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Nigel Farage - Could he become a future PM of UK?

"Yours sincerely,

Nigel Farage, Leader of the Brexit Party"

Love that he's reminded us he's the leader of a political party with 0 MP's, including himself :)

Never been more irrelevant, and Thank God for it.
 
Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage will no longer host his LBC Radio show "with immediate effect", the broadcaster has announced.

In a statement posted on Twitter, LBC said: "Nigel Farage's contract with LBC is up very shortly and, following discussions with him, Nigel is stepping down from LBC with immediate effect.

"We thank Nigel for the enormous contribution he has made to LBC and wish him well."

The Nigel Farage Show, which began in January 2017, was broadcast on LBC five days a week and saw the Brexit Party leader taking calls from members of the public as part of a discussion of current affairs.

Mr Farage hosted his show as recently as Wednesday evening.

LBC and its parent company, Global Radio, had been criticised for their employment of Mr Farage.

It came after the companies said they would observe a minute's silence to mark the death of George Floyd in US police custody.

In a statement, they also promised to "make a sustained effort to evolve for the better".

Following weekend protests in the UK over Mr Floyd's killing in Minneapolis, Mr Farage claimed a "new form of the Taliban was born in the UK".

He also described the Black Lives Matter group as "a far-left Marxist organisation that wants to abolish the police and dismantle capitalism".

Mr Farage's comments were reported to have angered some staff at Capital Xtra, another of Global's radio stations.

Following the news of Mr Farage's departure, LBC presenter James O'Brien posted on Twitter: "We got our station back."

His comment echoed Mr Farage's tweet the morning after the 2016 EU referendum, when he posted: "We got our country back."

Sky News has attempted to contact Mr Farage's spokesperson for comment.

https://news.sky.com/story/nigel-farage-to-leave-lbc-radio-with-immediate-effect-12004872

https://news.sky.com/story/nigel-farage-to-leave-lbc-radio-with-immediate-effect-12004872
 
The fact they gave Farage and Hopkins a voice in the first place is a joke.

Majid is an idiot too.
 
The party, which a year ago swept to victory in the European Parliament elections and sealed Theresa May’s fate as Prime Minister, is likely to be renamed the Reform Party amid growing demands for a centre right alternative to the Tories. The revelation comes in a week where speculation has been rife about Mr Farage’s future after he left LBC and led the attacks on the riots and destruction linked to the Black Lives Matter protests. The Sunday Express has learnt that plans for a relaunch of the Brexit Party have been in the pipeline for months and donations are pouring in for it to relaunch as a political force.

The party has already opened talks with a public relations firm and is preparing to stand a candidate in the next available by-election.

Senior figures from the Brexit Party have also been in talks with senior Tory MPs on the right of the party who are concerned about the loss of direction by Mr Johnson’s government.

There are also concerns that Mr Johnson may go “soft on Brexit” to get a quick deal with the EU and compromise on immigration rules as well as fishing waters and accepting EU rules.

One Tory MP who has spoken to both Mr Farage and Brexit Party chairman Richard Tice, said: “It will be a disaster if they relaunch. They will immediately pick up eight to 10 per cent of our vote and put us in second place behind Labour.

“A split in the centre right will mean we are always playing catch up.”

The MP added: “We should have given Nigel a knighthood and thanked him but instead Boris and Downing Street just wanted to humiliate him.”

Another Conservative MP added: “The problem is that Boris has left an open goal for the Brexit Party by pandering to the left.

“We have gone over the top with lockdown and we have allowed the streets to be taken over by rioters.

“The one thing we are getting right is Brexit but we are in danger of losing public confidence on that too.”

Last week Mr Farage is understood to have told friends that he felt “vindicated” after Downing Street admitted it was trying to put right the “unfair defects” in the Withdrawal Agreement Mr Johnson signed in January despite telling voters it was “an excellent deal”.

Last night Mr Farage told the Sunday Express: “[I am] watching and waiting. The lack of leadership from our government has been pitiful. Millions of Conservative voters want to see some moral courage not the current cowardice in the face of anarchic marxism.”

Sources close to leadership added: "Phones have been buzzing, hundreds emails per day from furious Tory voters, donations pouring in, we are praying for a by-election in Tory seat think would win one and gearing up for it, and currently deciding on who would stand.”

Meanwhile, former MEP Ben Habib told the Sunday Express: “We never really went away. The problem is that the Conservative Party is not really conservative.

“People are very worried about what is happening with Brexit. It is good that they will not extend the transition period but nobody can be sure that won’t happen until we have left properly.

“Meanwhile, we hear the government now saying it wants accelerated talks in June and July. What are they waiting for” How many times does the EU have to tell them Britain needs to sign up to its unfair level playing field rules?

“The government needs to walk away on world trade organisation rules.”

https://www.express.co.uk/news/poli...exit-party-return-boris-johnson-EU-trade-deal
 
A US congressman has launched an investigation after Nigel Farage apparently flew to America to attend a Donald Trump rally during the coronavirus pandemic.

Bennie G Thompson, chairman of the House of Representatives' committee on homeland security, said the decision to allow the visit raised "numerous troubling questions" at the time of travel restrictions from the UK.

The US has barred entry to arrivals from Britain, with the exception of US citizens, their family members and "individuals who meet specified exceptions".

Brexit Party leader Mr Farage posted a photograph of himself on Saturday with the caption: "In the USA, only twenty fours from Tulsa" - the destination of the US president's rally over the weekend.

Mr Thompson said he had sent a letter to Chad Wolf, acting secretary of homeland security, requesting "all relevant documents" on the decision to "waive the travel ban for Mr Farage".

He said: "The decision of the Trump administration to admit Mr Farage to the United States to enable him to attend a campaign rally at a time when most travel from the United Kingdom to the US has been suspended raises numerous troubling questions, as does the claim that such travel was in the national interest."

Mr Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat, said a statement provided to his staff by America's Customs and Border Protection (CBP) confirmed Mr Farage was initially denied boarding while attempting to fly from the UK to the US, due to the coronavirus travel restrictions.

According to the congressman, the CBP said the Department of Homeland Security conducted a review and determined Mr Farage's travel was "permissible" as his entry to the US "would be in the national interest" and he was allowed to board the flight.

In his letter to Mr Wolf, Mr Thompson has requested that the Department of Homeland Security provide "all communication" since 14 March related to Mr Farage's trip to the US.

He also requests documents on "the individual who ultimately approved travel to the US by Mr Farage" and "the determination and justification" that the trip "was a matter of national interest".

Sky News has contacted the Brexit Party for comment.

Mr Farage previously appeared alongside Mr Trump to give a speech at a rally in Mississippi in August 2016 before the last US presidential election.

At the time, he spoke about his role in the campaign for Britain to leave the European Union, but stopped short of endorsing Mr Trump for president.

It was announced earlier this month that Mr Farage will no longer host his LBC Radio show which he had presented since January 2017.

https://news.sky.com/story/nigel-fa...gated-by-homeland-security-committee-12012928
 
Nigel Farage accused of breaking quarantine rules with pub visit

The Brexit party leader, Nigel Farage, is facing claims that he broke quarantine rules by going to a pub when it reopened for the first time since lockdown.

Farage tweeted a picture of himself holding a pint, saying he was the first customer in the establishment on Saturday.

However, a post from 20 June shows he was in the US on that date and planning to travel to Tulsa, apparently in reference to a Donald Trump rally which took place that evening in the city.

According to the i newspaper, Farage was spotted at the rally taking part in a panel discussion called “Team Trump on Tour”.

The timing of the tweets and his presence at the rally indicate that he has been in the UK for less than 14 days. Government guidelines say that any resident or visitor travelling to the UK must self-isolate at the place they are staying for 14 days, except in very limited situations.

Ed Davey, a candidate to be Liberal Democrat leader, has written to Kent police asking them to investigate whether Farage breached quarantine rules, and said Farage was showing “flagrant disregard” for public safety.

“There are clearly serious questions to answer for Nigel Farage. It is clear from his social media posts that he was in America on 20 June, and he was pictured at a Trump rally that evening,” he said. “Given the current requirements for visitors returning to the UK to isolate for 14 full days on their return, Nigel Farage appears to be in violation of the quarantine.

“It is a responsibility of everyone to take the lockdown requirements seriously in order to stop the spread of the virus. By choosing to go to the pub when it appears he should have been staying at home, Mr Farage is showing a flagrant disregard for the safety of people in his community.”

Farage denied having broken the regulations.

Responding to the backlash, he tweeted: “To all those screaming and shouting about me going to the pub …. I have been back from the USA for 2 weeks and I have been tested –– the result was negative. Sorry to disappoint you.”

But he did not clarify the date on which when he travelled back from the US, or deny that he had been present at the rally in the US 13 days ago.

Farage was granted a special exemption from the US travel ban for his visit, which was deemed to be “in the national interest, as determined by the secretary of state, the secretary of homeland security or their designees”, according to the US Department of Homeland Security.

Some Twitter users mentioned the apparent breach of quarantine restrictions in their reply to Farage’s post, with some tagging police forces to inform them that he had allegedly broken the regulations.

Many pubs across England reopened on Saturday after more than three months of closure due to coronavirus restrictions, with laws allowing them to reopen from 6am provided they had a licence to do so.
https://www.theguardian.com/politic...d-of-breaking-quarantine-rules-with-pub-visit
 
The Brexit Party has applied to change its name to Reform UK, admitting it is "time to re-direct our energies".

When the Brexit Party held its policy launch ahead of last year's general election, leader Nigel Farage said the organisation would most likely never be in power but could be the driving force behind getting governments to "support the little people".
 
Nigel Farage’s Reform UK overtakes Conservatives in new opinion poll

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party has overtaken the Conservatives in a national opinion poll for the first time, in the latest setback for Rishi Sunak and his faltering Tory election campaign.

Reform has climbed two percentage points to 19 per cent, overtaking the Tories who remained on 18 per cent, according to a YouGov poll, which put Labour on 37 per cent.

The survey showing the “crossover” moment of rightwing Reform surpassing the Conservatives was conducted after the prime minister launched the Tory election manifesto on Tuesday.

While it is only one poll and the Financial Times’ tracker shows on average that the Conservatives have an eight-point lead over Reform, it is a fresh blow for Sunak, who is attending a G7 summit in Italy.

Farage, leader of Reform, said in an ITV election event on Thursday evening: “Just before we came on air, we overtook the Conservatives in national opinion polls. We are now the opposition to Labour.”

As attention turns to the future of the Conservatives after the election, Farage said earlier on Thursday he would be willing to lead a merged Reform-Conservative grouping.

He predicted “something new is going to emerge on the centre-right”, telling LBC that the Tories “may well be dead” after the election but that he would “be prepared to lead the centre-right in this country”.

A reverse takeover would be welcomed by some rightwing Conservatives, who venerate the arch-Brexiter and believe their party’s travails stem from its failure to advocate a more hardline approach on immigration, tax and cultural issues.

Suella Braverman, who served as home secretary under Sunak, said this week that the Conservatives should embrace Farage, arguing there was “not much difference” between his policies and those of the Tories, as she rallied colleagues to “unite the right”.

Sunak had hoped to get back on the front foot as he broke away from his foundering election campaign in the UK for a two-day G7 summit on the Puglian riviera.

Asked by a reporter about seeming “down in the dumps” after a deflated performance at a Sky News election event in Grimsby on Wednesday, where he had faced tough questions about broken promises, Sunak said: “Definitely not.”

With the polls indicating Labour is on track for a parliamentary majority just three weeks before polling day, Sunak dismissed any suggestion of being snubbed by allies at the G7 summit who may believe he is on his way out of office.

“I’ve already sat down with Emmanuel, spoken to Olaf about a bunch of things,” he said of brush-by encounters with French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

However, Sunak was prepared to acknowledge a setback in relation to the conduct of his parliamentary aide Craig Williams, who is under investigation by the Gambling Commission after placing a £100 bet on the date of the election three days before the prime minister announced it would be July 4.

Sunak said it was “very disappointing” and highlighted Williams’ own admission that it had been a “huge error of judgment”.

Tory insiders said the episode was seen as a betrayal by Williams and had dealt a psychological blow to other members of Sunak’s inner circle.

The prime minister was more upbeat discussing the $50bn loan to Ukraine that the G7 agreed, which he said “the UK have been leading on” for months.

He also welcomed the publication of Labour’s manifesto, which he said contained “no big ideas”.

Declaring that he would still be “fighting very hard” until polling day, Sunak said he wanted to ensure voters knew they would be “saddled” with higher taxes by a Labour government.

Foreign secretary Lord David Cameron was forced to insist he not did feel pity for Sunak. “I don’t feel sorry for him because he’s a very effective prime minister who wants to go on doing his job,” he said.

While Cameron told the BBC that the polls did not “look good” for the Conservatives, he argued “they didn’t look very good in 2015 when I won the election”.

Tory insiders said morale in the campaign had continued to nosedive. One Conservative figure said it felt as though many campaigners had “entirely given up”, adding it had not gone unnoticed how low a profile many cabinet ministers were keeping.

SOURCE: Financial Times
 
Independents join Reform UK in first for Essex

Four councillors have become the first in Essex to join Reform UK.

They were unveiled by party leader Nigel Farage during a rally at the Princes Theatre in Clacton, where he is standing as a candidate in the general election.

Jeff Bray and Peter Harris, of the Tendring Residents Alliance Group, were joined in the move by Richard Everett and James Codling.

Mr Bray, who was previously in UKIP and then the Conservatives, said: "People shouldn’t live by rosettes. Reform does things others wouldn’t dream of."

The so-called Farage Four were previously registered as independents on Tendring District Council, which is an independent-run coalition supported by Labour and the Liberal Democrats.

They took control of the council following local elections last May, with the authority having previously been run by the Conservatives since 2009.

On his journey to Reform, Mr Bray, who was leader of the Residents Alliance Group, said: "I was in the Conservative Party and it was the only party near my views. Most people accept the Conservatives are not doing what they used to, and so you look at what’s next.

"There will be people who agree with me and people who don’t. I have received lots of correspondence from people thanking me for moving over."

'Political football'

The leader of the Conservative group on the council, Paul Honeywood, said: "My view is that it is up to individual councillors to decide how best to represent their constituents.

"My concern is that our constituency gets turned into a political football that serves the ambitions of certain individuals."

Labour’s Ivan Henderson, the deputy leader of the council, said: "These four councillors have moved from party to party and have shown no loyalty to party or residents.

"They are using the electorate to further their own means."

It is the first time anywhere in Essex that Reform UK has had registered councillors.

BBC
 
Farage elected MP for first time as Reform wins four seats

Nigel Farage has been elected as an MP for the first time, as his Reform UK party won four seats.

The Reform leader overturned a 25,000 Conservative majority to take Clacton in Essex by more than 8,000 votes.

In a speech after the result was announced, Mr Farage said it was "the first step of something that is going to stun all of you".

Shortly after Reform also gained Great Yarmouth and Boston and Skegness from the Tories.

Earlier, former Conservative MP Lee Anderson, who defected to Reform in March, retained Ashfield in Nottinghamshire.

The BBC is not predicting that Reform, which was formed in 2018 as the Brexit Party, will win any more seats.

An earlier exit poll for broadcasters had forecast the party would win 13 MPs - more than many polls during the campaign had predicted.

However, the figure was highly uncertain, as the model suggested there were many places where the party only has a relatively low chance of winning.

Taking aim at the Conservatives, Mr Farage said: "There is a massive gap on the centre-right of British politics and my job is to fill it."

Speaking to reporters after the result, he suggested "this is the beginning of the end of the Conservative Party".

Mr Farage said Reform would "now be targeting Labour votes".

"What is interesting is, there's no enthusiasm for Labour, there's no enthusiasm for [Keir] Starmer whatsoever. In fact, about half of the vote is simply an anti-Conservative vote," he said.

"We're coming for Labour, be in no doubt about that."

Polling expert Sir John Curtice said Reform had benefited from a significant fall in the Conservative vote in seats the party had previously held, as well as advancing most in areas where people voted Leave in the 2016 referendum.

In all four seats won by Reform more than 70% of people voted for Brexit.

Reform UK chairman Richard Tice overturned a 27,402 Tory majority to win Boston and Skegness.

Meanwhile, in Great Yarmouth, businessman and former Southampton FC chairman Rupert Lowe beat the Labour candidate by 1,426, with the Tories slipping to third place.

In an early sign of Reform's success in winning over former Tory voters, the first two results of the night in north-east England - in Blyth and Ashington and in Houghton and Sunderland South - saw the party beat the Conservatives by more than 4,000 votes.

The pattern was repeated in a number of other seats, as the Tory vote share plummeted.

However, Reform had less success winning seats off Labour.

In Barnsley North, where the exit poll had forecast a 99% likelihood of Reform taking the seat, Labour held the seat with an increased majority of 7,811.

Reform's candidate, Robert Lomas, who was disowned by the party last week for offensive comments on social media, came in second place.

In Hartlepool, another seat forecast to go to Reform, Labour also held on comfortably with a majority of 7,698.

Mr Farage has said he is aiming for Reform to become the main opposition to Labour by the time of the next election.

His surprise announcement that he was standing in the election, after previously saying he would not, saw a jump in Reform's poll ratings.

At the same time, he took over from Mr Tice as Reform's leader and he has played a prominent role in the party's campaign.

The former UKIP and Brexit Party leader has stood unsuccessfully to be an MP seven times, most recently in South Thanet, Kent, in the 2015 general election, when he finished second behind the Tory candidate.

Clacton was the first constituency to elect a UKIP MP in 2014, after former Tory MP Douglas Carswell defected to the party and triggered a by-election, which he won.

In 2019 Reform's previous incarnation, the Brexit Party, stood aside in more than 300 seats previously won by the Tories, amid concerns it could split the pro-Brexit vote.

However, this time the party contested 630 seats across England, Scotland and Wales.

Fielding an almost full slate of candidates in Great Britain posed challenges for the party.

Reform has had to disown six of them over offensive comments since nominations closed.

The party has blamed the surprise announcement of a July election, as well as claiming a company it hired to conduct background checks on would-be candidates failed to carry out vetting before the election was called.

Two Reform candidates also defected to the Conservatives over what they said was a failure of the party’s leadership to tackle the issue.

However, it was too late to remove any of these candidates so they still appeared for the party on ballot papers.

BBC
 
Reform fake candidates conspiracy theories debunked

Airbrushing a picture of yourself is not a crime.

But in the case of Reform UK general election candidate Mark Matlock it led to viral - and spurious - claims that he was fake and generated by AI.

Mr Matlock came fifth in Clapham and Brixton Hill last Thursday, and did not turn up to the count because he had pneumonia.

Yet it was his decision to doctor an image of himself, including adding a tie, which fuelled speculation on social media that he was a work of fiction.

“People were very mean online and there’s been a lot of nastiness which is unnecessary,” he told the BBC.

Despite numerous claims on social media, the BBC has found no evidence that any of Reform’s candidates were fake.

However, a curious number of those standing for seats across the UK come from two small Midlands towns.

At least six Reform candidates have ties to Swadlincote in South Derbyshire.

They include Alison Devine, a personal assistant to the party’s chief executive, who came second behind Labour’s Graham Stringer in Blackley and Middleton South, Greater Manchester.

A further three candidates live, or have lived, just 10 miles away in Coalville.

Reform has now conceded that a last-minute rush to find candidates led the party’s staff to recruit their friends and family.

“We were desperate”, a party spokesperson told the BBC.

“Basically it’s friends, relations, office workers. One of the candidates got their partner to stand.”

A Reform election agent told us he had never met the candidate he was responsible for, did not know what he did for a living, but was sure he was not fake.

“I know he is real because he did contact me so we have spoken very briefly,” the agent said.

“He was very frugal. We spent hardly anything.”

So-called "paper candidates" - where a political party selects someone who does no campaigning but appears on the ballot paper - have long been a feature of British elections.

For opposition parties this practice is particularly important for amassing "short money" - the funds handed out by parliament to help them hold the government to account.

A party is awarded £22,295.86 for every seat won at the general election plus £44.53 for every 200 votes amassed.

Before the election, the Labour Party was entitled to £7,527,952.91 per year in funding.

Parties with five or fewer MPs - like Reform UK - are limited to an annual subsidy of £376,230 plus further funds to cover travel costs.

However, Nigel Farage’s party argues that their motivation in selecting as many candidates as possible was about democracy not money.

“People deserve the option to vote for us if they so wish,” said a spokesperson.

“If they didn’t have a paper candidate, that right is taken from them. It’s just putting a name on a piece of paper. There is nothing weird about this.”

The Electoral Commission said there are no rules general election candidates to any minimum level of campaigning.

Viral star Mark Matlock is embracing his new-found fame, even if it was the result of online conspiracy theories.

“I love it, a free advertisement. It’s great”, he told GB News.

“I’ve been made like a star on Twitter. I could never have imagined that this would be the case. It’s fantastic”, he said.

“Thank you to all the extremists who’ve done this for me.”

BBC
 
Starmer suffers defeat in first by-election as PM as Reform takes Runcorn and Helsby

Reform UK have won the Runcorn and Helsby by-election by just six votes in a blow to Sir Keir Starmer's premiership.

The narrow victory saw Nigel Farage's party taking a constituency which Labour won with a majority of almost 14,700 at the general election less than 12 months ago.

The by-election in the Cheshire seat was called after the previous MP Mike Amesbury resigned following his conviction for punching a constituent.

Reform candidate Sarah Pochin won with 12,645 votes, compared to the 12,639 secured by Labour candidate Karen Shore, making it the closest by-election result since records began in 1945.

Speaking after the result was declared, Mr Farage told Sky News' chief political correspondent Jon Craig that Labour's vote collapsed because of a "loss of confidence" and the fact "no one knows what the prime minister really stands for".

He said working people are fed up with higher taxes and illegal immigration, adding: "It's a sense of fairness and what's right and what's wrong bordering even on resentment.

"We've picked that up very strongly on the doors for people who voted Labour for all of their lives."

Mr Farage also declared the Conservatives as "toast", saying: "In much of this country if you vote Conservative you will get Labour.

"We now are the opposition party in the United Kingdom to the Labour Party and the Tories, frankly, are a waste of space."

The vote in Runcorn is Sir Keir's first by-election test as prime minister.

Ellie Reeves, chairwoman of the Labour Party, told Sky News incumbent governments "never tend to do very well in parliamentary by-elections" and this one was held in "very difficult circumstances".

She defended her party's record, saying that people are impatient for change but "change doesn't happen overnight".

However, Tory co-chairman Nigel Huddleston said that while it was a "bad night" for his party, it was a "terrible night" for the government, saying it is losing support because of "terrible policies".

He dismissed Reform's success, saying: "They are emerging into a populist popular party, not an alternative to the Conservatives, but trying to transcend and promise everything to everybody. That is not a long-term sustainable position."

Reform win first mayoral election

The Runcorn declaration was delayed as the close nature of the contest led to a recount.

As well as the Runcorn by-election, voters on Thursday took part in contests to elect more than 1,600 councillors across 23 local authorities, along with four regional mayors and two local mayors.

In further good news for Reform, Dame Andrea Jenkyns was elected as the party's first mayor in Greater Lincolnshire, with a majority of almost 40,000.

In her victory speech, the former Conservative minister, who defected last year, said there would be "an end to soft-touch Britain" and declared "the fightback to save the heart and soul of our great country has now begun".

She added: "I say no to putting people in hotels. Tents are good enough for France, they should be good enough for here in Britain."

Elsewhere, Reform looks set to gain control of Staffordshire County Council after taking 24 of the 30 seats to be counted overnight, with the Conservatives winning the other six.

There was some good news for Labour as it held on to the North Tyneside mayoralty in the first vote of the night - albeit by just 444 votes.

Why did Reform pull off their victory? Rachel Reeves’ massively unpopular winter fuel payments axe was a major vote loser. Some voters were appalled by the conduct of former Labour MP Mike Amesbury, who brutally assaulted a constituent.

Ms Pochin, in a fluent victory speech that suggested she’ll be a competent House of Commons performer, declared that the voters of the Runcorn and Helsby constituency had had enough of Tory failures and Labour lies.

Then, in a typically ebullient Sky News interview, Mr Farage said: “Britain is broken.” He also predicted more wins for his party in local government elections later on Friday.

For Labour, there will be a huge inquest into how they came so close to holding the seat and lost by just six votes. Many Labour MPs and party members will condemn Sir Keir Starmer for not bothering to visit the constituency to campaign for their candidate Karen Shore.

Mr Farage visited four times, including a lengthy stint on polling day. Say what you like about Mr Farage, and his opponents certainly do, he’s a tireless campaigner with a stamina that astounds even members of his inner circle.

His relentless tenacity has paid off handsomely. Other party leaders – with the notable exception of Sir Ed Davey – take note. Sir Keir sat on his hands and Kemi Badenoch was invisible too.

And they’ve both paid the price: humiliation.

And so, after declaring the Tories are “toast”, Mr Farage announced he was heading off for a bacon sandwich.

Last week at Prime Minister’s Questions, Sir Keir said Mr Farage would “eat the Tory party for breakfast”.

But in Runcorn and Helsby - and many other parts of the UK - he’s just eaten Labour for breakfast as well.

Labour also saw off Reform in the West of England and Doncaster to retain both mayoralties. However, in Doncaster it was also a slim majority, with Labour's Ros Jones clinging on by 698 votes.

Ms Jones criticised decisions to means-test the winter fuel allowance, hike employers' national insurance contributions and squeeze welfare.

She told the BBC: "I think the results here tonight will demonstrate that they need to be listening to the man, woman and businesses on the street, and actually deliver for the people, with the people."

'First 10 months not good enough'

Some Labour MPs have also called for a change of course, with veteran backbencher Diane Abbott hitting out at the cut to winter fuel payments on X and Richard Burgon calling the Runcorn result "entirely avoidable".

Brian Leishman, a Scottish Labour MP, said people voted for an end to austerity in the general election and Sir Keir's first 10 months in office "haven't been good enough or what the people want".

"If we don't improve people's living standards, then the next government will be an extreme right-wing one," he warned.

Former shadow chancellor John McDonnell hit out at the "tin eared" response from the Labour leadership over the results, saying voters feel the party has "turned its back on them" because of policies like the winter fuel changes, NI tax on jobs and cuts to disability benefits.

Kim Johnson, in the nearby Liverpool constituency of Riverside, said Runcorn "is a warning we can't ignore" adding: "Voters want change - and if we don't offer it with bold, hopeful policies that rebuild trust, the far right will."

SOURCE: https://news.sky.com/story/reform-win-runcorn-and-helsby-by-election-after-recount-13359606?s=08
 
Nigel Farage as Head of the Reform political party could potentially become the next PM in 4 years time when the U.K. has elections.

But how will be do as PM? The last few PMs have been incompetent from Starmer to Sunak to Johnson.

Also, what does he offer other than immigration control?
 
Farage is a wealthy upper class zionist backed puppet , parading as some sort of regular English guy. The bloke is a grade A idiot but captures the gammons, underclass of English who are bitter, mostly because of their own miserable lives but are happy to attack others for it.

See this.

 
A lot of the right wing don’t think Farage is hardcore enough, hence the Tommy Robinson love. The issue is that once you are in power, you can’t do a lot of the things you wanted to do or say things for legal reasons as well as logistically and for optics.

At some point, they will elect Tommy Robinson because he represents them better than the Tories or Reform and he’s being ‘cleaned up’. But he’s not going to offer them anything either. The reality is that if they get rid of Muslims or Immigrants, their economy will crumble and the U.K. will become just another minor country that is on its way to becoming a third-world state. Even if they don’t get rid of people, the U.K. is still declining.
 
Farage is a wealthy upper class zionist backed puppet , parading as some sort of regular English guy. The bloke is a grade A idiot but captures the gammons, underclass of English who are bitter, mostly because of their own miserable lives but are happy to attack others for it.

See this.

Amazing how so many in this country think a few brown folks in hotels are responsible for the country's economic issues.

Nothing to do with lack of investment from successive governments, nothing to do with weak productivity (not helped by fact British workers are some of the laziest around), nothing to do with us wasting our North Sea oil money unlike Norway, nothing to do with wasteful foreign wars etc.

Bitter and thick is a perfect summary. It makes me laugh hearing some white folk plead poverty yet are drunk off their faces in Ibiza every other month.

As for this London riot (won't dignify it by calling it a protest) - sometimes I think China have the right idea. Try attacking police in Beijing and these idiots would rightly get their skulls caved in.
 
Amazing how so many in this country think a few brown folks in hotels are responsible for the country's economic issues.

Nothing to do with lack of investment from successive governments, nothing to do with weak productivity (not helped by fact British workers are some of the laziest around), nothing to do with us wasting our North Sea oil money unlike Norway, nothing to do with wasteful foreign wars etc.

Bitter and thick is a perfect summary. It makes me laugh hearing some white folk plead poverty yet are drunk off their faces in Ibiza every other month.

As for this London riot (won't dignify it by calling it a protest) - sometimes I think China have the right idea. Try attacking police in Beijing and these idiots would rightly get their skulls caved in.

It's a very sad time for British politics where most of the population have lost all faith in governments but imo this was a deliberate agenda by the establishment. The Tories under Boris were almost openly lying, laughing in the publics face. To undermine this party even further they put in place numpties like Rishi Sunak and Truss, with this Nigerian lady being the final nail in the coffin for this party. Starmer and Labour are now also hated as much as the Tories, with Keir Stramer and his cabinet making labour a laughing stock, expect more controversy to come.

The agenda in Europe is pretty clear now, bring in far right governments to as many nations as possible. Countries like Spain wont fall for it, the public have a different mindset but you see in Italy, Holland, Germany, France, Belgium and now UK, the far right are either in power or edging closer to power.

Why do you think the British public and European public in general have lost faith in politicians and politics and why are is the far right parties doing so well now? If you take Farage and his old party UKIP, they became a joke but now even the likes of Elon Musk is video calling idiots like Robinson live at marches.
 
This Unite the Kingdom ‘rally’ was ridiculous. I understand people are frustrated with immigration and it is a sore point and key issue but the speakers Tommy Robinson had on were extremists.

You had Ant Middleton, the ex-SAS guy running for Mayor of London saying that first, second and third generation immigrants should be banned from top government jobs. So basically, those born here in the U.K. should not be allowed to work in such jobs.

Then there was Valentina Gomez, member of the US Republican Party and hoeing to get elected in Texas, an immigrant herself from Columbia saying that illegal immigrants should get the death penalty. She did a stunt on video in relation to this where she shot a dummy tied up in the head and was supposed to be an illegal immigrant.

There were also other extremists like some NZ guy who was saying that only Christianity should be allowed in the U.K. and that the Palestinian religion should not be allowed (missing the irony that Christianity is a Palestinian religion).
 
This Unite the Kingdom ‘rally’ was ridiculous. I understand people are frustrated with immigration and it is a sore point and key issue but the speakers Tommy Robinson had on were extremists.

You had Ant Middleton, the ex-SAS guy running for Mayor of London saying that first, second and third generation immigrants should be banned from top government jobs. So basically, those born here in the U.K. should not be allowed to work in such jobs.

Then there was Valentina Gomez, member of the US Republican Party and hoeing to get elected in Texas, an immigrant herself from Columbia saying that illegal immigrants should get the death penalty. She did a stunt on video in relation to this where she shot a dummy tied up in the head and was supposed to be an illegal immigrant.

There were also other extremists like some NZ guy who was saying that only Christianity should be allowed in the U.K. and that the Palestinian religion should not be allowed (missing the irony that Christianity is a Palestinian religion).

Majority of Britain is pro-Palestine, these clowns just lost further support or gained more hate. There is a new wave of Christians who are anti-Zionist, they will also not join these fools now.

As for the ex SAS weirdo he will not become Mayor. London will not vote a far right into power, it will be liberals now unless Sadiq Khan doesnt something very stupid.
 
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