Another Bloody Betrayal

The Government’s Shameful Vote to Strip Immunity from British Veterans.

JOHN SURTEES

Listen up, lads. If you’re a former squaddie like me, who’s done your time in the muck and bullets, you’ll know that feeling in your gut when the brass lets you down. It’s that same twist you got when kit failed in the field or when promises of support evaporated like morning mist over the Bogside. Well, here we are again, staring at the latest in a long, sorry line of betrayals by those shameless shits in Westminster. On 21 January MPs voted 373 to 106 to approve the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act 2023 (Remedial) Order 2025. What does that mouthful mean? It means they’ve ripped away the conditional immunity that protected our veterans from being dragged through the courts for actions taken decades ago during the Troubles. It’s a kick in the teeth for the blokes who risked everything to keep the peace in a place where peace was a dirty word.

Let’s not mince words, this isn’t just a policy tweak; it’s an outright stitch-up. For years, we’ve seen governments promise to look after those who served, only to hang them out to dry when it suits. Remember the post-war years after 1945? Heroes came home to rationing and unemployment, with politicians patting themselves on the back for victory while the lads struggled. Fast forward to the Falklands in ’82 when brave boys took back the islands, but then the MoD skimped on care for the wounded and the shell-shocked. Then there’s the Gulf War in ’91, where troops were exposed to God-knows-what chemicals, and the establishment spent years denying Gulf War Syndrome existed, leaving veterans to fight for recognition on their own.

But it’s the more recent stitich-ups that really boil the piss. Iraq and Afghanistan, wars sold on dodgy dossiers and grandiose visions of democracy. Our lads went in, facing IEDs and ambushes, only to come home to endless inquiries like Chilcot, which dragged on for seven years and cost £13 million, all to tell us what we already knew: the politicians got it wrong. Meanwhile, soldiers faced witch-hunts over alleged abuses, with legal aid flowing to claimants but bugger all support for the poor bloody infantryman. The Overseas Operations (Service Personnel and Veterans) Act 2021 was meant to shield troops from vexatious claims after five years, but even that got weak piece of woke hand-washing got watered down amid howls from human rights lawyers. And now, this Legacy Act repeal, the cherry on top of a cake baked from broken promises.

The Troubles were a different beast altogether. From 1969 to 1998, over 3,500 people lost their lives in a sectarian nightmare that saw British troops deployed to protect civilians from terrorists on both sides. Our boys patrolled streets where a wrong turn could mean a sniper’s bullet or a nail bomb. They weren’t there for glory; they were there because the politicians sent them. The original Legacy Act, passed under the Tories, offered conditional immunity if veterans cooperated with a truth recovery body. It wasn’t perfect, but it recognised that after 50 years, endless prosecutions weren’t delivering justice but were just reopening wounds. Now, Labour’s despicable lot, few of whom have ever had a proper job, let alone had to make a life-or death decision on the spot, have scrapped it, shamelessly claiming it’s unlawful under the European Convention on Human Rights. Bollocks. This is about virtue-signalling, not rights.

Don’t take my word for it, listen to the top brass who’ve spoken out. Former SAS commander Nick Kitson nailed it when he said on GB News that this vote is “not the way to run an army.” He’s spot on; you can’t expect blokes to put their lives on the line if they’re looking over their shoulder for the rest of their days. A group of seven former SAS chiefs wrote a blistering letter to the Daily Telegraph, accusing Labour of leaving ex-soldiers “vulnerable to harassment by money-hungry law firms” in a cycle that could drag on for decades. They warned: “History will not judge this prime minister on how carefully he managed legacy law. It will judge whether he had the courage to close the chapter and let the country move on.” These aren’t armchair critics; these are men who’ve led from the front, who know the cost of command. Even General Sir Patrick Sanders, former Chief of the General Staff, has slammed similar moves in the past, saying lawfare undermines the military covenant , that the unwritten pact, so often only words, that says if you serve, we’ll have your back.

And what about the effect on the Army’s effectiveness? This isn’t just about old timers like us nursing pints in the Legion; it’s about the future of the forces. Morale is already in the toilet. Recruitment’s down 15% in the last year, with the Army shrinking to under 75,000 regulars. Who in their right mind joins up knowing that 40 years down the line, some ambulance-chasing solicitor could haul you into court for decisions made in the heat of a riot or ambush? It erodes trust in the chain of command. Lads on ops will second-guess every action, worrying more about legal briefs than the enemy brief. We’ve seen it before: in Afghanistan rules of engagement got so tight that troops hesitated, putting lives at risk. This vote sends a clear message: serve your country, but don’t expect it to serve you back. It’ll hollow out the regiments, leaving us with a paper army unfit for the threats from Russia, China, or whoever’s next. As one retired colonel put it anonymously in the press, “It’s a betrayal that will echo through the barracks; why risk it all if the politicians won’t stand by you?”

Of course, the apologists will say this is about justice for victims. Fair enough. Nobody denies the pain on all sides. But let’s be real: IRA killers and loyalist paramilitaries got amnesties under the Good Friday Agreement, with on-the-run letters handed out like confetti. Over 200 terrorists walked free early, including bombers and killers. Yet our veterans, who operated under rules and accountability, are fair game? It’s two-tier justice, plain as day. The remedial order claims to fix incompatibilities with human rights law, but it’s a fig leaf for pandering to the anti-British sentiment so rife in the Establishment.

Which brings us to the nub: this does nothing but pander to anti-British globalist sentiment, kowtow to fictitious international law, and line the pockets of left-wing lawyers. Globalists in Brussels and beyond love tying our hands with conventions that terrorists ignore. The ECHR, dreamed up after WWII, wasn’t designed for asymmetric warfare like the Troubles. It’s become a tool for endless litigation, not justice. And who benefits? The legal eagles, sanctimonious, avaricious firms like those who’ve raked in millions from Iraq claims, often funded by taxpayers. This vote isn’t about reconciliation; it’s about virtue points for politicians and fat fees for solicitors. It’s a shameful capitulation that weakens Britain while emboldening those who hate us.

Lads, we’ve been betrayed before, but this one stings deep. It’s time to hold these MPs to account. They voted to throw our veterans under the bus. Remember their names when election time rolls around. Stand tall, speak out, and never forget: we served with honour—they govern with none.

List of the treacherous MPs Who Voted for the Measure (Ayes) and Their Constituencies – please note that some of the constituencies noted are wrong – please check before you write to any of the swine (TA).

Jack Abbott (Labour/Co-operative, Leicester East)

Debbie Abrahams (Labour, Oldham East and Saddleworth)

Zubir Ahmed (Labour, Blackburn)

Luke Akehurst (Labour, North Durham)

Sadik Al-Hassan (Labour, Leicester South)

Dan Aldridge (Labour, Weston-super-Mare)

Rushanara Ali (Labour, Bethnal Green and Bow)

Tahir Ali (Labour, Birmingham Hall Green)

Gideon Amos (Liberal Democrat, Taunton and Wellington)

Callum Anderson (Labour, Tynemouth)

Fleur Anderson (Labour, Putney)

Tonia Antoniazzi (Labour, Gower)

Scott Arthur (Labour, Sheffield Central)

Jessica Asato (Labour, Lowestoft)

Jas Athwal (Labour, Leicester East)

Catherine Atkinson (Labour, Montgomeryshire)

Josh Babarinde (Liberal Democrat, Eastbourne)

Calvin Bailey (Labour, Bristol West)

David Baines (Labour, Preston)

Alex Baker (Labour, Aldershot)

Alex Ballinger (Labour, Hertford and Stortford)

Antonia Bance (Labour, Canterbury)

Lee Barron (Labour, High Peak)

Alex Barros-Curtis (Labour, Leeds North West)

Danny Beales (Labour, Bath)

Lorraine Beavers (Labour, Bristol East)

Apsana Begum (Labour, Poplar and Limehouse)

Torsten Bell (Labour, Swindon South)

Hilary Benn (Labour, Leeds Central)

Alison Bennett (Liberal Democrat, Mid Dorset and North Poole)

Siân Berry (Green, Brighton Pavilion)

Clive Betts (Labour, Sheffield South East)

Polly Billington (Labour, Eastbourne)

Rachel Blake (Labour/Co-operative, Cities of London and Westminster)

Christopher Bloore (Labour, Edmonton)

Kevin Bonavia (Labour, Harlow)

Jade Botterill (Labour, Liverpool Wavertree)

Sureena Brackenridge (Labour, Peterborough)

Alex Brewer (Liberal Democrat, North East Hampshire)

Phil Brickell (Labour, Crewe and Nantwich)

Jessica Brown-Fuller (Liberal Democrat, Hastings and Rye)

Chris Bryant (Labour, Rhondda)

Julia Buckley (Labour, Westminster North)

Richard Burgon (Labour, Leeds East)

David Burton-Sampson (Labour, Crawley)

Dawn Butler (Labour, Brent Central)

Liam Byrne (Labour, Birmingham Hodge Hill)

Ian Byrne (Labour, Liverpool West Derby)

Juliet Campbell (Labour, Stone)

Alan Campbell (Labour, Tynemouth)

Markus Campbell-Savours (Independent, Penistone and Stocksbridge)

Charlotte Cane (Liberal Democrat, Tiverton and Honiton)

Dan Carden (Labour, Liverpool Walton)

Sam Carling (Labour, North West Cambridgeshire)

Alistair Carmichael (Liberal Democrat, Orkney and Shetland)

David Chadwick (Liberal Democrat, Leeds North East)

Wendy Chamberlain (Liberal Democrat, North East Fife)

Danny Chambers (Liberal Democrat, Winchester)

Bambos Charalambous (Labour, Enfield Southgate)

Luke Charters (Labour, York Outer)

Ellie Chowns (Green, North Herefordshire)

Chris Coghlan (Liberal Democrat, Lewes)

Ben Coleman (Labour, Chelsea and Fulham)

Jacob Collier (Labour, Plymouth Sutton and Devonport)

Lizzi Collinge (Labour, Brighton Kemptown)

Victoria Collins (Liberal Democrat, Orkney and Shetland)

Tom Collins (Labour, Worthing West)

Sarah Coombes (Labour, Gillingham and Rainham)

Daisy Cooper (Liberal Democrat, St Albans)

Andrew Cooper (Labour, Mid Dorset and North Poole)

Beccy Cooper (Labour, Colchester)

Deirdre Costigan (Labour, Telford)

Pam Cox (Labour, Colchester)

Neil Coyle (Labour, Bermondsey and Old Southwark)

Jennifer Craft (Labour, Liverpool Wavertree)

Mary Creagh (Labour, Wakefield)

Stella Creasy (Labour/Co-operative, Walthamstow)

Chris Curtis (Labour, Medway)

Nicholas Dakin (Labour, Scunthorpe)

Adam Dance (Liberal Democrat, Yeovil)

Steve Darling (Liberal Democrat, Deptford)

Emily Darlington (Labour, Hull North)

Paul Davies (Labour, Wolverhampton North East)

Shaun Davies (Labour, Bristol North West)

Jonathan Davies (Labour, Blyth Valley)

Bobby Dean (Liberal Democrat, Exeter)

Josh Dean (Labour, Bath)

Kate Dearden (Labour/Co-operative, Poole)

Carla Denyer (Green, Bristol Central)

Tan Dhesi (Labour, Slough)

Anna Dixon (Labour, Shipley)

Anneliese Dodds (Labour/Co-operative, Oxford East)

Helena Dollimore (Labour/Co-operative, Hastings and Rye)

Peter Dowd (Labour, Bootle)

Graeme Downie (Labour, Paisley)

Neil Duncan-Jordan (Labour, Aberavon)

Sarah Dyke (Liberal Democrat, Brighton Pavilion)

Maria Eagle (Labour, Liverpool Garston)

Angela Eagle (Labour, Wallasey)

Sorcha Eastwood (Alliance, Foyle)

Cat Eccles (Labour, Hackney North and Stoke Newington)

Lauren Edwards (Labour, Southampton Itchen)

Sarah Edwards (Labour, Tamworth)

Clive Efford (Labour, Eltham)

Damien Egan (Labour, Kingswood)

Maya Ellis (Labour, Coventry North West)

Chris Elmore (Labour, Ogmore)

Kirith Entwistle (Labour, Bolton North East)

Florence Eshalomi (Labour/Co-operative, Vauxhall)

Bill Esterson (Labour, Sefton Central)

Chris Evans (Labour/Co-operative, Islwyn)

Miatta Fahnbulleh (Labour/Co-operative, Peckham)

Linsey Farnsworth (Labour, Morecambe and Lunesdale)

Josh Fenton-Glynn (Labour, Norwich South)

Patricia Ferguson (Labour, Glasgow West)

Natalie Fleet (Labour, Strathkelvin and Bearsden)

Catherine Fookes (Labour, Enfield North)

Richard Foord (Liberal Democrat, Tiverton and Honiton)

Will Forster (Liberal Democrat, Waveney)

Vicky Foxcroft (Labour, Lewisham Deptford)

Mary Foy (Labour, City of Durham)

Daniel Francis (Labour, Abingdon)

Zöe Franklin (Liberal Democrat, Peterborough)

James Frith (Labour, Bury and Radcliffe)

Gill Furniss (Labour, Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough)

Allison Gardner (Labour, Eddisbury)

Anna Gelderd (Labour, Tiverton and Honiton)

Alan Gemmell (Labour, Stirling)

Andrew George (Liberal Democrat, St Ives)

Gill German (Labour, Ogmore)

Tracy Gilbert (Labour, Ludlow)

Preet Kaur Gill (Labour/Co-operative, Birmingham Edgbaston)

Becky Gittins (Labour, Wirral West)

Mary Glindon (Labour, North Tyneside)

Olly Glover (Liberal Democrat, Cheltenham)

Marie Goldman (Liberal Democrat, Deal and Walmer)

Tom Gordon (Liberal Democrat, Glasgow East)

Jodie Gosling (Labour, Plymouth Sutton and Devonport)

Georgia Gould (Labour, Queen’s Park and Maida Vale)

John Grady (Labour, Glasgow East)

Sarah Green (Liberal Democrat, Chesham and Amersham)

Lilian Greenwood (Labour, Nottingham South)

Nia Griffith (Labour, Llanelli)

Andrew Gwynne (Independent, Denton and Reddish)

Amanda Hack (Labour, West Worcestershire)

Paulette Hamilton (Labour, Birmingham Erdington)

Claire Hanna (Social Democratic and Labour Party, Belfast South)

Carolyn Harris (Labour, Swansea East)

Lloyd Hatton (Labour, Dudley North)

Tom Hayes (Labour, Harlow)

Helen Hayes (Labour, Dulwich and West Norwood)

Claire Hazelgrove (Labour, Filton and Bradley Stoke)

Mark Hendrick (Labour/Co-operative, Preston)

Meg Hillier (Labour/Co-operative, Hackney South and Shoreditch)

Chris Hinchliff (Labour, Wansbeck)

Jonathan Hinder (Labour, Pendle)

Wera Hobhouse (Liberal Democrat, Bath)

Rachel Hopkins (Labour, Luton South)

Claire Hughes (Labour, Bangor Aberconwy)

Rupa Huq (Labour, Ealing Central and Acton)

Patrick Hurley (Labour, Southport)

Leigh Ingham (Labour, Birkenhead)

Sally Jameson (Labour/Co-operative, Thornbury and Yate)

Christine Jardine (Liberal Democrat, Edinburgh West)

Adam Jogee (Labour, Leicester West)

Diana R. Johnson (Labour, Kingston upon Hull North)

Kim Johnson (Labour, Liverpool Riverside)

Gerald Jones (Labour, Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney)

Clive Jones (Liberal Democrat, Wokingham)

Ruth Jones (Labour, Newport West)

Louise Jones (Labour, Cardiff Central)

Lillian Jones (Labour, Rhondda)

Gurinder Josan (Labour, Brentford and Isleworth)

Sojan Joseph (Labour, Tynemouth)

Warinder Juss (Labour, Ilford South)

Chris Kane (Labour, Wallasey)

Mike Kane (Labour, Wythenshawe and Sale East)

Satvir Kaur (Labour, Ilford North)

Naushabah Khan (Labour, Gillingham and Rainham)

Afzal Khan (Labour, Manchester Gorton)

Stephen Kinnock (Labour, Aberavon)

Jayne Kirkham (Labour/Co-operative, Lewisham and East)

Gen Kitchen (Labour, Wigan)

Paul Kohler (Liberal Democrat, Devizes)

Sonia Kumar (Labour, Bedford)

Uma Kumaran (Labour, Brentford and Isleworth)

Laura Kyrke-Smith (Labour, Aylesbury)

Peter Lamb (Labour, Plymouth Sutton and Devonport)

Ian Lavery (Labour, Wansbeck)

Kim Leadbeater (Labour, Sheffield South East)

Brian Leishman (Labour, Uddingston and Bellshill)

Emma Lewell (Labour, South Shields)

Andrew Lewin (Labour, Kingston upon Hull East)

Clive Lewis (Labour, Norwich South)

Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour, Salford and Eccles)

James MacCleary (Liberal Democrat, Hertford and Stortford)

Angus MacDonald (Liberal Democrat, Fife North East)

Andy MacNae (Labour, Glasgow North)

Justin Madders (Labour, Ellesmere Port and Neston)

Ben Maguire (Liberal Democrat, Totnes)

Helen Maguire (Liberal Democrat, Bristol North West)

Seema Malhotra (Labour/Co-operative, Feltham and Heston)

Mike Martin (Liberal Democrat, Torbay)

Amanda Martin (Labour, Ipswich)

Rachael Maskell (Labour/Co-operative, York Central)

Keir Mather (Labour, Selby)

Brian Mathew (Liberal Democrat, Lewes)

Alex Mayer (Labour, Bognor Regis and Littlehampton)

Charlie Maynard (Liberal Democrat, High Peak)

Douglas McAllister (Labour, Middlesbrough)

Kerry McCarthy (Labour, Bristol East)

Martin McCluskey (Labour, West Dunbartonshire)

Andy McDonald (Labour, Middlesbrough)

Chris McDonald (Labour, Charnwood)

John Martin McDonnell (Labour, Hayes and Harlington)

Lola McEvoy (Labour, Solihull)

Pat McFadden (Labour, Wolverhampton South East)

Alison McGovern (Labour, Wirral South)

Alex McIntyre (Labour, Perthshire North)

Gordon McKee (Labour, Torbay)

Kevin McKenna (Labour, Stirling)

Catherine McKinnell (Labour, Newcastle upon Tyne North)

Jim McMahon (Labour/Co-operative, Oldham West and Royton)

Frank McNally (Labour, Stockton North)

Ed Miliband (Labour, Doncaster North)

Calum Miller (Liberal Democrat, Aberdeenshire West and Kincardine)

John Milne (Liberal Democrat, Glenrothes)

Julie Minns (Labour, Folkestone and Hythe)

Abtisam Mohamed (Labour, Sheffield Central)

Perran Moon (Labour, Brighton Kemptown)

Jessica Morden (Labour, Newport East)

Edward Morello (Liberal Democrat, Braintree)

Stephen Morgan (Labour, Portsmouth South)

Helen Morgan (Liberal Democrat, North Shropshire)

Grahame Morris (Labour, Easington)

Joe Morris (Labour, Hexham)

Margaret Mullane (Labour, Sunderland)

Tessa Munt (Liberal Democrat, Wells)

Luke Murphy (Labour, Hartlepool)

James Murray (Labour/Co-operative, Edinburgh South)

Susan Murray (Liberal Democrat, Aberdeen South)

Chris Murray (Labour, Hove)

Luke Myer (Labour, Kingston upon Hull West and Hessle)

James Naish (Labour, Rushcliffe)

Connor Naismith (Labour, East Kilbride and Strathaven)

Kanishka Narayan (Labour, Ilford South)

Pamela Nash (Labour, Airdrie and Shotts)

Josh Newbury (Labour, Newcastle upon Tyne North)

Samantha Niblett (Labour, Chipping Barnet)

Charlotte Nichols (Labour, Warrington North)

Dan Norris (Independent, North East Somerset)

Melanie Onn (Labour, Great Grimsby)

Chi Onwurah (Labour, Newcastle upon Tyne Central)

Simon Opher (Labour, Dulwich and West Norwood)

Abena Oppong-Asare (Labour, Erith and Thamesmead)

Kate Osamor (Labour/Co-operative, Edmonton)

Kate Osborne (Labour, Jarrow)

Tristan Osborne (Labour, Birmingham Erdington)

Taiwo Owatemi (Labour, Coventry South)

Michael Payne (Labour, Leeds North West)

Manuela Perteghella (Liberal Democrat, Bath)

Jess Phillips (Labour, Birmingham Yardley)

Bridget Phillipson (Labour, Houghton and Sunderland South)

Al Pinkerton (Liberal Democrat, Mearns and Newton)

David Pinto-Duschinsky (Labour, Lincoln)

Lee Pitcher (Labour, Gosport)

Jo Platt (Labour/Co-operative, Leigh)

Luke Pollard (Labour/Co-operative, Plymouth Sutton and Devonport)

Joe Powell (Labour, Ogmore)

Lucy Powell (Labour/Co-operative, Manchester Central)

Gregor Poynton (Labour, Newton Abbot)

Peter Prinsley (Labour, Tamworth)

Richard Quigley (Labour, Dundee East)

Yasmin Qureshi (Labour, Bolton North East)

Steve Race (Labour, Exeter)

Adrian Ramsay (Green, Bromsgrove)

Connor Rand (Labour, Middlesbrough)

Andrew Ranger (Labour, Rugby)

Angela Rayner (Labour, Ashton-under-Lyne)

Mike Reader (Labour, Copeland)

Steve Reed (Labour/Co-operative, Croydon North)

Ellie Reeves (Labour, Lewisham West and East Dulwich)

Joshua Reynolds (Liberal Democrat, Newark)

Martin Rhodes (Labour, York Outer)

Jenny Riddell-Carpenter (Labour, Colne Valley)

Lucy Rigby (Labour, Burton)

Tim Roca (Labour, Bristol East)

Matt Rodda (Labour, Reading East)

Ian Roome (Liberal Democrat, North Shropshire)

Sam Rushworth (Labour, Bishop Auckland)

Sarah Russell (Labour, Urmston)

Tom Rutland (Labour, East Worthing and Shoreham)

Oliver Ryan (Independent, Buckingham and Bletchley)

Anna Sabine (Liberal Democrat, Frome and East Somerset)

Sarah Sackman (Labour, Finchley and Golders Green)

Jeevun Sandher (Labour, Crewe and Nantwich)

Roz Savage (Liberal Democrat, Cornwall)

Michelle Scrogham (Labour, Birmingham Ladywood)

Mark Sewards (Labour, Wirral West)

Naseem Shah (Labour, Bradford West)

Baggy Shanker (Labour/Co-operative, Leicester South)

Tulip Siddiq (Labour, Hampstead and Highgate)

Josh Simons (Labour, Makerfield)

Vikki Slade (Liberal Democrat, Mid Dorset and North Poole)

Lisa Smart (Liberal Democrat, Keeley and Sowton)

David Smith (Labour, Ashfield)

Nick Smith (Labour, Blaenau Gwent)

Jeff Smith (Labour, Manchester Withington)

Cat Smith (Labour, Lancaster and Fleetwood)

Karin Smyth (Labour, Bristol South)

Gareth Snell (Labour/Co-operative, Stoke-on-Trent Central)

Ian Sollom (Liberal Democrat, Victoria)

Jo Stevens (Labour, Cardiff Central)

Kenneth Stevenson (Labour, Carlisle)

Jamie Stone (Liberal Democrat, Caithness Sutherland and Easter Ross)

Will Stone (Labour, Hornsey and Wood Green)

Alistair Strathern (Labour, Mid Bedfordshire)

Alan Strickland (Labour, Nottingham North)

Kirsteen Sullivan (Labour/Co-operative, North East Fife)

Lauren Sullivan (Labour, Bristol North West)

Zarah Sultana (Your Party, Manchester Gorton)

Peter Swallow (Labour, Bracknell)

Mark Tami (Labour, Alyn and Deeside)

Mike Tapp (Labour, Newry and Armagh)

Luke Taylor (Liberal Democrat, Hertford and Stortford)

David Taylor (Labour, North Wiltshire)

Fred Thomas (Labour, Plymouth Moor View)

Cameron Thomas (Liberal Democrat, House of Commons)

Gareth Thomas (Labour/Co-operative, Harrow West)

Nick Thomas-Symonds (Labour, Torfaen)

Adam Thompson (Labour, Erewash)

Emily Thornberry (Labour, Islington South and Finsbury)

Stephen Timms (Labour, East Ham)

Jessica Toale (Labour, Bournemouth West)

Jon Trickett (Labour, Hemsworth)

Henry Tufnell (Labour, Newham)

Anna Turley (Labour/Co-operative, Bolsover)

Matt Turmaine (Labour, Luton North)

Laurence Turner (Labour, Luton South)

Derek Twigg (Labour, Halton)

Liz Twist (Labour, Blaydon)

Harpreet Uppal (Labour, Huddersfield)

Freddie Van Mierlo (Liberal Democrat, Cheltenham)

Valerie Vaz (Labour, Walsall South)

Christopher Vince (Labour/Co-operative, Harrogate and Knaresborough)

Caroline Voaden (Liberal Democrat, Bath)

Christian Wakeford (Labour, Bury South)

Melanie Ward (Labour, Telford)

Chris Ward (Labour, Bexhill and Battle)

Paul Waugh (Labour/Co-operative, Brent South)

Michelle Welsh (Labour, Cardiff North)

Catherine West (Labour, Hornsey and Wood Green)

Andrew Western (Labour, Stoke-on-Trent North)

Michael Wheeler (Labour, Selby)

John Whitby (Labour, Perth and Kinross-shire)

Katie White (Labour, North Warwickshire)

Jo White (Labour, Bassetlaw)

Nadia Whittome (Labour, Nottingham East)

Max Wilkinson (Liberal Democrat, Cheltenham)

Munira Wilson (Liberal Democrat, Twickenham)

Sean Woodcock (Labour, Bridgend)

Rosie Wrighting (Labour, Hartlepool)

Martin Wrigley (Liberal Democrat, Sunderland)

Yuan Yang (Labour, Earley and Woodley)

Mohammad Yasin (Labour, Bedford)

Steve Yemm (Labour, Harlow)

Claire Young (Liberal Democrat, Thornbury and Yate)

Daniel Zeichner (Labour, Cambridge)


This article (Another Bloody Betrayal) was created and published by Free Speech Backlash and is republished here under “Fair Use” with attribution to the author John Surtees
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Featured image: The Independent 
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