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Agitprop at Yaxley Lennon’s latest central London ‘event’

In Uncategorized on May 17, 2026 by kmflett

On Saturday 16th May Yaxley Lennon held another ‘event’ in central London. At the centre of it were far right and fascist politics but elements of it, borrowed from US far right political culture, appeared quite idiosyncratic at best.

The Met Police claimed 60,000 attended ( a Palestinian and anti-racist march elsewhere in central London was far larger) but the Met has trouble telling the truth and has long been unable to count. More seasoned and rational demonstration watchers estimated 35,000, well down from Yaxley Lennon’s last central London effort.

One welcome feature was the presence of a Led By Donkeys truck on the route of the event displaying pro-immigration words and images. Agitprop at its effective best.

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Sunday Times Rich List 2020-2026. So, Farewell then ex-Brewdog founders Martin Dickie & James Watt

In Uncategorized on May 17, 2026 by kmflett

The Sunday Times Rich List 2020-2026. So, Farewell then ex-Brewdog  founders Martin Dickie & James Watt

The media is very bad at history so while the Sunday Times 2026 rich list looks back to 2025 further historical comparison is mostly absent.

I’ve had a look at 2020, just as the pandemic hit

Brewdog’s Martin Dickie was worth £228m and was 537th and James Watt by contrast had £262m and was at 495th on the list.

The Times list in 2020 was more extensive and is now capped at the top 350. Neither Dickie or Watt would have made the 2025 list based on their 2020 performance.

In 2025 James Watt with partner Georgina Toffolo re-entered the list at 304 with an estimated wealth of £425m

Martin Dickie is a re-entry at 317 with an estimated wealth of £398m

Neither appear in the 2026 list. The Sunday Times does not comment on most deletions (some very rich people who previously appeared now live abroad, while Nigel Farage’s benefactor Christopher Harborne, who also appears to live abroad, is a new entry at No.6)

Why Dickie and Watt have disappeared is not clear but it may be that following the sale of Brewdog to Tilray the theoretical value of their stake in the brewer, which was wiped out, has also caused a recalculation of their wealth..

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Sunday Times Rich List 2026. Cheer for the owners of Global Big Beer

In Uncategorized on May 17, 2026 by kmflett

The Sunday Times Rich List for 2026 which estimates the personal wealth of the richest at least notionally UK based people suggests that in global Big Beer the personal fortunes of the owner of Heineken and the part owners of ABInBev are doing very nicely.

Of course both are public companies so the personal wealth of the owners, while interesting, and concerning to many, does not particularly reflect how Heineken and ABInBev are doing

Charlene De Carvalho-Heineken and Michel De Carvalho is fifteenth in the Top 350 with a personal wealth of £10.09bn in 2025 estimated to be £10.215bn in 2026

Meanwhile Alejandro Santiago Domingo and Lady Charlotte Welleseley who are associated with ABInBev have risen from 61st place to 58th place with a personal wealth of £2.661bn in 2025 now standing at £2.74bn

The Earl of Iveagh and the Guinness Family is at 190 down from 186 with wealth of £856m in 2025 down to £807m in 2026. The Earl also owns the Norfolk Estate that supplies the King’s Christmas tree at Sandringham. Guinness itself of course is owned by Diageo but its falling shareprice has impacted the Earl’s fortune.

Big Beer is still very good business, for the owners anyway

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Ambridge Socialist. Is there too much real life in Ambridge?

In Uncategorized on May 17, 2026 by kmflett

The Ambridge Socialist

17th May

Is there too much real life in Ambridge?

This week the Archers has focused on the BRCA gene, the WI and Amber has schooled George on feminism and sexual politics amongst other things. Some have posed the question as to whether there is too much real life in Ambridge? A question perhaps for the Archers Anarchists.

Brian Crisis continues

Adam is continuing to pursue efforts to get control of Home Farm. Now that Ruari has departed elsewhere Brian is home alone. Adam is calling  a special family meeting with a view to purging Brian. There is speculation that Adam may grass Brian to the police for attacking George (even though he didn’t)

Pip & testing times

The moral maze of Ambridge continues as Pip continues to ponder getting a private test for a possible genetic condition. It’s a serious matter of course and its good to see the Archers taking it seriously.

Sport in Ambridge

The BBC is again covering the Sunday cricket in Ambridge. Last Sunday Den Horrobin appeared but his son Brad was too ‘busy’ being the scorer. Erik also put in an appearance and subsequently asked Kirsty to marry him. Clearly she is aware of Leon Rosselson’s Don’t Get Married Girls

In Other News

Carol Tregorran likes marmite toast

Iain has taken over as stand in manager at Grey Gables as Dane has apparently departed (possibly to Coronation St…)

George is flying his drone… & trying to understand what feminism is….

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Yaxley Lennon’s 16th May march again reminds why temperance campaigners have a point

In Uncategorized on May 16, 2026 by kmflett

The photo one of several posted by Stand Up To Racism from the assembly point of Yaxley Lennon’s march.

There is a connection between these marches, consumption of alcohol and other substances, street urination and general yobbish and worse behaviour.

I like a drink (mostly not those that Yaxley Lennon fans seem to like) but the labour movement has long taken a stand on drinking and politics. After the march or meeting is fine, Not before it or during it.

Their morals and ours as it were…

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A day at the women’s cricket in Cardiff

In Uncategorized on May 16, 2026 by kmflett

A day at the women’s cricket

A women’s T20 World  Cup will be underway in England (but not in Wales) from mid-June. It may not get the media headlines it deserves. The quality of the cricket played is likely to be excellent and as with football the women’s game comes with more game and less histrionics.

I wasn’t at the 78th anniversary of the Nakba march in London on 16th May where I might ordinarily have been found because I was attending a one day cricket international between England and New Zealand in Cardiff.

It was a sort of a special day. I’ve been at many games at Sofia Gardens over the last 30 years with my late partner Megan who died at the end of October 2025 aged 67. Saturday was just two days after what would have been her 68th birthday and two weeks before the first anniversary of the last game we both attended there- England v New Zealand (men) on June 1st 2025. The memories as might be expected are fresh.

Also there on Saturday were Megan’s sister Bronwen, her partner Jon and their grown up children Menna and Stefan. Only Stefan and Jon had been at a cricket match before, so it was a new experience for some.

Football, the offside rule and VAR can be baffling but cricket has the DRS and the DL system as well as LBWs and a whole book of Laws (not rules).

It being Cardiff there was rain and it was chilly, although in recent seasons I’ve been at Sofia Gardens, where the stands have little cover, where the sun was too hot to sit in your seat for extended periods.

Fortunately despite persistent drizzle there was enough time to get an outcome  in a reduced overs game with a DL result. In short New Zealand won. Megan and Bronwen’s father Owen was a New Zealander so clearly there were divided loyalties and its easier to support England on an anyone but England basis when you are in the Capital of another country altogether (as the recent Senedd election results reminded)

As above the cricket on display was excellent. It was the final ODI appearance for New Zealand legend Suzie Bates who is (allegedly) retiring although she made a modest contribution here. Lauren Bell bowled well for England but their fielding, ahem, still did not look to be at zeitgeist levels. Agreed it was a damp and slippery surface though.

In short an enjoyable day and also one to remember Megan by, who it must be said would have worked out (as I did) where the game was headed and been off to the dry and the pub a bit earlier than the family group ended up departing. They will of course learn…

Guardian report

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2026/may/16/new-zealand-sink-england-in-rain-hit-clash-to-level-odi-series?CMP=share_btn_url

Raf Nicholson has written the history of women’s cricket in Britain since 1945

Dr Rafaelle Nicholson – Bournemouth University Staff Profile Pages

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Jeremy Corbyn, leadership coups & allotments

In Uncategorized on May 16, 2026 by kmflett

Faction fights and leadership battles on the left can have the most dramatic of consequences. Read Victor Serge’s Midnight in the Century if you are not sure.

Sometimes they seem more melodramatic and quirky than dramatic. The story goes that Roger Protz was dismissed as Editor of Socialist Worker in the early 1970s after a ‘special meeting of the Editorial Board’. Roger may have a different recollection.

Jeremy Corbyn has spoken to the Guardian, who may not be exactly a disinterested player, about the leadership coup against him in the context of current efforts to dislodge Keir Starmer from 10 Downing St.

Typically Jeremy adds an unusual angle, noting that when the attempted (and failed) coup broke on a Sunday he was to be found on his East Finchley allotment and took notes of the rebels in a very specific context

Throughout Sunday, Corbyn took calls and letters from party colleagues telling them that they were leaving his shadow team. There were an unprecedented 21 resignations. “I was sort of ticking them off,” said Corbyn with a dry laugh. “Some were blunt and rude, some pleasant. In the afternoon, I went to the allotment. I got a few resignations in the allotment. I wrote them down and made notes at home: so I could call them the potato rebel, the beetroot rebel. It was a very, very intense period.”

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/may/16/jeremy-corbyn-target-labour-coup-keir-starmer-andy-burnham-wes-streeting-angela-rayner-leadership?CMP=share_btn_url

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Protesting for Palestine & against the far right in London, 16th May 2026

In Uncategorized on May 16, 2026 by kmflett

Credit Dave Smith @daveblacklist

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Keepin on Keepin’ On. 16th May march to mark 78th anniversary of the Nakba

In Uncategorized on May 15, 2026 by kmflett

There have been regular London demonstrations for Palestine and Gaza and against what has become an Israeli genocide since October 2023. They have been regular not weekly and there has been very little in the way of issues. The Met Police reported 7 arrests on 16th May 2025, one for someone attacking a marcher, and six for what appeared to be, at best, minor infractions of the very restrictive conditions the Met imposes on these occasions.

Of course the right-wing media (which is most of it) and many (but not all) politicians hate the idea of marching for Gaza and vary between ignoring a march and condemning it and trying to get it banned.

In fact the BBC completely ignored the 2025 Nakba march(they have reported at least some previous marches) as did most other print media, aside of course from Socialist Worker and the Morning Star

The 16th May 2025 demonstration marked the 77th anniversary of the 1948 Nakba, Israel’s first attempt to force Palestinians out of their own land and homes. A second Nakba is clearly underway. The marches in London have a particular importance because after the First World War Britain had the mandate for Palestine.

The fact that the marches continue, and May 16th 2025 was one of the biggest, reflect serious grassroots opinion and organisation across the country. They call out Israel’s genocidal actions but they are changing the face of British politics and will continue to do so, from below

History is being made on the streets but as Gil Scott-Heron sang the revolution will not be televised and as Michael Rosen wrote recently the genocide and protests against it won’t be televised in any sustained way either.

Despite an increasingly authoritarian approach to the demonstrations, and political interventions by the Metropolitan Police, the march to mark the 78th anniversary of the Nakba will go ahead on 16th March 2026 in central London.

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UK Prime Ministers: length of time in Office 2006-2026. The last 1838 Chartist demand for Annual Parliaments nearly fulfilled

In Uncategorized on May 15, 2026 by kmflett

Keir Starmer is still PM at the moment and so may add more days to his tenure particularly after Arsenal became Premier League champions. He is not a huge outlier looking back over the last 20 years.

One focus of this is a debate about whether Britain is ‘ungovernable’. Another notes a wider crisis. France is on its 7th PM in 10 years, while the quite recently elected German Chancellor Metz is already very unpopular. Politicians may be more or less competent but an underlying crisis of neo-liberalism is underwriting at least some of this.

In historical context the only unfulfilled demand of the Six Points of the People’s Charter (1838) was for Annual Parliaments. In the late nineteenth century the radical demand was modified to an election every two or three years. We are getting there..