
Rayner claims Reform will ‘fail women' as she weighs in on online safety row
Her warning is the latest intervention in a row between senior Labour figures and Mr Farage's party over the Act.
Under new rules introduced through the legislation at the end of July, online platforms such as social media sites and search engines must take steps to prevent children from accessing harmful content such as pornography or material that encourages suicide.
Reform party leader Nigel Farage has criticised the Act (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Reform has vowed to repeal the law and replace it with a different means of protecting children online, though the party has not said how it would do this.
Among their criticisms of the Act, Mr Farage and his colleagues have cited freedom of speech concerns and claimed the Act is an example of overreach by the Government.
This prompted backlash from Technology Secretary Peter Kyle, who claimed people like Jimmy Savile would use the internet to exploit children if he was still alive, and insisted anyone against the Act – like Mr Farage – was 'on their side'.
The Reform leader demanded an apology, but ministers have been trenchant in their defence of the Act.
Now, the Deputy Prime Minister has questioned how Mr Farage would seek to prevent the 'devastating crime' of intimate image abuse, also known as 'revenge porn', without the Online Safety Act's protections.
Ms Rayner claimed: 'Nigel Farage risks failing a generation of young women with his dangerous and irresponsible plans to scrap online safety laws.
'Scrapping safeguards and having no viable alternative plan in place to halt the floodgates of abuse that could open is an appalling dereliction of duty. It's time for Farage to tell women and girls across Britain how he would keep them safe online.'
Under the Online Safety Act, revenge porn is classified among the 'most severe online offences', the Deputy PM added.
Citing figures from the charity Refuge, the Labour Party claimed a million young women had been subject to revenge porn: either intimate images being shared, or the threat of this.
Some 3.4 million adults in total, both men and women, have been affected, Labour also said.
Ministers have previously had to defend the Online Safety Act against accusations from Elon Musk's X social media site that it is threatening free speech.
In a post at the start of August titled 'What Happens When Oversight Becomes Overreach', the platform formerly known as Twitter outlined criticism of the act and the 'heavy-handed' UK regulators.
The Government countered that it is 'demonstrably false' that the Online Safety Act compromises free speech and said it is not designed to censor political debate.
Mr Farage has meanwhile suggested there is a 'tech answer' for protecting children online, but neither he nor the Government have outlined one.
He also suggested children are too easily able to avoid new online age verification rules by using VPNs (virtual private networks), which allow them to circumvent the rules by masking their identity and location.
When Reform UK was approached for comment, its Westminster councillor Laila Cunningham said: 'Women are more unsafe than ever before thanks to Labour. Starmer has released thousands of criminals back onto the streets early with no regard for women's safety.
'I am calling on Jess Phillips to debate me on women's safety – she ignored the grooming gangs scandal and now she's wilfully deceiving voters on this issue.
'Reform will always prioritise prosecuting abuse but will never let women's safety be hijacked to justify censorship.
'You don't protect women by silencing speech. You protect them by securing borders, enforcing the law, and locking up actual criminals, and that is exactly what a Reform government would do.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
5 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Rayner says Farage ‘failing young women' with plan to scrap Online Safety Act
Nigel Farage is 'failing a generation of young women' with his plans to scrap the Online Safety Act, Angela Rayner has said, arguing the move would cause an increase in the prevalence of 'revenge porn'. The comments by the deputy prime minister are the latest criticism of Farage from the government, with Labour launching a parallel series of attack adverts on the Reform UK leader, including one showing him alongside the misogynist influencer Andrew Tate. In a press conference at the end of last month, Reform promised to scrap the act, which had just come into force, saying measures intended to push social media companies to limit false and potentially harmful content would instead bring censorship and make the UK 'a borderline dystopian state'. In response, the science and technology secretary, Peter Kyle, accused Farage of being on the side of child abusers such as Jimmy Savile, bringing a furious response from the Reform leader. In comments to the Sunday Telegraph, Rayner highlighted what she said would be the risks of getting rid of the act in terms of clamping down on what is formally known as intimate image abuse, where offenders either upload intimate pictures or footage of others or else share them via other means. 'Intimate image abuse is a devastating crime and contributes to a vile misogynistic culture on social media that we know translates into physical spaces too,' Rayner told the paper. 'Nigel Farage risks failing a generation of young women with his dangerous and irresponsible plans to scrap online safety laws. Scrapping safeguards and having no viable alternative plan in place to halt the floodgates of abuse that could open is an appalling dereliction of duty. 'It's time for Farage to tell women and girls across Britain how he would keep them safe online.' Labour is launching a linked series of online adverts against Farage, including one published on Sunday morning connected to Rayner's comments. 'Nigel Farage wants to make it easier to share revenge porn online,' it says, alongside an image of Farage grinning. According to the Sunday Times, another advert will highlight Farage's comments about Tate, the influencer who, along with his brother, Tristan, faces charges in the UK including rape, actual bodily harm and human trafficking. The two British Americans are under investigation in Romania, facing a number of charges that they deny. The Labour advert shows Farage with Andrew Tate and the headline: 'Nigel Farage says Andrew Tate is an 'important voice' for men.' The comments come from an interview Farage did on the Strike It Big podcast last year. Laila Cunningham, a former magistrate who has joined Reform, wrote a Telegraph article on Saturday in which she called the Online Safety Act 'censorship laws', saying laws already existed to combat 'revenge porn'. 'It's a cover for censorship, and an excuse to hand unelected regulators sweeping powers to silence views they don't like, while doing nothing about the real crimes happening on our streets,' she wrote. Cunningham said minister should instead focus on detaining asylum seekers rather than putting them in hotels, saying that for now, women 'are being put in harm's way' as the asylum seekers could pose a risk to them.


Telegraph
5 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Dawn Butler: I'll stand to be next Labour Mayor of London
Dawn Butler has announced that she will stand to become the next Labour Mayor of London. The MP for Brent East said she would 'pop my hat in the ring' as soon as Sir Sadiq Khan stood down. Sir Sadiq won an unprecedented third term in City Hall last year but is not currently expected to stand at a fourth mayoral election. Ms Butler is on the Left of the party and served in Jeremy Corbyn's shadow cabinet as the shadow equalities secretary from 2017 to 2020. She has been no stranger to controversy since returning to the back benches, and Sir Keir Starmer faced calls to suspend her last year over a social media post she shared about Kemi Badenoch. In an episode of The Mirror's web series Party Games, in which politicians take part in a number of light-hearted games, Ms Butler was asked if she would rather be prime minister or mayor of London She replied: 'London mayor, to represent London. I'm a Londoner through and through, born in east London. 'Just having London the way I have experienced it and seen it and just making London wonderful for everyone and everyone being proud of London and being a Londoner… Yeah, I'd love to be a mayor of London.' When pressed to confirm that she would run in the next mayoral election, Ms Butler said: 'Once there's a vacancy, I will pop my hat in the ring.' There has been speculation that Idris Elba, the actor and knife crime campaigner, and Deborah Meaden, the entrepreneur and star of Dragon's Den, are also interested in becoming Labour's next mayoral hopeful. Sir Sadiq was comfortably re-elected last year after seeing off Susan Hall, his Conservative challenger, with 43.9 per cent of the vote to Ms Hall's 32.7 per cent. The election was the first to use the first past the post system, meaning Londoners can only vote for one mayoral candidate and the candidate who gets the most votes is declared the winner. In November, Sir Keir refused to remove the whip from Ms Butler after she shared a social media post accusing Kemi Badenoch of representing ' white supremacy in blackface '. Ms Butler had reposted comments on X, which she would go on to remove, that also referred to Mrs Badenoch's election as the Conservative Party leader as a 'victory for racism'. The post shared by Ms Butler was written by Nels Abbey, a Nigerian journalist, and offered 'tips for surviving the immediate surge of Badenochism (i.e. white supremacy in blackface)'. 'Abhorrent' Labour sources noted the post had quickly been taken down and pointed to Sir Keir's remarks that Mrs Badenoch becoming the first black leader of a British party was 'a proud moment for our country'. The Prime Minister later said Ms Butler 'shouldn't have said what she did' as he faced demands to strip her of the whip over the 'abhorrent' remarks. The row came months after Ms Butler had agreed with the actor David Tennant that Mrs Badenoch should 'shut up' because of her views on women's rights. Mrs Badenoch has been a key voice in the trans debate, asserting the importance of biological sex and insisting that biological males should not be allowed to access female spaces. In a speech at the British LGBT Awards, Tennant said: 'Until we wake up and Kemi Badenoch doesn't exist any more – I don't wish ill of her, I just wish her to shut up – whilst we do live in this world, I am honoured to receive this [award].' At the height of a backlash to Tennant's remarks, Ms Butler said: 'Not all black women think the same. I agree with David Tennant. That's it, that's the tweet.' In April 2024, she admitted that she 'may have misled' the House of Commons by quoting a briefing issued by Stonewall in response to the Cass Review. Ms Butler claimed in a debate that 'over 100 studies' were excluded from the landmark report into gender identity services by Dr Hilary Cass, a paediatric consultant. But Dr Cass clarified that researchers examined a total of 103 papers, which eventually included the 60 datasets that were deemed to be high or medium quality.


STV News
34 minutes ago
- STV News
For Women Scotland launches legal action against Scottish ministers on gender
A campaign group which won a legal victory on the definition of gender is taking action against the Scottish Government over policies it says are 'inconsistent' with the ruling. For Women Scotland's legal battle with Scottish ministers on the definition of a woman ended in the UK Supreme Court, which ruled in April that the words 'woman' and 'sex' in the Equality Act 2010 refer to a biological woman and biological sex. However, the group said that it now has 'little choice' but to take further legal action as some policies regarding transgender pupils in schools and transgender people in custody remain in place – which the group said is 'in clear breach of the law'. The schools guidance for single-sex toilets says it is important that young people 'where possible, are able to use the facilities they feel most comfortable with'. The prison guidance allows for a transgender woman to be admitted into the women's estate if the person does not meet the violence against women and girls criteria, and there is no other basis to suppose that she poses an unacceptable risk of harm to those housed in the women's estate. For Women Scotland has now applied to the Court of Session seeking to quash the policies, which it says are 'inconsistent with the UK Supreme Court judgment of April 16 2025'. It has raised an ordinary action for reduction (quashing) of the policies relating to schools and prisons. In a statement, the group said: 'Nothing has persuaded the government to take action and both policies remain stubbornly in place, to the detriment of vulnerable women and girls, leaving us little choice but to initiate further legal action. 'The Scottish ministers have 21 days to respond to the summons. If the policies have not been withdrawn by then we will lodge the summons for calling, and the government will have to defend its policies in court. 'We are asking the court to issue a declarator that the school guidance and the prison guidance are unlawful and that they be reduced in whole. 'We are also asking that both policies are suspended in the meantime.' A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'It would be inappropriate to comment on live court proceedings.' For Women Scotland previously brought a series of challenges over the definition of 'woman' in Scottish legislation mandating 50% female representation on public boards. The last step of these ended in the Supreme Court ruling, which the campaign group's supporters hailed as a 'watershed for women'. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country