
Nigel Farage: ‘Labour is terrified of Reform'
Nigel Farage has claimed Labour is 'terrified of Reform' as he announced his party's plans to back a full reversal of the two-child benefit cap, restore winter fuel payments, and grant tax breaks to married couples.
At a press conference on Tuesday, the Reform party leader accused Starmer of having 'no connection with working people or communities'.
'Reform really are now the party of working people,' Farage said.
Reform also believes that people should not start paying tax until they earn £20,000 a year, a policy that Farage said is 'wildly popular'.
If Reform gets into power, he also promised to cut 'excessive' government costs, scrap net-zero goals, end asylum hotels, scrap Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) programmes, and crack down on 'mass migration'.
It's Farage's latest attempt to gain ground from other political parties.
He accused the Tories of being 'irrelevant' in both Scotland and Wales, and said a Conservative vote in both countries – as well as in 'many parts of England' – would be a 'wasted vote' to help keep Labour in power.
Chairman of Reform UK, Zia Yusuf, claimed the party has had the 'greatest political acceleration in British history'.
He said the party has gone from having zero MPs, a handful of councillors, and polling at 10% a year ago to having five MPs at Westminster, approximately 700 councillors across the country, and polling 'north of 30%' today.
Yusuf said the party's membership had grown by eightfold – from 28,000 member last June to over 235,000 today.
Farage accused Starmer's Labour party of being 'terrified' of Reform.
'It's clear to me that Starmer doesn't believe in anything,' Farage said.
Accusing the Prime Minister of 'daily veering off', Farage said Labour is 'terrified of what Reform is doing to the Labour vote'.
Farage outlined Reform UK's platform, values, and plans for the country on Tuesday just weeks after the party made major gains in local English elections in early May.
The party picked up a new Reform UK MP at an English by-election as well as gained control of ten English councils and won more than 600 council seats at the polls.
In the wake of Farage's success in England, Scottish First Minister John Swinney said there is a 'very real possibility' that Nigel Farage could by the UK's next prime minister – adding he is 'fearful of what lies ahead' if that comes to pass.
Swinney also accused both Labour and Tories of 'cosying up to Farage' to avoid losing voters.
Polls have suggested Reform UK could win a dozen or more MSPs at Holyrood in next May's Scottish Parliament elections, despite currently having no representatives there.
The first battle between Scottish Labour, SNP and Reform UK will come in just two weeks at the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election.
There are ten candidates standing for the MSP seat at Holyrood. SNP candidate Katy Loudon is attempting to hold the seat for her party.
Scottish Labour candidate Davy Russell was expected to be Loudon's biggest competition, but Reform candidate Ross Lambie appears to be gaining ground with just weeks to go.
Farage is due in Scotland to campaign ahead of the by-election. Candidate name Party Collette Bradley Scottish Socialist Party Andy Brady Scottish Family Party Ross Alexander Lambie Reform UK Katy Loudon Scottish National Party (SNP) Janice Elizabeth Mackay UK Independence Party (UKIP) Ann McGuinness Scottish Green Party Aisha Jawaid Mir Scottish Liberal Democrats Richard Nelson Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party Davy Russell Scottish Labour Party Marc Wilkinson Independent
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The Herald Scotland
42 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Reform candidate rejects racism claims after Sarwar video row
The party has faced widespread criticism for its portrayal of the Scottish Labour leader. The Facebook and Instagram advert uses heavily edited footage from a 2022 speech by Mr Sarwar in which he called for greater South Asian representation in politics. READ MORE The clip — which has been viewed more than 800,000 times — included a caption claiming Mr Sarwar wanted to 'prioritise the Pakistani community', a phrase he did not use. Both Scottish Labour and the SNP have described the video as racist and called on Meta — the company that owns the social media platforms — to remove it. Mr Sarwar, who was born in Glasgow to Pakistani Muslim parents, ha challenged Mr Farage to a public debate. 'Ask your chauffeur to put Hamilton into Google Maps,' he said during a BBC interview on Wednesday. 'Come up here. I will challenge him anytime, any place in Hamilton, any town hall — and he can challenge me on his views. I will challenge him on his views.' He branded the Reform UK leader a 'pathetic, poisonous, little man'. Mr Farage is due to visit Scotland on Monday, and will be making a speech in Aberdeen in the morning. He is also expected to join the campaign. Asked about the video, Ross Lambie told The Herald: 'Reform's position on this has always been that we believe in merit. 'People should get positions of power, promotion and work because of their merit. It should not matter what age they are, whether a man or a woman, or what ethnicity they are. 'Whereas the SNP and Labour have gone down this rabbit hole of DEI [Diversity, Equity and Inclusion] and want to try and socially engineer the makeup of companies, governments and councils. We just do not believe in that.' He added: 'My wife is an immigrant. She worked for the BBC at one point. She is from a Muslim country. I have a mixed-race daughter. You judge Reform based on the people in it — like me, from a working-class background, my parents are from the council estate just down the road.' READ MORE Voters in the constituency go to the polls on Thursday in the by-election triggered by the death of the SNP's Christina McKelvie. Last night, First Minister John Swinney claimed the vote was now a 'straight contest' between the SNP and Mr Farage's party. In comments issued ahead of a campaign visit to Hamilton, he said: 'Labour have let people across Scotland down, and they have quite clearly given up on this by-election. 'Thursday's vote is now a straight contest between the SNP and Nigel Farage — and I am urging people to reject the ugly, divisive politics of Nigel Farage and to unite behind the SNP.' Scottish Labour rejected the claim they had conceded the seat. eputy leader Dame Jackie Baillie said the constituency remained a two-horse race between Labour and the SNP. She said Reform 'cannot win here', adding: 'This is a direct fight between Scottish Labour and the SNP, no matter how much Reform and the SNP want to pretend otherwise. 'This weekend, Scottish Labour campaigners will be talking to voters the length and breadth of Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse so we can deliver a new direction for this community and elect local champion Davy Russell.'


The Herald Scotland
43 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Find all articles on the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election
Initially, this looked like a two-way contest between SNP and Labour, but Reform UK have thrown everything at winnng over disaffected voters. The outcome could reshape Scotland's political map and offer clues about how the parties will fare at next year's Holyrood election. On this page, you'll find all of The Herald's in-depth reporting, interviews, analysis and opinion on the Hamilton by-election, including candidate profiles, campaign developments, and what's being said on the doorstep. We'll update this hub throughout the campaign — and through the night as the results come in. Explainer: Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election Why voters in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse are heading to the polls — and why this by-election could send shockwaves through Scottish politics. Hamilton by-election preview: candidates set out their stalls Profiles and strategies from the Hamilton by-election front-runners, plus insight on the seat's political history and campaign dynamics. Reform support in Hamilton should worry other parties On the streets of Hamilton: voters voice frustration — and many say they are turning to Reform UK. SNP will be the winner as Reform outflanks Labour from the left Neil Mackay on Labour's identity crisis — and how Farage is stealing its clothes while the SNP reaps the rewards. Reform can 'win Hamilton by-election and take power' in HolyroodRichard Tice tells The Herald why Reform UK believes it can win in Hamilton — and reshape Scottish politics from Holyrood to Westminster. Reform support in Hamilton should worry other parties On the streets of Hamilton: voters voice frustration — and many say they are turning to Reform UK. SNP will be the winner as Reform outflanks Labour from the left Neil Mackay on Labour's identity crisis — and how Farage is stealing its clothes while the SNP reaps the rewards. Tory candidate defends Orange Order and Apprentice Boys links "We are law-abiding organisations. We pledge allegiance to His Majesty the King. And, you know, we are not divisive at all, and people have their right to their own religion.' Farage defends Reform UK by-election ad branded racist Nigel Farage has accused Anas Sarwar of 'introducing sectarianism into Scottish politics.' Labour by-election candidate denies he has hindered campaign Scottish Labour's by-election candidate has rubbished claims he has a 'low profile.' Anas Sarwar challenges Nigel Farage to debate in Hamilton The Scottish Labour leader said the Brexiteer was a 'pathetic, poisonous, little man'.


The Herald Scotland
43 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
SNP: Labour costing households in South Lanarkshire £165m
A spokesperson for South Lanarkshire Council defended the use of the funding model, saying it had allowed the authority to rebuild its entire school estate. Labour claimed the SNP were trying to deflect from their own record of local authority funding cuts. READ MORE: PFI contracts were introduced by John Major's Conservative government in the 1990s to fund infrastructure projects with private capital. The approach was later expanded by Tony Blair's Labour government and rebranded as PPP. Though hundreds of schools, hospitals and roads were built under these schemes, they have been criticised for long-term repayment costs far exceeding the original construction value. Since 2005, the Scottish Government has replaced PFI with non-profit distributing (NPD) and hub models, which aim to limit private profits by removing dividend payments. These alternatives have funded £3.3bn in infrastructure projects. The long-term financial burden of PFI was highlighted in a report by Audit Scotland last year, which found NHS Scotland is still less than halfway through repaying its PFI debts — more than 25 years after contracts were signed. BBC Scotland has also reported that at least 11 Scottish PFI schemes may require expensive buyouts at the end of their terms, including Edinburgh Royal Infirmary and University Hospital Wishaw. The council said PFI had allowed them rebuild every school in the regionSince Labour took control of South Lanarkshire Council in 2022, the local authority has paid — or is projected to pay — £165.29m in PFI and PPP repayments over four years: £39.81m in 2022/23, £40.80m in 2023/24, £41.82m in 2024/25, and £42.86m in this financial year. SNP MSP Collette Stevenson said the figures exposed the 'true price of Labour failure' and claimed the increasing costs were the result of 'decades-old policy decisions' that continue to drain local budgets. 'Labour's PFI and PPP failure is costing households across South Lanarkshire more and more every year — hitting this community with a bill of almost £43m this year,' she said. 'In government, the SNP has delivered for this community; scrapping PFI and PPP contracts and providing record funding for local authorities — much of which goes towards mitigating the impact of Labour decisions like PFI.' She added: 'Whether it is decades-old policy decisions like PFI, their decision to cut the Winter Fuel Payment or the council's decision to slash school bus provision, Labour in power is costing households dearly. 'Scotland has always been an afterthought to the Labour Party — but the SNP under John Swinney's leadership will always stand up for Scotland and be on the side of communities like South Lanarkshire.' A council spokesperson said: 'The council has utilised different financing options at different times in order to rebuild every single secondary and primary school in the area. "The result is a fantastic learning environment for every pupil in the area — and what many consider to be the best schools estate in the United Kingdom — including 127 new primary schools that were funded directly by the council. 'Part of the due diligence process undertaken for the secondary school contract was a comparison exercise signed off by Audit Scotland and the Scottish Government. 'In terms of secondary schools, funding is provided by the Scottish Government towards the costs of these contracts.' READ MORE Scottish Labour also hit back, with local government spokesperson Mark Griffin accusing the SNP of trying to 'deflect' from its own record. 'The SNP is the architect of austerity in Scotland's councils and this desperate attempt at deflection will not hide that,' he said. 'The SNP has raided over £480m from core South Lanarkshire Council budgets over recent years, undermining vital local services. 'Despite the SNP's relentless campaign of cuts, the Labour council has protected frontline services and delivered the lowest Council Tax increase in the country for local families.' The row comes as the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election enters it final week.