Labour Heartlands

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FounderPaul Knaggs.jpeg Paul Knaggs
Editor Paul Knaggs challenges neoliberalism and the establishment

Labour Heartlands is a British left wing media/news company that challenges the two wings of the same bird: neoliberal, imperialist Tories and Labour alike.[1]

Latest article

Blue Planet, Alien World

Extract:

In 2014, a team of geophysicists and seismologists from Northwestern University and the University of New Mexico, analysing data from a network of two thousand seismic instruments across North America, found evidence of a vast reservoir of water locked inside a mineral called ringwoodite, approximately four hundred miles beneath the surface, in the transition zone between the Earth’s upper and lower mantle. Confirmation came from a three-millimetre diamond, commercially worthless and visually unremarkable, brought to the surface by a volcanic eruption in the Juina region of Brazil. Inside it, barely visible to the naked eye, was a fragment of ringwoodite. And inside that fragment was water.

To be precise about what this means: the water is not liquid in any form we would recognise. It exists at the molecular level, bound within the crystal structure of the rock itself, under conditions of crushing pressure and temperatures above two thousand degrees Fahrenheit. Jules Verne imagined an underground sea you could sail across. This is different, and in some ways stranger. This is a planet-sized sponge, sweating water into its own mantle over geological timescales we can barely comprehend.

The scale is staggering. If just one per cent of the ringwoodite in the transition zone contains water, the volume would be approximately three times that of all the surface oceans combined. Lead researcher Steve Jacobsen of Northwestern University describes the deep reservoir as tangible evidence of a whole-Earth water cycle. Oceanic crust slides into the mantle at subduction zones, dragging surface water with it. The ringwoodite absorbs it. Over millions of years, some of it returns to the surface through volcanic activity. The planet has been cycling its own water through its interior, silently, for longer than complex life has existed on its surface.

Some scientists now believe this hidden reservoir may be where Earth’s surface water originally came from: not from icy comets striking a barren rock, but seeping outward from within, through volcanic exhalation, over billions of years. The oceans, in other words, may have been exhaled by the planet itself.

We now have three oceans to account for. The surface ocean, covering seventy per cent of the planet and less than twenty per cent explored. The abyssal plain, seven miles down, darker than the space between stars. And the mantle ocean, four hundred miles beneath that, three times the combined volume of everything above it, locked in blue crystal and never having seen the light of day.[2]

Some recent articles

The Epstein Paradox

Ghislaine Maxwell’s habeas corpus petition, filed on 17 December 2025 without legal representation, is not a document that courts are likely to act upon. Habeas petitions are, by design, last resorts, and they are routinely denied. But the substance of her allegations deserves scrutiny regardless of their legal fate.

The petition alleges that prosecutors were aware of twenty-five civil settlements reached between Epstein’s accusers and men the petition describes as co-conspirators.

These settlements, Maxwell’s filing argues, were structured with non-disclosure provisions that prevented the accusers from providing testimony or evidence in criminal proceedings. The effect, she contends, was to immunise those men from prosecution while allowing her to be tried as if she had acted alone.

“None of the four named co-conspirators or the twenty-five men with secret settlements were indicted,” the petition states. “None of these men have been prosecuted, and none has been revealed to the petitioner; she would have called them as witnesses had she known.”

When Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche was asked about these allegations, he offered what has become the characteristic response of this saga:

“To the extent that such arrangements exist, I’m not aware of them.”

Perhaps someone should inform him that his own department made them. The US Department of Justice has declined to confirm or deny the existence of the settlements. It has not explained why.

Maxwell’s motivations in making these claims are, of course, self-interested. She wants out of prison, and alleging prosecutorial misconduct is her best remaining legal avenue. But self-interest does not make a claim false. The pattern she describes, of wealthy men purchasing civil silence as a substitute for criminal immunity, is entirely consistent with how power protects itself.[3]

The Company They Keep

The Prince and the Paedophile

A Birthday to Remember

On 19 February 2026, Labour Heartlands published an article entitled "A Birthday to Remember: The Arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and the End of Impunity":

This morning, as the sun rose over the Sandringham Estate, the transition from Prince to prisoner was completed. Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, celebrating his 66th birthday, did not wake to the customary royal salutes, but to the arrival of Thames Valley Police.

He is currently in custody, held on suspicion of misconduct in public office. Carted off as any common criminal. The charge is as heavy as it is rare: it suggests that while serving as the UK’s trade envoy, the man formerly known as ‘Air Miles Andy’ treated the nation’s interests as currency to be traded with a convicted sex offender.

The investigation centres on the alleged sharing of confidential material with the late Jeffrey Epstein. According to reports, police are assessing claims that Mountbatten-Windsor forwarded sensitive government briefs to Epstein during his tenure as a trade representative between 2001 and 2011.

We must ask ourselves what a billionaire paedophile would want with reports on Singaporean investment or Helmand Province reconstruction. In the corridors of power, information is the only true legal tender. If a public official, hereditary or otherwise, hands that tender to a predator, they are not merely committing a ‘gaffe’; they are betraying the public trust in its most visceral form.

The arrogance required to believe that one can bypass the Official Secrets Act because of the blood in one’s veins is a symptom of a deeper, more malignant rot in our uncodified constitution.

The former prince has consistently denied any wrongdoing, maintaining he never witnessed or suspected Epstein’s crimes. His defenders will argue that he was ‘naïve’ or ‘ill-advised’. They will point to his decades of service and his military record. They will say that an arrest is not a conviction, and that he deserves the presumption of innocence.

This is technically correct, but morally hollow. The ‘naivety’ defence is a luxury afforded only to those who have never had to work for a living. For the rest of us, if we shared confidential company documents with a known criminal, we would not be ‘ill-advised’; we would be fired and prosecuted without a second thought from the High Court.

Further allegations emerged last week concerning Andrew’s dealings with the Rowland family, bankers who established Banque Havilland in Luxembourg after the Icelandic banking collapse.

Emails published in the Telegraph and confirmed by the BBC suggest that Andrew requested information from Treasury officials on banking problems in Iceland. This briefing was shared with Jonathan Rowland, a business connection whose father David Rowland had taken over part of a failing Icelandic bank.

“I pass this on to you for comment and a suggestion or solution?” wrote Andrew. “The essence is that Amanda is getting signals that we should allow the democratic process [to] happen before you make your move. Interested in your opinion? A.”

The Epstein files reveal the closeness of Andrew to David Rowland, with the former prince calling him his “trusted money man.” In October 2010, Andrew wrote to Epstein: “He is actively seeking high net worth individuals for his Private Bank. Perhaps this is an avenue for your undecided Chinese?”

Epstein replied: “His bank just might be the place.. I guess i should learn more.”

The emails also suggest that Rowland’s bank had made loans to Andrew’s ex-wife Sarah Ferguson, who faced debt problems at the time.

Jonathan Rowland told the BBC he and his father “never had any contact or correspondence or had dinner or met with” Epstein. There is no suggestion of wrongdoing on the part of Jonathan and David Rowland. But the pattern of Andrew sharing sensitive information with private business associates, information obtained through his public role, is now well established.

For years, the British establishment operated on a policy of containment. Titles were stripped, HRH status was mothballed, and Wood Farm became a genteel purgatory. But as the ‘Epstein Files’ were unsealed in January, the sheer volume of material, millions of pages, made the policy of silence untenable.

The police searches in Berkshire and Norfolk signify that the authorities are finally looking behind the velvet curtain. This is no longer about a ‘he-said, she-said’ civil suit in New York; this is a criminal investigation into the abuse of a British public office.

Andrew is not the only public figure facing scrutiny over Epstein links. Police are also investigating Peter Mandelson, the former ambassador to Washington and a government minister during the financial crisis, over alleged misconduct in public office.

Nine UK police forces are reportedly assessing a range of allegations related to Epstein, including human trafficking and sexual assault. Thames Valley Police had previously said they were reviewing allegations that a woman was trafficked to the UK by Epstein to have a sexual encounter with Andrew. These allegations remain under investigation.

If we are to take our democracy seriously, we must recognise that this arrest is more than a headline. It is an indictment of a system that allows trade envoys to be appointed on the basis of birth rather than merit, and then leaves them without the oversight that any junior civil servant would face.

The public interest demands more than a trial; it demands structural reform. We must ensure that no office of the state, no matter how ceremonial or ‘royal’ it claims to be is ever again allowed to operate in a shadow world of private emails and predatory friendships.

The birthday cake at Sandringham remains uncut. The candles have flickered out, extinguished by the cold reality of a police caution. For too long, the Windsors have lived as though the law was a suggestion. Today, the law suggests otherwise.

No man is so high that he is above the law, and no birthright is a shield against justice.[6]

Corridor for Child Sex Trafficking

Josh Simons Probe

Labour Together’s War Room

War on the Fourth Estate

Mapping the Trilateral Network


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