Noel Lock

8.7K posts

Noel Lock

Noel Lock

@NoelLock2

Founded the Greenfuel Company in 2003. Campaigning to reduce air pollution from road transport through the greater application of cleaner burning fuels.

Bath, England Entrou em Mart 2014
392 Seguindo210 Seguidores
Noel Lock retweetou
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677·
The Pattern That Demands an Answer. Is Starmer Compromised? There is a threshold in political commentary beyond which responsible analysis must go, even when the conclusion is uncomfortable. The question that this series of events now compels is not one any serious observer raises lightly. But the evidence, assembled piece by piece over months, makes it impossible to avoid. Is Keir Starmer compromised? That question deserves to be asked precisely rather than loosely. It does not assert that Starmer is an agent of a foreign power. It asks something narrower and more troubling. Whether the consistent pattern of decisions made by this Prime Minister on matters relating to China and Russia is compatible with the actions of a leader whose primary loyalty is to British national security. Consider what that pattern contains. Starmer attempted to surrender the Chagos Islands, handing Beijing strategic proximity to Diego Garcia that successive governments had refused to concede, before the deal collapsed under the weight of its own strategic incoherence. He allowed a China spy trial to collapse because his government refused to describe China as a national security threat in court, even as MI5 publicly declared it one. He approved the largest Chinese embassy in Europe, with a concealed underground chamber built within a metre of the fibre-optic cables carrying the City's financial data. He oversaw the Royal Navy's withdrawal from Indo-Pacific training at the precise moment China's navy became the largest on earth. He moved to relax accounting standards for Chinese companies listing in London, weakening City oversight for a state his own intelligence services treat as a strategic rival. Each decision was defended with the language of pragmatism and balance. Each delivered a strategic benefit to Beijing. Now add the Mandelson dimension. A man whose Chinese state enterprise connections alarmed American senators sufficiently to refer a dossier to the FBI. A man targeted by Russian intelligence for decades. A man who failed his developed vetting on grounds centring on his links to Russia and China. That man was placed in Washington with Strap Three clearance, giving him access to information that could endanger intelligence sources if leaked. The Prime Minister who placed him there had read a due diligence report flagging those exact concerns. Senior Whitehall sources say he was warned about the major risks and waved them away. The cumulative weight of these decisions defies innocent explanation through incompetence alone. A Prime Minister can make one catastrophic misjudgment about China. He cannot make six sequential decisions, each advancing Beijing's interests and retreating from Britain's, and ask the country to attribute it all to poor judgment. Two explanations exist. The first is that Starmer governs according to an ideological framework that genuinely regards Chinese engagement as opportunity rather than threat. The second is that something else is driving those decisions. Something that operates through networks, relationships and private arrangements that never fully surface in the public record. No commentator can answer that question definitively. Only a full independent inquiry, with access to intelligence material and the classified record of every decision documented here, can do that. What commentary can do is assemble the visible evidence and ask whether it is consistent with the leadership of a country that intends to defend itself. It is not. And the country deserves to know why.
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Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677·
@EdwardJDavey, with respect, that analysis is back to front and the facts don't support it. Trump did not ask for Mandelson. He asked for Dame Karen Pierce to stay. She was already in post, already trusted by the incoming administration, already known to Trump personally, and his team had made clear they wanted continuity. A senior Trump campaign adviser described her as professionally universally respected and lamented her removal. Trump himself has since said the Mandelson appointment was a mistake. Starmer did not replace Pierce to flatter Trump. He replaced her despite Trump's preference. The decision to install Mandelson was driven entirely from the British side, by people around Starmer who wanted that specific figure in that specific post for reasons that have never been satisfactorily explained. So the question is not why Starmer tried to appease Trump. The question is why he overruled Trump's own preference, removed a diplomat the Americans trusted, and installed a man the security services had said should not be cleared, in the face of warnings about Russia and China connections that were sitting in his own due diligence report. That is not appeasement of Trump. That is something else entirely. And it is the question nobody in Parliament has yet succeeded in getting Starmer to answer. "Trump did not ask for Mandelson. He asked for Dame Karen Pierce to stay."
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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@ShippersUnbound McFadden reasonably reverts to rationale at time to appoint Mandelson & I think that needs to be forensically explored. Why were Chagos & Mandelson the first decisions, the top priority? Is there a link from Sands to Starmer & Chinese money?
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Tim Shipman
Tim Shipman@ShippersUnbound·
No one wrote more devastatingly and amusingly about Boris Johnson’s shortcomings than Marina Hyde. This morning she has done a nuclear number on Starmer. Laugh until you cry theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@afneil ‘Can the Prime Minister assure the House that a full audit of all documents that Mandelson had access to whilst UK Ambassador to the USA will be undertaken so that we can understand the scale of national security risk that the PM is responsible for?’
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Andrew Neil
Andrew Neil@afneil·
Official side of the Mandy scandal continues to unravel. Starmer says he only learned about Mandelson flunking his vetting test last Tuesday. Couldn’t tell Parliament til he’d done lots of checking. But we now know his two most senior civil servants — Cabinet Secretary and Secretary to the Cabinet Office — had known for weeks, had the relevant docs and already done the checking. So he could have gone to Parliament late Wednesday or anytime Thursday. The fact he didn’t is the reason, I believe, the story leaked to Guardian on Thursday — whistleblowers feared a cover up to took matters into their own hands.
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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@BethRigby Getting harder to defend the indefensible. As soon as Mandleson an issue No10 team would have sought out the vulnerabilities. This would have happened months ago. Plausible deniability is bunkum. Stammer’s appeal was his experience of forensic examination. He lied, he must go.
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Beth Rigby
Beth Rigby@BethRigby·
NEW: Anger in No 10 tonight - am told by a source that neither the PM nor his advisors were told, over a series of months, that Mandelson had been granted security clearance against the recommendation of UK security vetting. That suggests this information was held in foreign office and not shared. Big Qs now about the PM misleading the House. I am told the PM had been asking Qs about vetting and not been told this information while giving statements to parliament. Told this week PM had been trying to get answers about what happened since Tues night - Guardian got ahead of story. The critical point is that the minister has to have ‘knowingly misled’ the House, and clearly No 10 saying tonight the PM was not aware. I understand the PM had been intending to update the HoC as soon as No 10 had established facts, which they have been doing since Tues. So expect to see the PM come to HoC on Monday to correct the record I asked PM on March 16 whether he has misled the House when he said due process was followed. This is what he told me BETH RIGBY: On the Mandelson files, your national security adviser said the process was quote, weirdly rushed, and Mandelson was appointed before developed vetting had been complete. You told MPs in the House of Commons that due process was followed. Is there a possibility that you have misled the House when you said that? KEIR STARMER: No, and the independent adviser looked at that very question. I think on Thursday or Friday of last week, and answered it very robustly, that the process had been followed. The process wasn't strong enough. And amongst the changes that I intend to put into place is the fact that you can't announce someone until the vetting is finished. It wasn't an individual decision in the Mandelson case, that was the process. Well, you only have to look at that. in the light of the appointment, to realise that that needs to change. But on due process, the process that was there was followed, the problem was the process wasn't strong enough, but ultimately, it was my mistake and I have apologised for that and quite right to.
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Higgy
Higgy@higgyboson·
"Hello Emily, what's this ". "Well Miss Phillipson, despite me only being six years old I decided to do a deep dive into the Morgan McSweeney stolen phone fiasco". "OK Emily, we'll leave it there". "Anyway, I was VERY suspicious right from the start because Mr Starmer, You, Mr Reed and all the other people who came on the telly and were asked about it all gave different dates for when it went missing and......". "Stop Emily, that's enough". "....and these dates varied by nearly a year, which is mental. And then you all gave differing accounts of what actually happened on the date you individually claimed to be the day of the theft. From my perspective as a mere six year old child this all seemed to be a bit whiffy, like when my puppy does a poo on the carpet, so I....". "THATS ENOUGH ". "....so I dug a bit deeper. Mr McSweeney gave what can only be considered to be scant details of the alleged theft when he reported it to the Police. It seems he didn't even know the location of the incident despite actually being there at the time. Now, I may only be in year 2 but I'd certainly know where I was if someone came up to me in the street and stole my ice cream so....". "Emily... bloody SHUT UP". "....so I've absolutely no idea how he didn't know where he was when his phone was snatched out of his hand. And then we move on to the "lost data". Now, Miss Phillipson as you know.....". "Now listen here you little shit, I've heard enough of this bollocks. Can someone take her away please"? "I'll continue. As you know Miss Phillipson, if someone takes your phone and won't give it back, or if it's damaged or stolen you can get a new one. It happened to my Daddy at work. He dropped his phone off some scaffolding and it wouldn't work. So THE NEXT DAY he got a new one and carried on as normal. He even had all the messages on it from my Mummy telling him she thought Mr Starmer was a twat, Lammy is thick as mince, Reeves couldn't run a burger van and you couldn't be trusted as far as anyone could throw you. It was all still there". (Miss Phillipson walks off). "But Miss Phillipson, I haven't mentioned how I believe this could all jeopardise your digital ID ambitions". "Piss off Emily, I'm not interested". "Can you or Mr Starmer tell us why we should put absolutely everything about ourselves onto our mobile phone for our "convenience" if all the data completely disappears when someone steals the phone, just like it did with Mr McSweeneys phone? Don't you think that's a bit silly"? (Miss Phillipson has left the playground).
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Sunday Sport
Sunday Sport@thesundaysport·
The Sunday Sport has never been rebuked by the US Treasury Secretary
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent@SecScottBessent

By publishing this explicitly false story, the @FT has officially become tabloid trash for market participants. Despite my direct, on-the-record denial of ever having advocated, explored, or espoused the idea that Chancellor-Bank of England statute serving as a prototype for a Treasury-Federal Reserve relationship, FT journalists manufactured a story with the headline, “Scott Bessent praised Bank of England as model for tighter oversight of the Federal Reserve.” These pathetic journalists have clearly fabricated a story to give the impression that both I and the Trump Administration are setting “about restructuring the relationship… at a time when President Donald Trump has launched an unprecedented assault on the world’s most important central bank.” Their mendacious assertion is based on vague statements from unnamed “financial industry executives familiar with the matter.” In short, FT has literally manufactured an entirely fake policy position for me and the Administration. Other than furthering a maliciously false narrative of dysfunction and divisiveness, it baffles the mind as to why they would shred their already diminished journalistic credibility. Over the past 10 years, I have written more than 20,000 words opining on the Federal Reserve decisions, personnel, structure, and modifications. Nowhere have I ever mentioned this ridiculous notion. The Governor’s letters to the Chancellor have proven to be a useless and perfunctory device. There is much to be said about the storied Bank of England, but any recreation of its operating framework on this side of the Atlantic has never been contemplated. The shameful journalists and editors at the FT are shocking in their meretriciousness, lack of standards, and general intellectual libertinism. It is the worst tradition of Fleet Street to manufacture news rather than report on it. They have brought irredeemable shame to their parent organization, Nikkei Inc., with whom I had previously held excellent relations. In 2025, I laid out a comprehensive 6,000+ word review of each and every policy reform that I believe should be adopted by the Federal Reserve. Read my actual, real thoughts on and proposals for Federal Reserve reform at the International Economy: international-economy.com/TIE_Sp25_Besse…

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Robert Abel
Robert Abel@rj_abel·
Funny how the Speaker now says he “can’t” tell the PM to answer the question. Yet when Boris Johnson was in office, he did exactly that—on record. Same chair, different standards.
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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@blaiklockBP This is corruption. If this were China people would be executed. We opt for poverty. Even now, the lucky few can witness what richer parts of the world take for granted. Accelerating quickly.
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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@ret_ward So, Norwegians are not getting richer by exploiting North Sea Gas right now? BTW, Norway & its people have an extremely high regard for the environment, higher uptake in green tech & booming sovereign wealth fund.
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Bob Ward
Bob Ward@ret_ward·
This is wrong. There is a European international market on which gas from around the world is sold to the U.K. and other countries. North Sea gas is sold at this market price, not at a discount to British consumers.
John Redwood@johnredwood

There is no world price of gas. US home produced gas is so much cheaper than our imported LNG. To save our factories we need to press on with more UK piped gas where supply will be cheaper and more reliable than LNG imports.

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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@lukas_ohl Language is everything, after all we can now be imprisoned if we are not careful. Preferred terms are ‘post-industrial’ & ‘service-intensive’. ‘Grifting’ if you must but ‘leeching’ too close to bone. Smacks of being ignorant of who to backhand.
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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@afneil @TerraOrBust You can be certain that some made a fortune on this. Their every Caribbean lobster is someone else’s hip replacement. Britain today. Bubble, bubble, trouble, trouble….
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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@ajcdeane Anyone, anyone at all, infants, kittens & puppies will have driven past Stonehenge & witnessed vista of open fields of England’s least populated county & thought - put road over there. Put tunnel under Bath or Westminster, not open fields! But yeah, trouser £££. Evil criminals
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Alex Deane
Alex Deane@ajcdeane·
We have spent £180m on plans for a tunnel under Stonehenge. The project is now scrapped. You can be for a tunnel & think spending is a good idea (even if you think the cost of planning is silly). You can be against a tunnel & think spending is a bad idea. But *nobody* can be for spending on this scale with zero result. And yet that is a peculiarly British outcome. Nobody will be reprimanded. Nobody will see their career affected. But that’s £180m of taxpayer money just wazzed up the wall. Totally without repercussions. Multiply this by airport expansions & train route plans and Thames crossings and power stations and other examples you can think of yourself, and… soon you’re talking serious money.
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Greg Baldwin
Greg Baldwin@GregBaldwinIroh·
British blokes…. I’ve purchased several “tins” of Heinz (British) beans because the idea of beans on toast intrigues me. I eagerly anticipate a tasting. Other than toasting bread and heating beans… Are there any other steps/ingredients?
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Lee Hurst
Lee Hurst@LeeHurstComic·
Gun to your head… Rejoin the EU? Become the 51st US State?
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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@paullewismoney ‘It doesn’t matter’ - so, no impact at all on credit scores if you are self-employed, mortgage affordability, incentive to get promoted to earn enough to settle down & start a family? Ie, all the stuff we need the next generation to do to continue society.
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Paul Lewis
Paul Lewis@paullewismoney·
It’s psychologically horrible to have such a debt. But it doesn’t matter. She’ll never pay off her loan. She’ll pay extra 9% income tax above Plan 2 threshold, £29,385 from April, which will mean less disposable income, but after 30 years, however massive, debt will disappear.
BBC Newsnight@BBCNewsnight

“I graduated from my undergraduate degree last summer… and I have £90,231 of student loan debt.” Gina Tindale, 22, who went to university from a low income background, says the necessity to take out a larger maintenance loan has significantly added to her debt. #Newsnight

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Faisal Islam
Faisal Islam@faisalislam·
Went to first West End musical in years with my two youngest today… The centre of London was heaving with visitors, in a way unrecognisable from the image percolated on this site… The stats underline this… West End has fully recovered and more from pandemic and now has overtaken Broadway on tickets sold - millions more, and more tickets sold than the Premier League… This isn’t mirrored in all visitor attractions but seems an interesting and resounding success. Industry reports interesting new trends such as very last minute ticket purchases. Ticket prices do seem extortionate/ dynamically priced… but the stats suggest they are down a bit in real terms. British Museum visitors at a 10 year high of 6.5 million… Visitors generally fully recovered from pandemic, interestingly driven by domestic tourists and North Americans… seemed pretty clear that summer 2025 for example, London was world capital of live music. Comes day after the Mayor of London wrote to Anthropic to come to London after their troubles with the Trump Administration and a marked change in the vibe around the investment in AI and tech… While there’s obvious some challenges in any modern day mega city, and in Britain right now, strikes me that the stats show taking your cues from the mildly bizarre cultivated campaign against Britain and our capital on this site is likely to lead to erroneous perceptions. Interested in any insights as to how the west end has overtaken the premier league and Broadway… and how other parts of UK have fared - as I’ve written before visitor numbers to places like Manchester are also booming re football, unis and now the music at the once laughed at Coop Live… PS yes it was Wicked. And it was good.👍🏽 🧙
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Noel Lock
Noel Lock@NoelLock2·
@julianHjessop @Jacob_Rees_Mogg I don’t think the lawyers on this have been working pro bono. So it comes down, as it always does, to who is paying. China.
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Julian Jessop
Julian Jessop@julianHjessop·
Great letter in today's FT on the ICJ's Chagos "ruling", by a proper lawyer... 👇
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Peter Hague
Peter Hague@peterrhague·
Bloody hell, that must have been quite a Facebook post
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