Monday, June 15, 2026

Well Said, Stephen.

STEPHEN GLOVER: Only Rupert Lowe can save us from a monstrous coup. The trouble is he's self serving, arrogant and a political extremist.


Returning to our shores after ten days abroad, I was amazed to find a full-scale political coup in progress.

Despite having no obvious qualifications for the job – and without having gone to the bother of putting himself forward in a General Election – Andy Burnham could soon snatch the keys to No10.

He will probably install his pal Ed Miliband as Chancellor. Even though he's still a member of the Cabinet, 'Red Ed' has reportedly been offering tactical advice to the 'King of the North' as he plots to replace Sir Keir Starmer.

As the successor to Rachel Reeves, Miliband would double down on the impoverishing net zero policies he has been shoving down our throats as Energy Secretary. They would break the bounds of Labour's 2024 manifesto.

Also joining Burnham's Cabinet would be Angela Rayner, who evidently feels no shame over her failure to pay a £40,000 stamp duty liability, and is itching to whack hard-pressed employers with a further raft of workers' rights.

Louise Haigh, who resigned as a senior minister in November 2024 after it emerged she had falsely told the police a decade earlier that her work mobile phone had been stolen, is also expected to take her place at Andy Burnham's side.

What a crew! Let us disregard for a moment their moral and intellectual shortcomings (perhaps excluding Red Ed, who is a clever zealot). They would all of them – Burnham, Miliband, Rayner, Haigh and their support troops – dominate the most Left-wing government in our history.

Yet their policies were not put to the British electorate in 2024. Andy has been doing his best to conceal his true intentions before this week's by-election in Makerfield but, if he wins, the mask will instantly fall.

Rupert Lowe¿s language is more incendiary than Nigel Farage¿s, Stephen Glover says

Rupert Lowe's language is more incendiary than Nigel Farage's, Stephen Glover says

The essence of a coup is that it is non-democratic. A group of people, usually unrepresentative and small in number, seizes power. They almost always then proceed to ruin the unfortunate country that they control.

Can anyone save us? There is one man who could, if he wanted to. The trouble is he is vain, self-serving and arrogant, besides being a political extremist. There is no point in appealing to his decency and good sense, because he has none. I speak of Rupert Lowe, leader of Restore Britain.

Most polls suggest Burnham is a short head in front of Reform UK's rather limp candidate Robert Kenyon. If nothing changes, Andy will win on Thursday. His margin of victory, though, is likely to be smaller than Restore's entire vote, which opinion polls are putting at around 8 per cent.

In other words, if Restore's candidate Rebecca Shepherd were to vanish into thin air, there's a sporting chance that Burnham might be stopped and Britain saved from an incompetent Leftist government no one voted for.

Since there's no point in appealing to Rupert Lowe's better nature, the only hope is that prospective Restore voters will wake up in time to the reality that the party they're thinking of supporting harbours some pretty nasty secrets.

Of course Restore and Reform have much in common. Both have a robust approach to bringing down immigration, particularly the illegal variety – as do the Tories under Kemi Badenoch. But Lowe's language, which he deploys to great effect on social media, is more incendiary than Nigel Farage's.

He is also close to some very suspect people. While Farage has kept his distance from far-Right rabble-rouser Tommy Robinson and has refused to let him join Reform, Lowe said over the weekend: 'If Tommy Robinson wants to join us, that's up to him'.

Elon Musk partly fell out with Farage because the leader of Reform had distanced himself from Robinson. Lowe, by contrast, hasn't offended the world's richest man by attacking the activist.

Mr Lowe with Makerfield's Restore candidate Rebecca Shepherd

Mr Lowe with Makerfield's Restore candidate Rebecca Shepherd

Yesterday's Mail on Sunday revealed some very dubious connections between Restore and extremist figures. A number of those campaigning in Makerfield consorted with neo-Nazis at a recent summit of white supremacists in Portugal which called for a white-only Europe.

One of them is Callum Barker, who was on the stump for Restore last week and is described as a 'hardened neo-Nazi'. Lucy White, another Restore activist, spoke at the summit and interviewed American white supremacist Jared Taylor, whom she described as 'a true pioneer, a true legend'.

Also addressing a panel at the event last month was a Restore campaigner who uses the name 'Angloid' online and has been identified as 19-year-old Lorcan Barker. All three have been pictured with Rupert Lowe.

Steve Laws, another backer of Restore who has been described as an ethnic-cleansing extremist and has advocated the mass deportation of British Jews, has just posted online about the success of the party's campaign in Makerfield.

I'm not suggesting that Lowe shares all the highly obnoxious views of these people. But surely the mere fact that he associates with them, and that his party is supported by others of a similar ilk, should make decent people planning to vote Restore think again.

The views I've cited echo those of the far-Right British National Party and its forerunner, the National Front. Only in a handful of elections over many years did either party achieve as much as 8 per cent of the vote – the level at which Restore is now polling. Most of the time they got less than 1 per cent.

Why, then, do a significant number of people contemplate supporting Restore on Thursday? Unless you believe that Makerfield boasts an unusual number of bigots and extremists – which I don't – it can only be because many are unaware of the unsavoury side of Restore.

It suits the Left, of course, to lump Reform and Restore together as being indistinguishable. They're not.

The question is where Nigel Farage's heart really lies. Last week he declared that under a Reform government foreign nationals living in social housing would be given three months to find private accommodation or face being deported.

This sounds draconian, and is also apparently at odds with his statement in September 2024 that it was 'a political impossibility to deport hundreds of thousands of people'. He was right about that.

Was he moved to change his mind because of Restore's polling success in Makerfield and Lowe's enthusiasm for deportation? It is hard to think this wasn't the case.

A much more profitable approach for Reform would be to point out the unwholesome connections Lowe's party has with some very dodgy characters. Many planning to support it don't know what they would be voting for.

I doubt Restore will present much of a threat to Reform in the long term. Lowe isn't a serious politician. He is driven by hatred of Farage. He's a multi-millionaire maverick and extremist, supported by the world's first trillionaire, who preposterously portrays himself as an enemy of the Establishment.

I'd be surprised if he stayed the course. He'll probably fizzle out. But Rupert Lowe is capable of depriving Reform of victory on Thursday, and thereby of delivering us into the hands of a government that would ruin Britain.

Yet it's still not too late to stop Andy Burnham's monstrous coup. People of Makerfield, awake!

I Despair!

Labour minister refuses to answer 'beheading' question 6 times in car-crash LBC interview.

The Northern Ireland Secretary was repeatedly asked if beheading is an "alien culture".

By Katie Harris, Senior Political Correspondent

Nick Ferrari and Hilary Benn

Nick Ferrari repeatedly asked Hilary Benn if beheading is an 'alien culture' (Image: LBC)

Labour minister repeatedly refused to say if beheading is an "alien culture" during a fiery LBC interview. Host Nick Ferrari asked Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn multiple times as he dodged the question.

The clash came after Mr Benn condemned Traditional Unionist Voice MP Jim Allister for using the term "alien culture" in the Commons earlier this week in the wake of the horror Belfast attack. After being repeatedly pressed by Mr Ferrari, Mr Benn eventually said: "It is alien to all right thinking people." DE.

Well. His Work Left Me Cold.

David Hockney, OM, blockbuster artist whose vivid paintings were recognisable to millions.

‘I suppose essentially I am saying we are not sure what the world looks like. An awful lot of people think we do, but I don’t’

Hockney in 2015

Burnout.

Life beyond burnout: how Christians can grow in the desert seasons.

CT.

I Wonder What This Is?


 

A Fair Point!


 

Excellent. Not Before Time.

Four sentenced to death over terror attack on Nigerian church.

Genesis 9:6 states: "Whoever sheds human blood, by humans shall their blood be shed; for in the image of God has God made mankind." (NIV). This verse establishes the divine principle of capital punishment for murder, grounding it in the sanctity of human life. Nowhere in the NT contradicts this teaching.

The Bible famously supports the death penalty—specifically referencing a "sword" as the symbol of execution—in the New Testament passage of Romans 13:4.

Bishop Jude Arogundade entering the St Francis Xavier Church shortly after the massacre in 2022Bishop Jude Arogundade entering the St Francis Xavier Church shortly after the massacre in 2022 (Photo: Aid to the Church in Need)

Four Islamic militants who carried out a deadly terrorist attack on a Catholic church in Nigeria have been sentenced to death.

Idris Abdulmalik Omeiza, Al Qasim Idris, Jamiu Abdulmalik and Abdulhaleem Idris attacked St Francis Xavier Catholic Church in Owo during a Pentecost Sunday Mass on 5 June 2022.

The militants assailed the church with firearms and explosive devices, killing over 40 people in and around the church, including children. 

The attack was one of the worst in Nigeria in recent years, with the late Pope Francis commenting at the time that he was praying for the victims who had been “painfully stricken in a moment of celebration”.

Around 100 people were injured, among them Margaret Attah, who lost both legs and an eye in the attack. In 2023 Attah was granted Aid to the Church in Need’s first #RedWednesday Courage to be Christian Award, which honours heroism and faith in response to persecution.

As well as a death sentence, which requires presidential assent, the four men were handed symbolic life sentences for alleged membership of the terrorist group al Shabaab and were given 20-year sentences for conspiracy.

Court filings show the men had planned to attack other targets, including a public school. A fifth man was acquitted of the charges due to insufficient evidence.

Bishop Jude Arogundad’s diocese includes St Francis Xavier Catholic Church. He attended a special Mass to mark the fourth anniversary of the attack.

Prior to the Mass the bishop told Aid to the Church in Need that he was pleased the case had come to a close.

“We are pleased that at last the families and victims in general can move towards a kind a closure although we realise that they will never fully reach closure as they will carry the scars of what happened that day for the rest of their lives," he said. 

“Many are still traumatised and are still going through medical treatment and many are on the edge – they are still suffering and worried because they don’t know what will happen next.”

He added that although the Church did not approve of the death penalty, it did believe it to be important that those responsible for such crimes be held accountable for their actions. He called upon the authorities to do more to bring others involved in the attack to justice. CT.
Blogger: evil must never be 'given a get out' by liberals and leftists.

Schools.

Christian Concern’s Head of Education Steve Beegoo, and the Christian Legal Centre’s Roger Kiska, lay out how, in response to updated guidance and key legal cases, Christian schools and teachers can best follow government guidelines relating to RSE and still respect religious beliefs.

CC.

Well Said, Stephen.

STEPHEN GLOVER: Only Rupert Lowe can save us from a monstrous coup. The trouble is he's self serving, arrogant and a political extremist...