Saturday, August 23, 2025

 

Zarah Sultana on Britain’s new left party: ‘The goal is to change politics forever’


Zarah Sultana MP at nurses strike in London - Jan 2023

First published at NLR Sidecar.

Zarah Sultana is among Britain’s most prominent socialist leaders. Born in Birmingham in 1993, she became politically active in the student movement and later in the upsurge of Corbynism: serving on the national executive of Young Labour, working as a community organiser for the party and eventually running for parliament, where she now represents Coventry South. Her election coincided with the beginning of Keir Starmer’s Labour leadership, which she has long excoriated for its reactionary outlook and petty authoritarianism. Over the past year her profile has increased significantly thanks to her trenchant opposition to the Starmer government’s complicity in the Gaza genocide. Her dissent led to her suspension from the parliamentary party, and since then she has become a standard-bearer for the nascent left alternative: one of the youngest and most popular figures involved in its formation. Sultana has proposed co-leading the new party alongside Corbyn, and is part of a group working on the founding conference this autumn.

Oliver Eagleton spoke to Sultana about the new left party: why it is necessary, what kind of democratic structures it should have, its parliamentary and extra-parliamentary aims, its response to the far right, the case for co-leadership, and how the conference should be organised.

Let’s start with your political trajectory and relationship with the Labour Party. How has it evolved over time? What brought you to the decision to leave earlier this year? Do you think others on the so-called ‘Labour left’ will follow you?

I was formed politically by the War on Terror and the aftermath of the financial crisis. The first time I engaged with parliamentary politics was when the coalition government launched a direct attack on my generation by tripling tuition fees; I was part of the first cohort who had to pay £9,000 per year for higher education. I decided to join Labour at the age of seventeen, because at that time it seemed like there was no other party that could act as a vehicle for change. I never thought it was perfect. My local branch in the West Midlands was controlled by older men who didn’t want young people — especially not young left-wing women — to be involved. When I went to study at Birmingham in 2012, the Labour clubs and societies did nothing other than host talks by right-wing MPs, so I had to find other political outlets.

In my first week of university my dad and I joined a delegation of Labour councillors and activists who went on a trip to the occupied West Bank, and it changed the way I saw myself. I had never previously thought of myself as privileged, but I realised that because of the sheer accident of where I was born and what passport I held, I was treated differently by the Israeli authorities. I watched as they harassed and abused Palestinians and then related to me as a regular human being. I went to Hebron and saw the Jewish-only roads, the communities who were coming under daily attack from settlers and soldiers. All this was hard to fathom. But it was even more confounding that we – our country, our society – were allowing this to happen. So that ignited an internationalism in me: a deep opposition to imperial power, apartheid, settler colonialism and military occupation.

Then when I got involved in the National Union of Students I realised that I wasn’t the only one who felt this way. That’s a really magical moment, when you discover that you’re not alone in your politics. I started campaigning on issues like free education, maintenance grants, anti-racism, housing, Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions. It was only after I graduated, though, that I learned just how broken our social contract was. I really struggled to find work. I would go to the Jobcentre, look through my CV and wonder why, despite my degree and my experience, I didn’t have a place in this economy. And of course I was also saddled with £50,000 worth of debt.

When Jeremy won the Labour leadership election in 2015, my immediate thought was, ‘Oh my god, here is a national political operation that doesn’t hate young people!’ So I threw all my energy into the party’s youth wing. I had already seen Jeremy speaking about the issues that were most important to me — at protests, events, picket lines — which naturally made Labour seem like somewhere I belonged. He set up a Community Organising Unit, with the aim of developing a different type of politics rooted in people’s material concerns, and I went to work for it, which allowed me to organise in my home region: areas like Halesowen, Wolverhampton and Stourbridge, all of which had voted for Brexit. We campaigned on local issues, ran trainings, identified leaders and built community power. From there I had the opportunity to run in the European elections and then in the general election of 2019, which is how I became an MP.

But today we have a very different kind of Labour Party: one that is pursuing austerity, watering down bills on workers’ rights, and actively supporting genocide. I spent months pushing the Starmer government to consider popular policies like taxes on the super-rich, nationalisation of utilities and universal free school meals. I also fought against some of its worst excesses, such as keeping the two-child benefit cap, cutting winter fuel payments and disability benefits, and selling arms to the Israeli war machine. As a result, I was among the group of MPs who had the whip removed last year. When I last spoke to the party’s Chief Whip, he insinuated that I was never going to be readmitted because I had criticised their complicity in Israel’s war crimes. But, contrary to some false reports, they were never going to expel me from the parliamentary party; they were planning on keeping me in permanent limbo. I stood my ground. I told the Chief Whip that the genocide in Palestine was a litmus test — not just for me, but for millions of people across the country — and that it was far more important to me than my political career.

So leaving the party has long been a matter of when, not if. But it was important for me to leave on my own terms, otherwise you give the leadership the ability to control the narrative. I chose to do so on a salient week, when the government decided to target disability benefits and to proscribe Palestine Action. There could be no clearer reflection of where Labour has ended up. Here is a party that wants to impose cuts on some of the most marginalised people in our society in order to please investors. Here is a party that, for the first time in British history, is criminalising a non-violent activist group, using the most repressive parts of the state to protect the profit margins of arms manufacturers. If these aren’t red lines for you, then frankly you don’t have any.

The Labour Party is dead. It has destroyed its principles and its popularity. Some Labour MPs who consider themselves on the left are still clinging to its corpse. They say that by staying in they’ll be able to retain their political influence. My response is simple: you haven’t been able to stop disability cuts, you haven’t been able to stop the flow of arms to a genocidal apartheid state, so where is this influence you’re talking about? There’s no point standing around waiting for a change of leadership while people are dying — not just in Gaza, but also from the poverty in this country. Time to get out, build something new, and invite everyone to join.

For many people of our generation, Corbynism set a paradigm for radical politics. Considering the historical gulf between 2015 and 2025, though, how should we adapt it to the present?

I think we’re in a very different political moment. We have to build on the strengths of Corbynism — its energy, mass appeal and bold policy platform — and we also have to recognise its limitations. It capitulated to the IHRA definition of antisemitism, which famously equates it with anti-Zionism, and which even its lead author Kenneth Stern has now publicly criticised. It triangulated on Brexit, which alienated huge numbers of voters. It abandoned mandatory reselection of MPs for the trigger ballot compromise, keeping many of the party’s undemocratic structures in place. It didn’t make a real effort to channel its mass membership into the labour movement or tenants unions, which would have enriched the party’s social base. When it came under attack from the state and the media, it should have fought back, recognising that these are our class enemies. But instead it was frightened and far too conciliatory. This was a serious mistake. If we’re contesting state power, we’re going to face a major backlash, and we need to have the institutional resilience to withstand it. You cannot give these people an inch.

Between 2015 and 2019 I had friends and colleagues who worked at the top of the Labour Party, and they can tell you that in parts it was a highly dysfunctional working environment with toxicity and bullying — not from Jeremy, but from some people around him. Power was too centralised. This is not what we need for this emerging project. We now have a younger generation that is highly politicised due to the establishment’s disastrous policies on housing, education, employment and war. They are going to demand a seat at the table and the ability to wield actual power, and rightfully so. My vision for the new party is about that kind of active participation, because that’s how I got into politics myself: not by the traditional route of running as a councillor, but through social movements. Everyone has to feel that they’re involved and the organisation has to be representative of wider society. That also means we can’t soft-pedal our anti-racism. Some people want us to focus solely on the ‘economic issues’. But if the politics of class is detached from the politics of race then it is bound to fail — because when our neighbours are being simultaneously targeted for eviction and deportation, that struggle is one and the same.

You’re right that any left project that draws an illusory dividing line between race and class will end up dividing its base, while also degenerating politically. But I also want to ask about how the party should position itself vis-a-vis Reform. Some of its messaging so far has emphasised stopping the far right and beating Farage. I think we can all agree on the necessity of that. But is there a danger that by presenting itself as primarily an anti-fascist party it could divert attention from the government as our principal adversary, or even legitimise Labour as part of some kind of popular front?

I don’t think you have to choose whether to focus on Reform or Labour. You can oppose Farage and spell out what he would do to the country, and you can also attack the government for acting as Reform-lite. Remember that quote by Sivanandan, ‘What Enoch Powell says today, the Conservative Party says tomorrow, and the Labour Party legislates on the day after.’ Unless we challenge this Powellite politics wherever it rears its head, we’re doing a disservice to the people we want to represent. It’s true that we can’t treat the rise of racist nationalism as simply a moral issue; we have to address its structural causes: the way it feeds off the anger and despair in areas that have been devastated by the Westminster consensus. But the right does not have a monopoly on this anger. I’m angry too. We should all be angry when we think about what’s happened to these working-class communities, and we should harness those feelings to make a very clear argument — that the problem is not migrant labour but exploitative landlords, greedy energy companies, privatised services. We don’t have to patronise people and tell them their frustrations are wrong, nor do we have to pander to any kind of nativism. We can be confident in our politics and communicate it through local campaigns and persuasive conversations.

This is a long process; it takes months and even years, especially in places where these arguments aren’t familiar to most people. But there are ways to make them cut through. One is to talk about the kind of society we actually want, and to describe it in detail rather than just sloganeering. What are our long-term goals? More time with our loved ones, more green space, universal childcare, free public transport, not worrying about bills. These are things that Farage and Starmer don’t talk about, so that allows us to contrast our positive vision with their wholly negative one. And then there is always the question: how are we going to pay for this? Well, we can put an end to massive military overspending; we can tax the oil and gas companies; we can reverse the redistribution of wealth from the public to the private sector that has accelerated since Covid. We should pledge to fund free public transport instead of funding forever wars. These are policies that make sense to people. We need to argue for them as aggressively as the right argues for theirs.

That’s a good description of the long-term horizon. What are shorter-term aims of the project?

We’re still at an embryonic stage, but then again we’ve already got more than 700,000 people who have shown interest, so our job at this moment should be to focus on activating our base and articulating who we are — which, incidentally, is why I believe we should call ourselves ‘The Left’, because it’s an unapologetic expression of what we stand for. At the same time we need to be recruiting from across the country, in areas that don’t have the same levels of political activity that London does. We’ve seen a huge amount of interest in the North West and the North East, which is very exciting, and of course I’d like to see more people involved in the West Midlands. My view is that there should also be a high degree of autonomy for Scotland and Wales. A lot of unofficial local groups have also been springing up since we announced the party, but we will be formalising our structures at the upcoming conference. The overall party structure has to be unitary, otherwise it won’t be a cohesive project that unites the existing spectrum of movements and struggles. A federation will not be as able to galvanise people or go on the offensive; it could end up being little more than a loose collection of different groups rather than a powerful, united bloc.

In order to establish all this we need to have a fully democratic conference. This relies on a few different things. First, it can’t be led by just MPs. Right now there are six of us MPs in the Independent Alliance, five of whom are men. This shouldn’t be what our party looks like going forward, so the committee that’s organising the conference should be gender balanced as well as racially and regionally diverse, all with an equal stake and voting rights. Anything less would be a boys’ club. Second, those who participate in our inaugural conference have to take part meaningfully, and that can only mean One Member One Vote. There should be an accessible venue, as well as a hybrid aspect with low barriers to entry. We should be striving for mass participation, as opposed to a narrow delegate structure which could be unrepresentative of our base. And finally, we should have a genuine forum for debate and discussion, not a situation where decisions are made by an executive team and rubber stamped by everyone else.

All this is vital, because unless we have the right internal democratic processes from the outset it will be much more difficult for the party to act as a catalyst for any broader form of democratisation; whereas if we organise an open and pluralistic conference, we will have already broken the conventions of British politics, which is a first step on the road to reshaping them. We can then establish not only a platform that speaks to people’s everyday concerns, but also a major campaigning presence across the country. We don’t just want electoralism — we want a project that’s tied in to tenants unions, labour organising, the fight to defend the NHS from privatisation and the Palestine solidarity movement.

To campaign effectively on all these fronts we need to make a clear set of demands. Think of Zohran Mamdani in New York; even many of us here in Britain know what his main pledges are. He has expressed them so that everyone can understand them, and they resonate on a level far deeper than most political discourse. If we start to do this then we’ll realise we don’t have to be beholden to the archaic traditions of Westminster, which are designed to make politics exclusionary.

One of the issues we’ve discussed in this series so far is the balance between popular and parliamentary power. Some have argued that the new party should be a lever for popular mobilisation, whose main role is to strengthen or create working-class institutions as a prerequisite for future electoral campaigns. Others say that the priority is to create a prominent parliamentary bloc that can make effective interventions and win elections — which, in turn, will have a spontaneously energising effect on working-class civic life. Where do you stand in this debate?

It’s a false binary. I see my job in Westminster as a bridge between social movements, trade unions and parliament. The progressive laws that we now take for granted — workers’ protections, maternity leave, the weekend, even the right to vote — only came about because MPs were forced to respond to wider pressures. The struggles that forced these concessions often get erased from history. Today we see Labour MPs showing support for ‘women’s rights’ by wearing suffragette sashes while at the same time voting to proscribe Palestine Action. We shouldn’t follow their lead by acting as if there’s some necessary gulf between the realms of popular and parliamentary power. A party that only cares about elections will be irrelevant outside of an election cycle. And a party that ignores parliament will create a vacuum that will inevitably be taken up by the far right.

What I want — and I struggle to see how a successful left party could be set up in any other way — is a campaigning, social-movement orientation combined with a robust parliamentary presence: a situation where our MPs are on the frontlines of strike actions and anti-fascist mobilisations. If you focus entirely on parliament rather than building wider capacity, that’s a very short-termist approach, because what happens when those MPs are attacked by the establishment? What happens if they lose their seats or they retire? You need to build the social infrastructure that will support them in office and identify new leaders to replace them. It’s that kind of community power that sustains socialist politicians and holds them to account. Without that, you either get capitulation, or you get a left that’s dominated by a few figureheads at the top, which makes it formally indistinguishable from every other party.

The thing is, people recognise when politicians are inauthentic, when they have no connection to a popular base. They see through it immediately. Whereas when you’re the kind of politician like Jeremy or John McDonnell or Diane Abbott, whose authority is deeply rooted in community struggles, you have a very distinct profile, and you can make much more meaningful gains.

When it comes to certain strategic decisions, however, there might be some binary choices. For example, should the party set up its own community organising unit, like the one you used to work for, or should it leave community organising to the communities?

In theory, I love the idea of having mass community organising as part of the DNA of the party. There are people who are already doing the everyday work of making sure that no one in their community goes hungry, or that the far right cannot attack asylum hotels. The new party should be finding those people — who don’t necessarily fit the traditional notions of a political leader — and getting them involved, asking them to shape the organisation, cultivating them for positions of authority. But should this take the form of a community organising unit such as we had in the Labour Party? Here I think there are certain limitations. In my experience, the COU didn’t always get the victories that it deserved, partly because when this kind of community work is attached to a party it immediately comes with certain connotations, which might be off-putting to those who are understandably fed up with party politics. We also had situations where the COU came into conflict with other parts of the Labour Party, for example when councils weren’t paying their workers a fair wage. I’m not saying this would happen with the new project, but there’s always the danger that when a national party is doing a range of different organising activities they may not fit together perfectly and tensions may arise.

Community organising would be more effective if, rather than being run by a specific unit, it becomes an ingrained practice across the party — in how we run meetings, training sessions, canvassing and campaigns. The role of the party could be to develop this kind of mass political culture: to make it second-nature for people to engage in politics at ground level, so that they would go and set up tenants unions, book clubs, anti-raids groups, or whatever else would meet their local needs. That way, the party would play a role in stimulating popular struggles without having to manage and control them. Political education would be a vital part of that: translating people’s instinctive sense of what’s wrong with society into a radical outlook. If we got half the people who’ve signed up as supporters into political education, the effects would be transformative. It’s impossible to predict where that would lead.

That’s interesting. So the party wouldn’t necessarily be tasked with forming these institutions, but nor would it assume that they will just spring up spontaneously. It would instead use its local democratic structures and education initiatives to create the political culture that would spur people to get active. One thing that’s certain to militate against all this is needless factionalism. What of the divisions that have beset the project so far?

After I announced my resignation and intention to co-lead the founding of a new left party with Jeremy, the leaks against me were almost instantaneous. A small number of people who are involved in the party have engaged in anonymous briefings, making hostile and implicitly Islamophobic comments about me to the Sunday Times and Sky News. This behaviour is absolutely unacceptable in any context, but especially one in which we’re trying to create a new political culture. People who are supposedly on the left thinking it’s appropriate to use the Murdoch press to broadcast smears is astounding. This is the very same media class who tried to destroy Jeremy’s reputation and the politics he represents. There is no space for that in what we’re building. We all understand comradely disagreement, but it’s different when you cross class lines for the sake of factionalism and psychodrama. The members don’t want that; it’s a major turn-off for them. I personally have no time for this type of bullying and intimidation, and I’m not going to let it sabotage a project that’s much bigger than all of us. We have fascism growling at the door; egos have no place in this fight.

A devil’s advocate argument against a fully member-led party model might go something like the following. Because we don’t yet have a mass political culture, many people who want to be politically active don’t know quite what that would entail. They might therefore want to have their energies directed, rather than doing all the directing themselves. The absence of mass politics also means that the organised left consists of various relatively small groups with their own distinct priorities, which will be difficult to bring together in a unified structure without intervention from above. And there is also the related risk that some of these priorities might not be particularly representative of society at large. What would you say to this?

If we follow that argument we’ll just replicate the problems with every single other political party: top-down control, unaccountable decision-making, internal bickering, jobs handed out to mates. I find the case against member-led democracy bizarre given that our entire aim is to empower people. You simply cannot do this without getting people involved and giving them ownership over the policies, strategy and leadership. This will inevitably result in some difficult situations, with various positions and perspectives coming up against one another, but that’s to be expected. If there are certain issues where we can’t convince a majority, then we can’t just circumvent or ignore them; that would be an abdication of political responsibility. Instead we have to work harder. I have no qualms, for instance, about advocating a resolutely anti-racist and pro-trans socialist programme, even if parts of that sounds contentious to some people. It’s only by having these discussions out in the open and through the proper channels that we can create something that looks fundamentally different, feels fundamentally different, to the other Westminster parties. If that’s not the aim, what are we doing here?

While we’re on the subject of the other parties, what is your view on electoral alliances?

I’m open to electoral alliances, with the caveat that this would have to be supported by the members. In general, I think we should be willing to work with anyone who will help us beat the right and the establishment. We need to be pragmatic, especially as long as we’re working within the first-past-the-post system, although winning electoral reform should be an objective as well. But at this point it would be premature to start carving up the constituencies — deciding where we should run, where we might stand aside — when we haven’t yet understood the full extent of what we’re building. Until we’ve actually created the party, and gotten a sense of its capabilities and its limits, we can’t do that in any detail. It’s going to be four years until the next general election. We first have to develop the party’s structures, and then the negotiations about that kind of strategy will come later if the members approve them.

What are the benefits of a co-leadership model, with you and Corbyn at the helm?

If we have more voices at the top, if we avoid concentrating power in one pair of hands, then we will be more representative of our movement and more accountable to it. It’s no small thing to start a new party, there’s a lot to be done and we need to share the work. So it seems natural that two people with the same values and principles, and the same belief in the project, should do it together. We have a lot to learn from each other; I’m always learning from Jeremy and I’d like to think there are insights I can offer him as well. A co-leadership with equal powers would mean that neither of us is a tokenistic figure. It would also allow us to take what is often just a liberal soundbite about ‘more women in leadership roles’ and make it a reality, undermining the prejudices that usually hold young women back: not serious enough, too inexperienced, and so on. People are already hugely excited about this idea and they’ve been getting in touch in vast numbers. It’s not about shying away from strong leadership, but about doubling its strength.

What can supporters do ahead of the conference? How can they be most useful?

Mass recruitment is crucial. We will need to organise events in the run up to the conference to enthuse supporters and recruit more people. One of the best parts of Corbynism was the rallies and the music and the performances. We need to get that back. What we need is a politics of fun and joy. We’re not interested in meetings where everyone’s got a point of order and they talk for twenty minutes each. Do you think the sixteen year-olds who are soon to get the vote will want to sit through that? The new project should engage that generation by embedding itself in mass culture. We’ve already seen musicians, artists, actors lining up to get involved. Jade Thirlwall has been supportive, so has Amiee Lou Wood and Ambika Mod — people in that younger age bracket who are in touch with popular sentiment and who know how far removed it is from the decaying politics of the establishment. We must do politics differently and that’s not a cliche, but a prerequisite for this party.

The goal is to change politics forever. When we have a government abetting genocide and waging war on its own citizens, and a far right gearing up to enter Downing Street, we can’t deny the urgency. So I am ready to give everything to this fight. That’s what I owe to my community and to my class. Now’s the moment.

 Making it Official: Famine Strikes Gaza City

History shows that famines are, for the most part, engineered. Be it through carelessness, selfishness or plain malice on the part of officialdom, creating the circumstances under which a population expires to hunger is a matter of construction. As the economist and Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen so powerfully showed in Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation (1981), the focus on the cause of famines should be less on the food supply and more on the economic, social and political factors surrounding them. Food prices might severely spike. Food distribution systems can fail. Certain groups in society may lose their means of employment, thereby preventing them from purchasing essential foodstuffs.

In Gaza, the conditions of famine have been in the making for months. From March, when the Netanyahu government purposely halted all food from entering Gaza, only to ease the blockade in May through a handful of food distribution points murderously overseen by the Israeli Defense Forces and the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the only question was when that ghastly outcome would be realised. “As was the case for the UK government in Ireland in the 1840s and Bengal in the 1940s, Israel is responsible for this famine because it controls almost all the Gaza strip and its borders,” writes Ilan Noy, an expert on the economics of disasters and climate change. “But Israel has also created the conditions for the famine.”

By the end of July, the New York Times, citing data from the Gaza Governorate Chamber of Commerce and Industry, listed a number of basic food items that had become obscenely priced: sugar, costing $106 per kilogram, as opposed to 89 cents prior to the war; flour, costing $12 per kilogram compared with the pre-war price of 42 cents; and tomatoes: $30 per kilogram, a shocking increase from the pre-war level of 59 cents. Hebrew University academic and economic historian Yanni Spitzer, casting his eye over the soaring food prices, observed that the situation had shifted from the start of the war, given the testimonies coming from the Strip.

On August 22, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) Famine Review Committee (FRC) published a report claiming that 514,000 people – a roughly a quarter of Gaza’s population – faced famine conditions for the period July 1 to August 15, described in technical terms as IPC Phase 5. The body defines IPC 5 as “the highest phase of the IPC Acute Food Insecurity Scale, and is attributed when an area has at least 20% of households facing an extreme lack of food, at least 30% of children suffering from acute malnutrition, and two people for every 10,000 dying each day due to outright starvation or to the interaction of malnutrition and disease.” The Committee was satisfied that reasonable evidence was available showing that the IPC Phase 5 conditions were affecting the Gaza Governorate. It also concluded that “the severity of conditions in North Gaza similar or worse than in Gaza Governorate”, though refrained from an official classification given “limited evidence on the population in this area”.

The IPC report is also adamant that the central and southern regions, comprising the governorates of Deir al-Balah and Khan Younis, will face the same level of catastrophic food insecurity next month, taking the number to over 640,000. A further 1.14 million in the territory will be in an Emergency (IPC Phase 4) state, with a further 396,000 people facing Crisis (IPC Phase 3) conditions. “The time for debate and hesitation,” urge the authors, “has passed, starvation is present and is rapidly spreading.” Any further delays to reverse this “entirely made-made” famine “will result in a totally unacceptable escalation of Famine-related mortality.”

In keeping with other famine-inducing authorities in the past, COGAT, Israel’s military arm responsible for overseeing the distribution of aid, offers a thin gruel of denial. The report was, COGAT thundered in its published response, “false and relies on partial, biased data and superficial information originating from Hamas, a terrorist organization, often laundered through organizations with vested interests.” The IPC, in any case, could not be trusted, ignoring Israel’s own information and repeatedly providing “inaccurate” assessments that failed to “reflect the reality on the ground.”

One could only express awe at the unflinching mendacity of the following statements: “The report disregards the fact that in recent weeks we have advanced significant efforts and that the overall trend has shifted”; “Since the start of the war, and specifically over the past several months, COGAT, in cooperation with other Israeli authorities and international partners, has implemented an extensive humanitarian operation in the Gaza Strip.” There had also been “a sharp decline in the prices of food, which plummeted in the markets.” Even as this is happening, however, a convenient culprit always looms large: “Hamas has not ceased its attempts to exploit humanitarian aid for its own military buildup.”

Be it willed ignorance or sinister motivation, Israel’s official response sidesteps the fundamental problem: the issue was always whether food would be allowed to reach a hungry Palestinian civilian population through unabridged humanitarian channels. Given the complete blockade of March and the choking, murderous points of food distribution set up in Gaza after May, the answer is all too clear in its grimness. As Forensic Architecture and the World Peace Foundation (WPF) plausibly contend, “Israel has effectively dismantled the existing ‘civilian model’ of aid distribution” long used and accepted in favour of a “military model”. This suggested a pattern, one positively crying out for judicial scrutiny and international sanctions.

Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne. Email: bkampmark@gmail.comRead other articles by Binoy.

The Case Against a Military Intervention toStop the Gaza Genocide


Have you read “The Case for Military Intervention to Stop the Gaza Genocide“? I don’t mind promoting it to you, since I agree with most of it (and also consider most of it to do absolutely nothing to advance any case for military intervention to stop the Gaza genocide).

The enormous problem we face is not the people who care enough and are desperate enough to make this misguided proposal. The enormous problem is the usual one: corrupt, evil, malfunctioning, and sadistic governments abetted by great masses of people too busy, distracted, ignorant, or uncaring to try anything at all.

The first eight pages of 23 in the document linked above simply tell us that there is a genocide happening and that nothing thus far has worked to stop it. On this there can be no dispute, and anyone unaware or unengaged should immediately read those eight pages five times.

The next two pages claim that a “military intervention” would be legal. While I think the rule of law is extremely valuable, and while I believe there is nothing doing more to tear down and degrade the rule of law than this livestreamed genocide, let me be the first to admit that I would be happy to back a strategically wise proposal to end the genocide regardless of whether it were legal or not. That being said, these two pages do not make a serious case for the legality of military action — much less the strategic wisdom of it.

There are three legalistic claims made. One is that the Genocide Convention obliges national governments to act to prevent genocide. Agreed, but it directs those governments to the United Nations and to the International Court of Justice. Those institutions have, of course, miserably failed to halt the genocide, but they are the only recourses to be found in the words of the Genocide Convention.

The second claim is that the Responsibility to Protect doctrine envisions military intervention. Yes, well, television pundits also envision military interventions all the time. That does not make them legal. The notion that the United Nations can create a “doctrine” in gross violation of the United Nations Charter and thereby legalize wars in places like Libya or Syria was once roundly condemned by many of the very same people now making that very claim in this document. They were right the first time and are now strengthening an extremely dangerous idea that they will come to regret.

The third claim is on behalf of “customary international law and interpretations of humanitarian intervention” — in other words, what governments have done and gotten away with. The paper sends you to an end note for examples, but when you get there, you merely find this: ” See historical precedents where states intervened despite Security Council deadlock, citing practice supporting moral–legal duties to stop mass atrocities.” Yes, well, I came to the end notes to see those and there were none there, possibly because such “interventions” in places like Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Libya, Pakistan, Somalia, and so on by the dozens have been consistent disasters and moral outrages.

Later, there’s a FAQ concluding the paper where the authors claim that a “military intervention” is not a war and therefore not a problem for all the laws — such as the UN Charter — that forbid war. This strict agreement with Pentagon propaganda is a recipe for countless wars by another name.

On the next page, the case for militarism authors lay out what they hope to accomplish — but not why armed conflict is the most likely way to accomplish any of it. Then they turn, in fact in the main text of the document, to examples of what they have in mind. The examples are: the Korean War, the Suez Crisis, the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia, NATO’s war on Kosovo, a French operation in Rwanda, the Gulf War, the war in Bosnia, and the war on Libya. Seriously? Even if the point is a technical one (there have been lots of these wars, so let’s have another and it will be totally different from these other ones) shouldn’t we notice what universally accepted disasters most or all of these have been — or at least disasters recognized by most of the people most concerned and active to halt the genocide in Palestine? It’s one thing to note that NATO claimed to be acting on humanitarian grounds in Kosovo. It’s quite another to omit what NATO actually did in Kosovo: bombed civilians, created ethnic cleansing, established a permanent occupation and training ground, and created a propaganda precedent for lots more “interventions.”

Next we get a couple of more pages on the indisputable need to do something, and three pages quoting a handful of people who support the proposal or something similar — or maybe they don’t actually support it. Some of the quotes support “an independent protection mechanism” or “a protective presence” etc., which may or may not mean the same thing as “military intervention”. Some of the quotes use the phrase “protection force,” but one of the people quoted saying that has told me explicitly and repeatedly that he in fact takes no position at all on whether a “protection force” should be armed or not. Yet here he is in a quote taking up a quarter of a page supposedly making the case for militarism.

So, there is very little of a case for anything made in this paper. If there were, it would be for something arguably illegal and hugely damaging to the rule of law. If it were legal, it would remain an extremely dangerous precedent, and would also be likely to result in catastrophic failure. Going to war with Israel — and you do not “enforce a no-fly zone over Gaza” without going to war with Israel (and you do not wage war in 2025 without slaughtering all types of people in the area) means going to war with (and possibly as) a nuclear-armed military, a military under a prime minister already inclined toward escalation and wider war if anyone can help him get it, and — in addition — Israel’s red, white, and blue sugar daddy across the Atlantic. This has the potential to slide Palestine ahead of Ukraine as the leading risk of swift planetary apocalypse.

But here’s the key question. What the bloody hell would I recommend instead? I would recommend two types of things, both difficult and with no guarantee of success, but with a significant chance of success. One type of thing is stuff that has not been tried yet. The other is vastly more of stuff that has been tried for years now. The war-as-last-resort crowd always rely on the notion that even a token effort, much less a major one, at something other than war makes war the only option. We’re about to hear, for example, that peace negotiations have been tried and failed for Ukraine, even as neither side proposed to ever compromise in the slightest and the neutral arbiter in the White House promised to keep the weapons flowing to one side. People have made heroic efforts for peace in Gaza. People are exhausted from all those efforts. But some of those efforts have worked and could be multiplied a-thousand-fold. Countries and companies have been forced to divest and to stop arming Israel, and more could be. Media outlets have been forced to convey bits of reality, and public opinion has swung dramatically. These facts do not make up a rosy, happy, hopeful picture. They’re sad little semi-wins for a team having a record-bad season. But they are what you can build on. If one dock can block shipments, all docks can. If one pundit can recognize a genocide years too late, all can. If one government can BDS Israel and its suppliers, all can. If a few aid ships can be sent, hundreds can. If some governments can commit to arresting Netanyahu, more can. Nobody’s proposing we give up on the climate struggle and join the people shooting guns at storms; and that struggle has been going a lot longer than this one.

But what hasn’t been tried yet? Of the thousands of tactics of nonviolent activism, most have of course not been tried. But the key tool especially relevant here is UNARMED civilian defense. Here is a leading expert proposing just that. Please read his proposal carefully. One minor point: he quotes Francesca Albanese at greater length than does the pro-militarism paper discussed above, which claims without evidence that she supports “military intervention.”

Here is a collection of resources and success stories for those unfamiliar with the general idea of unarmed defense.

Has exactly what is needed here been done before with Unarmed Civilian Defense? No. But it has not yet been tried here either. War is NOT the last resort. Unarmed action builds on a stronger success record than armed “interventions” or armed “peacekeeping.” It also has the following interesting advantage over “military intervention.” The more we put into unarmed civilian defense, the more likely it is to succeed (right up to the extreme in which millions of people are involved and success is guaranteed), whereas the more we put into escalating the war with an “intervention,” the more likely the war is to do more damage (right up to the extreme of killing all life on Earth).

David Swanson is an author, activist, journalist, and radio host. He is director of WorldBeyondWar.org and campaign coordinator for RootsAction.org. Swanson's books include War Is A Lie. He blogs at DavidSwanson.org and War Is a Crime.org. He hosts Talk Nation Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @davidcnswanson and FaceBookRead other articles by David.

Black Power Move


In late August 1968, one of the largest military protests in American history took place at Fort Hood in Central Texas. You’ve never heard of it.

Why?

The year before, on April 4, 1967, Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke out for the first time against the Vietnam War. He was assassinated one year to the day later. Just three weeks after MLK was assassinated, World Heavyweight Boxing Champion Mohammad Ali appeared in Houston, Texas, before a Vietnam War draft board. He was called for induction four times, but refused to answer his summons. He was immediately arrested and stripped of his boxing titles.

Fifty-seven years ago on August 23, Black soldiers staged a peaceful protest at Fort Hood—but not against taking up arms in Southeast Asia; they refused to take up arms against American citizens. You’ve never heard of them because political pundits and the American military didn’t want you to. The Vietnam War was fiasco enough, and the powers that be largely squelched coverage of the protest.

After Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated on April 4, 1968, thousands of Fort Hood troops were sent to Chicago for riot control duty. A number of Black civilians were killed.

In mid-August 1968, another large group of soldiers stationed at Fort Hood was scheduled to return to Chicago in late August to control potential rioters at the Democratic National Convention. At midnight on Friday, August 23,1968, sixty Black troops staged a nonviolent sit-in on base to protest their deployment to Chicago. The majority of these Black soldiers were uncomfortable with being placed in situation where they might be asked to “police” other Black Americans. Several of the demonstrators said they had grown up in low-income neighborhoods and could empathize with the folks in those areas who might feel civil unrest was necessary. At 5 a.m. that morning, the division commander and members of his staff met with the protesters and discussed their grievances. Seventeen of the demonstrators got up and left, but forty-three continued to protest. The protesters were placed in the Fort Hood stockade for failing to report for morning reveille.

The protesting soldiers became known as the “Fort Hood 43,” and their refusal to deploy to Chicago for riot-control duties was one of the largest acts of dissent in the annals of United States military history. Over the next few weeks and months, a number of the Fort Hood 43 were court-martialed and punished, receiving sentences of three to six months of hard labor, a partial forfeiture of their wages and reductions of rank.

For the last six decades there has been much made about the hippie movement and white Vietnam War protests. But, arguably, a disproportionate amount of the most significant activist stances involved young black men. And we have drifted into comparably grave straits.

President Trump and his legion of cretinous nimrods have turned the nation into a ludicrous gameshow, and three-quarters of the country is knackered or deeply despondent. Mortgage rates are approaching adult male shoe sizes, masked federal agents are goose-stepping over civil rights, prominent politicos are spread-eagle or face-down (and lubed) passing Big Beautiful Bills and crapping away their last remnants of human decency, moral compass and political conscience. There’s nothing bonny about Donny, and anyone half-awake is on edge or ready to crawl out onto a ledge (or simply devoid of humanity altogether).

Something has to give, or at least give us an excuse for not thinking about our vile betrayal at the ballot box, and the fatuous, sausage-vat we elected to the highest office on the planet.

We need a distraction.

We need a reason to ignore our staggering cluelessness and somehow take our minds off the dumpy cunt (thanks, Jim Jefferies) that flatulates across our eye- and ear-waves every day in increasing states of derelict flamboyance and inane kakistocracy.

Enter Blandman.

Or, in this case, bland men.

Or, even better said, whole leagues of bland men, addicted to pro, college and high school football.

Nothing brings hand-wringers and mouth-breathers together like football season.

There’s nothing important or relevant about American football, football players or football games in the current moment, but they give us a great escape from our election-day belligerence and the blithering of our titty-baby ignoranus-in-chief. We can pour ourselves into the “big” game, join fantasy football leagues, gamble big, or gamble small (on quarter-by-quarter football pools). We can forget about nepo Einstein visas, porn star payoffs, pissing parties, and Donny’s predatorial behavior around prepubescents. We can tune out Ukraine and Gaza, tranny terror, 10-Commandment commandants, asinine tariffs, and the Kennedy Center Commode Awards.

But who does this sanity-saving distraction ride largely on the backs of?

Young Black men.

It’s certainly not fair to put young Black men on the spot, here—they’re not treated very well or trusted, especially if they aren’t carrying, catching, or cradling a pigskin, but.

Paul Robeson

What would happen if young Black men became more Paul Robeson, or collectively pulled a Muhammad Ali, denying us our beloved distractions? And not just taking a knee, but actually refusing to play … at the pro, college and high school level? What would happen if young Black men went all Fort Hood 43?

That’s easy.

The January 6 insurrection would be a footnote compared to the “Football Riots.”

President Donny would be out of office in 60 days.

And fascist goons like Greg Abbott would be unceremoniously dumped headfirst in a downtown Austin port-a-poddy—by conservative Longhorn boosters themselves.

$13M decision in B.C. pre-sale condo case overturned on appeal

By Lisa Steacy
Published: August 19, 2025 

A rendering of the PRIMA development in Richmond, B.C., is shown in this image. 
(Credit: liveatprima.com)

A decision ordering a developer to pay pre-sale condo buyers more than $13 million in damages for breach of contract has been overturned on appeal, with the high court dismissing the case entirely.

More than 30 people who made deposits on condos at what was then called the ALFA development in 2015 and 2016 sued Anderson Square Holdings Ltd., alleging breach of contract.

The pre-sale purchasers had their contracts terminated by the developer in July of 2019, with the developer citing a legal dispute with contractors and an inability to secure financing. But the units would ultimately be sold – at higher prices – roughly two years later, albeit under the name “PRIMA,” according to a B.C. Supreme Court decision handed down last year.

The buyers’ claim was, essentially, that the developer had no right to terminate the contract when it did. The $13,093,900 in damages awarded represented the difference between what the pre-sale buyers paid for their units and what the condos were valued at when the buyers “repudiated” their contracts by accepting the return of their deposits in August of 2021, according to the 2024 decision.

Anderson Square Holdings Ltd. appealed the decision, claiming the lower court judge “erred” in interpreting crucial clauses in the contract. The developer argued it was “entitled to terminate the contract” when it became clear construction would not be completed by Sept. 30, 2019, and the three-judge appeal court panel unanimously agreed.


Although the appeal court found the clause in question was “inherently unclear and ambiguous” and “poorly worded,” the judges determined it gave the developers the right to terminate the agreement without the written consent of the pre-sale buyers in the event the project could not be completed by the specified date, if the circumstances were beyond its “reasonable control.”

The court rejected the pre-sale buyers’ argument that the contract remained in effect even without their written consent, saying the result of that interpretation would have “commercially absurd” results.

“That interpretation would mean that if there were blameless delay, the contract would remain on foot for the duration of the delay, unless the parties agreed otherwise,” the decision said.

“The parties would be automatically locked in for the full extent of the period of blameless delay in construction. Such delay could be indefinite, leaving the purchasers’ investments trapped in the project as the vendor works to complete construction.”

Finding the lower court judge erred in interpreting the contract, the appeal was allowed and the case dismissed.


Lisa Steacy

CTVNewsVancouver.ca Journalist
Google to provide Gemini AI tools to U.S. government

By AFP
August 21, 2025 

The Google DeepMind website on a laptop computer arranged in New York, US, on Friday, Dec. 8, 2023. Alphabet's Google said Gemini is its largest, most capable and flexible AI model to date, replacing PaLM 2, released in May. 
Photographer: Gabby Jones/Bloomberg 

Google will provide its Gemini artificial intelligence tools to U.S. federal agencies practically free, the government announced Thursday.

A suite of AI and cloud computing services called “Gemini for Government” from Google is intended to speed the adoption of the technology across the U.S. government, the General Services Administration (GSA) said in a joint statement.

“Gemini for Government gives federal agencies access to our full stack approach to AI innovation,” added Google chief executive Sundar Pichai.

“So they can deliver on their important missions.”

AI tools being provided include generation of video, images, or ideas as well as digital “agents” capable of independently tending to complex tasks.

U.S. agencies will pay a scant fee of less than a dollar for the AI tools, building on a previous agreement that saw Google Workspace software provided to the government at a major price discount, according to the GSA.

“Federal agencies can now significantly transform their operations by using the tools in Gemini for Government,” said GSA acting administrator Michael Rigas.

The deal comes just weeks after Google rival OpenAI said it was letting the U.S. government use a version of ChatGPT designed for businesses for a year for just $1.

“By giving government employees access to powerful, secure AI tools, we can help them solve problems for more people, faster,” OpenAI said in a blog post announcing the alliance.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Defense awarded OpenAI a US$200 million contract to put generative AI to work for the military.

OpenAI planned to show how cutting-edge AI can improve administrative operations, such as how service members get health care, and also has cyber defense applications, the startup said in a post.
As AI becomes part of everyday life, it brings a hidden climate cost


By The Associated Press
August 22, 2025 

A data center owned by Amazon Web Services, front right, is under construction next to the Susquehanna nuclear power plant in Berwick, Pa., on Jan. 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey, file)

Marissa Loewen first started using artificial intelligence in 2014 as a project management tool. She has autism and ADHD and said it helped immensely with organizing her thoughts.

“We try to use it conscientiously though because we do realize that there is an impact on the environment,” she said.

Her personal AI use isn’t unique anymore. Now it’s a feature in smartphones, search engines, word processors and email services. Every time someone uses AI, it uses energy that is often generated by fossil fuels. That releases greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and contributes to climate change.

And it’s getting harder to live without it.

The climate cost

AI is largely powered by data centres that field queries, store data and deploy information. As AI becomes ubiquitous, the power demand for data centres increases, leading to grid reliability problems for people living nearby.

“Since we are trying to build data centres at a pace where we cannot integrate more renewable energy resources into the grid, most of the new data centres are being powered by fossil fuels,” said Noman Bashir, computing and climate impact fellow with MIT’s Climate and Sustainability Consortium.

The data centres also generate heat, so they rely on fresh water to stay cool. Larger centres can consume up to 5 million gallons (18.9 million liters) a day, according to an article from the Environmental and Energy Study Institute. That’s roughly the same as the daily water demand for a town of up to 50,000 people.

It’s difficult to imagine, because for most users the impact isn’t visible, said AI and Climate Lead Sasha Luccioni with the AI company, Hugging Face.

“In one of my studies, we found that generating a high-definition image uses as much energy as charging half of your phone. And people were like, ‘That can’t be right, because when I use Midjourney (a generative AI program), my phone battery doesn’t go down,’” she said.

Jon Ippolito, professor of new media at the University of Maine, said tech companies are constantly working to make chips and data centres more efficient, but that does not mean AI’s environmental impact will shrink. That’s because of a problem called the Jevons Paradox.

“The cheaper resources get, the more we tend to use them anyway,” he said. When cars replaced horses, he said, commute times didn’t shrink. We just traveled farther.
Quantifying AI’s footprint

How much those programs contribute to global warming depends on a lot of factors, including how warm it is outside the data centre that’s processing the query, how clean the grid is and how complex the AI task is.

Information sources on AI’s contributions to climate change are incomplete and contradictory, so getting exact numbers is difficult.

But Ippolito tried anyway.


He built an app that compares the environmental footprint of different digital tasks based on the limited data he could find. It estimates that a simple AI prompt, such as, “Tell me the capital of France,” uses 23 times more energy than the same question typed into Google without its AI Overview feature.

“Instead of working with existing materials, it’s writing them from scratch. And that takes a lot more compute,” Luccioni said.

And that’s just for a simple prompt. A complex prompt, such as, “Tell me the number of gummy bears that could fit in the Pacific Ocean,” uses 210 times more energy than the AI-free Google search. A 3-second video, according to Ippolito’s app, uses 15,000 times as much energy. It’s equivalent to turning on an incandescent lightbulb and leaving it on for more than a year.

It’s got a big impact, but it doesn’t mean our tech footprints were carbon-free before AI entered the scene.

Watching an hour of Netflix, for example, uses more energy than a complex AI text prompt. An hour on Zoom with 10 people uses 10 times that much.

“It’s not just about making people conscious of AI’s impact, but also all of these digital activities we take for granted,” he said.
Limit tech, limit tech’s climate impact

Ippolito said he limits his use of AI when he can. He suggests using human-captured images instead of AI-generated ones. He tells the AI to stop generating as soon as he has the answer to avoid wasting extra energy. He requests concise answers and he begins Google searches by typing “-ai” so it doesn’t provide an AI overview for queries where he doesn’t need it.

Loewen has adopted the same approach. She said she tries to organize her thoughts into one AI query instead of asking it a series of iterative questions. She also built her own AI that doesn’t rely on large data centres, which saves energy in the same way watching a movie you own on a DVD is far less taxing than streaming one.

“Having something local on your computer in your home allows you to also control your use of the electricity and consumption. It allows you to control your data a little bit more,” she said.

Luccioni uses Ecosia, which is a search engine that uses efficient algorithms and uses profits to plant trees to minimize the impact of each search. Its AI function can also be turned off.

ChatGPT also has a temporary chat function so the queries you send to the data centre get deleted after a few weeks instead of taking up data centre storage space.

But AI is only taking up a fraction of the data centre’s energy use. Ippolito estimates roughly 85% is data collection from sites like TikTok and Instagram, and cryptocurrency.

His answer there: make use of screen time restrictions on your phone to limit time scrolling on social media. Less time means less personal data collected, less energy and water used, and fewer carbon emissions entering the atmosphere.

“If you can do anything that cuts a data centre out of the equation, I think that’s a win,” Ippolito said.

___

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content.

Caleigh Wells, The Associated Press
Swatch ad that sparked backlash puts focus on risky campaigns amid diversity rollbacks

By Reuters
August 20, 2025 at 11:46AM EDT

A pedestrian passes a Swatch watch store Thursday, Jan. 5, 2006 in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

In an era of short attention spans and a White House that has declared war on diversity programs, companies are embracing edgier marketing. But the strategy can carry risks.

Swiss watchmaker Swatch recently got in trouble for an ad that mimicked racist taunts against Asians and had to apologize.

The ad featured an Asian male model pulling up and backwards the corners of his eyes in a “slanted eye” pose. It was not clear if the mistake was an intentional bid to grab attention

Swatch, however, apologized and said it had removed the image.

“It was a faux pas by a young, motivated team who were not aware of the extent of the gestures. At no time was it the intention to offend or hurt anyone with the pictures,” the company told Reuters.

The Swatch misfire was just one in a growing number of norm-breaking advertisements that come amid a rollback in diversity programs in the U.S.

In addition, shoppers’ constrained budgets and short memories have prompted companies to green-light riskier ads that they hope will help them stand out in a competitive market.

In pursuit of going viral, companies including American Eagle Outfitters, Dunkin Donuts and Elf Beauty recently released ads that were immediately criticized on social media for seemingly promoting white-centric beauty ideals, or for hiring celebrity endorsers who might have negative associations.

American Eagle’s ad featured Sydney Sweeney - an actor popular with Gen Z and known for her parts in hit shows including “The White Lotus” and “Euphoria” - who played on the similarity between the words “jeans” and “genes.”

The commercial was widely panned on social media for possibly raising issues of genetic traits in a racial context. U.S. President Donald Trump even weighed in on the controversy, calling the commercial by Sweeney, a registered Republican, the “HOTTEST ad out there” and saying “Being WOKE is for losers.”

Dunkin followed with an ad featuring actor Gavin Casalegno promoting a new summer drink called Golden Hour. In the ad, Casalegno attributes his tan to genetics, saying “This tan? Genetics. I just got my color analysis back. Guess what? Golden summer. Literally.”

American Eagle Outfitters and Dunkin did not respond to requests for comment.

Businesses - especially those that make money from buzzy trends - are pushing the envelope as recent federal actions have shifted the legal and regulatory landscape surrounding diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs.

The notion of inclusivity had been a cornerstone of many companies’ marketing since 2020, when the death of a Black man, George Floyd, at the hands of Minneapolis police, became a catalyst for the Black Lives Matter movement. Five years later, that idea has been de-emphasized.

“Marketers are between a rock and a hard place. They know that the more inclusive they are, the less likely they are to get some social media buzz,” said Allen Adamson, co-founder of marketing consultancy Metaforce. They are taking more risks to try to break through to a younger, targeted audience, he said.

‘Unforced error’

Any gains from these ads, though, could be short-lived. They risk harming a brand’s reputation in the longer run and may alienate a large consumer base of non-white shoppers, branding experts said.

“Whether it’s the Black consumer, the Asian consumer, the Latin consumer, when American Eagle does an ad like that, they’re excluding and they’re leaving money on the table,” said Angeli Gianchandani, an adjunct professor at New York University and a brand strategist who has worked with the likes of Tiffany.

Gianchandani said while non-Hispanic white Americans dominate U.S. buying power, these other demographics are growing faster.

L’Oréal faced criticism this month for partnering with a content creator on OnlyFans who posts lifestyle as well as adult content.

The move went against the company’s own stated guidelines for working with social media influencers that says these partners will not “engage in behaviors which could be interpreted as ... pornography.”

Elf’s ad that starred Matt Rife, a comedian who has made headlines for his joke about domestic violence, drew swift and sharp reaction online. It prompted an apology from the company whose trendy, inexpensive products are a hit with young shoppers.

L’Oreal and Elf did not immediately respond to requests for comment

“That is not a blind spot; that is a brand knowingly stepping into controversy with someone who does not align with its values,” said Gianchandani, calling the move an “unforced error.”

Unlike Elf, and also Swatch, which apologized quickly for their ads, American Eagle stood by its campaign.

Ashley Schapiro, American Eagle’s vice president of marketing, said on LinkedIn that on a Zoom call with Sweeney, company executives asked her: “How far do you want to push it?” “Without hesitation, she smirked and said, ‘Let’s push it. I’m game.’ Our response? ‘Challenge Accepted.’”

---

Reporting by Samantha Marshak and Julaiza Alvarez in New York; Editing by Sayantani Ghosh and Matthew Lewis
Canada to remove countertariffs on American goods amid ongoing trade war: Carney


Trump: ‘I like Carney a lot’


By Spencer Van Dyk
Updated: August 22, 2025 



‘We want to be very good to Canada’: Trump reacts to the removal of tariffs on U.S. goods


PM Carney announces removal of tariffs on U.S. goods under CUSMA
Poilievre says PM Carney's 'elbows have mysteriously gone missing' after U.S. tariff step back

Poilievre takes aim at PM Carney for rescinding tariffs against U.S.

OTTAWA — Canada is dropping its countertariffs on the American goods that are covered by the free-trade agreement between the two countries, amid the ongoing trade war with the United States, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Friday.

Carney made the announcement during a news conference Friday, following a virtual meeting of his cabinet, and the day after a discussion with U.S. President Donald Trump.

Canada’s countertariffs on U.S. steel, aluminum, and autos are not changing, Carney said, adding the government’s “focus is squarely on these strategic sectors” going forward.

When asked whether he received assurances from Trump that scrapping some countermeasures will kickstart negotiations on a new trade and security deal, Carney said: “yes.”

Carney said that following his conversation yesterday with Trump, Canada and the U.S. agreed to “intensify” discussions to address trade challenges and “to seize major immediate opportunities, both in trade, investment and security.”

Carney won’t rule out future increases to steel and aluminum tariffs

Canada and the U.S. have been in a protracted trade war since February, when Trump imposed sweeping tariffs on Canadian goods, claiming they were related to border security. In the months since, he’s stacked additional sectoral tariffs on steel and aluminum, copper and autos.

Products that are covered by the Canada-U.S.-Mexico free trade agreement — known as CUSMA — are exempt from the initial slate of border-related levies.

Speaking to reporters on Friday, Carney insisted the move to drop some countertariffs is meant to “match” U.S. levies, by implementing a carve-out for goods covered by CUSMA. But, while the American administration has imposed 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum, Canada’s countertariffs on those industries will remain at 25 per cent.

When asked whether Canada will increase its tariffs on steel and aluminum to match those of the U.S., Carney said not at the moment. But, when pressed on whether it’s something he’d consider in the future, the prime minister said: “we’ll look at everything.”

“We look at our industry both in terms of how we support their retooling, their investment in the industries, liquidity for today, helping their workers, buying Canadian, diversifying markets, but of course, trade policy, including with the United States, is part of that,” Carney said. “But we’re engaged in discussions with the United States about exactly those sectors.”

When asked what Canada could gain from making concessions to the U.S. — for example by scrapping the controversial digital services tax, and now by eliminating some countertariffs — Carney again insisted that aside from certain sectors, the move is meant to “match” the Americans.

“That’s the first point. Second is that the president and I had a long conversation yesterday, and we see the opportunity to build on where our relationship already is,” Carney added. “There’s a host of areas for investment in both our economies, host of areas on the security side that we can build on, and we intend to advance those discussions as rapidly as possible.”

CUSMA, for its part, is up for review next year. Carney said the federal government is beginning preparations for a renegotiation of that deal.

The government has also implemented measures to support the industries most affected by the trade dispute, and has been working to diversify its export markets to help insulate the Canadian economy from an over-reliance on the United States.

Several provinces, meanwhile, have removed U.S. alcohol from liquor store shelves, and Canadians en masse have reduced travel south of the border. Trump and his team have criticized those actions, according to U.S. ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra, calling the country “nasty” to deal with.

Trump: ‘I like Carney a lot’


In a statement to CTV News on Friday, a White House official said the U.S. welcomes Canada’s decision to remove tariffs on CUSMA-compliant goods, calling it “long overdue.”

The official added they look forward to “continuing our discussions with Canada on the administration’s trade and national security concerns.”

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office Friday, Trump categorized his discussion with Carney the day before as “a very good call,” and saying he thought it was “nice” that Canada is dropping its counterlevies.

“I like him a lot,” Trump said in reference to Carney, adding he thinks he’s “a good person,” while accusing Canada and Mexico of taking “a lot of (U.S.) business over the years.”

“It’s basically all coming back into the United States now,” he added. “We’re hot as a pistol. It’s coming back in because of tariffs and incentives we give.”
Poilievre criticizes Carney for capitulation

In an interview with CTV News on Friday, Canadian Steel Producers Association President and CEO Catherine Cobden said the federal government has “taken an ‘elbows down’ approach on steel.”

“The facts are, we are not matching the tariff level by any stretch of anyone’s imagination, on what the U.S. is doing to us on steel,” Cobden said. “We are far, far away from that.”

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, meanwhile, criticized Carney for the number of concessions he made to Trump, accusing him of capitulating to the U.S. president and showing “weakness” on the world stage.

“His elbows have mysteriously gone missing,” Poilievre told reporters on Parliament Hill Friday, in reference to Carney’s campaign promise that he’d be the best person to deal with Trump, and his pledges to negotiate with Trump with elbows up.

“It was the promise on which he ran his entire election campaign, and now he’s abandoning it,” Poilievre also said. “So, either he admits that he was wrong all along, or that he knowingly spread falsehoods to get elected.”

When asked whether he wants to see Canada increase its tariffs on American steel and aluminum to the rate of the U.S. levies, Poilievre wouldn’t directly say.

“My preference would be to see the Americans lower their tariffs so that we can reinstate free trade,” he said. “But one tariff that I will be cutting for sure, that I will push the prime minister to cut for sure, … is the industrial carbon tax.”

Poilievre said he’s ready to work with Carney to tackle the cost-of-living crisis, and that all the parties need to “get to work” when the House comes back in the fall.

With files from CTV News’ Brennan MacDonald, Stephanie Ha, and Noah Wachter


Spencer Van Dyk
Writer & Producer, Ottawa News Bureau, CTV News

Sask. premier confirms trip to China to assist in canola tariff negotiations

By David Prisciak
Updated: August 21, 2025


Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe says he will be travelling to China in the coming weeks to assist federal officials in negotiating an end to Chinese tariffs on canola and other Canadian crops.

“I myself will be in China in the next couple of weeks, with potentially another opportunity for engagement before the end of the calendar year,” Moe told reporters during a press conference Thursday afternoon in Saskatoon.

Moe and provincial ministers met with federal Agriculture Minister Heath MacDonald, industry groups, and Kody Blois, the parliamentary secretary for Prime Minister Mark Carney, to discuss the tariff situation.

Blois noted that the federal government is aware of the threat the Chinese tariffs pose for producers in Saskatchewan and right across Canada, adding that while negotiations with the Chinese will continue, Canada must also look to other markets.Read more: Sask. premier vows to travel to China in attempt to end canola tariffs

“What I would say is


the message is very clear, and the government is very cognizant of the fact that the importance of the Chinese market for Canadian canola exports,” Blois explained.

“The premier’s going to make his trip to China. But part of this conversation also revolves to the premier’s comments of what other markets are available.”

Moe reiterated the fact that on an issue as important as canola exports – it’s essential for provincial and federal leaders to work together.

“It’s of vital importance that we are addressing this in a collaborative fashion,” he said.

“It isn’t going to be Premier Moe and President Xi that stand up and say, ‘We’ve come to a trade deal here and everything is good moving forward,’ It is going to be the Prime Minister of Canada, Prime Minister Carney and President Xi that ultimately are going to speak on behalf of their countries.”

Carney is scheduled to visit the prairie provinces in the next several weeks to meet with stakeholders in the agriculture sector and provincial leaders on what can be done domestically to support producers.

“To those who are involved in the canola industry from a producer level, we know the anxiety of the uncertainty of the market access right now and what this means,” Blois added.

“We have tools at our disposal. We know your value, and we’re going to work hand in hand with the Government of Saskatchewan to see what we can do to mitigate the situation in the days ahead.”

The date for Moe’s trip will be confirmed in the next several days.

China imposed the tariff of nearly 76 per cent last week, causing the price of one of Canada’s most valuable crops to fall and wiping out millions of dollars in its value.

It comes one year after China launched an anti-dumping investigation into Canadian canola, a move in response to Canada’s 100 per cent tariff on Chinese electric vehicles.

Farmers and Ottawa have rejected the dumping claim, saying exporters have followed rules-based trade.


David Prisciak

Digital Journalist - CTV News Regina