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Nigel Farage talks tough but Reform UK have already sold out in one key area.uk

So much for the insurgent alternative to the uniparty.

Nigel Farage talks tough but Reform UK have already sold out

Nigel Farage talks tough but Reform UK have already sold out (Image: Phil Lewis/WENN)

For decades, the British people have spoken clearly: we want immigration controlled, reduced, and brought to sustainable levels. Yet every election cycle, we’ve been met with lies, delays, and betrayal. Labour ignored it. The Tories broke promise after promise. That’s why Reform UK was born — not as a vanity project, but as a last stand for those abandoned by the political class. And now, it seems even Reform is folding.

In his first public statement as chairman, Dr David Bull declared: “Immigration is the lifeblood of this country.” That’s not just wrong — it’s treachery. It’s the same hollow slogan we’ve heard for 30 years from Blair, Cameron, Sunak, Starmer — and every other politician who’s watched Britain fracture and dared to call it “progress.”

No, David. Immigration is not the lifeblood of Britain. Our people are. The men and women who built our industries, defended our borders, raised our families, and passed down our values — they are the lifeblood.

You don’t replace them and call it strength. You don’t dissolve your culture and call it growth. What’s happening is not evolution — it’s erasure.

According to Matt Goodwin’s latest research, the white British population will become a minority in just a few decades. It’s the most dramatic demographic shift in our history — and no one voted for it. No one was asked.

When challenged on this, Reform’s Deputy Leader Richard Tice shrugged: “It’s a long way off… I’ll be long gone.”

“Let’s see what happens”? That’s not leadership. That’s cowardice. That’s the Uniparty mindset — and Reform was meant to be the alternative.

Mass migration on this scale is not just an economic concern — it’s a cultural crisis. Entire communities have been transformed beyond recognition. Not because of some multicultural utopia — but because our leaders refused to defend the line.

We’re told the NHS needs immigration to survive. Yet in 2022, just 3% of visas were granted to doctors and nurses. Meanwhile, our public services are buckling under relentless, low-skilled migration. So much for “lifeblood.”

Even Nigel Farage now says mass deportations are “impossible,” and that he doesn’t want to alienate Islam — as if alienating ordinary British voters is somehow more acceptable.

As if those who placed their trust in Reform — who voted for a firm stand — should now just put up and shut up.

And let’s not forget the pre-election press conference where Farage and Yousef promised to publish Reform’s deportation strategy after the votes were in. That document? Still missing. Still unmentioned. The electorate was played.

Then came Yousef’s resignation, outraged by a Reform MP’s call to ban the burka. A single comment — and he walks.

Yet he’s apparently unbothered by growing communities where British law takes a back seat to imported values. So who exactly is Reform trying not to offend?

The truth is painful, but it must be said: if Reform now parrots globalist slogans, offering no real alternative to descent and division within our country, then it no longer deserves the name. Call the party what it is: Uniparty 2.0.

Britain stands at a crossroads. Our culture is being diluted. Our cities overcrowded. Our taxes are rising to fund endless dependency. We are not allowed to question it without being labelled racist.

But the British people are not racists. They are realists. They want a country that puts them first — and leaders who have the backbone to say so.

Reform was meant to be that party. A party of courage, clarity, and confrontation with a broken system.

But if it can’t hold the line on the very issue it was built to fight — then let it fall.

Better that than pretending real change is coming, when the truth is, it’s already surrendered.

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