
The UK’s Looming Technocratic Enslavement
When Tony Blair attempted to bring in digital ID, we did not have a serious border problem; it wasn’t about illegal immigration then, and it isn’t about illegal immigration now.

When Tony Blair attempted to bring in digital ID, we did not have a serious border problem; it wasn’t about illegal immigration then, and it isn’t about illegal immigration now.

The bodies of the slain are not even cold, and yet the pro-Palestine brigade are on the streets of Britain, celebrating their deaths.

Islamist terror chiefs are split over key terms in Trump’s Gaza plan—including disarmament and guarantees for Israel’s withdrawal—saying more time is needed to respond.

Tony Blair had secretly lobbied on behalf of a tech giant that stands to make millions from Labour’s controversial digital ID card scheme.

A transitional administration would be established under a UN mandate.

As the crisis in the Channel deepens, the brains adjacent to the failing, flailing Starmer government present a new strategy document.

The timing of Blair’s attack on the net zero agenda could not have been worse for Labour—or better for Reform.

The Supreme Court was right to rule that a woman is a woman, but its existence continues to derail Britain’s delicate constitution.

“Were this man to have never entered Number 10,” said one migration expert, “I doubt the problem would be as acute as it currently is.”

When will the former UK PM finally butt out of politics and write his memoirs?