
Ex-UUP councillor and gay rights trailblazer proposed debate on controversial LGBT+ window but was voted down
The ex-UUP representative told the Belfast Telegraph he had no comment to make regarding his current position on the artwork, as he dismissed a TUV complaint about the 'Save Sodomy from Ulster' slogan etched on the glass as 'petty'.

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Rhyl Journal
a day ago
- Rhyl Journal
Cabinet minister calls Corbyn ‘chaotic' after new party launch
Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said that the Islington North MP 'doesn't think about governing, he thinks about posturing' and praised the leadership of Mr Corbyn's successor Sir Keir Starmer. The ex-Labour leader promised a 'new kind of political party' when he launched the as yet unnamed project with Zarah Sultana on Thursday. Asked about the move, Mr Kyle reflected on what he called the 'chaos and instability' of Mr Corbyn's leadership. Speaking on Times Radio, Mr Kyle said: 'He's not a serious politician. He doesn't think about governing, he thinks about posturing. And we see that writ large at the moment, because all the posturing, of course, just puts him at odds with his own supporters, which is why you've got George Galloway saying he won't join it.' It's time for a new kind of political party – one that belongs to you. Sign up at — Jeremy Corbyn (@jeremycorbyn) July 24, 2025 He later added: 'The Labour Party is now led by somebody who has the very clear interest of our country at heart. It is country first, and that's the kind of thing I think people are responding to. 'We see Keir acting incredibly well on the international stage in recent months, tackling some of the big issues facing the world and its economy and he's thrown himself into fixing our public services. I think this is the kind of leadership that people respond to, not that of the chaotic Jeremy Corbyn.' Mr Corbyn said on Friday that '200,000 people have signed up' after Thursday's launch. Wow. In under 24 hours, 200,000 people have signed up to build a real alternative to poverty, inequality and war. Something special is happening – be part of it at — Jeremy Corbyn (@jeremycorbyn) July 25, 2025 The movement has the website with a welcome message saying 'this is your party' – but Ms Sultana said: 'It's not called Your Party.' Mr Corbyn denied on Thursday that the launch had been 'messy'. His statement on X came after Ms Sultana said she was launching the party with Mr Corbyn earlier this month, but the former Labour leader appeared unready to formally announce the move until now. 'It's not messy at all. It's a totally coherent approach,' he told reporters. 'It's democratic, it's grassroots and it's open.' He also said that he and Coventry South MP Ms Sultana are 'working very well together'. Asked why it was him alone doing broadcast media to launch the party, and also asked where Ms Sultana was, he said: 'We're working absolutely together on this. 'She happens to be, as far as I know at this moment, in Coventry. 'I was in touch with her just a few moments ago. So it's all fine. We're working very well together, all of us.'


The Independent
a day ago
- The Independent
Could Jeremy Corbyn's new party actually come to Starmer's rescue?
As you may have noticed, there's been some speculation driven by opinion polling that a 'new, well-organised' Jeremy Corbyn-led party could take as much as 10 per cent to the vote at a general election – and smash Labour's prospects of a second term. I think we need to think that through a bit more. For starters, we have that glorious oxymoron – a 'well-organised' Corbynista party. I think, on the basis of the British left's unsurpassed record for splits, rows, delusion and chaos, we should all recalibrate our expectations to contemplate how a badly organised Corbyn-led party might change the scene. Here, I think the voters might find good reason not to put their faith in the new 'movement, ,such as it is. It seems disconcerting that the putative co-leaders of the organisation, the independent MP Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana – also ex-Labour, and also an independent – seem to be operating almost entirely, well, independently, if you'll pardon the joke. When the party was first launched a few weeks ago, Sultana put out a statement to that effect and declared herself co-leader. This seemed to take Corbyn entirely by surprise, and, according to some possibly mischievous reporting, a bit annoyed. Now this improbable dream team seem to have done it again. Interviewed on television, putting on as cheery a face on the lack of co-ordination as he could, Corbyn declared that he and his colleague were 'all fine" and that 'we're working absolutely together on this'. But he didn't know where she was – possibly in Coventry (where he might like to send her for good) – and they'd been in touch on the phone. What one would give to read the transcript of that. Theoretically, the Corbyn-Sultana, or Sultana-Corbyn, combo would be one of the great dream tickets of our time – the equivalent, for an Arsenal fan such as Jezza, of Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp, or the way Tony Blair and John Prescott balanced the different strands of Labour thinking in the old days. Corbyn would be the elder statesman: experienced, lost two elections in a row, that sort of thing. Sultana, on the other hand, would represent youth, hope, optimism and the certainty of losing many more general elections in future. Let them go forward together! In reality, of course, Corbyn has always had a rather vain streak; he greatly enjoyed being Labour leader and succumbed too easily to the propaganda about him generated by his fanatical army of Corbynistas. He doesn't seem quite as tolerant of dissent as he makes out. If the Sultana-Corbyn partnership is serious about building this new party, then why didn't the pair of them turn up at some big rally, or at least at the same press conference, hand in hand, arm in arm? Political parties, like marriages, are made much more difficult if they're conducted at long distance. The media folk can't fall back on Photoshop or AI to get a shot of the couple together. Maybe, indeed, Corbyn and Sultana are like those other apparently fun double acts who actually hated each other behind the scenes – like Wilfrid Brambell and Harry H Corbett who played Steptoe and Son, in which the old man always frustrated the aspirational ambitions of his offspring. Funnily enough. At the moment, they don't seem to be able to agree on a name – not for the double act, but the party (though 'Steptoe and Daughter' does spring to mind). Sultana had to quickly take to social media to point out that 'Your Party' was just a working title, and the actual name is yet to be decided. I'm wondering whether we might be in this position because she might not be that keen on 'Peace and Justice', which is literally owned by Corbyn (Companies House number 12945855) and was established as his own political vehicle when he was being pushed out of Labour. Sultana might well have ideas of her own about her party. In Pythonesque style, I look forward to the debate at the first party assembly about whether Peace and Justice works as well as Justice and Peace. Card vote on that one, I guess. Anyone on the left with any hopes about this being a properly run, disciplined and, indeed, well-organised party with clear policies and precise messaging should also wince with fear at Corbyn's latest thinking on his locally autonomous, grassroots movement: 'This is going to be community-led, community-based, grassroot-led, this is going to be very different, and you know what? It's going to be fun.' Well, you know what? The people who are going to have the most fun with Your Party are sods like me in the media who'll find it far too easy to satirise. The people who'll have no fun at all are the ones who'll have to live under a Farage government, thanks to this latest bunch of 'splitters', if I can use such a traditional socialistic term. I give it six months before Sultana and Corbyn have both left to start their own parties. Jeremy can have Justice, and Zarah can have Peace – each get half of the remaining membership (Corbynistas Vs Sultanas) and Starmer's Labour Party (and the rest of us) can forget all about them. The net effect, as it happens, may be to discredit Starmer's critics on his left; re-centre the Labour Party away from its fringes; remind disgruntled Labour backbenchers how voting against the government endangers their administration; and halt the rise of the Greens, which had become a natural repository for disgruntled hard leftists. It's unpredictable – but the last thing the country needs is a more anarchic version of the Labour Party, with Jeremy and Zarah being job-share co-prime ministers. Not fun.

South Wales Argus
a day ago
- South Wales Argus
Cabinet minister calls Corbyn ‘chaotic' after new party launch
Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said that the Islington North MP 'doesn't think about governing, he thinks about posturing' and praised the leadership of Mr Corbyn's successor Sir Keir Starmer. The ex-Labour leader promised a 'new kind of political party' when he launched the as yet unnamed project with Zarah Sultana on Thursday. Asked about the move, Mr Kyle reflected on what he called the 'chaos and instability' of Mr Corbyn's leadership. Speaking on Times Radio, Mr Kyle said: 'He's not a serious politician. He doesn't think about governing, he thinks about posturing. And we see that writ large at the moment, because all the posturing, of course, just puts him at odds with his own supporters, which is why you've got George Galloway saying he won't join it.' It's time for a new kind of political party – one that belongs to you. Sign up at — Jeremy Corbyn (@jeremycorbyn) July 24, 2025 He later added: 'The Labour Party is now led by somebody who has the very clear interest of our country at heart. It is country first, and that's the kind of thing I think people are responding to. 'We see Keir acting incredibly well on the international stage in recent months, tackling some of the big issues facing the world and its economy and he's thrown himself into fixing our public services. I think this is the kind of leadership that people respond to, not that of the chaotic Jeremy Corbyn.' Mr Corbyn said on Friday that '200,000 people have signed up' after Thursday's launch. Wow. In under 24 hours, 200,000 people have signed up to build a real alternative to poverty, inequality and war. Something special is happening – be part of it at — Jeremy Corbyn (@jeremycorbyn) July 25, 2025 The movement has the website with a welcome message saying 'this is your party' – but Ms Sultana said: 'It's not called Your Party.' Mr Corbyn denied on Thursday that the launch had been 'messy'. His statement on X came after Ms Sultana said she was launching the party with Mr Corbyn earlier this month, but the former Labour leader appeared unready to formally announce the move until now. 'It's not messy at all. It's a totally coherent approach,' he told reporters. 'It's democratic, it's grassroots and it's open.' He also said that he and Coventry South MP Ms Sultana are 'working very well together'. Asked why it was him alone doing broadcast media to launch the party, and also asked where Ms Sultana was, he said: 'We're working absolutely together on this. 'She happens to be, as far as I know at this moment, in Coventry. 'I was in touch with her just a few moments ago. So it's all fine. We're working very well together, all of us.'