Parents crying out for online regulation, MP Eastwood says

3 April 2025, 00:04

Alliance MP Sorcha Eastwood (PA)
General Election 2024. Picture: PA

Alliance MP Sorcha Eastwood said Sir Keir Starmer’s move to show Netflix drama Adolescence in schools shows the Government is ‘out of touch’.

Parents are “crying out for guardrails” for young people using social media, Alliance MP Sorcha Eastwood has said.

Ms Eastwood also said Sir Keir Starmer’s move to show Netflix drama Adolescence in secondary schools shows the Government is “out of touch” and “blind to the concerns”.

On Thursday, the MP for Lagan Valley is hosting a backbench debate on the impact of digital platforms on UK democracy.

Ahead of the debate, she told the PA news agency: “I think a lot of people have just resigned themselves to some sort of inevitability about this and in actual fact, I think our young people, and certainly those who care for them, whether they’re carers, adults and people that are in and around supporting our young people, mums and dads, guardians. I think they’re crying out for guardrails.”

She added: “Certainly not having any protections and no laws and not revisiting the age of consent, I think is completely wrong, because as far as I’m concerned, we know that it’s harmful. It is absolutely harmful. It’s damaging our young people. It’s damaging society.”

Andrew Tate (Vadim Ghirda/AP)
Andrew Tate (Vadim Ghirda/AP)

Ms Eastwood is currently undertaking legal action against influencers Andrew and Tristan Tate over social media posts made a day after she told the House of Commons she was a “survivor of abuse” and had received rape threats.

Andrew Tate has previously been banned from TikTok, YouTube and Facebook after the platforms accused him of posting hate speech and misogynistic comments, including that women should bear responsibility for being sexually assaulted.

She said: “Even whenever you look at some of the language that certainly followers of the Tates would use in terms of ‘lover boy’ methods and ‘love bombing’ and all that sort of stuff.

“Young people now are operating in a sphere where it’s a different language, it’s a different way, and most older people would not understand it and if they can’t understand it then they can’t deal with it.

“People like me, who are older, who do understand it, who can see it unfolding, and can see the absolute carnage that is resulting in terms of our young people’s lives, are desperate for action, are ringing the bell.

“If there was a dashboard, every light on it would be red and the Government are just blind to the concerns.”

The Netflix series Adolescence, which examines so-called incel (involuntary celibate) culture, has prompted a national conversation about online safety.

This week the Prime Minister backed Netflix making the show – which centres around a teenage boy accused of killing a girl from his school – free to stream for all secondary schools across the UK.

Ms Eastwood said the move shows “a Government certainly that are out of touch, but it also shows the Government that are wanting to just close its eyes and ears to this”.

She said: “This has been going on for such a long time and that the Government responded by saying, ‘we will allow this programme to be shown in schools’ without any reference to the fact that we need to revisit the age of consent, and so far as digital platform usage, we need to immediately have financial sanctions for these companies that platform this harmful and often criminal content, and absolutely no mention of legislation at all.

“It’s already clear that the Online Safety Act isn’t robust enough. These companies will only respond to what they understand, and that’s money and that’s cash, and that’s hitting them where it hurts, right in the pocket.”

Ms Eastwood called for additional taxes on “tech oligarchs”, which she said the Government were using as a “bargaining tool with the US”.

“Nothing at all can be used to denigrate the rights of our children and young people, and yet that’s exactly what they’re doing,” she said.

“Second of all, we need financial sanctions and consequences for these firms and lastly, we need robust legislation, because none of that will be enforceable or policeable without legislation.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Sir Elton John performing

Elton John says ‘we will not back down’ in awards speech addressing AI concerns

Live
Customers purchase Nintendo Switch 2 at an electronics retailer in Tokyo on June 5, 2025.

Nintendo Switch 2 launch live: Where to buy, best deals, and early verdict

In this photo illustration, an Apple logo is seen displayed alongside the Google logo.

Tech giants Apple and Google 'profiting from phone thefts', MPs claim

A man's hands using a laptop keyboard

Scots warned of ‘scamdemic’ as £860,000 lost to cyber criminals in 12 months

A close up image of a The North Face fleece

North Face and Cartier customer data stolen in cyber attacks

Imagery of a Zilch payments card and a virtual card

Buy now pay later provider Zilch to launch first physical card

UK’s most EV-friendly city has been revealed by new research.

Cities with slowest EV charging times and least amount of chargers revealed

View of a VodafoneThree logo outside the firm's offices

Vodafone completes Three UK mega-merger to form ‘new force’ in mobile market

A hand holding a Monzo bank card and a mobile phone showing the Monzo app

Monzo annual profit surges as paying subscribers boost digital bank

Majestic British Airways Airbus A380 taking off from London Heathrow at sunset, amazing colors

UK airspace shake-up could slash journey times and cut flight delays for millions of passengers

File photo dated 30/05/25 of the saltmarsh at Abbotts Hall in Essex. Saltmarshes are 'significant' carbon stores, but are at risk from rising sea levels, new research reveals

UK's muddy saltmarshes vital to tackle climate change, report finds

Nigel Farage

Reform backs cryptocurrency tax cut as party receives first Bitcoin donations

Digital devices on office workplace table of young business woman

‘Young people and black workers at highest risk of workplace surveillance’

Debris from the Titan submersible, recovered from the ocean floor near the wreck of the Titanic, is unloaded from the ship Horizon Arctic at the Canadian Coast Guard pier in St. John's, Newfoundland, in June 2023

The shock household item discovered in 'sludge' of OceanGate sub wreckage

Google is facing a £25 billion legal claim in the UK, accusing the tech giant of abusing its dominant position in the online search advertising market

Google facing £25 billion legal claim over abuse of search advertising market

A hand holding a phone showing the Nvidia logo

Nvidia posts strong growth despite ongoing tariff challenges