaking in hushed reverential tones about cadence and carbon fibre while simultaneously ignoring every red light between Cheltenham and Cirencester.


I have often thought that if a normal motorist behaved with the same tribal certainty as a Sunday cycling posse, there would be national outrage. Imagine eight men in matching Audi jackets driving side-by-side at 14 mph while discussing electrolytes and artisanal flapjacks. The police helicopter would be deployed by lunchtime.

And yet, the other day, there I was on a bicycle myself, crossing a large roundabout properly, legally and cautiously, only to be greeted by the automotive equivalent of an air horn blast from somebody who had entered the roundabout at approximately the same speed used by Royal Navy destroyers intercepting narcotics traffickers in the Gulf.

The truth is that large roundabouts reveal something deeply odd about British driving culture.

People approach them not as junctions requiring caution, but as performance challenges. There is a quiet national belief that if one can maintain speed throughout the manoeuvre without touching the brake pedal, one has somehow achieved engineering greatness. Clarksonism distilled into infrastructure.

This particular chap came from the opposite side of the roundabout. Because of the size and curvature, he could not see me until he had already committed himself. Which, in a sane world, would suggest he ought perhaps to have entered a little more cautiously. Instead, the logic appears to have been:

“I did not anticipate another road user existing there, therefore the other road user is clearly at fault.”

This is becoming increasingly common. The modern British motorist often treats unexpected events not as information requiring adaptation, but as personal insults. If something appears ahead requiring braking, the horn must immediately be sounded so that nearby villagers understand a grave injustice has occurred.

And I do understand some of the irritation drivers feel toward cyclists. I really do. There are cyclists who seem to dress specifically to resemble unlit bin bags drifting through the dusk. There are others who travel in intimidating swarms with the collective road awareness of migrating wildebeest. Some behave as though the Highway Code was written purely as a series of optional suggestions for lesser beings.

As an aside, cyclists also seem oddly resistant to the idea that visibility matters. Many will spend four thousand pounds on a bicycle made from aerospace-grade carbon fibre, shave ten grams off a saddle clamp, and then ride through dappled woodland sunlight dressed entirely in matte black on a black bicycle wearing a black helmet. In their minds they are visible because they themselves can see perfectly well. Unfortunately, that is not how human vision works. A tired van driver glancing through a fly-splattered windscreen does not perceive “enthusiastic cyclist”. He perceives a fleeting disturbance in the shadows shortly before his insurance premium rises.

But the uncomfortable reality is that on a large roundabout, a cyclist is terrifyingly vulnerable even when doing everything correctly.

The driver who beeped me probably went home convinced he had narrowly avoided catastrophe thanks to his own lightning reactions. In reality, the catastrophe was avoided because I had already spent the entire manoeuvre assuming somebody would eventually appear at speed having mistaken the roundabout for the opening stage of the British Touring Car Championship.

That, in the end, is the real problem. Roads now operate increasingly on assumption rather than observation. Everybody expects everybody else to vanish conveniently from their path. Drivers assume cyclists will hug the kerb. Cyclists assume drivers have seen them. SUV owners assume the laws of physics are now merely advisory because they are sitting three feet higher than everybody else.

And hovering over all of it is the horn. That magnificent British instrument of moral self-certification.

Not:

“Sorry mate, didn’t see you.”

Never that.

Always:

“How dare you exist where I intended to continue travelling quickly.”


The High Street We Remember Never Really Existed

There’s a particular sort of meeting where someone leans forward, taps the table, and says, “We need to get the shops back into town,” as if they’ve just rediscovered fire. Everyone nods, because it sounds sensible. It always has. It just hasn’t been true for about fifteen years.


The odd thing is that if you walk through most town centres now, they already look identical. Same chains, same layouts, same slightly weary signage. It’s like they were all ordered from the same catalogue. Perfectly serviceable, faintly forgettable, and interchangeable once you’ve left.

That sameness isn’t an accident. It’s the final stage of a very specific version of the high street, one that only really took hold in the 20th century. Rows of shops, mostly selling things made somewhere else, often by the same national chains. It felt permanent at the time. It wasn’t.

Before that, the high street meant something quite different. It wasn’t even about shopping, not really. “High” just meant the main street, the principal route through a town. Go back far enough and you find something much messier and, oddly enough, much more alive. Workshops, homes, traders, inns, all mixed together. Things were made and sold in the same place. Markets came and went. People were there because they lived there, worked there, or had something to do there. The buying and selling was just part of it.

We’ve forgotten that. Or rather, we’ve edited it out and kept the bit from about 1985 to 2005 and decided that was the natural order of things.

Then, in the 1960s and 70s, we did something else. We knocked a good deal of that older fabric down and rebuilt it around a single idea: retail. Clean precincts, tidy walkways, ring roads to keep things moving. Efficient, on paper. And for a while it worked.

But it came with a catch. We stripped out the mixed use. Fewer people living there. Fewer reasons to be there beyond shopping. Everything arranged around the assumption that shops would always be the main draw.

Then along came the rather inconvenient detail that if you’re selling something standardised, you don’t actually need a physical shop at all.

So the demand moved. Quietly at first, then all at once. And the chains followed it, retreating into the biggest centres where the numbers still stack up. Which leaves places like Preston trying to persuade a model that no longer works to come back and have another go.

You can hear the different political instincts circling around this without quite landing on it. Tories and Reform focus on safety isn’t wrong, but it’s treating a condition, not the cause. A place can feel perfectly safe and still be empty if there’s nothing to draw people in. Meanwhile Labour reaches for public investment and compulsory purchase, which can help unblock derelict sites but also risks councils trying to revive a retail model the market has already left behind. LibDems come closest when they talk about culture and the Guild Hall, even if it sounds a bit like a committee finding its way to a conclusion. And The Greens, perhaps unintentionally, brush up against the real constraint when they point out that people simply do not have the spare money to keep a town centre alive through spending alone.

What none of them quite say out loud is that the high street was never the destination. It was a by-product. People went into town because that’s where everything else was - work, services, markets, social life - and the shops fed off that. We’ve inverted it. We’re trying to rebuild the shops and hoping the life will follow.

It doesn’t work like that.

The places that still feel alive have stopped pretending. They’ve accepted that retail is now a supporting act. They’ve put people back into the centre, given them somewhere decent to live, and then built reasons for others to visit that don’t involve buying anything in particular. Food, culture, events, things you can’t click and have delivered tomorrow.

And this is where that older model quietly reappears, not as nostalgia, but as something practical. You start to see things being made and sold in the same place again. Bakeries, breweries, workshops, repairs. You get markets that create a bit of urgency, because if you miss it on Saturday, you miss it. You get squares and streets where people linger because they live there, not just because they might spend something.

That last bit matters more than we admit. The old market squares still work not because they’re pretty, although they are, but because they were built for living as well as trading. People above the shops, windows looking out onto the square, life going on whether anything is being sold or not. You can’t build that overnight, and when you try, it tends to feel a bit stage-managed. But you can recreate the conditions if you’re prepared to let places evolve rather than designing them to within an inch of their life.

Even then, it’s not a magic answer. You don’t fill an entire city centre with artisanal candle makers and hope for the best. You build a mix, you accept it will be uneven, and you quietly let go of the idea that every unit must be occupied by a recognisable brand.

The awkward truth is that towns are now competing in a very different way. If you offer the same shops as everywhere else, people will either go to the biggest version of that or stay at home. The only way to compete is to stop being the same.

Which is why “get the shops back” isn’t just unrealistic, it’s the wrong question. The real question is why anyone would go there in the first place.

If the honest answer is “to visit a row of shops they can find anywhere”, then you’re not reviving a town centre. You’re just walking past another empty unit, with the lights off at half five, wondering when that became normal.

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Ad Hoc Security - Reassuringly Improvised

There are few things in life more reassuring than a large sign announcing that a vulnerable, empty property is protected. It speaks of order. Systems. Men in high-vis who know which end of the radio to shout into.

So imagine the effect of discovering that your building is under the vigilant protection of something called “Ad Hoc”.


Ad hoc. Two small Latin words that translate, roughly, as “we’ll make it up as we go along”.

You half expect the next line on the sign to read: “Security provided as and when Dave is available, assuming he’s found his keys.” It has the air of a committee decision taken at 4.55pm on a Friday. Not so much a security solution as a shrug in corporate form.

Branding, in this context, is not a decorative extra. It is the first line of defence. A decent security sign is meant to project dull, grinding inevitability. Cameras that always work. Patrols that always happen. A system so tediously reliable that even the most enterprising copper thief decides to try his luck elsewhere.

“Ad Hoc” does rather the opposite. It hints at improvisation. A man with a torch and a sense of optimism. Possibly a clipboard. You can almost hear the conversation: “Is this place covered?” “Well… provisionally.”

To be fair, the company may be perfectly competent. There may be layers of process, response protocols, insurance cover, all the usual machinery ticking away behind the scenes. But none of that is what the casual observer sees. What they see is a sign that sounds like it was named by someone with a fondness for Latin and a tin ear for English.

And tone matters. Opportunists are not, on the whole, great students of corporate structure, but they are very good at sniffing out weakness. A vague promise is not a deterrent. It is an invitation to experiment.

There is a wider point here about the modern tendency to dress things up in cleverness when plain language would do. Security is not a field that benefits from wit. You do not want nuance. You want blunt force certainty, preferably in block capitals.

Instead, we have arrived at a place where a vacant building can be guarded, at least nominally, by something that sounds like a last-minute agenda item.

If nothing else, it is a small masterclass in how not to name a company. When your core offering is reliability, do not lead with improvisation. It is not a difficult rule. Yet here we are, reassured that everything is under control, in a manner to be determined.