Palestine Action

Starmer’s authoritarian turn – with Ash Sarkar

15 min listen

Since the government’s decision to proscribe the group Palestine Action, arrests have mounted across the country, raising questions not only about the group’s tactics but also about the government’s handling of free speech and protest rights. On today’s special edition of Coffee House Shots, Michael Simmons is joined by The Spectator’s James Heale and journalist Ash Sarkar to debate whether this is evidence of an increasingly authoritarian bent to Starmer’s Labour. Has the ban made prosecutions easier, or has it created a chilling effect on freedom of expression? And is this further evidence of the overreach of the attorney-general, Lord Hermer? Also on the podcast, with Keir Starmer’s majority secured

How many organisations are proscribed in the UK?

Mind your manors US Vice-President J.D. Vance is holidaying in an £8,000-a-week manor house near Charlbury in the Cotswolds. What are the other options available on Airbnb or Booking.com for staying in the area for this week (seven nights)? Sunnyside, Charlbury: a four-bedroom terraced Georgian townhouse  £4,847 The Old Chapel, Stonesfield: converted chapel with one double bed    £2,134 The Lamb Inn in Ascott under Wychwood: double room, breakfast included    £1,413 ‘Stay with Flo’ in Charlbury: double bedroom in stone-faced bungalow    £971 Daisy’s Rest, Shipton under Wychwood: shepherd hut with shower     £745 Breaking up the banned Over 400 people were arrested in London at a rally to support Palestine Action, a newly proscribed

Is the Met finally getting tough on pro-Palestine protests?

It was airily pleasant to walk round Parliament Square on Monday morning. I had come up to London to go to parliament and to interview Kemi Badenoch at a Policy Exchange event across the square. Palestine Action had announced a protest march against Donald Trump’s and Israel’s ‘genocide’ for that time. Although the Met had banned it from the area, I had recently witnessed so many ill-contained and threatening protests there – almost all for Palestinian causes – that I fully expected delay, disruption and occasional harassment. This time, however, it turned out that the Met meant business. The protest was well-contained in the designated streets round Trafalgar Square. May