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Why Nigel Farage Could Really Be Prime Minister by 2029


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Posted
6 minutes ago, Dionigi said:

Traditionally, local elections are where people vote their displeasure, this does not usually show in national elections.

 

"Usually" maybe, but in the 2019 General Election, thousands and thousands of people voted their displeasure by (erroneously) believing that Boris would finally get Brexit "done."

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Posted
Just now, blazes said:

 

"Usually" maybe, but in the 2019 General Election, thousands and thousands of people voted their displeasure by (erroneously) believing that Boris would finally get Brexit "done."

he was still mainstream political party. The greens and other lesser parties have never fared as well in general elections as they do in local elections.

Posted

@bubblegum your post has been removed

 

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Posted

 

 

29 minutes ago, Smokey and the Bandit said:

Well immigration for a start.

Labor promised to end hotel use but has seen a net increase in hotels (from 213 to 220 by January 2025). Efforts to reduce costs include clearing the backlog and increasing dispersal accommodation, but costs remain high

High spending on asylum hotels (£3 billion annually) fuels voter discontent, especially among working-class and Brexit-supporting communities who see it as a misuse of taxpayer money while domestic issues like the cost-of-living crisis persist. This perception strengthens anti-immigration parties like Reform UK, contributing to Labor’s declining support

Labors decision to reduce the, cut, the winter fuel payment for pensioners has been highly controversial

Labor’s budget, criticized for raising taxes and increasing borrowing costs, has been blamed for economic slowdown, higher inflation, and business closures. The International Monetary Fund’s warning about Labor’s policies pushing UK inflation to the highest in the G7 has fueled perceptions of economic mismanagement.

Starmer’s campaign promises, such as no tax rises, were perceived as broken when taxes increased post-election. This has eroded trust, with voters feeling misled about Labor’s economic plans.

 

 


The Prime Minister today (Monday 31 March) announced the government has returned more than 24,000 individuals with no right to be in the UK since the General Election – the highest returns rate for eight years.
 

Either someone is getting the job done or somebody else was not.

 

https://www.gov.uk/government/news/prime-minister-announces-massive-surge-in-immigration-enforcement-as-returns-reach-24000-since-the-election

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Posted

To win WWII against Hitler then to elect Farage. Labour must deliver for the people not just for the money-grabbing establishment, if it is to beat them - aka Reform - Tories are dead meat.

My mother was one of the Hang'em, Flog'em brigade for 50 years, I know what they represent - it is not nice.

Britain is dead if they elect Farage

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Posted
23 minutes ago, Smokey and the Bandit said:

The 24,000 figure has been called misleading by BBC Verify and others because only 26% (6,339) were enforced returns. The majority being voluntary, with many leaving without direct government action, undermines the narrative of robust enforcement.

The establishment narrative celebrates the 24,000 returns as a win for Labor’s border security strategy, but this glosses over critical flaws. The reliance on voluntary returns, many of which occur without government intervention, inflates the figures and masks the ongoing influx of small boat arrivals. The £3 billion hotel cost, unchanged despite high-profile returns, underscores a systemic failure to address the asylum backlog or shift to cheaper accommodation. Labor’s centrist approach—balancing enforcement with international cooperation—lacks the bold, visible action needed to counter Reform UK’s populist appeal. Starmer’s government risks losing more ground to Farage if it can’t deliver tangible reductions in migration and associated costs before the next election.

Why does it matter why they left, so long as they left?

 

Something Labour has achieved at levels not seen for 8 years.

 

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Posted
27 minutes ago, Bkk Brian said:

But the claim is misleading. The government's latest figures show that only 6,339 of these were "enforced returns". The majority were "voluntary returns" - and a significant number of these happen without the government's direct involvement or even knowledge.

 

By that line of reasoning, Thailand "returns" almost 40 million a year.

 

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Posted
5 hours ago, JonnyF said:

 

If there is anything we've learned since Labour came to power, it's that splitting the right wing vote is devestating for Britain and it's indigenous people.

 

 

 

What's your definition of an indigenous Briton?

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