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Starmer Accuses Farage of Exploiting Nowak Murder

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has accused Nigel Farage of exploiting the murder of Henry Nowak to fuel division, as the case sparked heated exchanges in Parliament.

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The row follows comments by Farage, who urged the public to respond with “pure, cold rage” after police arrested the 18-year-old victim while he was dying. Officers initially detained Nowak after his attacker falsely claimed he had been the target of a racist assault.

During Prime Minister’s Questions, Farage repeated his argument that the case demonstrated “two-tier policing”, claiming anti-racism guidance had encouraged officers to treat ethnic groups differently. Starmer rejected the allegation, saying the appropriate response was “serious work, not rage”.

Murder and Investigation

Vickrum Digwa, 23, was sentenced on Monday to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 21 years for killing Nowak in Southampton in December.

Digwa stabbed the teenager with a large blade that he said he carried because of his Sikh faith. He then falsely told police he had been subjected to a racist attack, leading officers to initially arrest Nowak rather than his attacker.

Body-worn camera footage released this week showed officers handcuffing the teenager as he repeatedly said he could not breathe. The incident is under investigation by the Independent Office for Police Conduct.

Family Urges Unity

Starmer told MPs that Nowak’s family had specifically asked for the tragedy not to be used to deepen social divisions.

He said his own response had focused on identifying lessons and ensuring justice, while accusing Farage of appealing to public anger despite the wishes of the victim’s relatives. Starmer described attempts to use the case to create “grievance and division” as unforgivable.

Outside court on Monday, Henry’s father, Mark Nowak, said the family wanted his son’s death to lead to positive change. He urged people not to use the case to promote hatred, tension or division, and said they hoped it would help make streets safer.

Political and Policing Response

Kemi Badenoch also criticised Farage, saying she was disappointed by his intervention. In the Commons, she described the case as a warning to institutions across the country and said politicians should work to unite people rather than divide them.

Ed Davey said police forces should implement any recommendations arising from the watchdog’s investigation. He added that politicians should avoid turning the teenager’s death into a political issue.

Donna Jones said Nowak’s family were distressed by violent protests that broke out in Southampton on Tuesday. She said relatives had made clear they did not support demonstrations or the unrest seen on the streets.

Meanwhile, the National Police Chiefs' Council said it would review wording in its Police Anti-Racism Commitment. The document has faced scrutiny because it states police should not necessarily treat everyone “the same” if they are seeking equal policing outcomes across ethnic groups.

Earlier, Policing Minister Sarah Jones said the wording was wrong and could create a misleading impression. However, she stressed that the document was intended as a statement of values and did not form the basis of police training or operational decisions.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 4 June 2026

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Geoff914 Gold Member

Geoff914

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Bday Prang said:

That's not quite how it happened though, is it ? Henry told the police officers several times that he had been stabbed , the police officers immediate response , without checking at all , was " I don't think you have" They then proceeded to handcuff him and arrest him

So what was the point you are trying to make? The police officer took no action other that to believe the Sikh who had lied and murdered Nowak.

"Definition of Malfeasance in Public Office

Malfeasance in public office is a legal term that describes unlawful conduct by a public official. This conduct typically involves a breach of the duties associated with their position and an abuse of the trust placed in them by the public.

Key Characteristics

  • Unlawful Conduct: The actions taken by the public official must be illegal.

  • Breach of Duty: The official must fail to perform their responsibilities or act in a way that violates their duties.

  • Abuse of Trust: The conduct must undermine the trust that the public has in the official.

Legal Consequences

Malfeasance in public office can lead to serious repercussions, including:

  • Removal from Office: Elected officials may be removed through statutory processes or recall elections.

  • Criminal Charges: In some jurisdictions, this offense can result in criminal prosecution.

  • Maximum Penalty: The offense can carry severe penalties, including life imprisonment in certain cases."

Not sure if this covers the police screw up. Maximum penalty Life Imprisonment.

Eloquent pilgrim Platinum Member

Eloquent pilgrim

Advanced Member
12 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said:

That’s you admitting your pedantry, progress of sorts I suppose.

Au contraire Chomper. I dismiss countless opportunities for pedantry every time I login to this forum; however, the irony of you proclaiming somebody’s legal name and then not being able to spell it correctly was an irresistible invitation.

It must have been acutely embarrassing for you, but you will just have to wear it on the chin; something you don’t appear to be doing very well at all.

Chomper Higgot Star Member

Chomper Higgot

Advanced Member
9 hours ago, Geoff914 said:

No he didn't did he. In fact he did **** all. He didn't even check to see if Nowak had been stabbed did he. He made his mind up up without any checks what so ever. So as luck would have it, if that is what you want to call it, Nowak was fatally stabbed and the bent, corrupt police officer who did sod all is off the hook. Complete dereliction of his duty. I don't know if that counts as a crime or not. Certainly not fit to wear a police uniform or get a gold plated police pension.

I would absolutely agree the officer failed tragically in his duty of care to the killer’s victim.

But the officer played no part in the murder.

He and the police in general absolutely need to face a full transparent investigation and criminal prosecution if criminal behavior is demonstrated.

Chomper Higgot Star Member

Chomper Higgot

Advanced Member
8 hours ago, Geoff914 said:

So what was the point you are trying to make? The police officer took no action other that to believe the Sikh who had lied and murdered Nowak.

"Definition of Malfeasance in Public Office

Malfeasance in public office is a legal term that describes unlawful conduct by a public official. This conduct typically involves a breach of the duties associated with their position and an abuse of the trust placed in them by the public.

Key Characteristics

  • Unlawful Conduct: The actions taken by the public official must be illegal.

  • Breach of Duty: The official must fail to perform their responsibilities or act in a way that violates their duties.

  • Abuse of Trust: The conduct must undermine the trust that the public has in the official.

Legal Consequences

Malfeasance in public office can lead to serious repercussions, including:

  • Removal from Office: Elected officials may be removed through statutory processes or recall elections.

  • Criminal Charges: In some jurisdictions, this offense can result in criminal prosecution.

  • Maximum Penalty: The offense can carry severe penalties, including life imprisonment in certain cases."

Not sure if this covers the police screw up. Maximum penalty Life Imprisonment.

The usual process is to investigate then decide on the charges based on evidence and testimony.

Chomper Higgot Star Member

Chomper Higgot

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Eloquent pilgrim said:

Au contraire Chomper. I dismiss countless opportunities for pedantry every time I login to this forum; however, the irony of you proclaiming somebody’s legal name and then not being able to spell it correctly was an irresistible invitation.

It must have been acutely embarrassing for you, but you will just have to wear it on the chin; something you don’t appear to be doing very well at all.

Well as I have observed, you finding purpose in life as a spell checker, is a positive moment in these grim times.

James105 Platinum Member

James105

Advanced Member
48 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:

I would absolutely agree the officer failed tragically in his duty of care to the killer’s victim.

But the officer played no part in the murder.

He and the police in general absolutely need to face a full transparent investigation and criminal prosecution if criminal behavior is demonstrated.

The officers in the UK aided and assisted in Nowak's murder in much the same way as the police in the USA aided and assisted in career criminal George Floyds death by fenatyl overdose.

In both cases the police did not believe the person claiming they couldn't breathe and denied them timely medical intervention. Although if George Floyd had been as forthcoming as Henry Nowak as to the reason for having difficulty breathing and confessed to his overdose on illegal drugs its entirely possible that the police in the USA would have called an ambulance earlier.

Eloquent pilgrim Platinum Member

Eloquent pilgrim

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Chomper Higgot said:

Well as I have observed, you finding purpose in life as a spell checker, is a positive moment in these grim times.

Please, if you can, point out anywhere on this thread, or any other thread / topic on this forum where I have corrected any other poster’s spelling.

I was happy to highlight your error simply because it was in a comment that you made claiming to know somebody’s Legal name; but unfortunately, you did not know how to spell their Legal name …. you’re welcome.

superal Platinum Member

superal

Advanced Member
On 6/4/2026 at 6:30 AM, JonnyF said:

Indeed. Lowe is doing to Farage what Farage did to the Tories on Brexit.

Keeping his feet to the fire.

Still don't trust Farage though. He'd happily morph into Tories 2.0 if it got him power and respect from the establishment.

Aim high. Vote Lowe.

Reform and Restore parties have similar policies , leaning heavily on a no nonsense solution to the UK illegal immigration . At the forthcoming Makerfield bi-election , there is a possibility that voting for either of these 2 parties will lessen the count for both of them and open the door to Labour .

Although Restore are gaining popularity , they have little chance of success at this time . Reform can make a serious challenge to this awful Labour government .

Finally I have to mention Kemi Badenoch who delivers brilliantly at PMQT . Unfortunately she has the burden of the previous Tory party reign .

Apologies for digressing from the main topic .

BritManToo Star Member

BritManToo

Advanced Member
21 minutes ago, superal said:

Reform and Restore parties have similar policies , leaning heavily on a no nonsense solution to the UK illegal immigration . At the forthcoming Makerfield bi-election , there is a possibility that voting for either of these 2 parties will lessen the count for both of them and open the door to Labour .

Although Restore are gaining popularity , they have little chance of success at this time . Reform can make a serious challenge to this awful Labour government .

Finally I have to mention Kemi Badenoch who delivers brilliantly at PMQT . Unfortunately she has the burden of the previous Tory party reign .

Apologies for digressing from the main topic .

She's also Muslim Nigerian ......... no foreigners should be allowed in the UK government.

superal Platinum Member

superal

Advanced Member

All of the murderers family are guilty of manslaughter . Why ? Because the brother of the murderer called the police , citing racial discrimination , in order to justify the stabbing . They had zero concern for Henry's condition having stabbed him deeply several times . The mother even hid the knife .

If an ambulance had been called for at the same time as the police call , Henry may have survived . An ambulance was not considered because their only concern was to incriminate Henry .

Bday Prang Star Member

Bday Prang

Advanced Member
6 hours ago, Eloquent pilgrim said:

Au contraire Chomper. I dismiss countless opportunities for pedantry every time I login to this forum; however, the irony of you proclaiming somebody’s legal name and then not being able to spell it correctly was an irresistible invitation.

It must have been acutely embarrassing for you, but you will just have to wear it on the chin; something you don’t appear to be doing very well at all.

A bit like that time with the "choo choo" train cheesy he really has no sense of humour whatsoever, none of "them" have. But they all make up for it with a well over developed sense of their own importance

Bday Prang Star Member

Bday Prang

Advanced Member
4 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said:

The usual process is to investigate then decide on the charges based on evidence and testimony.

and of course the ethnicity of the people involved.....of course. I mean , nobody wants to racist that would never do.

Bday Prang Star Member

Bday Prang

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, BritManToo said:

She's also Muslim Nigerian ......... no foreigners should be allowed in the UK government.

I would apply that rule to all local councils, and to the police and the military .

Eloquent pilgrim Platinum Member

Eloquent pilgrim

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, BritManToo said:

She's also Muslim Nigerian ......... no foreigners should be allowed in the UK government.

Point of order BritMan. Kemi Badenoch was born in London and is British of Nigerian parents; she is not muslim, she is agnostic and identifies as culturally Christian.

BritManToo Star Member

BritManToo

Advanced Member
44 minutes ago, Eloquent pilgrim said:

Point of order BritMan. Kemi Badenoch was born in London and is British of Nigerian parents; she is not muslim, she is agnostic and identifies as culturally Christian.

Attended Muslim services at school in Nigeria

Only born in the UK, (raised in Nigeria) cos her parents were using the UK hospital at the time.

Claims she loves her country Nigeria on video.

Guess what, politicians will say any lie to get elected.

Which is why we should not allow immigrants to be part of the UK government.

If Kemi (aka Olukemi Olufunto Adegoke) was born in a stable, would you be claiming she was a horse?

Tourist2 Advanced Member

Tourist2

Member
2 hours ago, Eloquent pilgrim said:

Point of order BritMan. Kemi Badenoch was born in London and is British of Nigerian parents; she is not muslim, she is agnostic and identifies as culturally Christian.


Point of order.
Her AFRICAN parents timed a holiday to England to 'coincide' with her birth and repeated the trick with her sibling.

Badenoch is a black Nigerian - paper bRiTisH at best - and should be nowhere near power in England.
Should she be looking to govern ethnically English people?
Absolutely NOT. GTFOH!


It's a humilation ritual targeting English people.

Repeal the British Nationality Act (1948/1981) and deal with them on a case by case basis.



Geoff914 Gold Member

Geoff914

Advanced Member
6 hours ago, BritManToo said:

She's also Muslim Nigerian ......... no foreigners should be allowed in the UK government.

She is an anchor baby but she denies it. After she was born the law was changed so she should consider herself lucky to be British let alone be the leader of the Tories and possible future PM.

Geoff914 Gold Member

Geoff914

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Tourist2 said:


Point of order.
Her AFRICAN parents timed a holiday to England to 'coincide' with her birth and repeated the trick with her sibling.

Badenoch is a black Nigerian - paper bRiTisH at best - and should be nowhere near power in England.
Should she be looking to govern ethnically English people?
Absolutely NOT. GTFOH!


It's a humilation ritual targeting English people.

Repeal the British Nationality Act (1948/1981) and deal with them on a case by case basis.



Apparently they didn't know until she was a teenager that she had the right to a British passport. Funny that. What I would like to know is if her mother was that far pregnant how she even got on the plane to come to the UK.

Geoff914 Gold Member

Geoff914

Advanced Member
4 hours ago, Eloquent pilgrim said:

Point of order BritMan. Kemi Badenoch was born in London and is British of Nigerian parents; she is not muslim, she is agnostic and identifies as culturally Christian.

And now the law has changed to prevent just such an occurrence happening again. I believe the term she is an anchor baby.

Tourist2 Advanced Member

Tourist2

Member
47 minutes ago, Geoff914 said:

And now the law has changed to prevent just such an occurrence happening again. I believe the term she is an anchor baby.


Better late than never.

As for Kemi, I believe she' been installed at the behest of a tribe (or 2) to keep the tories unelectable.
Why?

In order to buy time for these fabian socialist (wolf in sheeps clothing logo) 'Labour' commie ****s destroyi England etc. to make way for a communist utopia.
Same thing is happening in Europe.



Cloward Piven Strategy.jpeg

riclag Star Member

riclag

Advanced Member
On 6/4/2026 at 8:23 AM, JonnyF said:

Starmer and his dumb sidekick DEI Lammy created this racist environment and now they want to blame the right for highlighting it and objecting to it.

Labour disgust me. Especially Starmer and Lammy.

That Nowak video has put Starmer and his supporters on record defending a legacy disaster in policing. If that wasn't bad enough, just wait until the full details of the gang rape investigations come out.

Bday Prang Star Member

Bday Prang

Advanced Member
6 minutes ago, riclag said:

If that wasn't bad enough, just wait until the full details of the gang rape investigations come out.

not more Epstein files?

riclag Star Member

riclag

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, Bday Prang said:

not more Epstein files?

The actual UK grooming gangs inquiry, mate.

"That Nowak video has put Starmer and his supporters on record defending a legacy disaster in policing. If that wasn't bad enough, just wait until the full details of the gang rape investigations come out".

Geoff914 Gold Member

Geoff914

Advanced Member
24 minutes ago, riclag said:

The actual UK grooming gangs inquiry, mate.

"That Nowak video has put Starmer and his supporters on record defending a legacy disaster in policing. If that wasn't bad enough, just wait until the full details of the gang rape investigations come out".

Not released until after 2029 when the next general election will be.

TorquayFan Gold Member

TorquayFan

Advanced Member

Farages' shortcomings are obvious but Reform themselves also have a massive problem. Ponder a moment the problems that Labour have had with a massive influx of new and inexperienced MPs - (many of whom will be earning more now than they ever have before or will again) - they are mainly lightweight.

Now look at the chaos that surrounds Reform in the few places they have been elected and just imagine many hundreds of them getting into Parliament - it'll be chaos.

An excellent article in the iPaper yesterday - worth the read.

"Nigel Farage is responsible for these riots. His behaviour over the last 24 hours demonstrates precisely what he is: he is a persistent threat to national security. He didn’t give a damn about the wishes of Henry Nowak’s family. Henry’s father could not have been clearer when he left the court. His son had been murdered. He had been handcuffed and treated with suspicion as he died, after his murderer had wrongly accused him of racist assault. He and the family had gone through what no one should ever experience. But they conducted themselves with grace, dignity and precision.

Mark Nowak said that his family “do not want Henry’s murder to be used to create further hatred, division or tension”. The family were, of course, outraged at how police had treated their child, but they did not condemn the police in general. They expressed their “heartfelt gratitude” to the murder investigation team, who “secured justice for our son” and the police liaison officers.

No one has anything kind to say about the police officers who attended to Henry on the evening he was stabbed in Southampton, but it is worth reading the judge’s remarks. It does not necessarily absolve them from blame, but it places events in a context that a two-minute video cannot. “The police were given a convincing but wholly false narrative of the incident,” he said. “It was dark and Henry was wearing a dark top. The entry damage caused by the knife through it, would not have been obvious… It is the experience of the criminal courts that sometimes, someone arrested and handcuffed will feign injury in the hope they may be released. These police officers were faced with having to make quick decisions in pressurised circumstances about the best way to act.”

These are the subtleties and complexities of a situation which looks much clearer now than it would have done at the time.

On Tuesday morning, Farage responded to this situation by stoking animosity and anger towards the police. He ignored every one of the requests by Mark Nowak. They were not convenient.

“We should respond to this with pure cold rage,” Farage said. Given the sensitivity of the issue, this felt akin to incitement to rioting. He then racialised it, branding it an example of “anti-white prejudice”. Finally, he deployed a slogan used by white nationalists in the US during the Black Lives Matter protests: “White lives matter just as much as Black lives.”

It’s worth dismantling this comparison with Black Lives Matter. The video of Harry Nowak being handcuffed seems to have a very superficial echo of the George Floyd video from the US, due to the repeated use of the words “I can’t breathe”. It is therefore easy, as Farage is doing, to claim the new video as evidence of anti-white policing. Or, as Kemi Badenoch is doing, to act as a kind of racial centrist and say: “I don’t want to hear about Black Lives Matter, I don’t want to hear about White Lives Matter.”

Let’s just get something clear. George Floyd was killed by a policeman, Henry Nowak was not. The Floyd case was an example of brutal racial policing in the cold light of day. The Nowak case was the result of temporary confusion, with contrasting claims, in the dark. One was purposeful and the other was accidental. Both are tragedies which involved the police. They have no further similarity beyond that fact.

It is obscene to suggest that white people have faced the type of hatred and prejudice from law enforcement as ethnic minorities have. They have never been treated by the police as African Americans have in the US. They have never been treated the way that young Black and Asian kids have been in the UK. It is an affront to historical memory and common sense to even pretend there has been equality of treatment.

Then, in the evening, Farage’s little army came out. Many were violent white nationalists, pumped up with hatred. And that is not a coincidence. It is because, with his speech Nigel Farage encouraged rage, hatred and white nationalism. They threw projectiles at the police. They chanted: “Racist police, off our streets.” They held up placards with slogans like “Henry’s blood is on your hands”. They were addressed by the racist thug Tommy Robinson, who helped whip them up further. They marched to where the murder took place. And then, in a moment of real danger, they attempted to march to the home of his killer, Vickrum Digwa. A line of police blocked the rioters from entering the street. If they had not been there, or had failed, it does not bear thinking about what could have followed.

This is not the first time this has happened. We’ve been here before. Ahead of the Southport riots in 2024, Farage said: “I just wonder whether the truth is being withheld from us. Something is going horribly wrong in our once beautiful country.” Always the same game plan: spotting a moment where you can divide people according to their racial identity, encouraging resentment and vitriol. In that case, it resulted in people trying to burn asylum seekers alive. Last night, it resulted in lagered-up racist thugs battling police.

This is what he does. It’s who he is. God help us if Farage ever becomes prime minister. God help us from a future in which he will be able to use the podium outside Downing Street to encourage white nationalism, with the full might of the state behind him.

He has shown us who he is. Believe him."

https://inews.co.uk/opinion/nigel-farage-threat-to-national-security-4450676

Eloquent pilgrim Platinum Member

Eloquent pilgrim

Advanced Member
On 6/7/2026 at 4:32 AM, TorquayFan said:

Farages' shortcomings are obvious but Reform themselves also have a massive problem. Ponder a moment the problems that Labour have had with a massive influx of new and inexperienced MPs - (many of whom will be earning more now than they ever have before or will again) - they are mainly lightweight.

Now look at the chaos that surrounds Reform in the few places they have been elected and just imagine many hundreds of them getting into Parliament - it'll be chaos.

An excellent article in the iPaper yesterday - worth the read.

"Nigel Farage is responsible for these riots. His behaviour over the last 24 hours demonstrates precisely what he is: he is a persistent threat to national security. He didn’t give a damn about the wishes of Henry Nowak’s family. Henry’s father could not have been clearer when he left the court. His son had been murdered. He had been handcuffed and treated with suspicion as he died, after his murderer had wrongly accused him of racist assault. He and the family had gone through what no one should ever experience. But they conducted themselves with grace, dignity and precision.

Mark Nowak said that his family “do not want Henry’s murder to be used to create further hatred, division or tension”. The family were, of course, outraged at how police had treated their child, but they did not condemn the police in general. They expressed their “heartfelt gratitude” to the murder investigation team, who “secured justice for our son” and the police liaison officers.

No one has anything kind to say about the police officers who attended to Henry on the evening he was stabbed in Southampton, but it is worth reading the judge’s remarks. It does not necessarily absolve them from blame, but it places events in a context that a two-minute video cannot. “The police were given a convincing but wholly false narrative of the incident,” he said. “It was dark and Henry was wearing a dark top. The entry damage caused by the knife through it, would not have been obvious… It is the experience of the criminal courts that sometimes, someone arrested and handcuffed will feign injury in the hope they may be released. These police officers were faced with having to make quick decisions in pressurised circumstances about the best way to act.”

These are the subtleties and complexities of a situation which looks much clearer now than it would have done at the time.

On Tuesday morning, Farage responded to this situation by stoking animosity and anger towards the police. He ignored every one of the requests by Mark Nowak. They were not convenient.

“We should respond to this with pure cold rage,” Farage said. Given the sensitivity of the issue, this felt akin to incitement to rioting. He then racialised it, branding it an example of “anti-white prejudice”. Finally, he deployed a slogan used by white nationalists in the US during the Black Lives Matter protests: “White lives matter just as much as Black lives.”

It’s worth dismantling this comparison with Black Lives Matter. The video of Harry Nowak being handcuffed seems to have a very superficial echo of the George Floyd video from the US, due to the repeated use of the words “I can’t breathe”. It is therefore easy, as Farage is doing, to claim the new video as evidence of anti-white policing. Or, as Kemi Badenoch is doing, to act as a kind of racial centrist and say: “I don’t want to hear about Black Lives Matter, I don’t want to hear about White Lives Matter.”

Let’s just get something clear. George Floyd was killed by a policeman, Henry Nowak was not. The Floyd case was an example of brutal racial policing in the cold light of day. The Nowak case was the result of temporary confusion, with contrasting claims, in the dark. One was purposeful and the other was accidental. Both are tragedies which involved the police. They have no further similarity beyond that fact.

It is obscene to suggest that white people have faced the type of hatred and prejudice from law enforcement as ethnic minorities have. They have never been treated by the police as African Americans have in the US. They have never been treated the way that young Black and Asian kids have been in the UK. It is an affront to historical memory and common sense to even pretend there has been equality of treatment.

Then, in the evening, Farage’s little army came out. Many were violent white nationalists, pumped up with hatred. And that is not a coincidence. It is because, with his speech Nigel Farage encouraged rage, hatred and white nationalism. They threw projectiles at the police. They chanted: “Racist police, off our streets.” They held up placards with slogans like “Henry’s blood is on your hands”. They were addressed by the racist thug Tommy Robinson, who helped whip them up further. They marched to where the murder took place. And then, in a moment of real danger, they attempted to march to the home of his killer, Vickrum Digwa. A line of police blocked the rioters from entering the street. If they had not been there, or had failed, it does not bear thinking about what could have followed.

This is not the first time this has happened. We’ve been here before. Ahead of the Southport riots in 2024, Farage said: “I just wonder whether the truth is being withheld from us. Something is going horribly wrong in our once beautiful country.” Always the same game plan: spotting a moment where you can divide people according to their racial identity, encouraging resentment and vitriol. In that case, it resulted in people trying to burn asylum seekers alive. Last night, it resulted in lagered-up racist thugs battling police.

This is what he does. It’s who he is. God help us if Farage ever becomes prime minister. God help us from a future in which he will be able to use the podium outside Downing Street to encourage white nationalism, with the full might of the state behind him.

He has shown us who he is. Believe him."

https://inews.co.uk/opinion/nigel-farage-threat-to-national-security-4450676

Not an excellent article at all. Just classic left-wing “shoot the messenger, let’s ignore the issue” deflection; written by a left wing activist and copied and pasted on here by another one.

Farage was not the cause of the protest / riot, he was simply voicing the feelings of millions of ordinary UK citizens, and the protest would have happened whether or not he had said anything. Millions of UK citizens are enraged by this event, myself included; that you are not, speaks volumes.

The cause of the protest was not Farage, it was the murder of Henry Nowak, the appalling behaviour of the police attending the scene, and the limp-wristed response from PM; despite the Sikh community in the UK being generally good contributing citizens, Vickrum Digwa in one murderous act destroyed that reputation.

Although Digwa was born in the UK, his mother was born in India, and it inevitably broadened the issue to the UK’s singularly most important problem of immigration.

Farage is one of the few politicians willing to keep talking about the myriad problems in the UK; you don’t want to acknowledge them because it would dismantle the phoney facade of virtuosity and moral superiority that you cower behind; the one that keeps you cocooned in a belief of your imaginary status as a progressive liberal, ignoring the issues and blaming anyone that is prepared to keep them in the vanguard of discussion; and you get to vote in the UK, God help us.    

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