
New Forest Park Authority at 'crossroads' as it marks 20 years
The New Forest remains one of the few lowland areas where commoners release animals on to the open forest.The free-roaming ponies, cattle and pigs help shape the forest's landscapes, which are home to rare flora and fauna.Setting out its priorities for the next 20 years, the authority said housing and development pressures were testing the balance between conservation and community need.
Under government plans, Hampshire's councils will also become a single devolved authority, and Mr Bence called for the forest's unique needs to be recognised when budgets and financial settlements are drawn up.He said: "Twenty years ago we were entrusted with a responsibility - to protect, preserve, and enhance this special place for generations to come. "Now we stand at a crossroads - with devolution, local government reorganisation, climate transition, and agricultural reform all converging at once."These bring serious challenges, but also rare opportunities - to reinforce protections for the forest, formally recognise its unique culture, support a vibrant green economy, and shape a resilient future for both nature and people."At the heart of this future must be the protection of the forest's integrity... its landscapes, ecosystems, communities and traditions. "This must be the guiding test for any new proposals that arise from policy change."
You can follow BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

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


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Sultana accuses Corbyn of ‘capitulation' over antisemitism in attack on new party co-leader
Jeremy Corbyn has been accused by the co-leader of his new party of 'capitulating' over antisemitism. Zarah Sultana said the former Labour leader was wrong to accept the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism and said he alienated voters by 'triangulating' on Brexit. In an extraordinary attack just weeks after the pair announced the formation of Your Party, a left-wing challenger to Labour, Ms Sultana said Labour under Mr Corbyn 'capitulated to the IHRA definition of antisemitism'. She told the New Left Review: 'It triangulated on Brexit, which alienated huge numbers of voters. It abandoned mandatory reselection of MPs for the trigger ballot compromise, keeping many of the party's undemocratic structures in place. 'It didn't make a real effort to channel its mass membership into the labour movement or tenants unions, which would have enriched the party's social base. 'When it came under attack from the state and the media, it should have fought back, recognising that these are our class enemies. But instead it was frightened and far too conciliatory.' In a bid to end the antisemitism crisis that gripped the party under his leadership, Mr Corbyn in 2018 announced it would adopt the IHRA definition. He had initially sought to resist calls to fully adopt the IHRA's definition of antisemitism, including by adopting just seven of its 11 examples of antisemitic behaviour. In her interview, Ms Sultana said the IHRA's definition of antisemitism 'famously equates it with anti-Zionism, and which even its lead author Kenneth Stern has now publicly criticised'. The Board of Deputies of British Jews said the IHRA definition is supported by the overwhelming majority of British jews. 'Calling the recognition of the IHRA definition of antisemitism a 'capitulation' is a grave insult,' a spokesman added. The spokesman said: 'Labour's real betrayal under Corbyn was unlawfully harassing and discriminating against Jews. Those who seek to delegitimise and misdefine the IHRA definition in this way prove themselves to be no friend to the Jewish community and also call into question their wider commitment to anti-racism, the wellbeing of the Jewish community and social cohesion.' Ms Sultana's criticism of Mr Corbyn's tenure as leader will heighten tensions between the pair as Your Party takes shape. The name is a holding title before a conference, expected this autumn, at which activists will decide a long-term name, leadership structures and ultimately who is in charge. Ms Sultana initially announced that the pair would be co-leaders, blindsiding Mr Corbyn who had not yet committed to the structure. The party has so far brought together pro-Gaza independent MPs, councillors and candidates who have opposed the Labour Party's stance on the ongoing conflict. The MPs who have joined unseated former Labour frontbencher Jonathan Ashworth and almost cost senior ministers Wes Streeting, Shabana Mahmood and Jess Phillips their seats. Others likely to join include Faiza Shaheen, who was deselected at the last minute by Labour for Chingford and Woodford Green but ran as an independent, preventing her former party from taking the seat off ex-Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith.


ITV News
4 hours ago
- ITV News
Swansea has its first Reform councillor
Swansea has its first Reform UK councillor after Cllr Francesca O'Brien, who represents Mumbles, joined the party. The former Welsh Conservative was first elected to the council in 2022 and described Reform UK as the only chance to break the 'Labour-Plaid consensus in Cardiff Bay and create a government in Wales that understands the concerns of ordinary people'. Cllr O'Brien had stood as a prospective Conservative MP for Gower in the 2019 general election, finishing second behind Labour's Tonia Antoniazzi. At the time she apologised for a Facebook post in which she said people on a TV show needed "putting down". 'I'm proud to be announcing that I am joining Reform UK,' said Cllr O'Brien. 'Reform UK is our only chance to finally break up the Labour/Plaid consensus in Cardiff Bay and create a government in Wales that understands the concerns of ordinary people.' She said Reform UK was committed to ending 'the bleeding of millions of taxpayer pounds on things like empty Welsh Government buildings and pointless overseas offices' and would redirect that money back into Wales. She added: 'I continue to remain dedicated to my role as a councillor, determined to make our communities thrive, businesses boom and deliver a safe and vibrant community for our families to live and work.'

The National
6 hours ago
- The National
Labour under Corbyn 'capitulated' over anti-semitism
In a newly released interview, Sultana said the new left-wing political party she is launching with Corbyn must understand the 'limitations' of Corbynism, as well as its strengths. The MP for Coventry South, who lost the Labour whip in July 2024 and is currently sitting as an independent, told The New Left Review that under Corbyn, the party should not have adopted the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism. Corbyn served as leader of the Labour Party from 2015 to 2020. Sultana said the new party, which does not yet have an official name, should learn the lessons of how Labour under Corbyn handled attacks from 'the state and the media'. We previously told how 200,000 people signed up to Corbyn and Sultana's party in less than 24 hours. In a lengthy interview, Sultana was asked how Corbynism could be adapted to the present. 'I think we're in a very different political moment,' she said. 'We have to build on the strengths of Corbynism – its energy, mass appeal and bold policy platform – and we also have to recognise its limitations. It capitulated to the IHRA definition of antisemitism, which famously equates it with anti-Zionism, and which even its lead author Kenneth Stern has now publicly criticised. READ MORE: MoD slammed after ministers not told about US troops on Scottish soil 'It triangulated on Brexit, which alienated huge numbers of voters. It abandoned mandatory reselection of MPs for the trigger ballot compromise, keeping many of the party's undemocratic structures in place.' The IHRA definition is not legally binding, and states: 'Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.' On the Holocaust remembrance website, the IHRA adds that an example of this could be: 'Manifestations might include the targeting of the state of Israel, conceived as a Jewish collectivity. 'However, criticism of Israel similar to that leveled against any other country cannot be regarded as antisemitic. Antisemitism frequently charges Jews with conspiring to harm humanity, and it is often used to blame Jews for ;why things go wrong'.' Sultana argued that more effort should have been made to 'channel' its members into the labour movement and tenants unions to enrich 'the party's social base'. 'When it came under attack from the state and the media, it should have fought back, recognising that these are our class enemies,' she added. (Image: Novara Media/YouTube) 'But instead it was frightened and far too conciliatory. This was a serious mistake. 'If we're contesting state power, we're going to face a major backlash, and we need to have the institutional resilience to withstand it. You cannot give these people an inch.' Sultana said that power in Labour was 'too centralised' and that the new party should take a different approach. 'We now have a younger generation that is highly politicised due to the establishment's disastrous policies on housing, education, employment and war,' she added. 'They are going to demand a seat at the table and the ability to wield actual power, and rightfully so. READ MORE: Outrage as Reform councillor shares stage with 'neo-Nazi' at Falkirk protest 'My vision for the new party is about that kind of active participation, because that's how I got into politics myself: not by the traditional route of running as a councillor, but through social movements.' The MP added that members should feel involved and that the party should be 'representative of wider society'. 'That also means we can't soft-pedal our anti-racism,' she added. 'Some people want us to focus solely on the 'economic issues'. But if the politics of class is detached from the politics of race then it is bound to fail – because when our neighbours are being simultaneously targeted for eviction and deportation, that struggle is one and the same.'