Saturday, April 11, 2026

Indeed.

Daniel Hannan.

Labour hates Britain. So it’s abolishing what makes us who we are.

Removing Churchill from banknotes, curbing jury trials and unseating hereditary peers are all acts that chip away at our national identity.
Keir Starmer waves a Union flag during VE Day concert in 2025
Keir Starmer awkwardly waves a Union flag during a concert to mark the 80th Anniversary of VE Day Credit: Chris Jackson/Getty
Daniel HannanDaniel Hannan
Daniel Hannan is an author and historian, president of the Institute for Free Trade and a Conservative peer. In 2015, he founded Vote Leave, which went on to win the referendum.
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Published 14 March 2026.
Britain is governed by people who dislike it. There is no other explanation for the way they trash our constitution, surrender our independence, shrink our territory and traduce our past. Obviously they would not verbalise it like that, even to themselves.
No doubt, in their own minds, our intellectual and political elites see their work as modernising the country, sweeping away its anachronisms, making its minorities feel welcome.
It amounts, though, to much the same thing. A nation is not an amalgam of feel-good intentions. It is a product of its institutions, its structures, its history – all the things that our present rulers disdain.
The removal of Churchill and other historical figures from our banknotes, and their replacement by images of wildlife, is presented by its advocates as the kind of trivial change that only racists get worked up about. It is an old trick: you take away something that people like, and then accuse them of starting a culture war when they complain.
In fact, what our money looks like is far from a trivial issue. When Jesus drew the border between spiritual and temporal authority, he did so by pointing to Caesar’s face on a coin and asking the Pharisees: “Whose is this image and superscription?” There was no more resounding symbol of state power than the coinage.
Many of us have experienced the pain of watching friends or family lose their memories and, as they do so, their full sense of who they are. Countries are no different. A people who lack a common past are simply a random collection of individuals who happen to share a space. Unmoored from their predecessors, they become disconnected from each other and, in the end, indifferent to their posterity.
A £5 banknote bearing the image of wartime leader Winston Churchill
What our money looks like is far from a trivial issue. It speaks to who we are Credit: Joe Giddens/AFP
Half a century ago, Britain had a clear sense of who its heroes were: Shakespeare, Wellington, Isaac Newton, Christopher Wren and (rather splendidly) Adam Smith. Our banknotes celebrated the best of us, allowing a smidgen of patriotic pride to rub off on our fingers as whenever we paid for milk or stamps.
The idea that the people depicted on tenners should in some way be demographically representative is very new. No one saw the inclusion of Florence Nightingale in the 1975 banknote series, or of Elizabeth Fry in 2002, in feminist terms. Jane Austen in 2017 was the first historical figure to be included in the name of diversity – rather to the annoyance of Janeites, who wanted their heroine recognised as a writer rather than as a woman.
Since then, diversity has become the ruling doctrine of our standing apparat, however cold it leaves the country at large. Victoria Cleland, chief cashier at the Bank of England, explained that “gender, ethnicity and disability could be taken into account when planning the designs” because “banknotes serve as a symbolic representation of our collective national identity”.
The trouble is that the dictates of diversity, at least in its Labour/Guardian/BBC sense of “people who look different but think the same”, are incompatible with a shared national story. British heroes until around 60 years ago were disproportionately male and almost exclusively white, an inescapable consequence of our social structures, educational system and demographics.
The essence of a successful nation is that all its citizens, wherever their grandparents were born, should celebrate its past heroes as their fellow countrymen. Few of us were born in palaces or interned as prisoners of war, and few of us begin each day with a glass of sherry, but these things don’t stop us admiring Churchill. We are proud of him, not because he was white or male, but because he won a great victory for our country.
A nation that cannot agree on who its heroes are is no nation at all. The euro banknotes show imaginary bridges in non-specific landscapes, because the EU lacks a demos. Northern Ireland, which for different reasons has a limited sense of shared national identity, tends also to depict bridges and landscapes on its banknotes, though one series did honour the province’s industrial pioneers.
Is this Britain’s future? To be a collection of separate tribes whose ranges happen to overlap? A multi-culti state that buys loyalty with public money, compelling obedience in the name of law because it cannot ask in the name of patriotism?
If it were only the banknotes, you might reasonably argue that I was over-reacting. But the reason that the reaction has been as it has is that the announcement comes after a series of reforms from Labour, all of which suggest a fundamental discomfort with our national identity.
Consider the other changes that the Starmer government is pushing through. Ministers are restricting jury trials, discarding not just a great part of our heritage but a gift that we gave the world. They are a guarantee that the criminal justice system will remain the property of the people and not become an instrument of state control.
Labour is also turning out the last hereditary peers, coldly breaking the deal that it made with them in 1998, and thereby snapping the 800-year-old thread that connects us to Magna Carta.
Winston Churchill
We are proud of Winston Churchill, not because he was white or male, but because he won a great victory for our country Credit: Bettmann
And it is subordinating our country before the EU, seeking to join policies and initiatives which we rejected even when we were members. Again, this is sold as pragmatic, but it is really about distaste for Brexit and the people who voted for it, a collective institutional shudder at the flag-waving that accompanied Vote Leave.
For example, when Britain signed up to the Erasmus deal, a scheme whereby member states fund EU students who come to their universities, it was junking the obviously better Turing scheme, which paid for British students to study all over the world. We are joining a one-sided arrangement where Britain will put in billions more than it gets out. There was nothing practical about the decision; it was entirely vibes-driven, a kind of governmental apology to Brussels for the outrage of 2016.
That penitent attitude goes well beyond Erasmus. The Growth Commission calculates that Britain will be £15 billion worse off as a result of Labour’s determination to sign up to Brussels rules, even in areas where we are big net importers or where our trade with the rest of the world is worth more than that with the EU. Again, the policy is not informed by any cost-benefit analysis; the starting point, rather, is that British sovereignty, resting on patriotic attachment, is discreditable.
We glimpse the same attitude in the determination to hand away the British Indian Ocean Territory, and to sweeten the deal by raising taxes here so that Mauritius can cut taxes with the proceeds. This is not about British interests, still less about the interests of the indigenous Chagossians, who know that Mauritian sovereignty would mean the end of their dream of returning. No, this is about a masochistic elevation of foreign tribunals over British interests. It is the same spirit, in fact, that drives our obsessive decarbonisation at a time when the non-participation of most other countries has removed its chief rationale.
I could go on, but you get the idea. Most British people see our national identity as being bound up in our institutions, from county cricket teams to army regiments. But the Government regards these things as somehow racist or, at the very least, “insufficiently reflective of modern Britain”. It does not want immigrants – who, after all, admired this country enough to choose to come here – to assimilate, to adopt old traditions, enjoy old buildings, sing old songs. It prefers to use their presence as an argument against what should be our shared patrimony.
Result? We have become perhaps the only country where flying the national flag is seen as a subversive act: Union flags and St George’s crosses have been going up around the country, prompting councils to rush to remove them. Flying the national flag in a spirit of defiance is usually a sign of a country under occupation. That, to some, is how it is starting to feel. DT.

Everything.


 

Birdie.


 

Super Stuff, Victor!

 Christian Artemis II pilot Victor Glover reflects on God's creation from space.

Victor GloverVictor Glover (Photo: NASA)

Victor Glover, the Christian US Navy captain piloting NASA’s Artemis II mission, is being lauded for glorifying God in space and for his response to a question about his race.  

On Easter Sunday, Glover reflected on God's creation and the Bible, saying in part, "As we are so far from Earth and looking back at the beauty of creation, I think, for me, one of the really important personal perspectives that I have up here is that I can really see Earth as one thing. ... You have this oasis, this beautiful place that we get to exist together."

He added, "I think as we go into Easter Sunday, thinking about all the cultures all around the world - whether you celebrate it or not, whether you believe in God or not - this is an opportunity for us to remember where we are, who we are, and that we are the same thing, and that we’ve got to get through this together.” CT.

From Compassion.

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Resurrection hope, and lives changed

We hope you’ve been filled with joy and fellowship over the Easter period, celebrating the life, love and victory of Jesus.

And if you made it to Spring Harvest, you may have heard the wonderful story of James.

Below, we share his story in full, including a short video in which he shares about the difference it made to be loved by his local church and to have someone encourage him to dream.

We hope James’ story will encourage you about the lifelong impact your support makes.

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“He is not here; he has risen, just as he said...”

Matthew 28:6

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When a child is encouraged to dream

James remembers a childhood shaped by hunger, illness and unsafe water. Survival was the focus; the future felt out of reach.

Everything began to change when his local church, through Compassion, stepped in. Someone asked him a simple but unexpected question: What do you dream of becoming?

James’ answer set a story in motion that’s still unfolding today.

Be inspired by James’ story

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Would You Care To Help?


1 Peter 4. Suffering.

 12) Dear friends, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal that has come on you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you. 13) But rejoice inasmuch as you participate in the sufferings of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed. 14) If you are insulted because of the name of Christ, you are blessed, for the Spirit of glory and of God rests on you.

Friday, April 10, 2026

ALL Things.

 

‘Burnhamomics?'

 Sherelle Jacobs

‘Burnhamomics’ already lies in tatters.

It is one thing to throw out a sinking, lacklustre PM. It is entirely another to bet the house on a Leftist with a reckless economic agenda.
Andy Burnham and Liz Truss image
Sherelle Jacobs
26 September 2025 2:48pm BST
Sherelle Jacobs
Sir Keir Starmer is right about one thing: Andy Burnham, the Left’s last great hope, is living in an economic fantasyland.
True, the King of the North has amassed an impressive army of Labour followers who hope he can win back working class voters. The former Blairite, then Brownite, and now reborn as a committed socialist, somehow exudes authenticity, with his love of Madchester music and boxer’s brow.  
He has made a virtue of his two failed leadership bids. Time away from the Westminster bubble means voters don’t associate him with the disliked and discredited “uniparty”. His mix of cultural nationalism and economic socialism will appeal to former Labour voters dismayed by two-tier Keir’s directionless. It’s possible his policies could even destabilise Nigel Farage’s party, splitting the working class vote. Like Boris Johnson before him, he will sell himself as a People’s Mayor, albeit from the North.
But scepticism is building, doubts are setting in. One poll showed that Labour won’t overtake Reform were he to be crowned leader. Even more importantly, his plan to win back the Red Wall with an even more high-spend agenda – and his apparent nonchalance towards the risk of a market backlash – has sent a wave of panic through Labour that the party is walking straight into the “Truss trap”. It’s enough to give even some of Burnham’s backers second thoughts.
This won’t have been helped by Starmer’s suggestion that Burnham in No 10 would be a “disaster for working people”. In an extraordinary intervention this week, the PM drew parallels between his Labour colleague and Liz Truss, arguing that any attempt to abandon fiscal rules in favour of spending would end in financial implosion. This might reek of desperation, but Starmer is right.
The Manchester Mayor’s economic prospectus denies our fiscal reality. Britain is on the brink: the debt is colossal, taxes have soared, our inflation is the highest in the G7, the markets are extremely nervous. The cure to Britain’s economic torpor cannot be a dose of analgesic.
The scale of his spending commitments, including on council housing, border on lunacy. The tax hikes he advances could trigger a property market crash that would plunge the financial sector into turmoil. His plans to raise the top rate of income tax to 50p would risk a consumer spending slump and chase away what is left of our entrepreneurial class. His nationalisation plans – even more ambitious than entertained by Jeremy Corbyn – would surely lead to failed auctions on the debt markets.
Mere talk of Burnham in No 10 has coincided with a rise in UK bond yields, and warnings from investors that the gilt markets would be “spooked”. Even some Burnham supporters are rattled. “It’s just plain economically illiterate. You don’t go to the bank and tell the manager you want to borrow a load of money but don’t really respect the terms of the agreement,” one says.
Markets provide the ultimate safeguard against folly, administering their own inescapable form of rough justice. Even the US President has been forced to act within market strictures: when 30 year US Treasury yields touched 5 per cent earlier this year, Donald Trump paused his tariff war.
Yet Burnham is insistent we need to “get beyond this thing of being in hock to the bond markets”. As the economist Paul Johnson brusquely pointed out, the best way to do this is to reduce borrowing, which is already much too high under Rachel Reeves.
The Telegraph has now revealed that Starmer’s allies are planning to block Burnham’s return to Parliament by ensuring that Labour’s National Executive Committee – stuffed with TTK loyalists – would not approve his application to run for a Parliamentary seat. And that is assuming Burnham would be able to find a seat in the first place. The backbenchers in safe constituencies who had been identified as possible candidates to make way for the King of the North are now hesitating to cooperate. 
Those who have been in Parliament long enough to remember the rise and fall of Gordon Brown – a bunker chancellor answerable to nobody who was elevated into a bunker PM answerable to nobody – favour a contest over a coronation for the King of the North. This would at least allow them, and the British public, to challenge and test Burnham’s ideas.
Labour is facing a historic test. It is one thing to throw out a sinking, lacklustre PM; it is entirely another to bet the house on a radical Leftist with a doomed economic agenda.
DT.

Indeed.

Daniel Hannan . Labour hates Britain. So it’s abolishing what makes us who we are. Removing Churchill from banknotes, curbing jury trials an...