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DWP Youth Guarantee jobs fair is forcing kids into war

Rachel Charlton-Dailey by Rachel Charlton-Dailey
3 March 2026
in Analysis, UK
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The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) held its first Youth Guarantee jobs fair in Blackpool. But as always with the DWP, it’s not all it seems – as the fair was packed with military and weapons manufacturers.

DWP Youth Guarantee plows on

As the Canary has previously reported, The Youth Guarantee is the department’s scheme to force young people into work. The DWP claims this is a supportive process, but it’s clear it’s to kick people off Universal Credit into low-paid jobs.

The DWP boasted that

Thousands of young people were brought together with employers today for the first ever jobs fair for the Youth Guarantee

The fair brought 94 employers to Blackpool Winter Gardens, however the first red flag is the type of employment on offer. While there were full time jobs, the DWP highlights that many were offering  “apprenticeships, traineeships, work experience placements.” Translation: low or below minimum wage pay.

We also have to look at the kind of employers that the DWP were pushing on young people. While there were the Blackpool staples of the Pleasure Beach and Leyland Trucks, some were not as wholesome.

Heavy military and weapons presence

It’s almost expected that there’ll be a heavy military presence at these things by now. So naturally, the Royal Air Force and the UK Armed Forces were there to seduce working-class kids with the promise of a stable income, a roof over their heads and “duty”.

Also present were the police force, but this is the rare occasion where the police being somewhere was a good thing. It was reported by local press that the police apprehended a local man who tried to attack Blackpool South MP Chris Webb.

Even more worryingly, there were a number of companies there that have links to defence and the arms trade at the fair.

Arms giant BAE Systems was present at the fair. Last year they celebrated record profits of blood money from the Middle East and beyond.

Also in attendance was Composites UK, a trade association for

companies working in the UK’s fibre-reinforced polymer composite supply chain

However the trade body includes many composite suppliers to Israel’s deadly Elbit Systems. Some of whom were recruiting at the fair, Teledyne and Brookehouse Aerospace. Both also supply to arms companies Leonardo, BAE, and Raytheon.

These weren’t the only dangerous recruiters. The fair also included engineering giant Babcock International, “defence manufacturer” the WEC Group and CNC Robotics. DWP chief Pat McFadden can be seen high-fiving one of their creepy little robots at the start of the DWP’s propaganda video about the fair. The company also supplies robotics to the defence industry.

Also in attendance were Safran Nacelles, a subsidiary of Safran Group. They’re a major French aerospace, defence, and security company. Make UK trade association were also there, who have a defence sector offshoot. It’s “strategic partners” are a who’s who of the arms industry, with many links to Israel’s genocide including BAE, Lockheed Martin, Thales, and Pearson Engineering.

The DWP is forcing our kids into war

After the event, McFadden headed up a round-table with 16 employers from the manufacturing industry. The DWP says he “secured support” for the Youth Guarantee from these “major players”.

However of the 16 employers, 7 of them had links to war. Babcock International, Teledyne, Brookhouse Aerospace, Safran Nacelles, Make UK, WEC Group and CNC Robotics supplies were all part of the discussion.

The DWP talks a lot about wanting to “support” young people into work. However, it’s clear that their only alternative to low-paid, low-skilled work is to become a cog in a machine for war mongers and profiteers. That or be used as cannon fodder in rich men’s wars.

It might’ve been the Tories that wanted to bring back National Service, but it’s Labour who are coercing young people into the arms and military complex.

At least the Tories were upfront about wanting to force our kids to die in wars.

Featured image via the Canary

Tags: Department for Work and Pensions (DWP)militarism
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Comments 2

  1. Airlane1979 says:
    4 months ago

    These are organisations dedicated to building tools to decapitate children, although I doubt the fair made the slightest mention of their ultimate purpose. It would be all about skills, career building and the like. Morally there is no difference between an arms manufacturer such as BAE Systems and Jeffrey Epstein’s island – and British arms workers ought to bear that in mind. That such factories of child abuse are government-supported shows the urgent need for a working class, socialist revolution in the name of child rights.

    Reply
  2. Oneness says:
    4 months ago

    The arms trade is a hugely wasteful use of vast resources manufacturing harmful products but the many manufacturers’ balance sheets and the country’s GDP state it is profitable. Measured in money, the value of adverse production is calculated to be equal to prosperous production. A problem of economics deeming all production to be wealth creation and of positive value, even when contrary to the common good of all humanity.
    Importantly, could this be a previously obscured explanation for the increasing cost of living, for the necessities that sustain us and provide shelter and comfort?
    The global arms trade is negative value production that adversely impacts on international currencies, our living standards, the natural world and, above all, life itself.
    This hypothesis questions the way economics is taught and practised.

    Reply

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