Nigel Farage in a nutshell

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Dog Whistle Politis of the highest order.

Sadly (thanks to Reforms dodgy backers), as this thread proves some can be easily led.
Or be totally pissed off with the s hite you keep regurgitating.
I would say more people have decided to vote reform since reading your crap every day.
Must be over a 150 of the same post, has to be a NOT 606 record.
 
Happy to counter the nonsensical reform bullshit you parrot daily Roochy boy. You can see why the non doms and Russians chuck money to target people like you - it works
 
So they are telling lies?
Tell me who to vote for who are telling the truth.<ok>
Greens and Lib Dem’s are the best options at the moment for honesty. Brexit is the single biggest cause of budgets like this. Whatever the faults of the EU we were sold riches based on lies and got poverty. What you posted promises riches based on racist lies to make the ultra rich richer while ending our NHS. They dare quote health savings, the savings will come from us paying for accidental injuries.
 
Happy to counter the nonsensical reform bullshit you parrot daily Roochy boy. You can see why the non doms and Russians chuck money to target people like you - it works
Ok I will let you do that.
Write down my daily nonsensical reform bull
s hit.<ok>
Let’s hope it’s quicker than your mates list of reform voters
I’ll start the clock now 8:09
 
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Ok I will let you do that.
Write down my daily nonsensical reform bull s hit.<ok>
Let’s hope it’s quicker than your mates list of reform voters
I’ll start the clock now 8:09
Bishop is a reform activist
Moanjam
There are two off the top of my head
Ron looks possible
I think in the past you voted Lib Dem. You’re probably defending Reform because you are leader of the wind up party. You should start knitting. I’ll have a grey cardigan.
 
Bishop is a reform activist
Moanjam
There are two off the top of my head
Ron looks possible
I think in the past you voted Lib Dem. You’re probably defending Reform because you are leader of the wind up party. You should start knitting. I’ll have a grey cardigan.
Question for you.
Point out where I defend reform.
You have more chance of voting for them than I have.
PS not much of a list.
 
Here is some policies you keep asking for.


The state must serve the British people first

By Zia Yusuf REFORM UK’s Head of Policy

“Tough decisions must be made” has become the refrain of a political class that insists British people tighten their belts, again and again, while they continue writing blank cheques to the rest of the world.

Whether it was the Tories before, or Labour today, the script never changes: taxes go up, services get worse. What they never admit is that the only people ever asked to sacrifice are the British people themselves, while the state funnels ever larger sums to foreign nationals.

Britain has been turned into a global food bank, funded by taxpayers who can barely keep up with their own mortgages and energy bills. It is immoral, economically illiterate and politically indefensible.

And it must end.

Below is a summary how REFORM would cut public spending. More details can be found below:

1. End Universal Credit for foreign nationals – saving £6bn
2. Raise the Immigration Health Surcharge – raising £5bn
3. Personal Independence Payment reform – saving £3.5bn
4. Cap foreign aid at £1bn – saving £10bn
5. Deport foreign national offenders – saving £580m

Reform UK has published a set of proposals that do something novel in Westminster: put British citizens first. If Rachel Reeves adopted these measures tomorrow, she could save or raise £25bn this year alone, enough to plug the fiscal black hole without hammering working families with yet more tax rises.

Here is how:
1. End Universal Credit for foreign nationals – saving £6bn.
The Government hides most of the data on how much welfare is spent on non-UK citizens. The exception is Universal Credit: foreign nationals receive around £8bn a year in UC alone.
Even allowing for a reasonable three-month transition period, this would save £6bn this year.

This includes those with EU settled status. And it must include them, because the system we inherited from Theresa May and Boris Johnson is ludicrously asymmetric. In 2015, there were around four times as many EU citizens claiming benefits in the UK as Brits claiming in the entire EU. Since then, the number of EU claimants here has risen sevenfold.

Prime Minister Nigel Farage will renegotiate these one-sided arrangements.

2. Raise the Immigration Health Surcharge – raising £5bn.
The population has grown by 10 per cent since 2010, almost entirely through immigration, while NHS spending has nearly doubled in real terms, from around £110bn to £205bn. And yet NHS bed capacity has fallen. That alone tells you the system is being overwhelmed.

The Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS) is supposed to offset the cost of treating visa holders. But Tory ministers deliberately set it far below the real cost. The standard charge today is £1,035, a number so absurdly low that the Government admits it represents just 38 percent of actual per-capita NHS expenditure. It was Robert Jenrick as immigration minister who signed off an effective 62 per cent taxpayer-funded discount for foreign nationals to use the NHS.
Reform will raise the IHS to the Government’s own calculated cost of £2,718 a year and end the maze of exemptions that allow thousands of migrants to avoid paying entirely.
Based on Labour’s migration forecasts, this raises £5bn this year.

3. Pip reform – saving £3.5bn
Reform will focus Personal Independence Payment on serious, life-impacting disabilities, not mild anxiety issues. Shifting these claimants on to back-to-work programmes will save between £32 bn and £37bn over five years, and £3.5bn this year alone.
By 2029/30, annual savings reach £8.9bn.

4. Cap foreign aid at £1bn – saving £10bn
Charity begins at home. It is indefensible that while British children go without dental appointments and pensioners cannot get GP slots, the UK funds a £52m “road to nowhere” in Guyana.
While Labour resisted a national inquiry into grooming gangs, Britain wired £19m to Pakistan for child exploitation prevention programmes.

The Tories sent Pakistan more than £100m for “family planning”.
We even send millions to Turkey, whose teenagers now outperform Welsh 15-year-olds in basic education.

Reform will cap foreign aid at £1bn, enough to meet our core UN obligations, support Ukraine, provide emergency relief and promote British interests abroad. Everything else is an unaffordable luxury. This alone saves £10bn this year.

5. Deport foreign national offenders – saving £580m
Britain’s prisons are full. Labour and the Tories want to release offenders early. Reform says deport foreign nationals from our prisons.

Foreign nationals make up around 12 per cent of the prison population, 10,800 inmates, and cost £643m a year. Under Operation Restoring Justice, they would be prioritised for deportation or transfer to their home countries.

Net of costs, this saves £580m a year.

We are a generous country but we are not a limitless one. Reform’s proposals restore a principle that Westminster abandoned years ago: the British state exists to serve the British people.

If Rachel Reeves wants to avoid hammering working families with yet more taxes, the solution is sitting right in front of her.
The only question is whether she will finally put British citizens first.
That’s precisely what prime minister Farage will do.

Family, Community, Country.

Vote REFORM at every opportunity.

What do you think?
The Zia Yusuf who claimed to be 'on the political left' before becoming a fully paid up member of the Conservative Party? The Zia Yusuf who sold his luxury concierge company after being accused of doctoring financial figures of the company and creating an atmosphere of fear whilst there? The Zia Yusuf who resigned from Reform because he, "...no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time, and hereby resign the office."? The Zia Yusuf with no experience or background in working in finance? THAT Zia Yusuf? Forgive me while I go have my sides stitched back together.
 
The Zia Yusuf who claimed to be 'on the political left' before becoming a fully paid up member of the Conservative Party? The Zia Yusuf who sold his luxury concierge company after being accused of doctoring financial figures of the company and creating an atmosphere of fear whilst there? The Zia Yusuf who resigned from Reform because he, "...no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time, and hereby resign the office."? The Zia Yusuf with no experience or background in working in finance? THAT Zia Yusuf? Forgive me while I go have my sides stitched back together.

:) :):)

Or privately educated Nigel from a millionaire stockbroker family who was a member of the Tory party.

They are definitely all for the working class. Nigel smokes tabs and drinks beer (when the cameras are on him) so he must be

Perhaps the Russians and non dom billionaires that fund Regorm just think they are canny lads?
 
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The Zia Yusuf who claimed to be 'on the political left' before becoming a fully paid up member of the Conservative Party? The Zia Yusuf who sold his luxury concierge company after being accused of doctoring financial figures of the company and creating an atmosphere of fear whilst there? The Zia Yusuf who resigned from Reform because he, "...no longer believe working to get a Reform government elected is a good use of my time, and hereby resign the office."? The Zia Yusuf with no experience or background in working in finance? THAT Zia Yusuf? Forgive me while I go have my sides stitched back together.
Aye, that’s him.
 
Not a fan of the bloke, certainly dont want him as Prime Minister. But bringing up his behavior at school now seems pretty desperate. And its not going to lose him votes. I cant see any Reform voter being swayed by it. In fact, I can see him gaining more 'anti establishment' votes as a result of desperate character assassination attempts like this. They'll need to find something alot more concrete from alot more recent than 45 years ago. I certainly hope they find it.
 
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Roach confuses me... is he a
Fa gash/Deform fan or not... could he just be on a 'long-con'.

I generally vote Labour, but think that Starmer (boring and lacking charisma) and Reeve inherited a poor hand and as yet have not played that hand very well.

A Richie Rich, who was a fan of Hitler and Enoch in his youth, is using the fact that even ordinary folk are fed up with immigration to pursue his racist policies. Being thick as ****e himself (considering his expensive education, very poor 'O' and 'A' results hence no university), but good at pretending to be 'one of the people' smoking and drinking beer.. as con/mask... when in reality is just a 'pub bore'!
 
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Here is some policies you keep asking for.


The state must serve the British people first

By Zia Yusuf REFORM UK’s Head of Policy

“Tough decisions must be made” has become the refrain of a political class that insists British people tighten their belts, again and again, while they continue writing blank cheques to the rest of the world.

Whether it was the Tories before, or Labour today, the script never changes: taxes go up, services get worse. What they never admit is that the only people ever asked to sacrifice are the British people themselves, while the state funnels ever larger sums to foreign nationals.

Britain has been turned into a global food bank, funded by taxpayers who can barely keep up with their own mortgages and energy bills. It is immoral, economically illiterate and politically indefensible.

And it must end.

Below is a summary how REFORM would cut public spending. More details can be found below:

1. End Universal Credit for foreign nationals – saving £6bn
2. Raise the Immigration Health Surcharge – raising £5bn
3. Personal Independence Payment reform – saving £3.5bn
4. Cap foreign aid at £1bn – saving £10bn
5. Deport foreign national offenders – saving £580m

Reform UK has published a set of proposals that do something novel in Westminster: put British citizens first. If Rachel Reeves adopted these measures tomorrow, she could save or raise £25bn this year alone, enough to plug the fiscal black hole without hammering working families with yet more tax rises.

Here is how:
1. End Universal Credit for foreign nationals – saving £6bn.
The Government hides most of the data on how much welfare is spent on non-UK citizens. The exception is Universal Credit: foreign nationals receive around £8bn a year in UC alone.
Even allowing for a reasonable three-month transition period, this would save £6bn this year.

This includes those with EU settled status. And it must include them, because the system we inherited from Theresa May and Boris Johnson is ludicrously asymmetric. In 2015, there were around four times as many EU citizens claiming benefits in the UK as Brits claiming in the entire EU. Since then, the number of EU claimants here has risen sevenfold.

Prime Minister Nigel Farage will renegotiate these one-sided arrangements.

2. Raise the Immigration Health Surcharge – raising £5bn.
The population has grown by 10 per cent since 2010, almost entirely through immigration, while NHS spending has nearly doubled in real terms, from around £110bn to £205bn. And yet NHS bed capacity has fallen. That alone tells you the system is being overwhelmed.

The Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS) is supposed to offset the cost of treating visa holders. But Tory ministers deliberately set it far below the real cost. The standard charge today is £1,035, a number so absurdly low that the Government admits it represents just 38 percent of actual per-capita NHS expenditure. It was Robert Jenrick as immigration minister who signed off an effective 62 per cent taxpayer-funded discount for foreign nationals to use the NHS.
Reform will raise the IHS to the Government’s own calculated cost of £2,718 a year and end the maze of exemptions that allow thousands of migrants to avoid paying entirely.
Based on Labour’s migration forecasts, this raises £5bn this year.

3. Pip reform – saving £3.5bn
Reform will focus Personal Independence Payment on serious, life-impacting disabilities, not mild anxiety issues. Shifting these claimants on to back-to-work programmes will save between £32 bn and £37bn over five years, and £3.5bn this year alone.
By 2029/30, annual savings reach £8.9bn.

4. Cap foreign aid at £1bn – saving £10bn
Charity begins at home. It is indefensible that while British children go without dental appointments and pensioners cannot get GP slots, the UK funds a £52m “road to nowhere” in Guyana.
While Labour resisted a national inquiry into grooming gangs, Britain wired £19m to Pakistan for child exploitation prevention programmes.

The Tories sent Pakistan more than £100m for “family planning”.
We even send millions to Turkey, whose teenagers now outperform Welsh 15-year-olds in basic education.

Reform will cap foreign aid at £1bn, enough to meet our core UN obligations, support Ukraine, provide emergency relief and promote British interests abroad. Everything else is an unaffordable luxury. This alone saves £10bn this year.

5. Deport foreign national offenders – saving £580m
Britain’s prisons are full. Labour and the Tories want to release offenders early. Reform says deport foreign nationals from our prisons.

Foreign nationals make up around 12 per cent of the prison population, 10,800 inmates, and cost £643m a year. Under Operation Restoring Justice, they would be prioritised for deportation or transfer to their home countries.

Net of costs, this saves £580m a year.

We are a generous country but we are not a limitless one. Reform’s proposals restore a principle that Westminster abandoned years ago: the British state exists to serve the British people.

If Rachel Reeves wants to avoid hammering working families with yet more taxes, the solution is sitting right in front of her.
The only question is whether she will finally put British citizens first.
That’s precisely what prime minister Farage will do.

Family, Community, Country.

Vote REFORM at every opportunity.

What do you think?

im just going to answer the last question you ask. What I think is… Much like every other politician, they will tell you what you want to hear, then , if they get in power, they will renege on the big promises.

Tories promised the eart, couldn’t deliver.

Labour the same. It’s never been any different in my lifetime. Nor will it be