Keir Starmer Takes On Elon Musk
Via International News:
UK leader Keir Starmer accused US tech tycoon Elon Musk on Thursday of "trying to whip up division" in Britain following anger over the police handling of the murder of a white student by a Sikh man.
. . . Musk, the billionaire owner of X, has posted numerous times on the platform about the police response to the stabbing.
In one, he falsely asked whether people knew that "official police policy requires them to be racist against Whites?"
. . . Musk has offered to fund a private prosecution against the police over its handling of the murder and insulted the Hampshire Police force involved.
UK legacy media has generally portrayed public criticism of police polices, especially from Musk, as "far right". From The Guardian:
Musk is a regular poster of ethnonationalist content, and is a strong supporter of Restore Britain, the far-right party set up by Rupert Lowe, a former Reform UK MP.
. . . In recent weeks Musk has repeatedly argued that the case of Nowak, who was arrested by police as he lay dying from stab wounds inflicted by Vickrum Digwa, shows the UK is biased against white people.
In contrast, the line is that Starmer is calm, collected, and simply wants to fix what's wrong:
Starmer met Nowak’s family at Downing Street on Thursday to discuss a response to the actions of Hampshire police, who arrested the 18-year-old student as he lay dying from stab wounds after a false accusation of racist abuse by the killer.
He said after the meeting that he had been “profoundly humbled” and promised to take “whatever action is required to right the wrongs in this case”.
Of course he does. At the first link,
On Thursday, he said there were "difficult questions that need to be answered about the way the police handled Henry's murder".
The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) watchdog is investigating.
An inquest into whether police contributed to Nowak's death will open in front of a jury in September 2027, officials announced Thursday.
The IOPC has already leaked to the Guardian that nobody did anything wrong, and an inquest over a year from now will firmly establish that, once the furor has died down. What's clearly going on is that Musk is simply applying US standards of police conduct to the UK, where they're very different. The US has had a long history of experiencing police misconduct on one hand and finding equitable ways of investigating and ameliorating the problem on the other, something the UK apparently has not.I asked the AI oracle, "Musk has offered to fund a private prosecution against the police over its handling of the Nowak case. Can this be successfuly done under UK law?" It answered,
No, Elon Musk’s proposed private prosecution against the police over the handling of the Henry Nowak case is highly unlikely to succeed under UK law. While Section 6(1) of the Prosecution of Offences Act 1985 explicitly permits individuals to initiate private criminal prosecutions, the legal and systemic safeguards embedded in the English justice system make a successful outcome against the police in this scenario virtually impossible.
The absolute largest obstacle to any high-profile private prosecution is the sweeping intervention power of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS). Under UK law, the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) has the right to review any private prosecution at any stage.
If the CPS determines the private prosecution lacks sufficient evidential ground, is vexatious, or interferes with existing state investigations, they will legally take over the case and immediately shut it down. Because state watchdogs are already investigating the handling of the Nowak case, the CPS would almost certainly intervene to avoid a parallel, politically charged trial.
. . . Hampshire Constabulary has already issued a formal apology for the error. While an apology does not grant legal immunity, it signals a systemic failure and professional error rather than the malicious or intentionally criminal behavior typically required to secure an individual criminal conviction.
{I note yet again that AI made no attempt to seduce me, flatter me, or chat me up. Nor did it offer to draw me a picture of Kamala Harris in a bikini. It simply gave me a clear, straightforward, informative answer. I'll cover this in tomorrow's post.]In other words, the police have already said, "Whoopsie! Our bad!" and that settles it, the fix is in. This is simply not how things would play out in the US, as race-related cases like George Floyd, Kyle Rittenhouse, George Zimmerman, and Rodney King make clear. It does seem relevant to draw such comparisons, as Musk is in a position to do. But via Reuters,
Starmer has said police had serious questions to answer about their handling of the incident, but condemned a violent and disorderly protest that took place on Tuesday night and said it was "unforgivable" to exploit the death to stir tension.
"Musk again has been interfering in our politics in the last few days, trying to whip up division. That is not who we are in Britain," Starmer told reporters.
The problem for me as a US observer is that the US, 70 years ago, acknowledged that it had serious problems in policing and race relations and has made effective progress in dealing with them equitably. So far, it seems as though the UK hasn't even acknowledged the nature of the problem. Viewers of the highly popular US TV program On Patrol: Live recognize that US police departments employ African-Americans and other ethnicities widely and at all levels, and regardless of race, there's a dominant ethos of maintaining order and equitable justice.In fact, officers of all ethnicities share the same gallows sense of humor about crime and criminals, whatever the ethnicity of the perps. This, definitely including the gallows humor, is a big reason the show is so popular. In fact, it's a testament to the actual work that police departments have done over the better part of a century to put things where they are in the US. Musk is asking, somewhat naively, why things can't be the same in the UK -- but the UK first has to acknowledge there's a problem.
It sounds like the UK has yet to take that first step. Even if they hired lots if Muslim officers, for instance, I have a feeling that all we'd see would be repetitions of the Nowak episode all over the country. A big part of the problem, as I pointed out yesterday, is that the UK doesn't have the same constitutional incentives to solve the problem, especially if the government has such broad authority to limit prosecutions.
You know what? Edmund Burke had it all wrong. The Jacobins at least had a point.





