Monday, 6 July 2026

MEME MONDAY #90

Another fairly quiet week as we await the coronation of Burnham.  Distribution was significantly down, which could be due to any number of factors - summer, football, disillusion, the algorithm as set by left-wing technocrats in Dublin and so on.

Mon 29 Jun - 134 shares
Tue 30 Jun - 68 shares
Tue 30 Jun - 49 shares
Thu 2 Jul - 46 shares
Thu 2 Jul - 55 shares
Fri 3 Jul - 229 shares
Sat 4 Jul - 317 shares
Sat 4 Jul - 33 shares
Sun 5 Jul - 3 shares
Sun 5 Jul - 41 shares

Karl didn't produce any Facebook Stories the previous week, but he more than made up for it last week with a record eight editions - six of which are part of his ongoing 'Diversity Is Strength' series.  He also added a new Welsh design, featuring Comrade ap Iorwerth, who is very much a subscriber to the cultural Marxist doctrine.  How exactly the Boat People are going to strengthen the Welsh language and Welsh culture is anyone's guess!





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Thank you.

Sunday, 5 July 2026

ELECTION CORRECTION

In Thursday's election round-up, we incorrectly stated that there were only two by-elections this week.  In actual fact there are a whopping 16 in total.  The error came about because there are two elections taking place on Tuesday - not unheard of, but unusual - and we overlooked the 14 regular elections taking place on Thursday.

Apologies.

As such, an early preview will appear on Tuesday for those two seats, while the same post will expand to incorporate the remainder of the contests as per usual on Thursday.

BOATWATCH #66

After 38 boats carrying 2,601 colonists were picked up over the previous fortnight, last week's figures came crashing back down with just two boats collected.  One was picked up on Sunday and another on Tuesday, each carrying an average of 70 colonists.  Labour can still claim that boat crossings are down compared to their previous two years in office, but things can change rapidly.  The weather is set to be lovely again this week...


Total = 141 (down 858 from previous week)

ENEMY OF THE NATIVES?

If there were any lessons to be learned from the hideous death of Henry Nowak in police handcuffs, it is not being shown on the increasingly lawless streets of Britain.  Multiple videos have been shared online recently showing the police going to great lengths to detain white people, who in two recent instances were the victims of an assault clearly witnessed by the arresting officers.

In the most prominent recent example, a white lad was being attacked by a group of black lads in Birmingham as officers stood just feet away.  The young lad, who was worse for wear, was thrown to the ground by one assailant while another struck him on the back of the head as they fled the scene.  As he quickly gets back on his feet a female officer jumps in and throws him against a shop shutter.  This all happens in the space of three seconds and the lad understandably reacts by throwing his arm out to defend himself as he is completely unaware that his next assailant is a police officer.  She immediately accuses him of having 'punched' her 'in the face'.  He clearly does not do so, as his wild swing does not land.  "I just want to go home" he repeats over and over again, but his fate was already sealed.

As footage of the incident began to circulate, West Midlands Police doubled down and announced they had charged the white lad with assaulting an officer.  They claimed that the men were 'fighting', which is also not true.  They finished their statement by declaring that the actions of their officers was 'reasonable and proportionate', while at no time addressing the fact that the actual offenders had escaped.

Two days later, with the footage now going viral, the force backtracked somewhat and admitted that an assult had taken place and were now making 'active enquiries to identify those involved'.  However, the 20-year-old victim of this assault is due to appear in court later this month to answer the charge of assaulting the officer.  We can only hope that he pleads not guilty and the charge is thrown out, but of course thanks to this Labour government he will no longer have the right to be tried by a jury, so there is a very real chance a judge could send him down.

Shocking.

In another video, a white man is attacked in a London street by a black individual.  Two street wardens move in and detain the white man, even as the black man lands a punch on the man's face that draws blood.  It is not clear what happens after this, as the attacker once again is left at liberty to leave the scene.

On Saturday an equally disturbing video emerged from Leeds, this time relating to speech.

With a Palestine demonstration in progress, one angry local took it upon himself to stage a one man counter-protest.  He is seen shouting towards the marchers while being closely watched by police officers.  Within seconds of mentioning the Prophet Muhammad and Muslims as representative of an 'evil ideology', the officers move in and arrest him.  The shocked man asks why they are detaining him, to which one officer replies that he accused Muhammad of being a 'rapist'.  Since when has it been a crime to accuse a long deceased religious figure of rape?  Does this new 'crime' apply to all religions or just Islam?

The man quite rightly points to the contents of the Quran in his defence.  Islamic texts dictate that the Prophet Muhammad married a nine-year-old girl and shortly thereafter consummated that marriage.

Again, how can this stack up in a British law court?

Watch the video below (two minute watch)


The death of Henry Nowak, combined with all these recent videos, appears to show a pattern of systemic anti-white policing.  In the Birmingham case, the earlier police statement asked members of the public not to share videos of the incident online 'to allow the legal process to take its course'.  Of course they didn't want the video shared, because it clearly showed that the officers had acted improperly, unfairly and with racial bias.

Our advice is thus - if you are caught up in an incident or bear witness to one that involves the police - whip out your phone and start filming with great urgency.  It could save you or some innocent victim prison time.

Marxist-infiltrated systems are delivering a society in which reverse racism is becoming the state-sponsored norm.  Fight back with your devices.

Thursday, 2 July 2026

COUNCIL BY-ELECTIONS 02.07.26


Twelve seats were up for grabs on Thursday - four Conservative defences, two each for Labour and the Lib Dems, one each for Plaid Cymru and a local independent group, plus two free-for-alls.

Labour only contested eight seats this week and the apparent bounce they enjoyed last week on the back of Starmer's resignation was muted at best.  They collected three wooden spoons, which included tallies of just 14 votes in the Cotswolds and 15 votes in mid-Wales.  Their vote share was mostly down, they lost a seat to Reform in Leicestershire and only just held them off for a narrow hold in Shropshire.

Peterhead South & Cruden, Aberdeenshire Council

(first preference votes)

SNP: 741 (36.5%) -10.0%
Ref: 465 (22.9%) New
Con: 431 (21.3%) -20.0%
Ind: 150 (7.4%) New
Ind: 132 (6.5%) New
LDm: 56 (2.8%) -9.4%
SFP: 54 (2.7%) New

SNP GAIN from Con (elected at stage 6)

Triggered by the death of the 65-year-old incumbent, who had been serving as an independent since leaving the Conservatives a year after he was elected in 2022.  The SNP topped the poll here in 2022 on first preferences, with the Conservatives elected in second place and taking up one of the three vacant seats.  Labour and the Greens remain absent from this ward, which helped the SNP to a relatively easy gain, despite a dip in vote share attributable to multiple newcomers in Reform, the Scottish Family Party and two independents.  One of the independents was ex-Tory MP Ross Thomson, who was briefly the member for Aberdeen South from 2017-19.  He couldn't even beat the other independent and finished fifth on first preferences.

Karl - Con HOLD ✘
Rich - SNP GAIN ✔

Horwich North, Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council

Ind: 1,186 (50.0%) +10.8%
Ref: 541 (22.8%) -2.8%
Lab: 343 (14.5%) +3.4%
Grn: 189 (8.0%) -4.1%
Con: 71 (3.0%) -2.3%
LDm: 27 (1.1%) -0.4%
Ind: 13 (0.5%) New

Ind HOLD

An easy defence for local independent group the Horwich and Blackrod First Independents.  The incumbent had been elected under that banner, but later left to serve as an independent independent.  He resigned from the council in May.

Karl - Ind HOLD ✔
Rich - Ind HOLD ✔

Weaver & Cuddington, Cheshire West and Chester Council

Ind: 1,365 (35.7%) New
Con: 974 (25.5%) +3.7%
Ref: 778 (20.3%) New
Lab: 564 (14.7%) -5.8%
LDm: 142 (3.7%) -11.9%

Ind GAIN from Con

Triggered by the resignation of the Tory incumbent due to 'a change in professional and personal circumstances'.  He was elected in 2023, having finished third and taking the third and final available seat.  Independent candidates have finished in first place here since 2019 and that remained the case on Thursday, with the Conservatives closing on them slightly, despite an impressive new entry from Reform.

Karl - Ind GAIN ✔
Rich - Ind GAIN ✔

St Michael's, Cotswold District Council

LDm: 344 (58.4%) -10.0%
Con: 112 (19.0%) -12.5%
Ref: 91 (15.4%) New
Grn: 27 (4.6%) New
Lab: 15 (2.5%) New

LDm HOLD

Three new entries took votes away from the only parties that contested this seat in 2023, but it was a routine hold for the Lib Dems nonetheless.  A change of career led to the resignation of their incumbent, who had a very impressive local government record dating back 15 years to when he was first elected at just 18 years of age.  He was the UK's youngest mayor and was also the council leader for six years.  He simultaneously stood down as a Gloucestershire county councillor, with that by-election also held on Thursday (see Cirencester Park below).

Karl - LDm HOLD ✔
Rich - LDm HOLD ✔

St Leonards & St Ives, Dorset Council

Con: 928 (37.9%) -25.0%
Ref: 823 (33.6%) New
LDm: 629 (25.7%) -11.4%
Grn: 68 (7.8%) +2.8%

Con HOLD

Triggered by the death of the incumbent, who was in his 80s.  He was elected in 2023 as one of two councillors in this ward, as the Conservatives defeated the only other candidates - two Lib Dems.  The victorious candidate this time was the deceased's elderly widow, who finished comfortably ahead of second placed Reform despite a significant swing to the newcomers.

Karl - Con HOLD ✔
Rich - LDm GAIN ✘

Cirencester Park, Gloucestershire County Council

LDm: 1,369 (58.7%) +6.6%
Con: 429 (18.4%) +2.9%
Ref: 366 (15.7%) -5.7%
Grn: 111 (4.8%0 -1.2%
Lab: 59 (2.5%) -2.6%

LDm HOLD

The incumbent was also a Cotswold district councillor (see St Michael's above) and resigned from both seats simultaneously.  He won this seat for the Lib Dems comfortably in 2025 and his successor held with an expanded share of the vote.  Another wooden spoon for Labour.

Karl - LDm HOLD ✔
Rich - LDm HOLD ✔

Lutterworth East, Harborough District Council

Ref: 403 (28.2%) +21.5%
Con: 386 (27.0%) +4.5%
Lab: 271 (19.0%) -13.4%
LDm: 270 (18.9%) -11.6%
Grn: 97 (6.8%) -0.9%

Ref GAIN from Lab

This contest was triggered by the death of the incumbent, aged 79, which had a huge impact on the council.  His passing meant that the Lib Dem-led rainbow coalition was no longer the largest group on the council and the Conservatives wasted no time in raising a motion to dislodge the council leader.  The Lib Dems had been leading a coalition of Labour, Green and one independent councillor as a minority administration.  With Labour losing this seat to Reform, the finely balanced numbers remain in the Tories' favour and they can continue with their own minority administration.  All three of the rainbow parties saw their vote share take a dip here, with Labour plummeting to third.

Karl - Ref GAIN ✔
Rich - LDm GAIN ✘

Glantwymyn, Powys County Council

Pld: 513 (81.8%) -18.2%
Ref: 63 (10.0%) New
Con: 28 (4.5%) New
LDm: 23 (3.7%) New

Pld HOLD

The first of three Powys by-elections triggered by the incumbents having been elected to the Senedd on May 7.  Plaid were elected to this rural ward unopposed in 2022 and it was a routine hold for them on Thursday, despite the presence of three new entries.

Karl - Pld HOLD ✔
Rich - Pld HOLD ✔

Llanyre with Nantmel, Powys County Council

Ref: 359 (41.6%) New
LDm: 226 (26.2%) -20.1%
Con: 210 (24.3%) New
Ind: 51 (5.9%) New
Grn: 18 (2.1%) New

Ref GAIN from Ind

A nice result for Reform in rural Wales, turning a defection into a gain.  The incumbent vacated the seat, having been elected to the Senedd for Reform - but how long she maintains that banner remains to be seen.  She was first elected to this ward in 2017 as a Conservative, before defecting to the Abolish the Welsh Assembly Party in 2020 and standing for that party in the 2021 Senedd election.  By the time she defended her council seat in 2022, she had left Abolish and was elected as an independent.  Her most recent realignment occurred last year when she joined Reform, for whom she now sits in the Senedd.  Her only opponents in the 2022 Powys election were the Lib Dems.

Karl - Ref GAIN ✔
Rich - LDm GAIN ✘

Yscir with Honddu Isaf & Llanddew, Powys County Council

LDm: 297 (39.7%) -1.1%
Ref: 259 (34.6%) New
Pld: 96 (12.8%) New
Con: 68 (9.1%) -50.2%
Grn: 15 (2.0%) New
Lab: 14 (1.9%) New

LDm GAIN from Con

Another vacancy arising from the incumbent being elected to the Senedd for Reform UK.  Elected as a Conservative councillor in 2022, he defected to Reform in 2025.  He won his council seat in a head-to-head with the Lib Dems, but the ballot paper was much more crowded on Thursday.  The Tories ended up slumping to fourth, while Reform went straight in at second and lost out by just 38 votes.

Karl - Ref GAIN ✘
Rich - LDm GAIN ✔

Malinslee & Dawley Bank, Telford and Wrekin Council

Lab: 590 (42.9%) -32.2% Ref: 569 (41.4%) New Con: 104 (7.6%) -10.3% Grn: 76 (5.5%) New LDm: 35 (2.5%) -4.4%

Lab HOLD

A narrow 21 vote hold for Labour as they saw their majority crumble with a colossal swing to Reform.  The incumbent Labour councillor has been the town's MP for the last two years, but unlike Scotland and Wales - where Holyrood and Senedd members are forced to relinquish council roles - there is no such mechanism for Westminster MPs.  He only stood down from the council following his recent appointment as a government whip, and even then only after being 'advised' to do so.  His wife continues to serve as a councillor for the same ward.

Karl - Ref GAIN ✘
Rich - Lab HOLD ✔

Llantarnam, Torfaen County Borough Council

Ref: 505 (42.7%) New Lab: 362 (30.6%) +3.4% Pld: 190 (16.1%) -1.6% Con: 58 (4.9%) New Grn: 49 (4.1%) -6.8%
LDm: 18 (1.5%) New

Ref GAIN from Ind

This week's fourth and final vacancy triggered by the election of the incumbent to the Senedd, again for Reform UK.  And again, the new MS was never elected as a Reform councillor.  The journeyman was initially elected in 2017 as an independent, joined the Conservatives a year later and then quit the party the following year.  He was elected as an independent again in a 2023 by-election, before joining Reform the following year.  Regardless of the incumbent's back and forth, Reform turned this contest into an impressive gain at the first time of asking.  No independents stood this time, while Labour selected a candidate who is barred from social work due to sexual misconduct.  Worrying that he finished a strong second.

Karl - Grn GAIN
Rich - Ref GAIN

Karl led Richey by three points going into week seven, having correctly predicted 29 results from the 54 seats contested since May 7.  Richey has managed to claw a point back, correctly predicting nine results against Karl's eight and moving back up above the 50 per cent accuracy mark.

Tuesday, 30 June 2026

TOON TUESDAY #109

It's all about Andy this week (as he likes it).  There has been a bit of a football theme recently, but this week tennis takes centre stage (or court) with Wimbledon under way.  There's also a welcome return for Peter Brookes' famous depiction of Ed Miliband as Wallace.  Miliband has been mooted as a potential Chancellor of the Exchequer under Burnham.  Gawd help us!

It's fair to say that some cartoonists have yet to get to grips with depicting Burnham.  The usually excellent Ben Jennings has drawn a particularly woeful interpretation, while Brighty's rendering has a whiff of Gordon Brown about it...

Steve Bright for The Sun
Ben Jennings for The Guardian
Graeme Bandeira for The Northern Agenda
Morten Morland for The Times
Ben Jennings for The Guardian
Morten Morland for The Times
Ella Baron for The Guardian
Nick Newman for The Sunday Times
Morten Morland for The Times
Peter Brookes for The Times
Morten Morland for The Sunday Times
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Christian Adams for The Sunday Telegrpah
Morten Morland for The Times
Nick Newman for The Sunday Times
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Denzo on X

BURNHAM'S DEVOLUTION DEATHWISH


If Andy Burnham is to turn Labour's fortunes around, he will have to do things differently.  Starmer's slogan was 'Change' and Burnham will be looking to make changes of his own - primarily changing direction from what he inherits.

In his first big speech on Monday, he drew upon his northern credentials and announced big plans to 'level up'.  Yes, we've heard that before, but Burnham is plotting a radical agenda that includes opening an additional - possibly primary - residence in Manchester.  He has coined this 'Number Ten North', but it is not clear if this will be his main residence or whether he will spend a similar number of working days in Downing Street.

Burnham knows he will have to rebuild the Red Wall if Labour are to stand any chance of winning another general election and wants to be seen as the 'King in the North' who went south and devolved power away from London.

There is a major problem with his plan to devolve power to 'regions' of England.  We have been here before, it is nothing new and it was overwhelmingly rejected the first time around.

Tony Blair immediately set upon a path of dividing the United Kingdom into 'regions' upon his election victory in 1997.  That very same year he narrowly succeeded in devolving powers to Scotland and Wales, by way of two referendums, the latter of which garnered a paper thin majority of less than 8,000 votes and 0.6 per cent.  It was a double win nonetheless, followed a year later by two more successful referendums - one in Northern Ireland that delivered devolution through the Good Friday Agreement and another in London that created the Greater London Authority.  The next stage in the process was always going to be a much harder sell - devolution to a further eight 'regions' of England.

Why was all this important to him?  Because as a globalist Europhile, he was determined to split the UK into regions along the exact same boundaries drawn up by the European Union.  These were the twelve regions that were drawn up in preparation for the 1999 European elections and thereafter - Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, South West England, South East England, London, East of England, East Midlands, West Midlands, Yorkshire (and the Humber), North East England and North West England.

Prior to this election, there were only two entities that returned British MEPs to Brussels - Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

Selling devolution to Scotland and Wales - two distinct national entities on the island of Great Britain - was always going to be an easier sell for Blair (although barely one in four Welsh voters actually voted for devolution).  However, the other main constituent nation of Great Britain would have to be divided up into nine regions.  There was no national pride to which Blair could appeal, seeing as he would essentially be breaking England up into pieces.

Initially, Blair earmarked three northern regions to test the waters - the north east, north west and Yorkshire.  The latter two were dropped, but the north east devolution referendum went ahead, particularly as it was deemed to have the strongest support.  The result was disastrous for Blair and effectively halted his plan.  On a 48 per cent turnout, the north east rejected the proposed regional assembly by a huge margin of 78 per cent against 22 per cent in favour.

The message delivered was loud and clear - the people of England did not want to be broken into pieces with yet another layer of bureaucracy, while centuries old shire counties were consigned to the history bin.

Has this sentiment changed in 22 years?  Highly doubtful, as devolution to the other home nations has only increased a sense of English national identity.

The revival of this devolution plan will be problematic for Burnham, regardless of how he wants to achieve it.  He has not mentioned holding any referendums, but during the same speech declared ominously: "The political direction I set will not be up for negotiation".  If he means to impose devolution without a public vote, that is not going to endear himself to the electorate he desperately needs to get on board.

Monday, 29 June 2026

MEME MONDAY #89

It was momentous week as the inevitable finally caught up with Keir Starmer.  Yes, the week kicked off with the biggest resignation in British politics since the end of Liz Truss's fifty days in the big job.  Both were cut down by their own MPs, with a replacement readily lined up to be crowned PM without so much as a leadership contest.  Burnham's own coronation may not be confirmed just yet, but the likelihood of a challenge is diminishing.

Karl has taken his foot off the gas since returning from a short break and there were no Facebook Stories published last week.  That is set to change this week, but memes may still be few and far between for a wee while.  We do have day jobs and families, and if it weren't for the regular donations of Colleen Evans there is every chance we would have wound this campaign up by now.  Thanks Colleen, you are our rock.

Mon 22 Jun - 98 shares
Mon 22 Jun - 65 shares
Mon 22 Jun - 124 shares
Tue 23 Jun - 12 shares
Tue 23 Jun - 80 shares.  This post generated lots of debate,
with 1.1 million views and over three thousand comments.
The results (as it stands at the time of writing) are:
Leave, no regrets = 16,463
Remain, no regrets = 6,535
Leave, now Remain = 740
Remain, now Leave = 394
Wed 24 Jun - 204 shares.  Most MPs, but Burnham's decapitation of
the dire Starmer will save a few (as will Rupert Lowe)
Thu 25 Jun - 606 shares
Thu 25 Jun - 831 shares
Fri 26 Jun - 7 shares
Sat 27 Jun - 231 shares.  Rumours abound Burnham will call an autumn
election, which could have disastrous consequences and lead to a rainbow
coalition of leftist Hell
Sun 28 Jun - 23 shares.  If you're not on X, supporting Elon and the
proliferation of free speech - you are part of the problem
Sun 28 Jun - 14 shares.  One shy of a thousand, if only there was such a
number to call in this ongoing emergency!

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Thank you.