Welsh nurseries are being advised to report "racist toddlers" to the police under taxpayer-funded guidance backed by the Welsh Labour Government — and yes, even the snacks must be "diverse".
A student is under police investigation for comparing a Palestine activist's headgear to a 'tea towel' — the latest example of Britain's de facto blasphemy law at work on university campuses.
The Government defeated a Labour rebel amendment at committee stage that would have established specialist rape courts at every Crown Court and removed the government clauses restricting the right to jury trial.
An FSU briefing by David Rose on how Sebastian Bond, founder of Tattle Life, was the victim of an egregious miscarriage of justice. A High Court of Northern Ireland judgment awarding £300,000 in damages against him has been set aside after it emerged that his opponents and their lawyers misled the court for two years.
The Liberal Democrats have admitted to unlawfully discriminating against David Campanale, a former prospective parliamentary candidate who was forced out of his seat ahead of the 2024 general election because of his Christian beliefs. The party has agreed to pay damages after a four-year legal battle believed to have cost over £250,000.
Reform UK councillor Steven Plater faced a formal code of conduct investigation after posting a satirical image of the Prime Minister on Facebook. With the Free Speech Union’s help, the council dropped the case.
The choir Singing Striders had its invitation to perform at the London Marathon rescinded by disability charity Scope. The reason for the last-minute cancellation was the founding member Janet Murray's gender-critical beliefs. Following public backlash, Scope reinstated the invitation — but by that point, the choir had decided to go it alone.
FSU Campaigns Officer Max Thompson writes in The Telegraph that Britain’s failure to implement the Higher Education (Freedom of Speech) Act is a national embarrassment, with the country now ranking 64th in the world for academic freedom — below Burkina Faso and Malawi.
Sir Stephen Mitchell, a former High Court judge, has called the Government’s jury trial reforms “a form of legislative vandalism” and urged the judiciary to speak out against what he describes as the most serious assault on English liberty in 800 years.
An NHS trust has told staff to stop using everyday phrases like "it's raining cats and dogs" for fear of offending foreign patients — part of a pattern of language policing that the FSU warns may be driving experienced staff out of the NHS.
Former deputy leader of the Green Party, Dr Shahrar Ali, tells the FSU Podcast that the party has been captured by Islamists and is a danger to society.
Former Justice Secretary Sir Robert Buckland warns that David Lammy’s jury trial reforms will expose judges to physical attacks and undermine judicial independence.