A US Ambassador Ranted About The UK After It Criticised Israel. This Labour MP Had Just 1 Thing To Say.

A Labour MP tore into Donald Trump’s ambassador to Israel this morning after he criticised the UK.

Mike Huckabee slammed Britain and prime minister Keir Starmer on X after the UK condemned Israel’s plan to expand its military operation in Gaza, despite the ongoing humanitarian crisis there.

Starmer joined many European allies in warning Israel that occupying Gaza City, the largest city in the Palestinian territory, would only cause further “bloodshed”, almost two years after Israel first declared war on Hamas.

In a statement on Friday, the prime minister said: “Wwe urge it to reconsider immediately. Every day the humanitarian crisis in Gaza worsens and hostages taken by Hamas are being held in appalling and inhuman conditions. We need a ceasefire now.”

But Huckabee replied by bizarrely talking about World War 2.

He wrote on X: “So Israel is expected to surrender to Hamas & feed them even though Israeli hostages are being starved?

“Did UK surrender to Nazis and drop food to them? Ever heard of Dresden, PM Starmer?

“That wasn’t food you dropped. If you had been PM then UK would be speaking German!”

In a second post, he added: “How much food has Starmer and the UK sent to Gaza? @IsraeliPM has already sent 2 MILLION TONS into Gaza & none of it even getting to hostages. Maybe UK PM ought to sit this one out & follow Arab League who said Hamas should disarm & release ALL hostages immediately.”

Huckabee’s analogy compares the current war in Gaza to the joint British and American decision to bomb the German city of Dresden in February 1945.

It was one of the most controversial moments from World War 2 because many argue the attack, which killed around 25,000 people was unnecessary and cruel – especially as it occurred just months before the conflict ended.

Meanwhile, Israel is coming under intense scrutiny for its war in Gaza where at least 60,000 Gazans have been killed, and Israel’s aid blockade is causing mass starvation.

So Emily Thornberry, the chair of the UK’s Foreign Affairs Committee and a former member of Starmer’s shadow cabinet, offered a no-nonsense response to Huckabee on X.

She wrote: “This Ambassador is clearly an idiot.”

Trump has tried to end the war in Gaza but has refused to commit to recognising a Palestinian state, unlike the UK, France and Canada.

Just days after he acknowledged that people are starving in the territory, the US president said it was Israel’s choice to expand its military offensive.

Trump told reporters: “That’s going to be pretty much up to Israel.”

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Is Labour Preparing Brits For A Tax Shock This Autumn?

Are our taxes about to go up?

That’s a question Brits will be hearing again and again ahead of Labour’s autumn Budget, where the government sets out its spending and tax plans for the year ahead.

Very rarely do ministers admit in any significant detail exactly what they have planned for the fiscal event – but early signs suggest that a tax hike just might be looming.

The occupants of 10 and 11 Downing Street are stuck between a rock and a hard place when it comes to the country’s finances right now.

Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves promised not to increase taxes on “working people” in the run-up to the general election last year.

While the exact definition of that phrase split public opinion, Labour said it means not raising income tax, employee national insurance or VAT.

Of course, that wording came back to haunt the government at last year’s Budget when they revealed they were hiking employers’ national insurance contributions – and critics swiftly pointed out that employers are “working people”, too.

Then the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) think tank today predicted that Reeves will need to raise taxes to close a government spending gap on course to reach more than £40 billion.

This is due to unexpectedly sluggish economic growth – GDP grew by 0.7% in the first quarter of 2025 but contracted by 0.1% in May – and higher-than-expected inflation – at 3.6% in June.

To make matters worse, when Labour made its 2024 tax promises, it also pledged to oversee a period of significant economic growth which… has not really happened.

So perhaps it is no surprise the NIESR claimed Reeves is facing “an impossible trilemma” – sticking to her fiscal rules while fulfilling her spending commitments and upholding her manifesto pledge not to raise taxes for working people.

Tellingly, the prime minister refused to reiterate his commitment not to increase “working people” taxes on Wednesday.

He told reporters he did “not recognise” the NIESR’s figures, adding: “But the Budget won’t be until later in the year – that’s when we’ll have the forecast and set out our plans.”

He also steered the conversation away from taxes, telling reporters: “What’s really important is that I’m very clear about our focus, which will be on living standards and making sure that people feel better-off, partly because more money is coming into their pocket in the first place through better wages, and partly because we’re bearing down on costs like mortgages and other costs to everyday families.”

Tory donor and former deputy chair of the party, Lord Ashcroft, took that to mean there will be “another U-turn” on Labour’s promises coming soon.

But, increasing taxes on “working people” is not the only option for the government.

Those on the Labour left are calling for a wealth tax, although cabinet minister Jonathan Reynolds called the idea “daft” just last month.

Meanwhile, professor Stephen Millard, the NIESR’s deputy director for macroeconomics, told the BBC Radio 4′s Today programme that Reeves could look at reforming the council tax system.

“Houses have not been revalued since 1991. The system is ripe for a complete reform,” he said. “The question there is whether reforming the council tax system, getting it right, would necessarily raise any additional money.

“An alternative is to replace the whole thing with a land value tax, which is much fairer and which potentially could actually raise a significant amount of money.”

But just what will Labour choose to do to fix our unsteady finances? Right now, it seems like it is anybody’s guess – including Labour’s.

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Medical Experts Have A Grim New Term For Targeted Attacks On Healthcare In War

Medical experts have come up with a new term to describe deliberate, systematic attacks on health services as acts of war: healthocide.

Medical practitioners have called for their fellow medics within the international community to call out this weaponisation of health and healthcare, which they believe undermines international humanitarian law.

And silence could suggest complicity, Dr Joelle Abi-Rached and colleagues of the American University of Beirut, Lebanon warned in the open access journal BMJ Global Health.

The authors pointed to the suffering seen in Gaza and Lebanon right now as examples of healthocide.

They pointed out that since Israel began its military offensive in Gaza on October 8, 2023 – following the Hamas attack the day before – an estimated 217 health workers have been killed by the Israeli Defence Forces.

Amid 68 attacks on hospitals, 177 ambulances were damaged and 237 attacks on emergency medical services took place, according to data from Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health.

A further 986 medical workers have died since the war began.

The authors noted: “Both in Gaza and Lebanon, healthcare facilities have not only been directly targeted, but access to care has also been obstructed, including incidents where ambulances have been prevented from reaching the injured, or deliberately attacked.

“What is becoming clear is that healthcare workers and facilities are no longer afforded the protection guaranteed by international humanitarian law.”

They called for doctors to speak out, warning: “Medical neutrality is not ‘apolitical’; for us it means standing with humanity, social justice, and health-enabling policies.”

The experts also said attacks on healthcare providers have become normalised in recent years – but the ongoing conflicts have seen such strikes evolve into “the deliberate killing and/or destruction of health services and systems for ideological purposes.”

They also suggested healthocide could be taking place in El Salvador, Ukraine, Sudan and Syria.

Fears that not speaking out about wars, like that seen in Gaza, is akin to complicity have been rising lately.

Earlier this month, Tory MP Kit Malthouse warned that foreign secretary David Lammy could “end up at The Hague because of his inaction” over the war.

According to the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza, an estimated 180 people have died so far from famine and malnutrition, including 93 children.

A total of 60,933 people in Gaza have been killed since the war began.

Back in April, Israel denied deliberately targeting a Palestinian hospital, suggesting it was targeting a “command and control centre used by Hamas” instead.

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Did Donald Trump’s New Nuclear Threats Alarm Vladimir Putin?

Donald Trump suddenly announced he was moving two of America’s nuclear submarines closer to Russia after “highly provocative statements” from a senior Kremlin official last week.

The declaration was quite a surprise, especially considering the US president has previously spoken of his fond friendship for Vladimir Putin and even expressed sympathy for his invasion of Ukraine.

As Kyiv’s most powerful ally – and the only major Western figure to show leniency towards Putin – Trump’s words matter.

So how did we get here? And just how concerned is the Kremlin about what might happen next?

Why did US nuclear rhetoric suddenly ramp up?

The US president has been trying to pressure Putin to end his war in Ukraine for months, even offering to oversee a peace deal which would reward the Russian president for his brutal invasion with Ukrainian territory.

But the Russian president has consistently dragged his feet.

So Trump has gradually amped up his rhetoric.

Last week, while in Scotland, he said he was going to reduce his previous 50-day deadline for Russia to end the war down to 10 or 12 days – or the US would hit Russia with more sanctions.

Former Russian president, close Putin ally and the deputy chair of Russia’s Security Council, Dmitry Medvedev, lashed out at the news on social media.

He claimed Trump was “playing the ultimatum game with Russia” and said “each new ultimatum is a threat and a step towards war”.

The president responded: “Tell Medvedev, the failed former Russian president who thinks he is still in power, to be careful what he says. He is entering very dangerous territory.”

Hours later, he posted: “Based on the highly provocative statements of the Former President of Russia, Dmitry Medvedev … I have ordered two Nuclear Submarines to be positioned in the appropriate regions, just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that.

“Words are very important, and can often lead to unintended consequences, I hope this will not be one of those instances.”

He did not mention if the submarines were nuclear armed or nuclear powered, or where the “appropriate regions” are.

How did Russia respond?

After a weekend of silence, the Kremlin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov finally addressed Trump’s shifting stance on Monday, telling reporters: “In this case, it is obvious that American submarines are already on combat duty. This is an ongoing process, that’s the first thing.

“But in general, of course, we would not want to get involved in such a controversy and would not want to comment on it in any way.

“Of course, we believe that everyone should be very, very careful with nuclear rhetoric.”

He also claimed Moscow did not see Trump’s remarks as an escalation in nuclear tension, adding: “We do not believe that we are talking about any escalation now. It is clear that very complex, very sensitive issues are being discussed which, of course, are perceived very emotionally by many people.”

So, what does all this mean? HuffPost UK spoke to several experts to find out.

Not so chummy now: Trump, left, and Putin in 2018.
Not so chummy now: Trump, left, and Putin in 2018.

via Associated Press

‘Russia understands this is a serious step’

“In a way, Trump is trying to play a game,” the director of International Security at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) Dr Neil Melvin said.

Melvin suggested Trump was trying to call out Moscow for rattling the nuclear saber over the last three years.

“He tried to put a kind of baseline underneath the escalation conversation with Russia around nuclear weapons,” the expert told HuffPost UK. “This is why the Russians haven’t responded because they’ve actually understood that this is quite a serious step.”

“Trump is the first US president I think to openly challenge this new position of Russia,” he said, explaining that the he two countries are now looking to re-establish a conversation about just what escalation looks like.

Melvin said this was a very different place to where the world was during the Cold War, when the US and the USSR were also in a standoff over nuclear weapons – and everyone used “careful language”.

He pointed out that Trump’s post on TruthSocial was without its usual capital letters or exclamation marks, perhaps indicating it was a more serious and a “calculated response by the United States”.

The specialist said Moscow’s delay in reply probably stemmed from Russia being unable to decide whether to escalate or just make a rhetorical statement.

“Russia has been anxious to avoid direct confrontation with the US, even though they basically talk about being in a war with the States,” he said.

Melvin claimed other western leaders will “will broadly support” Trump’s latest comments, because “there has been some concern that Russia has been blurring the line between conventional wars and nuclear”.

“This is actually a step towards re-imposing a stronger distinction,” he noted.

This is not a ‘sensible or coherent’ strategy

Meanwhile, Keir Giles, a senior consulting fellow from Chatham House’s Russia and Eurasia programme, suggested these were mainly empty words from the US president – and so Moscow will not be intimidated at all.

He said: “With the submarine comment, Trump has discovered another means of appearing ‘tough on Russia’ without actually doing anything that would be of concern to Moscow – and there are plenty of other reasons why he might be seeking headlines that suggest he is taking a firmer line with Putin.”

The specialist said: “Trump has taken every possible step to pressure Russia, short of actually doing something.”

He concluded: “Whatever Trump’s latest verbal salvo at Moscow may be, there’s one thing it isn’t: a strategy for dealing with Russia, let alone a sensible or coherent one.”

Giles claimed the Kremlin will be watching Trump closely, but “perhaps as much out of curiosity as of concern as to what he will do next.”

‘The Kremlin was unprepared’

Russia analyst from the Institute for the Study of War, Christina Harward, told HuffPost UK that Russia’s response has been “incredibly limited thus far”.

She pointed out that there’s been no response from the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs or the Russian Ministry of Defence.

“High-ranking Russian officials very often parrot the same phrases as each other, telling us that Russian officials’ public rhetoric is highly coordinated within the Kremlin itself,” she said.

“The Kremlin is also known to disseminate manuals to Russian state media with clear instructions about how to cover certain current events.

“The fact that we didn’t see a coordinated response over the weekend to Trump’s announcement indicates that the Kremlin was unprepared for this move and is likely still working on how to publicly react. We may start to see a more unified official reaction in the coming days.”

What now?

While the specialists seem split over just how much impact Trump’s comments will have on the Kremlin, only one thing seems certain right now: Putin still has no plans to withdraw from Ukraine any time soon.

US special presidential envoy Steve Witkoff is set to visit Moscow this week to discuss peace talks, days before Trump’s new tariffs against Russia are set to kick in (August 9).

But Russia continues to target Ukraine almost every single night with drone and missile attacks, while Putin is still pushing to gain control over four Ukrainian regions to which Moscow currently occupies, and a promise from Kyiv will never join Nato.

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Nigel Farage Modestly Claims Starmer Is ‘Completely Obsessed With Me’

Nigel Farage has accused Keir Starmer of being “completely obsessed with me” in a new jibe at the government.

His remarks come after technology secretary Peter Kyle hit back at Reform UK for saying they would repeal the Online Safety Act – and alleged Farage would have been on the same side as Jimmy Savile, the late prolific sexual predator.

The Reform UK leader has subsequently called for an apology from the government over the claim.

Speaking about the incident again on LBC today, he said it was all “absolutely appalling” – and suggested Labour were “completely obsessed” with him.

The MP for Clacton-on-Sea said: “I thought [the Savile comment] was incredibly badly judged.”

He pointed out that Labour was outraged when ex-Tory prime minister Boris Johnson attacked Starmer in 2022 by saying he failed to prosecute Savile when he was the director of public prosecutions – although there was no evidence to support Johnson’s claim at the time.

Still, Farage said: “The levels of moral indignation that we got from Labour on this, ‘how dare Johnson do this’ – and yet they use this Savile analogy.”

The LBC presenter said: “The papers are all reporting it was authorised by No.10, that line. Can you believe that?”

Farage paused, then replied: “I think they’re losing the plot in every way, yes, and I think we’re at a place where, the PM in particular, and others, they’ve become completely obsessed with me.”

Labour have repeatedly pivoted to treating Reform UK as their main competitors instead of the Tories, who are the second largest party in parliament and the official opposition.

After Reform secured hundreds of council seats in May’s local elections, Labour’s political director Claire Reynolds told the party’s MPs: “Reform voters are not necessarily right wing. They are our people and they are pissed off.”

Starmer himself told his chief of staff Morgan McSweeney that they should be targeting Reform UK as the “real opposition” that same month.

And the party has been consistently leading in the polls, even securing a record nine-point lead over Labour in June according to Ipsos.

Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn – who is trying to set up his own party –even told Novara Media: “The Labour government is here to appease Reform.”

But insiders shrugged off Farage’s remark, suggesting what he really meant was he does not like scrutiny.

The Labour Party has declined to comment.

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‘TACO’ No More? Trump Signals No Extension To Tariff Deadline

President Donald Trump is holding firm on his Friday deadline to slap tariffs on countries without a trade agreement with the US.

Trump looked to defy his “TACO” – “Trump Always Chickens Out” – nickname by saying that his cut-off point will not be extended beyond August 1.

“THE AUGUST FIRST DEADLINE IS THE AUGUST FIRST DEADLINE — IT STANDS STRONG, AND WILL NOT BE EXTENDED. A BIG DAY FOR AMERICA!!!” Trump wrote on his Truth Social social media platform on Wednesday.

Trump earned the sobriquet from the financial press for repeatedly delaying new taxes on goods sent to the US.

The president has spoken about agreements on trade deals with the European Union and nations including the UK and Japan, though many of the details have yet to be formalised.

It means a slew of countries will face higher tariffs under Trump’s “Liberation Day” trade policy, a plan most economists say will lead to higher prices for American consumers.

The list looks likely to include India, which has the world’s fifth-largest economy, after Trump said on Wednesday the country faces a 25% tariff from Friday, plus an additional import tax because of India’s purchasing of Russian oil.

Trump said on Truth Social that India “is our friend,” but its “Tariffs are far too high” on US goods.

The president has used tariffs as a battering ram to reshape global trade in America’s favour, though the move has created economic uncertainty amid fears the policy will cause a US slowdown and stoke inflation.

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Blow To Labour As Reform Voters Prefer Jeremy Corbyn To Keir Starmer On Almost Every Metric

Reform UK voters generally prefer Jeremy Corbyn to Keir Starmer, a surprising new poll has found.

As first reported by Novara Media, a survey of 2,000 UK adults – conducted by Merlin Strategy over the weekend – showed Reform voters believe the former Labour leader has better qualities than the current prime minister.

The poll showed 65% of respondents think Corbyn was more authentic, 67% said he was for working people, 57% think he was hardworking, 64% believe he’s honest and 54% say he’s intelligent.

A further 70% said they believe Corbyn makes radical decisions, 64% say he is principled, 69% say he represents change, 62% say he’s strong and 59% say he’s trustworthy.

And, crucially, 61% said they believe the Islington North MP understands “people like me”.

Starmer won on only one metric – he’s seen as better on the world stage than Corbyn.

However, the poll did not show whether or not this would push Farage supporters to actually vote for Corbyn’s new party.

Still, the research will be a real blow to the Labour government, considering it has moved away from hard-left policies touted by figures like Corbyn, in favour of winning back Reform voters.

The right-wing populist party has soared in popularity over the last year and now consistently leads in opinion polls by a healthy margin – despite having just four MPs.

So the government has been trying to win back that support.

Labour’s political director Claire Reynolds even told the party’s MPs in May that Reform UK voters are “our people”, but they’re just “pissed off” with the government right now.

It’s well-known that Starmer’s increasingly hardline anti-immigration policies have failed to cut through to Farage’s growing body of supporters – as Reform UK currently have a seven-point lead on Labour.

However, it will rub salt in the wound to know that Corbyn, Starmer’s predecessor who was expelled from the party over a row related to antisemitism, is more respected than the prime minister.

Starmer has tried to present it as a major strength that he moved Labour away from Corbyn’s policies after the party’s disastrous performance in the 2019 general election.

But, the Islington North MP is now setting up his own left-wing party – which is yet to be named – and already has 500,000 sign-ups expressing interest.

Zarah Sultana, a suspended Labour MP who quit the party to join Corbyn’s new group, told Novara Media that Starmer’s “spent years chasing Reform voters, echoing their rhetoric, even mimicking Enoch Powell. And for what? They still prefer Jeremy Corbyn.”

Corbyn himself told the outlet: “The Labour government is here to appease Reform. We are here to defeat Reform.”

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Starmer Finally Announces Plan To Formally Recognise Palestinian State In September Unless Israel Acts

Keir Starmer has finally outlined a plan for the UK to formally recognise a Palestinian state this autumn.

A government readout from the prime minister’s meeting with his cabinet said Starmer plans to “recognise the state of Palestine in September” before the UN’s General Assembly.

However, the Downing Street release clarified this would not happen if “the Israeli government takes substantive steps to end the appalling situation in Gaza, reaches a ceasefire, makes clear there will be no annexation in the West Bank, and commits to a long-term peace process that delivers a Two State Solution.”

The prime minister said neither party will get a veto over whether he decides to recognise Palestine as a state in September.

He also “reiterated that there is no equivalence between Israel and Hamas and that our demands on Hamas remain, that they must release all the hostages, sign up to a ceasefire, accept that they will play no role in the government of Gaza, and disarm.”

It means the UK will become the 148th country to either formally recognise Palestine – or announce its intentions to do so – unless Israel takes action on Gaza.

The decision was announced after the prime minister called his cabinet ministers back to Westminster in the middle of their summer recess to discuss the growing concerns about starvation in Gaza.

The worsening humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory already pushed Starmer’s ally, French president Emmanuel Macron, to announce his own plan to recognise the Palestinian state this autumn.

More than 250 MPs – including some in Labour – have also signed a letter calling on Starmer to follow Macron’s lead.

According to some reports, up to seven cabinet ministers are doing the same.

But the prime minister has, until now, resisted. Ministers have told the press it is a matter of “when, not if” the UK recognises Palestine as a state, but they have refused to offer a clear timeline.

However, Starmer did get Donald Trump’s stamp of approval on Monday to recognise Palestine on Monday.

The US president said: “I’m not going to take a position, I don’t mind him [Starmer] taking a position. I’m looking for getting people fed right now.”

In the readout, the prime minister told his colleagues now was the time to recognise Palestine.

He said: “The increasingly intolerable situation in Gaza and the diminishing prospect of a peace process towards a two state solution, now was the right time to move this position forward.”

Campaigners and charities around the world have repeatedly raised the alarm in recent weeks that mass starvation is taking place in Gaza right now.

There are hopes that by recognising Palestine, there will be more pressure on Israel to end its military offensive and let more aid into the territory.

However, it remains to be seen just how much of an impact this will have on Israel.

The country still has the support of its most powerful ally, the States, although Trump has raised concerns about mass starvation.

Israel has been attacking Gaza since October 7, 2023.

According to the local, Hamas-run health ministry, more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed in the 22 months since the war began.

While tensions between Palestinians and Israelis were already high, they escalated after Hamas militants killed 1,200 people on Israeli soil and took a further 250 hostage.

Some of those captives have been released but 50 remain in Hamas’s hands.

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Is It Accurate To Say Corbyn’s Group Is Now The Biggest Political Party In The UK?

Supporters of Jeremy Corbyn’s new left-wing group have repeatedly claimed that it is now the largest political party in the UK.

As proof, they have enthusiastically pointed to the 500,000 people who have signed up to the group since the Islington North MP announced the party last week.

That is, by any means, a staggering number – but it’s worth remembering one key thing: these are free sign-ups, not paid members.

While the yourparty.uk website does have a page for donations, the homepage promises to “update you on news, activities and ways to get involved” as long as you provide your name, email, phone number and postcode.

Nowhere in the terms and conditions does it say this now means you are a member of the new party.

The group, which is less than a week old, does not appear to have a system set up to deal with membership yet.

But, 500,000 sign-ups undoubtedly suggests a huge amount of interest in the group, even if it does not have an official name yet.

That number also eclipses the number of members who pay to be part of the other main political parties in Westminster.

Labour, for instance, had an estimated 309,000 members as of February this year, according to LabourList.

The standard rate to be a Labour leader is around £5.88 per month.

There are also around 131,00 Tory members, according to the Spectator, and they pay roughly £3.50 a month.

Reform UK charges just over £2 a month but does have different membership options available. The party claims to have 309,000 members.

Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats say they have more than 90,000 members, with the annual fee starting at £15 per year (£1.25 per month).

Novara Media reported that the Green Party has an estimated 65,000 members, with the standard rate of membership costing £5 per month.

However, despite this clear difference between his sign-ups and other party membership, many of Corbyn’s backers have proudly proclaimed the unnamed party to be the largest one in the country already…

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How much screen time is the BBC going to give Jeremy Corbyn now he has more party members than Nigel Farage?

— BladeoftheSun (@BladeoftheS) July 27, 2025

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How much screen time is the BBC going to give Jeremy Corbyn now he has more party members than Nigel Farage?

— BladeoftheSun (@BladeoftheS) July 27, 2025

Some have even suggested the amount of interest in the pro-Gaza group has motivated Labour prime minister Keir Starmer to host an emergency cabinet meeting on the Palestine territory…

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In 72 hours 500,000 have signed up for membership in a new Corbyn/Sultana initiated party.

Cue Starmer calling an emergency cabinet meeting on Gaza. https://t.co/clJxfQLG2S

— Simon Black (@_SimonBlack) July 27, 2025

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In 72 hours 500,000 have signed up for membership in a new Corbyn/Sultana initiated party.

Cue Starmer calling an emergency cabinet meeting on Gaza. https://t.co/clJxfQLG2S

— Simon Black (@_SimonBlack) July 27, 2025