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Nigel Farage uses visit to Scotland to double down on attacks on Anas Sarwar

Nigel Farage uses visit to Scotland to double down on attacks on Anas Sarwar

Mr Farage claimed the Scottish Labour leader has a 'record of obsession' – citing a speech he gave in Holyrood in 2020 as evidence of this.
His comments came as he unveiled a new defection to his Reform UK party, with councillor Duncan Massey, who had been a Conservative representative on Aberdeen City Council, now a member.
Mr Farage also promised another defection, this time from Labour, would come on Monday afternoon as he visits Hamilton, where a Holyrood by-election is taking place.
That by-election has been dominated by a row over a Reform advert which has been branded 'racist' by Reform's opponents, and which claims that Mr Sarwar will 'prioritise' the Pakistani community in Scotland.
Asked about this, Mr Farage insisted Reform UK 'don't talk about race at all'.
He pointed out his party's chairman, Zia Yusuf, was someone who 'is Scottish born, but comes from parents who come from the Indian subcontinent'.
Mr Farage continued: 'We think everybody should be treated equally. We object, very strongly, to the segmentation of people into different types.'
Adding that the Scottish Labour leader has a 'record of obsession on this issue', he went on to reference a speech Mr Sarwar gave in 2020 where he noted that key figures across Scotland, from the judiciary, to council chief executives to head teachers, were all white.
Mr Farage said: 'I think that speech he gave was sectarian in its very nature – we are the south Asian community, we are going to take over the country and take over the world.
'We believe what he said was a form of sectarian politics and we don't like it one little bit.'
Welcome to Lower Deeside Councillor Duncan Massey ✅
Scotland needs Reform.
Be part of it ➡️ https://t.co/o8emOfA1dc pic.twitter.com/27zwgsLKQX
— Reform UK Scotland (@ReformUKScot) June 2, 2025
His comments came after First Minister John Swinney claimed the Reform UK leader 'doesn't care about Scotland'.
With an opinion poll having suggested Reform could be the second-largest party at Holyrood after next May's Scottish elections, the SNP leader spoke about the 'deeply concerning rise in support for Farage'.
Mr Swinney added: 'Be in no doubt, Nigel Farage doesn't care about Scotland. He poses a threat to our values and must be stopped, and only the SNP can do that.'
Mr Farage however declared that his party had 'made remarkable strides in Scotland over the past year'.
Speaking as protesters gathered outside, the Reform UK leader said if the polls are to be believed 'we are beginning to eclipse Labour to be the second most popular party in Scottish politics'.
Mr Farage again spoke out about the 'madness' of the net zero policies being pursued by the governments at Holyrood and Westminster.
He told reporters these had left the oil and gas industry, which is centred in Aberdeen, 'in serious decline'.
This 'to a large extent… is wholly unnecessary', the MP insisted, hitting out at the taxes imposed on the oil and gas sector, and also at the Labour Westminster Government's opposition to licensing new fields.
Mr Farage continued: '2025 will be a year of record consumption of fossil fuels.
'We can con ourselves as much as we like, there will be more coal burnt this year than has ever been burnt in the history of mankind, and the same applies to gas and oil.
'Even the most ardent proponent of net zero has to accept the world will still be using oil and gas up until 2050 and beyond.
'And yet we have decided to sacrifice this industry as a consensus around net zero has emerged.'
As a result of this he said parts of Scotland, England and Wales were 'literally deindustrialising before our very eyes'.
Mr Farage said: 'The madness of this is almost completely and utterly beyond belief.'
In an interview with the Scottish Sun on Monday, Mr Farage described Mr Swinney as 'anti-English' following his outspoken attacks on the Reform leader.
'Swinney's words are deeply provocative, which suggests the SNP leadership has learned nothing,' he told the newspaper.
'It suggests there is still that sort of quite unpleasant anti-Englishness.
'Why on earth would the top man in Scottish politics today come out with those sort of insults?'
Speaking to the PA news agency on Monday, Mr Swinney rejected the claims.
'I've always taken forward my politics on the basis of inclusion, of welcoming people, of working with others – that's what I'm about,' he said.
'Nigel Farage is the opposite of that.
'Nigel Farage stokes division, he seeks to put people against each other and we're bringing people together in Scotland to create the best future for our country.'

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Farage ‘seeks less powerful chairman' after Yusuf quits
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Farage ‘seeks less powerful chairman' after Yusuf quits

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Hamilton by-election: How Labour 'defied the odds' and Reform ripped up the rulebook
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Sign up to our Politics newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Anas Sarwar was buzzing. The triumphant Scottish Labour leader told journalists his party had defied the bookies, the pollsters and the pundits by winning the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election, and it was now 'game on'. He had a point. Almost everyone thought the SNP would keep hold of the seat, albeit with a much reduced majority. In the end, Labour's candidate, Davy Russell, beat his Nationalist rival by 602 votes. It was a narrow victory, but a win is a win. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad On Friday, as Labour held a victory rally in Hamilton, one party spinner purchased a "humble pie" - technically, an apple flan - from the Bayne's bakery next to their campaign HQ and used it to tease journalists who had written off Labour's chances. A Reform UK election billboard poster in Larkhall | PA Alas, it wasn't long before Professor Sir John Curtice, the polling guru, rained on their parade with some cold, hard numbers. The result, he said, was actually 'way below' what Labour needs if it wants to win next year's Holyrood election. "I think the honest truth is that neither Labour nor the SNP can be really particularly happy with this result,' he told The Scotsman. Professor Sir John Curtice has an important message about how to restore the public's trust in politics and democracy (Picture: Leon Neal) | Getty Images Instead, the most important development in terms of its wider implications lies elsewhere. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The Hamilton by-election was a tight three-horse race between Labour, the SNP and Nigel Farage's Reform UK. The latter came in third, but still secured a remarkable 26 per cent of the vote, outperforming its national polling. In light of this, Sir John said, the possibility that Reform might come second next year, ahead of Labour, 'is not an outcome that we can presume is out of the bounds of possibility'. Like it or not, Reform is now a force to be reckoned with in Scottish politics, and all without having a separate leadership team in place north of the Border. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The spectre of Mr Farage dominated the by-election campaign, and his visit to the constituency on Monday received huge amounts of coverage. His rivals also spent a great deal of time talking about him. The First Minister repeatedly portrayed the by-election as a two-horse race between the SNP and Reform - an analysis that turned out to be somewhat flawed, to put it mildly. "Reform's performance, 26 per cent, is more than you would expect in Hamilton, if the result there were simply reflecting what the opinion polls have been telling us,' Sir John said. "Now there are [a few] possibilities. One is that the Reform campaign in the constituency might have been particularly effective. I certainly think that Mr [Ross] Lambie was a relatively strong candidate. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad "And it may well be that Labour and the SNP made the cardinal, classic mistake of giving lots of lovely publicity to your opponent's election campaign. "Or it may be that the polls are indeed underestimating Reform somewhat. We did see Reform doing better than expected in the English local elections, and then the polls caught up with what the local elections were saying." 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